Sunday, July 6, 2025
Just for DadParenting Sometimes Sucks: A Survival Guide No One Gave Me

Parenting Sometimes Sucks: A Survival Guide No One Gave Me

Key Highlights:

  • No book or advice can truly prepare you for parenting, and let’s face it, parenting sometimes sucks.
  • Babies are cute but require 24/7 care (and ruin sleep forever).
  • Kids turn into teenagers—aka sarcastic, moody roommates you can’t evict.
  • Eventually, they return to sanity after high school (allegedly).

No One Prepares You for This

Before having kids, I had this naïve belief that parenting was just about love, patience, and the occasional timeout. Oh, how adorably wrong I was. No one tells you about the soul-crushing exhaustion, the mental warfare, or the sheer absurdity of raising small, irrational humans. There is no manual. There is no off-switch. And forget about those “parenting hacks” you see online—those are written by people who clearly don’t have kids.

The Baby Phase: Why Sleep Is a Myth

Newborns are sweet, tiny miracles that you instantly love. But they also operate on vampire hours, scream for no reason, and turn your once peaceful life into a never-ending cycle of feeding, burping, and diaper disasters. I used to sleep around eight hours a night. Now? I wake up if someone so much as exhales near me.

Yes, parenting sometimes sucks, especially when you lack sleep. People say, “Sleep when the baby sleeps.” That’s adorable advice, really. Because when the baby sleeps, you have about 2.5 seconds to shower, eat, or consider what bad life choices led you here. Oh, and the moment you finally doze off? They wake up. Every. Single. Time.

The Toddler Years: A Constant Game of “Why?”

By the time your little bundle of joy starts walking and talking, your home becomes a war zone of broken toys, misplaced sanity, and unanswered “why?” questions.

  • “Why is the sky blue?” (Because science.)
  • “Why can’t I have candy for breakfast?” (Because I said so.)
  • “Why are you hiding in the bathroom?” (Because I need a moment.)

Toddlers are both adorable and tiny sociopaths who have zero chill. They will argue with you over which socks to wear and insist on eating the same meal for three months—only to hate it without warning. Indeed, those days are when you realize that parenting sometimes sucks.

Elementary School: The Golden Years (Sort of)

Once they start school, there’s a brief window where parenting is almost enjoyable. They can feed themselves, they sleep through the night, and their questions make (slightly) more sense. Sure, you still have to deal with school drop-offs, homework meltdowns, and the dreaded projects, but at least there’s some balance.

Then, just when you think you’ve got the hang of this parenting thing, they remind you that once again, parenting sometimes sucks.

The Teen Phase: Who Is This Person?

Remember that sweet kid who used to hug you for no reason? Yeah, they’re gone. In their place is a grumpy, eye-rolling, sarcasm-generating machine that vaguely resembles your child.

Teenagers are fascinating creatures. They act like they know everything while simultaneously forgetting to put deodorant on. They communicate primarily through grunts, exaggerated sighs, and text messages that contain one-word replies.

Parenting sometimes sucks, but parenting a teenager? That’s next-level torture. They will fight with you over everything—curfews, chores, the way you breathe. One moment they need you; the next, they act like your very existence is an embarrassment to the human race.

Post-High School: The Return of the (Somewhat) Sane Human

The good news? They eventually grow out of their teenage rage and start resembling a functional human again. Somewhere in their 20s, they realize you weren’t a total idiot after all. They might even, gasp, call you for advice.

Sure, they’re still expensive, still slightly clueless, and still expect you to feed them when they visit, but at least they’re bearable. And—dare I say it?—they even start to appreciate you.

Conclusion: It’s All Worth It (I Think)

Parenting sometimes sucks. No doubt about it. It’s exhausting, frustrating, and often makes no sense. But despite all the sleepless nights, tantrums, and questionable choices, it’s also the most rewarding thing I’ve ever done.

Would I do it all over again? Absolutely. But I’d also invest in a lifetime supply of coffee, noise-canceling headphones, and a secret chocolate stash.

So, to all the parents out there struggling through another sleepless night or teenage meltdown—just know, you’re not alone. And one day, they might even say thank you. Just don’t hold your breath.

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