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HomeBlogReal-Life Self-Care for Real Parents
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Real-Life Self-Care for Real Parents

February 21, 2025•7 min read•Relationships and Family
Real-Life Self-Care for Real Parents

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Narrated by Dr. Jana Rundle• 1.4 MB

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This isn't failure. This is recognizing that you deserve more than survival mode.

Therapy isn't a last resort; it's a proactive choice to get the tools, support, and space you need to thrive.

"Self-care is how you take your power back."

We're Here to Help You Thrive

If you need help creating a sustainable self-care routine, or if you're realizing you need more than self-care alone, Bloom Psychology is here to walk beside you.

We specialize in supporting parents through the hardest seasons. You don't have to figure this out alone.

Book Your Free Consult

No pressure. No judgment. Just compassionate support.

Self-Care Ideas by Parenting Stage

Your self-care needs change as your kids grow. Here's what works for each season.

Newborn Stage (0-3 months)

You're in survival mode. Self-care is about basic needs.

✓ Sleep when baby sleeps (really)

✓ Accept all meal deliveries

✓ Shower with baby in bouncer nearby

✓ Text instead of calling friends

✓ Say no to all non-essential tasks

✓ Ask partner for one 2-hour block weekly

Infant Stage (4-12 months)

Sleep is still unpredictable, but there's slightly more space.

✓ Baby-wearing walks for fresh air

✓ Audiobooks during feeding sessions

✓ Join a parent-baby class

✓ Practice yoga while baby has tummy time

✓ Schedule regular date nights (even virtual)

✓ Trade babysitting with other parents

Toddler Stage (1-3 years)

High energy, big emotions. Self-care needs to be strategic.

✓ Use screen time strategically for breaks

✓ Parallel play while you read nearby

✓ Dance parties double as exercise

✓ Protect naptime as sacred rest time

✓ Join a toddler playgroup for adult interaction

✓ Early bedtime = your evening back

Preschool & Beyond (3+ years)

More independence means more opportunities for restoration.

✓ Use school hours intentionally

✓ Involve kids in self-care (yoga together)

✓ Schedule regular alone time

✓ Reconnect with hobbies from pre-kids

✓ Plan adult-only outings monthly

✓ Build in weekly friend connections

Your 30-Day Self-Care Challenge

Ready to build sustainable habits? Try one practice per day. Check them off as you go.

Week 1: Foundation

☐ Day 1: Drink 8 glasses of water

☐ Day 2: Eat 3 full meals

☐ Day 3: Sleep when baby sleeps

☐ Day 4: Take a 10-minute walk

☐ Day 5: Ask for help

☐ Day 6: Say no to one thing

☐ Day 7: Take a long shower

Week 2: Connection

☐ Day 8: Text a friend who gets it

☐ Day 9: Compliment yourself

☐ Day 10: Call someone you love

☐ Day 11: Join an online parent group

☐ Day 12: Schedule a coffee date

☐ Day 13: Share how you really feel

☐ Day 14: Ask partner for support

Week 3: Restoration

☐ Day 15: Do 5-minute breathing exercise

☐ Day 16: Listen to favorite podcast

☐ Day 17: Dance to one full song

☐ Day 18: Read for pleasure

☐ Day 19: Stretch for 10 minutes

☐ Day 20: Sit in silence for 5 minutes

☐ Day 21: Take a bath (or long shower)

Week 4: Growth

☐ Day 22: Journal for 5 minutes

☐ Day 23: Try a new recipe you enjoy

☐ Day 24: Watch a show you love

☐ Day 25: Practice gratitude

☐ Day 26: Do something creative

☐ Day 27: Plan next month's self-care

☐ Day 28: Celebrate your progress

Bonus Days

☐ Day 29: Book a therapy consult

☐ Day 30: Plan a full self-care day

💜 Print this checklist or save it to your phone. Progress over perfection!

📌 Bookmark this monthly challenge to build lasting habits

You've made it to the end of this guide, which means you're already taking yourself seriously.

That matters. You matter.

Whether you start with one deep breath or book that therapy appointment you've been putting off. You're doing the right thing. Keep going.


Related Reading

  • Building Healthy Parent-Child Relationships
  • The Power of Micro-Moments: Finding Joy in Early Motherhood
  • Navigating Life Transitions: When Everything Changes at Once

If reading this made you realize you've been running on survival mode and calling it fine, that honesty is the starting point—not a failure. Rest isn't a reward you earn after everything else is done; you have the right to it now. And sometimes the most real form of self-care is admitting you need more than a routine can give. If that's where you are, therapy for new moms offers a place to actually put something down. You can book a free consult whenever you're ready.

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Jana Rundle

Jana Rundle

Licensed Clinical Psychologist

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