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Mom Shaming

EmilyBee's picture

I truly don't understand it.

Mothers are constantly shamed if they choose to stay at home - why can't you get a job, why aren't you supporting your family?Then working mothers are shamed as well - You never see your children, who is taking care of things at home? It's such a lose-lose situation. When I wasn't working and taking care of my son full time, people were constantly pushing me to get a job. As soon as I started working full time, those same people were scolding me for not spending enough time with him. It's such a catch-22.

And then the shaming from Mothers to other Mothers - the criticizing and critiquing and "you're doing it wrong" and "Well, I do it this way." You're shamed if you choose to breast feed, shamed if you choose to bottle feed. You're shamed if you punish your children, shamed if you choose not to. It's like no matter what we do as mothers, it is never good enough. We can't win. It seems so counter-productive. We should be bonding and banding together, building each other up, but the people that have torn me down the most as a parent are other parents. Is there even a true "safe space" anymore where a parent can just vent about how hard parenting can be without having other parents swoop in and shame them mercilessly? I have been told that I have no right to complain, I should consider myself blessed to be a parent, "you knew what you were signing up for," and all sorts of other hurtful and unncessary statements. Parenting is HARD. Step-parenting is HARD. It's a daily struggle.

What makes it worse is that the ones that have shamed me the most have been mothers in my own family. Just because YOU parented a certain way doesn't mean I agree with it. Maybe I have looked at the way I was raised and chosen a different path, and that is perfectly acceptable. I may not be perfect, but I am trying my best and that should be enough.

Comments

WwCorgi7's picture

I am also a SAHM and people are rude as hell! I never knew the stigma that came attached with it until I attended a party and was the outcast. All the guys were hanging out in the living room and all the women were in the kitchen. One by one they announced their job and talked about how stressful it was, cut to me and I said I was a stay at home mom. No joke, 12 sets of eyes look me up and down and ask me "what do you do all day?", I was taken back by this. They acted like I was a bum. It hurt at first but I learned quickly. Now whenever I get someone who pokes fun at what I do or treats me less I just say "my days are unsupervised, unscheduled, and fully sponsored, what else could I ask for?", they tend to back off. I hate the judgement we are all just trying to make it in this world.

EmilyBee's picture

The nerve of some people to ask a SAHM what they "do" all day is just mind-boggling. I guess they assume we just lay around, eating chocolate and taking bubble baths and watching TV, right?

SteppedOut's picture

Mom shaming is bad. Unfortunately, it's not just mom shaming.

Women judge each other something fierce and they backstab and throw under the bus too. I always wonder why this is.

Men seem to have each other's backs and support each other far more then women do.