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SUPPORTING PARENTHOOD: IT TAKES A VILLAGE

Last week I had this wonderful opportunity to speak at a parent support group.

While enough has been researched and written about the positive impacts of support groups especially through chronic challenges, there remains a huge dearth of the same in our healing community.

“There are stigmas and doubts attached to certain life conditions which inhibit the community seeking behaviour.”

So, it did come as a pleasant surprise when I was invited to be part of one.

This was a group of parents who have children with different abilities. Most were seeking Occupational therapy from an established expert, and it was her brainchild to create this group to assist parents with their daily support and queries.

The expert, an old friend, and a firm believer of a holistic approach to healing had apprised me of the previous sessions and had outlined 3 core concepts where the parents were seeking inputs. (With limited time on the online format, we had to define the outline keeping priorities in mind)

And the 3 key concepts that I had to touch base upon were:

Acceptance – WHAT DOES ACCEPTANCE MEAN TO YOU? Is it about looking at the current reality with a sense of hopelessness? Is it giving up? Does it involve resentment at not having better options to choose from?

In my opinion, True acceptance is not a forced feeling. It’s about being authentic to your emotions at every moment. Before the rationalisation starts. Before we start making excuses and covering up our genuine feelings.

The primary objective of living is 1) survival 2) happiness. I’m not talking of the big chunky moments of obvious ecstasy and delight we feel on achieving or acquiring something…. but the ease of flow of day-to-day life that brings a sense of peace…if that is not happening then we may have to go back and introspect on what we are fighting against every day. If we truly accept then such a dichotomy wouldn’t exist.

True acceptance isn’t about saying ok I accept my situation or reality and then internalising a feeling of pain, resentment, anger, shame, disappointment. That’s a misaligned and false way of living and eventually erodes you from the inside.

For me, True acceptance comes when I can understand the honest Musts / Demands that are driving my emotions, my thoughts and my behaviours about a given situation at a given time. These Musts were identified and established by Dr Albert Ellis, an American psychologist and psychotherapist who founded Rational Emotive Behaviour Therapy (REBT), the school of counselling that I trained in. They are:

Once we have an honest review of our Demands, Acceptance appears through all the smog of hundreds of unhelpful thoughts and expectations.

Addressing the next topic of self-care was interesting. And touched a raw nerve with all the parents/caregivers who couldn’t remember the last time that they did something just for themselves. The guilt, anxiety or simple selfishness that they experienced, made it impossible for some of them to fathom the idea of self-care. But self-care need not be time-consuming or anything that throws off the carefully crafted schedule of their children. It can start simple. In fact, it should start simple to give you the faith and ease of making it part of your everyday living. My tiny self-care options included

We then moved on to the last topic of Parenting. This is a vast discussion point with no defined framework. No Rights and Wrongs. It’s experiential growth and very difficult to be learnt through books and speeches. But what I had intended to bring to light for this group of Parents were certain fallacies and traps to avoid which may just make this adventure called Parenting a little less inconvenient.

As a parent these are the 3 practical tips I try and use as often:

At the end of the session, I’m sure I couldn’t clear all queries or solve all challenges for the group. Nor do I think I can. But the comfort of knowing that there is a space available where some bits and pieces of support may make life a tad bit easier left all of us feeling grateful.

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