There’s a version of motherhood the internet loves to show us. It’s soft lighting, smiling children, colour-coordinated birthdays, lunchboxes shaped like cartoon animals, and mothers who somehow look calm amidst it all. But what often gets cropped out is the reality sitting just outside the frame: the exhaustion, the overstimulation, the guilt, the mental load, and the quiet feeling of constantly trying to hold everything together.
Many mothers are familiar with both realities. The polished one everyone sees, and the messy one they rarely talk about.
That gap between “I’m okay” and “I’m actually struggling” is something experts now often describe as maternal masking. It’s the habit of performing happiness, patience, and emotional stability even when a mother feels overwhelmed inside. Not because she wants to be fake, but because somewhere along the way, many women learned that motherhood is supposed to look graceful, no matter how difficult it feels behind closed doors.
What Is The Happy Mom Performance?
For many women, motherhood comes with an invisible checklist almost immediately. Be patient. Be available. Be nurturing. Be grateful. Don’t complain too much. Don’t lose your temper. Don’t look like you’re struggling.
And while mothers are expected to manage endless responsibilities, they are also quietly expected to make it all look effortless.
A lot of women grow up watching other mothers hide their exhaustion, too. So the idea gets passed down almost like a family tradition: good mothers cope silently. They sacrifice quietly. They don’t admit they’re overwhelmed because that somehow feels selfish or ungrateful.
Over time, this creates a kind of emotional performance where many mothers continue functioning normally on the outside while internally feeling drained, anxious, lonely, or emotionally disconnected.
The Mental Load Nobody SeesOne of the biggest reasons mothers often feel emotionally exhausted is because of the invisible work constantly running in the background.
It’s not just cooking meals or attending school meetings. It’s remembering vaccination dates, mentally planning groceries, noticing mood changes in family members, organising schedules, anticipating problems before they happen, and carrying the emotional atmosphere of the house all day long.
This kind of emotional labour is difficult to explain because it doesn’t always look like “work” from the outside. But mentally, it’s nonstop.
And because this labour often goes unnoticed, many mothers stop talking about how tiring it really is. Sometimes pretending to be fine feels easier than trying to explain a type of exhaustion people may not fully understand.
Why So Many Mothers Stay Silent
There’s also guilt attached to admitting that motherhood can feel hard.
A mother who says she’s struggling is often afraid of being misunderstood. She worries people will think she doesn’t love her children enough or isn’t grateful for her life. So instead of expressing frustration openly, many women suppress it.
But emotions that stay buried don’t disappear. They usually turn into burnout, resentment, numbness, or the quiet feeling of losing touch with yourself.
Many mothers end up wondering privately, “Am I the only one finding this hard?” while thousands of other women around them are asking themselves the exact same question in silence.
Social Media Made The Pressure WorseThe pressure to perform perfect motherhood existed long before social media, but the internet amplified it.
Now motherhood has an audience. Every milestone, birthday party, vacation, parenting choice, and family moment can be shared, compared, and judged online. And because social media mostly shows curated highlights, many mothers begin measuring their worst days against someone else’s best moments.
The result is emotional whiplash.
A mother can spend the day overwhelmed, tapped out, exhausted, and mentally drained, then still post smiling photos at night because that version feels easier to share.
Somewhere behind the perfectly edited family picture is often a woman sitting alone after everyone’s asleep, emotionally running on fumes while scrolling through another mother’s “perfect” day.
And that’s the difficult truth about maternal masking: many mothers are not pretending because they’re dishonest. They’re pretending because they’ve been taught that being visibly overwhelmed means they’re failing.
Also Read: I Tried A Skin Renewal Peel, And My Congested Skin Finally Felt Like It Could Breathe Again
The post Decoding The Happy Mom Performance: Why So Many Mothers Pretend They’re Fine first appeared on MissMalini.
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