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.
Take it from someone who almost died during pregnancy - your birth plan should be for you to come through it healthy, and with a healthy baby.
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.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are you going to do when your kid isn't perfect? When your kid doesn't behave exactly how you want? When they aren't how you want them to be?
I’m fine with that. My child doesn’t go be perfect. I don’t expect people to be perfect. I just like things like cooking, a party I throw, my home, etc., to be perfect. I want to have the most perfect welcome home for our baby.
Seems unlikely. Most people with perfectionist tendencies extend it to their children.
This. I'm the PP with a mom like OP. My mom would never have said she expected us to be perfect. But her desire for control and perfection in all other situations in life is what ruined our relationship with her. And what contributed to my brother and mine own mental health struggles. I get that OP doesn't see how things can go wrong now, I think that goes along with her need for control and perfection. She doesn't see why it's bad. But as someone who has lived it and as someone who has a mom who deeply regrets it, please, make changes now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are you going to do when your kid isn't perfect? When your kid doesn't behave exactly how you want? When they aren't how you want them to be?
I’m fine with that. My child doesn’t go be perfect. I don’t expect people to be perfect. I just like things like cooking, a party I throw, my home, etc., to be perfect. I want to have the most perfect welcome home for our baby.
Think hard about why you are trying to make the most perfect welcome for your baby. Who are you doing that for? The baby doesn’t need or care about coming home to a perfect welcome. The baby won’t remember any of it either. You are doing all of this for yourself not the baby or your husband. Perfectionism is about making yourself happy not the people around you.
Anonymous wrote:I'm divorcing a perfectionist and holy crap, ove never felt so FREE!
I can leave a fork in the sink over night.
I can eyeball a hanging a picture on the wall.
I can get all sandy and messy with my kiddos.
I can let them stay up late on a warm summer night.
I can plan a weekend away in a whim without researching everything to death and huffing and puffing if every single ideal activity we are "supposed" to do at that location doesn't fit in the time frame.
It's been 6 months of separation and I literally wake up on a freedom high every single day. It's pure bliss.
Anonymous wrote:Your marriage will end in divorce. Things won't be perfect and you can't control that. You need to learn to let go of some of this control. You will make your husband miserable and eventually your own child. Is that what you want all so you can have the perfect house and throw perfect parties? A miserable family?
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.