The Mamamia office is the kind of place where breaking news is greeted with a sound.
A collective gasp. A cheer. A groan.
Yesterday, a moan. Oh. A celebrity split, a couple we all ‘like’.
We don’t know them. They don’t know us. But we saw them falling in love on Packed To The Rafters, so you know, of course we’re all experts.
Jessica Marais and James Stewart have confirmed they’ve split.
My co-workers were sad. “But, they have a daughter together. She’s only three.”
I said nothing. Of course, none of us have any idea why this couple have decided to part. But I am never, ever surprised when the parents of young children break up. I am only surprised that even more don’t.
There is one thing I know about Jessica and James. Their daughter Scout is almost exactly the same age as my youngest child, Billy.
I know that because when I went on maternity leave to have Billy, I celebrated the first day of non-office work by buying a magazine. And they were on the cover, posing with their stunning baby daughter, Scout.
Days later I had my own beautiful baby, although the cover of Who didn’t beckon for us.
It’s almost three years since that day, and more than five since my partner and I went from being a couple to being a family. And while I am not the first person to ever point this out (the phrase, ‘having a baby is like throwing a grenade into a marriage’ is A Thing), something that is not talked about enough, in our tumbling rush to prove ourselves as worthy parents – is that tiny children place an enormous strain on relationships, and that it is fine to struggle.
Top Comments
This article made me laugh - it's so true that parenting is exhausting and demanding and the partner takes a back seat when mum is so preoccupied with the baby. It's easy to forget to care for ourselves as parents as we get so caught up in worrying, nurturing and providing and that lack of caring for ourselves breeds resentment. Perhaps all potential parents should read this article so their expectations are not so one sided because of the media's portrayal of so the "happy smiling families" with "cute bundles of joy". Children are amazing and mine have taught me heaps - once they were past their teens I wished I'd had a few more!
I understand all that you are saying here Kylie, but no one is quite prepared for the impact that having young children has on your life. No matter what others say it doesn't seemed to be able to be heard until you experience it for yourself. People seem to go into parenthood thinking that they are having a baby. As a mother of four and a grandmother of seven I say to a young couple that it is not a baby you are having but a twenty year commitment to another human being. Babies look tiny but the energy they bring is enormous. I can remember looking at my young children from a distance and thinking wow they are such little dots, that is not what they feel like at close quarters. Parenthood is demanding on all levels. I agree with Holly it is not surprising that parents of little kids break up and it is amazing that more don't. Just the workload and the sleep depredation alone is enough to shake even the most steady person. Giving yourself permission to take as loving care of yourself as you do your new born baby is of vital importance in all stages of parenting
and this cannot be over stressed. This is the only way to maintain one's sanity and one's harmony. Especially important is to encourage each other to do this rather than taking stabs at the other out of the resentfulness that you haven't done this for yourself.