Last week there was no school on
Monday. Tuesday we woke up to a blizzard outside and an email saying
school was cancelled. My kids were thrilled, we love snow days. The
day started great: I made pancakes and bacon and let them stay in
their pajamas, but as the day went on it turned less fun. All three
of us took turns being cranky and short with each other. One of the
kids cried at least every hour and I was constantly getting blamed
for their unhappiness (you won't let me have candy, why can't I do
this, etc.). In a last ditch effort to save the day I bundled up
with them and we had a snowball fight, but of course that ended in
frozen fingers and sadness. My oldest kept saying he wished daddy
was home and my youngest wished grandma could come over. So at the
end of our cooped up bonus day home I felt like a terrible mother.
I often get stuck in my head second
guessing and doubting but especially when it comes to how I am
raising my kids. I just so badly want to do it right. I was a
straight A student, always turned in my assignments on time, and
followed directions well. I wish parenting could be as clearly
defined as school. I would love to know exactly what I need to do,
and when I have done it a gold star by my name would be great.
I let my kids have a piece of candy or
a sweet every day, once a week I put a frozen pizza in the oven and
call it dinner, I let my kids play video games or play on the tablet
for an hour each day (more on Saturdays when I want to sleep in), I
worry about them, sometimes I hover, sometimes I let them do things
other parents wouldn't, sometimes I lose my temper and yell,
sometimes I push them too much with my high expectations, sometimes I
don't push them enough and enjoy babying them, I haven't devoted
enough time to teaching them how to ride a bike, I say no when they
ask me to play video games with them, I tell them about things
happening in the world that might frighten or worry them, I give them
processed foods for snacks and I only buy organic when it is on sale.
Before I had kids I thought I would teach them a foreign language
before they turned 5 … I haven't. Some of those things will seem
like terrible parenting decisions to some and some will seem like
parenting wins to others.
Next I could list things I am proud of,
but who even knows what that is because every single decision can be
criticized, picked apart and in hind sight seem like a bad one.
Trying to always do everything right is very hard. On that snow day
when the kids and I were all getting frustrated my oldest said “I
get mad at myself because I want to be perfect at everything.”
That crushed me. I felt guilty that maybe he picked that up from me.
I also felt so much compassion for him and wanted badly for him to
know how much he is loved unconditionally.
When my husband and I traveled to
England for ten days last summer it was our first time being away
from the kids and stepping out of my everyday situation gave me the
opportunity to reflect on it. I was well-rested, relaxed and in the
moment. I told myself “this is how I need to be.” This is who
my kids want. They want me to be myself … relaxed and in the
moment, not trying to predict all the mistakes I am making that they
will tell their therapist about 30 years from now.
But life happens, we get tired, we get
frustrated and we get caught up in trying to do everything right.
The other day I was talking to a mom that I think is great. Her kid
is kind, intelligent and well-spoken. In fact, everyone that knows
him says these things about him. She is great at her job and a great
mother. She casually mentioned a conversation she had with some
other moms about how they all felt like bad mothers. It surprised me
because of course she isn't a bad mother. I guess we are all just
trying our best and then trying even harder to be ok with that.
I thought about that, went home,
decided we were making our own pizzas that night, let the kids put
pretzels and goldfish on their pizzas, carried dinner downstairs and
let them watch tv while we ate. We left the mess downstairs to deal
with later. And we were all happy …
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