A hum of conversation fills the room as women nibble at cheese and fruit and sip tea while keeping a close eye on nearly a dozen babies attempting to walk or crawl or sit. Around the edges of the room sit a row of blue chairs, each with a white sign balanced on it. On the walls are photos of various women holding those signs—two or three women in each photo, smiling and leaning together, clearly friends even though the signs they hold say the opposite things.
I had a homebirth after Caesarean.
I had a hospital birth.
I had a water birth at home.
I use a stroller.
I wear my child.
I work outside the home.
I’m a stay-at-home mom.
I work at home.
No More Mommy Wars!: a photo project was started by local mom and blogger Shauna Stewart Douglas. As a new mom, she quickly encountered the judgement that almost every mom today has faced. You’re doing that wrong. You should be doing this. You aren’t doing enough. Shauna started a Facebook group for moms in Victoria to have a safe place to ask questions and share their ideas. This fall, inspired by CT Working Mom’s Campaign for Judgement-Free Motherhood, Shauna started her own photo project.
I was thrilled to meet Shauna at the event and to chat with some other moms as we watched our children play. I also wanted to take my own picture, but I wanted to hold two signs. My mantra as a mom has been that every family does what is right for their family, and that will look different for each family—and even for each child. My parenting has changed as my children have grown. I picked these two signs because I do co-sleep—but I also use a crib. (And, ironically, I also wear my child, as the sign in the back says, but I have four strollers too.)
As I drove to the event, I thought about all the silly things that divide parents and how my own parenting has changed over the past five years. Before Sunshine was born, a friend of ours shared her enthusiam for co-sleeping and I listened dubiously, intent on using a crib still—until Sunshine changed my mind by refusing to sleep in that crib. I exclusively cloth-diapered Sunshine, but with Jade, I use disposables at night and cloth during the day. I bought a change table for Sunshine, like most moms do, but now I don’t have one, as another friend of ours suggested when Sunshine was little.
As moms and dads, we are all unique. We each have different parenting situations and unique children. And of us has to figure out how to raise our children in the best way possible. That’s not going to look the same for each of us, but we’ll find a way that works. I’ve had friends ask me how I manage to juggle being a full-time student while having three daughters, but I’m also amazed by the things they accomplish. And so I applaud Shauna’s project and hope it does foster more sharing of ideas and less casting of judgement among moms.
16 Comments
I love this post! The project sounds amazing. I’ll have to look into it for my local MOPS group.
I’m sad I didn’t get to meet you there. Hope to run into you soon! I also changed many of my plans and ideas, and I’ve still only got one!
Fashion, we’ll have to meet up somewhere else!!! It was busy there and I was only there for the first bit but I’m glad you were able to make it too. 🙂
This is such a fantastic movement – women need to band together and reach out and support and love each other – it all sounds so simple and it can be. Thanks for the lovely post Bonnie! (Now I have to hunt down Shauna and send her an Internet hug)
It is simple! Since becoming a mom, I’ve loved the way that just being a mom is my connection with other moms. We have something to talk about now: our kids and shared experiences there!!! I don’t know why it has to turn into a big fight. 🙂 Do send Shauna a hug! 🙂
Love this!
So true! It’s funny how even when you find your “right way” with your first kid, then it’s so not the “right way” for your second. When I was preggers with my second, I thought I knew some stuff and would be better prepared – so not how it has been. This second one is totally different and I’ve had to find a whole new path!
I agree! I’ve got three now and as I mentioned a bit above, each of them has been different. My parenting has changed over the past few years as I learn and grow as a mommy – and adjust to their different and changing needs too. 🙂
Thank you so much for coming to the photo launch! It was wonderful to meet a fellow blogger in person 🙂
You raise an important point about each family being unique- what works for one child may not work for another. As parents we have to be flexible, it’s our only choice.
Thank you again!
Shauna, thanks so much for hosting! It was a lovely event. 🙂
I’m a firm believer in you ‘gotta do what you gotta do.’ As long as you are okay with whatever may come from DOING your choice (good or bad) then that’s all you can do 🙂
I agree! 🙂
This is a great project idea. We all do the best we can to keep our babies happy and healthy – it may not be this “Right Way” – but it’s our way and it works.
I don’t think there is one “right way…” 🙂 Even when you figure out the “right way” for one thing for your child, it could change next month when they change. It’s a constant learning process to find out what works. 🙂
I love this project and post! I see what you’re talking about all the time and I have probably been guilty of it myself. You’re right, different things work for different families and we need to be accepting and respectful of each families decisions.
We’re probably guilty of it in part because we each read different parenting books by various experts who don’t even agree… so when we’ve read a book that has advice we like, and someone else read a different book with different advice, we’re bound to clash. 🙂