Homeschooling my children is making me feel depressed and like a failure. what should i do?

When Homeschooling Feels Heavy

If homeschooling has you feeling depressed or like you’re failing, please know you’re not the only one. So many parents quietly carry those feelings, even while pouring their hearts into teaching at home.

I almost had a crash recently just because of pure exhaustion and dealing with changing behaviour from one of my boys.

Homeschooling is beautiful, but it can also feel like an endless weight. We are the teacher, the parent, the organiser, the encourager — sometimes it feels like too many hats on one head. And when the day doesn’t go as planned, it’s easy to believe the lie that you’re not enough.

But here’s the truth: you are not failing. The very fact that you care this much already means you’re showing up in the most important way.

If your heart feels heavy and you are flat out exhausted, here are a few gentle reminders from my heart to yours:

  • Keep it simple– Learning doesn’t have to look like a perfectly structured school day. Reading stories together, cooking a meal, going on a walk, or even long conversations all count as rich learning. Our children are always absorbing.
  • Let go of comparison– It’s so tempting to measure ourselves against polished blogs, Instagram accounts, or even traditional schools. But homeschooling isn’t about recreating the classroom. It’s about creating a space where our children can thrive in our family’s way.
  • Find your people– Homeschooling can feel isolating. Most days, it’s just us and our children in all things. So whether it’s a local co-op, a Facebook group, or a few trusted friends, connecting with others who “get it” can lift so much weight off our shoulders. Sometimes just hearing “me too” makes things lighter.
  • Take care of you, too- It’s easy to burn out when all your energy goes into teaching. Make time — even small moments — for things that recharge you. We can’t pour from an empty cup. A quiet walk, a favourite tea, a few minutes of journaling, a warm shower, and chat to a trusted friend— can help us feel more like ourselves.
  • Ask for support when you need it– If your feelings of sadness or failure don’t lift, reaching out to a counselor or doctor can make a world of difference. Getting help is not weakness; it’s strength.

Low-effort homeschooling hacks

I’ve thought of a few “low-effort homeschooling hacks” — ways to give our children meaningful learning while taking pressure off ourselves when things feel heavy.

1. Audiobooks = built-in teacher.
Pop on an audiobook during meals, car rides, or quiet time. Our children absorb so much just by listening — vocabulary, storytelling, history, even accents. (Bonus: you get a little break.)

2. Documentaries & educational shows count.
Sometimes we feel guilty about screen time, but there’s no rule that says learning can’t happen through TV. Nature documentaries, history series, cooking shows, even YouTube channels can spark amazing conversations, learning and curiosity.

3. Turn everyday life into lessons.
Cooking = maths (fractions, measurements), science (how heat changes things), and life skills. Grocery shopping = budgeting and planning. Nature walks = biology. We are always teaching way more than we realise.

4. Lean on online resources.
Free platforms like Khan Academy, Crash Course Kids, or even local library apps can take the teaching role for a while. We don’t have to reinvent the wheel.

5. Interest-led “unit studies.”
Instead of following a rigid schedule, pick something your child is already curious about (dinosaurs, space, baking, bugs) and weave lessons around it. Read a book, watch a video, do a craft — done! Children learn best when they’re interested.

6. Outsource where you can.
Co-ops, community classes, or even a trusted family member teaching a skill can give you breathing room. You don’t have to be the expert in every subject.

7. Embrace “slow days.”
Not every day has to be full of worksheets and structured lessons. Sometimes a day of reading, drawing, building Legos, or just talking counts just as much as the busy days.

On the really heavy and exhausting days, I remind myself that the secret to homeschooling is that it doesn’t have to look like school at home. The most powerful thing our children gain is the time, attention, and love that I am giving them.

Love, Alethea

The invisible (yet powerful) economy of homemaking

There’s a quiet economy at work within the walls of a home—one that doesn’t show up on pay slips, spreadsheets, or CV’s. It’s an economy of presence, peace, and provision – one that has taken a long while to settle in my own heart. Coming into marriage and home life from the path of corporate career experience and ambitions , this new path forged by my husband and I was one riddled with insecurity and uncertainty on my part. Accepting that there is also so much worth here, and also means to steward, be creative with and multiply our income breathed new life into my understanding and vision of the home economy.

Homemaking may not always earn an income, but it builds something far richer: stability, trust and belonging. The fruit of it isn’t always immediate, but it is lasting—and far-reaching and in today’s post I want to share a little bit about that.

What is a home economy?

A home economy refers to the way resources—both tangible and intangible—are managed within a household. Traditionally, it’s about how a home operates in terms of stewardship, budgeting, production, and care, all within the unique rhythms and values of a family. It’s not just about money; it’s about the whole ecosystem of a home and how it’s sustained.

A few key elements of a home economy

1. Resource management

This includes managing time, money, energy, food, space, and even emotions of all those that live in your home. Budgeting, meal planning, scheduling, and caregiving are all forms of resource stewardship that keep the household running smoothly.

2. Homemaking as production

While we often think of “production” as something that happens outside the home because it can be measured and scaled, a homemaker also produces meals, routines, clean spaces, emotional support, traditions, and a sense of safety. These things are intangible, and they form the culture and stability of a home.

3. Values-based priorities

Every home has its own “economic system” based on what it values most—peace, hospitality, learning, sports, health, faith, or rest etc. The home economy reflects those values in how time and energy are spent. It’s a slow, often invisible investment in people and purpose.

4. Relational economy

At the heart of the home economy is relationship. Time spent nurturing children, building a marriage, or hosting others isn’t transactional—it’s transformational. It builds emotional wealth and spiritual inheritance that can’t be bought.

So yes, I don’t currently earn a paycheck anymore in the way that I have grown up to know it because in this season, my work is to build up my home economy so that as a family unit we work really well.

There are no deposits with my name on them. No promotions, no raises, no quarterly reviews. No line in our family’s budget that’s “mine,” and for a long time, that quietly haunted me.

While I pour out my days in love and labour — in lunch bags, washing and wiping — a small voice sometimes whispers: “But you’re not contributing. You’re just dependent.”

I used to have my own income. My own purchases. My own ability to say, I’ve got this.

Now, as a full-time homemaker, I offer different gifts: patience, consistency, planning and organising. peacekeeping, cooking, teaching. praying for and with my family, giving big deep hugs, love and smiles to my family. These are not things you can quantify — or add to a bank account.

And that’s exactly what makes this role hard to value in a world that ties worth to a salary.

Sometimes I second-guess even small purchases. I hesitate before I press “buy,” not because I don’t trust my husband’s love, but because something in me wonders if I’ve earned the right to spend. Even in a marriage built on grace, that weight can linger.

And yet, here’s what I’m learning:

I may not bring home a paycheck — but I bring everything else.

I bring a steady presence.
I bring a safe home.
I bring meals, prayers, structure, softness, and sacrifice.

And most importantly, I bring my whole self.

That’s not financial dependence. That’s soul investment.


A Kingdom Perspective

The world sees one income and a woman who has “given it all up”, but God sees a household held together by mutual trust and quiet faithfulness. In James 1:17, we’re reminded:
“Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights.”

The income we live on is His. The work I do here — unseen, unpaid — is also His. There is no hierarchy in the Kingdom economy. There is only obedience. And while I may not get paid in pounds, I remind myself often that I’m being paid in something far deeper: Moments. Memories. Heart-shaping. Soul-growing. A front-row seat to childhood, and my life.

So if you’re feeling the ache of not earning…

If you’re wondering if you’re doing “enough” because you’re not bringing in money… Remember: your value is not attached to a paycheck. You are not a burden — you are a builder. You are not dependent — you are entrusted.

God is not asking you to bring income.
He’s asking you to bring faithfulness, trust and your heart each day.

And friend, that’s exactly what you’re doing.

Reframing the perspective for stay at home mums

Choosing motherhood and homemaking is far from a wasted life.

In a world that often equates success with visibility, speed, and accolades, choosing a life of motherhood and homemaking can feel quietly radical.

It’s a path full of unseen moments—toys everywhere, whispered prayers of desperation, patient corrections, and countless acts of service that rarely make headlines. But what the world overlooks, God treasures. This life—your life—is not small. It is sacred.

This post is an invitation to see your everyday with new eyes. To shift from simply surviving the tasks of home and motherhood to embracing them as part of a deeper calling. You’ll find encouragement to anchor your heart in truth, to find purpose in the small things, and to remember that your role carries eternal weight—even when no one else sees it.

What I feel

“This matters”. It is a constant, inner dialogue between my heart and mind—reminding myself that this path, though often unseen or undervalued, holds deep meaning and purpose.

Culture tells me that a successful life looks a certain way—the way of the majority. Because it has been glamorised, measured, and praised, so anything outside that mold can feel small or insignificant.

But the truth is, shaping a home is no small task. Nurturing children, creating peace in a space, building traditions, and tending to the needs of a family requires wisdom, strength, and a kind of love that doesn’t always receive applause. There are no promotions or performance reviews here—only the quiet, sacred rhythms of service and presence.

Still, there are days when the lies whisper louder than truth. Days when dishes pile up, children cry non stop, don’t listen and fight all day, and the world outside feels like it’s rushing ahead while I move slowly, wearily and deliberately, through another load of laundry. I sometimes wonder, Is this enough? Am I enough? And in those moments, I have to claw my way back to what I know deep down: that the unseen work of love is never wasted.

I’m learning that success isn’t always visible, and won’t always feel instant. Sometimes it looks like a child who feels safe, a marriage strengthened by small acts of kindness, or a home filled with peace and a warm meal rather than “perfect”. These things can’t be measured by certificates of well done or accolades, but they matter—deeply. I may not be building a career by the world’s standards, but I’m building something far more eternal: hearts, values, and a legacy of love.

Being at home is a deeply meaningful calling that I am finding is not just shaping my children, but also changing me.

Here are a few thoughts that I hold onto to encourage myself on this journey. I hope they’ll also help you in reframing your perspective if you are a stay at home mum.

1. Recognise the eternal value of your role

It’s easy to overlook the significance of what you do when so much of it happens behind closed doors and without recognition. But motherhood and homemaking are not just tasks—they are eternal investments. Instead of seeing homemaking as mundane, view it as a God-given calling to shape and nurture your family. Proverbs 31:27 says, “She watches over the affairs of her household and does not eat the bread of idleness.”

Every meal prepared, every gentle and firm correction, every bedtime story and prayer whispered over a sleeping child is a seed planted into a soul. Yes, these quiet, repetitive acts may seem ordinary, and can get tiresome, but in God’s eyes, they are weighty with purpose. We are shaping hearts, anchoring lives, and reflecting His love in the most tangible way. We shouldn’t underestimate the eternal value of our role—it reaches far beyond what the eye can see.

2. Shift from “just a mum” to “A builder of the home”

I heard a good friend of mine refer to herself in this way and it struck me deeply. I thought “wow what a beautiful and thoughtful way to describe your presence and role in your home”.

Maybe you’ve heard it said,—or have said it yourself—with a shrug: “I’m just a mum” ” I stay at home with the kids”. After your journey of pregnancy and childbirth, that phrase just carries a weight of dismissal that doesn’t belong. Motherhood is not a lesser calling; it is a foundational one. How quick we are to forget this.

When we shift our mindset from just a mum to a builder of the home, we begin to see our days differently. We are not merely managing messes—we are laying bricks of stability, love, and faith. We are crafting the atmosphere our families breathe. A builder is intentional, strong, and purpose-driven—and that is exactly what you are. You’re not filling time; you’re forming lives.

The world may minimise homemaking, or trivialise it, but Scripture elevates it. Titus 2:4-5 encourages women to love their families and care for their homes. Instead of saying, “I’m just a stay-at-home mum,” say, “I am building a home filled with love, faith, and peace.” Our work is foundational to a thriving household.

3. Find purpose in the small things

So much of homemaking and motherhood is made up of the small things—folding socks, wiping counters, answering endless questions, preparing yet another meal. It can feel unnoticed, repetitive, and, at times, insignificant. I’ve had days when I felt like I would explode with the overwhelm, yet it’s in these very moments that purpose quietly blooms. I know that God doesn’t just measure worth by grand gestures or public applause; He sees faithfulness in the hidden places, and I have to remind myself that when I choose to serve with love in the mundane, I am living out a holy calling. The small things—done with a willing heart—are not small to Him. They are sacred building blocks of a life poured out in love.

When the days feel heavy or unnoticed, pause and whisper a short prayer over what you’re doing—“Lord, let this simple act be an offering of love.” It helps shift your focus from the task to the purpose behind it. Even a folded towel can become holy ground when done with intention and grace.

4. Prioritise personal & spiritual growth

In the busyness of serving everyone else, it’s easy to forget that your soul needs tending too. But personal and spiritual growth aren’t luxuries—they’re lifelines. This is one of the areas that I struggle in often due to sheer exhaustion and lack of motivation at times.

Yet when we pour out daily for our families, we also need space to be poured into- well. Growing in your faith, learning new things, or simply taking quiet moments to reflect are not selfish acts—they’re wise and necessary. A nourished soul creates a nourished home. The more rooted you are in truth, the more grace, patience, and love you’ll have to give. You can’t pour from an empty cup, and God never asks us to run dry.

I start my day—even if it’s just five minutes—with a verse, a journal, or a whispered prayer before the house wakes. It doesn’t have to be long or perfect. What matters is the consistency of showing up and making space for your heart to breathe.

5. See homemaking as a ministry

It can take time to view our homes as a place of hospitality, love, and discipleship. I used to believe that anything worth doing had to be seen and felt by the masses, however ministry doesn’t only happen on stages or in mission fields; it happens right here—in our kitchens, gardens, and bedtime routines. When you begin to see your home as holy ground, the ordinary transforms into something sacred. Your faith is lived out in real time, shaping hearts in the most personal and lasting way.

We are the first example of Christ our families see day in and day out. Our kindness teaches grace, our patience teaches peace, and our sacrifice teaches love over time. Though this kind of ministry may not be noticeable immediately, its impact reaches far into eternity. It’s important to train our minds to start viewing our daily work through the lens of worship. Whisper this simple reminder to yourself: “This is not just work—it’s worship. This is not just a house—it’s a haven.” When we frame our homemaking as service to God, even the smallest acts take on eternal significance.

6. Embrace the season you’re in

Ecclesiastes 3:1 tells us, “There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens.” It’s a verse I think about often because it helps to center me in the truth that nothing truly lasts forever. Motherhood and homemaking may feel all-consuming now, but this season is temporary. Every season of life brings its own rhythm—some fast and full, others slow and stretching. It’s easy to look ahead and long for the next stage, or to look back and grieve what’s passed (guilty). Yet there is beauty and purpose right where we are.

God doesn’t waste seasons.

Whether you’re in the thick of newborn days, navigating school years, or adjusting to a quieter home, there is something He wants to teach you here. Embracing the season you’re in doesn’t mean it’s easy—it means we are willing to see it as meaningful, even in the mess, the mundane, or the mystery.

When we stop resisting the present and start receiving it, peace begins to grow. It frees us from comparison and expectation and allows us to truly live the moments we’ve been given. This season—whatever it looks like—is part of your story, part of your shaping, and part of the legacy you’re building.

Here’s a tip for you: write down three things each day that are unique to this season and thank God for them. Gratitude softens the edges and helps our hearts settle into the now.

Final thoughts

To the women quietly walking this road—those who have chosen to pour their lives into homes, children, and the unseen corners of daily life—know this: your work matters. It is not small. It is not second-rate. You are part of something sacred, something that will echo through generations. When the world questions your worth, hold fast to the truth: choosing love, presence, and faithfulness is never a wasted life. In fact, it may be the most meaningful work of all.

How to find value being at home

I remember the day I had THAT conversation with my boss, and handed in my resignation. I had a reliable job, a predictable rhythm, a reason to dress up, show up, and get things done. There was clarity in that world — performance reviews, deadlines, emails, rewards, outcomes. Yet I knew God was calling me out of it. Not because the work wasn’t good, but because from the moment I gave birth to my first son, I could sense Him whispering something deeper in my heart: Come home.

So with questions, fears, uncertainty and courage I said OK.

In many ways, it was beautiful. Slower mornings. More time with my babies. The chance to build something sacred behind the scenes.

But it wasn’t all soft lighting and a peaceful, pristine looking home.

What I didn’t expect was the quiet ache — the questioning of my worth, the mental weight of the mundane and of caring for all the people in my home, the way my world seemed to shrink even as my responsibilities multiplied. I left one kind of work and entered another — one that was far less recognised, but no less demanding.

I struggled to understand how valuable I could be, and yet, again and again, the Lord kept on reminding me: This work matters.

If you’re reading this as a mother who’s come home full time — or is thinking about it — and you’re struggling to feel the value in what you now do day after day, I want to gently offer this space and my thoughts. Not a formula or a fix, but a re-framing. A way to see our role not through the lens of the world, but through the eyes of a God who honours faithfulness in the hidden places.

This is for the mothers, the homemakers, the soul-weary women wondering if they’re doing enough.

I’ll be sharing some honest thoughts about why it feels hard to find value at home, and talk about how to find value here — not just in spite of the hiddenness, but because of it.


Cultural expectations & feminism’s influence

For much of modern history, staying home with your children was the norm. But in recent decades, the cultural message has shifted: women are told that success means being independent, career-driven, self-actualised, and visible in the public sphere. While there’s a lot of beauty in the opportunities now available to us as women, it can also create confusion and guilt when we recognise that are hearts are naturally tethered to home and yet we feel as though by saying yes to home, we are “wasting our potential” or “playing small.”

Many waves of feminism brought important progress: voting rights, workplace protections, and educational opportunities. But along the way, the narrative subtly shifted to suggest that “real empowerment” looks like career success, financial independence, and freedom from traditional roles. In that framework, choosing to stay home — to embrace motherhood as your main vocation — can be seen as backwards, even disempowering. It’s hard to feel proud of something the culture says we should have outgrown.

I am not sure if you’ve felt it, but I have felt the unspoken expectation that women should be mothers and entrepreneurs, and influencers, and side-hustling creatives. Being “just a mum” or “just at home” feels too quiet — too hidden — to count. But that’s a cultural lie, not God’s truth. Faithful homemaking might not be flashy, but it’s foundational. It builds souls. And the people right in our homes, matter just as much and even more than public applause.

Yet because society puts such weight on measurable outcomes, many of us who choose to be stay at home mums feel the need to justify our time: starting a small business, monetising a hobby, or curating a perfect online presence — just to prove that we’re still contributing. But this pressure can steal the peace and purpose of the home-centered calling, turning rest into hustle.

In Titus 2 and Proverbs 31, we see that home-making, child-raising, and nurturing a household are deeply valued by God. Not because they limit a woman, but because they root her in Kingdom work. It’s not about traditionalism — it’s about truth. God created women with the capacity to conceive, carry, nurture, cultivate, and lead in ways that often flourish in the context of home. That calling is not second-class. It’s sacred.

Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will. Romans 12:2


Lack of Recognition & Value

What I didn’t fully understand when coming home, was that homemaking and motherhood involve countless tasks—cooking, cleaning, childcare, emotional support—but these contributions often go unnoticed. Unlike a job with promotions and recognition, being a homemaker doesn’t come with tangible rewards or external validation, making us easily feel as though our work is invisible and undervalued, if we do not find encouragement and conviction within.

As human beings, we long to know that what we do matters. That our labour isn’t just effort, but impact. When society consistently overlooks or minimises homemaking — treating it as “less than,” unpaid, or unambitious — it chips away at the sense of purpose that comes from it. It becomes hard to keep showing up with heart when the world acts like you’ve opted out of something more “valuable.” Especially when we are also dealing with the chaotic and unpredictable nature of raising young children.

Modern society tends to praise what earns money, what’s seen, and what scales, and in turn we do too. But homemaking is slow. It’s deeply relational, cyclical, and intimate. You don’t “finish” homemaking — you return to the same dishes, the same floors, the same emotional needs every day. Pouring, filing, loving, and caring. Without broader cultural affirmation, it’s easy to internalise the lie that this work isn’t “real” work.

More times than I care to admit, I have wondered Am I doing enough? Am I wasting my potential? Would I be more respected if I were doing something else? It’s especially on the days when fatigue is at an all time high, I am over touched, stimulated and extremely short on patience. I realise that taking the time to build a home requires maximum effort and strategy.

In Colossians 3:23, Paul writes: “Whatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lord and not for men.” That includes laundry, nappy changes, making dinner, planning the week ahead. The unseen and the unglamorous. When we lose sight of the fact that homemaking is holy work — offered not just to our families, but to God — we start to believe the world’s narrative instead of God’s.


But here’s the truth:

Homemaking is not small. It’s kingdom work.
It’s soul-tending, heart-shaping, and legacy-building.
It’s building a haven in a chaotic world.
It’s servanthood, often without applause — but always seen by the One who matters most.

And when you feel the sting of being undervalued, remember: even Jesus washed feet. Not for applause, but for love.


Loss of Identity & Independence

Many women struggle with losing a sense of self when they dedicate their lives to their families. Before children, I had a career, hobby, and a clear idea of my creative pursuits. The shift to full-time homemaking felt isolating, especially with a lack of support and a big reduction in my time and energy to pursue creative outlets that would allow me to maintain my personal growth.

Likewise, homemaking can blur your sense of self. Before motherhood or homemaking, my identity was certainly tied to things like a career, personal interests, achievements, and even my name — not just “Mum” or “Babe” or “Where’s my sock?” Suddenly I found that my life had become centered around meeting everyone else’s needs, it can be easy to forget who you are apart from your roles.

Being a homemaker often means surrendering personal time, adult interaction, and even financial independence. You can’t clock out. The truth is that you can’t always make choices for yourself without considering how they affect everyone else. Even simple things — like going to the shop alone — become luxuries. That loss of freedom, if not acknowledged and supported well, can lead to quiet resentment or a sense that your life has been absorbed into everyone else’s.

Society doesn’t celebrate self-giving — it celebrates self-fulfillment and we live in a culture that preaches: Be your own boss. Chase your dreams. Put yourself first. But homemaking often calls you to do the opposite: to put others before yourself, to lay down parts of your life (even temporarily) for the sake of another. That’s radically countercultural — and when the outside world keeps shouting that you’ve “lost yourself,” it can be hard not to wonder if it’s true.

Without margin — emotional, spiritual, or creative — it’s also easy to feel like you’re just surviving, not becoming and thriving. And when you don’t see yourself growing, it can feel like you’re stuck, like who you were is slowly fading without something new rising in its place.


But here’s the truth:

Jesus said, “Whoever loses his life for my sake will find it” (Matthew 10:39). This isn’t about erasing ourselves, but about allowing God to reshape our identity in deeper, eternal ways. While the world tells us to find ourselves by doing more, the Gospel tells a different story: we find our truest self in the laying down, in the unseen faithfulness, in the love that gives.

You have not lost yourself.
You are being formed — in the hidden places, in the daily choices, in the humility of service.
You are becoming more whole, not less — even if it feels like a breaking.
Your identity is not erased by motherhood or homemaking; it is being refined, like gold in the fire.

Your value is not in what you produce or how free you feel — but in who you are, and Whose you are.


Monotony & Mental Load

Homemaking is a loop, not a finish line. You clean the kitchen… only for it to be messy a few minutes later. You fold the laundry… only for more to appear within hours. There’s no final product. No final “ta-da!” moment. It’s a well worn and well lived connected life and the constant repetition can make our work feel invisible — and even pointless at times — even though it’s deeply meaningful.

Also, the mental load of homemaking is relentless. We are the keeper of appointments, groceries, events, clothing sizes, emotional climates, relational tension, snack preferences, and who last took a bath. The planning is a full-time job in itself — and unlike a paid role, there’s no handoff at 5 p.m., no weekend shift rotation. You carry it all, often silently.

I’ve found that it’s also hard to feel creative or alive when I am running on empty. The monotony of routines — breakfast, dishes, naps, dinner, repeat — can numb the soul if there’s no space for rest, worship, or beauty. Without outlets to create, explore, or be poured into, it’s easy to feel like you’re just surviving, not living. That lack of stimulation or personal growth can make the role feel more like duty than delight.


The Truth Beneath the Tiredness

The world may not reward the daily acts of care, but the Kingdom does. In Matthew 6, Jesus reminds us that the Father who sees in secret will reward you. Folding laundry with love, wiping counters with grace, answering the same question a hundred times with patience — these are hidden offerings and in God’s economy, hidden doesn’t mean insignificant.

You are not failing because you’re tired of the monotony.
You are not less holy because you feel overwhelmed.
You are a human carrying sacred work that was never meant to be glamorous — only faithful.

You are building rhythms of safety, love, and consistency for your family. That kind of work is the foundation of flourishing — and though it feels like monotony, it’s actually soul-shaping repetition.

And yes, the mental load is real. But so is the God who offers rest to the weary, and wisdom to those who ask.


Financial Dependence

This is also a tough area for me, because we live in a world that says, “If you’re not contributing financially, you’re not contributing.” It’s subtle, but it’s everywhere — in media, conversations, even internal narratives. When you’re not bringing home an income, it can start to feel like you’re not pulling your weight, even though you are carrying the emotional, physical, and spiritual load of an entire household. When you’re not earning income, spending money — even on small things — can start to feel loaded with guilt or hesitation.

You may second-guess your needs, delay purchases, or feel like you have to justify everything. I have had to become more disciplined in this area which is a good thing, and share honest worries with my husband so that I remember that we are one team.

If you once earned your own income, managed your own schedule, and made financial decisions independently, the shift to relying on someone else — even your loving spouse — can feel like a loss of self. It definitely did for me! I’ve found myself grieving that freedom, even while being very grateful for my current role. Even in the most loving, grace-filled partnerships, money has power. When one person earns and the other doesn’t, there can be subtle dynamics of control, decision-making, or even self-censorship. You might feel like you have “less say” or like your contributions are less tangible — even though they are absolutely vital.


The Truth Beneath the Insecurity

Scripture reminds us in James 1:17 that “Every good and perfect gift is from above.” Your household may be operating on one income, but ultimately, it’s not your spouse who sustains you — it’s God. He is the provider, and He honours the unseen labour of the homemaker just as much as the work of the one earning the paycheck. The Proverbs 31 woman didn’t just bring home income — she brought wisdom, order, nourishment, and strength to her home. That’s kingdom wealth.

You may not sign a paycheck.
But you sign every permission slip, every grocery list, every appointment reminder.
You orchestrate peace, build schedules, soothe hearts, make dinners stretch, and turn houses into homes.

That’s not dependency.
That’s investment.
And it’s legacy work.


Comparison & Social Media Pressure

Social media shows the best 5% of other people’s lives — the spotless kitchens, perfectly dressed and coordinated children, mums who seem to juggle business, baking, Bible study, and beauty sleep without blinking. When I look at my life, it often doesn’t look anything like that. It feels as though I am living in my real 100%: the messes, the meltdowns, the mental fatigue, and this gap creates an ache — not because I am failing, but because I am human.

Homemaking doesn’t often look impressive online. Unless your home is photo-worthy, you have a lot of hired help, or you’re doing a trendy renovation, homemaking work is rarely celebrated on social media. Folding laundry, managing sibling fights, or planning meals on a tight budget aren’t “Instagrammable.” So the slow, sacred faithfulness of your daily work feels again invisible. Forgettable. Less than.

Maybe you see women your age launching businesses, writing books, or speaking at conferences while you’re just trying to get everyone to the breakfast table without tears and spilt milk. I tell you, those mornings can sometimes send me right over the edge and I start to wonder: Am I wasting my life? Should I be doing more? It’s easy to forget that your “more” might not be loud or public — but it is just as meaningful.


The Truth Beneath the Scroll

In Galatians 6:4, Paul says, “Each one should test their own actions. Then they can take pride in themselves alone, without comparing themselves to someone else.”
God didn’t call you to someone else’s life. He called you to this home, these children, this season. Not to impress the world, but to serve Him in secret — where true treasures are stored.

You don’t need to look like her.
You don’t need to do what she’s doing.
You are not behind. You are not less.

If you’re building a home of peace, if you’re shaping hearts with gentleness, if you’re staying faithful in small, unseen ways — you’re doing holy work.

Social media might not clap for you.
But heaven sees.
And heaven applauds.


Spiritual & Societal Misalignment

For Christian women, homemaking can be viewed as a calling, but modern culture often dismisses faith-based perspectives on motherhood and family life. I feel the tension between my biblical values and society’s messaging that a career is the only path to fulfillment. Society says: Be independent. Be ambitious. Be seen. The Gospel whispers: Be faithful. Be humble. Serve in secret.

These two voices aren’t always at war — but they rarely walk hand-in-hand. When you choose homemaking as your calling, you might feel like you’re swimming against the current of modern culture, where success is often measured by visibility, productivity, and external achievement.

Choosing to stay home, serve your family, and live quietly before the Lord is sometimes seen as regressive or even oppressive. The modern narrative says, You deserve more than dirty nappies and dishes. And that message can make even the most joyful homemaker second-guess herself. It’s hard to feel empowered when your life looks so radically different from the cultural script.

When your life is rooted in spiritual conviction, but the world doesn’t understand or value those convictions, it’s easy to feel isolated. Homemaking, done unto the Lord, is an act of worship. But worship isn’t always recognised. It doesn’t win awards or get likes. That can be disheartening — unless your eyes stay fixed on Jesus.

Sometimes, even Christian spaces elevate platformed ministry over quiet obedience. You might feel less “useful” because you’re not leading a study, writing a book, or starting a business — even though you’re building a home, sowing Scripture into your children, and laying down your life daily. It’s a lie that says only public faithfulness matters.


The Truth Beneath the Tension

You were never meant to fit perfectly here.
Your calling as a homemaker — shaped by the Spirit, anchored in Scripture — will look strange in a culture that chases self-glory.

But that doesn’t make it less sacred.

It makes it set apart.

You’re not behind. You’re not small.
You’re right where God has placed you — and that is holy ground.


Reframing our perspective

Homemaking will rarely get a standing ovation from the outside world.
There are no medals for folding the fiftieth load of laundry, no awards for whispering peace into a toddler’s tantrum, no public applause for creating a home where hearts can exhale.

But there is a quiet glory here.

A sacredness in the slow.
A strength in the unseen.
A worship woven into the wiping, the washing, the welcoming.

When we reframe our perspective, we begin to see homemaking not as a lesser path, but as a deeply formational one — shaping souls, stewarding peace, and partnering with God in the hidden rhythms of redemption.

We are not “just” at home.
We are curating spaces where people are known, nourished, and nurtured.
We are writing legacy in the ordinary.

And maybe the world will never quite understand.
But heaven does.

God sees every quiet sacrifice, every faithful choice, every moment when you lay down your life in love — and He calls it beautiful.

So let’s lift our eyes.
Let’s reframe the work.
Let’s remember that this, too, is Kingdom ground.

You are not less because you are at home.
You are planted here — with purpose.

And that, dear friend, is a holy calling.

How to build a home schedule that works

If you’re anything like me, juggling the homeschooling of three energetic boys and in general young children can sometimes be so overwhelming. Between the teaching, snack breaks, constant tidying up of little people and cooking, it can feel like the day is running us instead of the other way around. But fear not! I’m here to share some tips on how to build a home schedule that actually works—at least most of the time.

Be flexible

First things first, let’s talk about flexibility. As much as I love the idea of a perfectly structured day, with every minute accounted for, I’ve learned that life with kids, especially boys, just doesn’t work that way. There’s always going to be something that throws a wrench into our plans, whether it’s spilled food, an unexpected discovery of a “treasure” in the garden, or a tired and unmotivated gloom of the day. So, while it’s important to have a schedule, it’s equally important to hold it loosely. I like to think of our schedule now as more of a guideline than a strict timetable.

Create blocks of time

One thing that has been a game-changer for us is creating blocks of time instead of specific time slots. For example, we have a morning block for our core subjects like devotion, maths, reading, penmanship etc, an afternoon block for creative activities, and an evening block for family time. This way, if we spend a little extra time on a science experiment (or cleaning up from said experiment), it doesn’t throw the whole day off. It gives us the flexibility to dive deeper into subjects that capture the boys’ interest without feeling rushed.

Another tip is to incorporate plenty of breaks. Boys, in particular, seem to have an endless supply of energy, and expecting them to sit still for hours on end is a recipe for disaster (I’ve tried and learnt my lesson)! We do short bursts of focused learning followed by movement breaks. This may mean a quick game of hide and seek, a workout break, a few minutes on the trampoline, or even a spontaneous dance party in the living room with a Youtube video. These breaks help them burn off energy and come back to their work refreshed and ready to concentrate. I’ll always communicate to them and let them know what’s coming next in the day. This helps to prevent tantrums and resistance when it’s time to move on to the next activity.

Time for ourselves

It’s also crucial to build in some time for ourselves – even though most of the time it feels absolutely impossible! This season simply doesn’t permit me to have my free time as I would like all the time so I am learning that it is possible to infuse things that I enjoy throughout my day. Considering this as self care really helps me to know that I am not counting myself out of the family schedule and planning.

Whether it’s a quiet cup of tea before the boys wake up, a quick workout, some time spent in prayer and reflection, spraying a little perfume, a 5 minute make up routine, or putting on smart clothes for the day, taking care of ourselves even in the littlest way helps us to take better care of our families Remember, you can’t pour from an empty cup. So, carve out those moments of rest and rejuvenation whenever you can.

Use tools to stay on track

Using tools to stay on track can be incredibly helpful in maintaining a sense of order in the home. I have found that keeping a family calendar on the fridge helps everyone stay informed about daily plans and responsibilities. Additionally, a simple to-do list or planner can bring structure to the day and prevent tasks from feeling overwhelming. Personally, I enjoy using a prayer journal alongside my schedule—it not only keeps me organized but also allows me to reflect on God’s presence in my day-to-day life. Whether it’s a digital app or a traditional planner, having a system in place makes a big difference in staying consistent and finding peace amidst the busy routine.

Reassess and adjust regularly

Reassessing and adjusting regularly is crucial to maintaining a healthy and sustainable home schedule. It’s one of the things that I really struggled with initially, but the reality is that life is constantly changing—children grow, schedules shift, and unexpected circumstances arise. Taking time each month or even each week to evaluate what’s working and what’s causing stress can make a big difference. I like to pray over my schedule, asking God for wisdom to discern what needs to be adjusted. If a routine is feeling burdensome, it might be time to simplify or delegate tasks. Being flexible allows for grace in our daily lives, ensuring that our schedule serves us rather than us becoming slaves to it. Adjustments are not signs of failure but of growth and intentionality in creating a home filled with peace and joy.

So there you are! A few tips which I hope you’ll find helpful and encouraging. Building a home schedule that works is all about finding what fits your family’s rhythm and being willing to adjust as needed. With a little planning, a lot of flexibility, and a healthy dose of humor, you can create a routine that keeps everyone learning, laughing, and loving the homeschooling and home life. Keep up the great work, mama! You’ve got this.

When doubt creeps in: Encouragement for the homeschooling mum who feels she might have made the wrong choice

I don’t know about you, but there are some days when I look around at the chaos of our homeschool and wonder, What in the world is going on? The boys are arguing, fighting and screaming over toys, I am getting resistance with sit down book work and reading, and my youngest is determined to turn all the walls of my house into his museum of drawings. Meanwhile, I’m nursing a cold cup of coffee, a very messy kitchen (even though it was cleaned the night before), and sleepiness from waking up at 4:45am just to get a head start on the day before everyone wakes up. With fatigue, strain, frustration and overwhelm at an all time high, its easy to question whether we made the right decision to homeschool.

Some days, these are my thoughts, so first of all, I want to assure you that if you have felt any of this, you are not alone. There is no homeschooling mum on this planet (or probably even in the universe, if alien homeschooling mums exist) who hasn’t wondered at least once if she made a monumental mistake. It’s normal. We’ve all had those moments of doubt—when the curriculum doesn’t click, when the kids resist every lesson, or when we constantly feel that we are not enough. But let me remind you of something that God has been whispering to my heart lately: His grace is sufficient. Even on the hard days. Especially on the hard days. Here’s a beautiful hymn for you to tuck away in your heart.

I get it, though. It’s easy to romanticise homeschooling before we start. We picture morning devotionals with well-behaved children, afternoons spent exploring nature, and evenings reading classic literature in a cosy setting. Reality looks a little more like Weetabix smeared on every surface, (AND THEN DRYING IN A BLINK OF AN EYE!!), disruptive food requests every. five. minutes, and a “read-aloud” where you’re the only one actually listening to the story. And yet, even in the mess, there are so many beautiful moments waiting to be noticed.

A few tips and encouragement

When doubt comes knocking, I’ve found it helps to revisit why my husband and I chose this path in the first place. For me, it’s about nurturing my boys’ hearts as much as their minds. It’s about weaving our faith into their education and having the freedom to teach them in a way that honours their unique gifts and strengths. Yes, even when those gifts include making fart noises during lessons. (Lord, give me strength with these boys.)

Sometimes we just need to change our perspective. If a lesson is flopping or the kids are bouncing off the walls, maybe it’s time to pause the plan for the day. Go outside for a walk (which is my absolute go to), build a blanket fort, or get in the kitchen and bake and call it “life skills.” It all still counts. I have learnt that homeschooling isn’t about sticking rigidly to a schedule; it’s about creating a life where learning happens naturally and joyfully—well, most of the time for the children, and for us as mums.

Another thing that helps is connecting with other homeschooling mums. Join a co-op, find a support group, or just call that one friend who always “gets it.” There’s something so comforting about hearing someone else say, “Oh, me too!” We were made for community, and sharing our struggles often lightens the load.

Grace is available

Don’t forget to extend yourself some grace. God didn’t call us to this journey because He thought we would do it perfectly. He called us and wants us to depend upon Him every step of the way. Your children don’t need a perfect teacher; they need you. They need your love, your laughter, and yes, even your occasional meltdowns. (I firmly believe that seeing us apologise, pray for strength, handle difficult moments and regroup is an important life lesson for them.)

So, on the days when you’re tempted to throw in the towel, remember this: You are planting seeds, even when you can’t see the harvest yet. The hard days are part of the story, but they’re not the whole story. And who knows? Maybe one day, your children will look back on these years and thank you for the gift of learning together. They’ll remember a specific day (that you thought was pretty awful) and say that was one of the best moments of their lives. Or at least in my case they’ll remember how to bake really good cakes. Either way, you’re doing just fine, Mama. Keep going. ❤️

Crafting Timeless Moments: A Christian mother’s thoughts on creating special family memories

One of the big things on my heart is to create and experience special moments with my most favourite people- my husband and my 3 sons. It is a privilege to have the opportunity to plan creative and unique experiences that I pray will be etched onto our hearts for years to come.

Bringing us closer together as a unit is a worthwhile pursuit and deeply fulfilling to my mama heart. In a world filled with distractions and an easy inclination toward busyness, I can see already at this early stage of my families journey that it is essential to carve our moments that will strengthen the bonds between the five of us. In this blog post, I wanted to share some fun and faith-filled ways to build special memories with your family.

Document your family journey

I am sure like me, you have thousands and thousands of photos of your family on your phone! I try my best to not just be present in the moment, but to capture it for us to look back on and remember. That moment of remembering is so powerful for me as I lie in my bed at night and look back, and when we sit together to recall a family holiday or adventure that we were on together. Creating a beautiful roundup of your life, year upon year in photobook format is a great way to display and celebrate special memories.

Serving others together

When we do something good for others, we open up our hearts for God to do a work within us. When we invite others to come alongside us to serve, it seems as if there is a tangible knitting of our hearts with theirs. Serving others in any capacity as a family creates hearts that are missional and that have found a bigger purpose. This is an area of my personal life that I haven’t explored much but I want to learn. One way of doing this is through hospitality and opening my home to friends, families and even strangers. Preparing dishes to fill the hearts and bodies can create wonderful bonding experiences and memories, and helps foster community.

Establishing family traditions

When I gave birth to my first son I started thinking of family traditions that were unique to us, practical, special and that could be easily added without much overwhelm. Here are a few things that we do while the children are still very young:   

  • Saturday breakfast, evening mealtimes (if daddy is at home)
  • Friday games night and chips
  • Sunday movie nights
  • Morning Bible reading/short devotion
  • Regular nature walks          
  • We plan a trip either abroad or within the UK once a year.                           

These are a few things that we have started with consistently. They mean a lot to us and I look forward to seeing how it grows over the years!

It’s thinking about legacy. Pondering on and implementing the experiences that etch deep imprints into the hearts of those that we love and even ourselves, so that when we are long gone, the memories and traditions carry on a flame as a reminder of relationship and the privilege God gave us to know, love and celebrate one another.

Acknowledging milestones and celebrating one another

This is an area that is not only a great way to foster a positive and supportive family culture, but also add significant personal meaning to the individual being celebrated. They feel seen, valued and cared for and that’s the aim.

Timeless Family Bonding: Insights from a Christian Mother

One of the big things on my heart is to create and experience special moments with my most favourite people- my husband and my 3 sons. It is a privilege to have the opportunity to plan creative and unique experiences that I pray will be etched onto our hearts for years to come.

Bringing us closer together as a unit is a worthwhile pursuit and deeply fulfilling to my mama heart. In a world filled with distractions and an easy inclination toward busyness, I can see already at this early stage of my families journey that it is essential to carve our moments that will strengthen the bonds between the five of us. In this blog post, I wanted to share some fun and faith-filled ways to build special memories with your family.

Document your family journey

I am sure like me, you have thousands and thousands of photos of your family on your phone! I try my best to not just be present in the moment, but to capture it for us to look back on and remember. That moment of remembering is so powerful for me as I lie in my bed at night and look back, and when we sit together to recall a family holiday or adventure that we were on together. Creating a beautiful roundup of your life, year upon year in photobook format is a great way to display and celebrate special memories.

Serving others together

When we do something good for others, we open up our hearts for God to do a work within us. When we invite others to come alongside us to serve, it seems as if there is a tangible knitting of our hearts with theirs. Serving others in any capacity as a family creates hearts that are missional and that have found a bigger purpose. This is an area of my personal life that I haven’t explored much but I want to learn. One way of doing this is through hospitality and opening my home to friends, families and even strangers. Preparing dishes to fill the hearts and bodies can create wonderful bonding experiences and memories, and helps foster community.

Establishing family traditions

When I gave birth to my first son I started thinking of family traditions that were unique to us, practical, special and that could be easily added without much overwhelm. Here are a few things that we do while the children are still very young:   

  • Saturday breakfast, evening mealtimes (if daddy is at home)
  • Friday games night and chips
  • Sunday movie nights
  • Morning Bible reading/short devotion
  • Regular nature walks          
  • We plan a trip either abroad or within the UK once a year.                           

These are a few things that we have started with consistently. They mean a lot to us and I look forward to seeing how it grows over the years!

It’s thinking about legacy. Pondering on and implementing the experiences that etch deep imprints into the hearts of those that we love and even ourselves, so that when we are long gone, the memories and traditions carry on a flame as a reminder of relationship and the privilege God gave us to know, love and celebrate one another.

Acknowledging milestones and celebrating one another

This is an area that is not only a great way to foster a positive and supportive family culture, but also add significant personal meaning to the individual being celebrated. They feel seen, valued and cared for and that’s the aim.