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HomeBlogWhen Motherhood Isn’t Joyful—And That’s OK
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When Motherhood Isn’t Joyful—And That’s OK

June 29, 2025•4 min read•Relationships and Family
Bloom Psychology - When Motherhood Isn't Joyful (And That's OK)

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Why Joy Might Feel Completely Out of Reach Right Now

Joy can be hard to access when you're running on no sleep, your hormones are in free fall, and every moment feels like a demand.

Add on any of these layers, and joy might not be on the menu for a while, and that's completely understandable:

1

Sleep Deprivation

Your brain literally can't regulate emotions properly without rest. The fog you feel isn't a character flaw; it's biology.

2

Hormonal Chaos

Postpartum hormones are a rollercoaster. Estrogen and progesterone plummet while your body tries to recalibrate. This affects mood, energy, and emotional resilience.

3

History of Trauma

If you experienced childhood trauma, neglect, or difficult relationships, motherhood can trigger old wounds. This isn't weakness; it's how trauma works.

4

Postpartum Depression or Anxiety

These conditions affect 1 in 5 new mothers. They're medical conditions, not moral failings. And they're treatable with the right support.

5

Lack of Support

If your partner isn't helping, family is distant, or friends have drifted, you're doing this alone. That isolation makes everything harder.

6

Identity Shift

You're grieving who you were before. Your independence, career identity, spontaneity, even your body. That grief is real and deserves space.

That doesn't mean you don't love your child. It doesn't mean you're not a good mom. It means you're human.

Your struggle doesn't cancel out your love. Both exist at the same time, and that's okay.

Finding this helpful? Save it to your "Mental Health" or "New Mom Survival" board for later

Rewriting the Narrative: How Your Thoughts Shape Your Experience

We often carry an internalized story that moms should be grateful, present, and fulfilled at all times. When our lived experience doesn't match, shame sets in.

That shame keeps us silent and suffering. But what if we could rewrite the story?

The Thought-Feeling-Behavior Connection (CBT)

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy teaches us that our thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are connected. When we change one, we can shift the entire cycle.

OLD THOUGHT

"I should be enjoying this."

This thought creates a gap between expectation and reality, triggering shame and self-blame.

FEELING

Burnt out, guilty, inadequate

Your brain tries to reconcile the mismatch by blaming you, which deepens the emotional pain.

NEW THOUGHT

"This is really hard right now, and that doesn't make me a bad mom."

This reframe acknowledges reality while removing self-blame, creating space for self-compassion.

Letting Go of "Should": Permission to Feel What You Actually Feel

The word "should" is a heavy weight. It carries judgment, comparison, and impossible standards. Let's practice replacing it with reality.

You Don't Have to Enjoy Every Moment

You don't have to enjoy every diaper blowout or 2 a.m. wake-up. You don't have to feel blissful while bouncing a crying baby on your hip.

You're Allowed to Dislike Parts of This

You are allowed to dislike parts of motherhood. The sleeplessness. The loss of autonomy. The physical recovery. All of it.

You're Allowed to Ask for Help

Asking for help isn't weakness. It's wisdom. You can't pour from an empty cup, and you shouldn't have to try.

Instead of Chasing Joy, Look for Micro-Moments of Relief

You don't need to feel constant joy. You just need tiny moments of relief, connection, or calm. These small joys don't erase the hard, but they do soften it.

A Deep Breath

By yourself in the kitchen, even if it's just for 30 seconds.

A Funny Meme

Something that makes you laugh, even for a moment, is medicine.

A Text from Someone Who Gets It

Connection, even digital, reminds you that you're not alone.

Your Baby's Sleeping Face

Not the crying, not the chaos, just the quiet, peaceful moments.

A Hot Shower

Even if it's only 5 minutes, it's a reset for your nervous system.

One Sip of Coffee While It's Still Hot

A tiny victory that feels like luxury.

You're Not Alone: How Therapy Can Help

If motherhood feels nothing like what you imagined, you don't have to carry that weight by yourself.

Therapy can help you untangle the stories you've internalized, process grief or rage, and learn new ways to cope with the overwhelm.

What Therapy for Overwhelmed Moms Looks Like

A Space to Be Honest

No judgment. No "you should be grateful." Just honest conversation about what you're really experiencing.

Tools to Manage the Overwhelm

CBT techniques, thought reframing, self-compassion practices, and nervous system regulation strategies you can use in real time.

Processing Grief and Identity Loss

The person you were before doesn't exist anymore. That's worth grieving. Therapy gives you space to mourn and rebuild.

Healing Old Wounds

If your childhood was hard, motherhood can trigger those old patterns. Therapy helps you break the cycle.

Support for Postpartum Mental Health

If you're experiencing postpartum depression or anxiety, therapy (and sometimes medication) can be life-changing. You don't have to white-knuckle through this.

Permission to Not Be Perfect

Your therapist won't tell you to be more grateful or try harder. They'll help you see that struggling doesn't make you a bad mom; it makes you human.

REAL CLIENT STORY

From "I'm Failing" to "I'm Doing Enough"

One client came to therapy convinced she was a terrible mother because she didn't feel joy. She'd scroll social media and see other moms glowing, while she felt numb and exhausted.

Through therapy, we:

  • Unpacked her belief that "good moms feel joy all the time"
  • Identified her undiagnosed postpartum anxiety
  • Practiced self-compassion instead of self-blame
  • Created micro-rituals that brought her small moments of relief
  • Explored her relationship with her own mother and how it was shaping her experience

Six months later, she told me: "I still don't love every moment. But I don't hate myself for it anymore. And that's changed everything."

Joy May Return, Or It May Look Different Than You Expected

Here's the truth: joy may come back. Or it may arrive in unexpected forms, not the Instagram-perfect moments you imagined, but quieter, more real.

What Joy Might Actually Look Like (When It Returns)

Your toddler's laugh when they're being silly, and you actually have the energy to laugh with them

The moment your baby finally sleeps through the night and you wake up feeling like yourself again

A quiet morning where you actually drink your coffee warm and feel present

The first time you go out with friends and don't feel guilty the whole time

Watching your child discover something new and feeling wonder instead of exhaustion

The deep relief of finally having support and not doing everything alone

Save This Guide for Hard Days

Pin this article to your "Mental Health," "New Mom Support," or "Postpartum Survival" board so you can come back to it when you need the reminder that you're not alone.

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Continue Your Journey

Finding Micro-Moments of Joy

Learn how to spot tiny moments of relief and connection in the chaos.

Read More →
Preventing Postpartum Depression

Understand the signs and get the support you need before it gets worse.

Read More →
Supporting New Mothers

For partners, family, and friends who want to help but don't know how.

Read More →
Bloom Psychology
North Austin, TX | Maternal Mental Health Specialists

If joy feels completely out of reach right now—buried under no sleep, hormones in freefall, and endless demands—that absence isn't a sign you don't love your baby or that something's wrong with you. Joy is genuinely hard to access when your nervous system is running on empty, and naming that is more honest than forcing a smile. You don't have to manufacture gratitude to deserve support. If the flatness has settled in and stayed, learn how we treat postpartum depression in Austin, or book a free consult and let's see what's underneath it.

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