Friday, March 20, 2026

The Emotional Whiplash of Loving and Resenting Parenthood at the Same Time

There are moments in parenting that feel almost disorienting.

Your child wraps their arms around you, warm and sticky and completely trusting, and your heart feels like it might actually burst from how much you love them.

And then—sometimes within minutes—you’re overwhelmed, touched out, overstimulated, and silently counting the seconds until you can be alone.

It feels like emotional whiplash.

Love.
Resentment.
Tenderness.
Irritation.
Gratitude.
Exhaustion.

All coexisting, often in the same breath.

And if you’ve ever wondered, What is wrong with me?, the answer is simple:

Nothing.

The Part No One Says Out Loud

We talk about loving our kids.

We talk about how worth it it is.

We talk about how fast it goes.

What we don’t talk about enough is how often love and resentment live side by side.

Because resentment feels dangerous to admit.

It sounds like something that shouldn’t exist in a loving parent.

But resentment isn’t the opposite of love.

It’s often the result of being stretched too thin for too long.

What Resentment Actually Is

Resentment doesn’t mean you regret your children.

It doesn’t mean you wish they weren’t here.

It usually means something in your life feels unbalanced.

Too much responsibility.
Too little rest.
Too many needs being met by you.
Not enough space for yourself.

Resentment is often a signal—not a character flaw.

It’s your internal system saying, This is a lot.

Why the Love Is So Intense

The love you feel for your kids is unlike almost anything else.

It’s physical. Protective. Fierce.

You feel it in your chest, in your body, in the way your entire nervous system reacts to their presence.

It’s not calm, distant affection.

It’s consuming.

Which is part of why the emotional contrast feels so sharp.

The higher the love, the more jarring it feels when frustration shows up next to it.

The Reality of Constant Demand

Parenthood is a role with very few off-switches.

Even when your kids are asleep, your brain is still tracking.

You’re anticipating the next day. Remembering what needs to be done. Staying lightly alert in case someone wakes up.

During the day, the demands are constant.

Questions. Noise. Physical touch. Emotional needs. Logistics.

Even the sweetest interactions require energy.

And when that energy runs low, irritation creeps in.

Not because your child is doing something wrong.

But because your capacity has limits.

Why This Feels So Confusing

We’re taught to think of emotions in opposites.

Love or resentment. Gratitude or frustration. Joy or exhaustion.

But parenting doesn’t work like that.

It’s not either/or.

It’s both/and.

You can feel deeply connected to your child while also wanting space from them.

You can be grateful for your life while also mourning the freedom you lost.

You can love this role and still struggle inside it.

The confusion comes from expecting emotional simplicity in a situation that is inherently complex.

The Guilt That Follows

When resentment surfaces, guilt usually isn’t far behind.

You think:
I should be more patient.
Other moms handle this better.
They didn’t ask to be here.
I’m lucky—I shouldn’t feel like this.

So you push the resentment down.

But pushed-down feelings don’t disappear.

They build.

And when they build, they tend to come out in ways you don’t like—snapping, shutting down, or feeling emotionally numb.

You Are Not Alone in This

This is one of the most common—and least openly discussed—experiences in parenting.

Most parents have felt it.

They just don’t say it out loud.

Because it’s easier to share the love than the resentment.

Easier to post the happy moments than admit that sometimes you feel overwhelmed by the role itself.

But the coexistence of these feelings is not rare.

It’s normal.

The Difference Between Feeling and Acting

Feeling resentment is not the same as acting on it in harmful ways.

You can feel irritated and still be kind.
You can feel overwhelmed and still meet your child’s needs.
You can feel stretched thin and still show up.

Your internal experience does not automatically define your behavior.

And having hard feelings does not make you unsafe.

What Helps (Without Pretending It Fixes Everything)

You don’t need to eliminate resentment to be a good parent.

But you do need to acknowledge it.

Naming it takes away some of its power.

“I’m overwhelmed right now.”
“I need a break.”
“This is a lot.”

Those are honest statements, not failures.

Creating small pockets of space helps too.

Five minutes alone. A quiet coffee. A walk without interruption.

Not as a cure, but as a release valve.

And when possible, sharing the load matters.

Resentment grows in isolation.

Letting Go of the “Perfect Mom” Standard

The idea of a mother who is endlessly patient, always grateful, and never internally conflicted is a fantasy.

Real parenting is messy.

Real parenting includes moments of deep love and moments of wanting to be left alone.

Letting go of the expectation that you should feel one consistent emotion makes room for something more honest—and more sustainable.

What Your Kids Actually Experience

Your children don’t need you to feel perfectly about them all the time.

They experience the pattern, not the moment.

They experience whether you show up. Whether you repair. Whether you love them in ways they can feel.

A moment of internal frustration doesn’t erase a relationship built on care.

The Truth About Emotional Whiplash

The emotional whiplash of parenting isn’t a sign that something is wrong.

It’s a sign that something is big.

Big love.
Big responsibility.
Big emotional investment.

It would be strange if that only created one feeling.

You’re Allowed to Feel Both

You are allowed to love your children deeply.

You are allowed to feel overwhelmed by them.

You are allowed to feel grateful for your life.

You are allowed to miss the version of you that had more space.

These things do not cancel each other out.

They exist together.

And holding both is not failure.

It’s what it actually looks like to be a parent.

Friday, March 13, 2026

Letting Your Kids Be Bored Without Feeling Like a Bad Mom

There’s a moment many parents know well.

Your child wanders into the room, dragging their feet slightly, and delivers the sentence like it’s a personal emergency.

“I’m bored.”

Sometimes it’s said dramatically, like they’ve been abandoned in the wilderness. Sometimes it’s just a quiet statement of dissatisfaction. Either way, it has a strange power to activate immediate guilt in a lot of moms.

Your brain starts scanning for solutions.

Should you suggest an activity?
Offer a craft?
Turn on a show?
Go somewhere?
Do something?

The impulse to fix the boredom can feel almost automatic.

But here’s the uncomfortable truth: kids being bored is not a parenting failure.

In fact, it’s often exactly what they need.

Why Boredom Feels Like a Problem

Many of us grew up hearing the idea that a “good” parent keeps their kids engaged, enriched, and stimulated.

There are classes, sports, crafts, learning activities, educational toys, museum visits, and carefully planned playdates.

Modern parenting culture quietly suggests that children should always be doing something meaningful.

So when your child says they’re bored, it can feel like an accusation.

Like you’ve somehow dropped the ball.

But boredom isn’t a crisis. It’s a state of mind.

And like most emotional states, it passes.

The Fear of Being the “Lazy” Parent

Part of the pressure comes from comparison.

You see other families doing elaborate crafts, baking projects, nature walks, and carefully curated activities.

It’s easy to assume that other moms are constantly providing enriching experiences while you’re just trying to drink your coffee before it gets cold.

That perception can create a quiet sense of inadequacy.

But what you’re seeing is a highlight reel. Not the full rhythm of someone else’s house.

Most kids experience boredom regularly.

Some just complain about it louder than others.

Boredom Is Where Creativity Starts

When kids are constantly entertained, their brains rarely need to invent anything.

But when boredom arrives, something interesting happens.

The brain begins searching.

“What could I do?”

That search is where imagination lives.

Kids build blanket forts. They invent games. They draw strange creatures. They create entire worlds out of cardboard boxes and couch cushions.

These ideas often don’t appear when an adult is directing the activity.

They appear when there’s space.

The Discomfort Phase

What many parents don’t realize is that boredom usually has a short, uncomfortable phase before creativity kicks in.

At first, kids complain.

They wander around. They ask questions. They reject your suggestions. They look restless.

It’s tempting to jump in and rescue them from that discomfort.

But if you wait—if you tolerate a little bit of the whining and uncertainty—something usually shifts.

Their brain finds its own solution.

Why It’s Hard for Moms to Hold That Boundary

Letting kids be bored sounds simple in theory.

In practice, it’s harder than it looks.

Partly because we’re wired to respond to our children’s needs. When they sound unhappy, our instinct is to help.

Partly because boredom can lead to mess, noise, and chaos.

And partly because boredom sometimes means they turn their attention to you.

Suddenly they want conversation, interaction, or attention you may not have the energy for.

Holding the boundary—“you can figure something out”—takes patience.

Boredom Builds Important Skills

Boredom is not wasted time.

It teaches problem-solving.

It teaches persistence.

It teaches kids how to generate their own fun instead of relying on someone else to provide it.

In a world where entertainment is always available at the tap of a screen, that skill is more valuable than ever.

Kids who learn how to sit with boredom often develop stronger creativity and independence.

You Are Not Your Child’s Entertainment Director

One of the biggest mental shifts that helps is recognizing that your role is not to constantly entertain your child.

You are a parent.

You provide safety, structure, love, and guidance.

You are not responsible for filling every empty hour with activity.

Kids need time to be idle. To wander. To experiment. To get a little restless.

Those quiet spaces are where internal motivation begins to grow.

The Balance Between Support and Space

Letting kids be bored doesn’t mean abandoning them completely.

Sometimes they need a gentle nudge.

You might say:

“You could build something.”
“You could draw.”
“You could go outside.”
“You could read.”

Then step back.

The key is offering possibilities without taking over the entire process.

When Screens Become the Default Fix

Screens are one of the fastest ways to solve boredom.

They’re easy. Immediate. Reliable.

And there’s nothing inherently wrong with kids watching a show or playing a game sometimes.

But if screens become the automatic answer to boredom, kids lose the chance to discover what their minds do when nothing else is filling the space.

Letting boredom exist occasionally creates room for those discoveries.

The Quiet Gift of Doing Nothing

Childhood doesn’t have to be optimized to be meaningful.

Some of the most memorable parts of growing up are the unscheduled afternoons.

The long summer days with nothing planned. The quiet moments where time stretches out.

Those are the moments where imagination wanders.

Where personalities develop.

Where kids start to figure out who they are when no one is directing them.

Your Worth as a Parent Isn’t Measured in Activities

It’s easy to feel like you should be doing more.

More crafts. More outings. More stimulation.

But your worth as a parent is not measured by how busy your child’s day is.

Connection matters far more than constant activity.

And sometimes the most loving thing you can do is give your child the freedom to figure out what to do with their own time.

The Next Time Your Kid Says “I’m Bored”

Take a breath.

You don’t need to rush into action.

You can smile and say, “I bet you’ll figure something out.”

They might groan. They might roll their eyes.

But give it time.

Eventually, curiosity usually wins.

And when it does, you’ll see something pretty amazing: a child discovering that they are capable of creating their own fun.

That’s not neglect.

That’s independence beginning to grow.

Sunday, March 8, 2026

The Invisible Work of Being the Family Memory Keeper

There’s a role in many families that rarely gets named, but quietly shapes the way a household remembers itself.

It’s the person who takes the pictures.

The one who remembers the first day of school outfit. The one who saves the drawing taped to the fridge. The one who knows when the class field trip is, when Grandma’s birthday is, and when the baby first said something that sounded vaguely like a word.

This person is often the family memory keeper.

And more often than not, it’s Mom.

The Work That Looks Like Sentiment but Is Actually Labor

At first glance, memory keeping can look like a sentimental hobby.

Taking photos. Saving mementos. Writing things down. Remembering anniversaries.

But once you step back, you realize it’s much more than that.

It’s organization.
It’s emotional tracking.
It’s noticing milestones and capturing them before they slip away.

It’s the quiet, ongoing project of documenting a life while you’re still living inside it.

And it rarely gets recognized as work.

The Photos Tell the Story

One of the easiest ways to see this dynamic is to scroll through a family photo album.

You’ll find countless pictures of the kids. Maybe pictures of Dad with the kids. Pictures of birthdays, holidays, vacations.

But the person who took most of those pictures?
They’re barely in them.

The family memory keeper is often the one behind the camera, documenting moments that they themselves aren’t visible in.

Years later, when the photos resurface, there may be a quiet realization:
I was there for all of this… but you can’t really see me.

Remembering the Details No One Else Tracks

Memory keeping isn’t just photos.

It’s remembering the little things that might otherwise disappear.

The funny way your toddler mispronounced “spaghetti.”
The song your kid insisted on listening to every morning for three months straight.
The exact moment when training wheels came off.

These details don’t feel historic when they’re happening. They feel ordinary.

But the memory keeper notices their significance and quietly files them away.

Without that effort, many of those tiny stories would simply vanish.

The Emotional Weight of Nostalgia in Real Time

There’s a strange emotional layer to being the memory keeper.

You’re often aware that something is fleeting while it’s happening.

You see your child’s small hand in yours and think about the day it won’t fit there anymore. You hear their little voice and realize it’s going to change.

That awareness can be beautiful.

But it can also be heavy.

You’re not just living the moment—you’re witnessing it as something that will someday be gone.

When No One Notices the Work

Like many forms of emotional labor, memory keeping tends to be invisible until it stops.

If the birthday party photos don’t get taken, people notice.

If the gifts aren’t remembered or the holiday traditions aren’t organized, someone asks what happened.

But when everything runs smoothly—when the pictures exist, the milestones are remembered, the family history stays intact—it just looks natural.

No one necessarily sees the effort behind it.

The Pressure to Preserve Everything

Modern parenting has quietly added another layer to memory keeping: documentation culture.

Phones make it possible to record nearly everything. Every milestone, every holiday, every messy moment.

And with that possibility comes pressure.

Should you be filming this?
Should you be writing it down?
Should you be saving this artwork?

It can start to feel like you’re responsible not just for living family life, but archiving it too.

That’s a lot for one person to carry.

When the Responsibility Falls Unevenly

In many families, the memory keeping role happens by default.

One parent takes the photos, remembers the stories, organizes the albums, and saves the keepsakes because someone has to.

Over time, it becomes part of the invisible job description.

You’re the historian. The archivist. The one who remembers.

And while it can feel meaningful, it can also feel lonely when the responsibility isn’t shared.

The Quiet Joy Inside It

Despite the work involved, many memory keepers also feel a deep tenderness toward the role.

There is something powerful about holding a family’s story.

About looking back at old photos and remembering the smell of the house in that era. The way your child laughed. The chaos that somehow felt normal at the time.

You become the keeper of a living archive.

Not just for yourself, but for your children someday.

The Stories Kids Grow Into

Years from now, your kids will likely return to those memories.

They’ll scroll through photos. Ask about the funny stories. Try to reconstruct what their childhood felt like.

And the pieces you saved will help them do that.

The photo from the first bike ride.
The birthday candle pictures.
The awkward school play video.

These artifacts become part of how children understand their own past.

That’s not a small thing.

The Part Where You Deserve to Exist in the Memories Too

But there’s an important truth here: the memory keeper deserves to be in the memories too.

You deserve photos where you’re present, not just the photographer.

You deserve moments where you’re not responsible for capturing everything.

You deserve to be part of the story, not just the person recording it.

Sometimes that means asking someone else to take the photo.

Sometimes it means putting the phone down entirely.

Because memories live in experience, not just documentation.

Letting Some Moments Stay Unrecorded

One of the healthiest shifts memory keepers can make is letting some moments go undocumented.

Not every laugh needs a picture. Not every milestone needs a perfectly framed photo.

Some of the most meaningful memories live only in the people who were there.

In the feeling of the room.
In the way the moment unfolded.

Those memories count too.

You Are Part of the Story

If you’ve been the family memory keeper—the one quietly preserving birthdays, milestones, and everyday magic—know that the work you’ve done matters.

You’ve helped shape how your family remembers itself.

But you are not just the archivist of this life.

You are part of it.

The laughter in the background of the videos.
The arms holding the baby in the photos someone else finally took.
The voice your kids remember when they think about home.

You’re not just keeping the memories.

You’re living them too.

And that deserves to be seen.

Sunday, March 1, 2026

When Your Kids Trigger Your Own Childhood Stuff

There’s a moment in parenting that feels almost surreal.

Your child does something small—rolls their eyes, slams a door, cries in a way that hits just the wrong frequency—and suddenly your reaction is bigger than the situation. Way bigger.

Your chest tightens. Your voice sharpens. Or you shut down completely.

And afterward, when everything is quiet again, you realize:
That wasn’t just about them.

It was about you.

About something older. Something buried. Something you thought you’d moved past.

No one really prepares you for how deeply parenting can reach into your own childhood.

The Echo You Didn’t Expect to Hear

Kids have a way of pressing on the exact emotional buttons we didn’t know were still wired.

Maybe you grew up in a house where yelling meant danger, and now even normal sibling bickering makes your heart race.

Maybe you were expected to be “easy,” and your strong-willed child triggers something that feels like defiance—even when it’s developmentally normal.

Maybe you were dismissed when you cried, and now your child’s tears either overwhelm you or frustrate you in ways you don’t fully understand.

It’s not random.

Parenting doesn’t just activate patience and responsibility. It activates memory. Body memory. Emotional memory.

Sometimes before your brain even catches up.

Why the Reaction Feels So Intense

When your child triggers something from your past, your nervous system often reacts first.

Your body doesn’t distinguish between then and now.

A tone of voice. A facial expression. A certain behavior. It can all feel disproportionately threatening—not because your child is dangerous, but because something in you remembers a time when things didn’t feel safe.

This doesn’t mean you’re broken.

It means your body learned something a long time ago and hasn’t fully unlearned it yet.

The Guilt That Follows

After the big reaction comes the guilt.

You think:
Why did I overreact?
Why can’t I just be calm?
I’m turning into the exact kind of parent I didn’t want to be.

That spiral can be brutal.

But noticing the trigger is not the same as repeating the pattern.

In fact, noticing it is the beginning of something different.

You’re Parenting Two People at Once

When childhood stuff gets triggered, it can feel like you’re parenting your child and your younger self at the same time.

Your kid’s big emotions might awaken the parts of you that weren’t allowed to have big emotions.

Their mistakes might rub against the part of you that was harshly criticized.

Their neediness might press on the part of you that had to be independent too soon.

That’s a lot to hold.

No wonder it feels overwhelming sometimes.

Breaking Patterns Is Not Clean or Linear

A lot of parents go into motherhood determined to “do it differently.”

To be more patient. More gentle. More attuned.

And you probably are.

But breaking generational patterns is not a tidy process. It doesn’t mean you never snap. It doesn’t mean you don’t feel the old scripts rise up in your throat.

It means you catch them sooner. You pause more often. You repair more intentionally.

It means you’re aware.

Awareness is powerful—even when it’s uncomfortable.

When Your Kid Is Nothing Like You

Sometimes the trigger isn’t about similarity—it’s about difference.

If you were quiet and compliant, a bold, loud child might feel destabilizing.

If you were anxious and rule-following, a risk-taking kid might make your stomach flip constantly.

It can feel personal, even when it isn’t.

You might unconsciously try to shape them into something that feels safer, more familiar.

Not because you want to control them—but because you’re trying to calm something old inside yourself.

That doesn’t make you a bad parent.

It makes you a human navigating layers.

The Courage of Pausing

The most powerful thing you can do when triggered is pause.

Not perfectly. Not instantly. Just enough.

Enough to ask:
What is this really about?
Is my reaction matching the situation?
What does my child actually need right now?

Sometimes the answer is a boundary.
Sometimes it’s empathy.
Sometimes it’s space.

And sometimes it’s admitting, “I need a minute.”

That pause is how cycles shift.

Repair Heals More Than You Think

If you do react from a triggered place—and you will sometimes—repair matters.

“I got really upset, and that was bigger than it needed to be.” “I’m sorry I yelled. That wasn’t fair.” “You didn’t deserve that tone.”

Those words are radical if you didn’t grow up hearing them.

They don’t weaken your authority. They build trust.

And they quietly give your child something you may not have received: accountability without shame.

Doing Your Own Work Is Part of Parenting

This part isn’t glamorous.

Sometimes parenting forces you into therapy. Into journaling. Into hard conversations with yourself about what you normalized growing up.

You may realize that some things you brushed off as “no big deal” still live in your body.

You may grieve what you didn’t get.

That grief doesn’t mean you blame your parents. It means you’re aware enough to want something different.

Doing your own work is not selfish. It’s protective.

For you. For your kids.

You Don’t Have to Be Fully Healed to Be a Good Parent

There’s pressure to be completely self-aware and emotionally regulated at all times.

That’s unrealistic.

You don’t have to be fully healed to parent well.

You just have to be willing to reflect. To apologize. To keep learning.

Your kids don’t need a flawless parent with no triggers.

They need a parent who’s willing to notice them.

Compassion for the Younger You

Sometimes the most surprising part of being triggered is realizing how much compassion you feel for your own younger self.

You see your child’s vulnerability and suddenly understand your own in a new way.

You may find yourself saying things to your child that you wish someone had said to you.

“That makes sense.” “I’m here.” “You’re not too much.”

In offering them safety, you might be offering it to yourself too.

That’s not weakness.

That’s healing happening in real time.

This Is Hard, But It’s Meaningful

When your kids trigger your childhood stuff, it can feel destabilizing.

It can shake your confidence. It can leave you exhausted. It can bring up things you thought were settled.

But it also gives you something rare: a chance to respond differently.

To interrupt a pattern.
To soften a script.
To create a new version of what “normal” looks like.

That’s not small work.

It’s some of the deepest work parenting asks of you.

And the fact that you’re willing to look at it at all?
That already says a lot about the kind of parent you are becoming.