Why you’re exhausted before you’ve done anything — and it’s not because
you’re not organised enough
This week has been a lot.
Heavier than usual — but also, not
unusual at all.
My husband switched his
teleworking days without explicitly telling me. He assumed I knew. I assumed
nothing had changed. That small gap in communication meant I scheduled a
package delivery for a day he wasn’t home. It got missed. Now it’s sitting at a
pickup point far away, and we need to carve out time we don’t really have to go
get it.
At the same time, we had a medical
assessment for one of our children. Earlier this year we had a similar one for
another child, so when this appointment was scheduled, I assumed it would take
about three hours. I blocked that time off work.
It took one hour.
So now I’m recalibrating in real
time — do I keep the time off? Do I go back to work? I had a live webinar I
didn’t want to miss, so I joined late. Then I cancelled the rest of my time off
because it suddenly felt too precious to waste.
And today, we have a meeting with
a teacher about one child’s inattentiveness at school. The time for this
meeting has gone back and forth all week. Tired, I had it in my head as 18:45.
It’s 18:30.
I was reading the end time.
So now I double-check. Again.
All of this is happening on top of
everything else — three children in three different schools. Messages from
teachers. Parent groups discussing homework, birthday parties, class trips.
School bus updates. Aftercare communication. Newsletters. Parent associations.
Class reps. Principals. Deputy principals. Language programme communications.
The nurse. The librarian.
Then work — a minimum of one
hundred to two hundred emails a day. At least fifty require responses. About
twenty are urgent. The rest need answers within a day or two, while more keep
coming in.
Then the constant coordination
with my husband. Then work chats. Then my three closest friends, who all live
abroad. Then my family, also abroad.
They get what’s left of me.
This week is just an example. Most
weeks look like this. Or more.
If you read that and thought —
that’s just a normal week — you’re exactly who I’m writing for.
Because what you’re experiencing
isn’t disorganisation. It’s not a lack of discipline. And it’s definitely not a
personal failure.
You are living inside a
constant, invisible stream of communication that your brain was never designed
to handle.
The problem no one is naming
We talk a lot about ‘mental load.’
But we don’t talk nearly enough
about communication load — the sheer volume of information you have to receive,
filter, remember, interpret, and act on just to keep your family functioning.
Not doing anything extra. Just functioning.
A generation ago, information came
in predictable ways. A letter in a school bag. A phone call if something was
urgent. A note on the fridge. The volume was contained, the format was
predictable, and most of it could be processed in a single pass.
Now, for a family with children in
school, the communication infrastructure alone can include a school app, a
class teacher email, a parent WhatsApp group, a parents association channel, a
newsletter, separate communications from the nurse, librarian, class rep,
deputy principal, and principal — plus after-school care, the school bus, and
any specialist programmes your children attend.
Multiply that by the number of
children you have. Then add your work inbox.
This is not a dramatic
exaggeration. It is a conservative description of what millions of working
parents are navigating every single week.
Why this is exhausting — even when nothing goes wrong
Your brain has limits. Not
motivational limits. Not discipline limits. Actual, biological limits.
Cognitive load research
establishes that human working memory holds approximately seven units of
information at any one time. That boundary has not changed. What has changed is
the number of channels simultaneously competing for access to it.
Every time you switch from your
work inbox to a school WhatsApp notification to a message from your partner
about logistics, you are not just reading a message. You are paying a cognitive
switching cost. Over the course of a day, those costs accumulate into the kind
of exhaustion that does not respond to an early night.
That’s why you can feel
exhausted before you’ve ‘done anything.’ Because you have. You’ve been
processing, tracking, anticipating, and holding information all day long.
What makes this even harder — and more invisible
A 2024 study from the Universities
of Bath and Melbourne, published in the Journal of Marriage and Family,
surveyed three thousand parents and found that mothers handle 71% of all
household mental load tasks — the scheduling, planning, and organising that
keeps family life running. For daily, recurring responsibilities, that gap
widens further: mothers take on 79% compared to 37% for fathers.
But that research measures the
mental load of what needs to be done. It does not fully capture the
communication load of staying informed enough to know what needs to be done.
The appointment that needs to be
tracked. The permission form. The schedule change communicated through one
channel to one parent but not the other. The medical assessment whose duration
you had to estimate because nobody told you how long it would take.
These are not failures of
organisation. They are the predictable consequences of a communication
infrastructure that has no central coordination point, that adds new channels
without retiring old ones, and that places the full burden of synthesis on one person.
The same research found that
fathers are significantly more likely to perceive the mental load as equally
shared. Part of that gap is not about awareness of tasks. Part of it is about
who is absorbing the communication volume that makes the tasks visible in the
first place.
Why it spills into your home
By the time you arrive home at the
end of the day, you are not arriving to rest. You are arriving to a
continuation of the same cognitive load in a different physical space.
The message you haven’t responded
to, the appointment you need to reschedule, the school update you haven’t
processed — all of it comes through the door with you.
And a home that is not structured
to absorb that load — that has no shared systems, no clear distribution of
information-tracking, no predictable rhythms that run without active management
— adds its own layer of demand on top of an already full working memory.
This is why small things feel
disproportionately heavy. The missed package is not just a missed package. It
is one more task landing on a system that has no more capacity.
The home is not a refuge from the
overload. It is the place where the overload lands. Whether it holds you or
adds to you depends entirely on how it’s designed.
What actually helps — and what doesn’t
This is not solved by a better
planner, a new app, or trying harder. Because the problem is not effort. It’s
structure.
The households that start to feel
better are not the ones doing more. They are the ones who shift two things.
- 1. Who holds the information
Not just who does the tasks — but
who receives, filters, and owns which streams of communication. When that is
unspoken, it defaults to one person. When it is explicit, even informally, it
distributes.
2. How the home
handles the load
Simple, shared systems for
tracking what matters so it is not all living in one person’s head. Predictable
rhythms that reduce the number of active decisions required each day. Physical
environments that do not add to the visual and cognitive noise.
Neither of these requires a
dramatic overhaul. Both of them require a conversation that most households
have never had.
A small but useful starting point
Before next week begins, try this:
Count how many communication
channels you are personally monitoring for your family. Every app. Every email
stream. Every group. Every source of ‘just one more thing.’
Don’t judge it. Just see it.
Most people do not realise the
scale of what they are managing until they name it. And once you see it
clearly, something shifts: you stop blaming yourself, and you start asking a
better question.
How is my home actually
supporting me in carrying this?
If that question lands a little
too close to home:
The HavenBlossom Home Environment
Assessment gives you a clear picture of how your home is currently holding your
life — where it is supporting you, and where it is quietly adding to the load.
It takes about ten minutes. It
covers four areas of home functioning. And the results, along with practical
first steps, go straight to your inbox.
Take the free assessment → HavenBlossom ASSESSMENT