Just a click away
"We believe you're the best parent for your child."
When I first read those words, I blinked hard, and read them again. My six-week old daughter lay in my arms, and I remember sitting up straight, and taking my hand off the mouse. I touched my little girl's nose, and smiled.
My eyes returned to the monitor. "We believe you're the best parent for your child."
"Huh," I thought. "Am I?"
The first few weeks at home with my newborn daughter were a blow to my ego. I had read all the books and magazines. I took the classes offered by my hospital, and I had a nursery full of baby clothes and educational toys. It was pretty clear to me that I was going to be the best mother ever. EVER.
Then I brought my baby home.
I put on a brave face through sleep deprivation, through breastfeeding struggles, through well-meant advice offered by well-meaning loved ones that contradicted my idealized parenting experience. As I struggled through a horrible thrush infection, I kept my upper lip stiff. I was prepared to nurse my baby until she was a year, and if I was in horrific pain the entire year, it wouldn't matter, because it was the plan. My plan. The plan made by the best mother ever.
A moment came where I stood next to my infant daughter's crib, sobbing with my head on the side of her crib rather than picking her up. My breasts were so sore that I had to carefully lift her and center her between my breasts to carry her. Any movement was excruciating, yet I insisted that it would be fine. I was fine. FINE. That day, sobbing along with my baby, I knew I needed to let go of my idealistic visions and start learning to mother in the real world.
I called the lactation consultant at the hospital, and after my appointment, I came home with orders to pump for a week to allow my infection to heal, and then breastfeeding should be fine. I did, and it was, but for a week, I surfed the internet, and pumped. And pumped, and surfed the internet. I stumbled across a little site, just launched. From their front page, the words jumped out at me. "We believe you're the best parent for your child."
Amazing how an anonymous vote of confidence on the internet could mean so much to my fragile ego. I took a shuddering breath and let the bravado go. I was in pain, exhausted, slightly hysterical and completely irrational. But these people obviously thought I was capable of parenting my own child, in the best way FOR MY CHILD. Never mind the fact that everyone in my life had been telling me the same thing for weeks. What did they know? They had never set out to be the best mother ever. They had lower standards, which could not be applied to the likes of me. Reading this simple sentiment on the homepage of One Hot Mama was what Oprah calls "a lightbulb moment."
I sat there with my mouth moving, reading over and over. (I was sleep deprived, cut me some slack. Heh.)
" I, Jenny, am already, I already am the BEST parent for my own child. This child right here. My own child, which I am struggling to parent, but still, I know her better than anyone, so I guess I am the best at reading her and knowing what she needs...the best. I'm the best mother! For this here child! Maybe not the best ever, but in her ever, I'm the best. Woo hoo!"
I told my sleeping daughter, "Hey! I'm your best mama." She farted and sighed in her sleep. I stage-whispered to my husband, "Hey! I'm the best mama for our baby!" He rolled his eyes. "We're attachment parents!" I stage-whispered to no one in particular. "Woo hoo!"
I clicked over into the discussion boards, and met a circle of friends that is with me still, seven years later. I've had the privilege of watching my fellow mothers grow in confidence as our families grow in size. The original babies from seven years ago have been joined by many siblings. I wonder if parents that are attracted to attachment parenting practices tend to be larger than average? I was recently asked if I had always planned on having such a large family. "Is three kids large?" I asked.
Looking around at my local friends, my family with three children is a rarity. Two children is most common, with single children only slightly less so. In fact, watching me wrangle my three houligans in public parks and malls is probably keeping many local families from adding a third to the equation. That being said, I am friends with many mothers with families larger than mine. My questioner was surprised that I could name more than two or three families with five or more children. "The internet," I explained. "We don't all live in the same town."
While the years spent posting on discussion boards were truly wonderful, the community remained constant. The general philosophy of parenting was similar. Now that my youngest is three, I find I have less interest in whether I am "AP" or not. I've developed my own parenting style, for better or worse. My style is very much a product of my own temperment, my children's personalities, and the wisdom from my wonderful online friends. From that first visit, these women were my ace up my sleeve. I could always count on the Hot Mamas for a teething remedy, to know what to do when my toddler refused to eat, to encourage me as I approached my due date, to provide a laugh after a rough day. This shared wisdom, sometimes advice, sometimes an anecdote, provided a sense of security, an archive of information from in-the-trenches mothers who had been there and done that.
Mommyblogging expands on this sense of community. Far from a homogenous group of mothers, the bloggers documenting motherhood online are changing the way I see myself. I feel the disappointment of watching a pre-teen lose a school election. I see myself in a new mother's chatty posts about her new baby. I hear the echos of my own voice in the weary posts of an overdue pregnant woman. I catch glimpses of my future as I read the poignant words of mothers watching their grown children soar outside their nest.
Beyond the mechanics of raising a family, in blogging about her family, the woman is revealed. Sometimes I see myself. More often, I see a stranger. Our experiences as women inform our parenting. We want to raise our children differently than our parents did. We want to do it the same. We want to do it better. Pride, fear, longing and joy bubble up from these blogs. I devour all these experiences, and add them to my archives of been-there, done-that parenting knowledge.
It may not make me a better parent, but it comforts me to know that other mothers struggle. Other mothers laugh and cry at the wrong times. Other mothers parent differently, and they are the best mothers for their own children. Rather than judging, I always seem to find something useful and beautiful to take away from these little snapshots of other's lives.
The good, the bad, the ugly and the amazingly beautiful...all of it just a click away.

















Comments
It's the imperfect moments that people share that mean the most. I think beause rather than making me feel insecure and inadequate, they make me feel normal and most importantly, not alone. Beautiful post.
Posted by: Meghan | January 12, 2006 10:50 AM
I love when people share their moments of weakness or imperfection. Not because I relish the fact that they are imperfect, but because I realize I'm not alone in the scary world of parenting. I realize if I'm not supermommy today, it will still be ok. Thanks for sharing.
Posted by: Melissa | January 12, 2006 12:11 PM
My internet community has been the main force in how I parent. I wandered from the Attachment Parenting board at AOL over to the Positive Discipline board when my first kid got old enough to vex me. I'm with that group still, 8 years later. We've left AOL, to avoid the trolls, but we are a very active board and we even meet in real life. When friends of my husband tell him they're expecting a baby, he says "Find an on-line community!" It really gives so much more perspective, even in our self-selected little over-thinking, non-punishing little world.
Posted by: Deana | January 12, 2006 12:14 PM
Amen, sistah!
Posted by: Mir | January 12, 2006 12:35 PM
Exactly! We're all in this for the same thing, our wonderful children.
Posted by: Katie | January 12, 2006 1:35 PM
I puffy heart you, Jenny. You are one of the best people that I've ever met, and I love everyone at OHM.
Posted by: carmen | January 12, 2006 1:47 PM
It's funny how it calms us and reassures us by reading and finding out that we were doing okay the whole time. Or thats its okay to try different ways of tackling mommyhood. I will say that raising four children, that you find out that sometimes what worked for one child sometimes doesn't work for the next one. All trial and error. But thats what makes us all GREAT mommies.
Keep up the great work.
Posted by: Jill | January 12, 2006 1:49 PM
I have to agree with Meghan and Melissa. I had an imperfect moment last month when I accidently left my son in the car and went shopping, I felt like the worst mother on Earth till I started getting email from others saying it's happened to them too and I'm not alone. Of course they wouldn't comment that on my blog but they emailed me to let me know. ;)
Posted by: Sabrina | January 12, 2006 1:54 PM
I agree, we are all in it together, this hardest job on earth of being a mom. And not one person is perfect at it. It can be very demanding and exhausting but also very rewarding.
We live & learn from each other.
Posted by: Suz | January 12, 2006 2:40 PM
What a great post! I agree about the sharing of imperfections - it strengthens trust and community. I realized recently that men often interpret that kind of thing as self-putdowns or pathological insecurity, or just insane exposure of vulnerability, or worse, evidence of incompetence; while women often experience it as an exchange that establishes trust and security...
Anyway, beautiful post!
Posted by: Liz | January 13, 2006 2:22 AM
Jenny,
This was a truly lovely post. One of the societla issues I have lamented is that in our "mobile" society, we don't have a group of "Womenfolk" who can take us by the hand and tell us their own Parenting foibles, or take our children from us so we can recover our senses, or hand us a stiff shot of bourbon.
The Mommy's I have known have swung from the "insufferable" to the ones I love the best. One of my Mom friends will say "She's like us, you know? Real."
I wish for every Mom to get to know another real mom!
Posted by: Dawn | January 13, 2006 1:19 PM
Lovely post! I need to remember to record more of my downs on my blog. I tend to rush to write down the cute and fun and just throw ugly looks at my computer on the days that I am making an ass of life.
Posted by: Amber | January 16, 2006 9:06 AM
first time I saw this----
very well done.
xoxo
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