The Problem With Attachment Parenting
I have probably approached this topic from a hundred different directions. Still not quite sure how to say it nicely. Today, as a change in programming, I am just going to come out and say it.
The problem with Attachment Parenting is that it is impossible to do perfectly.
There. I said it.
I love the ideas behind attachment parenting- kindly responsiveness, respect, balance, etc. But we have to be honest- no matter what AP is SUPPOSED to be, what it usually end up being is very different.
What does AP end up being? Often it is a laundry list of mom resume accomplishments- breastfeeding, baby wearing, no circumcision, natural birth, no cry-it-out, co-sleeping, organic food and toxin free clothing and of course- cloth diapers! I even hear people say they don't believe in saying "no" to their children and think time-outs are as bad as spanking. (Spare me, please.) The truth is it probably doesn't have to be ANY of those things, but that is what it gets turned into.
I know my love affair with AP ended when I found myself pregnant with my second child.
I had been busy for the previous two years co-sleeping, breastfeeding on cue, and just generally striving for perfection. When I became pregnant again, I knew one thing- I could not SUSTAIN the mom rules I had set up for myself in my AP strive for Dr. Sears approval.
I was exhausted. EXHAUSTED. I had not slept through the night since my first pregnancy over two years before. Throughout my second pregnancy my two year old woke up every night and crawled into bed with me around 3am. In my big old pregnant state I couldn't get back to sleep. I was tired and not just physically. I was emotionally exhausted and fed up with constant contact and lack of sleep and doing it all for the good of my baby. I had lost myself in the shuffle.
Maybe that isn't what is supposed to happen. Maybe I was being unwise in my expectations for myself. I am pretty sure though that I am not the only one. I think AP burnout is really pretty common and the fact that other moms SEE how burnt out AP moms are makes them a little afraid to even TRY it.
I am ashamed (or just frightened) to even admit that my second child didn't sleep for even ONE night in our bedroom as an infant. She went into a bassinet in the room with her brother (swaddled even! GASP!) and she slept like a champ.
I was home with my two kids by myself for about 18 hours a day. I was over 1000 miles away from family. The problem with AP at this point was that I COULD NOT DO IT. I physically couldn't be there constantly, answering every emotional whimper, need, and diaper with perfect, attached, surreal calmness.
The baby swing- ummmm, yeah, I used it. And I LIKED IT. I have also owned a Bumbo (double gasp!) and strollers (I know- we can't be friends any more! Real AP moms only baby-wear!) and bouncers and all that jazz. Do they all work for every kid? No. But sometimes they worked. Sometimes they kept me sane. Sometimes they made life bearable when I was overwhelmed.
The sad reality is that most modern families don't have 10 adults living in a house together. Most people don't have half a dozen children and grandmas all under one roof. If you do then it is pretty possible for somebody to always go straight to a fussing baby and you can raise a child who never cries for more than a few seconds. But for most mothers the reality is much more lonely (and private) and those gadgets we buy- well they replace grandmother or an older sibling or a mom who simply needs to feed her other children.
The problem with Attachment Parenting is the rules and the restrictions and the impossible perfection and of course- the JUDGMENT. Not just judgment that we throw at each other, but the judgment that we hurl at OURSELVES when we perceive that we fall short.
Today- more than 7 years after my first baby, I don't consider myself an "Attachment Parent". I just try to be the best I can be in my circumstances. I try to baby-wear when it works for me and my baby (and my back). I try to get my babies when they need me but it doesn't always happen immediately. I try to make them feel loved but that doesn't mean I meet their every grunt and noise with a nipple. I breastfeed but sometimes I don't like it. I still love my stroller more than is healthy.
The biggest difference now though is that I no longer feel guilty or ashamed of all of these truths. I am more comfortable in my mom skin than I was seven years ago and I am more accepting of my own imperfections.
I hope that we can all get to a place where we find real balance and where we are so sure of how we are parenting that we don't care how other people are looking at us. I hope we can raise healthy, well rounded children who don't believe the world revolves around them and are sensitive to others. I am not sure how perfect parenting is done or how to raise a child into a fantastic adult.
I am pretty sure that it means doing our best and letting go of the rest. Nobody wants a mother who has lost her joy in trying to be a perfect mother.
Comments
(So glad you used my fave bfding picture:)
maybe it is because i have parented for 18+ years now or raised/raising 6 children, but all the stuff that i do that is considered AP i do because it is soooo much easier then all the other stuff. i co-sleep because i have found it lets me sleep more (i know that doesn't happen for everyone, so you gotta do what you gotta do), i breastfeed because formula is pricey and because, well i like it, and because it is good for the baby. i cloth diaper because... well sadly because i freakin LOVE cloth diapers. i justify spending ungodly amounts of money on super cute diapers because well, the are necessary. LOL
my first got jarred baby food and didn't get organic because i had no idea about that stuff, all the rest just ate off my plate and we have been eating organic for years now because i feel it is better for us, BUT when money has been tight i just buy what we can afford.
we have used a stroller, a johnny jumper.
i have sent the kids to their rooms, and grounded them, i say no.
i think it is all media hype that pits mama against mama. we all have to do what works for our families. if co-sleeping doesn't work, then put them in a crib. if you can't baby wear or don't want to, then don't.
all the ideals of AP help me have a way to be a better mother, which my children deserve. they do deserve a mama who will listen, hold them, answer their calls. which i think is a good thing. so much of my parents and grandparents generations were so detachment, keep your distance, show them who is boss. maybe it has swung too far the other way, but i think learning to que into your children isn't bad, just the list of have to's is.
So it just never worked for me. Which isn't to say that I don't try hard to give my kids what I think they need. And I'm a huge advocate for natural birth (I'm a home VBAC-er myself!) and breastfeeding and all that. I just can't go in for the slings and co-sleeping... It seems like it would just be bad for my mental health.
I don't have a problem with other people doing it. I just realized that for me, it would make me a worse mom...
Anyway, like I said, I really do love your blog, so please don't block me from it or something! :)
I think it is sad we are so busy judging ourselves and each other. I wish we could be more kind to ourselves and each other.
I never really labeled myself as a parent. I do some AP things and some not. But I am a Mom and a pretty good one in some areas, and lousy in others (such as dental health, really my kids and brushing their teeth, I get like a C-)
On the outside looking in, I am an AP momma. But whatever. I don't live my life based upon some list of DOs and DON'Ts which often change as the wind blows! I do what works for me and my family, right here, right now. And I do it very, very imperfectly.
I am not saying we shouldn't strive for greatness- we should. But I am kind of tired of the categories and the books and the rules and the this and that. And I think that a LOT of moms feel like I did.
Two years ago I embraced AP to the limit when I was always upset and feeling that my life was over. Then it took me some weeks to decide I had to do my best. The "best" I could without leaving myself aside. I think is better to teach my girl her mother has a life and enjoys doing things and going out, than teaching her I´m a zombie! lol. Love your blog! :)
If we'd had a mellow child we would absolutely have let her hang out for hours in a bouncy chair while we stared at our smart phones. And we probably would have weaned months ago, and had the baby in a crib in another room. We definitely didn't choose attachment parenting; our baby chose it for us. And I'm glad she did...mostly. The sad thing is when other parents, who aren't co-sleeping and breastfeeding anymore, seem to feel threatened when they find out that we still do these things--like it makes us better parents or something. No no...we're just trying to survive each day with a minimum of screaming/crying. If you want to voluntarily do all of that stuff, more power to you. It probably is really good for your kid, for the most part.
Maybe our reactionary attachment parenting doesn't count as the real thing since it's not exactly what we'd have chosen to begin with. I don't know, and am not sure I care. :)
I didn't turn to equipment, because that also didn't feel right to me (except a bassinet and a crib, because my second son slept so much better in them), but I found RIE. I guess it really doesn't matter what we found outside of AP that worked for us, but I think it's interesting that so many moms end up feeling overwhelmed.
http://www.rie.org/
I think I would have gone insane if I had kept giving myself all those rules, I ended up in therapy and realized how hard I had been on myself and had surrounded myself by "natural" moms who were just as hard and more on themselves.
Some time later I found RIE as well and it makes so much more sense to me if I combine it with what feels right to me from an AP perspective.
-Annie
Perhaps a better title and subject would be, "The Problem with Perfection-oriented Parenting."
You make me laugh!!! But, we all know Baby Wise starves babies and I don't know any self-proclaimed AP mama that doesn't stress out about being gentle enough at some point or another.
My husband says our kids might actually listen to me if I didn't strive to be so freaking respectful at all times. Maybe he is on to something...
I share your feelings about AP extremists, Mama Birth. I am a BIG fan of RIE, which has the tenderness for children without the big stick for mums that some extremist APs seem to love to wield.
I know that AP in its purest and original form was not meant to be like this, but some people want a blueprint for perfect parenting and once they find it they treat it like the Bible. There's no such thing as perfect parenting, and you and I and many of the other commenters here KNOW that.
Fabulous post.
I had the Dr sears book for my first, and we practice many of the principles because they seem right for us - co-sleeping, exclusive bf'ing, baby wearing, cloth diapering and a few of the other things. I wasn't surrounded by other people who did stuff like that, so I never had the experience of feeling judged when I chose to use disposables for a week, or experimented with CIO, or put the baby in bouncy seat. I guess I didn't label myself as an AP person, even though I did AP things. We've had 2 babies since then, and have continued with our selection of AP practices. Maybe I wouldn't be accepted into the AP club by some of the over-zealous parents, but I don't care. I know MY children, and I know how to respond the THEIR needs and cues. And that's the whole point. AP is merely the means to an end - having happy and healthy kids.
The guiding light during my first years as a mother has been to always remember that my default, because of the culture i live in, will be to obsess about my son's needs. and i want to balance that out whenever i can by trying to obsess over my needs. (i'm also a chronically empathetic person, so need to really work to think about my wants and needs). thinking this way really has served me well. i've had my own breakdowns and breakthroughs along the way. but it's helped me to remember that i'm ultimately raising an adult. and i want him to be both attached and able to function on his own. and i think one of the best gifts i can give him growing up is for him to see his mother actively taking steps to take care of herself while still remaining an engaged caregiver.
thank you! just found you through aunt annie's blog. thrilled to know you're out here.
so yes, i too feel like i suck most of the time because my emotional AND intellectual vision of myself is way more perfect than the realized vision of myself.
ah well- we can only do what we can do, but at least we are not alone in the fight :)