Every day in my work, I witness the struggles of creative, progressive, self-aware, growth-oriented mothers who would do anything to ensure the wellbeing of their families. These women are incredibly attuned with the needs of their children, have read impressive numbers of self-help, spiritual growth, and parenting books, and are doing their very best to practice self-care in order to be able to “keep up” with “all the things.” Yet for all of their efforting, the majority of these mothers have something seriously heartbreaking in common:
A felt sense of inadequacy. A sense that no matter how much they do or how consciously they parent, it will never be enough.
Enough to ensure that their children will be protected from the harshness and dysfunctions of our culture.
Enough to promote their children’s physical, emotional, and spiritual wellness within a society which actively breeds the opposite.
Enough to feel that they are making a true difference toward alleviating at least a bit of the world’s suffering.
Enough to feel at peace, at ease, and whole as women and mothers.
The irony is that, as a whole, today’s mothers are more invested, more intentional, and more “conscious” in our parenting choices than ever.
A look at the subject of discipline, alone, is enough to illuminate this truth:
As soon as our babies are born (if not sooner), we begin educating ourselves and stocking our tool kits with a host of seemingly gentler, more thoughtful, and more creative approaches than the yelling, spanking, ignoring, shaming, and depriving that shaped many of our own childhood experiences. Determined to create healthier family systems, we learn about forming secure attachments, identifying underlying needs, reasoning, using humor, honoring feelings, putting ourselves in time out, spelling out consequences ahead of time, rewarding positive behavior, and thinking in terms of connection rather than control. We adjust for the temperaments and needs of each child, try and make sure they’re getting enough time outside, and budget for alternative therapies best we can.
The list goes on and on.
Yet despite our very best efforts (in discipline and/or any other realm), the reality of modern-day parenting often feels more daunting and discouraging than gentle, conscious, or creative. I’d bet my dream farm that if we were to get a glimpse into the majority of households in our neighborhoods, we’d see that even the most heart-centered parents are yelling more than they’re proud of, occasionally spanking, shaming, or exploding in moments of utter exhaustion, and trying with everything in them to figure out what to do with their poorly behaving, screen-addicted, and/or depressed and anxious kids.
I know this because I hear your stories every day, sweet, wonderful mothers. I know this, too, because I count myself among you.
For all the progress we’ve made as a culture toward protecting and supporting our children’s well-being and development, parents now seem to be struggling more than ever.
In fact, the more “conscious” we become, the worse many of us seem to feel about ourselves.
What’s going on? How can we be investing so much and so intentionally in our families, while simultaneously feeling more collectively overwhelmed and inadequate than ever?
Are we simply not yet conscious enough?
I have a different theory.
I believe that the trouble with “conscious” parenting is that it’s idealistic, which means that it’s raised the bar immensely on what parents perceive to be possible. A picture has been painted for us of a connected, holistic, spiritually reciprocal relationship with our children. One in which we draw from our most authentic, soulful selves in order to honor, protect, and foster the authentic, soulful expression of our children.
So beautiful, right?
It is beautiful, as an ideal. It also has the potential to be incredibly disempowering and discouraging for millions of parents (particularly mothers, who are still responsible for the vast majority of day-to-day childcare) unless we also recognize how far we are culturally from the circumstances that would best support this ideal. Without this recognition, those of us attempting to achieve such lofty ideals are being set up for failure, or at least the perception that we are failing.
Increasing expectations of health and thriving while decreasing support structures simply goes against the laws of nature. We wouldn’t cut a tree from its roots and expect it to produce even more shade or fruit than when it was connected to its source of stability and nourishment.
In order to do and be more than ever before, parents need more support than ever, not less, which is what we are faced with in the absence of grandparents in our homes, alloparents in our communities, and packs of roaming children in our neighborhoods.
The first article that came up when I googled “conscious parenting” offered the following principles as a guide:
Again, beautiful, right? There’s not an item on this list that I disagree with, in theory, but achieving these ideals our day-to-day lives is a completely different story.
Let’s take a look at a few of the items on that list, not idealistically, but practically speaking:
Every one of these points describes the opposite of most mothers’ daily realities, particularly the most disadvantaged mothers among us, who also navigate racial, economic, and gender inequalities on the daily.
To expect increased consciousness, increased emotional labor, and increased everyday investment of time and energy from perhaps the single most overworked, sleep deprived, emotionally drained, under-appreciated demographic within any culture is to perpetuate the narrative that a mother’s worth is based on her ability to endure suffering and deprivation for the sake of others.
Until more mothers stand up for and honor their own needs and desires, this narrative will continue to present itself, morphing with the times and changing form to fill in the cultural cracks that mothers’ self-sacrifice has always filled. Until we begin to organize our lives around not just our children’s worthiness, but our own, mothers will continue to bear the brunt of cultural pain and dysfunction. Such burden adds immensely to our individual and collective sense of disempowerment, and keeps us from rising to our rightful place in the natural, balanced, and vibrant order of things.
Don’t get me wrong. I have a lot of respect for the brilliant, essential work of people like Shefali Tsabary (author of The Conscious Parent) who are revolutionizing parenting and child development. When Tsabury proclaims that “Parental metamorphosis is the key to a leap in human consciousness,” I want to stand up and holler “amen!” and “hallelujah!”.
But I also cringe for exhausted mamas everywhere when I read statements such as this one:
“Conscious parenting is more than applying clever strategies. It’s an entire life philosophy involving a process that has the power to transform both parent and child on an elemental level. The only meaningful way for a parent and child to relate is as spiritual partners, in mutual spiritual advancement.”
Because let’s be honest: most parents are too fried from full-time jobs, stressed partnerships, financial pressures, and out-of-control children to even begin to think about what it might mean to be their child’s spiritual partner.
And as wonderful as this sounds:
“As you muster the courage to abandon the control inherent in a hierarchical approach and step into the spiritual potential of a circular parent/child dynamic, you will find yourself increasingly free of conflict and power struggles,”
…I believe it’s a setup for deeply felt inadequacy unless we follow it up with:
“…assuming you’ve gotten adequate sleep, you aren’t so broke that you can’t pay your bills, you’re feeling well resourced and supported by your local community, your children are all neurotypical, and your own soul is being frequently fed.”
If we’re going to ask parents to enter into a spiritual partnership with their children, we also need to educate them about how impossible this can feel within a culture that holds families with so little reverence.
If we’re going to ask parents to stop spanking and yelling at their kids, we’ve got to address the epidemic of overwhelmedness plaguing isolated, exhausted parents from all demographics.
If it’s a truly evolved cultural consciousness we’re attempting to cultivate, we must create conditions that ensure the thriving of those doing the heaviest lifting.
Today’s mothers are carrying a hugely disproportionate burden along the path to greater cultural consciousness. We don’t merely have babies on our hips, we also haul around guilt, shame, self-doubt, and countless other stressors that we’ve been conditioned to believe we must carry in order to be deemed worthy of even a sliver of happiness, inner peace, recognition, or reward for our efforts.
It is our work as awakening women to examine the consequences of this conditioning, to decide what it’s time we let go of, and to imagine what might be possible if the world’s mothers were revered, respected and well-resourced.
Conscious parenting is a beautiful concept. And, in order for it to be sustainable, feel accessible, and truly revolutionize human development, the needs and wellbeing of those being called to show up consciously must be honored right alongside the needs of those of the children we’re striving to protect and nurture.
By all means, parent with as much consciousness as you can muster. Learn as much as you can about the shape of your children’s tender young souls and requirements for thriving. Enter into a spiritual contract with your kids and you will no doubt add richness and meaning to the rest of your days. And as you’re making the seemingly-impossible, heart-wrenching choices that growth will inevitably ask of you, please remember this, dear mama:
The path to greater consciousness isn’t lit by perfection, but by soul expression. Learn to nourish, protect, and support the tender young soul within yourself with as much dedication and devotion as you have for your children, and we’ll all benefit from your radiance. We all benefit from mothers rising.
With endless respect and reverence,
*Photo credit goes to the incredible Jote Khalsa, who captures the beauty and power of motherhood like no one else.
I love this. Thank you I have to read this again later while I’m not multi tasking. I’ve been feeling this hard lately but not able to put it into words. I will be sharing this with my readers????
Thank you the kind words and share, Ashton!! Now, back to multitasking, myself! 🙂
This article was empowering. Thank you for your insight.
I’m so glad to hear it, Rosa. Empowering is exactly what I hope for my messages to be!
Thank you for writing this! It’s the first time I have read an article that talks about conscious parenting from this perspective and it makes so much sense! Of course we can’t strive to achieve all the parenting goals we set out for ourselves when our culture/reality is not set up to support them and I had never realised this before, instead I’ve just blamed myself for not being good/wise/patient/understanding/respectful enough – you know the list goes on! Thanks for your insightful perspective as always x
I’m so glad my message resonated with you, Rachel. The list goes on until we decide to stop doing that to ourselves and care for ourselves as well as we do our equally-imperfect children. Thank you for your sweet comment!
Thank you so much for posting this! I love it 🙂 I’ve shared on my group page as …
BETH BERRY’S EXHAUSTED MAMA’S SOUL EXPRESSION PARENTING
COMPASSION
EMPATHY
PROTECTION
SUPPORT
PART TIME JOBS WITH BENEFITS
RICH COMMUNITIES
PLAY
HONESTY
OPENNESS
NON JUDGEMENTAL
INCLUSION
INTERGENERATIONAL CONNECTIONS
INTERGENERATIONAL MENTORSHIP
CREMONIAL CELEBRATION
RITES OF PSSSAGE
WHOLENESS
HEALING
CONCIOUSNESS
FAMILY
DEDICATION
DEVOTION
RESPECT
https://m.facebook.com/Thepleasanthome/?tsid=0.28053310337394&source=result
This made me smile so big. 🙂 Thank you, Sandy, and thank you for sharing!!
Beth: this is an excellent post act I thank you so much for writing it! I teach Becoming Us classes (based on the book of the same name, by Elly Taylor) and so much of what you share here is a part of the curriculum. Women (and their partners!) of this generation are probably the most well-read ever when it comes to parenting… They just react to do it “right” but that means they are also the most overwhelmed and anxious parents ever as they strive for those ideals in parenting that are wholly unsupported by our culture. It is part of my mission to let them know this massage: it’s not them, they are not failures – they are being failed by our broken system. I really, really appreciate this message from you. Thank you.
Thank you so much, Barb! I’m really glad to hear about this book and curriculum. I’ll be sure and check them out. All the best to you, mama!
Thank you thank you thank you thank you … I am too emotional to write more to you but you said everything I was feeling and more and not having the adequate knowledge to explain this to the people around me … Thank you so much for validating what I feel … and writing this so beautifully!
Thank you for the sweet comment, Neda. I’m so glad my words resonated for you. 🙂
Yes! Yes! Yes! Great article and could not agree more! My husband and I moved our family to a rural mountainous area which has drastically improved our ability to conscious parent but we do still have our struggles in this technological world. I know that moving is not an option for many. My hope is that we grow in support as a society. The future depends on it and our children deserve it! Well done! This is just the beginning.
Thank you so much for your affirming words, Sarah. I, too, have alleviated a great deal of my stressors by moving to a place that feels slower and more supportive to me, but you’re right, that’s not possible for everyone. All the best to you as you continue to fight the good fight!
This is the most validating insightful perspective! Thank you. I was proud of my parenting accomplishments and it almost killed me. I had no support. We are still reeling from the women can do it all phenomenon. I believe in all the better teachings and practices but the mothers need so much more.
I feel you, Stefanie. I, too, nearly lost my mind trying to “do it all” 12 years ago. “I believe in all the better teachings and practices but the mothers need so much more.” Amen to that, mama.
Thank you for these words, and for this side of the story and how it fits into our current context. I would like to add that these ideals are often even more difficult for many people who have been marginalized and systematically oppressed. So I would like to add to the list that we need safe spaces and extra support for those communities and to encourage those voices to be represented and heard.
Such an enlightening perspective. Had multiple ah ha moments throughout. Thank you for sharing. -Lo
Thanks for writing this! I read this as I was unable to sleep because I was feeling like such a mom failure last night. This got me sleep last night, so I came back to reread it again to help me sleep tonight.
Thank you ????????
I read you and feel that someone else was able to briefly summarize what my husband and I had being experiencing our last 5 years , trying to do our best to do something we don’t have reference – conscious , positive, holistic, spiritual, etc parents.
It’s exhausting ..we have being feeling heartbroken, guilty and lost most of the time trying to do our best.
I am glad you take time to share this meaningful insights that help us to find light and release a little bit the high expectations we put in our shoulders!
Thank you!
Thank you. Today I watched a mother doing the usual telling off of her son for not sitting still. My son has the same challenges but I don’t agree with telling off and am doing my best to find love and ‘hold the space for him’ when he reacts angrily and I don’t tell him off for what is very hard for him to do. It was hard but I felt proud I didn’t tell him off for what he is unable to do yet. Still it is draining and yes it sort of replicates the ‘norm’ is still to chastise your son to be seen as a competent parent. Weird territory and going by my instincts that is not correct. But it is draining and confusing as I accept my 3 year old son needing to move (as do the teachers) and am being as flexible as possible while this models a different approach to her son, and I don’t want to undermine but still cannot just copy to put her at ease and have to listen to my heart. What you say is what I was experiencing first hand today. Thanks for expressing this.
This is the truth. Over a decade into motherhood and this is right on.
Really great article Beth, thanks for taking the time to write it. I’m actually a father and found this looking for ways to try and not feeling allowed to parent my children (with her comfort) without following Tsabary’s book to the letter. I’m an author myself and a pretty smart guy but the quote you cite above:
“As you muster the courage to abandon the control inherent in a hierarchical approach and step into the spiritual potential of a circular parent/child dynamic, you will find yourself increasingly free of conflict and power struggles,”
I mean seriously, Plato’s Five Dialogues is more clear. Any advice you might have on further tempering the ideal with real is much appreciated.