In this article:
What she was experiencing wasn't laziness, ingratitude, or bad parenting. It was maternal burnout, a well-researched condition that affects millions of mothers worldwide, including in India. And yet, it remains one of the most misunderstood and least talked-about health issues in motherhood, perhaps especially in our culture, where a mother's suffering is too often mistaken for devotion.
What Is Maternal Burnout?
Maternal burnout is a state of deep, chronic exhaustion: emotional, physical, and mental, caused by the relentless and often invisible demands of being a mother. It builds slowly, quietly, until one day you realise you're going through the motions of motherhood but feel completely disconnected from it; unlike ordinary fatigue, it doesn't improve with a nap or a good night's sleep.
Researchers describe maternal burnout through three key experiences:
- Overwhelming exhaustion: You're depleted in a way that sleep alone doesn't fix.
- Emotional distance: You love your children, but you can't feel that love in the moment. You're physically present but emotionally absent.
- A sense of failure: You compare who you are now to the mother you wanted to be, and the gap feels unbearable.
The Causes of Maternal Burnout
Maternal burnout happens when demands consistently exceed resources over a long period of time. In India, several cultural and social factors stack these demands even higher:
The "ideal mother" Pressure: The Myth of the Perfect Indian Mother
Indian culture carries a deeply ingrained image of the ideal mother, selfless, tireless, always giving, never complaining.When reality doesn't match that impossible ideal, many mothers turn the gap into guilt rather than questioning the ideal itself. The belief that a good mother never gets tired is one of the most damaging myths Indian mothers carry.
Joint Family Pressures and the daughter-in-law and mother: Double Role
Many Indian mothers, especially in joint families, don't just mother their children; they also manage the expectations of in-laws, fulfil household duties for an extended family, and navigate complex family dynamics, all while caring for a newborn or toddler.The pressure to be the perfect daughter-in-law and the perfect mother simultaneously is immense, and the emotional labour it demands is invisible to almost everyone around her.
The Mental Load No One Sees
Even in modern Indian households, the majority of cognitive and emotional labour, remembering vaccination dates, tracking the baby's feed schedule, sensing when something is wrong, managing the emotional climate of the home, planning festivals and family obligations, falls on the mother. This invisible work never ends, and it is seldom acknowledged.Lack of Practical Support, Even in a Joint Family
It's a common assumption that Indian mothers in joint families have it easier because there are more people around. But being surrounded by family doesn't always mean receiving genuine support.Opinions, judgements, and unsolicited advice about how to feed, hold, or raise the baby can add to a mother's burden rather than reduce it. Many new mothers feel deeply alone, even in a house full of people.
Working Mothers: The Double Shift
A growing number of working mothers face a full day at work, followed by a full evening of cooking, childcare, and household management, with no real break in between. The pressure to prove oneself professionally while also being present and perfect at home creates a crushing, relentless load.Pre-existing Mental Health Conditions
Anxiety, depression, and a personal or family history of mental health challenges all of these significantly increase the risk of burnout. In India, where mental health is still heavily stigmatised and help-seeking is rare, many mothers are already carrying unaddressed emotional burdens before the baby even arrives.According to India's National Mental Health Survey, the treatment gap for mental health conditions among women of reproductive age is around 82%, which means most women suffering never receive care.
Signs You May Be Experiencing Maternal Burnout
Because burnout builds gradually, many mothers don't recognise it until they're deep in it. Here are some signs to watch for:
- You wake up exhausted, no matter how much sleep you got
- You feel emotionally numb or distant from your baby or toddler
- Small things, a crying spell, a sleepless night, a comment from a family member, send you into a spiral you can't explain
- You find yourself dreaming about escaping, even just for a few quiet hours alone
- You feel like you're watching your own life from the outside
- You've lost your sense of humour, joy, or identity outside of being a mother
- You feel intense guilt about everything, constantly
- You're going through the motions, but nothing feels meaningful
- You lose your temper with your partner or children and then feel overwhelming shame afterwards
Mothers are some of the most resilient, devoted, and capable people in the world. But resilience was never meant to be a reason to suffer alone. When we expect mothers to pour endlessly into their babies, their toddlers, their households, their extended families, their careers, without ever being refilled, burnout is inevitable.
If you are struggling with maternal burnout, please know this: what you're feeling is nothing to be ashamed of, it has a name, and you deserve support. Reaching out to your partner, a friend, a doctor, or a therapist is not giving up on your family. You have carried so much for so long, without being asked if you were okay. It is okay to say that you are not.
Whether you’re pregnant, a new mom, or navigating postpartum, you don’t have to do it alone. Join our support group to connect, share, and support one another.
FAQs on Why Am I Always Tired As a New Mom?
- Can stay-at-home mothers experience burnout too?
Yes, absolutely. Managing the baby, toddler, household, and family expectations, often without recognition or a break, is exhausting. Being at home does not mean having it easy. - How long does maternal burnout last, and can it go away?
It doesn't go away on its own, but with the right support, rest, shared responsibilities, and professional help if needed, recovery is possible. Some mothers feel better within weeks; for others, it takes a few months. - When should I see a doctor for maternal burnout?
If the exhaustion and emotional distance have lasted more than a few weeks, if daily functioning is affected, or if you're having thoughts of harming yourself, please see a doctor soon. You don't need to wait until things get worse to ask for help.