5 signs a mother is mentally exhausted

Signs you are exhausted as a mom
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Signs you are exhausted as a mom

When I sit across mothers in my therapy room, one sentence comes up again and again:“I’m tired… but I don’t know why.”

They are not always physically exhausted. Many are functioning, working, managing homes, showing up for everyone. But underneath that functioning is a quiet, chronic mental fatigue that rarely gets recognised, even by the mothers themselves. Arouba Kabir, Emotional & Mental Health professional, Founder Enso Wellness shares five signs she commonly sees in her work that tell her that a mother is mentally exhausted.

by TOI Lifestyle Desk
Her mind never switches off
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Her mind never switches off

ne client once told me, “The only time my brain stops thinking is when I fall sick.” This sentence stayed with me. Mental exhaustion is not just about how much you do. It’s about how much your brain is carrying: planning meals, remembering appointments, anticipating emotional needs, tracking school updates, worrying about the future. Even during “rest”, the brain is still working. Many mothers say they scroll their phones for an hour but still feel tired. That’s because the mind never truly got a break. It was still running background tabs the whole time.

Small decisions start feeling too big
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Small decisions start feeling too big

A subtle but powerful sign of mental fatigue is decision overload. I worked with a mother who broke down in session because her partner asked, “What should we cook tonight?” It sounds small, almost silly. But she said, “I make decisions all day. I just want someone else to decide dinner.” When the brain makes hundreds of micro-decisions daily, even tiny choices start feeling heavy. You may notice procrastination, avoidance, or irritation when asked simple questions. This is not overreaction. This is cognitive depletion.

Irritability replaces patience
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Irritability replaces patience

Many mothers tell me, “I feel guilty because I snap at my kids.” What we often label as anger is actually nervous system fatigue. Emotional regulation requires energy. When mental reserves are low, tolerance shrinks. Noise feels louder. Mess feels bigger. Repetition feels unbearable. I once worked with a mother who cried after shouting at her child for spilling water. She kept saying, “It was just water. Why did I react like that?” Because it wasn’t about the water. It was about an overloaded nervous system.

She feels invisible in her own home
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She feels invisible in her own home

This is one of the most painful signs. Mothers carry enormous emotional labour, remembering birthdays, noticing moods, maintaining relationships, preventing conflicts, keeping family life emotionally stable. And because this work is invisible, it often goes unacknowledged. Many mothers tell me, “If I stop doing things, everything will fall apart.” And slowly, they stop asking for help because explaining feels more exhausting than doing. This is not independence. This is burnout disguised as strength.

Joy starts feeling like effort
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Joy starts feeling like effort

A big red flag I watch for in sessions is when mothers stop doing things they once enjoyed. Not because they don’t want to but because it feels like too much effort. One client told me she stopped meeting her friends because “getting ready feels like another task.” This is the brain moving into survival mode. When energy is limited, it prioritises responsibilities over pleasure. But over time, this creates emotional numbness and loneliness.

Why recognising this matters

Mental exhaustion in mothers often hides behind responsibility, love, and resilience. Society praises how much mothers can handle but rarely asks how much they should have to handle alone. When I work with mothers, one of the most powerful shifts happens when they hear: “You don’t have to reach breaking point to deserve support.” Rest is not a reward for collapse and support is not a sign of failure and care should not only flow in one direction. Sometimes the most important step is simply naming the exhaustion that has been silently carried for years.

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