Friday, August 15, 2025

Survival Tips for Sick Days When You’re the Mom

Because moms don’t get sick days… but maybe we should.

It’s one of life’s most unfair truths: kids get sick, dads get sick, co-workers get sick — and they all get to rest. But when you get sick? The world keeps spinning, and you’re still the one it’s spinning toward for snacks, cuddles, homework help, and the location of the missing left shoe. Being a mom means that even when your body is waving the white flag, you’re still somehow running the ship.

So what’s the secret to surviving those days when you feel like curling up in bed with tea and Netflix but have to keep parenting instead? Here are realistic, guilt-free survival strategies from one mom who’s been there — more than once.


1. Lower the Bar (and Then Lower It Again)

This is not the day to cook from scratch, deep clean the kitchen, or start a new Pinterest craft with the kids. Sick days are for survival, not for impressing your future self.

  • Dinner can be cereal.
  • The laundry can wait.
  • The vacuum can take a vacation.

Your only job is to keep everyone alive and relatively safe until bedtime. If that means an entire day of cartoons and frozen waffles, so be it. The kids will think it’s a holiday; you can think of it as emergency parenting protocol.


2. Embrace Screen Time Without Shame

If ever there was a time to let Netflix babysit for a few hours, it’s when you have the flu. Educational content is great, but honestly? If Bluey buys you 22 minutes of uninterrupted horizontal time, grab it. Put the guilt in the same place you put your clean laundry that never gets folded — out of sight, out of mind.

Pro tip: Queue up a mix of shows and movies before you crash on the couch. That way you’re not constantly being summoned to approve “just one more episode.”


3. The Sick Day Snack Box

Before you fully collapse, assemble a quick snack station — either a low shelf in the fridge or a basket on the counter — with pre-packaged or easy-grab snacks. Think:

  • Granola bars
  • Sliced fruit cups
  • Cheese sticks
  • Crackers
  • Applesauce pouches

Tell the kids, “When you’re hungry, get something from the snack box.” It will cut your interruptions in half, and you can hydrate without standing up every 10 minutes.


4. Create a ‘Quiet Play Zone’

You can’t guarantee they’ll be silent, but you can set up an area with books, puzzles, coloring pages, or building toys and call it the “Quiet Play Zone.” Sell it like it’s something special: “You can only play here when Mommy is sick, so make the most of it!” The novelty factor can buy you precious minutes of peace.

If you have toddlers, the “quiet” part might be wishful thinking, but at least they’ll be occupied and less likely to use the couch as a trampoline while you’re lying on it.


5. Hydration Station for Everyone

Dehydration makes you feel worse, and it’s easy to forget to drink water when you’re focused on surviving the day. Fill a large water bottle for yourself and keep it beside you. If your kids are old enough, give them their own bottles and tell them it’s a “hydration challenge” — whoever finishes their water by the end of the movie gets a small treat. They’ll be busy sipping, you’ll be staying hydrated, and everyone wins.


6. Call in Reinforcements

This is the time to cash in on any offers of help you’ve ever been given. If your partner can come home early, ask them. If Grandma or a friend can swing by, say yes. If a neighbor offers to drop off soup, let them. You’re not being a burden; you’re being smart.
Remember — you’d do it for them in a heartbeat.


7. Use Nap Time Strategically (Even if They’re Too Old for Naps)

If your kids are past the napping stage, introduce the concept of “quiet rest time.” Put on an audiobook, give them a blanket and a pillow, and let them rest in their rooms for 30 minutes. This gives you a window to actually lie down without feeling like the walls are closing in. Bonus: They might fall asleep anyway.


8. Go Into “Lazy Meals” Mode

Sick day meals don’t need to be balanced works of art. The goal is minimal prep and minimal cleanup. Some no-effort options:

  • PB&J sandwiches
  • Microwave quesadillas
  • Yogurt with granola
  • Pre-made frozen meals
  • Cereal for dinner (again, no shame)

Pro tip: If you can, keep a “sick day stash” in the freezer — kid-friendly meals you can heat in minutes, plus a couple of comforting options for yourself.


9. Rest Where They Are

If you can’t get the peace of your own bed, bring the rest to you. Curl up on the couch under a blanket, keep your tissues and tea within reach, and let the kids play nearby. This way, you can keep an eye on them without dragging yourself from room to room.


10. Forget the Guilt

Mom guilt has a way of showing up exactly when you’re already running on empty. But your kids don’t need you to be a perfect, energetic parent every single day — they just need you to be human. Sick days happen. You’re not failing them; you’re modeling how to rest when you’re unwell. And that’s a lesson worth teaching.


The Takeaway

Sick days as a mom are never going to be fun. But they don’t have to be an exhausting disaster either. Lower your expectations, accept help, and remember that your main job is to get better — everything else can wait.

One day, your kids will remember that even when you felt terrible, you still kept them safe, fed, and loved. And honestly? That’s superhero-level parenting.

Saturday, August 9, 2025

The Messy Truth About “Having It All” as a Mom – Why Balance Is a Myth and What Actually Works

If you’ve been a mom for more than five minutes, you’ve probably heard the phrase: “You can have it all.” It’s usually followed by a perky smile, a Pinterest-perfect vision board, and maybe a side of unsolicited advice about meal prepping on Sundays.

Here’s the thing: “Having it all” is one of the biggest myths sold to modern mothers—right up there with “sleep when the baby sleeps” (as if the dishes, laundry, and your bladder are all going to wait patiently).

The truth? You can have a lot of wonderful things in your life—love, joy, meaningful work, hobbies, friendships—but not all at once, not all in equal measure, and not without trade-offs. And you know what? That’s okay.

Today we’re tossing the picture-perfect Instagram feed in the bin and talking about the real, messy truth about balancing motherhood, work, relationships, and the mythical idea of “having it all.” Spoiler: it’s less about balance and more about making it work for you.


Why “Having It All” Is a Myth

The phrase sounds empowering, but it sets moms up for burnout.

In the media, “having it all” looks like this:

  • A spotless house
  • A thriving career
  • Perfectly behaved children in coordinating outfits
  • A body that somehow looks like you’ve never carried a human being
  • Homemade meals every night (bonus points if they’re organic and Instagram-worthy)
  • Time for self-care, hobbies, and date nights

Reality check: nobody has all of those things all at once without help—and by “help” I mean a full-time nanny, a cleaning crew, a personal chef, and possibly a time machine.

Trying to achieve this mythical standard usually means trading sleep for chores, mental health for productivity, and joy for guilt. And who signed up for that version of motherhood?


The Juggling Act Is Real… and Exhausting

The problem with “balance” is that it implies all the balls in your life can be perfectly in the air at the same time. In reality, some days you’re juggling rubber balls and some days you’re juggling glass ones.

The trick is knowing which ones must be caught and which can bounce until tomorrow.

  • Glass balls: Your child’s health, your own well-being, major deadlines, anything that will truly break if dropped.
  • Rubber balls: Folding laundry immediately, replying to a non-urgent email, cleaning the baseboards.

If you try to keep everything in the air, you’re going to end up flat on your back staring at the ceiling fan wondering when you last ate something that wasn’t a toddler’s leftover chicken nugget.


The Comparison Trap

Nothing fuels the myth of “having it all” quite like social media. It’s hard not to compare yourself to that mom who seems to do everything flawlessly. But here’s what you don’t see:

  • The dishes piled just out of frame
  • The meltdowns that happened right before the photo
  • The fact that she might also be exhausted, overwhelmed, or doubting herself

Remember: Instagram is a highlight reel, not the director’s cut.

When you catch yourself comparing, pause and ask:

  • What am I assuming about this person’s life?
  • Is that assumption realistic?
  • What do I have that I’m not giving myself enough credit for?

What Actually Works

Since “having it all” is a myth, what does work?

1. Define What “All” Means for You

Instead of chasing a generic idea of success, decide what matters most in your life.

  • Is it being home for school pick-up?
  • Is it building your career?
  • Is it carving out time for your hobbies?

You’re allowed to prioritize differently than the mom next door.


2. Set Non-Negotiables

Pick a few things that are essential to your sanity and happiness, and protect them fiercely.
Maybe it’s family dinner three nights a week, or your Saturday morning run, or reading in bed before sleep. These become your anchors when everything else feels chaotic.


3. Lower the Bar Where You Can

Not every meal has to be made from scratch.
Not every shirt needs to be wrinkle-free.
Not every holiday has to look like a Hallmark movie.

Some days “good enough” is the best kind of perfect.


4. Ask for Help (and Accept It)

You do not get extra parenting points for doing it all alone.
Let your partner, family, friends, or even a delivery service lighten the load. The more you normalize asking for help, the less guilt you’ll feel about it.


5. Embrace Seasons of Life

There will be seasons when you can pour energy into your career, and others when family needs come first. There will be times when the house is spotless and times when laundry lives on the couch for a week.

Motherhood is not a static role—it’s constantly evolving. Allow your priorities to shift with it.


Permission to Let Go

If you take nothing else from this post, let it be this: you do not have to do it all to be a good mom.

Your kids don’t need perfection. They need you—present, loving, and human.
Sometimes that means serving pancakes for dinner. Sometimes it means saying “no” to an extra commitment. Sometimes it means closing the laptop and heading to the park instead.

Letting go of the myth of “having it all” is not giving up. It’s choosing a life that works for you and your family.


Final Thoughts

Motherhood is messy, beautiful, exhausting, and rewarding—often all at once. The idea that we can “balance” every part of our lives perfectly is unrealistic and unfair. But when we let go of that myth, we make space for something better: joy in the moments we do have, pride in what we accomplish, and compassion for ourselves when things don’t go according to plan.

So here’s to being Not-So-Ultimate—but exactly the mom your kids need.

Friday, August 1, 2025

When Your Kid Is the Bully – How to Handle It Without Shame or Denial

There are few gut-punch moments in parenting like hearing that your child has been bullying someone else. Maybe it’s a call from the school. Maybe it’s a message from another parent. Maybe you overheard something yourself that made your stomach drop. No matter how it comes, the first thought is often: Not my kid.

But what if it is?

Before you spiral into guilt or defensiveness, take a breath. Good kids make bad choices sometimes. And being a good parent doesn’t mean your kid will never mess up. What matters most is how you respond — because this is a teachable moment, for both of you.


What Makes a Kid Bully?

Let’s start here, because the word bully comes with a lot of emotional baggage. We picture a sneering playground tyrant, and that might be true sometimes — but often, bullying is more subtle. It can look like social exclusion, cruel jokes, digital harassment, or manipulation.

And it’s not always about being “mean.” Kids bully for a lot of reasons:

  • They’re trying to feel in control in a life that feels out of control.
  • They’re mimicking behavior they see from adults, peers, or media.
  • They’re struggling with low self-esteem and trying to lift themselves up by pushing someone else down.
  • They lack emotional regulation or social tools.

In other words, bullying is often a symptom of an unmet need. That doesn’t excuse it — but it does give us a path forward.


How to Tell If It’s Happening

Sometimes you know right away. Sometimes it’s more subtle — and you’ll need to listen closely.

Here are a few signs to look for:

  • You’re getting complaints from teachers or other parents.
  • Your child talks about classmates in harsh or dismissive ways.
  • They joke about hurting others’ feelings — and seem proud of it.
  • You notice an imbalance of power in their friendships.
  • They suddenly have a lot of social power or control — and wield it unkindly.

Also, keep an eye on their digital life. Online bullying can be just as harmful as face-to-face, and often flies under the radar.

The key is to stay open. If someone tells you your child hurt theirs, don’t shut it down. Listen. Ask questions. It might be uncomfortable, but it’s how you find the truth.


Don’t Go Into Denial (But Don’t Go Into Shame Either)

Your first instinct might be to defend your child. That doesn’t sound like them. They’re kind. They’d never do that. You want to believe the best of them — and that’s normal. But denial doesn't help your child grow. It keeps them stuck.

And then comes the guilt. You wonder what you did wrong. You question your parenting. You feel like you’ve failed.

Please hear this: you haven’t failed. But this is a moment to step up.

Kids need to know that they’re still loved — but they also need to know that hurting others isn’t okay. You can hold both truths at once: I love you and this behavior must change.


What to Do Next – Taking Constructive Action

Start by talking to your child in a calm, non-accusatory way. Create space for honesty.

“I heard that you said something unkind to a classmate. Can you tell me what happened?”

Don’t use labels like bully or bad. Focus on the behavior, not the identity.

Ask questions:

  • What were you feeling when that happened?
  • What do you think the other person felt?
  • Would you want someone to treat you that way?

If they deny it, stay calm. Kids sometimes lie when they’re scared. Keep the door open for truth.

Then, work on accountability. That might mean writing an apology, making amends, or facing consequences. But the goal isn’t just punishment — it’s growth.


Support and Correct

Bullying behavior often stems from gaps in emotional intelligence. So let’s fill them.

Teach your child how to:

  • Express frustration without lashing out.
  • Recognize and name their feelings.
  • Notice when someone else is hurt or excluded.
  • Repair relationships after a mistake.

You can model these things in your own life — how you talk about others, how you handle stress, how you apologize when you mess up.

Also, check in with their environment. Are they being pressured by peers? Are they watching media that glorifies cruelty? Are they struggling with stress, insecurity, or change?

Correcting bullying is about more than stopping the behavior — it’s about replacing it with something better.


Dealing With the School or Other Parents

This part can be awkward. It’s not easy to walk into a parent-teacher meeting and say, “Let’s talk about what my kid did.” But it’s necessary.

Approach it with honesty and openness:

  • “We’re aware of the situation and taking it seriously.”
  • “We’re working with our child to make it right.”
  • “Please let us know if anything else happens.”

If another parent reaches out, resist the urge to defend or deny. A little humility goes a long way. You don’t have to accept abuse, but you do need to take responsibility for your side of things.

And remember — when you show up with accountability, you’re modeling that for your child, too.


You’re Still a Good Parent

If you're feeling crushed right now — embarrassed, ashamed, overwhelmed — you’re not alone. Many parents have been here. And guess what?

You’re still a good parent.

Good parents don’t raise perfect kids. They raise kids who are human. Messy. Flawed. Learning. And they teach those kids how to do better.

By facing this, by not pretending it didn’t happen, by helping your child grow through it — you are doing the work that matters.

Let yourself grieve a little. Then roll up your sleeves and keep parenting.


Final Thoughts

No one wants to imagine their kid being the one who hurts others. But when that reality hits, denial doesn’t protect your child — it limits them. What helps is action, accountability, and compassion.

You’re not raising a finished product. You’re raising a person. A person who can learn to be kinder, more aware, and more responsible — especially with your help.

You’ve got this. One hard conversation at a time.

Friday, July 25, 2025

The Mental Load of Motherhood – Why You’re Always Tired

You know that feeling—when you’re absolutely exhausted but can’t quite explain why. You didn’t run a marathon. You didn’t even finish your coffee. But you’ve spent all day carrying something invisible and heavy: the mental load of motherhood.

The mental load isn’t just about what you physically do—it’s everything you have to think about. The birthday party that needs planning. The grocery list you keep updating in your head. The school forms, the laundry cycles, the dentist appointments, the emotional temperature of your toddler after a nap. It’s remembering that one kid hates the blue bowl and the other won’t eat if their food is touching. It’s knowing where the backup pacifiers are hidden, who needs new shoes, and when you last gave the dog their flea meds.

It’s constant. And it’s exhausting.

Many moms carry this load silently, believing it’s just part of the job. But here’s the thing: mental labor is labor. Just because it’s invisible doesn’t mean it isn’t real. And when one parent (usually mom) carries the bulk of that cognitive burden, burnout creeps in fast.

So how do we lighten it?

Start by naming it. Talk about the mental load with your partner, with your village (if you’re lucky enough to have one), or even with your kids in age-appropriate ways. Share the invisible tasks. Write things down. Use lists and shared calendars. Say no to things that don’t matter. Let go of perfection.

Most of all, give yourself credit. You’re not "just tired." You’re juggling dozens of things in your head at any given moment, and that’s a kind of strength that deserves to be acknowledged.

You’re doing more than enough, mama—even if your brain is a never-ending checklist.