The Cost of Being the Default
Published on: 06/01/2026
Many mothers are told they’ve become “mean” or “different” after having children, but this shift isn’t a personality flaw — it’s a physiological and psychological response to chronic burnout. Drawing on research in neuroscience, psychology, and sociology, this essay explains how sleep deprivation, emotional labor, and the invisible mental load push mothers into survival mode. Resentment and irritability aren’t signs of failure; they’re signals of prolonged invisibility and unmet needs. When women carry the default responsibility for everyone else’s well-being, “niceness” isn’t lost — it’s depleted.
CodependencyEmotional RegulationPersonal GrowthWellness

