My times of peak loneliness coincided with my moments of peak performative parenting. I posted more on social media, I barely stayed home. I have never posted more on Instagram than in the aftermath of moving interstate. I had two kids under four, was pregnant with the third and a 12 hour drive from our whole family. I felt embarrassed to be so desperate for connection and validation - so needy - but now I see it as a natural response to the isolation that often comes with parenting and invisible labour.
In a parenting role we are starved of much of the external validation we once received in our careers and former lives. As social creatures we crave reassurance from those around us that everything is okay and we’re still in the tribe. Generally the more content I feel within myself, the better I parent and the less I care about what everyone else is thinking about me as a parent. I feel that seeking external validation is normal, to a point, but the danger with performative parenting is when we start to parent purely to generate a positive public perception of ourselves rather than in the interests of our child. When we let the expectations of others guide our parenting choices we are bound to feel like we are falling short.
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