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What to Do When Youโre Overwhelmed and Nothing Seems To Help
If youโre a busy mom trying to reduce overwhelm but feeling like nothing actually works, youโre not alone. This blog post will help you understand why, and how you can actually reduce overwhelm by reducing your daily demands and mental load… not just adding self care.
Iโve been there. Standing in the kitchen in two-day-old pyjamas, coffee going cold, kids talking at me from all directions, their โMama!โ feeling grating rather than endearing, the house already messy even though I JUST cleanedโฆ and my body feeling like itโs bracing for impact before the day has even started.
Iโve tried the advice. Iโve GIVEN the advice.
Better self-care. More sleep. Less screen time. Yoga. Meditation. Pilates. Breathwork. Healthier meals. Gut health. Exercise. Morning routines that look beautiful on Pinterest and Instagram.
And some periods, I still felt completely depleted.
The problem wasnโt that I wasnโt trying hard enough. The problem was that my daily demands exceeded my capacity, and I thought self care, routines, and grounding would fix it.
In this post, Iโm going to show you a different way to reduce overwhelm that doesnโt add to your to-do list.
In this post:
If you are in a space where you are looking for self care, rest, and routines to help, you might like these posts:
- 5 Daily Wellness Habits (Grounding for Moms!)
- How to Reset Your Home When It Feels Heavy (Gentle)
- 3 Morning Habits To Gain Control Of Your Day (Even When Youโre Overwhelmed)
A Quick Reframe That Changes Everything
If your demands are higher than your capacity, no amount of self-care will fix that.
That sentence alone was a turning point for me.
If your cup is empty, self care and grounding in the moment will add mere drops to it.
You need to allow your cup time to fill again.
And thatโs done by reducing demands.
When youโre overwhelmed, your body isnโt failing you. Itโs responding honestly to the load itโs carrying. Itโs science:
A 2022 review published in Nature Reviews Psychology looked at how โsustained cognitive and emotional demandsโ affect our ability to function, and even recover from periods of higher demands (busy schedules, etc). It found that when โperceived demands exceed perceived capacity, people experience reduced focus, increased emotional reactivity, and slower recovery, even after restโ. In other words, overwhelm is not personal failure. Itโs not being weak, and itโs not being a bad mom. Itโs your system giving you clear, honest feedback that the load needs to be adjusted.
What โDemandsโ Actually Are
Researchers often describe โallostatic loadโ, which is the cumulative strain the body carries when it is constantly adapting to high demands over time.
Demands are anything your body and mind have to respond to. And many of them are invisible.
When youโre in survival mode, demands can include:
Sensory demands
- Background noise
- Constant talking
- Music playing all day
- Bright lights or screens
- Clothing that feels uncomfortable
- Strong smells
- Visual clutter
Social demands:
- Making small talk
- Texting people back
- Answering phone calls, or guilt for screening calls
- Managing other peopleโs emotions
- Pretending youโre fine when youโre not
Executive function demands
- Making decisions
- Planning meals
- Remembering appointments
- Switching between tasks, or being interrupted mid task
- Sticking to a routine
- Managing household tasks, like seeing a sink full of dishes or seeing the floors have to be mopped
- Managing tasks at hand at work if youโre working
Cognitive demands
- Processing information quickly
- Multitasking
- Solving problems under pressure
- Being perceived (by a real or perceived audience)
For me, motherhood itself carries an intense layer of these constant demands. The mental load. Switching gears constantly in this state is difficult for any mom, but as a mom diagnosed with ADHD in her 30’s, it seems to be crippling some days (read about my ADHD journey here).
One of the best tools I could ever recommend for this constant low-level demand are these Loop Engage 2 ear buds from Amazon… they reduce noise just enough that you only hear what matters (like your kids bonking heads in the next room).
And before any of that even starts, thereโs the environment. The dishwasher humming. The dog barking. (Cue the Loop ear plugs!) Toys under my feet. A sweater that itches but not having the energy to change it. Skipping meals because deciding what to eat feels harder than just having another coffee (or this weird thing I have where if I have toast for breakfast, I can’t have a sandwich for lunch, because that’s TOO MUCH BREAD… so I just… don’t eat).
None of these things are dramatic on their own. But together, they combine. And stack. And grow.
Why โJust Add Self-Careโ Often Makes Overwhelm Worse
Hereโs the part no one really talks about.
When your nervous system is already overloaded, adding structured self-care can become another demand.
A workout class you have to get dressed for and actually remember to go to, and arrange child care forโฆ
A time of stillness like mediation or prayer you feel guilty for skippingโฆ
A boundary conversation that turns into emotional labour (โugh I hope I didnโt hurt their feelingsโ)โฆ
Even rest can feel unproductive and stressful when your mind wonโt slow down.
Iโve lived this cycle. I LIVE it.
Dragging myself to something that was supposed to help, only to come home more exhausted, and anxious because it didnโt fix everything.
Lying down to rest and replaying every awkward moment of my life instead.
Trying to โoptimizeโ my wellness while feeling like Iโm barely surviving.
Youโre not failing at self-care. Youโre trying to regulate inside a situation that hasnโt changed.
Itโs like trying to get water out of a sinking boat without fixing the leak.
What Actually Helps Reduce Overwhelm
This is where things can actually change, not just be covered up.
Step 1: Identify whatโs truly draining you
Not what should be draining you. What actually is.
You might be surprised by the answers.
Step 2: Reduce demands strategically
This doesnโt mean fixing everything at once. It means choosing one or two pressure points and softening them.
Some demands are negotiable.
Can you reduce sensory load with quieter mornings or noise-canceling headphones? Can groceries be delivered instead of another stressful outing? Can similar tasks be batched to reduce mental switching? Can meals be simplified for a season instead of optimized, or even a meal prep service? Can you quit getting your nails done and hire a housekeeper?
And for working moms, is it reducing your work load or scheduled hours? And for self employed moms like me (bloggers, marketers, content creators, entrepreneurs)โฆ is it admitting that we are being too ambitious? Our goals are unrealistic? Accepting that thatโs ok might be the most challenging of all.
And, if not, this is where gentle systems matter. Simple cleaning rhythms, freezer meals, or a reset routine, etc. Winging it every day is not going to work anymore (it never really was, was it?)
When overwhelm is constant, support becomes a health choice, not a luxury. And that might look like occasional childcare, grocery delivery, or even hiring help when possible.
Your well-being matters more than anything.
A tool that will help with this is my weekly rhythm reset – a decision framework to help you prioritize exactly what needs to happen in the week ahead, reducing the mental load all week long. Pair it with the weekly meal planner (including a shopping list) to carry that peace through dinner time.
Step 3: Then layer in supportive self-care
Once demands come closer to your actual capacity, self-care can finally do what itโs meant to do: top up your cup when itโs already close to full, not do the filling up.
Rest will actually become restful. Movement actually feels good instead of exhausting. Time with friends feels refreshing instead of just another thing on your schedule.
Most importantly, youโre no longer trying to regulate your way out of an impossible situation.
Andโฆ Feeling Safe Changes Everything
One of the biggest shifts for me wasnโt a routine or a tool. It was feeling supported.
Reducing overwhelm isnโt a solo project. It often requires communication, shared responsibility, and releasing unspoken expectations to those in your life. Your spouse, partner, friends, and family.
In our home, that looked like small but meaningful changes.
Taking turns sleeping in on weekends. Having protected time each week to leave the house alone for something that feels nourishing (thrifting for me!). Clearly dividing household tasks (โI do the dishes, you take out the garbageโ).
These changes didnโt fix everything. But they taught my body that I wasnโt doing this alone.
And that sense of safety matters.
The Hard Truth About Capacity
Sometimes reducing demands means admitting that your capacity is lower than you thought. And as a former, high executive working mom, this was a tough pill for me to swallow.
That can feel like failure. Weakness. Especially for moms who are capable, driven, and used to pushing through.
But capacity isnโt a character trait. Pushing through isnโt something to be proud of. Itโs like continuing to train weights when you have tendinitis in both ankles (โฆ I did this too ๐ ).
Plus, capacity fluctuates with seasons, sleep, hormones, stress, and life circumstances.
Listening to it is wisdom, not weakness.
You cannot willpower your way through overload.
If Youโre Here Right Now
If youโre an overwhelmed mom reading this and feeling stuck, start with one question.
What is actually draining me right now?
A Glow Encouragement
Reducing overwhelm isnโt about becoming less sensitive or more productive. Itโs about aligning your life with your real capacity so you can show up with more presence, peace, and steadiness.
Youโre allowed to make things easier.
If this resonated, Iโd love to hear from you.
What surprised you when you started noticing your own demands?
And if youโd like more gentle systems, wellness rhythms, and supportive tools for motherhood, you can subscribe to Letโs Glow for free resources, blog updates, and exclusive discounts.















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