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I’m 38 and Spent Years Thinking I Was the Problem: That I Was a Bad Mum, a Bad Wife, Broken Inside B…
Im 38 now, and for the longest time I honestly thought I was the problem. That I was a bad mother, a useless wife. I kept thinking there must be something wrong with me, because although everything appeared fine on the outside, deep down it felt like I had nothing left to give.
Every morning, Id be up by 5 oclock. Id make breakfasts, get the girls uniforms ready, pack up the lunchboxes. Id get the children sorted for school, do a quick tidy up of the house, then dash off to work. I stuck to every schedule, hit every target, turned up at every meeting. Always with a smile. I never let it slip. No one at work ever suspected a thing. In fact, theyd go on about how I was so reliable, organised, strong.
At home, I managed it all as well. Lunch, chores, bath times, dinner. Id listen to the girls share their stories, help with homework, settle their little arguments. Id give cuddles when they needed, fix things that went wrong. From the outside, life looked normal, even good. I had my family, my job, my health. There was no big disaster, nothing that could explain how I felt.
But inside, I was completely empty.
It wasnt a constant sadness. It was just exhaustion. The type that sleep couldnt touch. Id go to bed wrung out and wake up still tired. My body ached for no reason. Any noise got on my nerves. The endless questions wore me down. I started having thoughts I was too ashamed to admit: maybe my girls would be better off without me, maybe I was just hopeless at this, maybe some women were born to be mothers and I wasnt one of them.
But I never forgot a single responsibility. I was never late picking them up. I never lost it more than usual. I didnt stop functioning, so no one really noticed.
Not even my husband saw it. As far as he could tell, everything was fine. If I said I was tired, hed say, Every mum gets tired. If I mentioned I just didnt feel up to anything, hed reply, Youre just not in the mood. So I just stopped talking.
There were evenings when Id sit in the bathroom with the door shut, just for some peace and quiet. I didnt even cryjust stared at the tiles, counting down the minutes before I had to step out and pretend to be the mum who can do it all again.
The thought of leaving crept in quietly. It wasnt a dramatic urge. It was just a cold idea: disappearing for a few days, running off, just not being needed for a while. Not because I didnt love my children, but because I honestly felt like I had nothing left to give them.
The day I hit rock bottom wasnt anything spectacular. It was just another ordinary Tuesday. One of the girls came and asked me for help with something so simple, and I just stared at her, blank. My mind was empty. I could feel a lump in my throat and this hot rush in my chest. I just sat down on the kitchen floor and couldnt get up for ages.
My daughter looked at me, scared, and said, Mum, are you okay?
And I couldnt answer her.
Nobody came rushing to help. Nobody was there to save me. I just couldnt fake being okay any longer.
I only asked for help when I literally had nothing left. When I couldnt handle it all anymore. It was actually my therapist who was the first to say something new to me:
This isnt because youre a bad mum.
She told me what was really going on.
And I realised no one had helped before because I never actually stopped doing everything. As long as a woman keeps going, the world assumes shell just carry on. Nobody ever asks if the one who never drops the ball is actually okay.
Getting better didnt happen overnight. It wasnt magic. It was slow, uncomfortable, and full of guilt. I had to learn to ask for help. To say no. To not be available every single second. To accept that sleeping in or having a break doesnt mean Im a rubbish mum.
These days, Im still raising my girls, still working. But Ive stopped pretending to be perfect. I dont believe a mistake defines me anymore. Most importantly, I no longer think wanting to escape now and then makes me a bad mum.
I was just completely exhausted.
