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Frustrated mom because her child is glued to her phone
Lead together, Podcast

#92: Default Parent Mental Load: How to Stop Being the Only Responsible Adult

Default Parent Mental Load: How to Stop Being the Only Responsible Adult

If you’ve ever thought, “I’m the only responsible adult in this house,” and then immediately felt guilty for thinking it… you’re not alone.

In fact, this is one of the most common things I hear from overwhelmed moms — especially the default parent.

And here’s the good news: this isn’t a “try harder” situation. Instead, it’s usually a home systems problem. More specifically, it’s a responsibility distribution problem.

So in this post, I’m going to break down why this keeps happening, and then I’ll give you one simple move you can make this week to start sharing the load.

Why the Default Parent Mental Load Feels So Heavy
First, let’s name what’s really going on.

This isn’t a motivation issue. It’s not that you need a prettier planner. And it’s not that you need better time management.

Rather, the problem is that one person is carrying too many roles at the same time.

Because when you’re the one remembering, noticing, planning, reminding, and following up, you’re not just “doing chores.”

You’re doing management. And management is exhausting.

The Real Problem Isn’t the Chores
A lot of moms assume the problem is the tasks.
However, the tasks are usually not the main issue.
Instead, what’s exhausting is the invisible work behind the tasks. So let’s talk about that.

The Invisible Job List (aka the Mental Load)
Most moms aren’t only doing the physical labor. They’re also running the invisible list behind everything.

For example, someone might take out the trash.
But who noticed it was full?
Who remembered trash day?
Who tied the bag, replaced the liner, and checked the other bins?

That invisible tracking is the mental load.
And when you carry the invisible list, you become the default parent — even if other people “help.”

a mom teaching chores for kids
Podcast, Raise Responsible Kids

#91: The First Chore Every Kid Over 7 Should Learn

If your kids help around the house but you still feel like everything ultimately falls on you, you’re not imagining it.
In this episode of the Organized-ish Parent Podcast, we’re breaking down why chores don’t actually reduce your workload — and what to do instead.

Because here’s the truth: chores aren’t about cleaning. They’re about ownership.

You’ll learn:
– Why kids “help” but responsibility doesn’t stick

– The 3 conditions that make chores actually work

– The first chore every kid over 7 should learn

– How to stop doing everything yourself without guilt

If you want to raise capable, responsible kids and lighten your mental load, this is where to start.

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