Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Sounds like what he shared is valid
Work on it - seek therapy.
Will say .. now that you’re a parent.. You’re going to be faced with plenty of non perfect situations you absolutely can’t control. Saddle up.
I’m not a parent yet. I’m due next month. I really wanted a vaginal birth but I’m crushed now that we will have a scheduled c-section. I really wanted to avoid a c-section unless it was an emergency.
I know I’m hard to handle and like things the way I do. I think my issues stem from growing up in a dysfunction home with a very critical mom and stepdad who had no issues talking about people ( including me) if I was single for too long, gained weight, not making enough money, etc.
Seems to me the real issue is that you have no interest in changing. And it’s going to be a hard road for your husband and child to deal with a wife/mother is a perfectionist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve always envisioned my life and had certain standards for it. I do struggle with feeling like things need to be a certain way and perfect. I like things to be just right. Example: I will make the same recipe many times until I perfect it. This happened for our wedding, home, and now our baby. I had to have prefect everything for this baby. My birth plan is not what I wanted and I’m crushed and in a bad funk. DH kindly sat me down and shared his feelings and worries over my perfection. He feels my feelings of perfection will derail my happiness. He doesn’t like how rigid I am and wants me to loosen up. I’m not sure how to achieve that or why I’m like this. He married me knowing how I am. He doesn’t get to change me.
That's true. He does not get to change you. Absolutely not.
However ... if you want to stay married ... you will talk with a psychiatrist about what are, at best, OCD tendencies. It's a rough way to live, and is affecting those around you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Sounds like what he shared is valid
Work on it - seek therapy.
Will say .. now that you’re a parent.. You’re going to be faced with plenty of non perfect situations you absolutely can’t control. Saddle up.
I’m not a parent yet. I’m due next month. I really wanted a vaginal birth but I’m crushed now that we will have a scheduled c-section. I really wanted to avoid a c-section unless it was an emergency.
I know I’m hard to handle and like things the way I do. I think my issues stem from growing up in a dysfunction home with a very critical mom and stepdad who had no issues talking about people ( including me) if I was single for too long, gained weight, not making enough money, etc.
Yes, that is all probably true. And: therapy can help you change those things.
I am going to warn you in the strongest possible terms: your kid is not your project. They will have their own preferences, dreams, desires—they are not there for you to perfect. The sooner you get started figuring out how to mitigate this tendency in yourself, the better you will parent.
Your risk for PPD is also significantly higher than average. All the more reason to get a therapeutic relationship underway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Sounds like what he shared is valid
Work on it - seek therapy.
Will say .. now that you’re a parent.. You’re going to be faced with plenty of non perfect situations you absolutely can’t control. Saddle up.
I’m not a parent yet. I’m due next month. I really wanted a vaginal birth but I’m crushed now that we will have a scheduled c-section. I really wanted to avoid a c-section unless it was an emergency.
I know I’m hard to handle and like things the way I do. I think my issues stem from growing up in a dysfunction home with a very critical mom and stepdad who had no issues talking about people ( including me) if I was single for too long, gained weight, not making enough money, etc.
Totally reasonable to be unhappy about abdominal surgery! But don't let it ruin your life.
Anonymous wrote:Perfectionism is a weakness, a character flaw. We have all flaws but if yours is perfectionism, then it is time to work on it. Maybe with a therapist if you haven’t been able to change it on your own. It is something you should want to change. It is a flaw that negatively affects you and those around you.
Anonymous wrote:NP. I am/was a perfectionist. I work hard to make everything go perfectly. Then when, inevitably, something doesn't go perfectly I get into a funk. (What is the saying: Man plans and God laughs??)
I wasn't able to change my behavior no matter what anyone said to me because it was my way of trying to maintain control. To avoid disaster. To avoid bad things. To make my life seem beautiful and harmonious. But then someone said something that I hadn't heard before. That I wasn't that I wanted to be so buttoned up and that was admirable (which is how I always thought of it as) but instead I was a catastrophist. Someone who is always worrying about the worst possible outcome (whether is was likely or not) and that by being a perfectionist I made myself feel better that I was going to avoid bad outcomes. Only sometimes bad outcomes happen anyway.
I proudly thought of myself as a great planner, not afraid of hard work, doing whatever it took. But I did not like to think of myself as someone who was mired in (deep down) catastrophic worries. That has helped me help myself change. It helped me realize that my mother did this in our unstable home. And I was determined to make sure I didn't pass it along to my own children.
Anonymous wrote:Perhaps you would struggle less if you got some therapy for your perfectionism. It would probably help you be a better parent, too. (Just ask any more-experienced parent whether their baby's "perfect birth plan" and "perfect nursery" and "perfect baby schedule" prevented toddler tantrums or teenage rebellion.)