The Mental Load Women Are Carrying (And Why It Feels So Heavy)

March 23, 2026

The mental load women carry is more than being busy. It’s the invisible work of remembering, anticipating, planning, checking in, following up, and holding a thousand tiny details at once. It’s not always loud, but it is exhausting. And for a lot of women, especially mothers, that invisible load is a direct path to burnout. […]

The mental load women carry is more than being busy. It’s the invisible work of remembering, anticipating, planning, checking in, following up, and holding a thousand tiny details at once. It’s not always loud, but it is exhausting.

And for a lot of women, especially mothers, that invisible load is a direct path to burnout. Not because they aren’t strong enough. Not because they need a better planner. But because carrying the emotional, logistical, and relational weight of daily life was never meant to be a one-person job.

In this episode of Don’t Cut Your Own Bangs, I interview Sarah Harker, Chief Growth Officer of City Moms, about career pivots, burnout, motherhood, and the invisible labor women often carry without even realizing how much is on their shoulders.

What I love about this conversation is that it isn’t just about big career change or entrepreneurship. It’s also about something so many women live every day: the quiet overwhelm of trying to hold everything together while still showing up for everyone else.

Mental Load Women Carry and Why It Feels So Heavy
The mental load women carry can quietly lead to burnout. Here’s what it is, why it feels so heavy, and how to start sharing it.

What Is the Mental Load Women Carry?

The mental load women carry is the invisible labor of managing life behind the scenes. It includes not just doing tasks, but remembering those tasks need to be done in the first place.

That means things like:

  • knowing the school calendar
  • remembering who needs snacks, forms, shoes, medicine, or a birthday gift
  • anticipating what your family will need on a trip
  • tracking the household rhythm without anyone seeing the spreadsheet in your brain

This is why someone can look “fine” on the outside and still feel mentally maxed out.

What does mental load mean?

Mental load is the ongoing cognitive and emotional effort involved in organizing, anticipating, and managing daily life. It often includes invisible planning work that happens before any visible task gets done.

In other words: it’s not just packing the bags. It’s remembering that bags need to be packed, what has to go in them, what everyone will need later, and what will happen if something gets forgotten.

That’s a lot.

Why the Mental Load Women Carry Leads to Burnout

One of the most important threads in this conversation is that burnout doesn’t only come from working long hours. It also comes from being responsible for too much for too long without enough support.

Sarah talked about this both in her nursing career and in motherhood. She described a season where she was working incredibly hard, taking on more leadership, supporting everyone around her, and still trying to be fully present at home. That combination is so familiar for so many women.

Burnout often grows in places like this:
when you are competent, capable, and caring enough that more and more gets handed to you.

The tricky part is that the mental load doesn’t always look dramatic. Sometimes it looks like being the default parent. Sometimes it looks like knowing all the details without ever saying them out loud. Sometimes it looks like being the one who gets asked, “What do you need help with?” when what you really need is someone else to notice what needs doing before you have to explain it.

That’s not laziness.
That’s not a lack of gratitude.
That’s exhaustion.

What Burnout Looks Like in Real Life

When people hear the word burnout, they often picture someone having a major breakdown. But many women experience burnout in quieter, more socially acceptable ways.

What is burnout?

Burnout is a state of emotional, mental, and physical exhaustion caused by prolonged stress, overload, and lack of recovery. It often includes feeling depleted, detached, irritable, or like even small tasks take more energy than they should.

Burnout can look like:

  • snapping more easily than usual
  • feeling resentful about things you normally handle
  • lying in bed tired but unable to truly rest
  • feeling like your brain has 47 tabs open at all times
  • needing a break but not even knowing what kind of break would help

That last part matters.

Because often, when women are carrying a heavy mental load, they aren’t just tired from what they did today. They’re tired from what they are holding tomorrow.

The Mental Load Women Carry Is Often Invisible — Even to Them

One of my favorite moments in this conversation connects directly to something I’ve seen in my own life too: sometimes you don’t even realize how much you’re carrying until someone slows you down enough to help you name it.

That is such a big part of this.

The mental load women carry becomes normal so quickly that it can start to feel like “just life.” You don’t always notice it because you’re busy functioning inside it.

A very real example:
you’re getting ready for a family trip, and someone asks what they can do to help. You freeze. Not because there’s nothing to do, but because your brain is already running an invisible master list of medications, pajamas, backup outfits, snacks, water bottles, swim gear, bedtime routines, travel timing, and what happens if one child melts down before lunch.

By the time someone says, “Just tell me what you need,” you’re already exhausted.

That’s the load.

Another example:
you’re not just making dinner. You’re noticing what’s running low, remembering who doesn’t like what, thinking about tomorrow’s lunch, and calculating whether there’s enough time before sports practice.

Again: that is the load.

Why Women Struggle to Share the Load

A lot of women do not struggle because they are unwilling to ask for help.
They struggle because asking for help often turns into more work.

You have to explain the system.
You have to delegate the task.
You have to remember to follow up.
You have to tolerate it being done differently.
You have to carry the emotional weight of not sounding “too much.”

So instead, many women think: I’ll just do it myself.

And that can work for a while.
Until it doesn’t.

Sarah named something so important here: the lie that “I just need to work a little harder.” That belief is especially brutal for women and mothers. It sounds responsible. It sounds admirable. But it often becomes a trap.

Because when the answer to overwhelm is always “try harder,” burnout becomes almost inevitable.

How to Start Lightening the Mental Load

This is where I want to keep things practical.

You do not need to overhaul your whole life this week. But you may need to get more honest about what you are carrying.

A helpful place to start is this:
write down everything you are responsible for in a given week.

Not just errands. Not just appointments. Everything.

Include:
the planning, the reminders, the checking, the anticipating, the emotional labor, the relational labor, the “if I don’t think about this, no one will” labor.

When you see it on paper, two things often happen:
first, you realize why you’re tired.
Second, you realize this isn’t “just in your head.” It’s real work.

Another helpful question is:
What am I doing that does not actually have to be mine?

Not what could maybe be shared in a fantasy world.
What can realistically be reassigned, owned by someone else, or done differently?

That’s where relief starts.

Burnout Doesn’t Always Mean You’re in the Wrong Life

One of the things I appreciate most about Sarah’s story is that her path didn’t begin with a dramatic reinvention. It began with noticing.

She started to realize she was more energized by supporting her team than by the part of the job she thought she was supposed to love. That curiosity led her somewhere new.

I think that’s such an important reminder.

Sometimes burnout is a sign that you need rest.
Sometimes it’s a sign you need support.
Sometimes it’s a sign the system is unsustainable.
And sometimes it’s a sign that something in your life is asking to evolve.

You do not have to know the full answer right away.
But you do deserve to listen.

Key Takeaways

  • The mental load women carry is the invisible work of planning, remembering, anticipating, and managing daily life.
  • Burnout is not only about working too much. It often comes from carrying too much mentally and emotionally without enough support.
  • If asking for help feels exhausting, that may be because delegation itself has become part of the load.
  • Lightening the mental load women carry starts with naming what’s actually on their plate and deciding what no longer has to belong to them.

If this resonated with you, subscribe to Don’t Cut Your Own Bangs, share this post with someone who’s carrying a lot, and send it to a woman who might need the reminder that she was never meant to hold all of this alone.

👉 If this episode resonates, share it with a friend who might also need this reminder. And don’t forget to subscribe so new episodes find you—no chasing required.

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DANIELLE IRELAND, LCSW

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xo, Danielle