I grew up in the culture of the superhero mom. Somehow from the positive benefits of the feminist movement came the belief that not only could you have it all, but that you must. To do less was a disservice to the efforts of the previous generation and a poor example to the next. Being a mom wasn’t enough. If you chose to procreate you had to also work full time at a successful meaningful career, while providing your children every possible opportunity along the way. Healthy homecooked meals, a clean house, and academic and social enrichment. Not to mention a happy, thriving marriage while still making it clear that you could do it on your own if you had to.
One of the negatives of social media is that it continues to perpetuate this myth. We see the happy highlights without any of the realities of the struggle backstory. When my husband and I got married, our joint goal was to buy a house and for my husband to earn enough money that we could get by on his income and I would stay home when we were ready to start a family. We agreed on this goal but within a year of our first child being born, I had serious doubts.
Two more kids and a handful of diagnoses later and I found myself in the world of neurodiverse parenting. (I hesitate to use the term special needs parenting because while one of my children does qualify for this designation I know it’s a deep and wide pool and we are in the shallow end).
Yet most days I felt like I was drowning.
Parenting is hard. Full stop. That doesn’t mean it isn’t worth doing or that we should compete about who has it worse. But there is a level of grief that comes with the kind of life I find myself in, one that honestly I haven’t often felt permission to delve into.
I have one or two friends with kids in similar situations with whom I’ve been able to share, but mostly I hide behind the super mom persona. Friends tell me how impressed they are and how I must be so organized and together to pull it off. But that’s far from the truth. Yes, I spent years hauling my kids to twice weekly therapy and now it’s weekly counseling. Medications, special diets, homeschooling, etc. It is definitely a lot, too much if the truth were told.
I am far from super mom. Click To TweetI’m the mom who cries at night because she worries that her kids will never build the resilience needed to succeed in life. I wonder how to even define success. (In joking moments, I say I just want my kids to be self-supporting and stay out of prison and hopefully be generally decent human beings).
I think every parent wants to see their children do better than they did, that’s a big part of the American dream. As a person of faith, it’s a bit more nuanced to me but it’s a struggle nonetheless.
I’m the mom who wants to make excuses for her children but mostly just tries to hide her embarrassment in public and cry it out in private. I hold my peace and lose my temper in equal measure. I say far less than I could because sometimes it’s just too hard to make others understand.
I worry about balancing medications and side effects, isolation and socialization, family and peer relationships. I spend hours reading and studying still left without clear answers because there has yet to be written a book about my specific kids.
I wonder why I was meant to be the parent to these humans when I feel like I fail far more than I succeed. Sometimes I need permission to grieve the life I thought I’d have, and the children I thought I’d raise. I need to be allowed to be the struggling mom who needs help but doesn’t know how to ask for it and to drop the supermom mask, at least for a while.
I’m far from the only one, but today I’m the one who has the words and the strength to say it. We’re sad, we’re angry, we’re afraid and many of us feel so very alone. Alone in our marriages, our families, our churches, our schools, and communities. So much of the burden we carry is unseen and yet unbearably heavy. We shouldn’t need permission but often we feel like we do because to everyone else, we’re supermoms. But inside we’re just struggling to do the best we can all the while knowing it may not be enough.
I’m your neighbor on FMF, and I’m your neighbor in motherhood! I too have “neurodiverse” kiddos, and I work with them as well. I’m a speech language pathologist, writer, and mothering most of the time. Our stories are similar. And, I love that God placed me next to you today! Cheers to the weekend! I’m raising a glass of water with limes.
Jennifer
Excellent post, my children are grown but I remember when they were little and what a challenging time that was. My daughter has struggled with a learning disability but will be heading to college this fall. Take time to rest when you can, it is so important and do not give up on those dreams. We serve a big God who has a plan for each one of your children. BTW, sorry my title was similar to yours. FMF#30
Your honest words may help another mom.
Reading this on John’s IPad. Can’t follow you anymore on the Nook— outdated security clearance. You write so well. I am glad to read and acknowledge your need to just vent and be heard. Agree with other comments and pray that this is read by another mom who needs to know she is not alone, even if she is too tired to comment and let you know that it helped. I’m sure it did and I’ll say thanks for sharing….for her. Jessie Ann
My goodness, this speaks to me so much! I am also have neurdiverse kiddos and that world can be so incredibly lonely and overwhelming at times! I have people from time to time tell me they think I am doing a great job, and that I handle it so well, and so on. While I know they mean well, its hard to hear sometimes, because I honestly feel like I am barely making it half the time. Sometimes we just need to be heard! Hang in there Mama, you ARE doing a good job <3
At my job I work with neurodiverse adults (I think I prefer that term!) and I know their parents have had to deal with some of the emotions you’ve described. Parenting IS hard, and the additional, unexpected, and uncharted challenges are added, it’s even harder. Thank you for sharing your heart, to help us understand and pray for you.
Your neighbor at FMF#25
Beautiful and genuine post. Parenting is already so hard and to layer neurodiverse children on top and the job feels Herculean and nearly impossible on some days. Good for you for recognizing and letting go of the sheen of social media perfection. You’re doing great! 👍