Kelly Rowland Cindy Ord/Getty Images
Kelly Rowland has realized to float elevating two sons — however she completely reveals within the newest subject of Us Weekly that she wasn’t at all times so comfy with motherhood.
“I was so worried about being perfect,” Rowland, 42, says, noting one of the best parenting recommendation she ever obtained was “that I was going to screw up anyway.”
The “Black Magic” singer is aware of now that “you might grow up with things you wish your parents would’ve done differently.” When that occurs, Rowland suggests mother and father “take some of that and the things you want to be better, [and] write those things down so you’re not flying by the seat of your pants.”
Rowland — who shares sons Titan, 9, and Noah, 2, with husband Tim Weatherspoon — has absolutely embraced life with all her boys, and he or she’s not trying again. (Rowland and Weatherspoon, 49, tied the knot in Costa Rica in May 2014.)
“I thought that I’d want a girl, but I love being a boy mom. There’s nothing like it,” she gushes. “I’m the queen of this house — it’s the sweetest thing.”

The former Destiny’s Child singer shares that maintaining together with her children is a full-time job that she’s comfortable to do.
“Noah thinks he’s Timbaland over here. He was making beats this morning on his iPad, doing his little dance. He’s hilarious,” she tells Us of her youngest youngster.
When it comes to life together with her firstborn, Rowland reveals, “Titan is obsessed with basketball [and] playing in a league. He has a really good time.”
With all of the hustle and bustle in her life — and her personal flourishing profession — Rowland chooses to reside within the second as a lot as attainable to keep away from the guilt of not at all times being round.
“I’m getting ready for a tour, and the mom guilt when I’m away is rough, but I’m grateful to do what I love,” she reveals. “I tell my [sons], ‘You got a great little life: You got your own room, the refrigerator [is] full of food and the water is running.’ I want [them] to have perspective.”
Rowland reminds her children, “Mommy and Daddy are working our butts off to make sure you live a nice life,” noting that the mantra “helps” ease her mother guilt — however she confesses “nothing makes you feel [completely] better.”
For extra on Rowland’s life as a boy mother, choose up the newest subject of Us Weekly, on newsstands now.
With reporting by Leanne Aciz Stanton
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