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Challenge: Stretched Too Thin

It’s okay to be the imperfect parent

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Friends,

All I can do, each day, is try my very best.

Some days work magically and as I lay in bed late at night, with a look of utter surprise on my face, I often wonder how I pulled that particular day off.

And other days, well, let’s just say, those days may not have gone as planned and I don’t deserve any awards coming my way.

But friends, on the days where I feel as if my parenting is an epic failure, and after I have beaten myself up a bit, I quickly bounce back to reality and remind myself that I am human.

A human...

Not a superhuman...

Not a superhero...

Not a supermom...

But just a human.

A woman attempting her best each day.

I realize that parenting can often look perfect on TV, movies and social media, but mamas, we need to be on the lookout for fraudulent parenting...

you know, the kind of parenting that appears to be perfect.

But let’s keep in mind...

Perfection is unrealistic.

Perfection is silly to try to attain...

Perfect simply doesn’t exist in parenting.

I have realized that my children will gain so much more by seeing my flaws and imperfections. They will see that I make mistakes, problem solve and learn how to move forward navigating through whatever comes my way.

I owe it to my kids...

to see that I struggle to make decisions.
I overthink most things that come my way and I either need to talk through it or I retreat to my own mind to figure it out.

I owe it to my kids...

to see that many days the laundry is piling up in the bin in the hallway, the vacuum is still out and nothing has been vacuumed and dinner is take out.

I owe it to my kids...

to see that some days more hugs and apologies are needed after some snarky comments were made from me feeling overwhelmed. They need to see all of this so they know it’s okay to let out their ugly side and not stuff their feelings down to the depths of their gut.

I owe it to my kids...

to see my mistakes, and wow, there are a lot of them. We all make mistakes, that’s for sure. It’s just about how we share those mistakes. Do we laugh, talk through it as a life lesson or push the mistake aside pretending it didn’t happen?

I owe it to my kids...

to see how I love. It may not be perfect and filled with chaos and frustration at times, but I love them fiercely and they know it deep in their soul.

My children will see a countless amount of imperfections daily and I’m okay with that. I don’t want to try to attain perfection. It is too much pressure and a goal I am sure to never meet.

So for now, my children will see all parts of me, the good, the bad and the downright ugly.

These may not be my finest parenting moments but my flaws make me who I am as a whole person... a human.

So mamas, on the days you want to be perfect, remember this...

being human is what your children will recall with a smile on their face and love filling up their hearts.

Being imperfect means being real.

Being human and imperfect allows our children to breathe and know that being just as they are is good enough.

Let’s vow to ourselves to parent each day being just as we are... imperfect and proud of it.

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