February 29, 2016
How many times as a parent have you written a to-do list that seemed totally reasonable, only to be crushed at the end of the day when only one single item got crossed off?
How many times have you beaten yourself up for not being able to return a phone call or text, let alone get dressed and prep dinner?
How many times have you had to choose between pumping milk at work and eating lunch without flanges attached to your boobs?
I’ve lost count on any sort of running total on this Mama Math, and I can no longer consider myself a “new mom,” as my kids are 5 and 7. But I still fall into the trap of adding too many things to my To-Do lists, whether work-, home-, or kid-related, and when I do, I become disappointed in myself.
As a Licensed Acupuncturist who specializes in the childbearing cycle, I work with parents every day, and I have come to realize that most of us have expectations of ourselves that are higher than anything we would expect of a friend or family member.
Before becoming parents, we were accustomed to putting our minds to something and making it happen.
We’d not only be able to wake up at 6am, take a shower, get dressed, eat breakfast, pack a lunch, work a full day, run errands, come home and make dinner, but also respond to emails, do a load of laundry and have a meaningful conversation (maybe even meaningful sex) with our partner before going to bed and sleeping for 8 hours.
Ha! After becoming a parent, we expect to be able to do all of the above (well, maybe not the sleeping part) and also meet the survival needs of small children. Our culture expects us to bounce right back after having a child, return to our pre-baby weight, get back to work, to entertaining, to being a loving spouse or partner…in 6 weeks or less!
Who are we kidding?
The expectations we put on ourselves, and that our culture puts on us, are not only unrealistic, they’re downright ridiculous.
The transition from being childless to being a parent (or from having one child to 2 or more) is the biggest transition we will undergo since being born ourselves. It takes adjustment. It takes practice. It takes self-compassion.
When we expect too much of ourselves, we are destined to be disappointed. Chronic disappointment can make us irritable, short-tempered, anxious or depressed. And that’s just no fun.
The biggest lesson I’ve learned in my short 7.5 years as a parent is to lower my expectations of myself.
Here’s how.