The Mental Load, Explained (and What to Actually Hand Off)
It's not the tasks that flatten you. It's being the one who has to remember, plan, and notice all of them, forever, without anyone asking.
The mental load is the invisible full-time job running in your head around the clock: knowing the nappies are running low, whose shoes no longer fit, when the form is due, what everyone will eat on Thursday, and that you're nearly out of the specific cereal that only one child will touch. None of it appears on a to-do list. None of it switches off. And nobody sees it, which is the part that'll do your head in.
Why it's so exhausting
Because you can be sitting completely still, staring at nothing, and still be working. Running the entire household database in your head while everyone around you assumes you're relaxing. Which is, to be clear, absolutely maddening.
And because it's invisible, it rarely gets shared. Which leads straight to the default parent trap.
The default parent trap
The default parent is the one everything routes through. The one asked "where are my socks." The one who holds the whole plan even when someone else is nominally "helping." The one whose mental to-do list never empties no matter how much they delegate, because they're still managing the delegation.
The goal isn't more help. It's to stop being the central server everything pings.
What to actually hand off
Handing off single tasks keeps you as manager, which is the tiring part. Hand off whole domains instead:
- Give someone an entire area to own completely. Not "help with bathtime." "Bathtime is yours, every night, all of it, I don't want to be consulted."
- Stop correcting them. If they do it differently, let it be different. The second you fix it, you've taken it back.
- Get it out of your head and onto a shared calendar. The information should not live only in your brain.
The conversation
You're going to have to say something. No, you shouldn't have to. Yes, it's exhausting that you do. Try something plain: "I am holding all the planning for this family in my head and it's too much. I need you to own some of it properly, not wait to be asked." Pick one domain and hand it over completely. Don't take it back when they do it wrong.
And if you need to get the weight of it out of your head first? That's exactly what the confessional is for.
Curious how heavy your load really is?
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