If thereโs anyone who understands the tremendous sacrifices and challenges that come with motherhood, itโs Karen Derrico.
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As the star of the hit TLC series Doubling Down With the Derricos, each week the Las Vegas, Nev., native invites millions of viewers into her home as she juggles the demands of maintaining a loving marriage, meaningful friendships, and the pursuit of her own personal ambitions with raising fourteenโyes, you read that correctlyโchildren. So with Motherโs Day on the horizon, Karen spoke with The Root to discuss the difficulties of raising her kids in the public eye, her proudest moment as a mother, and the perfect Motherโs Day gift.
In explaining what she loves the most about being a mother to Dayton, Dior, Denver, and the rest of her brood, her answer was simple: the love.
โWhat I love the most is the love,โ she began. โThe love that is reciprocated from my children back to me. Itโs the journey with motherhood. Youโve got this hustle and bustle every day. Youโve got all these extracurricular activities. Iโm homeschooling, Iโm buying clothing, Iโm shoppingโitโs a lot. So when they say that simple โThank you,โ I give them a hug and [they] donโt take for granted that they have a mother that loves them and is taking such good care of them. Itโs an awesome and amazing feeling.โ
To that end, with that โawesome and amazing feelingโ being multiplied by an astronomical fourteen, Karen is acutely aware that prioritizing her own mental health and well-being is not only a challenge within this unconventional dynamic, but a necessity. So despite everything on her plate, she still makes it a point to take care of herself and is a strong advocate of going to therapy.
โI used to be very overwhelmed. And I was just telling my husband [Deon] about this, that Iโm so glad that I went to therapy because I felt like I needed this,โ she said. โI was losing my grip on things and it was like, โForget about Karen, Iโm now a mother.โ I felt like everything was about my children. And of course, my therapist at the time was like, โIf youโre not together, your children arenโt together. Remember, theyโre watching you. And if this is how youโre handling your household, this is all theyโre going to know.โโ
That invaluable lesson taught Karen the value of delegating responsibilities and being more vulnerable with her close friends and husband Deon.
โI just learned through that,โ she said. โHaving great friendships and having a good marriage. My husband and I are really great friends as well. So it just makes it so much easier.โ
While Karenโs journey throughout the course of motherhood has had more than its fair share of wonderful moments, itโs also been wrought with tribulations and tragedy.
โ[Motherhood] has taught me that Iโm brave, Iโm strong, Iโm a fighter. My little baby, Carter, passed away in my arms and I thought I was going to pass away,โ she revealed before detailing other challenges sheโs faced as a mother. โWhen Dawson had to have two open-heart surgeries and a g-tube (gastrostomy tube) placed in her. No parent is prepared for this. Thereโs no manual thatโs given to you to say, โWhen you carry your baby for nine months and they pass away, what do you do in that situation?โ I gave birth to triplets. Two of them are thriving and the third one passes away. So I have to fill out two birth certificates and a death certificate.โ
She continued, โSo I just learned through [all of this] that God has just made me be that one. โKaren, you can get through this and youโre going to be that role model for other mothers out there.โ [โฆ] Itโs taught me that Iโm so much stronger than I think that I am.โ
Unfortunately, Karen has to devote at least some of that strength toward enduring the scrutiny that comes with raising your children in the public eye and coming to the realization that thereโs no such thing as a perfect mother.
โIโm just living my life,โ she began. โAt times itโs like, โOh my gosh. Everyoneโs looking at me. How am I going to react?โ And then after a while, youโre like, โForget it. This is me. This is how Iโm going to handle it.โ Everybody does parenting differently. [...] I had to let go of those things that were riding on me [as far as] what a perfect mother looks like. Thereโs no such thing as a perfect mother. Thereโs only a loving mother.โ
Despite all of the experiences sheโs accrued from raising so many children, Karen found it relatively easy to identify her proudest moment as a mother.
โMy proudest moment is I sacrificed so much doing my pregnancies,โ she said. โSo after Iโve given birth and Iโm holding my baby, you look at all the sacrifices that you make. In pregnancy and being a parent, you work a double shift. Youโre almost losing your job to [leave early and] get to that basketball game. You promise your child [youโll be there] and [to] see the look on their face, and theyโre like, โYou made it here! You did it!โ Thatโs so rewarding because itโs like my children know the sacrifices that my husband and I make for them. Itโs so uplifting when they say, โThank you, Mom. Thank you, Papi. I know this was a lot.โโ
And because we here at The Root make it a point to treat Motherโs Day with the reverence and gratitude it deserves, inquiring minds want to know: whatโs Karenโs favorite Motherโs Day memory, and in a perfect world, how would she celebrate Motherโs Day on Sunday?
โMy favorite Motherโs Day memory was when my children wrote a song for me,โ she said. โThey wrote it and had a dance routine set out for me, and as they were singing, the other ones who werenโt singing with them were showering me with gifts. They had this thing choreographed for me and I couldโve sworn they went to Debbie Allenโs studio.โ
And as for that perfect Motherโs Day?
โI would celebrate Motherโs Day in Hawaii,โ she said. โFacing the ocean with a nice virgin daiquiri on my side and having a massage. That would be my Motherโs Day.โ
But she didnโt stop there, as she had some compassionate words for all of the other Moms out there.
โMake sure you have that mental Motherโs Day throughout the year, not just on that one day,โ she said. โThis season on Doubling Down With the Derricos I definitely stepped into seeking therapy. And as much as I was against it, it definitely benefited me and it helped me out with mental health being a lot right now. [...] Youโre only one person. If youโre not good, your children wonโt be good to you. You do not want to teach them that stress is something normal and itโs okay to be stressed out all the time.โ
Doubling Down With the Derricos airs Tuesdays at 10 p.m. ET/PT on TLC.
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