As a stay-at-home dad during summer break, I can honestly say this is the toughest job on earth. I’m not trying to turn this into a contest — I also know what it’s like to be the parent working outside the home. I used to be on a team that helped people through heart attacks; I’ve seen patients recover and I’ve watched some die. That kind of stress is intense, but, to me, it still isn’t on the same level as full-time parenting: the children, the constant mental load, no sick days — you’re effectively on call 24/7. I’m not suggesting it’s not worth it; I believe it is. I’m only pointing out that it’s a different, often deeper strain. I used to save lives — so who saves me? He had a rough day. My point is this isn’t about winning or losing. I’m not trying to imply you’re not working hard. There are plenty of absentee dads who do nothing for their families, and I want you to know I see what you do as honorable and loving. This isn’t meant to shame anyone — it’s about helping both partners truly understand one another, which should be our goal.
So let me explain the stay-at-home mom in under three minutes from my point of view: even when she looks calm and composed, it can be because her body has adapted to a dangerously high level of stress and cortisol. She may appear collected, but inside she might be fraying at the seams. Just because you can’t see the burden she carries doesn’t mean it isn’t there — just like with you. Let’s get into the habit of asking, “How can we share each other’s loads?” Sometimes she won’t tell you how hard things are because she wants to seem strong; she wants you to be proud of her and to believe she’s got it under control. What she often feels instead is shame or doubt — wondering if she can truly handle everything or whether she’ll be crushed by it all.
Also, it can feel like a gut punch when you’ve been gone for ten hours, come home, and your first words are “I need to decompress.” It stings even more if you then retreat and leave her alone again, even if you’re in the next room — that can feel like abandonment. I don’t think you’re deliberately selfish, but you may not be showing empathy for how overwhelmed and exhausted she might be. She’s been “on” since waking up with the kids in the night, while you just had thirty minutes alone in the car — when will she get her time to decompress?
I know it may sound trivial, but don’t walk in and ask, “What’s for dinner?” if she’s been running herself ragged all day managing kids and summer activities. Even when she’s spent the day doing everything, she still finds some superhero reserve to make dinner, and being met with that question can make her feel deeply unappreciated. I know you don’t mean it that way, so instead try this: if she likes affection, go give her a hug, maybe a long kiss. Look her in the eyes and say, “I’m so glad to be home.” Offer something like, “Go take a bath or go for a walk — I’ll handle this chaos for a bit.” Acknowledge the effort: “Thank you so much for making dinner. I know that couldn’t have been easy with these little monsters clawing at your legs. I really appreciate you, and I love you.” That takes thirty seconds, and those thirty seconds can dissolve more stress and frustration than you might imagine. Small gestures often have the largest impact, so ask her how much difference these simple changes would make.
Quick, practical ways to help right now
- Offer an immediate handover: as soon as you walk in say, “Tell me two things I can take off your plate in the next 20 minutes.” Then do them — no questions, no commentary.
- Give a concrete compliment that acknowledges effort: “I noticed how you planned today’s activities and still got dinner ready — that took a lot.” Specific praise feels real.
- Take evening routines completely: bathtime, dishes, bedtime stories — give her uninterrupted 30–60 minutes to rest or do something for herself.
- Use practical relief: pick up dinner, start the laundry, handle mail/scheduling, or put the kids in a short activity (reading, puzzle box, TV show) so she can breathe.
- Ask one direct, open question: “What would make you feel less overwhelmed this week?” Then listen and act on at least one thing she names.
Set up routines that protect decompress time
Stress and burnout are easier to prevent when you plan for them. Create a clear, shared plan for transitions between parent shifts: a short “handoff ritual” where whoever is taking over asks “What needs my attention right now?” and the other parent can say, “I need 30 minutes to myself.” Put that on the calendar and treat it like an important appointment. Build small daily rituals that help — a fifteen-minute check-in after dinner, a fixed night out once every two weeks, or a Sunday planning session to split chores and activities for the week.
Make the invisible work visible
One reason resentment builds is that emotional labor (planning doctor appointments, remembering permission slips, managing kids’ moods) is invisible. Make it visible:
- Create a shared checklist or app (shared calendar, task list) where both partners can see recurring responsibilities.
- Label tasks as “someone should own this” and rotate ownership so it’s fair over time.
- Break big tasks into smaller, time-boxed chunks — e.g., “I’ll handle groceries Tue morning; you handle bedtime Fri.”
Small systems that save big headaches
- Meal hacks: designate two “easy” dinner nights, one takeout night, and one meal-prep session on the weekend so dinner isn’t a daily emergency.
- Use timers: let each parent set a 20–30 minute uninterrupted break where the other covers the kids.
- Outsource where possible: grocery delivery, laundry service, or a cleaning help even once every two weeks can reduce cumulative stress.
Recognize signs of burnout and act early
Watch for persistent exhaustion, irritability, feeling numb or detached, increased illness, or a sense of hopelessness. These are signs the stress isn’t temporary. If you see them in your partner (or yourself), step up help immediately: more rest, fewer responsibilities, and professional support if needed.
Self-care and outside support
Self-care isn’t selfish — it’s necessary for being the parent you both want to be. Encourage short daily breaks, regular sleep, and social contact outside the family. Consider swapping childcare with other parents, hiring a babysitter for a few hours each week, joining a parent support group, or seeing a therapist to process feelings and build coping strategies. If there are signs of depression or anxiety that aren’t improving, contact a healthcare provider — don’t wait.
Simple communication phrases that help
- “I see you. Thank you for what you did today.”
- “I’m going to take over for the next 45 minutes so you can rest uninterrupted.”
- “Tell me one thing that stressed you out today so I can understand better.”
- “Would you like help with dinner or would you rather I handle bedtime?”
Relationships don’t need perfection — they need attention, empathy, and systems that protect both people. Making small, consistent changes is more powerful than rare grand gestures. If you start with curiosity and a commitment to share the load, you’ll both feel more supported, connected, and resilient. Try one of these ideas tonight and ask your partner how it changed the evening.

