Turns out…Crying it out is for the moms!
Everyone says being a mom is hard. In fact, when I was
pregnant with E.R., I felt like that was what people wanted to tell me
about. I actually found myself wanting a
little less of a reality check and a little more sunshine and rainbows. But
even with all of the doses of reality sent my direction, I still found myself
of the struggle bus for the first 3…or 4…or 5 months of Etta’s life. (Who am I
kidding…I think I’m on the Speed bus
some days.)
My very lowest of lows came when I felt like I had zero
control over what was happening. I didn’t know why Etta was screaming and I
didn’t know what to do to fix it. Or even worse, I KNEW why Etta was screaming
and what would fix it, but for whatever reason, the screaming still
continued…some times for a Long. Time.
So, what do you do in those moments? What do you do when you
feel like you have no other options in the moment and you’re at your breaking
point? I can tell you what I did: I broke. I cried. Over the first several
months of Etta’s life – and still to this day – I found that often times
exactly what I needed in the hardest moments was just to be broken for a few
minutes. I needed to cry out my frustration.
What I struggled with, though, was that every time I cried, every time I
felt like I let the struggle get to me and break me for just a little bit, that
I failed. Why couldn’t I handle what was given to me? I am Etta’s mom – I should be able to handle this.
Should. A seemingly innocent word that can cut right into
your core. It implies that there is a
standard somewhere that has been set in regards to, in this case, what a mom is
able to do/fix/handle/etc. It implies that in the instances where we can’t do
what we “should” be able to do that we failed -- failed in the moments where I
“should” be able to do what my daughter needs, fix what she needs fixed. If
there’s some standard somewhere that sets the bar for what a mom can do, who
set that standard? Where did the ‘should’ come from?
Here’s the kicker: It came from me.
Being a mom was something that I have always known that I
wanted, and after having a miscarriage with our first baby, that only
intensified my feelings. Scott and I waited for what felt like such a long time
for our sweet Etta girl and I suppose I felt like I owed it to her to have
everything under control. I felt like I was made for this, so I should be able
to do it like a pro. Scott never came home and asked me what I did that day,
why Etta was crying, why I hadn’t taken a shower yet that day, why Etta didn’t
take a nap all day. Our families and
friends were ready and willing to give help. But I still felt this overwhelming
pressure to have it all together, all by myself.
What it really came down to was this: I was afraid of what it
would say about me if I asked for help. I was worried that other people wouldn’t
think that I was able to handle it all. The truth is that I can’t handle it all
on my own, but that doesn’t say anything about me except for that I’m built
exactly how I’m supposed to be. I’m going to quote my pretty brilliant brother
on this next part – life is meant to be lived together, with people, in
community. None of us can do it, whatever “it” is for you, all by ourselves. This wasn't a new thought to me - but it was a whole other idea to actually accept that I couldn't be amazing all the time all on my own. We are built to rely on other people for support.
Scott understood this far before I did. (Story of my life...I married a pretty smart guy.) When
E.R. was about 4 months old, he sent a couple rounds of S.O.S. text messages to
our moms after some particularly difficult, sleepless nights. I immediately
received texts from our moms with ideas for helping Etta through this rough patch
and offers of grandma time for Etta and help for me. It took him reaching out
for help FOR me to realize that it’s ok to ask for help, that I can’t do
everything, and that I’m not supposed to know everything. Not only is it ok to ask for help, that’s what
I was supposed to do. That’s one of the
functions of community. And no one
looked down on me for crying, for breaking down, for being lost. Their response
wasn’t that I should have been able to do better, their response was to help.
We need others to help us realize that you don’t have to
have it figured out all the time and that sometimes you need help. I needed
others to help me understand that all the pressure that I was putting on myself
with my self-imposed “should” was not necessary. Most of the stress of the “should”
could be fixed by having a good cry and asking for help.
Ask for and accept help. Know that you’re going to struggle.
Understand that you were made to rely on others in your circle. When things are
tough, cry it out for a minute, find some help, and then keep going. You’ve got
this.
In the words of Carrie Bradshaw: Stop “shoulding” all over yourself.

I love this post!!! And it even reminds ME that its ok to ask for help eventhough I'm not a "mom". By the way, you are such a "Carrie" writer (if Carrie were a mom lol). Keep writing the good stuff girl! Xoxo
ReplyDeleteI meant to give credit for the last line to Sex and the City! I knew I had heard it somewhere before but I wasnt sure where and then Scott remembered where it came from 🤣
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