Motherhood is beautiful, but if Iโm being honest, it can also feel unbearably heavy. Lately, Iโve found myself in one of those seasons where showing up the way I want to feels impossible.
Recently, I shared a paid Instagram postโsomething that shouldโve felt like an accomplishment. But when the engagement was low, instead of celebrating, I felt defeated. I started questioning my work, my effort, even my worth. On top of that, I had a financial savings goal Iโd been building toward. For a moment, it felt like I was finally making progress. But then the money was spent unknowingly, and just like that, I was back at square one.
Itโs moments like these that hit harder than they should. Because itโs not just about social media or moneyโitโs about the hope we attach to progress. Every time I think Iโm moving forward, one setback has me feeling like Iโm starting all over again. And maybe youโve been there too.
As moms, we carry so muchโour kidsโ needs, our familyโs future, and our own unspoken dreams. And yet, when life throws curveballs, itโs easy to feel like weโre failing at it all. Iโm naturally reserved, so I donโt always know who to turn to when Iโm overwhelmed. I long to be heard without being dismissed, to be reminded that my feelings matter, even when they donโt have a tidy solution.
At the same time, I know my children deserve a mother who is present, not distracted by setbacks. They need my love and my laughter more than they need me to have everything figured out. And while I want to protect them from my stress, I canโt ignore the weight I carry.
If youโre reading this and nodding along, please know youโre not alone. So many of us wrestle with these invisible battlesโfinancial worries, career doubts, the pressure to keep it all together. We might not always talk about it, but it doesnโt make the struggle any less real.
Hereโs what Iโm holding onto right now:
- A setback doesnโt erase the progress Iโve made.
- My worth is not tied to numbersโwhether in a bank account or on social media.
- Being present, even in imperfection, is enough for my kids.
I donโt have all the answers, and maybe you donโt either. But sometimes, naming the struggle is the first step toward loosening its grip.
So if youโre in a hard season, I see you. Youโre not a failure for feeling the weight. Youโre a mom doing her best in the middle of it allโand that matters more than you know.
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