Perfection Pending

By Meredith Ethington

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Motherhood Parenting Perfection Uncategorized

Motherhood is Breaking Me

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I watched my husband’s 90 year old Great Aunt slip into dementia unaware that all of her independence was being stripped a little more each day. She went from being able to do everything for herself, living an independent life well into her late 80’s to suddenly being unable to care for herself at all within a matter of months.

Confined to a wheelchair mostly because of her own fears of falling down, I watch as others lift her and transfer her as she clings desperately to the chair not wanting to move. She fears falling down. She fears for her own safety and security. Her independence has been ripped away, so maybe she clings in protest as others try to move her in a desperate last attempt to assert her own free will?

Motherhood has stolen my independence in a different way, but it still has me clinging. Clinging to old habits, and hopes for my children that maybe I have no control over. It breaks me every single day. So I cling. Hoping to hold onto something secure and stable.

Because motherhood is anything but predictable.

I’ve never been one to really love surprises. In fact, I’d much rather have a well thought out plan to anything than a spontaneous adventure. I want predictability and contingency plans, and security. Don’t just give me one plan, give me three. And if those don’t work out, I still want to know what’s going to happen.

Yet, when you’re a mom, it’s impossible to predict the future. I can’t predict whether my four-year-old will still like apples today when he loved them yesterday. How can I possibly predict the ins and outs of everything motherhood requires of me?

So I cling. I cling to routine and crumble when it is ripped to shreds by sickness working it’s way through five humans that live together. I cling to my sanity as the kids are wild in the morning instead of getting ready for school. I cling to my own identity. Am I still in there now that my life is consumed by raising a family?

A friend recently said that being in families breaks you every single day. It is certainly breaking me. In too many ways to count.

When you’re a child, being in a family means security, and safety. Always having a soft place to land, and arms to comfort you. Hopefully it means always having food when you’re hungry and someone to help you with homework and teach you how to ride a bike. Being in a loving family is great when you’re the child.

But, being in a family when you’re a mom has an added weight that most days I feel like I simply can’t carry. I’m the one responsible for it all, I sometimes think. How did I get here? What part of me is going to break today so I can carry this load?

I break a little more each day being a mother. I break because I need to grow. Not because I am broken. I break because I’m not supposed to be the same person I once was. And really, when I stop to think about it, do I want to be?

So I’m breaking and clinging. And trying to accept that breaking is part of why I’m doing all of this.

I break when they come home sad and I can’t fix it. I break when my husband and I barely get to speak two words to each other because we are consumed by the weight and responsibility and the load that we are expected to carry. I break when I crave alone time but my responsibility just won’t allow it some days.

We are the ones responsible for all of it. Living in families when you’re the parent is messy and difficult and frustrating. But, it’s beautiful isn’t it? Because, it’s breaking us into better people.

I’ve never felt more broken in all my life.

Much like my husband’s Great Aunt, I slipped into breaking unknowingly. But, I realize that I need to feel broken in order to be shaped. I need to learn patience from the strong-willed four-year-old that needs me to hold his hand while he poops. I need to learn acceptance from the seven-year-old that has quirks that are important to him that I simply can’t understand. I need to learn how to put my own needs last and listen with both eyes squarely on my nine-year-old so she knows I’m still here as she navigates her way away from me a little more each day.

Breaking hurts. But, it feels good too.

But, I’m imperfect and can’t always appreciate the bigger picture some days. So I cling. I cling to my past self not wanting to let her go even though I know there is a better self waiting for me at the end of this. Because there will be an end. They will stop needing so much help. They will become adults that want to do adventures I can’t wrap my brain around, and they will, one day, head off to college and not ask me to cut the crusts off their sandwiches anymore.

I cling to a daily routine hoping knowing full well that the routine is always interrupted. I cling to an old relationship with my husband that involved carefree trips to restaurants and sitting in an airport excited for an international trip without a second thought about who we were leaving behind.  We probably don’t realize most days that the relationship is getting sweeter and stronger as we give each other eye rolls across the dinner table when the littles are acting crazy. It’s breaking us.

I cling to who I once was because motherhood is breaking me every single day.

But, that’s what it’s supposed to do. We’re supposed to be broken by motherhood. So loosen that grip. That’s right. Let go of whatever you’re clinging to that’s holding you back of becoming the best mom. Let go of what you thought it was all going to be and what it was all supposed to look like. Instead, accept that motherhood is breaking you.

Let go. Quit clinging. Be broken.

You’ll be glad you did.

 


11 Comments

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Comments

  1. Kelli says

    February 29, 2016 at 6:42 pm

    Just lovely, from one broken mom to the next.

    Reply
  2. Erin says

    March 1, 2016 at 7:05 am

    You summarized in one beautifully written post what I have been celebrating and struggling with for the past 6 years since my first child was born. I have devoted myentire blog to exploring the emotions you described, and you put it all together in one place. Every word resonates with me. Thank you for this.

    Reply
    • Meredith says

      March 1, 2016 at 8:27 am

      Wow! Thanks for such a nice compliment Erin! 🙂

      Reply
  3. sue parker says

    March 2, 2016 at 2:54 pm

    I’m glad you’re beginning to understand.

    Reply
  4. Summer says

    March 6, 2016 at 2:16 pm

    This resonates deeply with me. We are all beautifully broken. Before I was a mother my expectation of motherhood was so incredibly different. I have been forever changed.

    Reply
  5. Cynthia says

    April 4, 2016 at 8:28 am

    I love this post! Thank you for sharing this beautiful thought with us.

    Reply
  6. nicolle says

    April 20, 2017 at 8:24 am

    Wonderfully said. I needed to hear this today. I break every day and at his point I’m not trying to cling to the past. However, ive been trying to reach to a future that my family is not ready for yet. I need to slow down. They still need me too much.

    Reply
  7. Cynthia says

    January 22, 2018 at 10:08 pm

    This was beautifully written. It’s exactly how I felt tonight. I have five wonderful children….We all have good days and bad days, and you’re article was so inspiring to take the good with the bad. We’ll miss these moments, even the ones that break us, when they aren’t little anymore.

    Reply
  8. Sus says

    February 24, 2024 at 1:52 pm

    I needed to hear this so much. Feel like I’m going mad at times with how lonely and relentless this feels/is. Thank you.

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. The Push and Pull of Motherhood - Perfection Pending says:
    June 15, 2016 at 10:35 pm

    […] Motherhood is Breaking Me […]

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  2. Why I Can't Take God Out of My Parenting - Perfection Pending says:
    July 25, 2017 at 12:09 pm

    […] I look in my kids’ eyes, I see Him. I see that He’s building me, and breaking me at the same time with these little souls He’s entrusted in my care. I see the parental […]

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Welcome! I’m Meredith.

Mom. Writer. Diet Coke connoisseur. Born and raised Texan. Lover of real talk and laughter with a hint of sarcasm mixed in.

The Mother Load

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Meredith Ethington

perfectpending

Mom • Author • Mental Health Therapist In Training
Grab my new book, The Mother Load, available now. 👇👇

Night night! 😤 Night night! 😤
If you missed my last post about how raising teens If you missed my last post about how raising teens can wreck you mentally….wellll this is part of the reason why. So lonely! But we are in this together somehow. 😂 Make sure to check out my latest substack and grab a copy of my book —- The Mother Load!
NEW ---> "When there are problems in these big kid NEW ---> "When there are problems in these big kid years, it’s no longer really acceptable to call a friend and air the annoyances of the situation. At least not the specifics.

Sure, you can commiserate with a fellow parent about teenagers being the worst.

But, to be honest - they’re not the worst. They’re kind of amazing. But their problems make me tired to my core." 

Read the latest on my substack. I promise you'll relate. ❤️
So sweet. ❤️ Follow me @perfectpending and bet So sweet. ❤️
Follow me @perfectpending and better yet buy my book or subscribe to my substack to support me.
"I don’t know about you, but I don’t really wa "I don’t know about you, but I don’t really want same-ness anymore. I want messy. I want admissions that shit is hard and we don’t have it all together. I want to have a makeup free, messy bun in my sweats run in with a mom friend and not feel worried she’s checking out my un-groomed eyebrows.

I don’t want to try to give off this illusion that I’m control of my life any better than the next person. It’s a shitshow for all of us, and we continue to hide it for fear of what? Being human?"

Read the rest on my Substack. Link in profile.
WHAT IF THIS IS THE HAPPIEST I’LL EVER BE AND I WHAT IF THIS IS THE HAPPIEST I’LL EVER BE AND I MISS IT? What if I miss the best time of my life. What if it’s right this second?
What if it’s right now while I’m in finals week of grad school, and have a kid that’s sick? 
I already miss so much. The gummy smiles of babes without any teeth. The squeaky voices of 2 year olds. The babbling of a baby that’s just trying so hard to say mama. The grammar mistakes my kids make when they’re talking that I don’t have the heart to correct because I love it too much. 

I miss a lot about those younger years that have already slipped away. My youngest is sick, much like in this picture, but he is too big to snuggle in my arms now when he’s running a fever. 

Today I had the thought, what if this is it? What if this IS the happiest I’ll ever be?
For a moment, I lingered in that thought as I stood over my sink and did the dishes. I started to cry.
Am I missing it? AM I? I felt a tug that maybe I was. Maybe I wasn’t relishing enough, and enjoying enough, and being present enough.
But, then I realized, it will never be ENOUGH. 

Read the rest in my substack ❤️
New year, same me. 😂 #mentalhealth #anxiety #de New year, same me. 😂
#mentalhealth #anxiety #depression
"I don't care" as I literally care about every sin "I don't care" as I literally care about every single thing.
I’ve got to admit - I’m kind of over all of th I’ve got to admit - I’m kind of over all of this. *sweeps arm generally at planet earth*

Look, I’ve never been a half glass full kind of gal. I can ALWAYS find the negative in every situation. 

But, right now it’s easy to say that I’m over it. It being.....

The state of our economy. Social media. People being unemployed. People being racist and homophobic. The debate over politics. People judging people. ALLLLLL of it. 

Everything is crap right now. We joke about it a lot. We have to in order to survive. 

It’s the one millionth day of January but Spring feels so far away. 

I’m over these four damn walls that we call home. 

Yeah, I know. Even as I’m typing this it all sounds like a bunch of ungrateful whiney BS. I hear it. I don’t need you to point it out, Karen. 

But, my guess is you’re reading this right now and realizing you’re over it too. Whatever “it” is in your life.

Some days the world feels like total crap. Everything is a mess. Everything costs too much. For E-V-E-R-Y-B-O-D-Y. 

Yes, even for you Karen. ➡️➡️ to keep reading.
Yes. Boundaries are healthy and good. And they mea Yes. Boundaries are healthy and good. And they mean someone loves you that much to communicate them! Love this wisdom from @wittyidiot
NEW POST ----> "This is not a post about loss of a NEW POST ----> "This is not a post about loss of a loved one. Or loss of a child. Those things are real, and they’re heart wrenching. And, this post is certainly not to compare that loss with the one I’m going to talk about.

But, the loss of yourself in motherhood is real. And It’s not talked about enough." 

Do you feel like you lost yourself in motherhood? How? I really want to know. 

Psss - I am in grad school to become a therapist, and am not ashamed to ask that you subscribe to my paid substack. I just lowered the cost to $36/year! That's like $4/month and you'll have access to all my previous posts, and some new weekly short posts to give you ideas to help with balancing motherhood and your own mental health. I'm learning a lot in school, and will only continue to do so, so subscribe and we'll support each other. ❤️
This memory made me laugh this morning. 🤣 This memory made me laugh this morning. 🤣
Saaaame. @womenwhorunwiththemoon Saaaame. @womenwhorunwiththemoon
I’m sorry are you really wearing doc martens and I’m sorry are you really wearing doc martens and a dress with spaghetti straps and a Tshirt under it while you’re telling me I’m doing it wrong? 🤣 Life is wild. Teenagers are fun.
Found in my pediatricians office. 🤣 What’s th Found in my pediatricians office. 🤣 What’s the moral of the story friends? If you think your household is always sick - it’s because they probably are. Kids make everything more germ-y
Here’s what I do know 👇 No one knows what th Here’s what I do know 👇

No one knows what they’re doing. 
We all feel like imposters. 
Our kids love us anyway. 
We’re all going to be OK. 
You’ve got this (as much as any of us do) 😘

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"By trying to be perfect, we're actually trying to "By trying to be perfect, we're actually trying to avoid being human." 

Do you struggle with perfectionism? Parenthood has helped me quite a bit, but It's something I've battled my whole life. I still struggle occasionally, although it's gotten better. But, let's stop trying to avoid being human and instead embrace ourselves an in turn embrace the entire human race. ❤️ I'd love to hear how you embrace being imperfect. 

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Mood. Mood.
Some of you wanted sources on my last reel where I Some of you wanted sources on my last reel where I said we only need to be getting it right 30% of the time for our kids to have secure attachments. Well I wrote a bit more about the concept of being the “good enough mother” a term coined in the 50’s by a researcher and pediatrician. Check it all out in my newest post. Link in profile.
It’s true! Researchers have found that as long a It’s true! Researchers have found that as long as you’re doing the repair after mistakes the other times - then 30% is enough! Sometimes I worry I’m not doing it right but I definitely know I’m doing it right 30% of the time! 
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