After the initial business of arriving home with a new Baby, comes a quiet and calm, that can be lovely and much needed.
However, a few weeks or months, or even years in, and many Mums find themselves isolated. Being a Mum generally means that βyou will never be lonely againβ, but in reality, it is often the loneliest place in the world.
Iβve spoken before about how social media can help with the isolation of new parents. Β But boy is it a double-edged sword? Β The same platforms and pages that offer modern Mammas conversation, support and company, very often also encourage feelings of loneliness, despair and isolation.
I like social media.
I like how it allows me to stay in touch with people.
I like how it helps me to connect with old friends.
I love how it allows my family members who are scattered like glitter across the planet, to see whatβs happening at home.
I love how one comment or image can spark conversations that are both heated and entertaining; sometimes even intelligent!
I like to see photographs of the people I like, smiling and happy.
I enjoy it and I get it I suppose.
As a Mummy, it provides some escapism. When the kids are asleep or you find yourself with 5 minutes to sit with a cuppa, thereβs something nice about hitting the little blue FΒ and seeing whatβs happening in the real world.

You know? That place where exciting things happen? Where Peppa Pig isnβt in charge and where people live wonderful lives?
Where everyone has terrifyingly precise, painted eyebrows and sparkly white teeth and where people look naturally happy, all of the time?
You get to look into the lives of your βfriendsβ: see their exciting nights out, admire their fabulous clothes, wonder where they get the time or money to visitΒ thatΒ salon again.
We see happy families, smiling for the selfie.
We see whoβs at the gym, whoβs out for dinner and whoβs heading away on holiday.
And while there is no harm in this really,Β the key is to know that what youβre looking at isΒ notΒ reality.
Itβs virtual.
Itβs fabricated.
Itβs lies.
No oneβs life is perfect all of the time.Β We know that, but letβs face itβ¦who is going to voluntarily put a shitty photograph of themselves up for the world to see?
TheΒ naturalΒ selfies are probably one of 23 shots.
There are magical filters that apparently beautify! (Note to selfβ¦find out more about these.)
The reality is that regardless of how careful you are, if you look through your list of friends, youβll possibly come across at least 2 people about whom you have to ask yourself βwho is this?β
And while it keeps us connected, a huge issue for many new mums, is the isolation caused by social media.
Yes, we can see whatβs happening and stay up to date with our friends.Β We post photographs and status updates about our children and about our lives, to let our friends and families see how cute they are and how entertaining life is with kids.
But when this means that our friends feel that they donβt need to visit, or meet for coffee, or pick up the phone, thenβ¦ we have a problem.
When seeing everyone else having fun, makes you feel boring and frumpy in your busy, unglamorous world of feeds and nappy changes, thenβ¦we have a problem.
When you know the story before someone tells you it, thenβ¦we have a problem.
When someone you havenβt spoken to in 2 years only realises that youβre no longer friends when you finally unfriend them on social media, thenβ¦we have a problem.
When every conversation you have includes the line βYeah, I saw that,β thenβ¦we have a problem.
And itβs our own fault.Β We see it all on social media so we no longer feel the same need to ring someone up to ask how theyβre doing.
After all, we know theyβve been to dinner this week, had the dog to the beach and that the baby has been puking. We read it on Facebook.
We no longer consider a coffee date important as we know whatβs going on with them.
We read it on Facebook.
But of course, Facebook doesnβt give you the same satisfaction that you get from good conversation over a cuppa.
Facebook doesnβt give you a hug before you go back to the whirlwind of your life.
Facebook might help you feel connected to the world outside your home, but only for a second, and only until it doesnβt.
Recently, I met a good friend for coffee.
Sheβs not on Facebook.
It was refreshing. She was interested in my stories, in how I was, in how the girls were doingβ¦ she hasnβt seen it on Facebook. I was delighted to hear about what sheβs been up to. It was real conversation and it was lovely. We actually had so much to catch up on.Β There were no lies about how perfect life is.Β Itβs difficult to lie to someoneβs face.

We were able to talk about the difficulties we have with our respective Mini-Mes. We laughed at things we remembered from our nights out BC. Stories were interesting because they hadnβt already been told or seen. It was good, old-fashioned catch-up and it made me feel fuzzy and loved and ridiculously real again.
So while this isolation I speak of obviously doesnβt just apply to mums, thatβs the angle Iβm seeing it from.Β Iβm lucky that I have a wonderful family and some very good friends, but sometimes, just sometimes, being a mummy in the presence of two fabulously fun princesses 24 hours a day, can be a lonely place.
And while social media is fantastic and helps us stay in touch, it isnβt real.
So if you know someone; a mummy or daddy, or friend or cousin, who you have toΒ reallyΒ think about the last time youΒ actuallyΒ spoke to them, do youΒ and themΒ a favour.
Pick up the phone and say hi.
Or call to visit and actuallyΒ holdΒ the baby, while she makes you a coffee.
Rather than sharing sentimental quotations or memories on our friendsβ pages, we really need to try to make more of our realityβ¦ not our virtual reality.
So there you go.
Social media is fabulous.Β I get it.Β I enjoy it.
But sometimes, it just isnβt enough.
Tomorrow night, Iβm going to speaking at a Mammy Meet Up which has been organised by my good friend Sarah Barr of New Beginnings. Β See detailsΒ here.
We did indeed meet online and our friendship blossomed online, but a few months ago, we took the plunge and went on a DATE! We met in an actual bar, had actual food and actual conversation. And now, weβre not just virtual friends, weβre ACTUAL friendsβ¦ in real life like! Weβve been getting up to all sorts of projects together and I have to say, sheβs a Doll.

So if ANY of the things Iβve mentioned in this article have you nodding in agreement, please come along to SONDER tomorrow at 7pm for a coffee and a chat with us. Β You never know who you might meet or what new friendship is around the corner.