Reviewing the experiences of maternal guilt – the "motherhood myth" influence

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Constantinou, Georgia;Varela, Sharon;Buckby, Beryl
Abstract

Maternal guilt has been a longstanding concern for mothers in the Western world. Literature around mother’s experiences of maternal guilt has allowed researchers to understand maternal guilt from a mother’s perspective. In this paper the authors aimed to systematically review this literature, to declare a more unified understanding of what the experience of maternal guilt is, from a mother’s perspective, and what role the “motherhood myth” has in maternal experiences of guilt. Our thematic analysis found the following themes relating to maternal guilt experiences: the motherhood myth, breastfeeding difficulties, essentialism/responsibility, division/depletion and connection. The motherhood myth was present in all the included articles, providing an unattainable ideal of motherhood from which mothers compare themselves and their actions to, contributing to their sense of maternal guilt. Mothers experienced many difficulties in their mothering roles, including difficulty breastfeeding, feeling a great sense of responsibility to their child, feeling divided in wanting to take time for themselves and depleted in having many tasks to complete and coping with a multitude of emotions, and feeling a profound sense of connection to their child(ren), which was experienced as both positive and negative.

Journal

Health Care for Women International

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Volume

42

ISBN/ISSN

1096-4665

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Issue

4-6

Pages Count

25

Location

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Publisher

Taylor & Francis

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Publisher Location

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Publish Date

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Url

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Date

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EISSN

N/A

DOI

10.1080/07399332.2020.1835917