For
The Love Of Mommy
by Jennifer Ottolino
For most of you being a mother is one of the most wonderful and rewarding
experiences that you will have in your life. It can also be a time when
you feel lost and out of touch with who you are outside of being a
“mommy”. Maintaining an identity outside of your children is vitally
important, not just for you, but for your family as well. So here are ten
strategies that not only keep you connected with you, but also have the
added bonus of being an important life skill to teach your children.
1.
Be present - Often when we spend time with our children we are
thinking about the things that we should be doing or we multi task and we
are not really present with them. Then, when we are not with them, we feel
guilty. Make the decision that when you spend time with your child to just
be there for them, enjoy them, listen to them, and focus on them 100%.
Spending this type of quality time with your child will lessen the guilt
and help you focus on other activities with the same 100% attention.
Added
Bonus: Teaches your child to focus on and enjoy the moment.
2.
Take care of yourself- This is a big one for most women since we get
so busy caring for others we tend to forget about ourselves. Define what
taking care of yourself means to you and develop a schedule to do it. Keep
tweaking your schedule until you are actually fitting taking care of
yourself into the day. Taking care of yourself helps to replenish your
spirit, it helps you to relax, and it helps you to feel good about
yourself.
Added
Bonus: Teaches your child to develop healthy habits that will last a
lifetime.
3.
Connect with you partner- It is so easy to get wrapped up in the kids
and in everyday life that you forget about your relationship with your
partner. Connect with your partner as often as you can, make a point to
sit down over coffee on a Sunday morning and just talk about anything and
everything, but the kids. It can be silly or profound, just make sure you
connect with each other as a couple.
Added
Bonus: Teaches your child how to maintain a healthy relationship.
4.
Get involved- Get involved in some activity that is only for you. It
can be work, volunteering, a class, or a book club. Just get involved in
some regular activity where you are not a wife or a mommy, you are just
you.
Added
Bonus: Encourages your child to participate in outside activities.
5.
Have meaningful conversations- Sometimes when you have children your
day gets so caught up with “kid stuff” that you can’t remember the
last time you had a meaningful adult conversation. Have you ever
felt frustrated, aggravated and on edge and then gone out to a long dinner
with a friend and felt like a new woman at the end of the night? That is
why it is important to have meaningful conversations.
Added
Bonus: Teaches your child to get their needs met by more than one
person.
6.
Read- Who has time to read? We all do. It doesn’t have to be a long
time, and reading is a great way to be intellectually stimulated. It
exposes us to different subjects and new ideas, even when it is a light
and fluffy read. Staying intellectually stimulated is important because it
keeps us in touch with what we find exciting and gets those brain cells
snapping.
Added
Bonus: Teaches your child to seek out and appreciate knowledge.
7.
Take time for just you- Make sure you get some get some quality time
for just you. It can be anything you want from spending time with a
friend, to getting a manicure, or just being by yourself. Just do
something that is only for you, it will fill you up and refresh you. You
will feel like a new woman after you are done.
Added
Bonus: Encourages your child to be independent.
8.
Remember that you have needs too- We have needs, and it is our
responsibility to get them met. If you’re feeling frustrated, or
unappreciated, instead of walking around feeling angry and misunderstood,
figure out a way to get those needs met. Talk about them, ask for support,
and be specific. And remember most people can’t read minds so you have
to communicate with them to get those needs met.
Added
Bonus: Teaches your child how to effectively meet their own needs.
9.
Give yourself permission- Why do we feel like bad mothers for wanting
to do something for ourselves? Every woman who I have ever talked to
that wants to express an unhappiness about being a mother feels the need
to qualify it by saying “Well, of course I love my child more than
anything in the world but…”. Of course you do, but it doesn’t mean
that you can’t be unhappy about the way something is going or how you
feel. This is how you feel right now, there is nothing wrong with
that, you’re a normal mother. Give yourself permission to feel the way
you do and do something for yourself to feel better. Even if that means
stepping back from your child for a couple of hours.
Added
Bonus: Teaches your child to recognize and healthily deal with their
emotions.
10.
Be a role model- When you ask most parents what they want most for
their children they say that they want them to be happy and successful
contributing adults. The very best way to ensure that comes true for your
child is to be a role model. If you want your child to be confident, get
their needs met, be sure of who they are, and happy with their life, just
remember that they learn that from you.
Added
Bonus: Teaches your child to act with integrity.
Being
a mother in today’s modern world is tricky business. We are bombarded
all day long with messages of what makes a “good mother”. Just forget
all that, and be true to you. Being joyful, present, and authentically you
is the very best gift you can give to yourself and your child.
___________________
Jen
Ottolino is a Personal Coach who works with individuals to eliminate
blocks to success. She partners with people to actively attract the life
they know they deserve, but haven’t quite managed to achieve. You can
visit her website at http://coachjen.com
and discover articles, tips, and strategies designed to enhance your life
purpose. She also publishes the bite sized weekly newsletter Little gems
to subscribe send an email littlegems@coachjen.com?subject=subscribe.