This week, I'm lucky enough to have a fire-dancing, baby-wearing mama (not at the same time!) teach me how to make mom friends. A guide I sorely need.  Thank you, Farren Square.
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Mom friends. Every mom needs at least one mom friend, another woman with  children who can be there for you through the ins and outs of life with  kids. Mom friends give us an excuse to get out of the house, a reason  to drag babies to the coffee shop or a walk to the park. Mom friends  listen to us vent, they understand there is love underneath all that  sleep deprivation. Mom friends can be even more important for a Stay at  Home Mom - they give us a connection to the outside world, another grown  up to laugh at our jokes and understand why we complain about not being  able to go to the bathroom alone. 
It took me personally about  two months as a stay at home mom to go completely insane from the  boredom. Don't think that life was a breeze or anything, but I'm just  not the type to watch TV much and since sitting around was my favorite  pregnancy pastime, I was pretty over it. Did I mention this was in the  dead of winter and I live in a frozen northern tundra land (aka Canada)?  I needed an excuse to get out, I needed someone to talk to during day  light hours, and I needed to be able to tend to my kid without guilt -- I  needed other mom friends. I went on a quest, and I was lucky enough to  find some truly amazing women, who also happened to be moms. Here is my  story of how I found success as a new mom befriending other new moms to maintain my sanity:
-I  started looking online. Blogging has been an incredible source of  support, friendship, information, and entertainment.  There is an  incredible network of intelligent women who are sharing their points of  view on parenthood out there. They have powerful things to say, and for  the most part, are incredibly humble and supportive. Twitter was another  amazing source of online mom-friends. We share pictures in real time,  live blog the ins and outs of our sometimes hectic sometimes monotonous  days, and support each other in 140 characters or less. Twitter is like  mass-texting a huge group, so often your questions "Omg, my kid just  swallowed a pound of glitter glue - what do I do?!" get answered right  away.
-I stalked the coolest library with the coolest children's  section. It doesn't matter that my baby doesn't understand story time  or has no recollection of the library 10 minutes after we leave. What  matters is that I get to hang out in an area downtown where crying  babies are totally acceptable, he gets to stare at other kids, I have  brief moments of intellectual conversation with moms who read books, and there is a trendy local coffee shop near by. Plus they gave us a free book when I signed my kid up for a library card. 
-I  remain open-minded at all costs, and I do not try to offer advice  unless it's clearly being sought. I'm passionate about many things in  life, but some of those things are only in my life. I talk  about them openly, but I support all mothers and the choices they make.  If you are looking for positive and supportive mom friendship, I think  it is vital to both display and seek these qualities. You won't be  disappointed. 
-There  are playgroups out there to be found. Sometimes you can find them  through local health centres, through support groups like the LLL, or  you can use great online resources like www.meetup.com When I simply  typed Mom and my area into meetup.com, I found over 15 different groups  I'd be interested to try out. Or you can make your own meetup and see if  you get any biters! 
-You have to Step  outside your comfort zone. You have to be prepared to be the one to  strike up a conversation at those playgroups. You might need to be the  mom that marches up to that other mom at the playground with the great  shoes and the awesome bag and say hi. You might even have to be the one  that says "Here's my number, text me later - let's get coffee." Because  why the hell not! Let me assure you, I'm not generally the type of  person to be so open and brash when meeting strangers. But I've done it.  I had some random mom send me an e-mail about my blog, noticed she was  local and arranged a day to meet with her at the library. Another day I  was out for a walk and ran into another mom with the same idea. I said  her baby looked cute, she complemented my baby carrier - it was mom love  at first sight. How could I let that go without a phone number? If we  decide to meet and the mom friend sparks don't fly, it really doesn't  matter. But if the mom friend sparks DO fly, I won't have regretted my brazenly asking for her contact information. 
The  fact of the matter is that sometimes you just need someone, anyone, to  fill that adult-time hole in your life. Chances are most of the mom  friends you meet won't change your life or become your new BFF, but I'm  willing to bet that you'll laugh a little, talk about your baby a lot  with absolutely zero remorse, and feel better knowing your days aren't  just a repetitive baby-centered affair. And if you really put yourself  out there, look in the kind of places where you want to spend time, and  keep an open mind - you might just meet a new MFF. Mom Friend Forever.  Oh yes. I went there.
 Farren blogs about breastfeeding, feminism and being a new mom over at Farren Square. Go check her out. It's one of the best-written blogs I've come across!
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Great post! I was lucky enough with both of my mat leaves to have a supportive group of mommy friends to help along the way. Truth be told, my one friend and I actually timed our second pregnancies so we would be off at the same time to support each other.
ReplyDeleteThe second mat leave, I formed a tight bond with the neighbourhood mommies. All of our kids were around the same age and it was a chance to sit and get the support we needed. We met weekly at each others homes and we made a day of it. It was the best thing for all of us.
I hope all new moms are as lucky as I was and find such a wonderful support network.
Jenn
This is a great entry. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteWhen I moved (with my then-11 month old) to a brand-new town across the country, I found our local Mom's Club to be a huge help. It's a national organization, but not every town has one (or has an active one) but I got really lucky with mine. Now I'm the one sending the emails and planning playgroups!
These are great ideas--stalking the library totally made me laugh!
ReplyDeleteCarla
You're so brave and awesome, Farren! You're doing such a great job at everything. These are all great tips!
ReplyDelete