
Parenting; itās the same concept with a completely different perspective. What do I mean? I mean that all parents have the same general goal in mind; keep kids alive, healthy, relatively happy and turn them into good, successful people. Now, those individual things have different meanings to all people. For some, success is a general concept of growing up into a person who is happy and well-adjusted and able to live their dreams. For others, it means something more along the lines of monetary value. For all parents, however, the goal is to raise kids that love you that turn into good people (who will eventually take care of you when youāre back on diapers ā payback, babies). The end result is the same, but the road to get there is not always the same. Much like we all have our favorite route home, we all have parenting preferences we prefer over others. That doesnāt make me a better parent than you because my kids sleep in their own rooms, through the night and donāt give us any issues at bedtime and it doesnāt make you a better parent than men that you breastfed for two years to my 2 months. We are all just trying to get through each day and do it as well as we can.
But for some moms, thatās not the end of the day. Some parents might intend to show off their parenting skills and others might not intend to do anything other than share their parenting skills (ie ā things theyāve learned that they think might help someone else looking for a solution) but publicizing your parenting on Facebook is just a bad idea all around. And Iāll tell you why; as a mother of four, Iāve been degraded, berated and told that Iām a bad mom because of what I post on Facebook. My husband and I have four kids ā our youngest a set of twins that just turned 1. People told us for months before they were born that they would be the most difficult challenge weāve ever faced, that we would never leave the house again and that life as we know it would be over.
Well, guess what? We donāt think theyāre difficult at all. In fact, theyāre the easiest babies that ever existed. Theyāve been on the same sleeping and feeding schedule since the day they were born. They go to bed and sleep all night and have since before they were a month old. They nap together, theyāre happy, theyāre smiley, and they adjust and enjoy life wherever we are. But apparently posting things about how easy the babies are and how grateful we are that they donāt challenge us like we thought they would makes people think that Iām telling them Iām a superior mother. I am not. Iām posting it because Iām darn proud of my kids (and beyond grateful that theyāre nowhere near as difficult as people said theyād be). But the fact that I have four kids and that Iām vain enough to wake up early every day and do my hair and makeup (go ahead, but Iām telling you that Iām a much happier, much more productive person when I feel good about myself each day) and like to wear dresses makes me āperfect.ā
Letās get something straight; Iām FAR from perfect. I canāt even see the sign to this alleged perfect. Iām not perfect. Iām impatient, Iām high-strung at times, Iām a perfectionist, Iām a neat-freak, Iām a terrible cook, I hate mess, I am easily thrown if Iām not on my schedule, and Iām a coffee and wine-aholic. Iām not perfect. I raise my voice at my kids. They call me the meanest mommy ever about once a week (not going to lie, that makes me feel as if Iām doing my job pretty well) and sometimes Iām so lazy when my husband gets home from work that I donāt change a single diaper or do anything āmomā related the rest of the night other than the fun stuff like playing with the kids. Perfect, I am not.
But the moral of the story is that my lack of complaints about things that donāt seem complaint-worthy, my upbeat and positive attitude and my āperfectā appearance (Just so you know, I donāt feel perfect, just good) make people think that Iām better than them, and thatās because thatās how I publicize myself on Facebook. Itās not my intent to make other moms feel insecure, and it does bother me when they tell me thatās what I do. I never want another mom to feel insecure. We are all doing the best we can on different levels, in different manners, and at a different time. I have four kids; Iām used to chaos, and that should not make a brand new first-time mom feel insecure. I didnāt know what I was doing then, either. I still donāt, but itās a lot easier.
Now, let me tell you why we need to stop publicizing our parenting on Facebook.
Weāre Mom-Shaming
When I brag about my kids all sleeping through the night almost right away on Facebook, Iām not doing it to make other moms feel insecure. Iām doing it because OMG MY KIDS ARE SLEEPING THROUGH THE NIGHT and I donāt have to feel like a zombie (and in reality, we all do this when it happens, so what difference does it make if it’s at 3 weeks or 3 years?). Iām excited. But it makes other moms with kids not sleeping through the night at 3 months or at 6 months or at 2 years feel as if theyāre doing something wrong and Iām pointing that out. Not my intention, but thatās the perception.
Weāre Making Others Question Their Parenting
At the end of the day, a happy, loved, healthy child is all we can ask for. There are some days I collapse after bedtime and toast my husband with a resounding, āFour kids alive and well at this moment in time is HUGE, so cheers to me since there were a few moments in time in which I didnāt think that was a possibility today.ā No one should question their own parenting because of the rest of us publicizing ours like itās the only way around. If you get through the day pretty much intact, all is well.
Weāre Losing Friends
Itās true. Iām a mom and I have deleted a number of people from my page for being overly annoying. Itās your page and Iām all about posting whatever you want, but if you feel the constant need to get online and tell other people they are doing the wrong thing for supplementing at your doctorās orders or not encapsulating and eating your placenta or getting an epidural (because giving birth is slightly uncomfortable, after all) 14 times a day, I donāt have time for that. And neither does anyone else. Some of us like our epidural, mmkay?
Weāre Annoying
We are. Parents, in general, are annoying. We post too many pictures, we give too much advice, and we become those people. We are boring, annoying and kind of crazy. Just sayinā.
Weāre Creating Competition that Doesnāt Belong
The mom competition kills me, and I hate it. I donāt care that someone else does ABC or XYZ. You know what I care about? I care about seeing your kids happy and healthy and living in a household will parents that love them. I donāt care if they sleep in your bed (I mean, Iām so glad mine donāt, but yours doing it doesnāt bother me in the least) or you nurse until you are 89. I just donāt care. But some people donāt have the confidence level just yet not to feel that everything is not a competition. Some moms (most of us) question what we do on a daily basis, and we donāt need people turning parenting into a competition. Itās just not worth it.
Weāre No Better than Anyone Else
Hey! Now we are talking. Guess what? I happen to think that Iām a pretty killer, amazing, superhero of a mom. I amaze myself (and Iām darn well not ashamed to say that) on a daily basis with all that I accomplish AND the fact that my kids live through the day. Iām not perfect, and Iām okay with that. Some days are a bit rough, and Iām okay with that (kidding! I hate that, but Iām realistic so I know itāll happen). Iām not the same as you, and Iām okay with that. Iām me, and Iām super okay with that. But guess what? None of the above makes me a better mom than you. We are all the best mom in the world (most days) in the eyes of our kids, and thatās the only person (s) whose opinion matters in the least (even when they come home and tell you that so-and-soās mom is way cooler than you because she lets them eat ice cream for breakfastā¦karma and cavities will get that mom).
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