
If you live the ADHD mum life, you probably know this feeling before your feet even hit the floor.
Your brain is already on.
Not gently. Not slowly. Fully loaded.
There are reminders, half-finished thoughts, school things, home things, work things, and at least one random “don’t forget to Google that later” thought floating around for no clear reason.
And it all starts at once.
ADHD mum life and the invisible mental overload
What makes ADHD mum life so exhausting isn’t always what’s happening on the outside — it’s what’s happening internally.
From the outside, things might look fine.
The kids are fed. You’ve replied to a message or two. You’re functioning.
But inside your head, it feels like:
- 27 tabs are open
- One is playing music but you can’t find it
- Two are frozen
- And at least five are “important” but you’ve already forgotten why
It’s not laziness. It’s not disorganisation.
It’s overload.
ADHD mum life and why simple tasks feel heavy
In ADHD mum life, even basic tasks can feel strangely heavy.
Not because you don’t know how to do them — but because your brain is trying to hold too many steps at once.
You go into the kitchen for something and forget what it was.
You sit down for a second and suddenly remember everything you didn’t do.
You start one job and somehow end up doing something completely unrelated in another room.
And then you question why everything feels harder than it “should.”
The hidden exhaustion behind ADHD mum life
There’s a type of tired that sleep doesn’t fix.
It’s the tired of constantly tracking everything in your head.
What needs doing.
What you already did.
What you forgot you forgot.
And as a mum, there’s another layer on top — everyone else’s needs, emotions, routines, and expectations.
So even when the day looks “normal,” your brain has been working overtime the entire time.

ADHD mum life doesn’t mean you’re failing
One of the biggest shifts is realising this:
You are not failing at life.
You’re working with a brain that processes everything at full volume.
That means you often need:
- External reminders instead of mental ones
- Written lists instead of memory
- Systems that support you instead of relying on willpower
And on some days, the “system” might just be getting through the day without dropping everything. That still counts.
Finding your version of “good enough”
There’s a version of life that looks perfectly organised from the outside.
And then there’s real life — ADHD mum life — where things are imperfect but still moving forward.
Where:
- Lists exist but sometimes get lost
- Alarms are set for things you “should” remember
- Not everything gets done, but the important things usually do
Good enough isn’t settling.
It’s sustainable.
If your ADHD mum life feels heavy today
If your brain feels noisy, scattered, or like it’s juggling too much at once — you’re not alone in that.
There’s nothing wrong with you for finding everyday life overwhelming sometimes.
You’re just trying to manage a lot with a brain that doesn’t do “quiet organisation” in the background.
And honestly, you’re doing better than it feels like you are.
Even if today doesn’t feel like it.
Looking for More Support?
The free library is a great place to start, but if you’d like access to the full collection of planners, business tools, templates and printables, you can join the Simply Sasha membership for £3.99 per month.
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