Evidence that I'm a good parent
Miraka Davies
te reo Māori advocate | toitū te tiriti | speaker & mc | once was Shelly Davies
(which I could EASILY completely ignore, duh)
My children know that if I could go back I would not have chosen to be a parent. This is not the same thing as saying I don’t want them. They are (especially currently – keep reading) an absolute joy, and they’ve made me a good person. I would not give them back, NOW.
Instead, I tell them, it means that if I had ANY idea how painful and hard and soul-destroying I’d find parenting, I wouldn’t have done it.
It’s the pain that’s the worst part – their pain.
Empathy and parenting
Lil’ old empath me cannot handle their fucking pain. It’s too much.
I want them to be happy, but alas, it’s not a parent’s job to make their children happy. It’s our job to raise adults who can be functional and resourceful in the world – and by doing so, make their own happy.
And that kind of adult emerges from a child who’s had to tolerate enough times of being unhappy, because you say NO to them and have boundaries and shit like that. That’s the way it goes.
Anyway, I sat down late last year to list the evidence that I am, in spite of all the “evidence” to the contrary that I can find AT THE DROP OF A HAT, a freaking good mum. Not to sit down and write about how in my time machine, I’d be child-free (and a selfish bitch, for the record. But that’s another post).
The evidence
Because while the “evidence” that I suck as a parent - that I’m a failure in all the worst ways - has legs and wings and stands ten feet tall and bellows at 100 decibels, the evidence that I’ve done not a half-decent but an amazing job, can slip past unnoticed. And I’m completely over that bullshit. So I sat down one day and took stock.
Here's what I came up with on that day:
So I’ll share it with you.
This list is from the perspective of someone who doesn’t take the simplest things for granted. She gets up each day and keeps herself alive, and is GOOD and KIND and SMART and STRONG even when her life could easily have shaped her so differently.
领英推荐
That was huge for me. It forced me to acknowledge that I had done some things right.
You're allowed to say it - PARENTING IS FUCKING HARD
And finally, a shout out to Emily Writes and friends, because I had also just finished reading Is it bedtime yet? and it was the most glorious, loving, real, raw, accepting and forgiving thing I’d read in a long, long time. If you’re about to have a baby or if you have babies or someone else in your world does, and they need to hear that PARENTING IS FUCKING HARD and that’s NORMAL, you need to buy them that book. And probably the next book too.
Here’s an idea for you:
What’s the area in your life that you are best at punishing yourself about? What’s that part of your life that you feel literally SURROUNDED with things to beat yourself over the head with, because there is SO MUCH EVIDENCE that you suck at it? That you’ve failed? What’s your shame?
Because how about this…. What if you write a list of every. Tiny. Piece. Of evidence. That you’re NOT failing at that thing?
Would you do that?
Sending love,
Shel
(Oh, and PS. If you can’t see the flipside and all you read here is a list of ego-boosting bullshit, call me and I’ll give you ALL the details about the child with addiction and the child who started having children at 17, and the child who I hit and who called the police and had me arrested and rightly so, and the children (yes – REN, not CHILD) who have had the Police intervene in their suicide attempts, and the child who felt betrayed because I raised her one way and then changed the entire direction of my life. Or the children who were abused or assaulted. Or the children who had sex too young.?I’m not going to keep going here,?because you haven’t got the time. But rest assured – this post of self-love has been HARD WON. Parenting is fucking hard. That is all.)
Business Clarity Expert || Simple Strategy — Real Results ??
4 年My kid in London came across the end of a protest just as everyone was leaving, having fully vented their disgust at being told what to do, and having asserted their right to protest. He sent me a video of the shameful MESS they'd left behind in the street, and then HE stayed and picked up bags and bags of rubbish. And I had a very proud parent moment. ?? Ok I'm going to read the blog now, I still need more reminding.
?? Personal Brand Coach For Senior Professionals | Turning ‘Invisible’ into ‘Influential’ through personal branding and leadership
4 年Thank you Shelly for giving me that kick to remind myself that yes I am a great parent and a pretty awesome grandmother ?????? will write up the list tonight!
Experienced Instructional Designer / Learning Architect / Training Strategist
4 年The raw honesty, blended with such a healthy dose of _REAL_ is nothing I expected from LinkedIn, but something I should have known to expect since I started following you. Thank you, for the vulnerability to hold your failings up to the same light as your amazing strengths. And YES! parenting... remember everyone, that even if you do your 'real' job 40, 60, 80 hours a week, it's different; you're a parent _always_. You can't punch out from that clock, and wouldn't if you could (though you have considered it if you're honest.)
Talent Acquisition Specialist (NZ)| Sunglass Hut | Oakley | OPSM
4 年Flagging this for myself, to come back and read/listen properly in the morning. Props Shelly ????
WSET Wine 1 & 2, Beer 2, Spirits 2 Distiction 100%. Edinburgh Whisky Academy Certificate's in Scotch Whisky, Irish Whiskey and Gin. Certified Bourbon Steward, duty manager who enjoys learning about spirits.
4 年One day at a time, one step at a time .... you can do this.