This is a tough one and can take some time in and of itself. But forgiving yourself, as a mother, is a big hurdle to jump over. As mothers, it is innate that our role is to nurture and protect our children. However, we've just begun to exit a period when we had little interest in our baby, when we wished it wasn't our responsibility, when we were perhaps angry and annoyed at our infant, and when we saw our newborn as an interruption in our life. You may even feel as though you've betrayed your other children by giving birth to a new one, which is another area in which you must seek forgiveness.
When I had my son, I was riddled with guilt for betraying my two-year-old daughter, who now had to share me and didn't adjust particularly well to that. I also was not fond of my son. He was a roadblock to the life I had created with my husband and daughter, and suddenly, life was turned on its axis, and nothing was joyful.
Months later, I looked back on the first few months of my son's life with shame and regret. The countless times I'd walked by him to go to my daughter, the moments I'd wished I'd never had him, and the fantasies I'd devised to give him to someone who really needed a baby. All of it was shameful to me. I had failed as a new mother.
I had to forgive myself. It was not a deliberate choice I'd made to go through that, nor did I still have those thoughts and emotions. But while my fondness for my child had increased exponentially, and now I couldn't imagine our family without him, I still found myself overcompensating to make up for the self-shame. I also berated myself for not being what my son needed at his birth. For those moments I turned my face away. The "how could you's" that I asked myself were great. But the moment I chose to forgive myself and begin fresh was when healing began to take over, and my bond with my son deepened in a way I could never have imagined.
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