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Rewriting the Motherhood Narrative: Loving Yourself Through the Hard Seasons

Motherhood is beautiful.
Motherhood is brutal.
Motherhood is both—often in the exact same moment.

But somewhere along the way, women were taught a story about motherhood that left almost no space for the truth. A story that said:

And here’s the thing:

That narrative was never written by mothers.
It was written by a culture that expects women to carry everything without complaint.

You deserve better.
Your story deserves better.
And it’s time to rewrite the narrative—one that honors your humanity, your emotional wellness, and your worth.

Let’s begin.

You’re not failing—motherhood is just hard

This sounds obvious, but it’s the truth mothers forget most often.

The messy moments, the overwhelm, the burnout, the identity shifts—none of them are signs that you’re doing it wrong.

They’re signs that you’re doing it.
They’re signs that you care.
They’re signs that you’re human.

Motherhood is hard for good moms.
Not bad ones.

Read: 5 Things I Don’t Feel Guilty for as a Mom

Your mental load deserves to be acknowledged—not minimized

You know that never-ending list running in your mind?

The one that tracks:

That invisible weight is real.
It’s emotional labor.
It’s cognitive load.
It’s the unpaid, unthanked job you do daily.

Rewriting the narrative means naming it.
Not carrying it silently.

You deserve support—even if you learned to do everything yourself

So many mothers are conditioned to be the default parent:

And because you’re good at it, people assume you don’t need help.

But you do.
Every mother does.

Asking for help doesn’t mean you’re weak.
It means you’re wise.

Read: How Therapy Has Helped Me Become a Better Mama

Motherhood doesn’t require you to lose yourself

You’re allowed to still be a person.

You’re allowed to:

Motherhood should expand you—not erase you.

And when you care for yourself, you become a mother who is grounded, present, and emotionally available… not because you sacrificed everything, but because you didn’t.

The hard seasons don’t mean you’re doing anything wrong

Every mother goes through cycles of:

These seasons require gentleness, not judgment.

You don’t need to “power through.”
You need space to breathe, grieve, rest, and rebalance.

There is no motherhood without hard seasons.
There is no shame in any of them.

You are still a good mother on the days you yell, cry, or fall apart

Let’s just say the quiet part out loud:

Good mothers lose their tempers.
Good mothers get touched-out.
Good mothers shut down.
Good mothers need space.
Good mothers feel resentment sometimes.
Good mothers cry in the shower.
Good mothers get overstimulated.
Good mothers apologize.
Good mothers repair.

Perfection was never the point.
Connection is.

And you’re building that every day.

Rewrite your motherhood story with compassion, not comparison

Your motherhood story is yours alone.

It will not look like:

Rewrite the narrative like this:

I’m doing the best I can with what I have.
My needs matter too.
Hard seasons don’t define me.
I get to model emotional wellness for my kids.
I am allowed to ask for support.
I don’t have to be perfect to be loving.
My story is valid, even when it’s messy.

Motherhood is not a performance not matter how much social media leads us to believe otherwise—it’s a relationship.
And relationships are built on truth, tenderness, and trying again.

Loving yourself makes you a better mother, not a selfish one

Self-love in motherhood looks like:

Your children don’t need a mother who does everything.
They need a mother who feels like herself.

That’s the narrative worth writing.

Sending you love and light,

Jaime

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