Home / Life / Motherly Stories If your kids act worse around you, there might be a (very good) reason why @aleeenot/Twenty20 For every moment at her worst, she always makes it up to me with a thousand of her at her very, very best. By Justine Lorelle LoMonaco Updated August 1, 2024 @aleeenot/Twenty20 Rectangle A tiny sweet, grandmotherly type approaches me at the end of one of our religious meetings. āYour daughter is so well behavedāyouāre doing such a great job with her!ā I smile graciously, hoping my grin is masking my deep-seated confusion. My daughter? My mind flashes to earlier in the day. To the screaming tantrums over (apparently incorrect) lunch choices. To the swatting hits when I donāt give her the makeup brush sheās crying for. To the timeoutsāoh, the timeouts!āfor ānot listening,ā followed by wailing āIām sowwyyyyyyyy!ā echoing through our townhouse (though, hopefully not through our shared wallāsorry, neighbors!) while sheās confined to her crib. Related: How to deal with toddler tantrums in public The womanās comments make me feel like a fraud. Iām doing such a great job with her? Me? Are you sure? And for every moment when sheās at her worst, she always makes it up to me with a thousand of her at her very, very best. Because I second-guess every discipline decision. And every timeout. Every time I acquiesce to a demand. Every time I make her say āpleaseā (or donāt), Iām nearly convinced Iām doing it all wrong. The pressure to keep your child from turning into a bad person can be almost paralyzing sometimes. At those same religious meetings, I often find myself at the brink of tears, my screaming (though, ironically, tearless) child locking eyes in a battle of, āWell, what are you going to do about it, Mom?ā She tears papers, refuses to sit still, shrieks and cries when she doesnāt get her way. I donāt hear a word of the talks being given. And then, minutes later, a kind friend offers to have her come sit with them for a few minutes, and the room goes suddenly, blissfully silent. Itās not until I realize that Iāve heard an entire talk given uninterrupted that it dawns on me: Um, where is my baby? Related: No one cares about your childās tantrum more than you do So Iāll crane my neck to my friendās row only to see my previously monstrous baby sitting quietly, politely drawing in a notepad or playing contentedly with a lip balm container. For the briefest of moments, frustration wells up in me. Why canāt she be like that with me?! What am I doing wrong? And then I take a breath. And Iāll notice the way my daughter respectfully listens to my friendās instruction. The way she politely flips through a book. The way elderly couples around the room will smile proudly at her, then throw me a conspiratorial wink. āYouāre doing such a great job with her!ā And so Iāll brush off those tantrums. Those moments of monster baby. Iāll remember that maybe she shows me her worst sides, her own moments of weakness, because there is no place else she feels safer with than with her mama. She feels safe to push her own boundaries. To get frustrated. To act out. To try something differentāeven if occasionally that means being a worse version of herself. Related: How to help your toddler with ābig emotionsā (before it turns into a tantrum) And for every moment when sheās at her worst, she always makes it up to me with a thousand of her at her very, very best. And then Iāll sit back, reveling a bit in this quiet that, in a way, I helped create. Because, you know what? I must be doing something right. A version of this post was originally published on Aug. 28, 2017. It has been updated. The latest Life Can men really see the mess? Inside momsā invisible labor at home Life 7 months pregnant on the campaign trail: How motherhood has changed the way I view politics Style Zooey Deschanel’s tips on how to get holiday party-ready (without putting your finger through your tights while your kids are yelling for dinner) Motherly Stories What is the āgratitude trapā? How gratitude can keep us stuck