28/05/2025
AS A MOTHER DO YOU FIT IN
1. Unconditional Love
A good mother loves her child without expecting anything in return.
She offers emotional security and reassurance even in difficult times.
Her love is steady, not based on performance or behavior.
2. Supportive and Encouraging
Encourages her children to pursue their dreams and interests.
Provides positive reinforcement and celebrates achievements, big or small.
Helps them overcome failures with constructive feedback and emotional backing.
3. Patient and Understanding
Demonstrates patience with her child’s learning process and emotional growth.
Understands that mistakes are part of growing up.
Listens without judgment and makes her child feel heard.
4. Responsible and Protective
Ensures her child's basic needs—nutrition, health, safety—are met.
Teaches boundaries and discipline with love, not fear.
Protects her child from harm while allowing independence.
5. Nurturing and Present
Emotionally available and involved in her child’s daily life.
Participates in activities, school events, and special moments.
Builds a strong bond through quality time and shared experiences.
6. Good Role Model
Lives with integrity, showing how to treat others with respect and kindness.
Demonstrates resilience, work ethic, and the importance of values.
Shows emotional maturity in handling conflicts and challenges.
7. Communicative and Honest
Keeps open, age-appropriate communication with her child.
Teaches the value of truth, openness, and empathy.
Answers questions with honesty and clarity.
8. Encourages Independence
Promotes critical thinking and decision-making skills.
Teaches life skills: cooking, budgeting, self-care, etc.
Allows her child to take risks within safe boundaries to build confidence.
9. Sacrificial Yet Balanced
Often puts her child's needs ahead of her own, but also maintains self-care.
Knows that a healthy, fulfilled mother is better able to care for her child.
Balances nurturing and discipline with emotional strength.
10. Emotionally Intelligent
Recognizes and validates emotions—her own and her child's.
Helps the child navigate complex feelings.
Models healthy ways to cope with stress and conflict