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3 Steps I’m Taking To Be A Better Mom

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Over the last several weeks, I’ve had this burning desire to become a better mom. Because y’all, I have a long way to go toward being a good mom.

I don’t love doing crafts with the kids; I find explaining things to them frustrating, and their constant questions wear me out.

Image shows a woman seated with a young girl in her lap. The two are resting their foreheads together and smiling. Text reads "Three Steps I'm Taking to Be a Better Mom"

It’s not that I don’t love my kids – I do! And I want to be a good mom. However, my driven personality wants to do things efficiently rather than effectively. You know, rush through a craft that’s supposed to be fun and nurture the kid’s creativity so that I can check it off of my list rather than sitting back and enjoying watching the kids learn.

It’s a serious and deep character flaw of mine, and I’ve been praying about it a lot, and while I feel terribly uncomfortable about being so open and vulnerable, I want you to know that it’s a struggle that I am attacking head on, because I want the wellbeing of my kids to always come first.

3 Steps I’m Taking To Be A Better Mom

Image shows a mother seated on a floor with a young girl in her lap. The woman is leaning against a wall, and the two have smiles on their faces and their heads resting together. Text reads "3 Steps I'm Taking to Be a Better Mom"

Stop saying “Yes, but”

I didn’t realize I was doing this or that it was even a problem if I was, but listening to one of Money Saving Mom’s Periscope broadcasts recently opened my eyes. Kids have a desperate need for a quality time from their parents, and Hearing Crystal talks about how telling her husband, whose love language is quality time, that she only had a few minutes to check in completely sucked the quality out of the time he hit me in the gut. I do that to my kids all the time! They ask, “Mommy, will you cuddle with me?” and I say, “Yes, but only for a few minutes”. “Will you play with me?” Yes, for just a few minutes”. I thought I was doing a good thing by letting them know what to expect, but it was just the opposite!

Separate my working hours from my family hours

As a work at home mom, this can be hard. There are some things, like recipe development,  that aren’t really separable, but the part where I take it to the computer can wait until the kids are in bed. Gabriel’s been a big help with this by taking the kids out to the farm with him to do chores in the afternoons when he can so I can have a bit of time. I’ve also been getting up earlier (of course, if it were up to me, I’d just stay up later, but Gabe’s an early-to-bed, early-to-rise kind of guy, and I don’t want to get too far off of his schedule). The bottom line is that I want to be present with the kids. I don’t want them to see me in their memories as someone who was always too busy for them.

Set aside time to just be with them

No agenda, no school work, no crafts, no chores, just be there and be ready to do whatever they want to do, be it read a book, play outside, or make a snack together. This one is especially hard for me because I tend to be a planner and not spontaneous at all. But I believe it’s important to show the kids that their opinions and wants matter and not just decide for them what they need.

Those are my three big things for right now. Do I want to add more? Yes! But baby steps, y’all, baby steps.

The truth is, I’ll probably always have a long way to go before I ever reach  my version of “good mom” status. The goal – probably for the rest of my life – will always be to just be a little bit better every day.

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2 Comments

  1. I enjoyed this! And I totally identify. I’m an “efficient” mom too, where I’d like to get it done fast rather than linger in the special moments. My husband is REALLY good at spending quality time with my daughter and patiently teaching her things, and I’d like to be a better parent like that!

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