Tag Archives: single parenting

A mother wondering why parenting feels lonely

The Loneliness of Being a Parent That Nobody Tells You About

Why does parenting feel lonely and isolating?  “Parenting can be the loneliest job in the world—surrounded by little voices all day, yet craving to be truly seen, heard, and understood.”

Support for parents of teenagers

Isolation happens and everybody feels lonely at times but usually, we know how to fix it.

If somebody tells us they feel alone, the advice is often quite easy to give.

Spend some more time with your friends, family, or even work colleagues.

 

And, even if this is impractical, there are still ways you can feel less alone, like Social Media? or other online spaces.

 

Parenting is full of surprises and misconceptions that catch even the most prepared off guard.  Maybe you expected to enjoy every moment of the parenting experience, or that your kids will always react in the ways you expect.

For me the biggest surprise of parenting was the loneliness and isolation that accompanied it being a parent.

 

“It was during the long bus journeys on school runs, especially on the way back home or returning to fetch him at the end of each day”.

 

“It was in the hours I spent alone while he was at school. Too short a duration to do much but long enough to feel isolation”.

help for parents

“It was in all the moments when I was with my wife but understandably my son needed most of her attention”.

 

“It was every time people asked how my son was but nobody ever asked how my wife or I were feeling”.

 

“And in the earliest parts of raising him, it was the small hours of the morning spent alone feeding and soothing him”.

 

Parenting is a paradox of noise and silence, love and isolation.

Or course, it’s hard to discuss these feelings without feeling guilty. How can you have this loneliness paradox when you love them so much and are blessed to have children and family?

 

But maybe this is also part of the reason why you do feel this way. 

So how did we end up here, and is there anything you can do?

 

Why Parenting Can Feel Lonely

 

The key to understanding why you feel this way is to know that loneliness is way more complicated than just being alone.

Read Great Blog How Do Stop Parents Bickering Over Children

In reality, it’s a lot more complicated than this and touches on feelings of being seen, fostering strong connections with like-minded people while having the time and energy to spend enough quality time with people. Children can’t really validate or empathize the way adults can.

 

Long days spent caring for chatty children can feel like too much company. But is it the same as the connection of a date night, a few hours in the pub, your hobbies, or chatting to your good friend at work? You may be talking to your children, are they meeting your individual social needs that came with your personality?


 

There’s then the danger you end up only having conversations about the kids, logistics, routines, and the things that require doing. You never talk about anything deeper.

This doesn’t mean that you don’t love your family, or that you don’t enjoy spending time with them, but as adults we will have many and varied needs.

 

If parenting falls mostly on one parent – because of work, the way roles are traditionally split, or you are a single parent raising a child then the sense of isolation may be much worse. The loss of identity may be deeper, especially if the workload feels unfair.

Read Great Blog Is PHONE ADDICTION Ruining Your Family Bonding?

As parents, we will try to seek a balance and still see our adult friends and acquaintances.

I did so myself, but the younger your offspring, and the more of your friends that start their own families, the more it feels like snatched moments and stolen freedoms.

 

That is, if with your friend’s commitments you have the same free-time and the money or energy to use it. Often you will feel guilty leaving your children, or your partner, to babysit alone.

 

Modern lifestyles frequently lead to families and friends living greater distances apart, making time spent together as adults, or the warm support of family, is inevitably rarer.

Speaking from my own experiences, as my time as a parent progressed, my identity changed.

Read Great Blog When CAHMS fails you what do you do

In fact, as soon as I held my son for the first time, a switch flipped in my head,

and I knew things would never be the same again.

 

The old me, that loved a rock band, a long bike ride or a few beers in the pub, faded into the background.

 

It wasn’t just that I was distracted, worrying my son was OK at home. Sadly it just didn’t feel the same any more. It was fun for an hour or so, but soon I wanted to get back to my young family.

Eventually, though, you are actually neglecting your individuality, and in the worst cases you are hiding your loneliness by deliberately keeping busy with family.

 

Nobody asks parents how they are, only about the children. This only deepens the sense of isolation.

 

Now my son is older and more independent, I find that I have time to look again at my own needs and work out what to do with any new-found free time.

It’s a chance to reconnect with my own peer group, and re-find my own identity in a way you can’t achieve with a young child.

 

Finally, when parents contrast themselves with other parents both online and off, admitting you are lonely is to admit that you are struggling. You had expectations of how it would feel as a parent, how can you admit you are falling short of this?

 

Society tells parents to be always grateful and never put their hands up to say they are not doing as well as you might think.

 

In the perfectly presented social media world, you feel you should compete with the other parents that make it look just so effortless. How could you possibly admit you are lonely now?

Especially when inevitably you feel guilty about feeling this way.

 

From feeling isolation to a sense of community 

 

Realising that you might be lonely because you are a parent is one thing, improving this is another thing entirely. This is especially true when you need to also work around the limitations that come along with parenting.

 

This meant for me, that after four hours a day on buses taking my son to and from school, caring for him and getting him to sleep, I had limited opportunities to try and prevent feeling lonely,

 

With a bit of creative thinking, teamwork, flexibility and some help from technology it’s possible to lessen the sting of feeling lonely. 

 

It’s often said that it takes a village to raise a child. I heard this advice more than once when I became a dad!

 

 

Strength in Family 

 

Having a team behind you can benefit more than just your children.

With willing friends and family behind, maybe there’s now an option for a date night, or for one parent to have some ‘me time’.

 

This can be win-win more than most parents realise as it gives relatives treasured time with their young relative, and gives you the chance to refresh and reset and to come back as a better parent. 

 

Having some time to yourself is definitely not something to feel guilty or ashamed about as its an important chance to rest and recover,

 

Reconnecting with yourself physically and emotionally is a great way to be the best parent you can be. 

 

Even if you can’t meet up with friends as much because of the challenges of working and parenting, often there is a chance at the end of the day to spend some time with that special someone.

 

If you share your life with a significant other, put some time aside to  reconnect, discuss how your day went and plan to talk about something other than parenthood, however briefly this might be.

 

It’s understandably easy to get into a routine and forget to do this, but it can be a powerful way to not feel quite as lonely.

 

This probably sounds somewhere between ironic and sarcastic considering the topic of this blog, but your own child can be a great remedy too!

 

It becomes more true as they grow older, but if you try to forget for a brief moment that they feel like a weighty responsibility. That they are an individual thinking and feeling person (just a smaller one) then you have a source of constant conversations.

 

Young children can be good company as they are often very funny and have refreshingly honest viewpoints.

 

Often, on school runs or after scouts night I took my son to the coffee shop and just chatted with him about shared interests – as a young person, not just as my child.  

 

Micro connections

 

If, as parents, we are short of time, money and energy to combat loneliness then we can choose to  accept this and embrace the opportunities that we do have.

 

Although technology is blamed for a lot of modern harms, especially for children; it can be very useful socially.

 

Even if it’s late at night, or you are rushing during a school run, a mobile phone means you can still text friends and acquaintances. Most people always have their phone with them.

Aside from this you could interact on social media, have a quick gaming session with a friend or listen to podcasts that reconnect you to the wider world.

 

Briefly socialising doesn’t have to be just digital or virtual as we can also hopefully grab moments in different ways. They might just have to be adapted to your new  lifestyle as a parent.

 

This can mean socialising locally to where you live much more often and hanging out with people that are also in that same parenting boat.

 

I personally found myself spending more time with friends living locally to me, or having a coffee with groups of parents during the  school run.

 

Solutions not shame 

 

Whatever works for you, especially while you are working on parental loneliness, it is vital to not feel ashamed.

Feeling embarrassed or isolated can only hinder you from connecting with the wider adult world and realising just how many parents feel this way. When I ignored any stigma and spoke to other parents about how I felt, it felt like a weight lifted and we were able to find solutions together. Being open about isolation and feeling that no one understands your situation is more common than I thought

 

Feeling lonely does not mean that you do not love your children, it just means you have other needs as a parent.

 

Embracing these feelings also stops resentment from building, which is toxic for you and your whole family.

 

Hobbies

 

Remembering who you are, even for a few snatched moments, is a great way to tackle loneliness. Oddly even doing something alone can have a  positive effect on loneliness because it can also be about reclaiming your identity and having space to feel like you.

Furthermore, hobbies have the potential to grow friendship circles based on mutual interests.

 


Summing up

 

The reason I think I found some aspects of parenting to be challenging and why many parents have harder periods is because it is all such a big surprise.

Perhaps the most repeated parental cliche is that there is no manual for being a parent and while this is true is doesn’t mean you can’t seek the expereince and knowledge of other parents who have walked in your shoes. This was the very reason we set up CosyChats to be a resource for people to share a feeling or emotion with someone who understands and says. i know what its like when no one in your family understands or is really listening. To find support that does understand your situation and what you and your family need.


Feeling’s of loneliness and isolation were a huge surprise because we did not expect it. 

 

Like me, you probably saw families as the way people nurture the strongest sense of belonging.

 

A belonging that can last a lifetime.

But we did not realise that a family is different to the company you get from relationships like friendships with peers.

 

Parenthood is a responsibility and, mostly, young children can’t give the same feelings or empathy, and nor should they. 

 

The stress and upheaval of parenthood can take away your identity and make you start to chase being busy to not feel lonely – and end up trapped in a rut.

 

My parental loneliness came mostly in my son’s intense early years, and this is when it can be hardest to deal with.

 

Fortunately I had family to help give my wife and I small breaks, and  I found local friends. Because I have always loved technology I learned to find ways to communicate with people in other ways. To enjoy my hobbies in smaller doses. Finding like minded people helped my feelings of isolation.

The key is to realise that, like many things in parenting. Challenges come in different quickly passing chapters, and that you are not alone in sometimes feeling alone. There are like minded and supportive people and parents out there. Isolation is a common feeling among st parents.

 

If you want to talk about this or any other parenting issues, please feel free to contact me on CosyChats. My name is Andrew and I’m a father from Leicester-shire in the UK.  

What is CosyChats?

👍🏼🚨CosyChats is a personalised parent support Service that can provide support to parents across a wide range of parenting issues. Including how to bring up happy and well round children.

 

As parents we understand how lonely and isolating being a parent can be even when your surrounded by friends and family. As they don’t understand or appreciate your situation. Many adopters for instance find this where there isn’t a history of adoption in family. Or friends or where people close to you don’t understand or appreciate ADHD for example. Isolation can happen when your surrounded by people just as much as when your not.

Whatever you feel we’re here to listen and if you want, share our experience and knowledge.

👍🏼Cosychats – Where No Problem Is Too Big and No Question To Small
Cosy Chats is a personalised parent support Service that can provide support to parents across a wide range of parenting issues.  Including how to bring up happy and well round children.

How to allow children to follow their dreams and be happy.

Introducing CosyChats

🛟1-2-1 Personalised Parent SupportSessions

🧷 Safe Spaces Free From Judgement and Shame

👍🏼Where No Problem Is Too Big and No Question To Small

👩‍👦Offering Compassion and Understanding

🆘From Real Parents Who Know How Difficult Being a Parent Can Be

🧑‍🤝‍🧑Real Lived Knowledge & Experience

💻Virtual Sessions Where You Are In Control

Top 10 Benefits of the CosyChats service.

👍🏼Access to a wealth of Parenting Experience and Knowledge.

👍🏼Your own personalised 1-2-1 service.

👍🏼A safe space free from judgement and shame.

👍🏼You are in control and choose the CosyChats parent and service that’s right for you.

👍🏼Years of lessons learnt and experience gained that can all be shared.

👍🏼Being understood and your needs heard.

👍🏼No question is too small, no problem too big.

👍🏼Compassion and support from people who understand how difficult being a parent can be.

👍🏼Its affordable and is far greater value than professional providers.

👍🏼Meetings are on online so you can join from where you feel most comfortable.

👩‍👦Offering Compassion and Understanding

Please browse our parents to find a parent that is right for you. Book a support session and share the experience and knowledge or another parent.

Thank you for reading our blog on isolation and loneliness in parenting.

a dad and son walking while the dad explains why being a positive role model is a good trait in a father

How To Create Positive Role Models For Children

Why do children need positive role models?

Younger children look up to their parents like hero’s. Sheer bewilderment about how amazing you are. How you are the source of knowledge and authority.  For them you are the source of the universe but as children grow so do influences on them.  They begin to form their own opinions and find influence and hero worship elsewhere.  As parents you understand this.  As difficult as it is to relinquish that role, you cannot be your child’s only hero.  There has to be space for other hero’s for your children but as parents you cannot control these choices or influences.

Read Blog: How to Create a Strong Relationship With Your Children – Cosychats

Your parents probably spoke about not falling in with the wrong crowd and while that is true there is a whole new crowd on-line and in social media. So many of these influences are poor and /or misguided.

Your children need positive role models. As parents we need to guide them or at the very least be able to have a conversation to counter the toxic bubbles that exist online.  Teenage years especially can be hard and parents need to keep on talking, keep on being a positive part your child’s life.

Read Blog: Are TEENAGERS Safe With Their Lives Online?

Positive role model’s are like a light that guide your children through a dark forest of life where pitfalls and evils lurk. Self doubt, body shaming, drugs, alcohol the list is endless but your child is not alone you are their for them.  You are their guide and you may lose sight of them at times but you keep your beacon of positively and support aloft for them.

Parents need to be able to provide positive support and guidance for their children.

It sounds so obvious but so many parent lose sight of this.  ‘They’ve made their own choices and must suffer the consequences.’  While natural consequence is a way of learning its not a way of washing your hands of you children. Your children need that positive guide throughout their lives.  We never lose the need for parental support and wisdom. Cosychats is built upon the benefit of sharing experience and knowledge and this is so true of the parent child relationship.

You never give up on your children.

Read: FORCING Your Child to Follow YOUR Dreams Not Theirs?

There are so many competing influences and voices tempting your children.

👍🏼Personalised Parent Support from CosyChats.com👍🏼

The Power of Social Media and the Internet

We know children no longer watch TV preferring social media videos and influencers.

Children spend six hours or more a day on screens – BBC News
This is a world parents may not understand or be part of. Its a largely an unregulated world relying on the free speech argument. Online safety laws unsatisfactory, Technology Secretary Peter Kyle says – BBC News 

Children can now easily find role models online and here in lies the problem.  There is little or no regulation that prevents children forming unrealistic and damaging expectations due to the influence of role models.

If you think this is harmless browsing think again.
Kent headteachers back smartphone ban after Netflix’s Adolescence – BBC News

‘Boys formed Andrew Tate club in School’ – teacher

Our experience echo’s this where my 11 year old son starting quoting Andrew Tate to me. Talking about women in a derogatory way and using explicit terms. I was quite shocked but i shouldn’t have been surprised. This is the world they live in.

What did surprise me was that he didn’t take much notice of me. I was the positive role model and being ignored

CosyChats is for parents by parents. Were here to listen and support you with whatever help you need being a parent.  We’re a parenting community  that understands how difficult being a parent can be. 

When i tried to explain why Andrew Tate wasn’t a positive role model. What Andrew Tate represents and says aren’t good things, he looked at me and said i didn’t know what i was talking about.  This wasn’t going to be a quick conversation and it took plenty of explaining to challenge the stereotype he had formed.

How to create positive role models for children?
Be a positive role model.

Now more than ever parents need to be positive role models.  Check your behavior. Think about what you project to your children.  Re-enforce your own positive behaviour.

Talk to your children.

Understand what they are viewing. Whet they are interested in. Who their friends are.  Its not an inquisition, do it calmly and compassionately.

Discuss things.

If they mention a influence or belief you don’t agree with explore it with them.  Don’t just shut them down.  With my son it took a few conversations to put an alternative view across.  I didn’t just say Andrew Tate was wrong as that’s my view. Its about understanding his view and exploring it to educate him and then re enforcing the education.

Be vigilant

Its surprising how quickly views from.  From an early age.  In the BBC report the boys were under 10.  Social media and the internet mean your children are exposed to greater content at an earlier age. That positive role model may not be in your child’s life and you don’t realise it.

Being a parent is amazing and life changing but also difficult and challenging.  Children can test you and  we believe every parent needs plenty of support. We know we’re parents ourselves.  Speak to other parents and get the help you need and the support your family needs.
Check your internet setting.

If you don’t have child filters on, turn them on but don’t rely on them.  They didn’t stop my son learning about Andrew Tate.

Promote positive influences

Use positive role models. Explore and share positive role models.  Don’t force it maybe just put a picture up and let them explore.  Use local clubs. Sports clubs can have positive role models and have positive influences built in. Boxing clubs teach respect and self discipline. Football clubs promote team work.   Libraries usually have book and reading clubs.  We have a great local art centre that does loads of half terms clubs and events to promote creativity and self expression.

 

 

 

CosyChats Personalised Parent Support for You, because Family Is Everything.

CosyChats is a personalised parent support Service that can provide support to parents across a wide range of parenting issues including how to connect with your children and spend quality time together. How to leave your parenting guilt at the door and build a solid and happy relationship with your children.

Parents on Cosychats.
🛟1-2-1 Personalised Parent Support Sessions

🧷 Safe Spaces Free From Judgement and Shame

👍🏼Where No Problem Is Too Big and No Question To Small

👩‍👦Offering Compassion and Understanding

🆘From Real Parents Who Know How Difficult Being a Parent Can Be

🧑‍🤝‍🧑Real Lived Knowledge & Experience

💻Virtual Sessions Where You Are In Control



Top 10 Benefits of the CosyChats service.

👍🏼Access to a wealth of Parenting Experience and Knowledge.

👍🏼Your own personalised 1-2-1 service.

👍🏼A safe space free from judgement and shame.

👍🏼You are in control and choose the CosyChats parent and service that’s right for you.

👍🏼Years of lessons learnt and experience gained that can all be shared.

👍🏼Being understood and your needs heard.

👍🏼No question is too small, no problem too big.

👍🏼Compassion and support from people who understand how difficult being a parent can be.

👍🏼Its affordable and is far greater value than professional providers.

👍🏼Meetings are on online so you can join from where you feel most comfortable.

CosyChats is a personalised parent support Service that can provide support to parents across a wide range of parenting issues including how to connect with your children and spend quality time together.