Calm Parenting Podcast - 5-Minute Mother's Day Message
Episode Date: May 11, 20245-Minute Mother's Day Message Moms, here you are holding your family together—all alone at times, sometimes feeling numb, working through your own childhood hurts while trying to heal everyone aro...und you. Many Moms never feel like what they've done is good enough. But I want you to know I am proud of you. And you are a great Mom. Take advantage of our Mother's Day Sale. Visit https://celebratecalm.com/mothers-day/ to purchase the Get Everything Package at the lowest prices of the year. Visit https://www.oneskin.co and use code KIRK to get 15% off. Visit https://drinkAG1.com/calm for a FREE 1-year supply of Vitamin D3K2 AND 5 free AG1 Travel Packs with your first purchase. Head to https://acorns.com/calm or download the Acorns app to start saving and investing for your future today! AirDoctor comes with a 30-day money back guarantee so if you don’t love it, just send it back for a refund, minus shipping! Head to https://airdoctorpro.com/ and use promo code CALM and you’ll receive UP TO $300 off air purifiers! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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So I have a short message today for every mom who has worked so hard to raise her children,
who has sacrificed to make home a safe place with unconditional acceptance and love,
who has struggled to hold her family together, sometimes with an unsupportive spouse,
who stays up late worrying about her family and rises early to pray for them,
who sometimes suffers in silence but keeps going, who has worked
and labored harder than anyone knows to make changes in her own life, to break those old
patterns, but who never feels like she's done enough or is good enough. I want you to let this
sink in and repeat it again and again. I'm proud of you. I'm really proud of you. I'm proud of you.
You don't hear that enough, moms, either from others or yourself. So many of you have suffered
trauma as a kid or in your marriage. You ended up with a controlling man or a narcissist,
or you grew up in a controlling religious environment in which your voice was never heard,
so you never learned to speak up, or you doubted and second-guessed your instincts,
and you got hurt badly. Yet here you are, working through your own hurts and trauma and struggles,
selflessly doing everything you can to make sure your kids don't experience the same pain you did.
Many of you are doing this by yourself without any support at all.
And no one knows how hard this is, how lonely that road can be.
No one knows what it's like to feel so vulnerable emotionally, sometimes financially,
and to even feel helpless to do the one thing you want to do better than
anything else you've ever done. Be a mom. But then you feel like you're not doing enough,
or like others are judging and second-guessing you. Or maybe you are married to someone who
somehow poured on the charm or was engaged during the thrill of the hunt, but now he doesn't even seem to know how
to communicate or listen or even touch you without expectations. With someone who won't listen to a
single podcast or try to change his parenting style, even though you've asked him nicely
countless times. And here you are, holding your family together, all alone at times, sometimes feeling numb,
working through your own past childhood hurts while trying to heal everyone around you.
Well, I'm proud of you because you are like my own mom.
My mom was a simple girl who fell for a charming man who turned out to be deceitful, controlling, and abusive.
Not to mention that my dad was just plain scary.
And when she couldn't take it anymore,
she somehow got her four boys out of the home
when her husband, my dad, was on a business trip so we could be safe.
That was in 1978.
Women didn't do that back then, but my mom did.
Because my mom was the most loving
encouraging person you've ever met
but down inside
she was a badass
because she fought like you do
sacrificing herself
for the boys she loved more than anything
in life and I believe that
all the stress that my dad caused her
caused her to
contract she had MS she bore that in her body,
and it was a disease that gradually took away body part after body part, but she never complained.
She never stopped loving. She never stopped fighting. She loved her boys to her last breath.
See, we as men like to think we're tough. We develop hero stories
around it, but we've never carried or given birth to a baby. We rarely bear the emotional burden
of an entire family. Now look, I was going to add a few tips to lighten the load from your parenting
journey as a mom, but I think I'm going to stop here because I think it's important for this to sink in. I do want you to know that I'm proud of you, that you are seen, that you are appreciated,
and that you're a great mom. And don't you ever doubt that or forget that. Happy Mother's Day,
mom. Love you all.