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Single Mom's Mother's Day Survival Kit
By Catie
Hayes
In
a perfect world, motherhood would be universally valued, the phrase
'just a mom' would not exist, and all mothers would be acknowledged
on Mother's Day. Also in a perfect world, I'd have glimmering fairy
wings, a sparkling crown of early morning dew, and would never have
to clean a litter box. That's another story entirely, though.
Most
women were raised to not plainly ask for something, to think of
others first, to be polite, to be (gasp) nice. Now this baggage,
coupled with the realities of single motherhood makes a rather uncomfortable
situation. The reality is that we all want to be acknowledged. It
just feels good to receive validation. Single parenthood, by definition,
however, means you are the sole adult responsible for younger creatures
devoid of the awareness of others. Kids, especially younger ones,
though miraculous and occasionally perplexing, do not innately think
'what can I do to show my appreciation to others'. One of the responsibilities
of parenting is to guide children to consider their relationship
with others and the world around them. Ideally, in a two-parent
family, the Dad would step up to this duty on Mother's Day as the
Mom would on Father's Day, out of respect for each other, as well
as modeling values to the children. So what happens when your family
isn't the ideal Ward and June Cleaver variety? What happens when
you're the only one modeling respect to the kids?
There
are two ways it can go here, single moms can either grin and bear
it or stop being nice and call for a reality check. Think about
it women, haven't we all grinned and bore enough? In my own case,
even when I was married, any recognition was of the last minute
I better buy something, anything....honest to God it doesn't matter
what variety, when a simple, heart-felt 'thank you' would have been
more than enough. Now that I'm on my own, even that is gone. I will
continue to make sure my kids mark special occasions for the father,
out of respect for that role, but I've given up hope that the same
courtesy will ever be returned. It's no surprise really, it's right
in the 'Single Moms Guidebook to Reality'...
You
want something done, assume 'The Buck Stops Here' as your mantra,
and just do it yourself
So how to build the kind of Mother's Day where an already overburdened
Mom feels acknowledged, the kids don't feel guilty they couldn't
do anything for Mom, and the bank account does not turn a nasty
shade of red? Personally, I recommend referring to another rule
from the 'Single Moms Guidebook to Reality'...
The
old rules have little to do with you now. Build new ones
Some
of my personal favorites include :
- enlist
the help of girlfriends, sisters, neighbors, parents (can you
help Joey make a card/bake some cookies/pick out a small gift?)
- tell
the kids you as a family are going out to dinner/to the park/to
a movie to celebrate Mother's Day (sure, you foot the bill, but
you model self-respect to the kids, say what you need, and get
an outing in one fell swoop)
- arrange
a plant swap with friends. (a cost-free way to repopulate your
garden and build something of beauty for yourself)
-
enlist the kids' help in making pampering things for you. (check
out Pampering
Tips and Recipes at OldFashionedLiving.com for great ideas.)
- use
the few bucks you save on not buying junk food for a week and
spend it one something frivolous just to give yourself pleasure
(a few bottles of nailpolish, a bouquet of flowers, a journal,
new writing paper, a shade of lipstick your mother would never
let you wear, the raciest pair of panties you can find)
So,
to my fellow single Moms, a gentle reminder accompanied by my deepest
respect and admiration.....
We
are all doing the most significant thing possible with our lives,
we protect and nurture the future with a solitary pair of hands.
It doesn't matter if society in general considers motherhood brainless
work. It doesn't matter whether or not our exes pull their share
of the parenting load. It doesn't matter that it feels hard and
embarrassing to have to ask for help.
What
matters most, women, is that WE ROCK. No matter what kind of garbage
is tossed our way, if we expect respect from the world, we have
to give it to ourselves first.
blessings,
Catie
Copyright
2004 WomanLinks.com
About the Author : Catie Hayes is founder/editor of WomanLinks.com;
a community of support, spirituality, growth and empowerment for
women. She is a freelance writer, the single homeschooling mom of
two, and an avid fan of laughter, spontaneous dancing, cats and
chocolate (not necessarily in that order).
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