The Therapy Edit - THROWBACK - On a big lightbulb moment that changed my parenting
Episode Date: October 14, 2024In this THROWBACK episode Anna shares a lightbulb moment where she realised a life changing truth that has transformed her motherhood journey.It's a biggy so you'll have to listen to find out more and... also to unpick Anna's realisation (which of course comes accompanied with lots of helpful therapeutic tips to help you make space for this realisation in your own motherhood journey. )
Transcript
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Hello and welcome to the Therapy Edit podcast with me, psychotherapist Anna Martha.
I love bringing bite-sized thoughts and conversations to support your well-being in your busy lives.
Behind the scenes, we are working on bringing you a whole new series, but in the meantime,
we have delved into the archives and will be sharing some of our most loved nuggets, lightbulb moments and powerful chats.
I hope you enjoy them.
Hello and welcome to today's episode of the Therapy Edit.
Today I have got quite a stark truth to share with you,
something that really hit me the other day.
And it's one of those things.
You know, when you recognize the truth
that just makes you feel incredibly uncomfortable,
but also completely changes the way that you think about
and approach something.
Well, this is that kind of truth.
And I want to share it with you because
I just think it's going to benefit me so much in how it impacts the decisions I make in parenting.
So this truth is, no wait for it, and bear with me, because it sounds pretty full on to begin with,
but we're going to unpick it a little bit. So this realization was that I set the bar.
I, I help set the bar for my children's well-being.
with where I set the bar for my own.
Now, I mean, this felt like,
this felt like a punch in the stomach, really.
And I think the power in this is that we love our children.
We want the absolute best for them.
We research things for the help.
We try so hard to kind of pull all our energy
and parent in a way that we are proud of, don't we?
We want the best for them in their mental health.
We want them to know that they are lovable, that they are valued, that they are valuable.
We want them to know that they are deserving of rest, that they are deserving of good things.
We want them to welcome the good opportunities that come their way, the healthy, nurturing, loving relationships and friendships that are in their path.
We want them to welcome and accept all of those things.
them to care for themselves because they are valuable. We want them to nourish and nurture themselves
to take the rest that they need. We want them to have a loving and compassionate, supportive voice
in their minds. We don't want them to have that inner critic, that inner bully. We want all of
these things for our children. Now that is true. But where we set the bar for how much we want
those things for ourself is part of how much our children will want those things for themselves
too. Now, I have the bar really high for my children's emotional and mental well-being.
I want to invest in and nurture and give them the tools. But where is that bar that I set for
them and what I yearn for for them compared to where I set the bar for what I yearn for, what I
accept, what I seek, how I treat myself. Where is that for you? The standard that you have
for your children's mental health, well-being, their acknowledgement of their worth and value,
and where you set the bar for your acceptance of good things in your life. Your desire,
to seek support, your acceptance of kind gestures, your acceptance of value and your worth,
your bar for where you have that critical or kind internal dialogue. You know, what is okay
for you and how does that differ with what is okay for your children? Because if those bars
are in different places, this is where it gets tricky. This is where we have to start recognizing
and this harsh realization and it's harsh because it's true and it's hard that if we have
the bar up there for our children and we we want the best for them but we are accepting base level
maybe even less than critical internal dialogue overlooking needs devaluing feelings not
accepting or seeking support for ourselves you know our children are watching us
Oh, I wish they weren't sometimes. I wish they weren't watching and absorbing me and how I
treat myself and how I respond to myself and how I accept those kind things and how I seek and
accept support. I wish they weren't watching because I don't want them to do that. I want them to
want more. I want more for them. So I can tell my children that they are lover.
I can love them so hard, but they are learning about how to love themselves by watching me.
Oh, it's hard. You know, if I don't want them to struggle with anxiety and low self-esteem and low self-worth and a bullying critical internal dialogue, they might not see tangibly these things, but they sense them and they see their little behaviours.
that come out when I'm struggling with low self-worth,
when a friend might say something kind and I brush it off,
when I drop something and I berate myself.
I can have all the patience for them,
but they are watching and learning about how to love themselves
by how I am responding to myself.
Oh, it's hard.
It is hard.
You know, if I don't want them to struggle
with some of the things that I struggle with,
I think so often what we do is we look for tips and tools to help them when actually the most
powerful thing that we can be doing, the biggest gift that we can be giving them is addressing
these things in ourselves. And I hope that I've done, you know, created so many different
resources around kind of confidence and self-worth and anxiety and health anxiety and resentment and
rage and guilt and all of these things because I have recognized that I have to,
If I want them to have a healthy relationship with themselves, the most powerful way that I can do this
is by nurturing and investing in the relationship that I have with me because they are watching.
Oh, it's true, but I wish sometimes they weren't.
But it's better, it's far better for me to start to accept this fact that I, where I set the bar
for my own mental and emotional well-being is a real contributor.
into where they will set theirs.
Now, this awareness has been one of the biggest motivators for me as a mum,
that as I am prioritising my own mental health,
as I am seeking these tools and I've got loads of them go on the mother mind way,
which is my platform for all of those £12 resources,
that all £12, I've got the books that go into anxiety
and worth and confidence and people pleasing
and the new one which is all about introducing more compassion
into the emotions that we often feel so guilty and judgmental about towards ourselves.
So as I have invested and prioritised my own mental health
and finding ways to bring clarity and feelings and emotions and compassion into these things
as well, I am inadvertently as I'm raising the bar for my own mental health
and I'm saying, you know what, actually this isn't good enough for me.
If I want more for them and I have equal value, then I'm deserving of this more too.
and as I do this I am giving them the gift of when they look at me and they hear me say
you know what right now I'll do that in a moment but I'm just having a rest I'm going to sit
with you for a minute I've just been in the dinner I'm going to sit with you for a minute and I'm
just having a rest as I verbalise these things and show them that I am meeting those needs
I am teaching them that their needs are important too so you know I
I think often, you know, when we hear these things, you know, if you're like me,
that first response is like, oh, there's so much guilt there. I feel this guilt rising up.
So a couple of quick things, you know, know that our kids learn so much from how we respond
and resolve things. When we're growing, they have a chance to grow to. They're watching and
they grow to. So we start investing in these things. I think so it's so easy, isn't it,
to think, oh, what have I done? I've, you know, I've not been showing this. I've not been
living this when actually just accepting that, you know, we grow as we go. We shouldn't be berating
ourselves for what we didn't know when we didn't know it. You know, when we become aware of
these things, there are opportunities, aren't they, to move forward. And we're not going to get
it perfect. And our kids do not need a perfect parent to set them up for this wildly and perfect
world that we live in. So go gentle, go easy, go kindly. You know, we might have our own meltdown.
sometimes but the most important thing is that that moment that comes afterwards where I say
oh my goodness mommy had massive feelings it's not your fault I should have taken a deep breath
I'm sorry for shouting you know sometimes my kids will kindly say oh it's okay mommy I'm like you know
what I don't want to do shouting at you I have big feelings and I should find other ways of dealing
with that and as I do that then they learn to they learn to find grace for themselves when it all
goes to pot and they learn to access and seek tools and things that can help nurture and calm them
and ground them in those moments. So, you know, I think it's really important to remember those things
as you listen and as I reflect on this hard truth, my mental and emotional well-being impacts theirs
and I want everything for them. Therefore, I need to up the bar for myself as well. So I hope you find
that helpful. I hope it creates a little bit of thinking and maybe just prompts that
reflection on, is there an area of your life where you just think, oh man, I've wanted everything
for them and I have accepted nothing for myself in that area. If you are of equal value to them,
which is the fundamental fact, how can you find a tool or seek some support or get some insight into
that so that you can start upping that bar of what of where you want your own mental and emotional
well-being to be so it's more in line with what you desire for your children because that is a
gift to them than a gift to you i hope you enjoyed this episode grab a copy of my new book the
uncomfortable truth change your life by taming ten of your mind's greatest fears where we tackle
some of life's uncomfortable truths that rob us of energy joy and heads
space such as some people don't like me, I'm going to fail, bad things will happen. And as we move
into a place of radical acceptance of these truths, you will find yourself living more freely
and intentionally with more presence and confidence than ever before. You can find it at your
usual bookseller. But in the meantime, just feel free to hit subscribe. And if you enjoyed this
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Thank you.