Moms spill truth about motherhood

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Moms spill truth about motherhood - CNN.com

(OPRAH.com) -- Motherhood is a wonderful responsibility -- but it can also be exhausting, confusing, infuriating and downright funny.


Trisha Ashworth and Amy Nobile felt motherhood hit like a bomb and wrote a book on their experiences.

"I always say moms have the toughest job in the world if you're doing it right," Oprah Winfrey says. "Today, [women] are spilling the beans about a side of motherhood that hardly anybody ever talks about."

She is saluting moms everywhere and letting them know they have support.

"We hear from mothers all the time who say they feel alone. They feel overwhelmed; they feel sometimes inadequate. And you say you're afraid to admit the truth for fear of being judged," Winfrey says. "So today we're creating a judgment-free zone, a sisterhood of motherhood where anything goes." Oprah.com: Stress-relief for busy moms

Heather Armstrong is a mother of a 5-year-old daughter and has another baby on the way. She's getting the conversation started by admitting the aspects of motherhood she says she could do without. "I really don't enjoy the early mornings or the plastic toys," she says. "I don't do arts and crafts, I don't do pipe cleaners, I don't do cotton balls or scissors."

She'd also be happy to never deal with bodily fluids again, she says. "I could do away with the liquids," she says. "The snot and the poo. I'm not fond of those things."

Bodily fluids are a point of contention for the mothers across the board. Vicki Glembocki, a mom of two, says she had a "pee incident" recently during a seven-hour drive with her kids.

"I looked in the back, and the kids were sleeping, which was literally a miracle from God, but the problem was I had to pee," she says. "So I'm thinking, 'If I stop at a rest area, they're totally going to wake up, and I do not want them to wake up.' So I reach into the diaper bag, I pulled out a diaper and I peed into it."

Dee-Dee Jackson, a mother of five, has her own diaper confession. After running out of diapers in the middle of the night, she says she had to make her own. "What we had to do was use a maxi pad until the next morning," she says. "It worked so well, we took our time the next day to get diapers."

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Heija Nunn has a diaper tip that has served her well with her three kids. "You have to seed the house and car with diapers," she says. "That way there's always one to unearth in an emergency. Don't put them in one spot -- just scatter them."

The one universal truth about motherhood seems to be that no one ever tells you what to really expect. The moms on our panel say they had to learn the toughest lessons from experience.

Glembocki says the most surprising thing about motherhood was that she didn't feel maternal right away. "I swore to God that the moment my daughter issued forth from my loins that ... my life would finally be complete and I would finally know my purpose. It was not like that," she says. "I couldn't get her to sleep. I couldn't get her to stop crying. I completely believed that I was the only woman in the history of time who did not have the maternal gene, and I thought I was completely alone."

Four years later, Glembocki says she's just now getting the hang of it. Oprah.com: What your baby's cries mean

Melinda Roberts, a mom of three, says she had to learn on her own that motherhood is like a 12-step program.

"You've got to take it one day at a time sometimes," she says. "You feel like: 'If I can get out of bed and get breakfast on the table, I'll be happy. If I can get them to school, I'll be happy.'"

One major motherhood realization that Roberts says she had with her first child was that she could no longer control everything in her life.

"You can no longer choose your activities, your down time, when you get to sleep," she says. "No matter what you do or where you go, you're always tethered to this other human being in this unbreakable, incredibly fragile way. Anything you do will affect this child potentially for the rest of their life."

Longtime friends Trisha Ashworth and Amy Nobile set out on the motherhood journey together. They had perfect plans -- Amy would stay at work after kids; Trisha would have three children, set exactly two years apart. But, like so many best-laid plans, things didn't work out like they thought. Motherhood, they say, was more overwhelming than they expected. "It was like a bomb hit us," Nobile says. "I didn't feel I had permission to talk about how hard motherhood really was." Oprah.com: Would you trade your husband for a housekeeper?

Eventually, Ashworth and Nobile say they reached their breaking point, and they set out to see if other mothers shared their struggles. After interviewing hundreds of women, they say they've heard all the dirty little secrets of motherhood. Their first book, "I Was a Really Good Mom Before I Had Kids," was based on their findings.

One of the most interesting things Nobile discovered is that mothers are dying to open up -- but it takes time. When interviewing mothers for their book, Nobile says it would take a good 22 minutes of chatting before moms would speak the truth. "We feel like we don't have permission to admit that it's really hard, so we're all walking around with these smiles on our faces, but really we feel alone," she says.

Ashworth and Nobile say they've heard just about everything from moms, but one admission really struck a chord. "One mom said, 'I love being a mom, I just hate doing it because it is an impossible job,'" Nobile says. "We've raised the bar so high."

The common thread throughout Nobile and Ashworth's interviews -- whether they were talking to mothers of one or of five -- was that mothers demand too much of themselves. "The expectations we have on ourselves is completely unrealistic. This generation of women was raised to believe that we should and could do it all," Ashworth says. "And that list [of expectations] is so huge that we think if we can't live up to that, then we're not good moms."

Mothers need to know that if they can't do it all -- or if they don't want to -- that doesn't make them failures, Nobile says. "We need honesty," she says. "We need to support each other more."

Nobile says mothers need to accept that they cannot reclaim the person they were before they had kids. "You have to reinvent yourself," she says.

It's also important to remember that taking time for yourself doesn't make you a bad parent. "Most of us feel guilty, like you have to be on the floor with them 24/7 and give them all your attention or you're not a good mom," Ashworth says. "Redefine it for yourself that way, like, 'It's okay that I'm on the computer and my kids are playing by themselves.' Make peace with that."

Before Armstrong had her daughter, she kept a blog that she says had about 30 readers. The week she gave birth, she says she noticed a spike in her traffic and a new audience of moms looking to connect. She chronicled her experiences breastfeeding and her bout with postpartum depression. She says her blog became her lifeline.

"So many women reached out to me to let me know that they had gone through the same crises and come out the other side," Armstrong says. "It was the hope that they gave me that pulled me through."

Armstrong's blog, Dooce.com, became so popular that she's been called the "mother of all bloggers." The site brings in a reported $40,000 a month in advertising and has become the family business. "I think people are really hungry for that honesty," Armstrong says.

One popular topic on Armstrong's blog is sex and how it changes when you are a mom. "It took seven months [before I had sex after giving birth]. No one had told me that it was going to take that long after what the baby did to me," Armstrong says. "Any guy who wants to have unprotected sex? Seven months without it. Just think about that for a minute. Let that number circulate in your head for a little bit."

As hard as it can be to find time or energy for sex, Nobile says its an effort worth making. "We have to make sex a true investment in the marriage," she says. "A good marriage is the backbone of a healthy family."

Date nights and moments of intimacy send important messages to both your husband and your children about your priorities, Nobile says.

"One husband said [to me]: 'I used to be first, and now I'm pulling up the rear. I'm behind the pet rabbit,'" she says. "Our kids are watching us. So when you go out on that date, you have to sit your kids down and say, 'This is important for our family.'"

In a studio full of moms, one audience member says her biggest complaint regarding motherhood is the unspoken competition between working moms and stay-at-home moms.

"It is a war. It's a kind war, but still a war," she says. "I'm a working mom, so it's important that my family comes first and that I still do everything that a stay-at-home mom does, plus have a career. That means every single one of my vacation days are used for [my kids] -- mommy day at school, a play date or mommy and me things. ... We don't want it to seem as if we love our career more, so we try to do it all and get two hours of sleep."

Jackson is currently a stay-at-home mom, but she was a working mother once too.

"The competition is there because we create it for ourselves," she says. "There's really no reason to compete, because [stay-at-home moms] are just as busy as the working mom. The working mom is just as busy as we are. We just tend to sometimes put the focus on the wrong things. We're all busy 24/7. I consider myself an at-home working mother."

Nobile says these wars arise out of our own uncertainties as mothers. "We're insecure about the choices we're making -- that's why we're judging each other," she says. "We need to give ourselves a collective break." Oprah.com: Try Amy and Trisha's judgment exercise

"Have compassion for each other," Ashworth says. "Realize we all have issues, and we're all doing the best we can."


I thought it was interesting how these moms admitted to competing against each other whether a working-mom or a stay-at-home mom is tougher.

I do agree that being a mom is a tough job. My confession is that I didnt really enjoy the baby stages..the sleepless nights, the breastfeeding, trying to get a routine going, and watching them like a hawk when they started walking. I love babies but I dont love taking care of them. I never realized that until I read this article. I never admitted that cuz I always thought that was a selfish thing but other moms have their own thoughts too. That was interesting!
 
I can only imagine. I remember when my niece Amanda was born and my big sister helped out with baby sitting her.. and while she was changing diapers, my niece peed on her.. She had to go home and change clothes.
 
Being a Mom is never an easy task.

When the kids were little I used to feel guilty all the time leaving them at a childcare center. Then I sat back and now know. If I did not do that. We would not be where we are now. It takes both parents nowadays to work and bring in an income. I do not resent the ones that have that opportunity to stay at home with their kids. As long as they are not milking the welfare system.

My kids know I live for them. And when they want something I can not afford. I feel bad sometimes. But then again I feel it teaches them to appricate things more.

Kids are so spoiled nowadays. So teaching kids value and responsibilities is what I feel makes a successful child.

My expectations are high for my children. Due to both are doing very well in school. They do well. So I have set my standards by what I know my children are capable of doing.
 
Motherhood is a tough job. I have been on both sides as a stay at home mom and a working mom. Both are equally hard.

I think the hardest part of it all is that your life is 100% devoted to your children, there is no more just you. I don't think I have had a day to myself since I had my first daughter 12 years ago. That and sleep! Even though my youngest is already 3 I still wake up at least twice every night.
 
Y'know, I relate to these feelings, but one important aspect I feel they left out is the demands your husband makes on you too. I don't know how working mothers do it....every person in the home is making demands on you constantly and add that to a boss and co-workers..wow lol
 
Even as a working mom.. last year... I had to everyday after work. Take my child to softball practice. and/or to her games. come home about 8 pm. THis year I had a break. due to my daughters illness she had. but still.

Last year and this year. had to make arrangements for someone to pick up my son from student council meetings.

I am constantly even as a working Mom making sure my kids are involved in school activities.

Even though my daughter is no playing softball. I still take her to cheer her team on in the dug out! That is one of the reasons why I have not been online much!
 
Everyone is correct. Being a mother is a tough job. While I was married I had the demands of my husband, my children and my job where I was assistant manager. I was always the one that had to take kids to school, therapies and work 50 hours aweek. And the husband still demanded sex. Geez!! So it's just not the children that demands your time and energy. I love being a mom but when you have to leave a cubscout meeting early cause your children won't behave and then come home and get them to bed..just makes you want to scream. I am now not working but I am just as tired as when I was.
 
Y'know, I relate to these feelings, but one important aspect I feel they left out is the demands your husband makes on you too. I don't know how working mothers do it....every person in the home is making demands on you constantly and add that to a boss and co-workers..wow lol

I am fortunate that my husband is not very demanding and helps out with the job of raising children. However, my job is very demanding cuz I work with children all day so yea, it is tough sometimes but I cant really complain since I feel single mothers have it much more tougher. I just didnt like the demands of taking care of infants. Not my thing..I like it now that my children are older and can help around. :)
 
I love being a mom but when you have to leave a cubscout meeting early cause your children won't behave and then come home and get them to bed..just makes you want to scream.

AMEN!!! I was the one who SWORE their child wouldn't misbehave in public... well how wrong was I?? Part of it he can't help since he's deaf, and can't tell how loud he really is (even if it's just 'talking') but sometimes he's just misbehaving and it can be embarassing...

Since I chose to do this on my own (be a single mom) I try not to complain too much~~ but I will have to say it was nice when I was w/my mom for a week to be able to say "You deal w/him~~ I need a break" when the baby would start to misbehave. I don't get time to myself often (he's been w/the sitter ONCE in a year--I just feel guilty about it) so to at least get to have dinner like an adult w/a friend was a blessing...

I will admit, this being a mommy thing is MUCH harder than being the big sister or teacher!!! BUT it's also much more rewarding!! Just glad to know other mom's have some of the same feelings I've had...
 
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I am fortunate that my husband is not very demanding and helps out with the job of raising children. However, my job is very demanding cuz I work with children all day so yea, it is tough sometimes but I cant really complain since I feel single mothers have it much more tougher. I just didnt like the demands of taking care of infants. Not my thing..I like it now that my children are older and can help around. :)

It's not that he's demanding, I mean don't get the idea that he's Walt and comes in and flops down and doesn't do a thing else. But he still demands and with NO timing or sensitivity. "Could you get me a coke" sounds like a simple request unless you were just chasing a 1 year old, 3 year old, and 5 year old through the house trying to get clothes on and teeth brushed and in bed and you just sat down. LOL It's like, did you just totally miss that???? Then sex too?

People were so horrified by me, when I found out I was pregnant with number 5 (completely an accident) and I cried for 3 weeks. It's not that I don't love my children, but I've been a trooper through 4. I've lost significant portions of my hearing....I wasn't sure how I was going to deal with a newborn and two toddlers and not being able to hear any of them very well. The reactions to that were almost all wrong. They went from "what a horrible mother to not be happy" to "you don't have to have this baby". My husband was the only one who said the right thing: WE'LL get through it.
 
People were so horrified by me, when I found out I was pregnant with number 5 (completely an accident) and I cried for 3 weeks. It's not that I don't love my children, but I've been a trooper through 4. I've lost significant portions of my hearing....I wasn't sure how I was going to deal with a newborn and two toddlers and not being able to hear any of them very well. The reactions to that were almost all wrong. They went from "what a horrible mother to not be happy" to "you don't have to have this baby". My husband was the only one who said the right thing: WE'LL get through it.

I know several people who have felt the same way-- not w/their fifth or even their 3rd babies... but after being pregnant once and having a physically hard time with it-- they were not thrilled to discover they were pregnant again-- in the end it all worked out ok-- they love their kids and that's what matters, right?? I think the hormones stirred up by pregnancy and motherhood have a LOT to play with all this!!

:hugs: I think your hubby said the RIGHT thing!!! Good for him!!
 
Yea sometimes I feel so quilty and wanted to go back in time to fix it but knowing that I am in a learning process and not to do it again. But being mom is rewarding and I love it. When my son says ILU or give me a hugs that I know he does love me and care for me. But his school is not doing so good and I am trying to push him to get to school instead of lame excuse to stay home. So that is not an easy thing and now the school know who I am and for once I would like to be free from it. I do work and also a single mom. I got a full custody of my son last January 2009. So my exh gave up the share legal custody.

I am doing it all to myself with no help at all.
 
I knew it would work out, it was just so overwhelming at the time with so much going on. HOW WILL I EVER DO THIS!!!??? And it has worked out wonderfully. I mean, all of us have days where it's like, y'know I could really do without THIS part of the parenting thing. But the great thing about them being little is the spontaneous affection. Just when you swear your fixing to lock yourself in a closet and cry one runs up and says something that fixes the whole day LOL On the really rough days, early bedtime is great for us all.

Horselover, I am really finding out what you mean again. I was a single mom of one from the day she was born until she was 5 (my ex and I seperated shortly after I found out I was pregnant). But I lucked out with such a quiet and introspective child. My husband is currently living in Houston while we save up money to move there and now it's 3 wild ones. I never realized how much I relied on him to run interference!
 
Wow - That's an interesting article! Thanks for sharing this, Shel.

I definitely can relate to every mothers out there. It's a tough job to do. We don't get paid for it (money-wise) but we get paid for it by seeing how our children revolves as they grow.

I'm a single mother and a working mother too. There are some days I just want to sit down and scream on top of my lungs whenever I feel so overwhelmed. I don't know how these other mothers out there feels but with me - I used to think of this and was wanting to disappear to a place where nobody knows me. Of course it doesn't mean that I would do it because I couldn't abandon my children. It's just at the breaking point where I only wanted it. There are times I wanted so badly to cry it out, lock myself in a room or even to a point where I could knock myself out cold.

I love being a mom with no question but being a mom to an autistic son does take a toll and not only that, both of my kids are 14 1/2 months apart which adds up to it. I at first didn't accept my son's autism but as time goes along - I was able to discover myself through it and eventually accepted his autism.

Only if we could get a manual of Motherhood - Gosh, I know I would love to have this and I know many other mothers would want that too, LOL. *sigh* Only if this was actually the real deal, haha. (Yeah, that's a wishful thought)
 
I've had many of those breaking points. And I will have many more. And I know this is not a politically correct thing to say aloud, but honestly - mothers get more pressure than fathers do. Why isn't there a discussion of working fathers who also do stay-at-home father work? Ugh...because 9 out of 10 times, they don't do it...they are only expected to work and then when they get home, they can sprawl on the couch with a beer and watch TV. After all, they've had a hellva day at work and they're ...*pausing for effect* tired! Omg...they're so tired. Poor things. (Not ALL men are this way...I'm simply pointing out that a majority of them are this way though).

But us Mommies don't have that luxury. As soon as we get home from work, there's dinner...and then cleaning up...then homework with the kids...etc. By 8:30 or 9:00 PM, it's OUR time. Oh wait. We got papers to grade or do something to prepare for the next meeting at work. We got to do some laundry. THEN we can have OUR time. Oh, wait. Don't forget making the lunches for tomorrow. Don't forget to ...and so on and so forth.

Then it would be at that point the men who are sprawled on the couches would get up, scratch their potbellies, scratch their asses, and stretch before saying, "Honey, did you need me to help you with anything?"

Hmph.

And they wonder why we women act like bitches half the time. Why we're so worn down that when it's time for bed, sex is the LAST thing we want. Or why we're so bombarded with life, that a simple cup of coffee with a friend is relished.

Mother's Day...is so underrated.
 
deafbajagal, well said. That's what I was trying to say. While my husband isn't a complete Ward (I call that guy you described Ward, though I'm far from a June LOL), he is a lot Ward. He was raised in a real trad family. Daddy work, Mommy stay home..kids should be seen and not heard.

I actually tried once to to explain to him, YOU get days off, YOU come home and that's then end of dealing with those people. If you had a rough day, at 5 o'clock, it's over. My day NEVER ends. Even when he says "ok, go do what you want for the entire evening" y'know eventually your evening will get interrupted with "I need help, can you just make him a bottle". One time I actually stomped through the house and said "do I call you when you're golfing to make a bottle? Just because my entertainments put me in the vicinity doesn't mean you should bother me".

Have you heard the "well, what can I help with" line? Ugh, like the laundrey piled up and the trash full and two screaming kids in hand isn't an indication of something you could do. Maybe I'm a jerk, but do I really have to direct you to something you could be doing?

Or the night when I came back from the grocery store to both boys crying and him sitting in the chair. "They are just being cranky". I had to explain to him that the 3 year old needed a clean blanket because he'd wet his bed earlier and the baby was cold. Did it ever cross your mind to find out WHY they were upset? Maybe it's because I'm around them constantly, but I would figure your first reaction shouldn't be they are crying just to bug me.

He doesn't act like this all the time, really he doesn't. I don't want you to think I'm married to some jerk. But he has his moments and they are a doozy when they happen.
 
Jalestra - I know exactly what you mean. I once was a stay-at-home mom for nearly two years...not ONCE did I have a full day off. I throughly enjoyed my time as a stay-at-home mother and really appreciated that opportunity...but I did not have the proper support system...and that really made it difficult.

The first time I got my hair done ALONE (as in without the baby), I cried. I didn't know what to do. She was two years old.

And honestly, no one in my family could understand why I was so exhausted, overworked, and at my breaking point. It took a toll on my marriage (I did end up divorcing him), my physical and mental health, and even my spiritual well-being.

I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE being a Mommy - it's the greatest job on Earth. But I'm only human. I need support. I need my alone-in-the-salon days.
 
:hug: to all the mommy's!!!!

Like I've said I CHOSE to be a single mom so I can't say 'I understand' about the daddy part first hand, but did witness it the entire time my mom and daddy were married. (Part of why I chose to do it on my own)

But I do understand not getting a break... Adam is over a year old and he's been w/a sitter once (I feel so guilty) and with my mom twice for a very brief time...after 45 min alone she called me begging me to come home... she couldn't handle him AND HER dog... I wanted to scream.."tie the f-ing dog up and watch the baby!!!!" I just wanted to go to spend a gift card at bath and body works geez!! Lol

No we don't get enough credit, we don't get days off, we're under paid in many ways... but as all of you have said its the most rewarding job ever... watching Adam crawl as fast as he can to get to me when I get to school to get him... man, that beats ANY huge paycheck...

Again :hug: to all the moms, single moms, married moms, working moms, stay at home moms... all of us!!! :hug:
 
but as all of you have said its the most rewarding job ever... watching Adam crawl as fast as he can to get to me when I get to school to get him... man, that beats ANY huge paycheck...

Oh, I love the stuff they come up with. When my 13 year old was 5 we're walking through a store and she pops out with "I wanna be a psycho when I grow up". Naturally I look at her kind of shocked and she says "I wanna be a psycho!" So I finally ask her what exactly she thinks a psycho does and she tells me they see into the future. Of course people are stopped listening as I giggle and say "PsyCHIC, you want to be a psyCHIC, not a psycho." LOL To this day I'm still not sure where she heard about psychics, but it was funny.

Or my other fave, when my now 5 year old, then 3 told the cashier at the grocery store "you're a girl so you have a vagina". You gotta love a person who smiles and says "that's right" without missing a beat. lol (We had just had our first son so that's where that one came from LOL) The cashier just looks at me and says "don't worry about it, I have 3" lol
 
Oh, I love the stuff they come up with. When my 13 year old was 5 we're walking through a store and she pops out with "I wanna be a psycho when I grow up". Naturally I look at her kind of shocked and she says "I wanna be a psycho!" So I finally ask her what exactly she thinks a psycho does and she tells me they see into the future. Of course people are stopped listening as I giggle and say "PsyCHIC, you want to be a psyCHIC, not a psycho." LOL To this day I'm still not sure where she heard about psychics, but it was funny.

Or my other fave, when my now 5 year old, then 3 told the cashier at the grocery store "you're a girl so you have a vagina". You gotta love a person who smiles and says "that's right" without missing a beat. lol (We had just had our first son so that's where that one came from LOL) The cashier just looks at me and says "don't worry about it, I have 3" lol

These had me cracking up... I can't wait to have stories like this!!
 
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