Not exact matches
The idea behind this post was to help
moms that are being constantly
judged by others to be confident, to not let
others put them down, and to stick up for themselves.
There are few more personal matters than how we feed our own children, and we'd all be better served
by adopting a live - and - let - live attitude instead of
judging other moms.
So as a dude, we owe it to the women in our lives, whether that be our significant
others, whether that be to the
moms in our practices, whether that be to the
other birthing providers who are helping these women to meet them where they are and to help them through the process
by giving them information,
by offering support, and
by absolutely not
judging so that
moms can maintain their power 100 % through not just the pregnancy process, but labor and then on to postpartum.
«I'm surprised
by other moms who seem to
judge that my daughter does like to have her hair done, wear big bows, and dress in dresses.
The Huffington Post quoted one of its own writers, Kim Simon, in expressing her trials and tribulations, first as a
mom who couldn't produce breast milk and was shamed
by other parents, then as a breastfeeding - only
mom who was
judged when doing so in public.
And if I want to bring some semblance of normalcy, I am
judged either
by others or
by myself (the guilt creeps in),» shares another
mom, Pratibha Manrai.
Much of the comedy of Bad
Moms (Jon Lucas and Scott Moore, 2016)-- a film that is predicated on the very real, paralyzing fear mothers have about being not good enough to their kids (and being
judged by others for it)-- falls flat because it starts from an unbelievable place, pushes only some details to their extremes (not really abiding
by an «if x, then y» logic), and lurches forth with its plot.