Every mom has heard some version of it: just ask for help. And while the advice usually comes from a good place, it can feel frustrating when the problem is not simply needing another set of hands. The harder part is often being the person who has to notice everything, remember everything, plan everything, and then explain what needs to be done before anyone can step in.
According to maternal wellness expert Dr. Nicole Kumi, PhD, PMH-C, that invisible responsibility is a major reason motherhood can feel so mentally exhausting. “The mental load is not just doing the tasks,” she says. “It’s carrying the responsibility of remembering that the tasks exist.”
The Invisible Work No One Sees
When people talk about the demands of motherhood, they often focus on the visible parts: the feedings, diaper changes, doctor’s appointments, laundry, bedtime routines, and endless household logistics. But so much of the real weight lives in the layer underneath. It is the running list in a mother’s mind that never fully turns off. It is knowing what is almost out, what needs to be scheduled, what needs to be packed, what might go wrong, and what everyone else will need next.
As Dr. Kumi explains, it is “knowing when the next doctor appointment is, noticing the diapers are almost gone, remembering which foods the baby tolerated, researching sleep schedules, knowing when clothes no longer fit, thinking three steps ahead, and constantly scanning: What does everyone need from me next?”
That kind of work is hard to see from the outside, but it is often what leaves mothers feeling completely drained. A mother may not be physically doing every single task in the home, but she may still be carrying the responsibility of making sure nothing gets missed. And that constant remembering, anticipating, and scanning can be just as exhausting as the task itself.
Why Overwhelm Does Not Mean You Love Your Child Any Less
One of the reasons this conversation matters is because so many mothers feel guilty admitting how overwhelmed they are. There is often an unspoken pressure to feel grateful all the time, especially when you love your child deeply. But loving motherhood and feeling consumed by the responsibility of it are not opposites.
Dr. Kumi wants mothers to understand that both things can be true. “A mother can deeply love her child and still feel completely overwhelmed by the responsibility of motherhood,” she says. “Those two things can exist together.”
That distinction is important because overwhelm is often mistaken for failure, resentment, or not being “cut out” for motherhood. In reality, motherhood can be beautiful, meaningful, joyful, disorienting, and mentally exhausting all at once. Feeling stretched thin does not mean something is wrong with the mother. It may simply mean she is carrying too much without enough real support.
The Brain Is Adapting, But The System Has Not
Part of what makes the mental load of motherhood so intense may be connected to what is happening in the maternal brain. During pregnancy and postpartum, the brain becomes more responsive to the baby’s needs. It adapts in ways that help a mother notice subtle cues, anticipate danger, respond quickly, and stay deeply connected to her child.
“During pregnancy and postpartum, the maternal brain becomes highly responsive,” says Dr. Kumi. “It is adapting to notice needs, recognize cues, anticipate danger, and respond to the baby. From a biological perspective, that is incredible.”
The problem is not that mothers are so attuned to their babies. That responsiveness is powerful and important. The problem is that in modern motherhood, that same heightened awareness often exists inside homes, workplaces, and family systems that still expect mothers to carry almost everything. A brain that is adapting to tune into a baby’s needs can become overwhelmed when it is also expected to manage the schedule, the home, the emotional climate, the work responsibilities, and everyone else’s needs at the same time.
In other words, the maternal brain is adapting, but the support systems around mothers often are not.
Why Help Can Still Feel Like More Work
This is where the advice to “just ask for help” starts to fall apart. On the surface, it sounds supportive. But for many mothers, asking for help still requires an enormous amount of mental labor. She has to identify what needs to be done, decide who should do it, explain how to do it, answer follow-up questions, and sometimes check afterward to make sure it was done correctly.
That means the task may be shared, but the management of the task still belongs to her.
“What happens for many mothers is that they become the ‘expert’ on everything because they have had to be,” says Dr. Kumi. “Then, when help is offered, it can actually feel like more work because accepting help often requires explaining, planning, organizing, and supervising.”
Most mothers know this feeling. Someone says, “I can help,” but before they can actually help, she has to explain where the bottles are, which ones the baby likes, when the next feeding happens, what the doctor said, what clothes still fit, what has already been tried, and what not to do because it never works. By the time she has explained the task, the offer can feel less like relief and more like another thing to manage.
As Dr. Kumi puts it, a mother may think, “By the time I explain how to do it, I could have just done it myself.”
The Problem With Making Mom The Project Manager
When a mother takes the task back, it can be easy to assume she does not want help or believes no one else can do it correctly. But Dr. Kumi explains that the pattern is usually much more complicated.
“So she takes it back,” she says. “Not because she doesn’t want support, or because others aren’t capable, but because carrying the mental load has trained her brain to believe everything depends on her.”
Over time, that belief becomes exhausting. It also becomes self-reinforcing. The more a mother carries, the more she knows. The more she knows, the more everyone depends on her to know it. Eventually, she becomes the default project manager of the household, even when other people are present and willing to help.
This is why telling mothers to “just ask for help” is not enough. Asking for help still requires her to manage the solution. It keeps her in charge of the system rather than actually sharing responsibility for it.
What Support Should Actually Look Like
Real support does not mean waiting for a mother to delegate. It means noticing what needs to be done and taking ownership of it without requiring her to explain every step. It means understanding that support is not just completing a task, but helping carry the responsibility around the task.
That can look like a partner noticing the diapers are low and ordering more without being asked. It can look like a family member bringing food without needing a detailed list of instructions. It can look like a friend asking, “What feels heavy right now?” instead of only asking how the baby is doing. It can look like a workplace understanding that postpartum recovery is not only physical, but emotional and cognitive, too.
Dr. Kumi says the shift has to move beyond helping mothers carry everything. “We need to shift from helping mothers carry everything to creating systems where partners, families, workplaces, and communities share the responsibility,” she says.
That is the key difference. The goal is not for mothers to become better at carrying an impossible load. The goal is to stop making the load theirs alone.
Mothers Were Not Meant To Carry It All
Motherhood has always required support, but modern motherhood often asks women to operate as if they should be able to do it all with enough organization, gratitude, and resilience. The result is that many mothers are not only caring for their children, but also carrying the invisible weight of everyone’s daily life.
As Dr. Kumi says, “Mothers were designed to be connected to their babies. They were not designed to carry an entire system alone.”
Maybe that is where the conversation needs to begin. Not with asking mothers to communicate their needs more clearly, but with building homes, workplaces, relationships, and communities where they are not the only ones responsible for noticing what needs to be done.









