Any woman can tell you - it is in our nature to be a care-taker. Mother Nature has hard-wired us all to be the nurturer. Although some of us gals may be better at taking care of business than others; however, we are all genetically pre-disposed to take care of the village. What happens when that village does not include caring for the most important person of all? You!
What working mom has not felt the tug, pull and YANK of the countless tasks in her daily routine? What wife does not maintain her household
responsibilities with careless effort twice her heft? What woman has not let herself go, at the price of taking care of her children, her parents,
her employer, her spouse, her pets and her friends?
<Crickets………Crickets…….>
I thought so.
Now, every single one of us is a
smart, level-headed individual who knows what has to be done in the general
gist of daily life. But, why…..why do we
always put ourselves dead last? Why do
we not hesitate to take our kids to their countless
doctor appointments and sports commitments?
Why do we absolutely ensure our spouses are cared for, nurtured, listened to,
cooked for, laundered for and mentally okay?
Hmmm. I hear you. You are saying, "Because...... that’s what we do."
So, why do we fail to take
ourselves to our necessary doctor appointments (both routine and when something feels off)?
If our child so much as wimpers for a moment too long, we have the doctor on speed dial ringing. Why do we make excuse, after excuse, after excuse when WE are not cared
for, nurtured, listened to, cooked for, laundered for and not mentally okay? We simply cast ourselves off with a brisk
(and oftentimes harsh), “I’ll be fine.”
In reality, we are suffocating and we are letting ourselves go.
Now, I am immensely guilty here –
so I will be affirmatively calling the pot black. However, all I can think of is flight
attendants. Yes, formerly known as
airplane stewardesses. What do these ladies of the sky instruct you to
do on each and every flight? Put your
oxygen mask on YOU first. Yes. They do not advise that you put it on your
children first, or even someone else next to you. PUT IT ON YOU FIRST. Okay, so we get that. Why, oh why can’t we women apply that to life
as well?
Why does it seem socially UNACCEPTABLE for a woman to take
care of herself? To put herself first
makes a woman appear selfish. Wait. What?
I do not have the answers for you.
Why must we always portray ourselves as being completely
pulled “together”; despite the circumstances?
Why, when we really take a look at ourselves – and we do not feel pulled
“together”, do we judge ourselves as not worthy? Why do we criticize ourselves as inadequate
when Jane Doe seems to be sufficiently pulled together? Instead of changing our thoughts, we simply
chastise ourselves for being too tired and the fear of competing with the other
women in our world forces us to give up on ourselves.
Typically, it is not until a woman falls sick that
she is cared for and relents to taking care of herself. I know this first hand. My cancer diagnosis SCREAMED at me for being
foolish; the chiding voice still takes up residence in my head as I struggle to
keep lovely, wonderful me on the front burner in a life of three kids, a
husband, a job (okay, and a couple of hobbies on the side).
Suffocation, for me, is not the crushing pressure of not
being able to breathe amongst the weight of my womanly duties. For me, when I fail to put the oxygen mask on
me first, I find myself exhausted. Utterly
exhausted. After a particularly
non-stop day, you know – the one that starts at 6:15 a.m. and does not wind
down until well after 9 p.m. – I wonder how I persevered through the day. I suddenly remember that I forgot to eat. I then tend to overeat because I am hangry
(so hungry, I have become angry); or I am in auto-pilot - eating is no longer a
pleasure but a survival reaction - my
brain instructs me to shovel in copious amounts of calories to ward off
starvation (and because I am so hangry ,
no one shall die a premature death).
Well. Let us do this
together. Let us STOP wearing our
exhaustion as a badge of honor! Let us
STOP buying into the excuse that it’s okay to be the sacrificial lamb of the
family. Seriously, our behavior is a
form of self-abuse. Being a good mother,
a good wife, a good friend – it is all irrelevant if we are driving ourselves
into the ground. Let us STOP comparing ourselves to Ms. Jones next door and let's start being us.
Grab your mask. Let’s
oxygenate you. Now. Starting this moment. There’s no better time to breathe.
I am really bad at doing anything for me. Even when I'm sick, I never rest and so getting better takes forever, I still all my normal mommy stuff.
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