Being a new mom is one of the most incredible and incredibly scary things a
woman can go through. It is an instant admission to one of the world's
oldest and most amazing clubs! It is remarkable that for eons, women have
been having the same experience around the world.
There is a cost however, to joining the club... I like to think of it as,
"The Shaming of the Mom". New moms are constantly doubting
themselves, worried that they are not measuring up to astronomical
standards.. It doesn't help that in the age of Pinterest and Instagram,
it is even easier to dig your way to the China of doubt.
It is so simple to compare our private nite mare to the picture perfect world
of everyone else's "best foot forward". You know exactly what I
talking about... You sit down on the couch to take “a moment” as a naked Dear
Child runs by with a cape of toilet paper, the cat over his shoulder, screaming
about what a terrible person you are. Dear Child then climbs the pantry
shelves, knocks over the open bag of flour (because you haven’t had the time to
put it in one of those pretty canisters with the custom chalkboard pant label) and
grabs a highly processed, packaged, and sugared snack (the kind that those
Pinterest Mom’s would NEVER feed their children).
In exacerbation, you pick up your device of
choice (smart phone, tablet, etc) and click through the social media Portal of
Doom (Pinterest, Instagram, Facebook, etc.).
Picture after picture… art projects, home baked goodies, gourmet dinners,
spotless living rooms.
It’s a never ending parade of carefully edited, picture perfect moments.
We don’t see the individual pictures but a cacophony
of virtual perfectness.
We begin to feel
that is the norm and everyone else do it, meeting and in some cases surpassing
the standard of “perfect”.
We look at
our personal words and the tidal wave of shame comes crashing down.
REMEMBER:
There is no magical measuring stick to “mom-ness”.
Every mother has their moments, when the
stars align,
Every mom is different and special and wonderful and perfect. Every mom has her good days and her bad days. Put the binoculars down and stop the comparison.
the children behave and we have all of the parts to do a project
that has been taunting from the virtual to do list.