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Mom confessions: It's no secret why moms head online to confess all

Posted Tue, Nov 06, 2007
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I have a confession to make. I spent most of last night delving into other moms' secrets — the kind of secrets that moms don't even tell their closest friends.

In case you haven't heard, click-and-go confessionals, like True Mom Confessions, are taking advantage of the Internet's ability to serve up connection and anonymity at the same time.

You'll find sex-related confessions ("I take the kids to my lover's house") as well as the standard mom-confession fare:

  • Things-I-can't tell my mother-in-law ("I hate it when my kids get toys as gifts that turn out to be junk.")
  • Things-I-can't-tell-my-husband ("I hate how if I am having a bad day then I am a bitch but you can be a complete jerk for no reason and it's completely okay.")
  • Things-I-feel-most-guilty-about ("Every day I start the day wanting to be a better mom than the day before. By 9 a.m. the fighting and crying is about to drive me up the wall and I've already screwed up the day's resolution.")

True Mom Confessions doesn't have a monopoly on the mom confessional. Her Bad Mother's Basement  is also meeting the need for online confession, but in a way that feels more like a good-for-the-soul bitch session in a girlfriend's basement than scrawling graffiti on a washroom wall. The site, which launched in early 2006, features a loyal community of posters who drop by to offer support to anyone who chooses to post their confession, anonymously or otherwise.

So why don't moms feel like they can express these feelings openly as opposed to spilling their guts to perfect strangers? After all, we're constantly being told that we no longer have to aspire to be perfect moms, perfect wives and perfect homemakers.

Frankly, talk is cheap. You only have to look at what happened to Jessica Seinfeld last week to see how quickly the implication that someone is a bad mother can be used as a weapon when someone wants to question someone's credibility or launch an attack on someone. I'm not going to get embroiled in the stealth vegetable debate (we've talked about that here before) or who might have cribbed whose recipe for spinach brownies, but I do think it's worth pointing out that the brownie backlash goes a long way towards explaining the popularity of sites like True Mom Confessions and Her Bad Mother's Basement. After all, if a cookbook war can lead complete strangers to speculate about what kind of mother you are, imagine how vicious the comments could get if you did something truly dastardly, like showing up late to pick up your child at a friend's birthday party?

Now over to you. Have you ever been slammed with that most damning of labels: "bad mother"? Do you read or post to the online confession sites for parents? Why or why not?

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4 Comments

  • 1. Posted by Her Bad Mother on Thu, Nov 08, 2007

    Well, as you know, I think that the 'bad mother' title needs to be reclaimed and redefined - it's too easy for moms to be made to feel incompetent or unworthy. Children and hormones and day-to-day anxieties can really combine to make a perfect storm of insecurity - which is why 'confession' sites are so valuable. At a click, moms can see that they're not alone in those insecurities and anxieties and deep, deep fears - and if you're not alone in them, maybe they're not as bad as you thought they were. It can go a long way to exposing and obliterating the bogeyman (bogeymom) of bad momness - which is usually only ever a state of mind, anyway.

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  • 2. Posted by romilassally on Fri, Nov 09, 2007

    posted by True Mom Confessions - I love catherine (her bad mother) and her use of the "perfect storm of insecurity" that we mothers deal with on a daily basis! Catherine is a pioneer in this confessional space...I foll0wed long after her basement was overflowing with material. I started TMC to give moms a platform to deal with their emotional lives first and foremost - not as the last item on an endless "to do" list. And as you pointed out - it can be a really quick fix for those of us feeling alone, scared, confused or just plain crazy. One of the dirty little secrets of motherhood is that many of us walk around feeling out of step with our mom friends - and I'm hoping that TMC can offer these moms a place to feel - if only for a moment - that they fit in.

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  • 3. Posted by heatherm on Fri, Nov 09, 2007

    I think all the moms that blog probably have family that read their blog. So if something happens within the family and they want to write about it, they can't. These sites allow them to write out what happened and get rid of the emotion, without hurting anyone. I personally think that they are a great idea, but I have never posted to one. Though if I had known about them a few days ago I probably would have. And still might in the future.

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  • 4. Posted by anndouglas on Mon, Nov 12, 2007

    Thanks for your comments. It's great to have feedback from both The Basement and True Mom Confessions. And, Comfortablycrazy -- you express an insight that I've seen echoed all over the momosphere: once you've got an established blog and your family/friends read it regularly, you lose your ability to be totally open about everything that's going on in your life (unless you have exceptionally saintly family/friends).

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