Last November, some of you may be aware, I stopped working outside the home and became a full time MamaWriter. At that time, both invigorated and terrified, I decided my kids would become my “job.” In a way and with a vigor not held since my littlest was in diapers, I became super mom. Involved in everything. In control of, um, well, nothing.
Seems my kids missed their daycare. They missed their friends. They missed free play and running around like wild banshees. My reins were too tight. My supervision too strict. Suddenly, I was in a Mama Quandary. What do I do, now? Where did I go wrong?
Sometimes writing feels this way. You develop a plot, plan your characters, give them problems, help them sort them out. If you have trouble, you reach for books like “The Flip Dictionary,” “Hooked!,” “Plot & Structure,” or “Revision & Self Editing.” You track your characters and scenes with your WIP Notebook until you know their world better than your own. Ultimately, you work with your characters until we all reach our happily ever after! or you shelve them. They become a stack of pages or files on a computer, rarely to be touched again.
And then, there’s real life.
Each Happily Ever After bedtime ends with a new beginning the next day. Motherhood is a 24/7 job with no pay and little reward, I decided. I became sullen, gloomy, opted for house beautiful even if the kids would rather play together than with me. THIS one was a fun decision. One room would be sparkling, then the kids would be drawn to the shining floor, the organized toys, as if I’d provided manna from Heaven. Soon, the order would become chaos, and it would all begin again.
I couldn’t win.
So, what do I do with writing when things go sideways? I research. I hit the books. One bright sunshiny day, when my youngest was darting from me, making mama lose her top in public, as was her newest 4yo game, I turned to a friend who is also a child psychologist. What do you recommend for a mama who’s at her wits end?
Turns out, she had a book. Parenting with Love and Logic.
Here are the basic principles:
- Show empathy and love when your kids make bad decisions that affect THEIR Life.
- Redirect anger, never level punishment in the heat of the moment
- Offer choices that ultimately help your child make better life decisions
- When the choices they make are “not great,” let them experience the consequences so they can learn from their own mistakes
And can I tell you how it’s changed my life? Okay, it’s changed me, which in turn is evolving our relationship… my 4yo, DD#2, responds better to choices that love and logic parenting offers. She now asks if she can run and play instead of running pell-mell away from me. She also tests the new limits I’m giving her, daily.
While I don’t want to be the mama that looks like she’s about to tear out all of her hair, I would LOVE it if my children were perfect in all circumstances. But I’m not raising automatons, nor am I expecting things to be smooth sailing every day of my life. So, each day I hit the books, remind myself to remind myself to breath, and think about how much I love them while they are pitching fits and making irrational demands. Love, followed by logic, as we all make our way through our happily ever after! Wish me luck and I’d LOVE to hear your best parenting and/or writing tools!



Twitter: silverwriter
says:
Thoughtful piece today, Ashley! I’m on the other side of this battle. Mine’s all but grown and headed out into the big, bad world. She long ago quit holding my hand to cross streets.
Best parenting advice? Don’t sweat the small stuff. Temper tantrums (theirs AND yours) will pass. Hurts will be kissed and heal. Rooms can be cleaned another day. Enjoy them while you can, every good, bad, and ugly thing about them because one day, they’ll walk up and surprise the heck out of you with a hug, a kiss, or a compliment when you least expect it.
Writing is the same advice. Don’t sweat the small stuff. Get the story down first. The ugly bits will work themselves out in subsequent edits. Treat your characters like your children–give them wings so they can explore their world and grow.
Have a great day. I’m off to paint wings on my H/H.
Twitter: wiremamma
says:
Silver, you know I adore you. Thanks for helping me remember that this part, the hardest part, doesn’t last forever! And really, isn’t every stage they go through difficult in one way or another?
Same with my latest WIP. My H/H have been working through a difficult situation, and found love early. SO, getting them to focus on solving the mystery I’ve set before them… they’re just not interested. What to do, what to do…
Hmmm.
Well stated, Ashley, and so very true! We talk a lot about Honor – treating others as special, doing more than what’s expected and having a good attitude. I honored my kids by taking them to the zoo yesterday and today they need to honor me by doing their school work well. Kids will really rise to the occasion to honor someone and when we notice, they are enthusiastic to continue doing good. Not too long ago I explained to the kids they could honor me when I put them to bed at night by going to bed on time and staying in bed because that’s my time to write. It has worked like a charm – some mornings my 8 year old even asks me if I did a good job writing the night before.
This training has been ongoing for 3 years, so didn’t give up if the results are not instantanous. I’ve learned that just like editting your novel, it takes time to train your children.
Twitter: wiremamma
says:
Kelly,
I like the idea of honoring each other. will need to figure that into our repertoire. Hopefully they’ll ALL honor you enough to let you go to writer’s group tonight!
The thing I’m liking about love and logic is the way you help them make choices and be affected by the decisions they choose. It’s HARD. But, my youngest certainly learns best that way…
See you soon!
Ash
Good luck Ash!
My oldest daughter’s school’s guidance counselor RAVES about love and logic. She actually teaches a workshop for parents twice a year on it. It is FABULOUS! Enjoy!
Twitter: KrisKennedy
says:
Hey Ash~
LOVE AND LOGIC has some fabulous–and thankfully simple, sensible–approaches!
Another book I love, that was a godsend for me, is PLAYFUL PARENTING–funnily enough, I just mentioned it to another writing mother this week.
Oh, Ashley, your DD#2 running off from you makes me feel like I’m not alone. *sigh* My almost 3 y.o ran away from me at the college a couple of weeks ago and ran into some mucky-muck’s office. LOL I was so embarrassed! Luckily, said mucky-muck thought my boy’s sudden visit quite the thing.
I usually ask my hubby’s gma for advice. She raised 5 kids and helped with her 13 siblings kids. aka- she’s a pro. Sure some of it is ‘old school’ way of thinking, but normally she’s spot on. If there are any issues I think she can’t help with, I turn to one of the many specialists I take my boy to every day. LOL
I did like your bullet list though. I think I’m going to write those down. Thanks for sharing!