Parents Over 40 Are Confessing The Hard Truths About Having Kids That No One Talks About


As the eldest of four, I’m sure it wasn’t easy for my parents to navigate parenthood for the first time (especially when I hit my late teens). And though raising kids can be an amazing and rewarding experience, there are hardships that only parents can understand. Here are some of the

hard truths

about parenting that no one really talks about:


1.


“I didn’t expect how guilty you constantly feel for no reason at all. The pressure we end up putting on ourselves as we try to hold ourselves to standards we see portrayed online is exhausting. You end up feeling guilty for working and not being with your kids, but then you feel guilty if you stay home and don’t work. You feel guilty for feeding your kids something quick after taking a self-care day, but then you feel guilty for not doing enough self-care. You feel guilty for putting your kid in one school instead of another, or for having your kid do this sport instead of that, and guilty if they don’t have activities at all. There’s just SO MUCH GUILT.”


2.


“Making sure each child feels loved and valued equally, especially when they are at different ages and stages and have extremely different personalities.”

—

k402e21627


3.


“Sadly, the hardest part is making funeral arrangements and having to bury your own children. I’ve had five children, and three have passed away. I’m only 52, and, like most parents, I envisioned growing old and having those great moments with them. It made me question so many things. My two living children don’t understand why I’m so overprotective of them (or maybe they do, but they don’t want to have that emotional talk with their old dad). I try to spend as much time with my children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren as I can. So, please spend time with your families. Set aside the petty nonsense and let them know you care. It won’t be the same without them.”


4.


“During the teen years, kids can say very hurtful things. Letting it go and reminding yourself that they don’t mean it is very hard.”

—

alih26


5.


“Choosing when to step back and when to speak up. I’m always mindful of the fact that once my kid thinks I’m nagging, they won’t want to come to me if they need help.”


6.


“Watching them make decisions that are clearly detrimental to their future and being unable to help them.”

—

UtterlyBored


7.


“The day-to-day juggling of finances: Paying for soccer instead of buying things for myself, going without buying myself clothes so the kids have new things, driving used cars so we could afford a house in a good neighborhood. And during really tight times, going without eating so the kids could eat. My adult son told me he was resentful and ashamed of our old cars and my appearance growing up. Meanwhile, both my daughters are very grateful and successful in life. It’s wonderful when your sacrifices are appreciated and very heartbreaking when they are not.”


8.


“Without a doubt, it was teaching them how to drive. Next, it was watching them drive away without you for the first time.”

—

TopHat80


9.


“One thing I found hard was the absolute lack of control. You try to make plans with friends, and the kids get sick. You plan a trip somewhere and think it will be fun, and then the kids don’t like it at all. You try to run an errand, and your kids decide to have a giant tantrum in the middle of the store. It was all worth it, of course, but it was so hard retaining patience and sanity each day.”


10.


“When you are in an empty house after they are grown and you have to figure out what to do with your life now.”

—

NefariousnessOk5602


11.


“For me, the troublesome mid-teen years. While some people will find the move to independence the most troublesome, I enjoyed it. Not because I got my own space back, but because I knew my daughter would do well.”


12.


“The hardest part about having kids was trying not to pass down the traumatic child-raising techniques I was raised with. There were times during my kid’s teenage years when my automatic responses were to hit, mock, or withdraw. I had to find a way to do the opposite without avoiding the responsibility of parenting. I tried to be present and open and exercise my authority without having a clear model of how to go about it. I think it went well, though. All three of my kids are amazing people living interesting and happy lives. They exceeded me in so many ways. The second hardest part was when they moved out, but that’s because I loved the day-to-day interactions, and having a house full of cool young adults, keeping me culturally informed and relevant. As my kids make their way through life, I’m now their consultant and cheerleader.”

—

gardengirl0


13.


“Assuming they’d go to college when it turns out they want no part of that life — and accepting it. It was easier for me than my wife because she actually uses her degrees, but I was a kid who should have done something

other than

college after high school.”


14.


“Knowing that they’ll get hurt and you won’t be able to protect them from everything. I’m not talking about when they’re little (though they’ll get hurt then, too), but I’m talking about the big hurts that will happen later. It might be a car accident, it might be a nasty divorce, or it might be a miscarriage. You don’t know what will hurt them, and you don’t know when it might happen. But it will, and it’s inevitable.”

—

candlestick_maker76


15.


“Navigating my divorce from their father, who was addicted to alcohol and emotionally abusive. I wish I could have done more to protect my kids, or at least help them deal with his nonsense in healthy ways. There are scars that will never heal, and it breaks my heart.”


16.


“The sheer exhaustion of the infant and toddler years. It sucks, though, because even though they are so cute during that time, you can’t really appreciate it as much because you are constantly tired.”

—

HazyDavey68


17.


“My first kid is an

introvert

, and I suffered so much watching her struggle to have friends. My second is an extrovert, and I suffered watching her be everyone’s friend, no matter how poor the quality of their character was. A mother is only as happy as her most miserable child. Now, I’m an old grandma, and they are both fine. But, there is some suffering in watching them suffer with their own children.”


18.


“Making decisions that will ultimately affect their development and future. My daughter has autism, and it was impossibly early on for her to attend school full-time, have working parents, and receive all the recommended therapies. So, we focused heavily on speech, ABA, and traveling experiences. We allowed her to choose team sports and music lessons over additional after-school therapies as a teenager. She’s 17 now, and my partner and I stay awake at night, hoping we’re setting her up for a healthy, happy, and independent life.”

—

No_Practice_970


19.


“The hardest part is always letting go, and you have to do it every time: the day they start kindergarten, the day they get their learner’s permit, the day they go off to college, the day they get married, etc. You have to learn how to let them go so that they can grow up and make good choices.”


20.


“When they decide they hate you.”

—

Unhooked-

“The first time I was told that, I went to my bedroom and cried for an hour.”

—

Butter_mah_bisqits


21.


“Letting them be independent and do things for themselves. As parents, we spend those first two years or so doing everything for them. Then, it seems like it happens overnight when they start choosing their own clothes, dressing themselves, and pouring their own cereal. Next thing you know, they’re graduating from high school and going out on their own. In the blink of an eye, they’ve gone from being this helpless little baby that you napped every day with on the sofa to a full-grown adult. It happens so fast.”


22.


“Not having any family locally. I really could’ve used the support, especially when my kind were younger. I’m currently not liking my almost 14-year-old son going through puberty. The mood swings and poor attitude are worse with him than it was with my daughter (not to mention his stench). I make a conscious effort to try and maintain a connection with him, even if it’s him showing me the game he’s creating on Roblox or family game nights. I cherish those moments when I glimpse my son’s ‘normal’ personality.”

—

Robospammm


23.


“The constant praying that your kids will be at your funeral and not that you will be at theirs. My brother was three when he got sick and passed; I was one. Being a kid or a parent is not easy; being a grandparent seems like the best deal.”


24.


“Missing that cute little toddler. I love my adult kid, but I’ll never see that toddler again.”

—

freebleploof


25.


“I thought society was equal, but nope! School districts differ. ‘Good’ school districts are in expensive areas, so you gotta move and pay. It affects everything. So the question boils down to: Stay in the cycle of poverty or break your kid out early? There are privileges made from such decisions, and the people born in them aren’t even aware.”


26.


“The discipline. Children need to be guided and corrected. Doing so doesn’t make you popular with them, but what is best for them often isn’t what they want at that moment. Raising children in their best long-term interest takes great discipline for yourself and them.”

—

OldAndOldSchool


27.


“Hearing all the idiots telling you how to raise your kids: Do this, don’t do that, this school is better, that school is worse, don’t be friends with that kid, only let them do this, etc. Shut the hell up.”


28.


“Tempering your own insecurities as a parent. Mine was an overly excessive focus on them being perfect or great — whatever that means. I corrected myself eventually, but it’s my biggest regret.”

—

itchman


29.


“Spending the first few years teaching them how to walk and talk, and then spending the next 20 years telling them to sit down and shut up.”


30.


Last but not least: “Wow. What isn’t a challenge? I suppose it was hard to watch their bodies become adult-like, even though they aren’t adult-like at all intellectually or emotionally. Guiding the grown-up bodies that believed they were mature and could make appropriate decisions exhausted me. I remember being 15 and 16; I knew my mother was correct when she said I didn’t have the experience to make grown-up decisions, but I felt and looked grown up. I did my best to listen to my children as they justified their actions because my father hadn’t been keen to hear me out. I did my best, I succeeded, and I failed.”


If you’re a parent, what was the most difficult part about raising your kids? What was a part of parenthood that you didn’t expect? Let us know in the comments, or you can anonymously submit your thoughts using this

form

.

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