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Is it a Parenting with ACEs Thing or Just a Parent Thing? Why Is It So Hard to Just Stop?

 

[Note from Jane] --Cissy White wrote this for the Parenting with ACEs group. I've cross-posted it to the main network because I think many people who aren't members of Parenting with ACEs would be interested. And if you're interested in helping develop tools for how parents can educate other parents about ACEs, or their communities about ACEs, I invite you to join the group!

I have a friend going through a rough patch. She was physically sick with a back to back virus which is no fun for anyone but brutal for a single mother with young children.

She got herself and the kids bundled up and out for a full fall day on Saturday and Sunday left her utterly depleted and unable to do much of anything.

So she was now not only sick and exhausted but deflated and feeling guilty for not being a better mom, for her kids having a boring day, for not being more fun or active. 

Is this what all parents feel when they are sick and the kids are stuck at home, safe but bored? Do parents with a history of ACEs struggle more?

The truth is I don't know that answer.

For much of my parenting I've had a best friend Mom mentor. She was 12 years older than me and so her three kids had already been through most anything I was facing. I called her all the time.

And so often, like this weekend, I find myself repeating what she shared with me with other moms, who like me, are filled with uncertainty about parenting.

These are the nuggets:

  • You are allowed to rest.
  • You can be a good mother even if you don't entertain your child every second.
  • You need to be a rock but that does not mean you are 100% in service and should ignore all your own needs. 
  • Your child will not die of boredom. In fact, boredom is good for your child.
  • You are doing your child a favor if they see you reading or having a cup of tea with a neighbor or taking care of yourself when sick. 

She'd have to tell me these things over and over and I'd be like, "I don't have to feel wrong, bad or guilty?" She'd have to tell me how much her kid did or didn't watch t.v. or what a normal amount of teen time in the bedroom might be. She'd talk it through with me my unofficial mother mentor and I'd be reminded, "Oh yeah, I loved seeing my mother read on the couch after work." I'd think, "I love the way my mother devoured books before bed even when she was busy." 

I was basically begging my friend to take care of herself trying to give her permission slips to make sandwiches for dinner or eat frozen pizza without apology. I was telling her to stay in her pj's and even if she couldn't color or craft or cook she was still a worthwhile human being. 

She didn't have someone to take over and nurture her. No one could step in and I had to remind her she is not failing at parenting this day because she is not, like the day before, directing activities.

I struggled with that too.

I told her taking care of herself is not selfish and that it is, in fact, good mothering. Her kids will be sick and need to learn that adults do self-care because adults are not children and they might have help and support but they also take care of themselves. 

How did it get that we feel so useless or worthless or uncertain if we aren't in "on all the time" parent mode?

I think that for adults who parent and have had been neglected, we don't always know what's normal, healthy and allowed.

We know what a bad parent is but not necessarily what a good parent is. That's the thing we don't get a job description for and so we keep trying, doing and working at what we don't want.

We don't know how to stop, rest and be.

To allow our own selves to be sick, tired or vulnerable and to see that is not a flaw or a failure or something we must make amends for. It just means we are 100% human. 

Is it because some parents maybe don't know they have a right to exist and that even when they are not doing something pro-active (parenting, work, working out), that they (we) have a right to just be? To breathe. To self-nurture.

Or is it in the culture and all parents feel this?

I don't know.

Is this just a parent thing or a parenting with ACEs thing or both? What do you think?

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Comments (4)

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Your writing brings such a bounty of relief. I love the way you offer up questions with open curiosity and non-judgement.

Oh Heather: 
That is so kind and warm and makes me feel so good. It's EXACTLY why I write and often precisely why I read, to feel that. So, for you to feel a "bounty of relief" is wonderful because sometimes it's hard to know if others feel similar or these are thoughts/feelings and experiences to be left in a journal. 

But, as you said, that's part of what makes Parenting with ACEs so lonely. We do think we're the only ones or it's too much on some level. 

You wrote:

"Slowing down, creating genuine space for personal vulnerability and self-care. Unapologetically. This is so not easy.

My life is more full and peaceful than it has ever been, and yet, it takes very little for me to suddenly be racing; appearing calm and methodical on the outside, while on the inside, I am running a non-stop marathon, accessing and examining what I can do better, while trying to sift through what I also do not want to do."

YES!!!!!!!!!! I wonder how many relate to that?

It often feels wrong or like going in reverse to just stop. I literally have to practice, to coach myself but it often is a craving but more like something I know I should do. 

This is so great.

You wrote:

"Translate this to parenthood. I can see how inadvertently, I have taught my kids to be 'on alert,' even in their 'down time,' in their unconscious space, not because of any out-right acts, but because of my own struggle with self-care from the inside out."

Thank you for sharing and for being honest. I think this is part of what the epigenetics is all about, the way we do pass on (via nature and nurture) our stress experiences and responses to some extent.

How much of this do you share with your own kids? I've just started to use some language now that my daughter is 14 so she at least has some context for my buzzing energy which can be like an amped up motor, especially at high stress because I don't want her to think it's ideal or that stopping isn't a good thing when it is and I just have difficulty doing it.

YOUR comment was wonderful. I'm glad it spoke to you and we could share. If we feel this way, you know others do as well. And for a long time, this was just unconscious and the way I was and I didn't even think I had a choice or that slowing down was a good idea. I thought it was "good" how productive i could be and how much like a non-stop robot I could be.

I don't think that will help me live longer any more or live any better. Or help me parent. But it's still a challenge and takes conscious effort.

And this that you wrote:

"I get to practice 'to stop, rest and be' because I am in a place where it is possible to now. There was a time it wasn't possible, because I hadn't 'arrived' to a place of owning I was valuable to myself. To my kids, of course I was, they depended on me, but to myself? What did that even mean? To be of self-value. This isn't selfish. It is a practice. As an ACE's parent, it is both a practice and a demonstration. Every single day. "

Yes. And I'm with you. I wouldn't have even know what the heck that meant for most of my life. So THANK YOU for sharing and for being a parent of the Parenting with ACE's blog and sharing you, your experiences, insights and in this amazing community.

I will hug you right back!
Cissy

 

Jill:

It IS a hopeful idea that we CAN have a healthy parent - child relationship - just not as children. I've not thought of it that way before. That one false move part is what I think so many of us feel... the worry... that there's not been a foundation that can ever be deep enough or solid enough. IT IS weighty and I"m sure all parents feel that to some level. But many of us are so well aware of how it can go off the rails or poorly and feel close to that even if we're not close to it in behavior. Like I feel like an at-risk parent at times even when there's stability. And that turns into an anxiety/worry/fretting. 

I'm SO grateful for this fantastic community and that we can speak to and about these issues. 

Warmly,

Cissy

Your writing brings such a bounty of relief. I love the way you offer up questions with open curiosity and non-judgement.

Parenting with high ACE's I find can be very lonely. Sharing even the smallest thing can feel too revealing or like taking up too much of another persons time.

Re 'how to stop, rest and be'. This is enormous. It is something I personally struggle with regardless that my children are older. I struggle with this equally as a parent, as a woman in a relationship, and as an individual with just myself.

Slowing down, creating genuine space for personal vulnerability and self-care. Unapologetically. This is so not easy.

My life is more full and peaceful than it has ever been, and yet, it takes very little for me to suddenly be racing; appearing calm and methodical on the outside, while on the inside, I am running a non-stop marathon, accessing and examining what I can do better, while trying to sift through what I also do not want to do. Maybe this is the piece that makes it harder for ACE's? Because the models are missing, there isn't a natural 'solid' regulatory place to pull from that gives permission to 'rest.' 

How to not always be looking for what needs attention, for what I have missed, or for that 'something' I can do in order to lower/prevent the chances of 'chaos and disruption' from possibly happening. It isn't always logical, but the pattern served an important purpose, and thus, letting it go, is like cutting the body belay. 

When I was growing up, to sit still, meant two things, either I was trying to avoid attention, or, it meant I wasn't paying attention. Whichever action, some important piece of protection, information and connection would be lost if I wasn't 'moving,' physically or emotionally. 

Translate this to parenthood. I can see how inadvertently, I have taught my kids to be 'on alert,' even in their 'down time,' in their unconscious space, not because of any out-right acts, but because of my own struggle with self-care from the inside out. The experience of what this might be like, to have a parent, who can appear calm on the outside, but who isn't on the inside and understanding it doesn't have to be an 'ugly' situation to still have impact. That it can and does -look like me. 

I once was told that to be a good mother, I just had to be 'good enough,' not great, or perfect, simply 'good enough.' The person was trying to be caring and helpful, and it sent me into a tailspin. The confusion for me was, I didn't know what 'good enough' meant. What is the definition of 'good enough?' Who decides? How does one apply that to someone who is on their own in parenthood? Surely, my definition of 'good enough' would somehow be inferior and lacking?

In reading your post, I do think aspects of parenthood are universal. I also think, those with high ACE's are constantly in practice toward recognizing we have the tools accessible should we need to pay attention, and, those same tools look very different in re to healthy self-care practices. Does that make sense? Identifying this difference, and naming the practice.

I get to practice 'to stop, rest and be' because I am in a place where it is possible to now. There was a time it wasn't possible, because I hadn't 'arrived' to a place of owning I was valuable to myself. To my kids, of course I was, they depended on me, but to myself? What did that even mean? To be of self-value. This isn't selfish. It is a practice. As an ACE's parent, it is both a practice and a demonstration. Every single day. 

Another reason this Parenting with ACE's blog is invaluable. A heartfelt thank you. Thank you for reminding me I am valuable. (I just want to reach out and hug you!)

 

 

 

 

 

Thank you for this Cissy. When I was a teenager I read that I could indeed have the parent-child relationship I had always wanted; it’s just that I would be on the parent side, not the child side. I thought this was such a beautiful idea, and it buoyed me with hope.

Fast forward a couple decades and I am happy to say that I have had the close and loving relationship with my three children that I had always wanted to have with my own parents. That said, the parenting roller-coaster has been fraught with anxiety as I have often felt the weight of the world on my shouldersβ€”as though one false move on my part would sabotage my children’s well-being forever. Of course this is silly, but as a parent with a high ACE score, these doomsday thought patterns are stubborn creatures!

So thank you again for this post. Raising kids is a monumental job for anyone. But we all need to be aware if and how our own ACEs inform our parenting, and, if so, what we can do about it.

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