When you become a mom, so many things change, including your place in the world. You’re suddenly faced with an entirely different perspective and whole new way of looking at pretty much everything. It’s like being handed an endless maze which is constantly changing, no matter which path you take. On top of that, you are immediately put in a “Mom” category, which carries all sorts of connotations with it, which might, or might not, apply to you.

When I had my kids, I did have some playdates where I hung out with other moms. It helped to have them around just to vent, and to learn the hundreds of things you are supposed to know when you first have a kid, but I never really felt “mom-enough.” I didn’t add sweet notes to their lunches, take pictures of them in matching outfits, or sing them to sleep. That last one was particularly unsettling as I realized I didn’t know any lullabies because clearly my parents just shut the door and told me to “go to sleep!” In this social media frenzy of the cool mom, wine mom, yoga pants mom, crafty mom, healthy chef mom, and of course, the mom who is trying really hard to look like they are not trying at all, I never really felt like I fit in.

During this time with young kids, I started going to the local gym where the owner was an incredibly intimidating strong female who would yell across the room to me in spin class “Liza! Pick it up! You out late last night or something??!!” (My name is Lisa but there were already enough Lisa’s at the gym, so it stuck—my gym name became Liza, which I embraced whole-heartedly.) This gym was full of amazing women who accepted me for who I was, and I quickly realized I was just being myself when I was there because I felt comfortable in that environment—no mom act, no trying to fit in. I thrived on being pushed to do my best and started going every day. Some days the woman next to me would plunk her Dunkin Donuts iced coffee into the bike’s water bottle cage, look at me and ask, “How are you doing Liza??” And she meant it. And other days the owner would bring me her turkey chili recipe, and invite me to Friday wine night with the ladies. I finally felt like I fit in somewhere, and just having that, made me feel better as a mom.

I realized I didn’t fit into any of these other mom groups because I wasn’t being myself around them. I was just acting the way I thought moms should act—whatever that is—I am not sure anyone really knows. I took a step back from the whole mom label that is applied the minute you pop those kids out, and just tried to be myself and to do what I enjoyed, and that was working out, something I have always considered important and enjoyable. (I know many moms who would think I was crazy.) Turns out, that was my community and I just hadn’t realized it.

So if I had one piece of advice for moms out there searching for their community, it would be—just be yourself, don’t try to keep up with anyone, and see what happens. If you feel most comfortable going to the craft store and creating amazing pieces of art, then go for it. If you feel more comfortable hiking a trail and planning your next backpacking adventure, I guarantee there is a community out there for you too. If there is one thing I have learned, it is you are not alone in your interests and needs as a mom—there is a group of people out there just like you. Be yourself, and the community will find you.

 

I am a mom, a film/tv editor, potato chip lover, and former New England girl turned Southern California resident. Interests include trail running, hiking, snowboarding, and photography. I have two boys who keep me young, and motivated to do well in this world.

Photo: via Canva

There was no room for tears on the first day, those would come in the weeks to follow. 

Today was suck it up day. 

Today was focus on breathing under the crushing weight of uncertainty and fear day. 

Today was be strong for the kid’s day. 

I watched the tail lights until they disappeared around the corner and forced myself to choose gratitude over resentment, even though I didn’t want to.

He was leaving me again—not for good, just “for now”.

This wasn’t new for us. 

In fact, we did it every single month, over and over for 2 years. We weren’t victims, we had made these choices together, but it was still really, really hard.

We finally made the choice to move our family to the place my husband was working so we could “do life together”. 

We didn’t know it, but we would be exchanging one kind of challenge for another. He still worked 100+ hours a week. Sometimes he would come home to eat, shower and sleep for a few hours. Other times he would stay in a man camp and we would still have to go weeks without seeing him. 

That lasted 4 more years.

I could have fallen into a rut of depression. 

I could have binge-watched more Netflix than any one person should.

I could have let the dishes pile up next to empty wine bottles and Reese’s wrappers.

I could have cried myself to sleep each night while reassuring a suckling baby and a snuggling toddler that they were safe and loved, shielding them from the loneliness I was drowning in.

I could have let the kids run wild through minefields of toys and crumbs,living off of applesauce pouches and granola bars.

I could have become a helicopter mom, a desperate attempt to combat the lack of control I felt.

I could have distanced myself from my husband because it was easier than aching for him.

I could have felt sorry for myself and let blame and self-deprecation run the show.

I could have.

And the truth is, all of those things were intertwined throughout my years of living the oilfield wife life. A life I don’t wish on anyone, but have grown to cherish nonetheless for how it nurtured a spider silk strength in me—flexible and resilient, nearly invisible until the light hits it.

As I fought to find the meaning in my cyclical survival, I learned how to weave delicate and intricate webs that became my life—an unexpected magnum opus.

There are many, but these are three of the accidental lessons that pulled me through and allowed me to grow from a young mother that life was happening to, to a resilient woman who happened to life:

1. Find Your Tribe

After we moved, it didn’t take long to realize I desperately needed a tribe. People to do life with. People who were in the same boat as me, who knew what it was like to be in my shoes. People who needed me too. I forced myself to be brave. I went to park parties and play dates, I signed up for clubs, I met people from Facebook groups, I hosted craft days.

Eventually, in a place I didn’t even know existed years previous, I had a “framily”, a melting pot of people from around the country that I fell in love with individually and collectively. We did birthdays and holidays together. We did paint nights and lake days and coffee mornings. 

We walked with each other through sicknesses, having babies, starting businesses, and long, cold winters. 

We made each other laugh, we let each other cry and we kept each other in the boat when one of us wanted to slip over the edge and sink into the deep, dark depths of life.  

2. Find Your Passion

I knew that if I didn’t throw myself into productive and creative endeavors, I would quite possibly trip into a puddle of life-wasting, destructive behavior.  When I had a project to focus on, it felt like stepping into a bullet-proof bubble that shielded me from all the worries that accompanied our lifestyle.  

Loneliness has a beautiful way of showing you yourself since no one else is blocking the way.  

On those quiet Friday nights, when it felt like the rest of the world was kissing and cuddling and feeling seen, I would get lost in a painting or get found in a book. I would let ideas take me anywhere they wanted. I lived a thousand different stories, met a hundred different versions of myself, without ever leaving home.  

I cultivated my passions and they became not just a safe haven through the storms of life, but a path to guide my feet to my purpose.

3. Find Your Voice

It felt like the only people I talked to were little humans who didn’t hear me. The conversations with the one I loved were pigeonholed into five-minute increments, not looking into each other’s eyes, but peering into our phone screens, hoping to catch a glimpse of our other halves world. Cut too short, not enough shared, not enough time. 

It often felt like my voice didn’t matter. So much bubbling inside of me with no place to go, the buildup increasingly painful.

I learned that sometimes feeling silenced in the best way to realize the value and power in having a voice. I learned that the less I said, the more I listened to the whispers of the world around me. I thought about things harder and longer, and when I did speak or write, my words were more concise, potent and powerful. 

I learned that having a voice isn’t about saying everything, it’s about saying the things that matter most and trusting that they will find eager ears and open hearts.

 

If you find yourself living the oilfield wife life,

or so many like it, know that you are part of a spider-silk sisterhood. 

Just because it’s hard to see doesn’t mean it isn’t hiding in the shadows. Your circumstances are an invitation to find your tribe, find your passion and find your voice. 

If you accept, a new kind of freedom will find you.

This post originally appeared on Midland Moms Blog.

Nicole is an artist, children's book author, and a free-spirited creator gracefully raising three wild offspring while chasing her bearded husband on his oilfield adventure in Midland, TX. Nicole paints pictures with words and tells stories with art that encourge people to reclaim their maker identity and live a life of colorful authenticity. 

Pregnancy has been no laughing matter for comedian Amy Schumer but she’s found that a greener change to her beauty routine has helped and it could be beneficial for other moms dealing with morning sickness, too.

Schumer has spent the better part of her pregnancy dealing with the extreme symptoms of hyperemesis gravidarum, a type of severe morning sickness. She was hospitalized early in her pregnancy and even forced to cancel tour dates. However, the comedian recently mixed up her beauty routine and not only does she have that beautiful pregnancy glow but it’s helping her symptoms as well.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BwrlVV5lks8/

In a recent video post for Beautycounter, Schumer explained that she’s made the switch to cleaner beauty care and that the toxin-free and scent-free products have made a difference. “Especially being pregnant and puking so much during pregnancy, a smell would set me right off,” she said.

Becoming a mom is what prompted her to make a switch in the first place. “Now that it wasn’t just me taking care of my dirtbag self, I was like, ‘there’s also a baby living in me, I should also be conscious of the products I’m using,’” Schumer explained in the video.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

Featured photo: Beauty Counter Tribe via Instagram

 

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It’s easy to see why a strong support system of friends is important as a mom, especially when you have babies and young kids. However, new research shows the benefits of mom friends extend to your kids as well.

A new study conducted by Cornell University found that kids of moms who had strong social circles (aka an awesome mom tribe), scored higher on cognitive development tests, which measure language along with motor, socio-emotional and adaptive behaviors.

photo: Priscilla du Preez via Unsplash

The researchers believe the stronger scores could correlate with the fact that moms who have more close friends socialize more, which exposes their kids to more language and socialization early on. In other words the more time you spend chatting with your mom friends at the park, the more your kids pick up on.

Having a stronger social network could also mean that a mom feels more supported and less stressed and anxious, which could lead to improved parenting skills. Regardless of the reason, having great mom friends clearly has many benefits.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

 

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Stay-At-Home Moms Deserve Work-Life Balance, Too—Here’s How

It’s safe to say that mom life is never boring. Millions of moms around the world battle the everyday struggle of simply finding time to “do it all”—myself included. However, even on those darkest days when you just want to give up and binge on Netflix, there’s a way to balance being a mom and finding time for yourself.

There’s no secret “key” to being able to balance everything. If there were, we’d have all unlocked that door by now, right? When it comes to finding a work-life balance, it takes patience and understanding of your true goals. This can be increasingly more difficult if you work from home as well. Trust me! When you’ve got little ones in the home during the workday, it can add a few extra stresses and hurdles, too. I’m happy to share all the tidbits of knowledge that I’ve accumulated over the years. What works for me may not work for all. But I can say that if you’re stressed now, any steps forward on a different path can help.

1. Make a real schedule.

I know, I know. Schedules can be tedious and draining… I get it. But, this is where you need to think differently. Make a schedule that fits your lifest‌yle. If you know that you’re going to get sidetracked during the day, create your daily schedule to accommodate that. It’s the only way I can manage a home, three kids and running my blog.

Planning on eating lunch at noon? Write that into your schedule. But instead of giving yourself 30 minutes to sit down and eat, pencil in an hour—just in case. If you allow yourself a bit of wiggle room in your schedule, you automatically don’t feel as stressed. And when you don’t feel as stressed, things just tend to go a bit more smoothly. Be sure to pencil in some time for things YOU enjoy throughout the day—whether that means taking a 30 minute break to watch your favorite show or making a quick call to your friend while you clean the kitchen. And when your schedule of tasks is over for the day, stop there. Don’t you dare try to clean another thing. Let yourself rest.

2. Use your phone for something other than scrolling through Facebook.

More than likely, your cell phone probably isn’t very far from you at all at this very moment. Most people know where it is at all times and are constantly grabbing it, reading mom blogs with it, playing on it or just scrolling and wasting time.

And while I won’t ask you how much time per day you spend on in Internet searching and scrolling, I will ask you to change your mindset about your phone. Instead of looking at your phone as an escape, look at your phone as a tool to help you overcome and stay on track. Phones are helpful in so many ways that we often tend to forget their true function. Your phone can help you balance everything. It’s crazy simple.

For example, if you know that you need to do at least three loads of laundry every single day, but somehow it never happens, your phone is there to help. Set an alarm to put a load of laundry in at 8 a.m. and another alarm at 9 a.m. to move it to the dryer. Boom! Just like that, you got a friendly reminder from your phone and you’re on track (now folding… that can be a whole other alarm on its own!). Keep setting those alarms throughout the day and soon enough, you’ll start to notice that your mind will create a routine that you don’t even have to think about. Plus, knowing you got your tasks done during the day means more peace at night when you have time for some TLC. No one wants thoughts about their dirty dishes during a bubble bath.

3. Outsource, outsource, outsource.

As a mom, you’re always busy! You have a million little and big things to do. The best tip I can give you is to outsource the things that you don’t enjoy doing. For me, that was grocery shopping. Loading three small kids into the minivan to find the best deals at Aldi was a marathon to say the least. I would come home utterly exhausted. Since I found InstaCart, a grocery shopping app, I haven’t been in a grocery store in months. It is well worth the small additional fee to save my sanity and time. Remember, balancing it all doesn’t mean doing it all. Getting rid of some tasks means more time and energy to take care of yourself.

4. Define your physical and mental limits, then stick to them.

I’m a firm believer that when you’re mentally healthy, it has a direct positive effect on your work-life balance. The longer that you run around and wear yourself out without giving yourself time to rest, the more crazy and chaotic your home life will be. That chaos leaves you with less time to take care of yourself. The moment that you understand your mental and physical limits as a mom, you’ll find a much more effective manner to do everything.

I understand that giving yourself time every day to relax may not be possible if you have a little tribe of children keeping you busy. But ask for help so you can collect yourself and be a strong mom again.

5. Make your happiness a priority.

When it comes to finding balance, you need to always remember to factor in your happiness and personal growth as well. Our minds are a beautiful thing and so it’s important to take care of them. No matter when you choose to do so, do something for yourself daily, even if you start with only five minutes. You’ll be amazed at how much more energized you feel. More than likely, your work-life balance will start to show improvements as well!

—Suzi Whitford for Fairy Godboss

Fairygodboss Georgene Huang & Romy Newman, Founders
Tinybeans Voices Contributor

As the largest career community for women, Fairygodboss provides millions of women with career connections, community advice and the hard-to-find intel about how companies treat women.

Motherhood is a lifelong journey and a continually evolving process. As a mom of two teen boys, sometimes I think back to the beginning of my mothering journey: The anticipation and nesting, the excitement of bringing a brand-new human into our home, the years when I was blurry-eyed for lack of sleep, the times when I wished for just five minutes of peace and quiet to myself without another human attached to me, playdates, pre-school, elementary and middle school…

Even as long as some those early days felt, they did in fact fly by. One day, it seems, I blinked and watched my son get in a car and drive his brother to school.

There are innumerable joys and challenges at every stage of motherhood. But there’s one challenge we don’t often discuss—and that’s the loneliness and isolation which moms feel to some degree throughout motherhood.

Reflecting on the various phases of my children’s lives, I’ve come to realize that for me, what has kept that loneliness and isolation at bay, are the connections I’ve made with other moms.

I remember being a new mom and how getting out of the house and meeting a friend for lunch was a major event—an appointment that could easily be derailed by nap time or a cranky, teething baby. Many well laid plans got cancelled in those days.

But what kept me from feeling completely isolated during those first sleep-deprived years were the moms I met at mommy groups, neighbors, park friends and pre-school moms. If I didn’t have an activity on the calendar, sometimes I felt like I was spending the day waiting for my husband to come home and wondering if I’d made the right decision to be a stay-at-home mom (fully realizing how fortunate I was to even have that option).

I met women I am still friends with today at one of those mom groups. All those women were my first mom tribe and we all needed each other! Getting out of the house at least once a day became my sanity saving mantra (showered or un-showered!).

In elementary school, PTA and volunteer opportunities helped me forge friendships with other moms, but it was the after-school playground time that was best. As our kids burned off pent up energy running around, we moms got to catch up, share stories, connect and make plans. These precious minutes with other moms always gave me the little bit of extra energy I needed to make it through the rest of the day’s routine. I was part of a tight tribe and since we were mostly dealing with the same issues, we had each other’s support.

When our children left elementary school and entered middle school, we lost that after school playground time spent connecting with each other. In middle school many children also began to specialize in their sports teams and extra-curricular activities leaving little time for playdates or hanging out after school.

During this phase my time to connect with other women shifted from after school to earlier in the day—but I had to make a concerted effort to make plans! Many moms went back to work and some of that isolation and loneliness resurfaced. If there was a kid issue in our house, I no longer had the built-in playground time to talk to friends about it. There are no official mommy groups for moms of middle and high school aged kids and yet parenting becomes so much complex during this age!

I continued to connect with friends one-on-one, whether going to the gym or on walks together. But I really found the connection I needed when I attended a Happy Parent Happy Teen workshop put on by a parenting coach in Kirkland, Washington. Here were all these other moms who also have teenagers who sulk, roll their eyes and who walk straight through the house and close themselves in their bedrooms. We were all sharing slightly different versions of the same experiences we’re having while raising teenagers!

I loved feeling part of a tribe again. A tribe of moms whose kids have one foot out the door (some already had kids in college), all of whom craved to hear how other moms were coping.

The high school years are yet another brand-new phase of motherhood. In high school we rarely know the parents of our kids’ friends. Other parents are less likely to show up and be chatty at our kids’ sports games. Kids are driving and, in some ways, need us less than before. But in other respects, this phase of motherhood has been the most challenging yet and the roadmap is even vaguer than before.

I’ve attended a few of these workshops now and I will continue to do so. I need those connections with other women. I need my mom tribe more than ever. This new tribe of moms is different in that we don’t all live in the same neighborhood, our kids don’t all go to the same schools or play on the same sports teams.

Among the group, there are a broader set of experiences and challenges. The big thing we do have in common is the recognition that together we are stronger and that cultivating these connections with one another helps us be better moms and helps us be happier individuals.

In late April I’ll be attending a women’s retreat in Bellevue called Luscious Mother. I am looking forward to the connections I will forge and the insights I will gain. I am looking forward to learning from the coaches and the other women. It’s the best way to care for my self as a mother and as a woman.

I am a professional home organizer at Simplify Experts, a blogger, and a mom of two boys ages 11 and 13. I blog about home organizing for busy families, especially those impacted by ADHD.

Parenting ain’t easy, but at least we have our tribe of Twitter parents to keep us laughing! Whether you’re having a great day or one for the books, our roundup of funny tweets is sure to get you smiling in no time. Keep scrolling to see this week’s collection!

 

1. 🤯

https://twitter.com/meaghano/status/1097323903490248704

2. Spring, summer, fall…

3. Always.

4. Consider it done.

5. That’s all kids telling a story.

6. Lesson learned.

7. But hey––the kids will think it’s fun!

8. Have a great day, honey.

9. Again, 🤯.

10. You’re hungry AGAIN?

Photo by Ryan McGuire via Gratisography; composite by Karly Wood for Red Tricycle

 

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This week in tweets, it’s all about learning how to Marie Kondo, prepping for all those Valentine’s Day cards and the general navigation of parenthood. As usual, our tribe of Twitter parents are keeping it real, and keeping us laughing.

Keep scrolling to see our fave tweets from this last week.

 

1. We can’t wait until you have kids of your own.

2. Please and thank you.

3. ::sigh::

4. On Marie Kondo-ing with the kiddos:

5. Pretty sure they’re in cahoots with makers of hot dogs and hot dog buns.

6. When even their “inside voice” is still too loud.

7. Obvs.

8. So fun.

9. It’s no hot stone massage, that’s for sure.

10. ::givesup::

––Karly Wood

Photo by Ryan McGuire via Gratisography; composite by Karly Wood for Red Tricycle

 

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Everyone needs to feel that super-special sense of belonging. The new song “My Tribe,” by Austin band The Mrs is all about that, and more. If you haven’t heard of this Austin, Texas all-women band, we’ve got the scoop on them and their fab new album.

The four-woman band The Mrs released their debut self-titled album in March of 2017. Their sophomore album, Five Minutes, was released in 2018. With plenty of empowering music, The Mrs is your next new fave, especially their track, “My Tribe.”

Along with the other tracks on Five Minutes, the song “My Tribe” is something that you’ll totally understand—and appreciate. While this is music for mamas (and dads too!), the lyrics of “My Tribe” are oh-so-perfect to use in some of your more serious parenting moments:

“It takes a village to help you win a fight / It takes a friend to show you wrong from right / Though they may not be perfect, they are always by your side / My tribe.”

You can download the Five Minutes album, as well as the “My Tribe” single, on iTunes, Amazon, Spotify and Google Play. Proceeds from the title track go towards The Kindness Campaign, a charity that helps to end bullying.

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Courtesy of The Mrs

 

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Whether you’re an award-winning actress or a stay-at-home-mom, every parent makes their own choices about how to raise their kids—and they should be free to do so without facing judgment—especially from other moms. A viral post about mom-shaming offers the perfect explanation for why we should build one another up instead of tearing each other down.

Florida mom of two Kelsea King took to Facebook recently to share a quote from her friend Alee Zering. The post, which has since been liked and shared thousands of times, captures how hard it is to be a mom when there are so many preconceived notions about how moms “should” do things.

Photo: Joe Gardner via Unsplash

”Mom-ing is hard when breastfeeding in public is offensive but formula feeding is frowned upon…” King’s post begins. And it only gets better.

“…When co-sleeping is dangerous but rocking your baby to sleep is wrong, when sleep training means you don’t love your baby but not having your kid on a schedule means you have no control of your kid, when putting your child in a bouncer/walker is detrimental to their development but holding them too much is spoiling them, when being a stay at home Mom means you’ve given up your career/dreams but putting them in childcare and going back to work means you’re going to miss out on all of the important things, when getting kids their shots is injecting them with poison but if you don’t you’re endangering the world, when you’re trying to be confident in your motherhood but everyone wants to tell you that you’re doing it wrong.”

It’s exhausting just reading it, but there are no exaggerations here, just the reality of what being a mom often feels like. The post ends with an important reminder, “Mom bullies are the worst. So stop. Just love, encourage, support, and give a mom a cup of coffee.”

King told Good Morning America that she believes the post is relatable to so many moms because we’ve all experienced some type of mom-bullying at one point. She said the quote, “reminds everyone that we are doing the best we can, there is no ‘right way,’ and there is no need to worry about the opinions of others.”

Check out King’s viral post below.

Be right back—texting our mom tribe about how awesome they are.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

 

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