Why Mother’s Day Can Feel Overwhelming (And Why Moms Deserve More Than One Day)
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Mother’s Day is meant to be a celebration. And for many moms, it truly is. But for others, it can come with a quiet mix of emotions – a sense of pressure, guilt, exhaustion, or feeling a little out of step with what the day is “supposed” to feel like. If you’ve ever felt oddly flat on a day that’s meant to celebrate you, you’re not alone.
The truth is, one day of appreciation – however thoughtful – doesn’t always reflect what motherhood looks like day to day. The emotional labor, the invisible planning, the constant giving of yourself in ways that can go unseen. This article is here to acknowledge that honestly, while also coming back to what feels true for so many moms: that the moments that matter most in motherhood are often the smallest, most ordinary ones. That’s exactly what the Little Bellies Little Moments, Big Feelings campaign is built around this Mother’s Day.
What Is the Mental Load of Motherhood?
Before we talk about Mother’s Day, it helps to understand what many moms are actually carrying on any given day.
The mental load is the invisible work of raising a family. It’s not just the doing – it’s the planning, tracking, anticipating, and remembering. It’s knowing when the next size up of diapers is needed, keeping track of which foods your baby has tried this week, mentally logging the pediatrician appointment that needs to be booked, and holding the emotional temperature of everyone in the household, often all at once.
Research consistently shows that mothers often carry a disproportionate share of this invisible labor, even in households where physical tasks are shared more equally. And because it mostly happens inside your own head, it rarely gets acknowledged – by others, or even by yourself.
We know from our own experience building Little Bellies that feeding kids alone can feel complex and overwhelming. From choosing the right baby snacks for a 7+ month old to navigating the pickier preferences of a toddler and the overall expectations around feeding, the mental load starts early and it doesn’t let up. Multiply that feeling across every other dimension of parenting and you start to understand why so many moms are running on empty, even when life looks good from the outside.
Why Mother’s Day Can Feel Like a Lot
Here’s something worth acknowledging: Mother’s Day doesn’t feel the same for everyone – and sometimes, it can feel like a lot to carry and can feel overwhelming.
There can be an unspoken expectation to feel deeply seen and celebrated. There’s the version of the day we often see online – perfect brunches, beautiful flowers, little ones smiling on cue – that can make your own experience feel like it doesn’t measure up. And for some moms, the day can bring up more complex emotions – from grief to a quiet sadness about how much has changed.
Mom burnout is real, and many parents experience it in different ways. It can look like a kind of tiredness that a night’s sleep doesn’t quite fix, a creeping sense of losing yourself in the role, or a disconnection from the things that used to bring you joy. While Mother’s Day is meaningful, one day of appreciation doesn’t always address the root of it all. What many moms need isn’t necessarily a bigger gesture, but to feel seen in the everyday – in the small, in-between moments that often go unnoticed.
What Does Mom Burnout Actually Look Like?
Burnout in mothers doesn’t always look the way we expect. It can be quiet, gradual, and easy to overlook in the middle of everyday life. It can show up as:
If any of that sounds familiar, you’re not failing at motherhood nor is it a reflection of who you are as a mom. It can simply be a sign that you’re carrying more than one person was designed to carry alone. Recognizing it is a meaningful first step, and reaching out – whether to a partner, a trusted friend, or a mental health professional – can be a quiet but powerful way to start sharing that load.
The Moments That Actually Matter
Now for the part that feels true in a different way.
Think back to the last time you really felt it – that quiet, full-hearted sense of “this is everything.” Chances are it wasn’t a grand occasion. It was probably something small and ordinary. A baby falling asleep on your chest. A toddler reaching for your hand without thinking about it. A giggle over absolutely nothing. A messy snack time that somehow turned into twenty minutes of pure, joyful chaos.
These are the little moments that don’t get enough credit. They’re fleeting, they’re unglamorous, and they are completely irreplaceable.
At Little Bellies, we believe that childhood – and parenthood – lives in exactly these moments. Not in the milestone photos or the perfectly timed celebrations, but in the small, honest, everyday experiences that make up the real texture of this season of life. The made-up songs, the bedtime negotiations, the first time a little one scrunches their nose at a new flavor and then reaches back for another bite. Whether you’re navigating your baby’s first tastes or keeping up with a busy toddler, those everyday moments are worth celebrating all year round – not just in May.
How to Actually Support Yourself as a Mom
While there’s a bigger conversation to be had about how we value and support mothers as a society, there are some practical things that can help in the day-to-day:
Name the invisible work. Start making the mental load visible – whether through a shared household task list, a weekly check-in with your partner, or simply saying out loud what you’re carrying. You can’t share what nobody else can see.
Redefine what Mother’s Day looks like for you. Give yourself permission to decide what you actually want from the day. A long walk, a slow morning, a meal you didn’t have to plan or think about – sometimes the simplest things are the most restorative.
Collect the small moments. One of the most grounding things you can do as a parent is to slow down and notice the little things before they pass. A photo on your phone, a note in a journal, a voice memo of something funny your toddler said – these become the things you come back to. It’s one of the reasons we love what the Little Moments, Big Feelings campaign is doing this year – giving families a real reason to pause, reflect, and share the moments that actually mean something.
Talk about how you’re feeling. Mom burnout thrives in silence. The more openly we talk about the harder parts of motherhood, the less alone every mom in that experience gets to feel.
Celebrating What’s Real This Mother’s Day
This Mother’s Day, Little Bellies is inviting families to share their favorite little moment as part of the Little Moments, Big Feelings campaign. Not the most impressive moment. Not the most polished one. Just the one that made you smile, pause, tear up, or laugh until your stomach hurt.
Because that’s the stuff worth remembering.
Share your little moment for the chance to win a brand new Panasonic LUMIX S9 camera worth $3,299 AUD or the equivalent* – a way to keep capturing the moments that matter most. Simply head to the campaign page, fill out the form, and submit your details. We can’t wait to see what you share.
And if you’re looking for simple, wholesome snacks to share with your little one along the way, take a look at our full range of products – from baby snacks for tiny first tastes to toddler snacks for bigger appetites and even bigger personalities.
FAQs
Mother’s Day can bring up complicated feelings – pressure to feel celebrated in a specific way, grief around their own mothers, or simply the exhaustion of a role that never really pauses. When expectations don’t match reality, the day can feel deflating rather than joyful. That’s completely normal and much more common than it’s talked about.
The mental load is the invisible cognitive and emotional work of running a family – the planning, tracking, anticipating, and remembering that happens mostly in a mom’s head. Unlike physical tasks, it’s hard to share because it’s rarely visible. Over time, carrying this load contributes significantly to stress and burnout.
Absolutely. Many moms feel a mix of emotions on Mother’s Day, including gratitude, exhaustion, and a quiet sense of not being fully seen. If the day feels more complicated than celebratory for you, you’re in very good company.
Start by giving yourself permission to define what the day actually looks like for you. Beyond that, the most helpful things tend to be practical and ongoing – making the invisible work visible, asking for specific support, and finding small ways to notice and hold onto the everyday moments that bring you genuine joy. The Little Moments, Big Feelings campaign is a lovely place to start – sharing a moment that meant something to you is a simple but genuinely meaningful thing to do.