Friday, April 10, 2026

The Mental Load of Always Being the One Who Knows Everything

There’s a quiet role that settles onto many mothers over time.

It doesn’t come with a clear title. No one formally assigns it. There’s no moment where you agree to take it on.

And yet, somehow, it becomes yours.

You are the one who knows everything.

Not in a grand, intellectual sense—but in the day-to-day, invisible details that keep a family running.

You know when the next doctor’s appointment is.
You know which kid hates which food this week.
You know where the missing shoe probably is.
You know when the permission slip is due, when the library book needs to go back, when the birthday party is happening, and what gift still needs to be bought.

And over time, that knowing becomes constant.

The Load That Lives in Your Head

The mental load isn’t just about tasks.

It’s about holding information.

Tracking it. Updating it. Anticipating what comes next.

It’s the invisible checklist running in the background of your mind all day long.

What needs to be done.
What’s already been done.
What’s coming up.
What might go wrong.

Even when you’re sitting still, your brain is moving.

Why It Doesn’t Feel Like “Real Work”

Because so much of this happens internally, it often doesn’t get recognized as work.

You’re not always physically doing something.

You’re remembering.

Planning.

Anticipating.

And because it’s not visible, it’s easy for others—and sometimes even for you—to underestimate how much energy it takes.

But mental tracking is work.

And it adds up.

The Default Role That Forms Over Time

In many families, this role develops gradually.

You remember one thing. Then another. Then another.

You become the reliable one.

The one who doesn’t forget.

The one who keeps things from slipping through the cracks.

And once that pattern is established, it becomes the default.

Other people stop tracking because they trust that you are.

The Question That Reveals It All

There’s a question that highlights the mental load more clearly than anything else:

“Do you know where…?”

Where the form is.
Where the extra socks are.
Where the schedule is.
Where the answer is.

And most of the time, you do.

Because you’re the one holding the map.

The Exhaustion of Always Being “On”

The hardest part isn’t just the amount of information.

It’s the lack of off-time.

Your brain doesn’t fully shut off from the responsibility.

Even during quiet moments, there’s a low-level awareness running in the background.

Did I forget anything?
What needs to happen tomorrow?
What’s coming up next week?

It’s like having dozens of tabs open in your mind at all times.

When It Starts to Feel Unfair

There are moments when the imbalance becomes more noticeable.

When someone else asks what needs to be done instead of already knowing.

When a task gets completed, but only because you remembered it, reminded someone, and followed up.

When the responsibility for knowing feels one-sided.

That’s when the mental load shifts from invisible to heavy.

It’s Not About Capability—It’s About Distribution

This dynamic isn’t usually about one person being more capable than another.

It’s about how responsibility is distributed.

When one person becomes the central hub for all information, everything flows through them.

And that concentration creates pressure.

Not because they can’t handle it—but because they’re handling all of it.

The Cost of Being the “Organizer”

Being the one who knows everything often means being the one who manages everything.

Even when tasks are shared, the planning behind them may not be.

You might not be the one physically doing every chore.

But you’re the one who knows that the chore exists.

And that awareness is its own kind of work.

Why It’s Hard to Let Go

Even when you recognize the imbalance, letting go can feel risky.

If you stop tracking something, will it get done?

If you don’t remind someone, will it be forgotten?

There’s a tension between wanting relief and wanting things to run smoothly.

And often, the smoother things run, the more invisible your role becomes.

The Illusion of Effortless Functioning

When a household runs well, it can look effortless from the outside.

Appointments are kept. Supplies are stocked. Events happen on time.

But that smoothness is often the result of constant mental effort.

Effort that isn’t always seen.

Sharing the Load Without Chaos

Redistributing the mental load isn’t about dropping everything at once.

It’s about gradually shifting responsibility.

Not just tasks, but ownership.

Instead of reminding someone to do something, the goal becomes: they track it themselves.

That transition takes time.

And sometimes things get missed along the way.

But missed things can be part of the learning process.

You Don’t Have to Hold It All Alone

One of the most important shifts is recognizing that you don’t have to carry every detail.

Even if you’ve been doing it for a long time.

Even if it feels easier to just handle it yourself.

Sharing the load may feel slower at first.

But over time, it creates space.

The Mental Space You Forgot Existed

When the load lightens, something surprising happens.

Your brain quiets.

There are fewer tabs open. Fewer things competing for attention.

You start to notice what it feels like to not be tracking everything all the time.

That space is not laziness.

It’s relief.

You Are Not the Only Brain in the Room

It’s easy to slip into the role of being the central processor for the entire household.

But you are not the only brain in the room.

Other people are capable of remembering, tracking, and managing.

They just need the opportunity—and the expectation—to do so.

This Isn’t About Doing Less—It’s About Carrying Less

You may still do a lot.

Parenting doesn’t become effortless.

But the difference is in how much you’re holding internally.

Carrying less doesn’t mean caring less.

It means distributing responsibility more evenly.

The Work You’ve Been Doing Matters

If you’ve been the one keeping track of everything—the schedules, the details, the moving pieces—know that the work you’ve done is real.

Even if it hasn’t always been acknowledged.

Even if it’s lived mostly in your head.

You’ve been holding the structure together.

You Deserve to Step Out of That Role Sometimes

You don’t have to be the one who always knows.

You don’t have to be the one who always remembers.

You don’t have to be the one who always anticipates.

You can step back.

You can let someone else hold a piece of the map.

And in doing so, you make room for something you may not have had in a while:

A quieter mind.

And a little more space to just exist.

Saturday, April 4, 2026

Parenting While Overstimulated – Noise, Touch, and No Personal Space

There’s a point in the day when everything starts to feel… louder.

The TV isn’t even that loud, but it feels like it’s buzzing inside your skull. Someone is talking to you from the other room. Someone else is asking for a snack. A toy is making a repetitive noise that you can’t quite locate but also can’t ignore.

And then there’s the physical side of it.

A hand on your arm. Someone climbing into your lap. Another small body leaning against you while you’re already warm, already tired, already at capacity.

Nothing about this is technically “too much.”

But suddenly it is.

Welcome to parenting while overstimulated.

The Kind of Overwhelm That Builds Slowly

Overstimulation in parenting doesn’t always hit all at once.

It builds.

A little noise here. A little touch there. A little interruption layered on top of another.

Individually, none of it is a problem.

Together, it becomes a constant stream of input your brain is trying to process without a break.

And eventually, your system says: enough.

Why This Feels So Intense

Your brain is designed to filter information.

But parenting—especially with young kids—floods that filter.

You’re tracking:

Conversations
Safety
Emotions
Schedules
Needs
Movement
Noise
Touch

All at the same time.

There’s no clean boundary between “on” and “off.”

And when your brain can’t filter effectively anymore, everything starts to feel sharp and intrusive.

Even things you normally tolerate.

The Touch Factor No One Talks About Enough

Physical touch is often framed as a beautiful part of parenting.

And it is.

But it’s also constant.

Small hands. Climbing bodies. Someone always needing to be held, hugged, leaned on, or comforted.

When touch is continuous, it can stop feeling soothing and start feeling overwhelming.

This doesn’t mean you don’t love your kids.

It means your body has limits.

When Noise Feels Like an Attack

Noise is another major trigger.

Kids are not quiet creatures.

They talk loudly. They repeat things. They sing, shout, argue, and create sound simply by existing.

Again, none of this is wrong.

But when your nervous system is already taxed, normal noise can feel like an assault.

You may find yourself snapping over something that wouldn’t normally bother you.

That’s not a character flaw.

That’s sensory overload.

The Guilt That Follows

After you react—after you say “stop” a little too sharply, or pull away from touch, or feel that wave of irritation—you might immediately feel guilty.

They just wanted a hug.
They’re just being kids.
Why am I like this?

That guilt can be intense.

But here’s the reality: being overstimulated is not a moral failure.

It’s a nervous system response.

You Can Love Them and Still Need Space

This is one of the hardest truths to accept.

You can love your children deeply and still need physical and sensory space from them.

Those needs are not in conflict.

They exist together.

Wanting a break from touch does not mean you’re rejecting your child.

It means your body is asking for regulation.

The Myth of Endless Availability

There’s an unspoken expectation that parents—especially moms—should always be available.

Emotionally. Physically. Mentally.

That you should welcome every hug, respond to every question, tolerate every sound.

But humans aren’t built for constant input.

Endless availability leads to depletion.

And depletion leads to reactivity.

What Overstimulation Looks Like in Real Life

It might look like:

Snapping at small things
Feeling physically tense or irritated
Wanting everyone to stop talking at once
Pulling away from touch
Feeling like you need to escape the room

It can feel sudden, but it’s usually the result of buildup.

And once you’re there, it’s hard to think clearly.

What Actually Helps (Even a Little)

You don’t need a perfect solution.

You need small interruptions in the overload.

Lower the volume where you can.
Turn off background noise.
Step into another room for a minute.
Take a few breaths without anyone touching you.

Even brief pauses can help your nervous system reset.

Setting Boundaries Without Shame

You are allowed to set sensory boundaries.

“I need a minute without touching.”
“My ears need a break from noise.”
“I’m going to sit quietly for a bit.”

These are not rejections.

They are regulation.

And modeling that is valuable for your kids.

It teaches them that bodies have limits—and that those limits deserve respect.

You Don’t Have to Be Perfect About It

You will not handle overstimulation perfectly every time.

You will get snappy. You will feel overwhelmed. You will sometimes react before you can pause.

That doesn’t undo your parenting.

What matters is what happens next.

Taking a breath. Softening your tone. Explaining what happened.

Repair matters more than perfection.

When Overstimulation Becomes Chronic

If you feel overstimulated most of the time, that’s not something to ignore.

It might be a sign of:

Burnout
Sleep deprivation
Anxiety
Sensory sensitivity
Too little support

That doesn’t mean something is wrong with you.

It means something in your environment or your capacity needs attention.

You Deserve Space Too

Parenting requires closeness.

But closeness doesn’t mean constant contact.

You are allowed to need:

Quiet
Stillness
Personal space
Moments where no one is touching you

Those needs don’t make you distant.

They make you regulated.

And regulated parents are better able to show up with patience and care.

You’re Not the Only One Feeling This

If you’ve ever felt like you were going to crawl out of your own skin because of noise, touch, and constant demand—you are not alone.

This is one of the most common, least talked-about experiences in parenting.

It’s just not something people tend to say out loud.

This Is Your Nervous System, Not Your Character

Overstimulation is not a reflection of who you are.

It’s a reflection of what your body is experiencing.

And your body is allowed to have limits.

You’re not failing because you need quiet.

You’re not failing because you need space.

You’re responding to a very real, very human threshold.

And recognizing that is the first step toward handling it with more care—for yourself and for your kids.

Friday, March 27, 2026

Why Some Days You Just Don’t Like Being a Mom (and That’s Okay)

There are days when motherhood feels warm and expansive.

Your kid says something funny. You catch a quiet moment together. You feel that deep, steady love that makes everything feel meaningful.

And then there are days when none of that is accessible.

Days when everything feels heavy, loud, repetitive, and relentless.

Days when you think—quietly, maybe guiltily—
I don’t like this today.

Not I don’t love my kids.
Not I regret my life.

Just… I don’t like being a mom right now.

And that thought can feel almost dangerous.

The Thought You’re Not Supposed to Have

We don’t talk about this part.

We talk about burnout, exhaustion, needing a break. But saying “I don’t like being a mom today” feels like crossing some invisible line.

It sounds too honest.

Too close to something people might misunderstand.

So most moms don’t say it out loud.

They soften it. Reframe it. Push it down.

But the feeling still exists.

Liking and Loving Are Not the Same Thing

One of the most important distinctions you can make is this:

Liking something and loving something are not the same.

You can love your child with your entire being and still not enjoy the experience of parenting in a given moment—or even an entire day.

You can be deeply committed and still feel frustrated, trapped, overstimulated, or disconnected.

Love is steady.

Enjoyment fluctuates.

Confusing the two creates unnecessary guilt.

Why Some Days Feel So Much Harder

Not all parenting days are created equal.

Some days, your capacity is simply lower.

You didn’t sleep well.
You’re mentally overloaded.
Your body is tired.
Your patience is already stretched thin before anything even happens.

Then add normal kid behavior—noise, mess, questions, emotional swings—and suddenly everything feels harder to tolerate.

It’s not that your kids are different that day.

It’s that your internal resources are.

The Relentlessness Factor

One of the hardest parts of parenting is that it doesn’t pause when you need it to.

You can’t call in sick from being needed.

You can’t always step away when you’re overwhelmed.

There’s always another request. Another question. Another interruption.

Even the most loving interactions can feel draining when they’re constant.

That relentlessness is what turns a normal day into a hard one.

When You Miss Your Old Life (Even Just a Little)

There are moments when you remember what it felt like to have more control over your time.

To sit in silence. To leave the house without planning. To finish a thought uninterrupted.

And sometimes you miss it.

That doesn’t mean you’d trade your kids for your old life.

It means you’re aware of what changed.

And awareness can come with grief—even when the life you have now is meaningful.

The Pressure to Feel Grateful All the Time

Many moms carry a quiet pressure to stay grateful.

You remind yourself that your kids are healthy. That you chose this. That others would give anything to be in your position.

All of that can be true.

And you can still have a day where you don’t like being a mom.

Gratitude doesn’t erase difficulty.

Trying to force it often just adds another layer of emotional strain.

The Guilt Spiral

When you admit—even to yourself—that you don’t like this today, guilt often rushes in to fill the space.

I shouldn’t feel this way.
They deserve better.
What kind of mom thinks this?

That spiral can turn a hard day into a miserable one.

Because now you’re not just struggling—you’re judging yourself for struggling.

And judgment rarely makes anything easier.

You’re Not Alone in This Feeling

This experience is incredibly common.

It’s just rarely spoken out loud.

Most moms have had days where they feel disconnected, frustrated, or simply done.

They just don’t post about it. They don’t lead with it in conversations. They keep it tucked behind more socially acceptable language.

So it feels like you’re the only one.

You’re not.

What Actually Matters on These Days

On days when you don’t like being a mom, the goal shifts.

It’s not about being joyful.
It’s not about making memories.
It’s not about doing it “right.”

It’s about getting through the day without harming yourself or your child emotionally.

That might look like:

Keeping things simple.
Lowering expectations.
Allowing more screen time.
Choosing the easiest version of dinner.
Skipping anything non-essential.

These are not failures.

They’re adjustments.

The Role of Self-Compassion

Self-compassion is not about excusing harmful behavior.

It’s about recognizing your humanity.

“I’m having a hard day.”
“This is a lot.”
“I’m doing what I can.”

Those statements don’t make you weak.

They give you room to breathe.

And breathing room is what helps you respond instead of react.

Repair Still Matters More Than Perfection

If a hard day leads to a sharp tone, impatience, or a moment you wish you could redo, repair matters.

“I was frustrated earlier. I’m sorry for how I spoke.”
“That wasn’t about you. I’m just having a tough day.”

These moments don’t erase the difficulty.

But they rebuild connection.

Kids don’t need perfect parents.

They need parents who can come back and reconnect.

This Doesn’t Define Your Motherhood

One bad day—or even a string of them—does not define you as a parent.

It doesn’t erase the love you show over time.

It doesn’t undo the consistency, care, and presence you bring to your family.

Parenting is a long arc.

A single moment, or even a rough season, is just a small part of that story.

Letting the Feeling Exist Without Panic

One of the most powerful things you can do is let the feeling exist without immediately trying to fix it.

“I don’t like this today.”

That can be the whole sentence.

It doesn’t need a justification. It doesn’t need to be balanced with immediate gratitude.

Feelings pass more quickly when they’re allowed.

Tomorrow Will Feel Different

Not perfect.

Not magically easy.

But different.

Your capacity will shift. Your mood will change. Your kids will wake up as slightly different versions of themselves.

The day that felt unbearable will become just another memory.

You Can Love This Life and Still Struggle Inside It

That’s the truth that holds everything together.

You can love your kids more than anything.

You can value your role as a mother.

You can recognize the meaning in what you’re doing.

And still have days where you don’t like it.

Those things do not cancel each other out.

They exist side by side.

And allowing both to be true is not failure.

It’s honesty.

And honesty is what makes this whole thing sustainable.

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.