One of the biggest myths about being a parent is that everything is rosy all the time and that in the first few months in your new role as 24/7 carer you will feel constant joy and elation!
Yet, according to results released last month from a UK Parenting website, Babycentre, Mums are almost promoting this myth with 53% of women admitting that they felt compelled to lie about their child and the experience of motherhood in order to put a positive spin on things.
The Secret Life of Mum Survey revealed that many women admitted to having lied about how they were coping mentally by glossing over any incidences of postnatal depression, frustration or boredom. A point of which is further supported by the fact that out of the working mums interviewed, three quarters admitted to feeling relieved to go back to work on a Monday morning.
Results of the survey also brought to light the fact that it is totally normal for parents to feel some kind of resentment or dislike towards their children at one time or another. Two fifths of mums admitted to feelings such as these, with the same number of respondents confessing to comparing one child unfavourably to another.
New parents also reported a range of ‘mummy mishaps’, with one in three forgetting to strap their baby into their car seat. However, Prime Minister David Cameron may not be so comforted to hear that only two per cent of mothers said that they had ever left their child behind when out and about.
One of the biggest findings in this particular study however was the fact that, more often than not, Mums are doing all the things that they say they don’t, but just behind closed doors! For example, nine out of ten Mums surveyed admitted to using the television as a means of keeping the kids entertained and giving them some much needed peace, with many adding that it was often also on during dinner time, as well as being used at bedtime in place of a story.
This isn’t the first study to reveal that parent’s lie in order to avoid being judged as bad parents however, with other sources revealing that other lies commonly told by parents are usually in relation to topics such as their babies’ sleep, milestones and bad habits.