Am I amazing or a complete failure as a parent? Allowing myself be imperfect.

Recently we had our final meeting with our foster care social worker. She was the one who did our intake application and interviews, she was there when the transfer was made from the birth parents to us, and she’s come monthly for the last three and a half years for home visits.

Now that we’ve moved to a different part of the country, our file will be moved to a different organization that has jurisdiction locally. Hence the goodbye.

We took care of the formalities, and then she told me how much she appreciated working with us. She said,”Even though there have been times we’ve had strong disagreements (yes, when I found myself facing policies that I believed were harmful for my child!), I appreciate that you’ve always been willing to listen to me and consider my view, and that we’ve been able to talk about it.

She continued: “On a personal note, I have a lot to learn from you as a mother. Leadership Parenting, that’s what your approach is, right? I see that all the time, in the way you say ‘yes’ to your children and how you say ‘no’, really I see it in many different things you do. I can learn a lot from you.”

Picture taken by the social worker

Coming from someone who has been in my house regularly for years and has seen a lot of situations, her feedback was significant and appreciated.


Then there was two days later, when I was so, so, so frustrated with my seven year old and responded very disappointingly. I can’t even remember now what triggered it – it wasn’t something major – it was facing the kind of thing that I deal with every day.

A few months ago I went to a workshop on setting boundaries for kids with special needs. The workshop leader was excellent, but I felt very bothered listening and at the end I spoke up. “I’ve been using all these techniques for years – I’ve raised all my children like this. And it’s important to be clear that this approach doesn’t make it easy to parent a child with special needs – sometimes it just makes it possible to cope. Because I use these all day, every day, and sometimes it is just really hard. I think it’s important to be clear that if it’s hard doesn’t mean someone is doing something wrong.”

Yirmi (who is an awesome kid who happens to have Trisomy 21) will be eight in a week. When I think of that birthday I have to take some deep breaths and remind myself to let go of my idea of when things should happen, and also remind myself that as a parent, I’m enough.

I think that many (all??) parents struggle with these split emotions of sometimes doing great as a parent, and then falling on your face and feeling like a complete failure – sometimes within minutes. And you know what? There’s no contradiction to being a fantastic parent a lot of the time and struggling mightily at other times.

It’s the reality of parenting.

When I’m feeling discouraged and inadequate as a parent, I remind myself that I’m doing my best in every moment. We all are. Sometimes my best looks impressive and sometimes it really doesn’t look good at all, but with the good and with the not so good…..I’m enough.

Avivah

7 thoughts on “Am I amazing or a complete failure as a parent? Allowing myself be imperfect.

  1. Dear dear Avivah, thank you for telling us that the woman we look up to as Supermom also has those moments and feelings!

    1. Aaaack, Shoshana! You know me in real life and know I’m not superwoman, and goodness knows I’ve tried throughout the years here for that to be very clear! But yes, I think we all struggle with those feelings, no matter how long we’ve been parenting and no matter how much ‘success’ we’ve had.

  2. Dear Avivah,

    I’ve been participating for the past three years in a parenting workshop of ‘Gishat Shefer’, and one of the main lines that keep being repeated, is אין תנאים להורות, there are no conditions to being a parent. In other words, there is no list of things that if you stick to them, you qualify as a parent. There is no such thing as a “good” mother. A mother is a mother, period. After hearing that message time after time, it started sinking in to me, and like so many others, one of the best things we get out of the workshop is throwing the guilt out the trash.

    I see your approach to be so much similar to ‘Shefer’ and remind myself of you often during class.

    Thanks for another great post!

    1. Thanks for sharing this, Tehilla!

      I’m reading a novel to my kids exploring the idea of what is enough materially, and was thinking just today that the parallel for me as a mother is exploring continually the question of when am I enough as a mother – and the answer is, right now, as I am, with all my good qualities and with all the things that still could use a lot of improvement.

  3. That was just what I needed to read and internalize, today and every day.
    Thanks for your honesty and humility.

  4. Thank you Aviva!
    This was really good and comforting for me to hear too, especially from a role model like you!

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