Mental load is the invisible backpack moms wear all day.
It’s not heavy because it’s dramatic.
It’s heavy because it’s constant.
It’s remembering who has library day, who hates socks with seams, who needs a permission slip signed today, and who will absolutely melt down if their cup isn’t the blue one.
It’s knowing the toothpaste is low before it’s empty.
It’s realizing dinner needs to defrost at 2pm even though dinner happens at 6.
Mental load isn’t just doing things.
It’s thinking about things so other people don’t have to.
And that’s the part that gets exhausting.
Because while someone else can “help” when asked, the asking itself is work.
Delegating is work.
Tracking is work.
Following up is work.
You don’t stop thinking just because you sit down.
Your brain is still running tabs:
- Doctor appointments
- School spirit days
- Emotional temperature of the house
- The weird noise the car made yesterday
- Whether your kid’s silence means peace… or chaos
Meanwhile, you’re told:
“Just ask for help.”
“Make a list.”
“Relax.”
Cool.
But who’s making the list?
Who knows what even needs to go on it?
Mental load is loving people so deeply that your mind never clocks out.
It’s anticipating needs before they’re spoken.
It’s holding the family rhythm together quietly, so life doesn’t fall apart loudly.
And here’s the truth no one says enough:
You’re not tired because you’re weak.
You’re tired because you’re carrying everyone.
If today all you did was keep the wheels on — emotionally, mentally, barely — that still counts.
That still matters.
That is still work.
You are not invisible here.
I see the weight you carry, even when no one else notices.
💛 A quiet hooray to the moms holding everything together in their heads.