Site Meter Single Parenting

True love: family of friends

by Rachel Sarah

When I first moved back to California four summers ago, I was wedged between resentment and anger. I wasn’t what you’d call “a single-mom-by-choice” — my partner was gone, out the door — and every time I turned around I was smack in front of another traditional, mom-and-pop family.

Just pull yourself out of it, Rachel.

But c’mon now, wasn’t this Berkeley? Where were all the unconventional families like mine?

I tried to focus less on the “single” and more on the “motherhood.” I really did. The truth is: I love being a mom. It’s the “single” part I struggled with; that one word could be such a downer. Would I ever learn to accept my status and be satisfied with it?

Fortunately, right around this time, I spotted Siobhan at a local playground. It was hard to miss her on that foggy morning, in her red fleece flying cape, strolling with her daughter in a similar cape, complete with polka dots and a matching hat.

We quickly exchanged stats and discovered that her two-year-old daughter, Hazel, is just one month younger than my daughter, Mae. They also share the same middle name, “Frances.”

“I want boobie!” Hazel said, pulling up her mom’s shirt.

“Me, too!” Mae said.

As if signaled by the gods, both Siobhan and I held our hands to our breasts, as if protecting them. Then we sighed simultaneously.

“I’m trying to wean,” Siobhan said.

“Me, too!” I said.

“How about some food first?” Siobhan said, opening her polka-dot bag. Then she whispered in my ear: “Let’s see if we can distract them.”

Our differences became obvious when Siobhan pulled bags of dried fruit and organic salt-free rice cakes from her bag.

“Uh, I have a little something to offer, too,” I said, embarrassed when my own snack bag contained sugar-filled granola bars with chocolate chips.

After snacking, the girls, having long forgotten our breasts, toddled off to play in the sand. That’s when Siobhan told me she was in the middle of a divorce. “Men are scum,” she said. “I’m done.”

“But there are other fish in the sea,” I said. “Look at that guy over there. He’s hot,” I went on, signaling with my eyes to a tall guy with dreadlocks who was pushing his son on the swings.

“He’s a pot smoker,” she said.

“How do you know that?” I said.

“Berkeley’s a small town. You’ll get acquainted with who’s-who fast.”

Sure enough, Siobhan had a good bogus detector, and within months she’d become a barometer for my bad taste in men. But if Siobhan is my conscience when it comes to affairs of the heart, then Arden is my partner in crime.

I spotted Arden and her daughter at a local swimming pool. I couldn’t stop staring at them; it was like looking in a mirror. Arden is white and Jewish, like me. Her daughter, Celia, is multi-cultural, like mine, with coffee-brown skin and curly hair. I waved. Arden waved back.

Arden manages a local sports equipment store for kids, and she soon became an easy resource for soccer balls and hula hoops. We met for “hair parties” with our girls, during which we sat behind them with detangling spray and long-toothed combs. Soon, we decided to put our profiles on Match.com together.

Soon the three moms began swapping houses for a weekly dinner. Each week, one of us makes the main dish, while the others bring veggies and salads. We also take turns sharing parental anxieties and work stress. We confess to screaming at our girls in public and losing our house keys who-knows-where.

When I’m having a hard day, I know that I can call them: they are the two people in the world who always seem to get what I’m talking about.

“I told Mae this morning that she was a brat,” I said recently. “I spent the rest of the day feeling terrible. How could I have said that?”

Siobhan put her hand on my shoulder. I breathed in her lavender scent.

“Please absolve me,” I said to my friends. They always do.

These moms know that being on our own isn’t easy or graceful. But they’ve also helped me erase the shame I felt about it. As single moms, we get to call all the shots. We like giving our girls exclusive attention. And none of us is on a hunt for a husband. You won’t catch us desperately chasing some guy.

When you’re a single mom, a clan of close friends like mine is much more than a nice distraction. It’s the key to survival. Sure, we swap kids if one of has to run an errand. But it’s more than that. We call each other or email almost every day. This isn’t Gymboree or a baby-sitting co-op. Nor is it a makeshift single mom’s group; these women are my partners in a way.

Arden recently sent me a note said, “I’m so lucky that my girl has you all as part of her family.” She got it exactly right. We are family, unconventional perhaps, but family nonetheless.

Are single parents who want to date self-centered?

by Rachel Sarah

sasha.jpg
This is 3-year-old Sasha, daughter of one of the most loving and caring single mamas I’ve ever met!….

This dating how-to artice for single parents ran in my local Oakland Tribune today: “DF seeking S/DM for fun or LTR, if KID says it’s OK…When should you date again? Do you need the approval of those who stuff oatmeal in your DVD player?”

And it has certainly irked one local reader.

M.M., Director of Global Alliances at Unisys Corporation, begins his letter by praising my website: “one of the best looking websites I have seen. Everyone needs to be complimented on the marketing end.” (Ah, thanks.)

But then, M.M. goes on to say, “Sometimes I wonder if anyone has a brain left in their heads! ‘Dating’ for the children of single parents is a tragedy. Every reference to children in the entire article indicates the children are unhappy and in risky situations. The only ones served are the parents whose ‘libidos’ have returned. Having to watch the sexual-ization of their parents is painful for the kids. And when the adults ask the child if they like the new potential partner/date, what do you expect the child to say?! The children, especially in cases of divorce, want their mom or dad to be pleased (ie. not disappointed). This is backwards.

We live in culture that focuses on our needs. There are words for this: hedonistic, self-centeredness, and selfish (all negatives). And while I like my own pleasure as much as the next guy, when adults have children, we should be subsuming our pleasure for their upbringing. This seems intuitive and natural to me… I know. I have been there.”

~~~
What do YOU think? Are single parents who want to date again really hedonistic? self-centered? selfish?

You can read the feature here.

Want to read a hip, sassy book on dating?

by Rachel Sarah

I know, I know, Valentine’s Day is so overdone…. But if you happen to be looking for recommendations for current hip, sassy books hit on dating (yours truly included!), please check out this up-to-date resource on love-books.

Next to Dr. Phil

Wonder about this picture?

A single dad in Union City recently went to his local Borders to ask for Single Mom Seeking. He says, “Wedged between a lot of self help books, there were two copies of your book. I left one there and I took the other one and placed it on the center table that has a lot of Valentines stuff on it. So, I made some space and put your book next to Dr. Phil. I am sure that book selling is a lot like selling real estate: Location, Location, Location.”

He even took this picture. Ah, thanks Alan.

Do children raised by single moms resent and hate their mothers?… Of course not!

by Rachel Sarah

This morning, I had a great Live Chat with a handful of single moms at Single Rose, the up-and-coming online network for single moms!

Two of the moms are raising teenagers solo, so they talked about what it’s like to date when your teenagers are dating, too. Is anyone else in that boat?

We were a great mix, from California, Colorado and Texas. Please check out Single Rose.

~~~
Here’s one of my favorite new posts on the site, from Leah Klungness, PhD. Psychologist and co-author of The Complete Single Mother (Adams Media).

Leah Klungness tackles the myth that “Children raised by single moms actually resent and hate their mothers ….”

My two year old son lies on the floor kicking and screaming when I pick him up at day care. I make all kinds of complicated arrangements to pick him early so we can spend maximum time together. The caregiver tells me he only acts this way for me. He must resent me and, obviously, he hates me.. I am doing everything wrong.

You are doing nothing wrong and your child certainly does not resent or hate you! Toddlers save their most intense feelings for their mothers because they are most closely connected to their moms. Toddlers feel safest with their mommy so they literally store up all their “bad stuff� until they see us and then kick and scream, refuse to put on their jackets, cry pitifully, and, basically, make us feel like they hate us. It would have been kind of their caregiver to clue you in to this expected reaction, but sometimes there is unconscious competition between mothers and caregivers. If you picked up your son at the same time as the other mothers, you would quickly see that the “reunion meltdown� is typical in toddlers.

Every mother has the exact experience. These behaviors have nothing to do with being a single mom. Are you unsure about how to handle your child’s strong reunion message? The best way to handle these reunion messages is to realize that your child needs comfort, not discipline. Establish a routine for picking him up so he’ll know what to expect.

When you first arrive home, give your child some undivided attention. The dishes in the sink aren’t going to go away and can certainly wait till you and your son have had time to settle in at home. Keep your dinner and bedtimes routines simple. Your child will develop trust and confidence by being able to anticipate routines at home. Fortunately, this stage will not last forever. Soon he will be a teen-ager who conspicuously ignores you when you pick him up from sports practice or after school.

Are you a single mom who writes?

by Rachel Sarah

If you haven’t seen this call yet… It’s time for single moms to write!

Single Moms: Let Your Voices Be Heard!

As Oprah Winfrey has often said, parenting is the most difficult and important job in the world — even more so for single mothers, who single-handedly face all the usual parenting challenges, plus a whole set of unique ones. While being a single mom can be tough at times, it also brings many joys and rewards, and the positive aspects and outcomes of single motherhood often go unrecognized.

The editor of the bestselling Cup of Comfort (Adams Media) book series is (desperately) seeking personal stories for publication in an anthology for and about single mothers. We want slice-of-life stories that read like good fiction and both entertain and move readers. Any topic and any “voice� goes, as long as the author tells an authentic and compelling story. Stories can be humorous or poignant or both, and must be original, positive, and based on real people and actual events.

* Deadline: March 20, 2007
* Story Length: 1000-2000 words
* $500 grand prize; $100 for each other story published in book
* Simultaneous submissions accepted
* Authors may submit multiple stories
* The title page of each submission must include the author’s full name, mailing address, phone number, and email address
* Submit by email or mail

EMAIL: Copy and paste the story into the body of the email; no attachments. One story per email. Send to wordsinger@aol.com

MAIL: Send a printed copy of the story (no CDs or disks) and an SASE to: Colleen Sell, Cup of Comfort, P.O. Box 1539, Cottage Grove, Oregon 97424, USA

Single Parents Seeking

by Rachel Sarah

rachel-author-pic.jpg

Hot off the presses!

Single Parents Seeking… in the Contra Costa Times.

WHEN SHE HIT 30, Rachel Sarah added a must-have item to her milk-caked mommy wardrobe: A date skirt.

The Berkeley single mother spent the first two years of her daughter’s life dateless, and happy. But when her libido returned, and with it, a longing for companionship, she joined the scene.

Here are some DATING TIPS from the article:

Dating is daunting, but it can be even more difficult as a single parent. Here, experts provide tips to help you navigate the challenges:

• Don’t feel guilty. Date, but do it carefully, and keep your child as your top priority.

• Don’t discuss your dates with your child. He/she is not your confidante.

• Early on, stick to short dates, like coffee. If the relationship progresses, move to longer dates, like dinner.

• Create a network of people willing to baby sit and provide emotional support for the higher degree of rejection.

• Don’t introduce your child to your date. Wait until a serious commitment or relationship develops.

• Avoid overnight visits when your child is in the house.

• When it comes time to make introductions, plan family dates around your child.

Read the full story here.
Do you agree with these tips? Have anything to add?

Please share.

Quick Coffee Date, Anyone?

by Rachel Sarah

coffee.jpg

Newsday reported yesterday that “Single parents must juggle their desire for a social life with the demands of raising kids“… and yours truly put in her two cents.

Start slowly, says Rachel Sarah of Berkeley, Calif., who started dating again a year after her boyfriend walked out on her and their baby daughter, Mae, who turns 7 in April. Sarah chronicles her experiences in “Single Mom Seeking: Playdates, Blind Dates and Other Dispatches From the Dating World” (Seal Press), which was released last month.

“Once I started dating, my motto became quick coffee dates. Time is such a big factor for single parents. In 20 minutes, you can tell if you want a second date. In my experience, you don’t have to have a date that drags on three or four hours.”

Sarah says she found it important to have a support network. “Even before dating, I think it is crucial for all single parents to have a tribe,” says Sarah. Her “tribe” includes her sister and father, who baby-sit and even introduce her to men, and two best friends who also are single mothers with children around her daughter’s age. “We have dinner together every Wednesday night, and the girls play. We talk or e-mail every day,” she says.

Read the full article here.

Please write to me with your dating tips! I’d love to hear them.

Don’t go back for more where there is only less

by Rachel Sarah

This is by far the best piece of dating advice I’ve ever received, thanks to my single mom friend Siobhan.

I’ve held onto this nugget for years now. Thank you, thank you.

What’s the best piece of dating advice you’ve received/created as a single parent?

cropped_rachel_and_siobhan.jpg
Here’s my single mom friend guru [on the right], during a camping trip we took with our girls for my birthday…

JK Rowling on Being a Single Mom

by Rachel Sarah

Did you know that JK Rowling, author of the Harry Potter series, is a single mom?

“There was a point where I really felt I had ‘penniless divorcee lone parent’ tattooed on my head,” remarks JK Rowling sardonically in an interview in The Guardian . “You couldn’t read about Harry Potter without seeing that somewhere in the piece.”

“So I thought, ‘Fine, let’s take that and use it.’ ”

“Using it” meant sacrificing the relative anonymity that Jo Rowling still enjoyed before she decided last year to lend her support to the National Council for One-Parent Families….

Beyond the fact that she was a young-ish single mother who had written parts of the first book sitting in a cafe in Edinburgh because her flat was unheated, relatively little was known. Only when the third book (Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban) was published did the media’s curiosity force her hand: “So I decided that I would give interviews - when I had something to say.”

She has plenty to say about the way single parents get blamed for everything from falling morals to rising crime: “It’s this universal human desire we have through history: if we demonize them, we don’t have to help them. It’s much easier for certain sections of society to say, ‘You’ve brought this on yourself by your fecklessness; you sort it out,’ than to say, ‘You’ve been a victim of circumstances,’ or ‘Hey, marriages break up … but how are we going to help you help yourself?’

“I never set out to be a lone parent - and there I was,” she says. “It’s undeniable: there’s a stigma attached. But I was the most unashamed lone parent you were ever going to meet. I was, like, ‘And what is your problem? I’m doing a great job.’ I’m very impatient with the idea that any of us should be ashamed about it.”

Rowling became a single parent when her marriage to Portuguese television journalist Jorge Arantes fell apart shortly after the birth of her daughter Jessica. “It was my Pamela Anderson and Tommy Lee moment,” she jokes. “It is the most humiliating thing, actually: you’re supposed to have your relationship disaster in your teens, aren’t you - and then wise up?”…

Rowling’s success as an author - the four Harry Potter books to date have sold more than 90m copies worldwide and been translated into 42 languages - has clearly removed that problem. The days of sitting in a cafe, snatching a few hours to write while Jessica slept in her pushchair, are long gone. Jessica, now seven, goes to school, and has a nanny who picks her up two days a week, while Rowling looks after her the other three.

What are the ins and outs of dating as a single parent?….

by Rachel Sarah

Mr. Dad

I’d love to hear from single parents who’ve dated!

If you’re a single parent who lives in San Francisco; Washington, DC; Ravenswood, WV; or Nashville, TN…. please tune into the radio this Sunday morning, Feb. 4th.

You can catch me on “Positive Parenting” with Mr. Dad – otherwise known as Armin Brott — when we’ll discuss:

How soon to start dating after a breakup;

When to introduce your children to the new person;

The pros and cons of on-line dating.

Here’s the schedule:

Sunday at 8 a.m. PST: KOIT (96.5 FM/1260 AM) San Francisco

Sunday at 6 a.m. EST: WGMS (103.5FM) Washington, DC

Sunday at 9 a.m. EST: WMOV (1360 AM) Ravenswood, WV

Sunday at 6:30 a.m. CST: WSNA (941. FM) Nashville, TN

If you’re a single parent who’s dating…. I’d love to know: Are you online? Are you asking friends to set you up? Are you finding it easy to meet men? Are you upfront about the fact that you’re a single parent?

Please write me here!

Are you a single mom who’s dating?

by Rachel Sarah

Red Flag Watch Out for Red Flags….

Are you a single mom who’s dating?

Initially I was terrified at the thought of reentering the dating scene. How do you balance the challenges of raising a healthy, happy child (or children) with the chaotic, emotionally-charged world of dating?

Is it fair to be thinking about men again? To be thinking about sex and relationships?

Yesterday, I had a LIVE radio interview with Joan Hamburg in NYC, about what it’s like to date as a single mom.

Listen here to the PODCAST at WOR 710 HD.

If you’re strapped for time — ah, as single parents I know that you often are! — here are a few of the tips I shared:

1. Enjoy Being Single

Who isn’t eager to find her prince and live happily ever after? In the meantime, I say, “Have your own ball.”

Take lots of bubble baths. Sign up for a poetry class. Take your kids to the beach. Being single can be an opportunity to have fun. Get out there and live the life you want, how you want.

2. Get a Tribe

When you’re a single parent who’s dating, having a clan of close friends is much more than a nice distraction — it’s the key to survival. Not only can you whine to your pals after a lousy date, they will certainly look out for you — and your child. Swap childcare with friends so you can have time to date. My friends have also been the best honest bogus detectors when it’s time for a potential boyfriend to pass the test.

3. Look for Red Flags

I won’t consider being with a man who smokes; or can’t pay his bills. What are you absolute about?

Know what your red flags are. Be selective. Here are some more behaviors that you just can’t overlook:

1. A man who gets too possessive too early bringing up marriage too soon or calling you all the time to “check in.”

2. A man who comes with a lot of baggage, such as an unsettled divorce or high unpaid debts. The last thing you want to do is take care of a man and your baby.

3. A man with a quick temper, the kind of guy who explodes into a stream of cuss words when another driver cuts him off during a casual drive during your date.

Standing Up for Single Moms

by Rachel Sarah

Apparently no one ever told Randi Anderson that single moms can’t do it all. In between raising her two-year-old son by herself, starting a new job, and completing her Master’s in Public Administration, 34-year-old Randi Anderson has spearheaded a national non-profit for single moms called Single2Mother.

Single2Mother is a result of no sleep,” Anderson says half-jokingly about her Seattle, WA-based organization.

I ask her how she possibly does it all.

“I don’t know!” says Anderson, who also works part-time with Sound Families, an initiative of the Gates Foundation, as a grants and contracts specialist. “I’m just as amazed as anyone else.”

Like me, Anderson is a solo mom. She has been on her own since the day she drove herself to the hospital and gave birth to her son, Markai.

His father has never met him. “He is, however, paying child support through garnished wages,” Anderson says.

I’m not the only one who’s impressed by this go-getter.

This winter, Anderson and Single2Mother will be recognized by NPower Seattle, an organization dedicated to helping other nonprofits use technology effectively and creatively, as a runner up for its annual “Innovation Award.”

NPower recognizes Anderson for tapping into no-cost/low-cost resources for single moms nationwide, such as using Craigslist for outreach, and Evite as a fundraising tool to organize monthly potlucks and playgroups.

Single2Mother has created a new community for marginalized single mothers for whom there was previously no existing support structure,” NPower states on its website. To date, there are more than 300 members online.

For Anderson, her “new community” involves planning monthly potlucks and playgroups, as well as facilitating an online dialogue about every issue single moms face, from “How do you deal with stress?” to “How do we explain our family situation to our children?”

Single2Mother is made up of “single moms from all walks of life” who are “creating the best lives for themselves and their families, while facing challenges they’d never anticipated,” Anderson says. “Dreams are being recreated.”

Anderson is certainly recreating hers.

Raised by a single mom in Montana “who fought depression and was quite absent — either at work or sleeping,” Anderson says that her son “deserves a mother who is proud of herself — and of him.”

“Giving single mothers an opportunity to connect and empower one another to succeed in positive parenting, personal success, and life balance, will make a difference for themselves, for their children, for their families, and for society as a whole,” she adds.

As a single mother in a leadership position, Anderson feels her most important role is to help other single moms get over the shame they feel about raising their children alone. She says the stigma toward single mothers is “outdated” and based on “ignorance and a lack of understanding.”

Last year on Mother’s Day, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer profiled Anderson in an article called, “Seattle’s Single Moms Find Strength in One Another.” It was a tribute to all the work she’s doing — and certainly an inspiration to me.

“I’m aware that how I feel and how I deal with my situation has a strong effect on my son and my family,” Anderson says. “I’m the one who took responsibility in a situation where two people should have taken responsibility — and for that, I should be proud.”

Proud indeed.

What Do You Think about Single Moms on TV?

by Rachel Sarah

Weeds Single Mom Nancy Botwin
Weeds Single Mom Nancy Botwin

Single motherhood in the media appears to have come a long way since the 1977 movie The Goodbye Girl, about a divorced mother and her daughter who are forced to move in with an off-off-Broadway actor. Single motherhood has come even further since the stigma of Murphy Brown.

For one, more single mom characters are popping up on the tube. There’s Desperate Housewives’ Susan Mayer — played by Teri Hatcher, who’s a single mom to a daughter in real life, too — trying to find love. And Showtime’s highest-rated series, Weeds, stars widowed mom Nancy Botwin (played by Mary-Louise Parker) making a new life for herself in a pristine, LA suburb.

But if you look closely, these single mom representations might not be something to cheer about.

In a Desperate Housewives episode, for instance, a new single mom character — Nora Huntington (Kiersten Warren)– was portrayed as an insane husband-stealer, and then she was shot after just a handful of episodes in a bizarre hostage situation. What does this say about the finale for single moms?

And how does Weed’s single mom — who has no discernable career skills — make her living? As the well-paid local pot dealer. What does this say about a single mom role model?

What we need to see on TV is strong, assertive, smart single mom characters.

We’ve come close in HBO’s Sex and the City, in which the polished big city lawyer Miranda (Cynthia Nixon), decides to have a baby on her own. The show did a credible job of showing Miranda’s agonizing transition from single woman to single mom. (Bravo to HBO for showing the realistic scene in which Miranda’s crying baby interrupted her getting hot with a man.)

Like Miranda, we all have struggles and flaws — but these flaws don’t need to be the focus. Why does the media insist on making single moms klutzy and pitiable, like Desperate Housewives’ Susan? It’s about time viewers see how sharp and self-assured we are.

Positive portrayals of single moms will not only give us single mom’s something to cheer about — it will also make our kids feel a whole lot better to see more families that looks like their’s — and look happy and healthy.

Welcome to Single Nurturing!

by Rachel Sarah

rachel-mae-email.jpg

When I was 28 years old, my boyfriend—the father of our seven-month-old daughter—walked out of the door. Bi-polar, and unable to handle the responsibilities of parenthood, his whereabouts remain unknown.

In hindsight, we probably would not have lasted as a couple. But I’ll be the first to tell you that I’ve grown up a lot over the past six years. I’ve also redefined what love means.

And I’m not alone.

Today, there are more single parents than ever in this country. Bravo to all of you. If you saw the recent Centers for Disease Control figures on single parent-families, then you know that nearly four in 10 U.S. babies were born outside of marriage in 2005. (But please, someone tell ABC News to stop using that archaic phrase, “Out of wedlock.”)

I want to be the first to welcome you to Single Nurturing. I look forward to all of your comments, questions, and suggestions. This will be your safe, fun, no-nonsense source on everything from self-care and childcare to getting along with your ex and dating again.

My hope is that you’ll find some smart tips here about how to parent solo — and even share some with me! I hope to widen your support network here, as well as inspire you to fulfill your dreams, as well as your children’s.

I look forward to hearing from you.

Warmly,
Rachel

P.S.
My book, Single Mom Seeking: Play Dates, Blind Dates, and Other Dispatches from the Dating World (Seal Press/Avalon, Jan. 07), is now out! Read it to learn how I juggled bedtime stories and breastfeeding with Match.com and first date outfits. I look forward to hearing your thoughts.

Writer Needed

by Staff Writer

This site is currently in need of a writer. If you have any interest in writing on the topic this site covers, feel free to submit an application at 451 Press. Thank you.

About Single Parenting

Welcome! Single Nurturing is a site that squashes every stereotype about single parents. This is where you'll meet other attractive, bright, funny, single parents. We are loving, hard-working parents who support ourselves and our kids. We talk about having a community, dating again, being financially savvy, and taking care of ourselves. Please stop by and share your thoughts.

Single Parenting Author(s)

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  • Mark Boudreaux, My Hero
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  • Barbie vs. Bratz: Mattel Wins 20 Million
    Well Mattel just scored a pretty big win against MGA. A jury recently awarded them a whopping 20 million dollars and CEO, Isaac Larian, for copyright infringement and general buggery. That's a [...]
  • Casting and Spoiler alert!!
    Good morning, guys! Yesterday, there was some bad news regarding Nicollette that brought things down a little. Well, today we’ve got some happier news to discuss: casting and spoilers! Don’t [...]