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A positive thread about being a lone parent.

141 replies

OptimistS · 06/01/2009 22:08

I've been reading a lot of posts lately about people who are desperately unhappy in their relationships but are reluctant to leave because they don't want to be a single parent. I've also been reading some heart-rending posts about people who find being a lone parent terribly lonely and feel that they are not a 'proper family'. Am I the only one who absolutely loves being a single parent? Come on all you single MNers. Let's have some positive stories about being a lone parent. I don't want to dismiss the feelings of those who aren't happy. They are valid feelings and they are entitled to them. However, I would like to show that it doesn't have to be like that and that it can actually be very enjoyable in the right circumstances. If we can give hope to a single pregnant mum, a parent facing divorce, or a recent single parent who is still finding the future daunting, it will be well worth it.

I'll start the ball rolling. I am mum to 2-year-old twins (well, 2 in a couple of weeks). I can honestly say that I am happier and more fulfilled now than I have ever been in my life. For once, I have stopped tying up my identity and goals (and therefore self-responsibility) with another and taken control of my own destiny. I feel incredibly empowered as a result. I don't have to compromise on decision making. I have a much stronger bond with my children than I think I would have done had I remained with my x. I have a good job with fantastic bosses who are more like friends to me, and wonderful friends who I count as family.

The family angle is a good one that I think we often get sidetracked by. But the truth is, if you look at different cultures in the world, and the idea of family through the ages, it's clear that the modern idea of the typical nuclear family is a very recent, western idea. Many societies are based on the idea of extended family, while other societies work well based on polygamy, etc. I like to think that familes can come in all shapes and sizes and are best described as 'a collection of people whose lives are interrwined and who all care deeply about one another". That could be two gay men bringing up a child, a single parent with children, a typical nuclear family, a step-parent family, or anything really. I consider myself and my children as a proper family. We have no need of a man (though it would be nice if I met the right one - I'm certainly not a man-hater). I count friends as well as relatives as my extended family, possibly because my friends are more involved in my day-to-day life than my family (my wonderful parents are sadly both dead, my dear sister is in Australia, and my elderly aunts and uncles all live miles away).

All in all, I am very content with my lot. Those of you who are happy too, please join in.

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
Gettingagrip · 08/01/2009 11:39

I agree sleeping, no man will ever cross this threshold! It would be nice to be able to have a relationship with a man that was a bit like the the ones I have with my friends, but with a bit extra!!! I don't really know if that's possible though! And I really am not too bothered at the moment. That might change when the kids eventually leave home...if they ever do!!!

I think it was when my barrister described my husband and his family to me in fine detail without ever having met them that I realised I had dome the right thing, no question!

That concrete block on your chest is lifted away, the one with 'misery' stamped all over it.

You are no longer on the back foot the whole time. You no longer have to justify every move you make. You can have your own opinion! You can do something without getting through the barrier that is your partner first. You no longer have the shine taken off something that you enjoy or feel proud of.

My god...can't stop now I have started!!!

sleepingwiththeenemy · 08/01/2009 12:02

LOL, well don't stop. It will serve to validate what we're doing when times get a bit hard sometimes, as they inevitably do and will. It will also enable any single mother reading this to stick her fingers up (metaphorically of course ) to anyone who makes derogatory remarks about single mothers.

So I'll add some more....I am still watching the clock in the afternoon, and waiting for sounds of arrivals, but this time it is with pleasure and comfort knowing my children are home safely and I've got their company for the next few hours, rather than to hear how hard the car door is slammed, as that would enable me to gauge how rough me and the children were going to have it that night. My son has just text me to ask if his friend can come over to do homework tonight...I was able to say yes straightaway without worrying about how his stepfather would react to having someone else in the house.

OptimistS · 08/01/2009 12:32

So many of your stories really echo with me. I remember the feeling well of having a day our ruined that I'd been looking forward to for ages, simply because ex didn't want to go, and listening for the sound of the door so I could guage what mood he was in.

It's the little things that make so much difference, like swte says: being able to give a yes or no answer straight away without the fear of a huge row if you make the wrong call. I also really get the make-up for the school run thing.

This is so great to read. I don't want to sound like a patronising idiot, but I'm so proud of you all. It's reading stories like this that justify my pride in being a single parent and make me want to stick two fingers up to all those idiots who think we all play the system and keep having chidren to claim benefits.

WELL DONE US!!!

OP posts:
oldraver · 08/01/2009 13:34

.....I remember the feeling well of having a day our ruined that I'd been looking forward to for ages, simply because ex didn't want to go....

That so rings a bell, there have been plenty of 'spoilt' moments due to some silly idea in the head. I always remember how when in hospital for 10 days after having DS1, dh constantly went on about my greasy skin and open pores. I snapped in the end and told him to shut up but found him 5 mins later leaning over to one side pulling faces at my offending pores on my nose. Totally put a dampener on what should of been a lovely time

wintercitylover · 08/01/2009 13:45

OMG Old raver

when I had just given birth to DS1 (premie 6 weeks early) my exH bought my hair dye into the hospital (must have had a pack at home) and said didn't I think I ought to do my roots!!!!

Am ashamed to admit I did as I was told. For him appearances are everything!!

LittleBella · 08/01/2009 14:47

Another one here who is happy to be a LP and is constantly irritated by the assumption that our families are somehow more likely to be dysfunctional and screwed up than those of coupled parents.

I think what has been v. important for me, is that being a LP gave me the time and energy and importantly, the humility, to face up to my own psychological inadequacies. I'd been in such denial that my childhood had affected me, that I was blind to the fact that anyone who had got involved with a man like my XP in the first place, must have had ?ishoos? . While I was with him, I could kid myself that we were a ?normal? family, that the fact that I?d come from an abusive home hadn?t had any long term effect on me. Becoming part of a marginalised and despised group made me re-assess if there was any particular reason why I?d decided to have children with a man who was very obviously never going to be able to be a proper partner or father.

It made me understand how emotionally unhealthy I?d been and it has made me gain insight into my (bad) choices. It?s also meant that instead of struggling in denial to present a brave happy front to the world, I?ve sought counselling and found out how to be emotionally healthy and happy and to pass that on to my children. Whenever I hear David Cameron and his ilk going on about ?broken families? I seethe and rage ? he?s talking about MY family, which was broken all the time I was with my xp. When I became a LP, I began the process of fixing my family ? it isn?t broken anymore, it?s bloody fixed thank you very much, and me being a lone parent isn?t a symptom of dysfunction and inadequacy, it?s a symptom of me being healed. Unlike me, my children are growing up in a happy, functional family where they are being taught to take ownership of their feelings and responsibility for their behaviour. I?m bloody proud that I?ve been the first one for generations in my family to break a cycle of abuse and when I hear those fucking tories talking about my family as ?broken? because I didn?t continue the cycle of dysfunction and denial, it fills me with disgust and sadness that they can't see how their blinkered view of what families should be, promotes a broken-ness they don't recognise, because it's safely hidden in a nice nuclear family.

LittleBella · 08/01/2009 14:48

Oops, sorry, that turned into a bit of a rant didn't it, this is supposed to be a feel-good thread.

Anyway, I feel good!!!

OptimistS · 08/01/2009 14:50

Well said LittleBella. Took the words right out of my mouth! I too feel that my children will be brought up far better precisely beccause I am a single parent.

OP posts:
sleepingwiththeenemy · 08/01/2009 16:12

I've just come back from picking up my uoungest from school. At the bus stop there was me and DD2 (single parent), another mum with her 2 boys (single parent), and a mum with her son (married). Whilst there, DD2 stood and chatted to me about her day. The 2 boys were running around but when their mum called them back they came, and the other lad, aged 4/5, picked up a big stone and threw it at a parked car. On the way home a lad on the bus, still in primary school, declared 'f**king hell' in front of his (married) mother. Now, please don't think that this is an anti-2-parents thing, it's so not. But it IS challenging the myth that, as was said above, children from 'broken homes' are dysfunctional, with behavioural problems and 'ishoos' . When I was still with my abusive ex, the children's behaviour was worse than it is now, and because I have removed them from the conflict, I too feel that they are now in a fixed, healed home where they can blossom into the people they want to be, not the people they are being bullied into. If that makes sense?

solidgoldsoddingjanuaryagain · 08/01/2009 16:20

ANother happy single parent here. I was a long-term happy single before I became a parent, though - and DS dad, having been an old drinking buddy (though we did date briefly when we met 20 years ago) is a great co-parent though he and I would kill each other if we had to live together.
I do think that the myth of couplehood-as-the-only-way-to-live is very damaging, particularly to women - remember all those studies that show the happiest people are married/partnered men (have a woman to service them domestically, emotionally, socially and sexually) and single women (don't have to service a man).
It is far, far better to be single than to cling on to a partner who is abusive, or so lazy (and sexist: servicing him is what you are for) that he's like another dependent child to be looked after, or a man who is pleasant but bores you to death. Never mind how dreadful it is for your mental health and self esteem to expend huge amounts of effort and energy trying to 'keep' a partner who is not very interested in remaining in arelationship with you ie wants to have sex with other people or just to get away from you.

sleepingwiththeenemy · 08/01/2009 16:22

Anyway, what the hell...to get back to the OP...I LOVE being a single Mum, it's been a massive learning curve, I've learnt how to use a drill, fix my computer, find my way around...I was always told I couldn't do this stuff, so I believed it...I can burn the dinner without having it flung across the table (the kids don't mind me scraping off the burnt bits, lol), we can sit in our pyjamas all day if it's a horrid day and we're not going out...And I'm getting back to the feisty, gutsy girl I was 20 years ago.

aseriouslyblondemoment · 08/01/2009 16:52

sleepingwiththeenemy
you and me both girl
and yes i agree i think us single mums get
younger and NOT older
and i'm so enjoying it lol

sleepingwiththeenemy · 08/01/2009 17:05

Absolutely ...but I think there's a lot of truth in that, seriously. Especially if you've come from a controlling and or abusive relationship. When someone is putting you down all the time, you start to believe the bad stuff. So you start to act like it, a kind of self fulfilling prophecy. But once you are away from that, you can start to find yourself again, and build up your self esteem and confidence, and that then shows through. You've also not got the worry of the previous night's row on your mind, or the row that's coming, so you look less stressed too. Of course it's not without it's pressures, but I find that my life is infinitely calmer, happier and much more content since becoming a single mum.

oldraver · 08/01/2009 17:06

LB... The Cameron Man is my MP.... I hope to God he never comes canvassing... actually there is a photo somewhere of him giving an award to my then child 'from a broken home'

sleepingwiththeenemy · 08/01/2009 17:09

Just as an interesting 'aside'...I was in a relationship after leaving my ex...and it was exactly like having another child to look after. Me and the children all got flu, and I was particularly ill with it, and he turned up at my house with flu also (although he seemed well enough to drive, strangely ) and asked could he go to bed at my house, and could I bring him a lemsip, and can't I lie down with him and look after him please? I was practically on my knees with flu, and I was trying to look after 3 children with flu, and HE wanted looking after too???? ooohhhhh....nooooooo...uh uh.....I'm not going there again! And he had the cheek to tell me my hair didn't look too hot that day!

aseriouslyblondemoment · 08/01/2009 17:26

swte
yes i came from a controlling relationship
and i was put down all the time and i had rock bottom confidence in every dept
but thanks to all my wonderful friends and their undying support i managed to start again on my own with my dcs
and no it's not easy but i for the most part find me taking a 'is that really important?' approach to life now
i'm much more laid back which is great
and yes do also owe alot to my BF as he's made me see that actually i am truly deserving of having nice things happening to me
and that's to me the me who thought i was a worthless waste of space
ah bless him eh?

aseriouslyblondemoment · 08/01/2009 17:49

swte
missed that last post for some reason
what the fcuk?
bet his feet didnt touch the ground lol!!

sleepingwiththeenemy · 08/01/2009 18:51

Yep, incredible but true. I'm no longer seeing him, needless to say. I think I am still in danger of allowing myself to be sucked into a controlling relationship again - my mum was very controlling when I was a child and still is to a large extent - so I'm conditioned I believe to accept it. But now, harsh as it sounds, if there are real signs of control appearing, I'm outta there. And it's really nice to be able to make that decision without the complications of loyalty, duty, breaking up a family or ending a marriage. What I mean is that I have no 'obligation' to anyone any more so can end a relationship without feeling guilty.

notevenamousie · 08/01/2009 18:57

What a wonderful thread. Thank you.

Another contented single mum here. My DD is 2 and delightful. Mostly, given that she takes being two very seriously

Making my decisions, feeling proud of me and my girl, doing our own thing and having really great holidays (cottage somewhere and picnics and ice cream and the like, nothing flashy), spending time with friends, and feeling confident (well, sometimes, at least) in myself.

I love my girl and would not be without her, or just now would I have anything any other way.

SameAsYou · 08/01/2009 19:05

Me too!! Knew from pregnancy I was going to be alone but thought I was 29 years old and an ok ish job/salary so decided to go ahead alone. DS is now 3.2 years.I am still single and not dated anyone but am a man hater (even after all this time!) so not feeling that I have missed a man in my life.

I went back to work when DS was 10 months and he goes to daycare - i really needed to return to work as those three days do the both of us good (well i think so!)

I have learnt to do lots of things like build furniture, change plugs even can sort out my dodgy ballcock! I feel all girl powered when I have completed something. I don't think DS has missed out on anything he has not asked the question about daddy yet so still have that coming which not worked out what I will say.

poshsinglemum · 08/01/2009 19:25

so good to hear from so many of us. i think that society does perpetuate the myth that you are nothing without a man which is very unhealthy. since being a single mum i have realised that im everything to dd man or no man. i secretly think that single mums are scapegoats so that men in our patriarchal society can get away with behaving badly and getting their wicked way. rant over.

aseriouslyblondemoment · 08/01/2009 20:07

sorry laughing about the dodgy ballcock!!

meanmutha · 09/01/2009 14:42

swte, lol about the useless bf with flu! An experienced woman told me that the kind of men who go for single mothers are really looking for mothers themselves... EEk! (I am on watch for signs of this in my bf..)
BUT I have a few good things to say about being a single mum of 3..

  • I was offered a great deal of help from other women when I needed it, when I first became single.
  • The past 2 years being single I have learnt soo much about myself, about life!
  • The thought of myself still with him gives me the fears.
  • I know that at least I have done my best to maintain my own sanity and give the children a good role model.
GOOD LUCK to anyone who has just started on this path, life gets better!
HOLLY2310 · 09/01/2009 21:25

I've been reading all the messages in this thread and feel they are really positive. I;m beginning to see light at the end of the tunnel. I'm going through a divorce, I have 2 DC and we are living with my parents for a few months until I get my own house. That part of it is hard but still a million times better then being with my soon to be ExDH who enjoyed making me feel inferior. He still can't believe I am filing for divorce though whih I find amazing! its like he thinks I should stay with him to take all the sh*t he throws at me! sometimes I question whether I'm did the right thing by leaving him - don't ask me why! stupid i know!! he plays mind games with the kids and goes round telling people he wants the marriage to work and its me that wants a divorce and he texts me every now and again saying the same thing but there really is nothing between us and I think this is all mind games again. Why do men do this??

aseriouslyblondemoment · 09/01/2009 21:40

holly
i think alot of men think that we wouldn't be brave enough
it took me a long time to decide to end my marriage
there was noone else involved and no violence but there was mental abuse
thou he wouldnt see or admit to this as to him women are doormats
tbh i think its a huge blow to their ego
and yes my exh still does mind games