|
Rx for Parents - Work-Life Balance Articles

Rx for Parents
By Sharon Teitelbaum, MA, MCC, Sharon@stcoach.com
Acknowledge yourself for the parenting work that you do. No
one else will! There are ways that you are amazing in this work
THAT NOBODY KNOWS BUT YOU. The perfect lunches you sometimes pack.
Knowing how to distract your child from his sore throat for a few
minutes. Getting the right size boots, snowsuit, and mittens in
the right colors in time (more or less) for the first snow. Reading
the letter from the teacher a second time and getting that there
really is a problem in that classroom. Finding a babysitter that
your child really likes. Listening to your child's pain and indignation
at being ousted from the clique, at not getting the part in the
play, at not making varsity. And so on.
It is likely that no one will ever thank you for the unique and
gifted way you do this work. But you, oh achiever, need and deserve
the recognition, so give it to yourself. Not to flatter or inflate,
but truly to witness the important work you do, work that is largely
invisible. Say to yourself, "I was really there for my child
today" in this or that particular way. It's motivating, and
it will re-charge your batteries.
Even the most polite children rarely thank you for doing your
job well. In fact, children sometimes do just the opposite. When
my children were about 7 and 11, they thought they were the only
children in Massachusetts that hadn't been to Disney World, and
once even joked about calling the child neglect hotline to complain
about this. We tended to take nature vacations. The truth is my
husband and I viewed Disney World the same way we viewed water
parks at the time -- we thought the longer we can postpone this
the better.
But I got a new job around that time, flush with benefits, including
(of all things) discount trips to Disney World. I went for it,
and arranged for the 4 of us to get to the Magic Kingdom. I knew
it would be fun, and of course it was. But the first day, we made
the classic mistake of packing too much into one day and underestimating
how long the restaurant lines would be for dinner. While waiting
in line, my younger daughter had a complete meltdown. Through her
frustration and tears, she shouted at me, "This was all your
idea, coming to Disney World. We never wanted to come here! We're
only here because you made us come!" It was a breakthrough
moment for me as a parent, because it was so clear what was going
on.
Honor and appreciate the ways you are an inspired and devoted
parent. If you parent with a partner, let your partner know what
you appreciate about the ways he does it, and ask him to do the
same for you. When you're with other parents, tell them what you
admire about their parenting style. But most important, acknowledge
yourself for the ways that you do it well. It will motivate you
to keep doing it well.
If you're getting drained and depleted, either as a parent or
in some other capacity, contact
me for an initial consultation
at not charge.
[Back to Motivating Articles]
Copyright 2002-2008, by Sharon Teitelbaum, all rights
reserved.
For permission to reprint this article or to use it for anything
other than your own personal use, contact
me.
| |