On the Coast – Families Issue 104 I February/March 2020 | Page 22
What’s your vision
looking like this year?
BY CATHERINE SCHASSER
H
ow would you describe
your entry to the
decade and view for
your future? My hope is it’s
bright for you and your family.
That your days are filled with
feelings and experiences that
make your heart come alive and
your soul sing. Where peace
and enthusiasm co-exist and an
excitement for what’s to come
palpitates through your body.
This is my hope, but not my
expectation. Time and experience remind
me this wishful thinking is a vision
tinted by rose-coloured glasses. I know
mothers will cry and worries will rest
heavy on their chests. This it seems, is an
unwritten mandate after the arrival of
one’s first born.
Yes, life’s going to bring challenges.
This is a certain. Other challenges
that have the potential to bring us to
our knees however is not restricted
to natural disasters, diagnosis or loss.
But it’s a force so strong, it thwarts our
happiness and success EVERY. DAY.
The primary influence of our
feelings of sadness, disappointment
and guilt reside in the immensely high
expectations we hold of ourselves,
standards we’d never reserve for a
friend. ‘Don’t be so hard on yourself.
You’re doing an amazing job. You need
to rest’ we’re likely to offer our dearest,
but to ourselves? Oh no – this narrative
would be much harsher. Cursing which
depicts our inability, lack of discipline,
ineptness and plain hopelessness
meander through our minds, day after
day, back and forward they go, swirling
unconsciously until we conclude we
mothers must be causing irreparable
harm to our children. And the feelings of
disappointment get stronger.
Have standards higher enough
to inspire your growth,
but low enough to encourage
your commitment.
22
ON T H E C OA S T – FA M ILIES
I’m certain you have standards for
yourself as a mother. Expectations of
yourself you believe will best serve your
children. I do too. Recently I failed to
meet the ideal I hold for myself and wish
to share the wise words I received via my
friend’s response. In case your human-
ness comes to the fore and you feel
you’re not living up to who you want to
be for your children, I hope you can
remember her viewpoint.
While recounting an interaction in
which I believe I didn’t respond as my best
self, I described it as feeling like an addict
who fell off the wagon after 5 years off
sobriety with my ‘sobriety’ being calm and
non-reactivity in the face of triggers. My
friend did just as Brene Brown would
encourage – she doused my potential-
sitting-on-the-ledge shame with empathy
and understanding. Part of her loving
message read, ‘everyone has times they
feel like they’ve fallen off the wagon…or
are running alongside the wagon trying to
get back on!’ Conjuring an image of me
hobbling alongside a moving and rickety
wagon, reaching my arms in one last and
desperate attempt to hold on, put a turn in
the corners of my mouth and left me
feeling lighter in my heart. I messaged
back with a wagon and running girl emoji
before beginning my ‘work’ to
consciously progress through
the oh-so-familiar self-talk of
mum-guilt. I needed to return
my focus to where I wanted it
to reside; in love and gratitude
for my family and friends and
to acknowledge my reflection
and new actions from this
moment on were what would
matter. A practice I was oh so
familiar with. You see, our
focus has a significant impact on our
thoughts, beliefs, feelings and actions. For
me to remain feeling bad, guilty or upset
would mean my focus was on me. ‘I feel
bad for reacting.’ ‘I wish I hadn’t done
that.’ My ultimate goal is to balance
personal reflection with outward focus on
others, not to remain centred on myself.
“If we can share our story of shame
with someone who responds with
empathy and understanding,
shame can’t survive”
Brene Brown
When you next fall off your wagon of
self-imposed expectations (not yelling,
saying no to sugar, no-aimless scrolling –
the list continues), strap on those shoes and
get running girl! This human adventure of
motherhood is going to provide you plenty
of bumps and bruises along the way.
Promise you’ll hoist yourself up, practice
empathy and understanding and envision a
future blended perfectly between personal
growth and personal kindness.
Remember, you’re the holder of the
torch. You have in your reach the power
to illuminate and focus on the future you
want to see in 2020.
Enjoy, Catherine
Catherine is the co-founder of Developing Dreams, a local company 'empowering children one adult at
a time'. This vision is achieved through the educational curriculum at Developing Dreams Early Learning
Centre named 2019 Best Small, Private, Regional Centre in NSW, and through coaching programs
written and facilitated by Catherine. Email [email protected] for further
information or to find out how you can be EMPOWERED in your life.