Hi Chutzpahgirl,
I really respect you for parenting in such a conscious fashion, just the knowledge that Mom really cares about what kind of people they are becoming is a wonderful gift to your kids.
How old are they? Selfishness is the norm in young children...
I heard a speaker say, "You are a good parent when you give your children everything they need... and some of what they want."
That helps me keep my job in perspective. I have a tendency, like you, to overindulge my daughter, to give her more than I can really afford of time, attention, and money, but then she gets a cranky mom. So, she
needs an emotionally available mom, and I am instead giving her expensive tennis lessons, a party for her entire class, etc (which are
wants, not needs). So, I self-correct- not by taking away something she already has been promised but by saying no to the next ones that come up. it's a real juggling act but essentially my daughter (at 11) now understands that she is responsible for creating fun for herself and her friends in ways that don't require my undying devotion.
When she was younger and got bratty and demanding, I told her, "I feel very tired and unenergetic when you talk to me like that. If I get too tired, I won't have the energy to take you to the park later." She quickly learned that by being pleasant and considerate towards me (and others) she got more of my time and resources, that we were both happier. Teaching kids MUTUALITY is really an important endeavor.
It's really hard not knowing what "normal" is. Do "normal" moms raise their voice sometimes? Do "normal"moms feel ambivalent towards their children at times?
Parenting groups and friendships with older women who have raised kids you admire can help sort out what's right for you as a parent. Many very different styles of parenting can work out fine. The parents I chose as mentors altered their parenting somewhat for each kid. Some needed stricter rules, some more attention, some got priveleges earlier than others based on maturity.
I've been coming to the realization of how much I beat myself up for not being a perfect parent.
I can relate to that. I got a lot out of Anon groups (AlAnon and SAnon) in healing my negative, judgemental inner dialogue. I also found Cameron's the Artists Way valuable for allowing myself time for what I want, for who I am.
I also remember living in my crazy dysfunctional family down the street from a perfect famility- they were great humanitarians, gentle, kind, nurturing, wealthy but charitable- and their eldest had a nervous breakdown in freshman college because the real world was not a warm cocoon like her family. The next eldest retreated into a Christian cult because she lacked the ability to think for herself or see bad intentions in others. So, perfect has its drawbacks, too, LOL.
Delphine