Anonymous wrote:I learned that parenting is hard and that while my parents sucked, maybe that was the best they could do given their own emotional baggage. I’ve tried to do better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How neglectful and abusive my parents were.
This.
Anonymous wrote:Very similar experience. My parents overreacted and were short tempered a lot of the time when I was growing up. I think I repressed a lot of the memories of childhood until I had my own kids and found myself struggling to deal w the day to day challenges of having kids. Then I found myself acting the way my parents did, hated it, couldn’t understand why I was acting that way, had a revelation that that was how I was raised, and now am actively working against those natural tendencies to be a better, calmer parents for my own kids. Reading books about being an adult child of emotionally immature parents has helped. In the moment, trying to see things from my kids’ perspective, focusing on the kids and their feelings and motivations rather than on my own feelings or expectations of the kids has really helped me to empathize with my kids and help them cope with the big emotions they have. it helps me remain calm and patient and really listen to them.
Anonymous wrote:How neglectful and abusive my parents were.
Anonymous wrote:Very similar experience. My parents overreacted and were short tempered a lot of the time when I was growing up. I think I repressed a lot of the memories of childhood until I had my own kids and found myself struggling to deal w the day to day challenges of having kids. Then I found myself acting the way my parents did, hated it, couldn’t understand why I was acting that way, had a revelation that that was how I was raised, and now am actively working against those natural tendencies to be a better, calmer parents for my own kids. Reading books about being an adult child of emotionally immature parents has helped. In the moment, trying to see things from my kids’ perspective, focusing on the kids and their feelings and motivations rather than on my own feelings or expectations of the kids has really helped me to empathize with my kids and help them cope with the big emotions they have. it helps me remain calm and patient and really listen to them.
Ive heard so many people comment that having kids made them appreciate their parents much more but it actually had the opposite effect on me. I didn’t even realize how much pain and hurt I had leftover from childhood until I had kids and I never really analyzed my parents’ parenting before but now that I have, I realize how much I want to make sure I do differently as a parent. I try really hard not to be resentful or blame my parents but just to focus on myself and my kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
These threads kill me. “I have a toddler and now realize I am such a better parent than my imperfect parents who raised me, sheltered me, fed me, educated me, etc.”
Abuse= habitual cruelty. Cruelty = callous indifference to causing suffering in another person.
Be respectful of your own parents. If they didn’t have the positive parenting resources that are so popular today, cut them a break. Or your kids will absorb your judgmental habits. End rant.
I agree that people should not be too judgmental and realize that most parents really did do their best in raising them, despite obviously making mistakes. Still, it’s not wrong to acknowledge and identify things your parents did wrong and try to improve your parenting as a result of that. That’s what this thread is about, I think: not blaming parents (except the abusive, negligent ones of course) but about realizing ways to be a better parent than your parents were...if your parents truly were good parents, then they would hope and wish for their adult kids to turn into better parents than the previous generation.
Anonymous wrote:One of the surprises of parenting is how much it has made me realize about my own childhood. Just stuff I'd never really thought about before has become so obvious.
I have a toddler, going through the phase of learning how to handle big emotions. Something I learned early on in the process is that when she melts down, one of the best things I can do is stay calm. Some of the parenting resources I look at call this "being their calm." The idea being that they don't know how to manage feelings like frustration or disappointment yet, but if you can model calmness, it helps them process those feelings without always becoming angry or screaming and crying.
This was an epiphany for me. I don't find it hard to model calm for my kid, and it's actually really help deal with the toddler meltdowns. But it's made me realize that no one modeled calm for me as a child. They modeled irritation or rage, or they just ignored me when I was upset. As a result, I've struggled as an adult with managing the same emotions my toddler is now working on, and definitely have bad habits of getting angry, irritable, or simply ignoring my own feelings. Helping my toddler has actually helped me figure this out and I'm sort of amazed I made it through this much of my life without these skills.
Anyone else realized stuff like this via your kids and learning how to parent them? I honestly don't think I would have realized any of this stuff if I hadn't had a kid.