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Is Mom Burnout Making You Numb?

Published by Liz Morgan

There are some mornings when you wake up and the weight is already there. Before the sun even gets a chance to peek through the curtains, your shoulders carry it.

You drag yourself to the kitchen, shuffle past tiny shoes and laundry baskets and half-empty cereal bowls, and your brain already feels like it’s been sprinting.

But what’s most exhausting isn’t the dishes or the drop-offs. It’s pretending. Pretending you’re okay. Pretending you’re not unraveling.

And if you’re reading this with tears in your eyes or your jaw clenched so tight you forgot what relaxed feels like—let’s just say, you’re far from alone.

The Exhaustion You Don’t Talk About

It’s not just physical tiredness. It’s the kind that lives in your chest and behind your eyes. The kind that doesn’t go away with a nap or a good night’s sleep (on the rare occasion you get one).

Being a mom demands everything—and then a little more. The emotional load is a freight train. You’re expected to be patient, kind, loving, present, firm, organized, funny, gentle, creative, and basically omniscient—all before noon.

But here’s the thing no one prints on the Pinterest quotes or baby shower cards: sometimes, motherhood makes you feel like a ghost. You exist, but barely.

You hover around the edges of your family’s life, handling needs and solving problems, but somewhere along the way you disappeared.

And admitting that doesn’t make you a bad mother. It makes you an honest person.

When You Start Feeling Numb Instead of Sad

There’s a certain emptiness that creeps in when you’ve been running on empty too long. Not crying. Not panicking. Just… nothing.

You go through the motions—packing lunches, wiping spills, texting back the teacher. But inside, it’s foggy. You laugh when you’re supposed to.

You nod and say, “I’m fine.” But the truth is, you can’t even remember the last time you felt like you.

That kind of detachment is a warning sign, not a weakness. It’s what happens when the internal wiring short-circuits from too much doing and not enough being.

And that’s where intentional care has to enter the picture. Not bubble baths and candles (unless those actually help). Not vague “me time” that feels more like a chore.

But actual self-care for moms that acknowledges you have needs beyond your family’s calendar and to-do list. Sometimes that means therapy.

Sometimes that means medication. Sometimes that means just asking someone to watch the kids while you lie on the floor and breathe.

The Shame We Carry Quietly

Guilt is the soundtrack of motherhood. It’s a loop in your mind: “I should be happier.” “Other moms seem fine.” “I’m being selfish.” But none of that is true.

None of it. You are navigating one of the most demanding experiences a human being can live through, and you’re doing it with your heart exposed and your sleep stolen. That’s not weak. That’s brave.

Still, the shame shows up. Especially if you were raised to believe that mental health struggles meant something was “wrong” with you.

Especially if you were taught to push through, keep smiling, and be grateful no matter how badly you’re unraveling. But here’s what’s real: your pain is valid, and your healing matters.

And talking about what hurts doesn’t make you dramatic—it makes you free.

When a Break Isn’t Enough Anymore

At some point, the idea of a weekend away or an early bedtime just doesn’t cut it. You might find yourself thinking, “I need more than this.”

And maybe you do. Maybe it’s time for help that doesn’t come in 15-minute fragments between meetings and mealtimes.

That’s where an Orange County crisis stabilization unit, one in Portland or wherever you live comes in—not as some distant fantasy, but as a real, reachable step.

These places aren’t about spa treatments and fluff. They’re about actual deep healing in environments that respect you as a whole person, not just a patient or a parent.

You get rest, structure, and support. And maybe for the first time in years, you get to be the one who’s cared for.

It’s not selfish to consider this. It’s not indulgent. It’s survival. If your mental health is hanging by threads, there’s nothing noble about waiting until it snaps.

You don’t need to prove your strength by suffering silently. You can walk into a place built for healing and say, “Help me find myself again.” That’s not a weakness. That’s power.

Letting Your Kids See You Take Care of You

There’s something quietly radical about letting your children see you rest. Letting them see you cry. Letting them hear the words “I need help.”

Because what they learn from that isn’t that you’re broken. What they learn is that being human is okay. That emotions are safe. That healing is brave.

And that even moms—especially moms—deserve softness, patience, and care.

You are not just a machine programmed to love and clean and correct and nurture. You are a human being. A woman. A person with layers and edges and limits.

And when you honor those things, you teach your children something no book ever could: that strength is found in softness, and there is no shame in asking for more.

You Don’t Have to Keep Surviving Like This

There’s nothing wrong with you. You’re not failing. You’re just tired in a way no one prepared you for. And while the world might still expect you to smile through it, you don’t have to.

There are people who will listen. There are places that will help. And there is still a version of you inside who remembers what it felt like to laugh for real, not because you should, but because something finally lifted.

Let that version speak up. Let her breathe. You deserve to feel okay again. You don’t have to disappear. You’re allowed to be whole.

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Elizabeth Morgan who owns Cleo Madison

I'm Liz, a mama of four living in Utah. Here you'll find posts about fashion, motherhood, travel, and more!

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