The (Not So) Pretty Pictures

This post contains affiliate links. Please read our disclosure policy.

This post is for the moms who are having a hard time juggling it all- we're not perfect, we're exhausted, and we aren't alone! The GIFS at the end are HILARIOUS!
Picture of my kids and one of our bathtime “disagreements”. Please do not remove watermark… I just have to share an ACUTAL representation of my life!

As a blogger, I read a lot of blogs, and am on Facebook a lot to promote my work. I love to see how other moms are spending their days as a way to find people facing the same things I do from day to day. But there is one big thing a lot of people don’t talk about.

They talk about their perfect decor, the fabulous developmental activities for kids, how perfect their hair looks, or how beautiful their cookies are. They show smiling faces, never have clutter in the background, and are seemingly perfect at… EVERYTHING.

Oh, and their kids are angels, they sit down for dinner, are doing long division in preschool and wear perfectly pressed outfits because they are the BEST. MOTHERS. EVER.

I’m not.

If I’ve ever given you that impression, I am very sorry.

The truth is, I love my family, I love that I can be home with my kids and help them grow, because I am truly blessed to be in a position to do so when not every mom can- and I don’t really know that being a stay at home mom is really meeting my best potential or that frankly, I am any good at it. I have often thought that the thing I yearned for (having children), dreamed about, and frankly always wanted (even more than being married), I am absolutely not built for. I manage, my kids are happy, healthy, thriving and I couldn’t possibly love them more or want to be around them more- but I don’t think it comes naturally for me.

I yell, I cry, I lose my temper, I sit them in front of the tv more than I should, I don’t feel like I absorb any information I read about child development in a way that I could put into practical use, I struggle with finding a parenting/discipline style that works well for my kids, and I am even worse as a homemaker, and frankly… I just care way too much about my damn self.

For me, at-home motherhood is a weird cycle.

I love my kids more than anything in the world. I stop breathing just at the thought of something happening to them. The (very few) times I am away from them, I miss them like crazy. I want to know what they are doing. I want to know they are ok. I know that my son is really hard to understand but I know his “language” and worry he’s unable to communicate without me. I know my daughter is a complete mommy’s girl and I worry she is sad not being by my side. I know they are fine (especially since their only babysitters are ever my parents or my inlaws, who my kids love so much they often cry for them and want to be with them nonstop). But **I** am attached to them.

I would never, ever chose anything than to be with them. Not that going back to work isn’t a valid option for many women (and one I dream about more than I care to admit)- I just can’t do it. I had actually planned on returning to work my entire pregnancy. I never, ever thought I would be a stay at home mom. I always thought I would continue to work in politics, and make my way to working in the white house someday.

Except, two weeks before I was supposed to go back to work from maternity leave, I couldn’t.

I couldn’t leave my baby boy with anyone else. Not only did I think he would be missing the love and support from his mom, but I felt I’d be missing a huge part of my heart. Add another baby to the mix and I feel the same way 100 times over.

And I still feel that way- even as he is in preschool (which he love, love, loves and his teachers are the sweetest, most loving women I’ve met…) I miss him and wish I was with him.

BUT

(and it’s a big but…)

I also really struggle with being a stay at home mom. I am sure 90% of moms don’t feel like a great mother 100% of the time (or heck, even 50% of the time) but I do wish we’d talk more about it.

It has nothing to do with our kids- whom we love unfailingly- but more with balancing our own expectations and remembering most of what we see from other moms is the “pretty” picture they want us to see. Not the piles of laundry in the corner, timeouts after timeouts, toy avalanches, and to-do lists that go completely ignored for months and years on end so that our kids constantly feel loved and cared for. Yea- my “real picture” is kind of a sh*tstorm.

My blog has helped because it has allowed me to combine my hobby interests (which every mom needs to have and set aside time for) with my interest in contributing to our family’s finances as well as build my own business. People often ask me how I do it all, and I tell them I don’t. Really- I don’t.

There are piles of laundry sitting to be done. My loft/craft room is horrifying. It literally gives my husband and I nightmares. We’re slowly decorating our home (only, you know, after 4 1/2 years of living in it) but it feels like everything takes forever (because when you get pregnant basically on your honeymoon and your hubby JUST moved in, it kind of kills your energy).

Seriously people- we JUST go our downstairs to a point of not looking like a frat house. Our upstairs is about 70% de-frat-ized. But I keep up with my blog because it is keeping me sane and actually nourishing the part of me that has been left in the cold- the part that wants to contribute, work at something that I can see tangible results from, and build a business.

Most people who see me in real life know that I tend to be a hot mess. Aside from struggling to find a good solution to some horrible pain from recently discovered (but long suffered) Rheumatoid/Spondylitic Arthritis, I just have a hard time holding my family together well. We stay home a lot, we always seem to be running late, we cancel on things often, and get sick just about every other day. It takes me about 4 1/2 hours to do something that should take five minutes. Everytime I sit down to post/paint/glue/cook/type- there’s a poopy diaper. There’s a fight over a toy neither kid actually wants but only wants because the other has it. There’s a need to sit on my lap, pounding on the keyboard as I type. There is a kid forcing my laptop shut… nonstop. And there is not enough medicine or booze in the world or hours to sleep at night to stop the headache of it all.

It’s getting better as my kids get older, but man- it is tough, and I want everyone to know I am flouncing. Because I am pretty sure there are a ton of other mothers out there who feel like they are the only ones feeling this way….. but…. WE AREN’T. Say that again with me, we aren’t alone.

Being a mom is awesome. It’s also incredibly difficult (whether you stay at home, work away from home, or work at home. They are all hard, all amazing, and all exhausting). And I hope it’s ok that I shared my frustrations with you, and that you share some of yours so we can all commiserate together!

My hubby and I have had some long talks, and given how horrible my health is lately, its probably time to get someone a few hours a week to help while I work from home to try to find some kind of balance. We’ve come to really rely on the income my blog and web design has provided to save and get out of debt, and it seems like a perfect mix since I WANT to be with my kids, but I simply cannot do it all.

About Courtney

Courtney loves to share great wine, good food, and loves to explore far flung places- all while masting an everyday elegant and easy style at lifestyle blog Sweet C’s Designs. Sweet C's devoted to finding the best food and drinks you'll want to make or find, around the world!

You May Also Like

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

66 Comments

  1. I have one kid and a tiny apartment, but I still don’t keep up with it. I know that most people would look at my home and say, “She has one kid AND she’s a SAHM! How is she not able to keep up with it?” People never know the whole story, though. Thanks for making me feel a little bit better tonight about ignoring the dishes! I’ll go now and try to get five hours of sleep with raging heartburn so I can get my daughter up in the morning for school. *Sigh…

    1. Karen, I feel like my husband thinks the same thing when he gets home. She’s here all day, why isnt it clean?? Then I make sure he has the kids for a day or two by himself. I notice the looks lessen when he remembers what life with them is like!

      1. A couple of years ago, I had a baby daycare so I could stay with my kids at home and work to, I did this for 5 years. My husban is a workaholic, so I was alone to do everything in the house, the only thing he did around the house was change the garbages, so after 5 years of hard work and trying to keep the house clean and take car of my kids alone, I gave him an ultimatum, either I quit working for a while or he’d split the housework with me…..he didn’t have to think a lot about this one, he told me to quit my job…that’s what I did… But then, couple of times a week, he’d say to me that I was lucky to stay at home, not working, that it was like if I were always on vacation, so one time, I couldn’t deal with his sarcasm anymore so I told him to stay at home alone for a weekend with the kids and I left with my sister for a two days vacation….witch I felt bad but wanted him to realize that it was no vacation for me!!! Since that weekend, he never called me lazzy again, and even told my three childs to help me around the house!!! What I find hard these days, is that when I tell someone that I only work outside the house 8-10 hours a week, they look at me like if I’m not normal, the generation we live in is so hard on stay at home moms….

  2. Amen!! Very well said!! Motherhood is HARD and is the Steepest Learning Curve of our lives! With 2 little boys, I deal w/ more body fluids at home then I do at work as a Nurse!! Agggghhhh! As for the perfectly kept house: kids will never brag to their friends about what an amazing house you keep, but they WILL brag to their friends about how much fun they have with you! They will cherish the memories and traditions you create w/ them, not cherish the perfectly folded linen closet that would bring Martha Stewart to tears 😉 As mothers we need to give ourselves a huge break and find happiness truly in the little things and not feel like that is settling. Thank you for letting your guard down and letting us all in. You truly are an inspiration and influence more people than you will ever know!! Taradara is one of my BFF’s and we try to keep each other sane everyday! Hang in there, it’s all worth it!!

  3. Thank you for your blog! I am not a mother, but have a sister that I see fighting this battle. I have asked her to read your blog so that she knows she is not alone in her feelings of being a stay at home mom. Seeing other “perfect” moms is something impossible to live up to and I hope she reads your blog and realizes she is doing the best she can and I have her to thank for two adorable, happy, nieces! Thanks so much!!

  4. I love this so much. I could have written this myself today. Especially since I just had baby #3, it seemed to magnify my imperfections around the house and in my parenting. But all in all. my kids are clean, well-fed, and happy. At this moment, that’s all I can ask for. As they get older, I will strive to master stay-at-home-motherhood further. But at this time, I am trying to enjoy this time that they are so little, since it is so fleeting.