Jun 16, 2014

Tales from the Single Mom



Blog Post by Tania Cuadra

I read this article online a while back about how Michelle Obama caught herself referring to herself as a “single mother”. Really?! Is what I thought as I bristled at such a remark. No ma’am, you have help and money! I was a single “all the time” mother at the moment and no one, not even the first lady could identify with me… or so I believed.
Let me share a glimpse of my story.

I try not to compare my situation with others because I know that road leads to a dark, lonely dead end. For three lengthy dramatic years, I was a single mother to my son, Gael-Sebastían. I realize there are a lot of women who have it much worse than I did and it isn’t so much that I coveted the title of “single mom”. Actually, I hated it! But it was what it was and my situation embodied the truth of the term. I didn’t get a weekend to myself to do as I choose. I didn’t have a steady stream of residual income for my child’s growing wants. I didn’t have the other parent every night with whom to pillow talk over the latest worries and concerns about our son. I was one. Alone. Single. Drained.


The father and I split on common terms, there was no infidelity (thank God) we both just wanted different things, as it usually goes. I wanted to play wifey and he wanted to live the “party” life. So – I walked away. It was tough, scratch that it was agonizing, but I walked out with my integrity and self-worth. A huge part of me wanted him to stop me and choose us – sadly, he didn’t. As a result, I became withdrawn, utterly withdrawn. I used to bury myself in the depths of my sorrow, cry out of confusion and painfully question everything. Will I be okay? Will my son be okay? Will he and I be able to get along someday? Who will date me? Will people poke fun at me? Will I lose my friends?


Not every day was easy. Not every night was full of sleep. But every morning the sun came up and somehow I put one foot in front of the other. I went through my day, fed the kiddo, hugged him, and loved him. I dealt with everyday life by continuously praying and putting things into perspective… framing them up. Each and every day, I told myself, “You got up on February 14th, you can get up today” and I did. I got up. Day after day. You do the things you have to do and then the day ends and you face another night. Ugh, nights were the cruelest, but even those became easier as I figured out how to sleep through the entire night without cringing. Then, at some point you stop doing it because you have to do it, you are actually happy to do it and you smile again, you laugh and you notice the sun coming up, the birds chirping and the flowers blooming. But like most bliss, we must go through the storm before we could appreciate the sunshine...


I worked harder than I had ever worked in my life. I was making my way in the world… concealing the melancholy underneath my determination. I was constantly on the verge of a nervous breakdown. I felt like from the moment I woke up in the morning to the moment I laid my head down at night I was in a marathon. No, each day was a sprint in the epic marathon that had become my life. Getting up, taking care of my baby boy, getting him to day care, getting myself to work on time, trying to be awesome at work, dashing out the door at 5 p.m. to make it to daycare on time, loving on my son so that he would not remember that I had just left him for ELEVEN HOURS and feeding him and ready-ing him for a new day. Gosh, I’m exhausted just writing about it. How the hell did I do it? And what I just described was a good day. Now throw in one little monkey wrench: sick child, traffic, long meetings at work, car problems, perfectionist micro-managing boss (ok, so that was every day) and it was a recipe for mind-blowing guilt and anxiety. I stayed feeling guilty (lots of mommy guilt.... working, single, my kid is from a "broken" home guilt).... so when I even so much as thought about going to do something outside of the house, I just couldn’t. I hated to be away from my little one. I had very little to no help from family. They confused my strength and clarity with, “She’s got it all under control”. Um, no. Occasionally, I wondered selfish thoughts, “Would life be different if I had stayed?” At least I’d have a partner so that when I go out, that person is here to... well I dislike using the word ‘watch him’ but kind of. I could go out with friends and not worry about Gael feeling "alone", "neglected" or placed in harms way. Tragic, I know.


I didn't always WANT to get along with Joe (baby daddy), but I had to make it work for my son. I had to for him – he loves his daddy. It took a lot of work and wanting to do it. Not every step was easy and I had to put my hurt aside for it to work. Truth be told, prayer & patience were my best tools because there were days I wanted to go ape sh*t wild on him. Haha. Yet no matter how frantic he would make me, I never talked bad about Joe in front Gael, ever. This abetted our current relationship immensely.


Moving along… I guess my biggest problem (aside from BD issues) was maintaining friendships and dating, especially dating. I really struggled with this. I had so many friends or I had bursts of "close" friendships that didn't last quite long. I only dated one guy as a single mommy. A spot-on charmer, smart, tall and handsome, no kids. A dream! It ended months later – I called it off. Pfft. He wanted a vulnerable woman to control, I was not that; not even under my doomed circumstance. Sad face but reality is what it is. C'est la vie! Late-twenties and I’m boring… not partying every weekend or “hanging out” at happy hour on weekdays instead I acquired hobbies. Ironically, the first was babysitting children of single moms needing time away for the little things like manis/pedis, haircuts or a date night. If I couldn’t do it then I should let someone else relish in a mini break. That pastime proved to be successful and then I moved on to professional makeup artistry. What started as a passion filled diversion went on to be a fruitful business. I left my mortgage job and followed my heart - I had survived!



I found closure where there was pain and wounds. For any woman who thinks she can't make it on her own, don't let that be the reason for choosing a life of unhappiness. You never know what you can accomplish until you try. I, too was weak, naive, afraid and confused about raising a child on my own. However, with time, I learned it is possible to live on a single paycheck while managing to maintain my fashionista ways. And, by leaving a partner I wasn't compatible with at the time, set a good example for my son and allowed me to take my new found freedom as a chance to re-discover my true self and create a life worth living rather than staying in a fated relationship. There are unique and not so unique things about being a single mom, and I know hearing from others who had been there, done that, really helped. Having pen & paper to vent whatever I wanted helped too. Best therapy ever!
Fast forward years later…



Joe (baby daddy) and I are back as a team. As one. We sought after advice from our closest friends & family and have planned a life for ourselves. God, our son and love brought us back together. He gained a fresh respect for me and me for him. I thank him for not holding me back before and he thanks me for not giving up on him… our little boy couldn’t be happier! The only downside to this triumphant saga is that Joe travels a lot for work and is away 75% of the time… So I’m back to fulltime mommy duties. I now know what Michelle Obama meant to say… her husband is a pretty busy guy (obviously) so she has to do a lot of the parenting herself. There are a lot of “sometimes single” parents out there that do share a lot of the same challenges as “fulltime single” parents. It’s a hard route for either circumstance - I've endured both.





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