A mental health check-in for parents running on caffeine and chaos
You know that feeling when your browser has too many tabs open, and you can’t figure out which one is blaring sound? Yeah, that’s my brain on a Wednesday. Between parenting, work, school, and remembering to defrost the chicken, my mental bandwidth is… buffering.
The Science of the Overloaded Brain
When your brain is juggling too many tasks, your prefrontal cortex gets overwhelmed. According to neuroscience, multitasking actually reduces efficiency and increases stress. Translation: that feeling of “doing everything but finishing nothing”? Totally legit.
The Invisible Load of Parenting
We carry more than what’s on our calendars. Remembering birthdays, noticing moods, tracking school forms, keeping the fridge stocked, soothing meltdowns and it’s heavy, even when it’s invisible.
What Helps When the Tabs Won’t Close
Write it down
Take 3-minute “reset breaks”
stretch
hydrate
scream into a pillow
Practice “thought parking”
jot down what’s bugging you and give it permission to wait Laugh. Seriously. Find something stupid and let it crack you up.
Permission to Power Down
You don’t need to solve everything today. It’s okay if the dishes wait and your brain is buffering. Close a tab. Take a breath. You’re still doing enough probably more than you realize.
Let’s be honest. There comes a moment in every parent’s life when your once-adoring child looks at you like you’re a walking embarrassment. Maybe it’s the way you sing in the car. Maybe it’s how you say “vibe check” unironically. Or maybe it’s simply because you exist. Welcome to the “cringe era”
What’s Going On in Their Brain?
Teenagers are wired for independence. According to developmental psychology, the adolescent brain is in full-on remodeling mode. That means they’re figuring out who they are and often, that means pushing you away a little so they can pull themselves closer. It’s not personal. It’s biology.
The Cringe Moments That Actually Connect
Funny enough, those awkward dad-jokes or dance moves you bust out in the kitchen? They’re secretly little anchors of safety. Teens roll their eyes, sure, but deep down those predictable “cringe” moments can bring a sense of stability and even connection.
The Psychology of Embracing the Cringe
Parents who model authenticity (even at the cost of looking silly) help their kids learn self-acceptance. When you’re willing to be vulnerable or goofy, you’re showing your teen that perfection isn’t the goal being real is. That’s powerful.
Tips for Surviving the Cringe Era
Laugh with them, not at them (or yourself). Keep showing up, even when they act like they don’t care. Don’t take the eye rolls personally. Leave space for connection on their terms.
So yes, I may be “so embarrassing” for bringing my teen Starbucks with a note that says “you’re my favorite notification.” But one day, they’ll remember the cringe and maybe, just maybe, they’ll smile.
A psychological journey through chaos, identity, and expired batteries.
It started with good intentions: “I’ll just tidy up this one drawer.” Forty-five minutes later, I was knee-deep in mystery keys, dried-out pens, and emotional baggage from 2007. What is it about a junk drawer that turns into a personal excavation site?
The Layers of the Junk Drawer (and the Soul)
Let’s break it down:
1. Denial
“This won’t take long.” (It will.)
“This is just a few things.” (It’s not.)
“I’m totally organized.” (You’re not.)
2. Discovery
3 pairs of scissors 1 mini screwdriver no one knows how to use 14 twist ties you might need one day A birthday card from someone who doesn’t talk to you anymore (cue existential reflection)
3. Existential Crisis
You sit on the floor and question everything:
Why do I have this? What is this? Who am I?
4. Identity Reboot
You realize this drawer isn’t just a drawer. It’s a metaphor. A tiny portal into your inner life. Cluttered, layered, random and completely yours.
5. Liberation
You toss the receipts from 2020. You donate the rogue phone charger. You keep the weird key, because maybe it does unlock something important.
And suddenly, you feel lighter. Like you just let go of a little emotional weight.
Letting go is emotional, even when it’s literal trash.
We all have clutter in drawers, in minds, in hearts.
Sometimes, cleaning something small gives you clarity about something big.
Next time you feel overwhelmed, don’t aim to “fix your life.” Start with a drawer. The healing begins there.
Why embracing ‘good enough’ parenting might be the healthiest thing you do this week.
You know that feeling when you’re trying to be the Pinterest mom, the peaceful parent, the snack wizard, the emotional coach and you still somehow mess up bedtime, lose your cool, and forget to put the chicken in the chicken salad ? Yeah. Me too.
But what if “good enough” is actually great?
The Myth of the Perfect Parent
Perfectionism is sneaky. It’s dressed up as “doing your best,” but it quietly steals your joy and fuels stress. According to psychologist Donald Winnicott, the concept of the “good enough mother” (or parent) means your child doesn’t need flawless, you just need to be responsive, loving, and human. Mistakes? They’re part of the relationship, not the end of it.
What I Tried
Last week, I decided to test this theory. I gave myself permission to:
Order takeout without guilt. Say, “I need a minute” instead of powering through a meltdown. Let my daughter wear whatever made her feel good even if it clashed like a Crayola crime scene. Lower the bar and see what really mattered.
What Happened
Spoiler: The world didn’t fall apart. My kid still smiled. We connected more. And I stopped snapping at minor things because I wasn’t wound so tight.
What I Learned
Connection > perfection. Kids need authenticity, not constant accommodation. Self-compassion is contagious.
Quick Takeaways
✔️ You don’t have to be everything all the time.
✔️ Repair matters more than being right.
✔️ The mess is where the magic lives.
So if you’re hanging on by a thread today, this is your permission to loosen your grip. Be the real you. Your kids don’t need a perfect parent they need you, present, flawed, and loving anyway.
(And How to Connect With Them Without Being a Cringe Machine)
Let’s face it: teens today are basically a different species than we were. They’re growing up in a world of BeReal, skincare fridges, and “soft girl” vs. “grunge fairy” aesthetics. If you’ve got a teenage daughter, niece, student or you’re just trying to connect with the girls of Gen Z and Gen Alpha here’s a cheat sheet of what they’re into right now, plus some meaningful ways to bond over it (without embarrassing them too much).
Skincare, Aesthetics & Self-Care Vibes
From face masks to jade rollers, today’s teens are obsessed with wellness routines especially ones they can film on TikTok.
Try Together:
Make a DIY spa night with homemade sugar scrubs and cucumber slices. Create “aesthetic” Pinterest boards together. Shop for affordable skincare and make it a little mom-daughter haul.
Connection Tip: Ask her to teach you her routine it shows you value her world, and bonus: your skin wins too.
Creative Outlets (That Are Also TikTok-Worthy)
Many teen girls express themselves through art, journaling, room decor, or digital design.
Try Together:
Create a vision board or bullet journal page side-by-side. Learn digital design with Canva (great for school and social content). Start a mother-daughter paint night with Bob Ross tutorials (yes, he’s trending again).
Conversation Starter: “If your life was a mood board, what colors or quotes would be on it?”
Social Media Trends & Aesthetics
Yes, they know all the TikTok dances. No, you don’t have to join in (unless you want to).
Try Together:
Ask her to show you her favorite creators. Make a fun video together lip syncs, recipes, or a goofy pet reel. Try a BeReal moment if she’s into it.
Connection Tip: Respect their digital space but show interest it makes online life feel less like a secret cave.
Niche Interests & Hyperfixations
Today’s teen girls love going deep into specific interests like Taylor Swift, Studio Ghibli, crystals, or astrology.
Try Together:
Host a mini themed night (Swiftie sleepover, anime bento box picnic, zodiac birthday bash). Watch her favorite show or read the book she’s obsessed with.
Ask: “What’s something you’re totally into right now, even if it’s weird or random?” (Bonus: Be genuinely excited.)
Cozy Crafts & Cottagecore Dreams
Crafting is cool again especially when it comes with soft music and vintage vibes.
Try Together:
Crochet or make friendship bracelets. Decorate mugs with Sharpies and bake them in the oven. Press flowers or make DIY candles.
Bonding Idea: Build a cozy “rainy day box” full of shared crafts, snacks, and a playlist.
Music, Playlists & Emotional Vibes
Music is a teen girl’s therapy, identity, and creative escape all rolled into one.
Try Together:
Make each other a playlist of your “top 5 songs that describe your week.” Go on a drive and let her DJ. See if she wants to share her favorite sad song and don’t try to fix the feelings, just listen.
Parent Tip:
Invite her to share a song that means a lot to her and ask what it makes her feel. Make a “then vs. now” playlist together: her current faves vs. what you loved at her age.
Connection Cue: Deep listening (without interruption or interpretation) sends the message: “I’m here for your feelings, not just your behavior.”
How to Actually Connect:
Here’s the secret: it’s not about loving the same things. It’s about showing you care about what she loves, even if it’s glittery water bottles or fanfic about animated boys.
Ask open questions: “What’s something that made you laugh this week?” Respect her privacy, but stay present. Be the safe place, not the critic.
Guiding Principles for Connection
Stay curious, not critical. Offer structure with flexibility. Ask, don’t assume. Let her lead sometimes.
“When teens feel heard, they open up. When they feel controlled, they shut down.” – Adapted from the work of Dr. Dan Siegel
Bonus Download:
Teen Connection Bingo – A printable game to try new things together (like matching face masks, making playlists, journaling, or watching throwback Disney Channel).
She doesn’t ask me to tuck her in. She doesn’t reach for my hand when we cross the street. She doesn’t sit on my lap or crawl into my bed at 6 a.m. just to be close. And no one warned me that these tiny, ordinary moments would quietly disappear.
I didn’t mark the last time. Didn’t know it was the last until it just… stopped happening. No One Talks About This Part of Motherhood. They tell you how fast it goes. But they don’t tell you how painful it is to still be here, watching her grow away from the version of you she used to need. You become the background music to her life instead of the center stage. You’re not gone, just… fading into something quieter.
But Here’s What I Know Now
Even if she doesn’t curl up in my lap, She still needs to know it’s available. That my arms are still open. That my presence is still solid. Even if she says, “I’m fine,” She still wants to know I’ll ask again. Even if she rolls her eyes, She still listens to what I say, especially when I say it with love.
Mama, It’s Okay to Grieve This. You can miss who she was and still love who she’s becoming. You can feel the ache and still show up. This is the part where the love deepens, not because it’s easy, but because you keep offering it anyway. So no, she doesn’t sit on your lap anymore. But she still sits in your heart. And no growing-up will ever change that.
There’s a quiet kind of heartbreak that comes with raising a daughter who’s growing up right in front of you.
She used to need you for everything snuggles, snacks, stories before bed. And now? Now she rolls her eyes more than she holds your hand. She shuts her door more than she opens up. Some days it feels like you’re losing her and maybe even losing yourself in the process.
Mama, if your heart feels heavy with the shift, I want you to know this:
You’re not doing it wrong. This is just what growing up looks like. Your girl is becoming her own person. She’s stretching her voice, her thoughts, her edges and yes, sometimes pushing against you to figure out who she is. It’s messy. It’s hard. And it’s beautiful in a way that often breaks your heart before it warms it again.
Here’s what I hope you remember:
~ You’re still her safe place, even when she doesn’t say it
~ She still needs your presence, even if she acts like she doesn’t
~ The foundation you built in those early years? It still holds her now
~ you are not losing her you’re learning how to love her in a new way
So take a breath, mama. You don’t have to get it perfect. You just have to keep showing up. With love, open arms, and a heart that’s still learning to let go without disappearing.
If I could give just one piece of advice to anyone raising a daughter, it would be this:
Let her know consistently and unconditionally that she is enough, exactly as she is.
This sounds simple, but it’s one of the most powerful things we can do as parents. The world will tell her she needs to be prettier, quieter, smarter, funnier, thinner, more successful, or less emotional. She’ll be flooded with messages that her worth is tied to how she looks, what she achieves, or how well she fits in.
But if she knows, deep down, that home is the one place where she doesn’t have to earn love where she is accepted, seen, and celebrated just for being her she will carry that confidence with her through every storm.
And here’s the bonus truth:
She is watching us.
She learns how to treat herself by watching how we treat ourselves. She learns about boundaries when we set them. She learns emotional honesty when we express our feelings. She learns self-respect when we walk away from things that dim our light.
You don’t have to be a perfect parent. You just have to be a safe one.
And remind her, over and over again:
She is enough.
What is the one piece of advice you would give for someone raising a girl?
You had this beautiful idea: unplug, reconnect, roast marshmallows under the stars. But your teen? Not impressed. The eye rolls, the complaints, the dramatic sighs all before you’ve even left the driveway. So why even go camping or vacationing with teens who act like they’d rather be anywhere else?
Because beneath the salt is still your kid and shared experiences (even messy ones) build the kind of connection that sticks.
What’s With the Mood?
Teens are biologically wired to crave independence. According to adolescent brain research, the prefrontal cortex (which handles reasoning and emotional regulation) is still developing, while the amygdala (hello, mood swings) is running the show. So when they grumble or sulk, it’s not always about you it’s often their overwhelmed system reacting to new environments and limited control.
Tips to Survive (and Maybe Even Thrive)
Involve Them in the Planning
Let them pick a snack, playlist, or even a stop on the drive. Choice = ownership = less grumpiness.
Don’t Make it All or Nothing
Let them bring their phone, but set “tech-free windows” like during meals or hikes. This way it’s not a battle it’s balance.
Validate, Don’t Lecture
“I know this isn’t your ideal trip” goes further than “Stop being ungrateful.” Teens want to be heard, even when they’re prickly.
Let the Fun Find You
The best moments aren’t always planned. Laugh at the burnt hot dogs. Dance in the rain. Show them it’s okay to be imperfect and still have fun.
Keep the Connection Light
Start conversations with curiosity, not control. “What’s the weirdest snack combo you’ve ever tried?” goes down smoother than “So… how’s school?”
Endgame: It’s Not About the Destination
Even if the trip has more sighs than sunsets, you’ve still planted a memory. Years from now, they might not remember the hike but they’ll remember that you tried. That you showed up, kept showing up, and created a space where they were loved, salty and all.
Because burnout doesn’t make you a better caregiver
Let’s be honest:
Parenting can feel like a full-time job with zero clock-out time. Add in work, relationships, and the mental load of daily life and suddenly, taking five minutes to breathe feels like a luxury. But here’s the truth: Self-care is not selfish. It’s survival. And it’s backed by science.
The Cost of Ignoring Your Needs
In Managing Stress, Seaward says stressSw is defined not just as pressure but as the wear and tear on your body, mind, and spirit. When parents push through without rest, they’re more likely to experience:
Chronic fatigue
Emotional reactivity
Poor sleep and digestion
Disconnection from their kids
These aren’t signs of weakness they’re signals. And they matter.
Why It’s So Hard to Choose You
Last patient when your teen talks back
More guilt when you finally say “no”
Feeling like you’re failing, even when you’re giving everything
You don’t need more guilt. You need more grace.
What Self-Care Really Looks Like
Self-care isn’t all bubble baths and yoga (though those help). Sometimes it’s:
Saying “I need a minute” instead of exploding
Drinking water and sitting down to eat
Calling a friend and admitting you’re overwhelmed
Using a technique like cognitive restructuring to reframe negative thoughts(“I’m not a bad mom I’m a human having a hard moment.”)
Even 10-minute micro-moments count. “We cannot give from an empty cup.”
Try This: A Simple Stress Recovery Ritual
🌀 Mini Grounding Break
Pause what you’re doing
Take 3 deep breaths
Name 3 things you’re grateful for
Ask: What do I need right now?
Give yourself permission to meet one small need. Repeat as often as needed. No guilt.
Final Thought
You’re not just keeping your household running you’re shaping the emotional climate your child grows up in. And when you model self-care, you teach your children it’s safe to value themselves, too.
“Taking care of yourself is the most powerful way to begin to take care of others.” Bryant McGill