As our babies are getting older and more independent, and developing more and more personality, I was wondering how many of you are struggling with the old cliche of "becoming your mother." S+TMs, do you feel like you battled some of those demons with your first?
Not to be an AW, but I have been having a bit of a rough patch lately, and was wondering if anyone else was having a similar experience. I don't actually think there was wisdom in the way my mother parented that I just couldn't see when I was younger (quite the opposite - I was very obedient and agreeable when I was younger), and it's really hard to fend off some well-ingrained though terribly flawed ideologies while raising a young child.
Makes me wish I'd invested in good therapy pre-baby, yanno?
Re: Those Intentionally Estranged from Their Mothers...
For now:
HUGS!
Am I becoming my mother? Yes. In a lot of ways, yes I am. I like to think that being aware of that fact allows me to accept the common parenting techniques I want to keep and replace or upgrade the ones I would like to remain in my childhood.
Have you considered going to an ECFE class? DH and I went to one this week that I enjoyed. It was about self esteem and the difference between "praise" (what was done when I was growing up) and "encouragement" (how things are done now). I'm still wrapping my head around all this. I say "good helper" (or good girl / good boy) to LO all the time. This focuses on the child and teaches them to seek approval from others. Instead I need to train myself to say "good job", which focuses on the child's behavior / choice and teaches them to "own" their choices and decisions.
Probably not the kind of therapy you were referring to, but I really enjoyed learning something new about child development and parenting.
I hope your path ahead becomes more clear in the very near future.
I truly over-compensated with my eldest. We are working with her to help her overcome "learned GAD" (I have generalized anxiety disorder, in part due to growing up in the environment that my parents created, and my first was born before I was diagnosed and began seeking treatment - as a result, she has a lot of anxiety about things that I am triggered by, because she was exposed to my own uncontrolled anxiety during some of those peak years). You can see in my second daughter that she still has anxious reactions (and even panic attacks), but she also recovers faster, she doesn't have lingering anxious thoughts, and it does not interfere with her day-to-day activities... and I do think a lot of that has to do with me having more control over my own anxiety and my choice to recognize the things I do not like about my own reactions, and improving upon myself.
It does get better. With every step you take in your own journey to recognizing, recovering, and rebounding, you will gain confidence in your own parenting. You will learn to identify when you've made a poor choice, and you will feel proud of yourself for being able to accept it and then make changes in yourself. That is (I think) the biggest difference between a good mother and a crap mother: The willingness to reform ourselves when we realize we made a mistake.
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My mom did a lot of overcompensating trying not to be her mom. I sure do stress about picking habits up from her by osmosis, but I have been actively trying to forget about (thanks therapy).
I concentrate on who I want to be and what I want to say and do and go from there instead of thinking too hard about what I do not want to say and do.
I'm so tired right now, but I hope that makes sense