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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To want to blow this "Motherhood" BS into teeny tiny weeny pieces?

137 replies

creepymumweirdo · 17/01/2018 21:28

I'm prepared to get flamed for this, but I've had enough. I can't contain this desperation and rage a moment longer.

I love my little boy to the ends of the earth. I would never do anything to hurt him and will protect him until my last breath. I am a conscientious parent. Some would say an overly anxious one. BUT!

He boils my blood. He is a tiny, irrational narcissistic dictator who does his absolute best to find new ways to rattle me at every opportunity. Of course he is. He's 2.

So surely it's within the bounds of normal to find this mind-bendingly irritating, right? To be so tired and wound up at the end of a working day that it takes all the energy in my knackered old body to not scream "JUST BRUSH YOUR FUCKING TEETH!" after 10 minutes of firm but gentle persuasion. To want to shout "For the love of all that is holy KEEP STILL!" when I watch him restlessly twitching every part of his body in a bid to keep himself awake at the end of a fun and tiring day. To look at him occasionally and think "I wish you weren't here right now" so I could have a massive gin, an hour long bath and go to bed knowing I won't be woken up by the sound of his voice at 5.30am.

Of course, I don't act on any of these feelings. Instead I cuddle him, remind myself how much I love him and how brilliant he is, and when all else fails I walk away and count to ten. Eventually I feel the tension in my body subside, I look forward to spending more time with him and I feel immense guilt at having felt any of those feelings at all.

And here's where my bugbear starts. Why do I feel so crushingly guilty about these feelings? Why have I, until now, never spoken of them honestly to anyone else? Why does it feel like a dirty little secret?

I'm convinced there is a conspiracy around motherhood. A veil of silence that it's dangerous to perforate. Because I have a uterus and the (frankly weird, though remarkable) ability to grow another human inside me and then get them out without either of us dying (mostly, often with hideous consequences that also go unspoken - that's another post) I am expected to have an innate tolerance of all of these massively time consuming, irritating, often boring interactions. One look at mum related websites, blogs, news article and adverts confirms this with the added threat of "Now shut up and be grateful".

Where did this come from? Who was the first female human to raise a child and think "this is a breeze and I am blessed"? If we relied on men to raise our children; to do the majority of endless night wakings and constant changing of sicky clothes and entertaining and unending negotiations and plain old boring drudgery of it all, would we expect them to do it effortlessly? Where is the male Madonna? Clad in regal blue. Glowing, ethereal, smiling and beautiful? Where are the politicians and journalists calling for men to be more responsible, compassionate or 'paternal'? Where are the men writing columns or presenting TV programmes about their struggle with their ambivalence towards having children, or the guilt they feel for not being the father society thinks they should be (there have actually been a very small number of these in recent years, for which I am grateful. If I had the energy to find the articles and cite them I would).

My husband tells me that men and women divulge their parental low points to him quite freely. I envy him. I can't help but think this would not happen were he a woman. It certainly doesn't happen to me.

Maybe I'm a frosty fucker. Work colleagues seem to think 'approachable' is one of my greater strengths, so maybe there's something else at play here. Maybe the myth of motherhood is a useful narrative for some people. I doubt those people are women.

I'm sure there are mothers out there who would never think such dark or unwholesome thoughts about their children. Let's call them, for the sake of argument, the Natural Mothers; as whatever is 'natural' about motherhood (genes? gestation? nurture?) is so ambiguous it's an arbitrary title. I imagine a few of them will be along here soon to tell me I need help. I take my hat off to them. Clearly they have skills that I lack.

But let us be pragmatic for a second: Statistically, what percentage of all women who give birth will fall into this Natural Mother category? I suspect (as, given to bias, I suppose I would) that they are in the minority.

This being the case, who does the Natural Mother trope serve? I, for grace of god, biology, or down and dirty luck, conceived, gestated and gave birth to my son naturally. Whatever that means. And it sure as hell doesn't serve me.

OP posts:
EggsonHeads · 18/01/2018 20:12

Yep. Toddlers can be bad. Some of them though. It's terrible on the one hand you love them but on the other hand you want nothing more than a mute button on them.

EggsonHeads · 18/01/2018 20:16

Oh, and the natural mothers are the ones who have children that aren't that bad. If it weren't for my eldest I would be a natural mother. I love him, I'm happy for him-he's so energetic and extroverted but it's fucking annoying and really draining (for me, ok, most people if we are being honest). My youngest is quieter, less twitchy, less damanding. I have no difficulty in dealing with him and have never found him irritating. I don't love him more but he is easier to get on with.

Absofrigginlootly · 18/01/2018 20:21

I think the OP means that the existence of 'natural mothers' bleating in about how #blessed they are and how wonderfully life affirming and wholey fulfilling every tiny aspect of parenting is does not serve the vast majority of parents who are just trying to do their best, love (and dearest at times) their children and get by as best they can.

The thing is I don't know many of these "blessed" mummy bloggers really tell the truth... it all seems a tiny bit of trying to convince themselves it's the truth? (In a the lady doth protest too much sort of way??)

Like I said, I consider myself to be a "natural mother" in that I am a naturally maternal person. Before DD is was a nurse. I have always been motivated by wanting to care for people. It's just part of me.

Unless OP means natural in terms of having a baby "naturally" (or vagibal birth, no pain relief)... in which case I'm out!! (Epidural and assisted delivery - but it meant DD and I survived childbirth so I'm good with it)

Absofrigginlootly · 18/01/2018 20:23

*detest not dearest

TheBrilloPad · 18/01/2018 20:26

My 2 And 3yr olds are both an absolute joy. They are funny, kind, nice, calm kids. They don't tantrum. They sleep through the night and eat anything put in front of them. I enjoy every minute I spend with them and genuinely love their company.

When they were babies, however, they were total dickheads. Utter arseholes. Swings and roundabouts, innit.

bossbabymomma · 18/01/2018 20:31

Yanbu
Toddlers are fucking ass holes at times
Have some 🍷

TeachesOfPeaches · 18/01/2018 20:51

I'm really struggling with my 2 year old at the moment. Ima single parent and work full time and his behaviour has just deteriorated so much since he turned 2 in December. He has massive tantrums and is so stubborn, and has started hitting and throwing things. I don't know what to do.

goose1964 · 18/01/2018 20:55

You are correct,I'm lucky because I'm now grandparenting. My grandsons are much better behaved for me than their parents. Even at 10 months old my littlest one won't stand still for a nappy change, for me he'll lie on the floor and stay still long enough for me to put his nappy on.

All I can say is it will pass and you'll look back on the good old days when you could pop them in a cot with some toys just to have a break from it all. You can't do that with teenagers

malificent7 · 18/01/2018 20:58

Yanbu..and then some! Spot on op!!

upaladderagain · 18/01/2018 21:21

My two are 18 months apart, and when they were toddlers I used to think they would send me barking mad and that in return I would ruin their lives. Every day I’d lock myself in the loo and scream quietly. If a stranger had knocked on my door and offered to take them away and give them a good home I’d have packed them off there and then.
At the same time I’d have slaughtered with my bare hands anyone who tried to hurt them and I loved them body and soul.
Such ambivalence is totally guilt inducing, confusing and terrifying.
They are in their 30s now, and we are very close and love each other immensely.
One day a week I look after my 18 month old grandson, who is wonderful and frustrating.
Thankfully one day a week is all that is required of me!

moita · 18/01/2018 21:29

My beautiful, funny adorable one year head butted me when I picked him up to put him in his pram today. Cue my lip gushing blood and me trying to deal with it whilst strapping him into his pram.

It's bloody hard work.

SheGotBetteDavisEyes · 18/01/2018 22:57

The more I read your OP, OP, the more I see.

My husband tells me that men and women divulge their parental low points to him quite freely. I envy him. I can't help but think this would not happen were he a woman

People moan at your DH about crap days. You envy this and think that women don't talk to other women about having a bad day?

I imagine a few of them will be along here soon to tell me I need help. I take my hat off to them. Clearly they have skills that I lack.

This does rather damn 'them' with faint praise, doesn't it?

You are quite expansive in your OP, but the essential points seem to be:

kids are irritating
why don't men get this pressure to be perfect

But I'm not getting the warm, fuzzy, fist-bump that other posters are from your OP.

Within what you say is actually a consistent needling of women. The fact that 'other women' are part of a conspiracy of silence; that they don't share the 'truth about parenting' with other women. That only a handful of them are head-shaking, faintly disapproving 'Natural Mothers,' as mentioned above, and 'they' are separate.

That kind of narrative compounds any 'conspiracy of silence,' in my view, and draw more lines where they really, really are not needed.

I get that raising young DC is complex, isolating, scary, brilliant, and a thousand other things. Veiled criticism of other women who may well be on their own parenting journey, with all of their issues, doesn't get a thumbs-up from me, to be honest.

Some women find it easier to speak up and say 'being a mother is SHIT sometimes,' than others. But the ones who aren't saying it might be feeling the same. Or they might not. But that doesn't make them conspirators of some silencing of truth, or one of those 'Natural Mothers,' it might just mean that they cope and live with it all differently.

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