…When the System Was Never Built for You
Shannon Maroldo

Let me say something out loud that most people are still afraid to admit.
The system was not designed for working moms.
It was not designed for the mother who is answering emails while mentally composing a grocery list, who is sitting in a meeting and wondering if her child’s fever went down, who leaves work feeling like she did not give enough and comes home feeling exactly the same way. The working mother is expected to perform at full capacity in two completely different worlds, and somehow do both without complaint, without dropping anything, and without letting anyone see how close to the edge she really is.
This is not a personal failing, it is a structural one. Unfortunately, it is one that far too many women are quietly absorbing as if it is their own fault.
There is a particular grief that comes with being a working mother, and it lives in the in-between.
It lives in the moment you miss a school performance because you could not get coverage. The in-between lives in the meeting where your mind drifts to your kids and you feel guilty for being distracted. It lives in the evenings when you are physically present at the dinner table but emotionally spent, and you can see that your children need more from you than you have left to give.
The hard truth is that it is nearly impossible to be fully present in both places at once and that is because full presence requires something that cannot be split cleanly down the middle. You are one person being asked to show up completely in two directions simultaneously, and no amount of time management or morning routines will change that fundamental reality.
One of the most important shifts a working mother can make is the decision to stop measuring her life against a standard that was never realistic to begin with.
This is harder than it sounds because in today’s world, you are surrounded by comparisons. Social media, family opinions, cultural messaging, all of it quietly tells you what a good mother looks like, what a successful professional looks like, and how the two are supposed to coexist seamlessly. But what works in someone else’s home, for someone else’s children, with someone else’s circumstances has very little to do with what works in yours.
Allowing yourself grace means releasing the judgment, including the judgment you level at yourself. It means doing what functions well in your actual life rather than the life you feel you should be living. And it means accepting that some days the house will be messy, the dinner will be simple, and the to-do list will carry over, and none of that makes you a bad mother or a bad professional.

I want to offer you a reframe that I use with clients, because I think it can genuinely change the way asking for help feels.
When someone else steps in, when a neighbor attends a school party in your place, when a grandparent picks up at carpool, when a trusted friend takes your daughter to her activity because you simply cannot leave work, that is not a gap in your parenting. There is something more generous in that act. It is allowing another person to love your child. That is a wonderful way to widen the circle of people who will know your children, experience them, invest in them, and carry a piece of their story.
Working mothers are often the last ones to give themselves permission.
Permission to rest, permission to ask, and permission to say that something is not working and that they need something different.
You are allowed to put your children first, even when that inconveniences a workplace, a schedule, or someone else’s expectations. Working mothers are also allowed to put your own wellbeing first, because a mother who is running on empty does not have the capacity to show up the way she wants to for anyone.
Here is what I want you to walk away from this knowing.
You are not doing it wrong. You are doing something extraordinarily hard inside a world that has not caught up to what you actually need. And you deserve support that sees that.
The working mother who asks for help is not falling behind, she is leading the way.
At House of Grace Counseling, we work with women who are navigating exactly this – the beautiful, exhausting, complicated reality of doing it all while still trying to feel like themselves.
Schedule your free consultation today. You do not have to figure out the next step alone. Let’s find out together what support can look like for you, and what it might feel like to finally have somewhere to set some of this down.
House of Grace Counseling offers clinical therapy and options for faith-based therapy in New Jersey for women and overwhelmed moms. Through virtual sessions, you receive specialized support for maternal mental health, anxiety, grief, and family challenges, helping you regain emotional balance and resilience.