How could I have possibly taken my baby from her
protective little home when she was so young and thrust her in such an
environment as a public nursery?!?!
I
went to bed feeling like a bad bad mom.
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There was a time, long long ago, when kids weren’t even on
the radar (in fact I was certain I wouldn’t have any), when my career was my
life. I worked long hours, leaving my
desk just in time to catch the last train home.
What little free time I had was often spent at lectures, filling in
paperwork, studying for additional exams, and adding to my portfolio, all in
the quest of success.
As is often the case, my priorities changed and work became
part of what I did but was no longer the only way to define me. Despite those changes and as sad as I am to
say it, I still do equate my self worth with my success in the working world. This combined with a bit of number crunching
meant that when we decided to start a family, I knew I would return to
work.
That said, when the time came to put little miss into
nursery, I wasn’t ready. I had just
begun to come out of the numbness of postnatal depression and was desperate to
get in some much needed bonding with my daughter, worried she’d connect with
her key worker before she did with me.
This was made even harder by the fact that, because of the recent and
all too familiar economic downturn, I had no job to return to. I used the nursery time to job hunt but it did
not lesson my guilt. It was a bit easier
once I had a job to go to but it still felt like I was abandoning her and completely
failing in my primary duty as a mother.
My daughter, on the other hand, thrived from day one. Sure,
she has brought home her share of fevers and stomach bugs, but she’s a real
trooper when it comes to being sick, taking even that in her stride. She often comes home covered in paint or
shimmering with glitter, sometimes in her spare change of clothes, the ones she
went in sopping wet from water or some other sort of messy play. She’s made friends and has learned so many skills
we could only hope to expose her to if she wasn’t in that environment. She has
a learning journal that is bursting with info already. I’ve watched my baby become a little girl and
I know a lot of that is down to that place she goes to a few times a week.
Still, there are days when she clings to one of us at drop
off or refuses to hug me good bye that my heart breaks and I wonder if perhaps
I should find a way to be home with her.
There are other days when I feel under-appreciated at work and struggle
to justify the valuable time I’m missing with my daughter for what is essentially
a shadow of what I used to do. These
days are tough and leave me guilt ridden but most of the time the bouncy giggly
child that I meet at pick-up reminds that she’s doing just fine.
This week we increased her days at nursery. She didn’t
want to go yesterday and it seemed as the world was telling me I’d made a wrong
choice. I wondered where I’d gone wrong,
how I could fix it, how much had I scarred her already. Thankfully that feeling didn’t last. In today’s light, I remember that we explored
various options and we know this place is a good fit, for her and for us.
---------------------------------------
This morning Little Miss couldn’t get into nursery and begin
playing fast enough. Even with our new schedule, she still gets one whole day
with Daddy and one whole day with me.
That’s a pretty good deal if you ask me.
***PS. On the subject of Good Mom/Bad Mom, did you see this
on Postpartum Progress last week?
I've read it everytime I've had a week moment.
6 comments:
Your daughter is thriving and it is because of all the love and care you show her. I know the guilt, I'm sobbing daily at the moment. This morning, The Boy said to me (first time ever) "Don't go to work mummy" and I almost crumpled there and then.
Reading this entry was like reading my own thoughts and fears. The truth is there is no easy answer. We can only do our best and hope its good enough.
argh, I've lost a comment! I can see it in my reader but it's not here! Anyway, thanks to both of you for your kind words. Drop offs have been horrendous so far this week so I'm glad I could see a bit of silver lining last week to help me make it through!
mom guilt. who invented that stuff anyways?!? there were days i felt so guilty dropping off my daughters. they are 8 years apart so i had to do it twice. and never felt better about it either time. now they are both in school and i find myself, especially on friday's when i am off, just wanting to go and get them from school to spend time with them. other days we cannot get on the bus fast enough. and sometimes it is because i need that time away. i cannot promise it will get easier. but never doubt yourself. you are doing what you have to do. end of story. it will work out.
Oh my god i can totally relate to this, addison screamed for the first six months. I questioned myself all the time and was riddled with guilt, it is a horrible experience.
you are clearly a beautiful woman as well as beautiful mum and the fact the children (mine now included) are happy and bouncy when we pick them up from from nursery, is because even when they were crying in the morning , eventually they can relax and have fun as they are secure enough that you will always always come back and be there for them in any capacity you can.
xxx
Type youDrop off has been quite a roller coaster since I posted this! Today was the first day in a while that she walked in with no tears. If she wasn't in such a brilliant mood when we picked them up, it would be constant heartbreak wouldn't it? Thanks again for letting me know I'm not alone in all this craziness we call parenthood.r comment here.
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