Therese Borchard writes in Beyond Blue:
Motherhood provides a host of useful lessons on how to live with mental illness, and vice versa. Here are just a few things the two have in common (in my opinion, of course):
1. Five years into both of them, plastic surgery is your only way of looking young again.
2. There's only one boss, and it's best if that's you.
3. In both, you have to handle a lot of crap.
4. Both require deep breathing.
5. Time Outs are encouraged--especially for Mom (psych wards stays count for this).
6. Both feel like you're being pecked to death by a bird.
7. You must learn on the spot--pop quizzes are thrown at you every half-hour.
8. Both drive you insane (of course).
9. Both are full of surprises and force you to tear up any script you may have written (how things were supposed to go).
10. They require a support system, discipline, and a ton of self-control.
11. You have to get out of bed in the morning for both.
12. Bedtime often spells relief.
13. Both take a chunk out your heart but give it back to your soul.
14. You never graduate from or complete your responsibilities.
15. You get used to frozen dinners, canned soup, and spats with your spouse.
16. You must sort out tons of advice, much of it horribly shallow and not at all useful.
17. Both benefit from lots of sunshine and time at the park.
18. They are tolerated best with a sense of humor.
19. Both can make you fat if you're not careful.
20. They are more challenging to the soul than the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius. (I don't think he was either.)
21. A bad day of either is more physically exhausting than an Olympic-distance triathlon.
22. After only a few years they transform you into a more compassionate and loving human being, possibly a candidate for a Nobel Peace Prize.
23. With them comes a lot of wisdom and patience, possibly world peace.
24. A love for your kid(s) keeps you going through both.
25. You have to strike that difficult balance between keeping busy but not too busy.
26. The mornings and evenings are typically the hardest.
27. Stress complicates thing. Best to avoid it as much as possible.
28. Comparing yourself to others will paralyze you.
29. There's no going back.
30. Your best is all you have, and that's good enough.
Monday, May 12, 2008
Beyond Blue: 30 Ways Motherhood Is Like a Mental Illness
9:29 AM
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