PARENTS EVERYWHERE ARE TIRED: THE TRUTH ABOUT PARENTING FATIGUE
Parenting fatigue is an all-too-common experience that can cause negative health symptoms and a drop in relationship satisfaction.
By Kari Rusnak, LPC, CMHC, BC-TMH

Parenting fatigue, also known as parental burnout, is a mental health issue many parents experience. To define it simply, parenting fatigue is when the responsibilities of parenting add up and create excess stress that causes mental and physical health symptoms. This, in turn, makes it hard to continue the role of parenting. It can be a downward cycle where the more burnout you experience, the more stress parenting causes, which increases your fatigue.
Parenting fatigue can happen to all parents, and they do not have to be experiencing children who are having difficulties themselves. In John Gottman’s research, he found that two-thirds of parents will experience a drop in their relationship quality within three years of bringing their baby home. This drop in relationship satisfaction can be due to the many types of parental burnout.
Causes of parenting fatigue
There are many causes of parenting fatigue and many unique situations with your children, your life factors, and other external factors. Some common causes are the stress and emotional strain that parenting can cause. A big one is the actual fatigue becoming a parenting cause.
When you bring a baby home, your sleep patterns get disrupted, and that continues throughout your young child’s life. When your kids get older and they have extracurricular activities that keep you out of the house later and eating dinner later, it can cause general fatigue from long days and being out of the house for so long.
Many parents who work full-time and are also trying to balance their own activities, like exercise or other hobbies and interests, create pressure to be home and present with their kids as much as possible. The guilt of doing things for yourself and possibly only seeing your child a few hours a day on weeknights can wear on you.
I’ve worked with many parents who have breakdowns over the fact that they can’t “do it all”. I have to be honest with them and share that no parent can work full-time, keep their house clean, be there with their kids all the time, make time for themselves, and nurture their relationship. It’s not physically possible to do this. This can be especially hard for single parents or those who are not co-parenting with a partner in the home; you absolutely cannot do it all alone.
Consequences of fatigue
All of these stressors that cause parental fatigue then lead to many mental and physical health issues. It’s well known that chronic stress affects our memory; you may become more forgetful and experience brain fog, especially when your sleep has been affected. This can also lead to
symptoms of depression and anxiety. Feeling like a failure leads to a low mood, and worrying about not doing the best job can create an anxious cycle.
Many parents can start experiencing isolation from friends and family when they worry about feeling judged or are too overwhelmed to reach out. Parents often feel shame when they can’t fulfill all expectations or when they make a mistake. They can experience guilt when they aren’t spending time with their kids. These symptoms can also cause issues in your relationship and can lead to more disagreements, less time together, and less desire and time for intimacy.
It can also cause issues in your relationship with your children. The stress can lead to less patience with them, and that can create a barrier in closeness.
The importance of self-care
The good thing is that some of this burnout can be prevented with good self-care. You have to take time for yourself to rest, get a break, and do the activities that recharge you to be there as a parent. The metaphor of putting on your own oxygen mask on an airplane first is very fitting for parents. You have to put on your own mask before helping your child with theirs. You need to take breaks from parenting to be a good one. You will be much better at handling the responsibility if you allow yourself to put yourself first. Hire a babysitter and take the offer from friends and family to watch the kids when possible.
Counseling can also be a great tool in processing the emotions of parenting fatigue. A therapist can help you find the balance for self-care. It’s also important to voice your feelings to your partner; remember, you’ve signed up for this together and need to lean on each other when possible.
Parenting fatigue can cause extra conflict that can expand outside of parenting topics. Couples counseling can help you navigate the extra stress together. It’s equally important to make time for your relationship where you get to step out of the parenting role into the romance role. It helps to make time for dates and quality time alone each day.