Self-Care Isn't Selfish: Protecting Your Mental Health as a Solo Mom
The practices that keep me grounded when everything feels like too much
Before I became a mom, self-care meant long baths, leisurely workouts, and the occasional weekend away. After becoming a solo mom, self-care means something fundamentally different.
It means survival. And beyond survival, it means modeling for my daughter what it looks like to treat yourself with care.
The Guilt Problem
Let's address this upfront: solo moms often feel guilty about taking time for themselves. Every hour you spend on your own needs is an hour you could be spending with your child, and when you're the only parent, that math feels merciless.
Here's the reframe I come back to constantly: you cannot pour from an empty cup, and you cannot parent well when you're depleted beyond function. Self-care isn't selfish. It's infrastructure.
What Actually Works for Me
Therapy. Every two weeks, non-negotiable. My therapist understands the specific pressures of solo parenting and doesn't try to fix me — she helps me process. This is the single most important investment I make in my mental health.
Morning quiet. I wake up thirty minutes before my daughter. I drink coffee in silence. I don't look at my phone. Some mornings those thirty minutes are the only time that's truly mine, and they're sacred.
Movement. Not always exercise — sometimes it's a walk around the block with the stroller, sometimes it's ten minutes of stretching after bedtime. The bar is intentionally low so I actually clear it.
Social connection. At least once a week, I talk to another adult about something other than parenting. A phone call, a coffee date, a text exchange about a show we're both watching. Maintaining my identity beyond "mom" is critical.
Saying no. This one's hard. I say no to birthday parties that will wreck nap time. I say no to extra commitments at work when I'm already stretched thin. I say no to the voice in my head that says I should be doing more.
The Bad Days
I'm not going to pretend self-care prevents bad days. It doesn't. There are days when I cry in the car after daycare dropoff. Days when I lose my patience and feel terrible about it. Days when the loneliness hits like a wave I didn't see coming.
On those days, self-care looks like ordering takeout instead of cooking, putting on a movie for my kid so I can sit on the couch and breathe, and texting a friend the most honest version of how I'm doing.
A Note for Anyone Struggling
If you're reading this and you're not okay — if the bad days are outweighing the good ones, if you're feeling hopeless or overwhelmed more often than not — please reach out. To a therapist, to your doctor, to the Postpartum Support International helpline (1-800-944-4773), to anyone.
Asking for help with your mental health is the bravest form of self-care there is.