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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To feel ‘less’ of a mother when you have one child

218 replies

HelloSunshine100 · 05/07/2025 22:18

Lately I don’t know if I am creating this feeling myself or just noticing things but does anyone else feel like others make you feel less of a parent when you only have one child?
Like the school mums with 3 young kids under five rushing from school run to nursery and carting the baby around etc..almost like they are the ones to really be exhausted and tired and if you have one child it’s awkward to claim your struggling and tired cos you only have one?! Almost like feeling less entitled to the role as parent as you don’t have multiple kids ‘you only have one it must be so easy’ these sorts of comments are widely thrown around…

OP posts:
MeganM3 · 06/07/2025 00:00

Well 1 is very easy compared to 3!

SlightlyTooMuch · 06/07/2025 00:02

MeganM3 · 06/07/2025 00:00

Well 1 is very easy compared to 3!

So don’t have three! It’s not compulsory!

Cocktailsincans · 06/07/2025 00:07

HiCandles · 05/07/2025 23:50

Not less of a mother, but a mother having a different experience. I didn't realise how easy it was having just one until I had two. It definitely didn't feel easy at the time. I was exhausted at times. Then with two I found out I could get even more exhausted. Naptimes, making food, clearing up, juggling schedules, everything I fretted over as a first time mum became harder with two opposing sets of needs.
I do look at my friends with one and think why are you making such a fuss, you only have one to sort, you get so much free time with one parent free, but then I remember I was them once too and it's only by going through it having two plus that you can appreciate the experience of one.

Again, your experience is not the same for all, you children are not the same as everyone else’s and your situation isn’t, We can’t possibly know how hard or easy life is for others.
I have a friend with 4 kids, v wealthy family, she doesn’t need to work, but does bits from home with the family business, dad works from home too, can choose their hours etc, both do pick ups/drop offs. They have a great nanny, the kids are pretty feral as in the mum is extremely laid back, but they’re easy kids.
Cut to my friend whose husband recently met someone else. She’s a single parent working all hours, no extra help, her Ds is lovely but has lots of extra issues he needs help with and is extremely demanding. She has to constantly arrange play dates and activities to keep him entertained, all whilst she’s utterly exhausted. Mum of 4’s kids generally are off somewhere in the garden or house or pool all playing together or keeping each other occupied

Who would you say had the harder life?

A mother is a mother, no matter how many children they have. Let’s as women support one another instead of constantly judging or thinking we are better/have it harder etc etc…you just never know!

Swampdonkey123 · 06/07/2025 00:18

It makes sense that in general it gets harder the more DC you have. It doesn’t make us parents of one any less parents, or that we can’t struggle.

TheNinny · 06/07/2025 00:33

i’ve got one child and sometimes feel (or made to feel intentionally or unintentionally) that i’m not a ‘proper mum’. Someone even ‘jokingly’ said that to me once. So I get you. I know i am a proper mum, and my life is very busy in other ways so at times Im more tired/frazzled/time poor than my friends with 2+, but I still have a sense that I don’t understand children or motherhood as much as others with more do, I feel this way at the school gates or functions mainly. BUT I am quite an insecure person and worry about how i’m perceived so this probably doesn’t help any exaggerate slights that may or may not be there.

NameChangedForThis2025 · 06/07/2025 00:48

We all have different bandwidths and stress tolerances.

I was pretty sure that one was the most I was capable of being a good parent to, and even with one I struggle with overwhelm. So I stopped at one.

I know objectively one is easier, but I’m also sure that our experience of what is easy/hard in parenting is informed by our own personal capacity. It’s totally likely that I find parenting my one child harder than some (not all) mums find parenting two or more.

I’m not less of a mum, I’m just a different person, that’s ok.

Tubs11 · 06/07/2025 01:20

Parenting is a hard gig and I think there are pros and cons when you have 1,2,3 or more kids

DarkForces · 06/07/2025 01:25

Parenting is a relationship, not a job and all that matters is the strength of each unique relationship with each child you have, however many you have. Being a positive, safe parent and enabling and supporting them to develop to the best of their abilities is the way to judge your 'worth' as a parent. I have one child and once she's an adult I'm sure she'll weigh up my parenting and her judgement is the only one I care about. I hope, on balance, she recognises I tried my best and made her childhood as good as I could.

I've only had one husband too. We've been married nearly quarter of a century and over half my life. Doesn't make me less of a wife than someone who has married multiple times. It's just a different experience

SunnyFTM567 · 06/07/2025 01:53

I think this is about your own insecurities than anything else.

Of course having one child is easier than having 3, at least in the early years.

Personally, I am happy with just the one. It's partly selfishness, my baby is only 1 but I am already back at work, the gym, starting to go out here and there (rarely but still). I didn't realize how selfish I am and how much I need my own space before i had my son. But at the same time I'm a perfectionist and have an anxious personality and I've thrown myself completely into motherhood to a point that it was quite damaging. I love him.more than anything and I give him absolutely everything I've got. I really do. I couldn't cope with 2.

Of course, there are outside factors too. Our families are not around but they'd be useless anyway. Everything is on me and my husband.

Pregnancy was horrific for me. Nothing I could do to prevent just how sick and disabled I was. By 32 weeks I couldn't leave the house because 1) I couldn't move because of severe PGP and 2) I was still vomiting 3x a day. Then I also got a liver condition which had to be monitored every few days until I gave birth. So that was fun. Not doing that again.

I just think I wasn't built for multiple children 😅🤣

failedatlifee · 06/07/2025 02:02

Really? I have 4 and people often tell me it must be easier for me as 4 is easier than 1 apparently so seems different people say different things depending on who they are talking to I always get told her easy I must have it. My sister has one and she would often tell me how much harder her life is!

Lavender115 · 06/07/2025 02:22

A woman I manage said her husband commented how people with one child can’t complain. I just laughed it off (that kind of comment doesn’t bother me). I think people can complain about anything - if you don’t have children it’s selfish. If you have one it’s very sad as they don’t have a sibling. If you have two and they are both one gender then it’s a shame you never had the other. If you have three or four you have too many, sucking resources dry and find a hobby.

I couldn’t be bothered - I will have exactly as many as I choose and am in no competition with anyone else.

Rafting2022 · 06/07/2025 02:31

Whynotjustengageyourbrain · 05/07/2025 22:48

This. I think anyone who has 3 kids is insane (and in the cases I know the third has been an accident!)

How is being rude about people with 3 kids any different to what the OP has posted about people behaving badly towards her for having one child?

This thread should be about supporting people’s choices and circumstances, whether they are the same or different to our own.

Whynotjustengageyourbrain · 06/07/2025 03:13

Rafting2022 · 06/07/2025 02:31

How is being rude about people with 3 kids any different to what the OP has posted about people behaving badly towards her for having one child?

This thread should be about supporting people’s choices and circumstances, whether they are the same or different to our own.

Well I am allowed to have my opinion and I actually think people who choose to have 3 children are selfish. But I keep these opinions to myself. Obviously having 3 children is harder than having one, so there's no need for OP to be bothered or insulted about it.

MatLeave · 06/07/2025 03:17

No, it's a matter of choice. Excluding multiple births and circumstances outwith the mothers control. Embrace it.

JudesBiggestFan · 06/07/2025 03:53

As soon as you get pregnant you have to switch off to what other people say. Parenting is the biggest competition we ever unwittingly enter. For every time someone has made you feel less of a mother for having one, as a mom of three I guarantee I’ve heard different nonsense. This thread is a prime example! If I listened to mumsnet on this subject, I’d hear I’m spreading my resources too thinly, it’s chaos, I’m a drudge, I’ve lost my freedom. Wrong on all counts, but what difference does it make to me what others think? The only thing that matters to me is the happiness of me and my family.

Dontcallmescarface · 06/07/2025 05:28

No matter how many children you have there will always be a negative comment about it from someone. Being "less of a mother" isn't down to how many children you may, or may not, have, it's all to do with how you treat them. DD tells me that I'm a great mother and her opinion is the only one that counts.

NoviceScoutMum · 06/07/2025 06:01

I only have one child, but he tells me regularly that I'm the "mummiest mummy in the world" 🤷‍♀️

DeedlessIndeed · 06/07/2025 06:08

I have a 12 month old, who apart from never sleeping through the night and being a bit clingy has been quite an easy baby.

Also have an incredibly supportive DH, who has supported me to become a SAHP, so no worries about work for the next year.

I am still bloody exhausted. How the duck everyone else manages is beyond me!

I'm not less of a mother, but I can admit there are some absolute troopers out there.

HandsKnees · 06/07/2025 06:12

I have one child and have many friends with 2 or 3 or 4 children. I'm sure it is easier to have 1, in the same way that having 1 job would be easier than having multiple jobs. Of course, there are factors like the level of support you have, the temperaments of the child, that can make having 1 child challenging too, and having 1 child certainly doesn't feel 'easy', but comparatively speaking it usually is. I don't find it offensive at all to concede that.

theonlyonestillawake · 06/07/2025 06:20

I'm a better mum BECAUSE I only have one. Being tired doesn't make you more of a parent. DS is an only by chance, not design so I get the guilt and comparison to other families. But DS gets more attention, experiences, hobbies etc than if he had siblings. I am fun and present and we do things we wouldn't be able to afford if we had more children.

distinctpossibility · 06/07/2025 06:23

Being a mother is binary, you are or you're not.

I have 4 children and my observation would be that our life is far more child centric than those with 1 or 2 children.

Thedevilhasfinallycaughtupwithhim · 06/07/2025 06:31

As you can see from this thread, there’s a lot of judgement made on women with more than two children.
Try not to participate in it. ☺️ you’re happy with your decision and that’s all that matters. Some people will always try to put others down for making different choices to make themselves feel better. These comments are never really about you.

244milesnorth · 06/07/2025 06:37

This is more about your own insecurities than anything else

I have 3 including a set of twins. As a single parent. Yes it’s hard and on the odd occasion I only have 1 at a time its so bloody easy and a parenting dream.
i don’t consider those with only one child less of a parent but I do think they have it easy in comparison 😂

Batbrown · 06/07/2025 06:39

You’re projecting as you feel insecure. The comments suggest most don’t feel that way.

Shitstix · 06/07/2025 06:43

Yes, I sort of know what you mean as there is 5 years between dc1 and dc2. I sometimes felt like others thought I couldn't hack being a parent so stopped at 1.

But when I was ready we went for dc2 and I'm so glad as 2 was our number.

Tbh I look at parents to 3+ dc and take my hat off. I know the work that goes into having 2.

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