Calm Parenting Podcast - Moms, You Are Doing A Better Job Than You Think! (10 Lies You’re Told) #478
Episode Date: May 11, 2025No wonder you second guess yourself—you are doing the hardest job on the planet while being observed and judged by the people you thought would support you in this…and sometimes you even ...get undermined from within your home. You constantly feel the need to take the temperature of the home and then get accused of coddling your child when you are just protecting your child. You are courageously dealing with childhood trauma and breaking generational patterns. I am so freaking proud of you! I hope this podcast makes you feel heard, understood, and inspired to keep being an awesome Mom. We are extending our Mother's Day Sale for one more week. Visit https://celebratecalm.com/mothers-day/ to purchase the Get Everything Package at the lowest prices of the year. Moms, do this for yourselves.AG1AG1 is offering new subscribers a FREE $76 gift when you sign up. You’ll get a Welcome Kit, a bottle of D3 & K2 AND 5 free travel packs in your first box. Go to https://drinkag1.com/calmCOZY EARTHWrap yourself and your kids in Cozy Earth luxury…with 40% OFF! Visit https://cozyearth.com/ and use my exclusive 40% off code CALM. IXL LEARNINGGet an exclusive 20% off an IXL membership when you sign up today at https://IXL.com/KIRK.FASTGROWINGTREES.COM/CALMFast Growing Trees has the best deals for your yard, up to half off on select plants. Listeners to our show get an additional 15% OFF their first purchase at https://FASTGROWINGTREES.COM/CALM using the code CALM.SKYLIGHT CALENDARSSkylight is offering our listeners $30 off their 15 inch Calendars by going to https://SkylightCal.com/CALMKIWICO.COMBuild the best summer ever with KiwiCo! Get $15 off on your Summer Adventure Series at https://kiwico.com/CALM.ACORNS EARLYHead to https://acornsearly.com/calm to help your kids grow their money skills today.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Moms, I really want you to know this deep down inside.
You are doing a better job than you think.
You are so tough on yourself.
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Moms, I really want you to know this.
You are doing a way better job as a mom than you think you are, than you give yourself credit for.
You constantly second-guess yourself and no wonder.
You're doing the hardest job on the planet while being observed and judged by the people you thought
would support you in this. And sometimes you even get undermined from within your
home. You constantly feel the need to take the temperature of the home and
then you get accused of coddling your child when in fact you're just
protecting your child. And yet you keep going. You never stop learning and trying because there's
nothing as great and fierce as a mom's love and you're also a hero because you
are breaking generational patterns. You are doing this courageous work inside
and it takes a tremendous amount of emotional vulnerability to do this. And nobody
even knows what you're going through. You're dealing with trauma that no one is even aware of
before. And so I'm proud of you for that. So happy Mother's Day to you. Look, I've agonized over this
podcast more than any other because I don't want it to be trite or gratuitous or meaningless.
But I also don't want to add to your burden with, Hey moms, here's three more
things you can do to be the best mom possible because you already carry too
many burdens.
But I do want you to feel heard.
That's partly why I recorded that letter written from Jess from New England a
few weeks ago.
And I want to take the pressure off of you.
So this Mother's Day podcast is going to have
four sections to it.
I hope you find it encouraging.
And for those of you who don't know,
this is Kirk Martin, founder of Celebrate Calm.
You can find us in our glorious Mother's Day sale
at CelebrateCalm.com.
So first part, moms, you are doing a much better job
than you think. I want to know that that deep down inside
Because if you ask most moms if they're doing enough or a good enough job as a mom
They will say no and that's wrong and I think it's partly just false
Expectations of what moms are supposed to do and be in as we are currently, right? I remember when Casey was an infant,
I took him over to my
grandma's apartment and I just laid him on the bed and she just stared at him so sweetly and I asked my
grandma what it was like to raise kids when she did back in the 30s and 40s and she said,
raise kids when she did back in the 30s and 40s. And she said, well, we just brought your mom and uncle home
and continued with our lives.
Kids didn't really talk too much except between themselves.
And here's what my mom experienced.
When she had me, I was the third of four boys.
The doctor actually came back in the room and said,
Nancy, let's have a smoke.
They smoke cigarettes right in the maternity room.
And her generation of moms did what?
Well, they got together with other moms
and they played cards and smoked
and watched soap operas while the kids played.
And then moms, we kind of made the kids go outside
and not come back in until it was dark or dinner time.
It was completely different.
But you are part of a generation in which you as a mom are expected to be responsible
for everything for your child's happiness and choices and successes and failures and
moods 24-7.
You feel guilty if your child isn't thriving and it's too much.
I want you to know you are a great mom.
Look, you're listening to a parenting podcast, right?
So you're invested in this and you're a much better mom than you give yourself credit for.
Look, you're not a bad mom if you...
Look, I just want to go through this because there are so many false
expectations placed on you. And if you have a strong will child, a child with
PDA or ADHD, ADD, OCD, ODD, SPD, ASD, then it is just monumentally challenging. And
I've worked with over a million families
over the past 25 years, so I want you to know this.
You are not a bad mom.
If your kids don't play team sports
and get along with other kids their own age,
they will gravitate toward individual activities
that also tend to meet sensory needs,
and they tend to be better in the adult world,
not the kid world.
You're not doing something wrong, moms. You are not a bad mom. If your child has
massive meltdowns when they get anxious about going to new places it's normal.
You're not a bad mom. If your child doesn't have good manners in front of
your friends and parents I don't want you to feel like you have somehow failed
your child or and I don't want you to have to apologize for them.
You're not a bad mom if you get calls from school because your child won't sit
still in circle time or act silly in class or doesn't follow directions that
well. That's normal for our kids. You're not a bad mom.
If your kids argue and fight and aren't kind to each other,
I think it would be weird if they got along really well all the time.
You're not a bad mom if your kids complain and they don't act grateful.
You're not a bad mom.
If you have three kids like under the age of seven and your house is constantly a mess
and your entire day is putting out fires and you never get to check anything off your list,
that's how it's supposed to be.
Don't listen to the judgment of others.
Don't watch all those Instagram accounts
where the mom has everything all together.
It's not reality.
You're not a bad mom if some nights,
you just can't pull it together.
So you get takeout or you throw together mac and cheese
for the third straight night. You're not a bad mom if your child is still wearing her Halloween
costume in May or your child wears the same hoodie for 18 straight days. You're not a bad mom if you
send your child to school with processed pre-packaged meals or if all they eat is mac and cheese and
chicken nuggets. Just chill with all those expectations. You're not a bad mom
if your child lies about washing their hands or brushing their teeth or if they don't listen to
you the first or 12th time. You're not a bad mom if you haven't signed your kids up to learn violin
or mandarin and they don't practice their musical instruments. Most of your strong will kids are
not going to practice at sports or their musical instruments.
You're not a bad mom if you're overwhelmed and occasionally lose it and yell.
That's part of the growing process.
You're not a bad mom if your kids don't go to their high school graduation and barely
get that diploma or if they won't apply themselves.
And I know you're going to have to grieve that sometimes sometimes but that's not your fault. You didn't do something wrong
You're not a bad mom
If your child won't eat everything or anything on their plate
Or if you leave dishes and plates in the sink overnight you hear your mom's voice screaming in your head
To clean it up. You're a great mom. You are a great mom
Though you shouldn't have to, you constantly take the
temperature of the home to make sure your kids are safe and healthy and happy. You sacrifice so
they can have things you never had. You get up in the middle of the night even when you're exhausted
to calm their fears and calm their stomachs. And you know there's nothing as fierce, loyal,
and relentless as the love of a mother. So I wanted to go through 10 lies and false expectations that I couldn't even say right,
but I'm practicing imperfection myself, moms.
Here are 10 lies and false expectations that moms are told or expected to live up to.
And I wanted to, as a man, speak very directly about these so you have clarity and hopefully feel heard and validated inside.
Not that you need me to validate you.
So number one, here's something your moms are told all the time.
Well, you just coddle our children.
Sure, maybe you're a little bit too accommodating at times.
I get that.
But that is usually because you are likely counterbalancing your husband's negativity and yelling. You are forced
into a position of being the referee and doing damage control. Then you get told
you're coddling the child when in essence you're actually coddling or
babying your husband because he can't control himself. That is not your fault. That is not your
responsibility. You are just doing the right thing by protecting your child and that's a noble thing.
So don't let people guilt you over that and make it like it's your issue. Number two, well you must
be doing something wrong because your kids misbehave. That's a lie. You didn't do something wrong. I get these questions almost every day. Well, what am I doing
wrong as a mom that my kids aren't grateful, that the siblings fight, that
my child is so intense, that my child has sensory issues, that my child has meltdowns?
Nothing. You did nothing wrong. You did not cause these things to happen. Stop being
responsible for everybody else's opinion of you and what your child does. This is
just who your kids are. They're okay. You're a good mom. Look, for those of you
who had the compliant child first, remember? You were like, I am such a good
mom. But then you had a more strong-willed child. You're like, I am such a good mom. But then you had a more strong willed child.
You're like, I don't know what I'm doing.
You didn't cause the strong willed child to be like this.
It's just who they are.
One of the third lie we hear all the time, I should be doing more.
No, I want you to do less.
There is no way you will never not be a great mom. Seriously, be confident in
that. Well, I need to always be on my game and never take time off in order to
be a good mom, a good wife, a good partner. No, that's not true. You are worthy of
being respected, loved, and accepted just as you are. You have nothing to prove. You have nothing to earn. This is a big one for moms.
Number four, well, I just feel like I'm bothering people when I ask for help. No, no, no. I get so
many emails to begin with. Well, I'm sorry to bother you. Why do you think you are bothering
people? You're not. How come it's okay for you to do everything for everyone else with such a good attitude,
but if you ask for one small thing, you feel like you have to apologize.
Now, I know a lot of you, for a lot of you, that's from your childhood and you're courageous
because you're facing those patterns and breaking them.
So I want you to stop apologizing and know
deep inside you are worthy of having people do good things for you.
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So think about this moms.
Here's what's kinda happening.
You are doing what many of you consider is the most important job of your lifetime, being
a mom raising kids.
And while you are doing it, you are being observed and studied and judged for every
little thing that goes wrong, even if it's not your responsibility.
You get judged by your own mom and dad, by your
siblings, by your in-laws, by strangers and teachers and people on Instagram.
Imagine going to work at an office and you have like six different bosses who are critiquing
and criticizing every single decision you make.
No one would put up with that, but that's what often happens to moms.
So I want you to trust your instincts and develop a little bit of a more of a kind of like
F you attitude toward other people's judgments and society's expectations.
Learn to trust that voice inside. Think about this.
Number six, for some moms, it's even worse.
Your partner in this is actually undermining all your efforts on a daily basis
Right you you spend all this energy and time like get making sure everything's okay
Making sure the kids are good and then your spouse walks in the door and now just blows everything up
Because if you have a spouse who cannot control his emotions who yells and reacts and escalates
Not only do you have to clean up the emotional messes,
your work is being undermined. Would your husband like it if you went to his office
and started yelling at his colleagues and creating drama there?
Will he be furious that you're undermining his work and company culture and preventing him from getting a promotion?
So let him know that. Listen to the May 2nd episode
about how to get husbands on board,
because you need help, not a critic.
Number seven, you are not wrong to expect
to feel emotionally and physically safe
before being intimately vulnerable with your spouse.
You shouldn't be guilted or coerced into doing something if you're
not being treated with respect. You're not weaponizing a damn thing. You're
demonstrating self-respect and expecting to be treated well. Don't let people
manipulate you. Learn to trust your internal voice again, even if that voice was not listened to or respected as a child.
Number eight, it is not dishonoring your parents to create very clear boundaries with them
and say no when they are not acting appropriately around your kids or in your home. Don't allow those accusing voices and guilt to cause you to continue
this pattern of being bullied and manipulated by your parents. For some of you, this is very,
very strong. If you grew up like I did in a religious background, it's like, no, we have to
honor our parents. It is not dishonoring your parents to create boundaries and say no. We are
the parents of a grown man and a daughter-in-law and
we tread lightly in their home. We respect their way of doing things. We
don't force our opinions on them. Expect your parents to grow up or they are not
allowed entrance to your family island because that's what you have. You have a
family and there's a moat and there's a drawbridge there. It is your home. It is
your children and no one has a right. It is your home. It is your children.
And no one has a right to come into your home and behave in ways contrary to your values.
And you are not being a disrespectful or rebellious daughter if you stand your ground and say,
you are welcome in our home, but you are not welcome if you do X and Y. I know that's hard for many of you, but it's
important. Number nine, you're a mom. There's something special about a mom. I often joke that
when men go to sleep, we forget that we have children. It's kind of true, but a mom never
forgets. She wakes up in the middle of the night, wonders how her children are sleeping. She's going
through that mental checklist
of all the appointments and things
she needs to keep straight for the kids,
even if she has her own full-time job.
And this may be an unpopular take,
but I found it to be true.
Do you know why when a divorce happens,
the kids often take out their anger on their mom
and not dad, and they kind of play nice with their dad,
even though mom has always been the supportive,
loving parent.
It's because most kids intuitively know this,
my dad's love and acceptance can be kind of fleeting.
So I need to give lots of allowances
and make excuses for my dad so he doesn't abandon me.
But I know that my mom will always love me no matter what.
Right? Because I can always come back to my mom
because she will always be there for me.
Mom means home and safety for so many of us.
Number 10.
Moms like you are heroes to me.
And I'm not just saying that.
You are breaking generational patterns.
You are working through trauma, through dysfunctional childhoods.
Some of you were not listened to as kids.
You had no voice.
And here you are as a grown adult, now with kids of your own, and you are learning how
to find that voice to change patterns that have been part of you for decades.
That is heroic work.
You are digging down deep and dealing with issues that no one else is even
aware of. You face setbacks. You get knocked down even by the people close to
you. You have your trust broken and yet here you are battling through that pain
to learn to trust again,
to be vulnerable, to become fully you.
I am so freaking proud of you, not just as a mom, but as a human.
So I wanna tell you about my mom, who passed shortly after Mother's Day four
years ago.
Now, I think I had the best mom ever, and I hope you're not offended by this, but my
mom was just a simple woman.
There were no pretenses.
She wasn't very bright, and I'm not being mean.
She was just a simple person.
We never had deep discussions.
I don't ever remember her ever giving me like good advice or some kind of wisdom, and she
couldn't cook.
She was awful.
But when you talk to my mom, she made you feel
like the most important person.
Like she was really interested
in what you were saying or doing.
She listened, she loved, she laughed.
If you were having a bad day, you could call my mom,
and I used to tell my friends this.
I was like, just call my mom. She won't even know who you are and she'll talk to you. And you'll
you'd hang up feeling better about yourself and your life. Isn't that a magical trait?
And then there's this part of my mom. She was a naive, simple girl who ended up marrying
a monster. Near the height of my dad's abusive behavior, my mom somehow
figured out a way to move her four boys across town to a tiny little town home while my dad was
away on a business trip. It was 1976. No one did that back then. She did. It was a courageous move
on her part to protect her four boys and she took menial jobs to support us.
We got reduced lunches at school because my dad refused to pay her.
But she never complained.
She just fought for her four boys.
And although she get frustrated, I have to tell you this,
she get frustrated with us when we were a little bit older.
And she tried to swat at us with a fly
swatter. And then all you had to do with my mom was make a really inappropriate joke, and she would
laugh so hard. But you know what? She raised four boys who turned out to be pretty good humans,
and she didn't do nearly as much as you do for your kids. But eventually the body keeps the score and my mom
developed MS which slowly ravaged her body piece by piece and I have no doubt
that my dad's abuse triggered her MS. And I think that my mom bore that MS in her
body for us as kind of a sacrifice of sorts. So her four boys didn't have to
bear so much of his stress and abuse and
she never complained. And she used to lament, I wish I could go out and play
and take my grandkids fun places. But all of her grandkids adored her. And I mean
adored her. To this day you should hear them talk about her. Like, there is reverence and affection for her more than anyone on the planet.
Why? Her MS. She couldn't do much physically.
So she would sit for hours and hours.
She would watch her grandkids do all those boring little inane things little kids do
where they say watch me
grandma watch me and she would watch for hours and hours day after day and
everyone adored her because she never complained as her body slowly fell
apart she just kept loving there are things I want to say but I can't because
I'll cry more. So at the end of life and I'll end with kind of a sweet moment, she
and I had this tradition. I'd come and I'd sleep on our sofa and every night at
10 p.m. I'd say, hey mom you ready for some dessert? Because she had always made
me brownies when I visited because I love those and she actually made those okay
and by the way, I know that brownies and ice cream and whipped cream are
Horrible for inflammation and not good for MS
But at some point she was old enough and I told her mom F it just do what you enjoy doing
So anyway, I say mom you ready for some dessert she'd always say, just a little bit tonight, honey. I'm not very hungry. So I would pile up a big bowl of ice cream,
couple brownies, throw in that awful whipped cream. She didn't get the nice kind. And awful
chocolate syrup. And I'd go and I'd give it to her and she'd say, oh honey, I can't eat all that.
And about 15 minutes later, she'd be hunched over,
scooping up every last bite and she'd look up and see me smiling at her and she'd say,
Oh shut up. And then she'd laugh this big laugh.
I miss my mom. My mom raised four boys who turned out to be good men.
And her secret was she always believed in
us and she listened and she loved and the point is I think she was the best
mom ever and she did far less than so many of you do for your kids. Moms thank
you for being an awesome mom. I am so freaking proud of you. Now go and have a
good Happy Mother's Day and Happy Mother's Month and Year Ahead.
If we can ever help you, just let us know. Love you all. Bye-bye.