Home / Health & Wellness / Mental Health When depression makes you feel like an awful parent Thinkstock photo by Jupiter images "Depression looks different from person to person, just like parenting styles differ from parent to parent." By The Mighty Updated June 6, 2022 Thinkstock photo by Jupiter images Rectangle If you need support right now, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255, the Trevor Project at 1-866-488-7386 or text âSTARTâ to 741-741. This story was written by Alisa Kane and originally appeared on The Mighty. Having a child is a lot of work. Itâs exhausting running after a tiny person everyday who will eat anything off the floor and cries when they donât get cookies for breakfast (to be fair, I would too). Struggling with depression is also exhausting. Constantly working to fight off negative thoughts and pushing away that pesky grey rain cloud over your head is taxing. And when you put both of these things together, some days are anything but the sunshine and rainbows that exude from your little one. Depression looks different from person to person, just like parenting styles differ from parent to parent. Sometimes you canât physically or mentally get out of bed in the morning, some parents only feed their children organic food. Some days you canât stop thinking about ending it all, some parents let their kids watch TV all day. Sometimes little things make you so angry you could put your fist through a wall, some parents let their children dress themselves. Related: To the mama battling depression: You are not alone Whatever you are struggling with mentally and emotionally is still valid whether your child has been giggling nonstop for 20 minutes or theyâre screaming in the restaurant youâre in and everyone is staring at you. You are allowed to have these overwhelming feelings of sadness while your child is telling you goofy knock-knock jokes. Youâre allowed to laugh when youâre hurting on the inside. Itâs OK to get angry when your child misbehaves but still teach them how to act better and treat people nicely. And itâs definitely OK to cry at a commercial because thatâs your way of releasing pent-up emotions, even though itâs just a commercial. There are days when your kid wakes you up and your brain says, ânope, not doing this today,â and thatâs OK. This is a good time to ask for help. Call a friend to come over and have a play date so you can blow off some steam over a glass of wine or a cup of coffee. Ask your partner to wrangle the kids for an hour so you can lay down and close your eyes for a bit. There is no shame in saying, âI canât do everything.â Moms especially feel a lot of pressure to be the âperfect momâ who has great hair and the perfect body and takes her kid to the park in nice, clean clothes every week. Thereâs nothing wrong with your kid wearing the same shirt two days in a row because you couldnât find the motivation to do laundry for the third day in a row. Related: 10 meaningful ways you can support mothers every day Every parent needs a little âme-timeâ every once in a while. Itâs healthy to be in-check with how youâre doing so you can be the best parent you can possibly be. You donât have to pretend to be perfect for anyone â not your kid, not the other parents in the school drop-off, not even your partner. No one can tell you how to parent your child, just as no one can tell you to perk up and get over it. Some days your child will eat cookies for breakfast and you wonât clean a single dish in the sink. Other days theyâll get all their homework done before dinner and youâll have vacuumed the entire house. And itâs OK if there are more bad days than good, and itâs definitely OK to ask for help when the bad days get to be too much. You are doing a great job. You are tired and want to hide in the bathroom some days, but you are doing the best you can. You are a mom or dad, and you mean everything to your child. And they will always love you, no matter what kind of day it is. If you or someone you know needs help, visit The Mighty’s suicide prevention resources page. This story was written by Alisa Kane and originally appeared on The Mighty. Related Stories News What parents need to know about the âglass childâ effectâand how to address it Mental Health Kids can have seasonal affective disorder, too Children's Health Swimming is not just a summer activity: Here’s how swimming can boost your kidâs mental health for the school year The latest News New study shows Black women are 25% more likely to have C-sections, but why? Baby New study explores link between fish consumption in pregnancy and autismâhereâs what experts say Toddler This toddlerâs ‘snack tummy’ logic has TikTokâand momsâlosing it Baby H5 bird flu outbreak: What families need to know to stay safe