To help you overcome this
type of mommy guilt ask your daycare provider if they'd use an app to keep you connected during the day.
So, in an effort to deal with our daily
dose of mommy guilt, I'd like to share some (hopefully) helpful tips.
I was just having a
bout of mommy guilt yesterday — overwhelmed with my «to - do» list and worrying I don't spend enough quality time with the kiddos.
These lingering
pains of mommy guilt are more deep - seated and we take them with us throughout our motherhood.
These everyday
pangs of mommy guilt can add up and take a toll on our physical and mental well being.
Working while the kids are around will take some getting used to and you'll also have to let
go of your mommy guilt that you're working while they are right in the room with you.
The worst
part of mommy guilt is the feeling that you ought to * know * the right answer to the riddle of how to focus 100 % of yourself on your kids, 100 % on your husband and another 100 % on yourself.
The
amount of mommy guilt over the awful feelings can be too much sometimes and I wonder if I was crazy to think this whole SAHM thing was a good idea.
(Except for when my 19mo old completely loses it when I drop him off, nothing like a
side of mommy guilt with the rest of that bad diet!)
Among the many benefits of this approach, beyond the greater propensity for a child to experiment with tastes and textures and beyond the elimination of mealtime battles, I also saved myself a
ton of mommy guilt through the years.
In fact, Pflock and Renner's survey of mothers found that yelling is the number one
cause of mommy guilt.
• Letting go of
some of the mommy guilt.
Love
both of your mommy guilt posts!
But, what about the everyday pangs
of mommy guilt?
Your first pang
of mommy guilt.
:] Still, this article relieved
some of the mommy guilt for me.