Our numbers are legion – mothers who did the best we could with what we had… and are still carrying the weight of wondering if it was ever enough. So many of us are quietly struggling. With mom guilt. With strained relationships. With the painful question: Where did I go wrong?
Let me be honest. I know that question well.
I spent decades mothering – through adoption, homeschooling, learning disabilities, addiction, mental health struggles, and the everyday pressures of trying to hold a family together. I gave it everything I had.
And still, years later, after the marriage ended and the kids became adults, I found myself sitting in a swirl of questions. Heart aching. Wondering how much of their pain was my fault.
It creeps in late at night. It whispers in your ear during a hard conversation with your grown child. It shows up when you hear the words, “You never…” or “You always…”
But here’s the truth I’m learning, and maybe you need to hear it too:
We’re so used to rescuing, cushioning, explaining, justifying, trying to protect them from the consequences of their choices – even when they’re adults.
But grown people have to carry their own loads.
Even our beloved children.
The most loving thing we can do sometimes is step back – and let them fall.
It’s not cold. It’s not cruel.
It’s necessary.
There are no guidebooks for this.
No more pediatricians or parent-teacher conferences. Just adult kids making choices you don’t agree with, living lives you didn’t raise them for, or perhaps holding resentment for things you did the best you could with.
And you, Mama, are left with an ache.
You try to explain. You try to reconnect.
You may even apologize – and sometimes, that’s holy work.
But let me say this loud and clear:
You do not need to keep apologizing for the same thing over and over again.
Own what’s yours.
Extend grace where you can.
But stop carrying what doesn’t belong to you.
If you’re feeling the weight of what your child still holds against you, or the pain of what you couldn’t protect them from – here’s what I’ve learned:
You don’t owe a TED Talk every time you set a boundary or say no. “I love you” and “No” can live in the same sentence.
When they try to hand you their pain, their blame, their unhealed wounds – gently and prayerfully hand it back. Say, “That belongs to you now.” You’ve carried it long enough.
Your emotional safety matters. You are still worthy of respect and gentleness. Set the boundary. Take the space. Walk away if you need to.
You can’t change their hearts. Only God can. Keep praying – not to fix them, but to free you.
Yes, you made mistakes. All mothers do. But you also loved. You sacrificed. You showed up. And that matters, even if they can’t see it yet.
Mama, you’re not perfect. But you are good.
You were the best mother you knew how to be in the moment. And now, your job is to trust God with the rest.
I hold this verse close in this season:
“Each one should carry their own load.” (Galatians 6:5)
We are not meant to carry the full weight of their adult lives.
We’re here to love them. Pray for them.
But also to release them.
You are not failing.
You are becoming.
And maybe – just maybe – it’s time to mother yourself with the same grace you gave to everyone else.
You’re not alone in this.
I would invite you to do two things today: Get a copy of the Second Act Soul Check-In available here. Then check in at our Empty Nesters Facebook Group. Join the conversation as we deconstruct these complex emotions. You are not alone.
How have you learned to deal with and diminish mom guilt? Share your thoughts and stories here.
Tags Adult Children
I can fully appreciate what the undersigned have written
our children want to continually blame us for their own anger and inability to work through it
we have done our best ,often in difficult circumstances.They are adults and need to embrace their own issues rather than blame their mother.
again , mom is the easiest punching bag.
when they do take responsibility for their own issues,like anger and recognize only they can manage it perhaps they can relate to us moms as adults too
We all deserve decency and respect from others,especially our children 🌸
Very excellent article. I have a triple whammy of mom guilt: an Italian Catholic mother!
I, too, needed this today. I have felt guilty too long. I did the best I could with what I had. I’m hoping I can finally let it go.
This is excellent, Christine: “You Are Not Called to Carry What Belongs to Them”! I have finally stood up to my hostile adult daughter and told her she needs to find a new punching bag and stop blaming her own problems on everyone but herself. It is such a relief.
For those of us who don’t do Facebook, are there other options? Thanks again for a great article!
Bravo! Same here. I have done some hard work (therapy, much self-deconstruction, owning my failures, apologizing). Now I am done. Life goes on. This trend of cutting parents off is a trend and is just so sad. We are not alone.
I am chosing to improve my life; my mental and physical health, travel with my new husband, keep learning and enjoying MY peace. It’s up to her now.
I wish you much joy. Stay safe and now, live for you.
Big hug.
❤️🩹
Thank you, Polly, and you too! Joy and peace ARE possible after letting all the pointless drama go. Health, travel, love, and learning are truly the ingredients of a life well lived. Hugs to you as well—
Liz
Thank you. 💝
Although I agree with you – I did this. The result was I’ve lost my grandchildren. Four years have passed and my grandchildren don’t know their only grandmother. They have a step-grandma who has her own grandkids whom my grandchildren have been schooled to believe is their grandma. Be cautious with narcissistic adult children
I needed to hear this. I have a 40 year old daughter who over the last 6 years has brought up all the ways she feels I had failed at raising her and her older brother. I really tried to be a loving and attentive mother. I didn’t spank nor abuse my children and tried to be supportive and loving, but it seems my daughter has read psychology books about regressive dream stuff (I do not understand it nor want to) and I finally told her that I love her but if she wants to live in the past digging up old bones, then we cannot have a relationship today. I refuse to live my life looking in the rear view mirror. You can’t change the past. I’m 70 years old and do not have the emotional stamina for it.