Ever notice how the biggest transformations in life happen so slowly you don’t even realize they’re happening? Like watching your kids grow—one day they’re tiny bundles in your arms, and suddenly they’re borrowing your car keys.
I’ve been thinking about this lately as my oldest approaches her sixth birthday. All those parts of myself that parenthood quietly dismantled while I was too busy wiping noses and packing lunches to notice.
The perfectionist tendencies, the rigid expectations, the need for control—they all had to go. And you know what? Most of them were holding me back anyway.
Looking back, I can see clearly now what was too foggy to understand in those sleep-deprived early years. Parenthood doesn’t just change you; it breaks down the parts of you that needed breaking all along.
1. Your belief that you could control outcomes
Remember when you thought if you just did everything right, your baby would sleep through the night by three months? Or that if you read all the parenting books, you’d have all the answers?
I spent my first year as a mom convinced that with enough research, planning, and effort, I could control how things turned out. My background as an elementary school teacher had me believing in lesson plans for life. But kids? They don’t follow scripts.
My daughter taught me this lesson early. Despite all my careful sleep routines, she woke up every two hours until she was nearly two. No amount of scheduling or sleep training changed her internal clock. She simply needed what she needed.
What breaks: The illusion that effort equals predictable results.
What grows instead: The ability to adapt, flow, and find peace in uncertainty.
2. Your need to be right
Before kids, being right felt important. Really important. I’d mentally rehearse arguments, gather evidence for my opinions, and feel personally attacked when someone disagreed with my choices.
Then parenthood handed me a thousand decisions a day with no clear right answer. Cloth diapers or disposables? Co-sleeping or crib? Extended breastfeeding or weaning at one? Every choice had passionate advocates on both sides, each convinced they held the truth.
The breaking point came when I realized my “right way” might not be right for another family, or even for my second child. What worked beautifully with one kid could be a disaster with another.
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These days, when another parent makes different choices, I think, “They’re doing the best they can with what they know.” Just like me.
3. Your perfectionism
This one took years to fully break, and honestly, I’m still finding pieces of it hiding in corners of my life.
As a recovering perfectionist, I brought impossibly high standards to motherhood. Organic meals from scratch. Educational activities planned daily. A spotless home. Looking back, I exhausted myself trying to be a Pinterest-perfect mom.
The breaking moment? Finding my toddler happily eating crackers off the floor while I was in the bathroom. The world didn’t end. She was fine. And I realized that “good enough” was actually… good enough.
Connection over perfection became my mantra. My kids don’t need a perfect mother. They need a present one. One who can laugh when the art project becomes a glitter explosion. One who can serve cereal for dinner sometimes and call it a picnic.
4. Your inflexibility about your values
Before kids, my values felt like stone tablets. Absolute. Unchangeable. “I’ll never give my kids screens,” I declared. “Only wooden toys.” “No processed foods.”
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Want to know what flexibility looks like? It’s handing your screaming toddler your phone during a long car ride and feeling grateful for the sudden peace. It’s buying the plastic toy that makes them ridiculously happy. It’s serving goldfish crackers because sometimes that’s what gets you through the grocery store.
Parenthood taught me that values can be guides without being rigid rules. We still limit screens, choose natural products when possible, and eat plenty of whole foods. But we also live in the real world, where flexibility keeps everyone sane.
5. Your independence
“I don’t need help.” How many times did I say that before kids?
Parenthood shattered this illusion completely. From the moment my first was born, I needed help. Help figuring out breastfeeding. Help getting a shower. Help staying awake during those endless newborn nights.
Asking for support felt like failure at first. Shouldn’t I be able to handle this? Other moms seemed to manage fine. But slowly, I learned that accepting help wasn’t weakness. It was wisdom.
The village we talk about? It’s not just nice to have. It’s necessary. And letting people in, letting them see the messy reality of your life, creates connections deeper than any you had before.
6. Your idea of productivity
My teacher brain loved checking off lists, meeting goals, achieving measurable outcomes. Then I became a mom, and suddenly keeping two humans alive and relatively happy was the only achievement that mattered.
Some days, productivity means everyone got fed and nobody got hurt. That’s it. That’s the whole list.
What felt like failure at first—those days when nothing got “done”—I now see differently. Reading the same book twelve times built literacy skills. Watching bugs for an hour taught science. Cuddles on the couch wired their brains for emotional security.
Productivity redefined itself. It became less about doing and more about being.
7. Your relationship with time
Time used to feel linear, predictable. Work from 8 to 3. Dinner at 6. Bed by 10.
Kids exploded this tidy timeline. Suddenly, getting out the door took 45 minutes. Bedtime stretched for hours. But also, whole afternoons could disappear in imaginative play. Mornings became slow, snuggly adventures.
I learned to release the clock’s tyranny. Yes, we have routines, but they bend around needs and moods and unexpected moments of magic. That conversation about clouds can’t be rushed. That meltdown needs the time it needs.
Time became elastic, sometimes crawling, sometimes flying. And I stopped fighting it.
8. Your ego
Perhaps this is the biggest break of all. That part of you that cares what others think, that wants to appear competent and together.
Parenthood strips this away in the most humbling ways. Your kid has a complete meltdown in Target. You show up to preschool drop-off in yesterday’s shirt with spit-up on it. Your toddler announces to everyone at the library that you have hair on your bottom.
The ego that cared about image, about being seen as successful or put-together? It couldn’t survive parenthood. And thank goodness.
Without it, I found something better: authenticity. The freedom to be imperfect publicly. The ability to laugh at myself. The recognition that every parent is just winging it, no matter how composed they appear.
Looking back to see the beauty in the breaking
These breaks didn’t happen overnight. They came through countless small moments—through tantrums weathered, through plans abandoned, through expectations released.
Some days I mourned these losses. That organized, controlled, independent person I used to be. But she needed to break apart to make room for who I was becoming: someone softer, more flexible, more real.
Someone who could hold space for big feelings without trying to fix them immediately. Someone who could find joy in chaos. Someone who could love imperfectly but fiercely.
The truth about parenthood? It breaks you in all the right places. Those rigid parts that kept you small, that limited your capacity for joy and connection—they had to go. And in their place grows something more beautiful: resilience, patience, and a love that expands beyond anything you imagined possible.
So here’s to all the things parenthood broke. Most of them needed breaking anyway.
