Healing Trauma While Parenting: A Guide for Exhausted Mums
Let’s be honest. Nobody tells you that healing trauma while parenting feels like trying to rebuild a house whilst living in it during a bloody cyclone.
You’re already running on empty. You’re touched out, overwhelmed, and questioning every parenting decision whilst trying to process your own shit. And society? They’ll tell you to “just breathe” or “practice self-care” like you have hours to spare for bubble baths.
I’ve been there. Sitting on the bathroom floor at 2am, crying into a towel because it’s the only place you can fall apart without little eyes watching. You’re not broken. You’re not failing. You’re a mum trying to heal generational trauma whilst keeping tiny humans alive, and that’s bloody heroic.

The Truth About Healing Trauma While Parenting
Here’s what the wellness industry won’t tell you: healing trauma while parenting is messy as hell. It’s not linear. Some days you’ll feel like you’re making progress, and then your toddler will have a meltdown that triggers your own childhood wounds, and you’ll feel like you’re back at square one.
That’s normal.
Your nervous system is trying to heal from old wounds whilst managing the constant stress of keeping small humans safe. You’re not doing it wrong – you’re doing something impossibly hard.
Why Traditional Self-Care Advice Falls Short
• “Take time for yourself” – With what time? And who’s watching the kids?
• “Just relax” – Tell that to my hypervigilant nervous system
• “You can’t pour from an empty cup” – My cup has been empty for years, mate
The truth is, healing trauma while parenting requires a completely different approach than what you’ll read in most self-help books.
What Actually Works: Micro-Healing Moments
Forget hour-long therapy sessions you can’t afford or meditation retreats you’ll never attend. Healing happens in the spaces between nappies and school pick-ups.
1. The 60-Second Nervous System Reset
Download my free 60-Second Nervous System Reset Cards here.
When you feel triggered, you don’t need a whole morning routine. You need something that works right now:
• Four deep breaths – in for 4, out for 6
• Ground your feet on the floor
• Name three things you can see around you
That’s it. No fancy equipment, no perfect conditions. Just 60 seconds to tell your nervous system you’re safe.

2. Healing Through Your Kids (Yes, Really)
Your children can actually be part of your healing journey. When you’re reading them a bedtime story, you’re practising being present. When you’re cuddling during a movie, you’re learning safe touch. When you comfort them through a tantrum, you’re learning to regulate emotions.
This isn’t about using your kids as therapists – it’s about recognising that parenting can be healing work too.
3. Rewriting Your Inner Dialogue
That voice in your head saying you’re screwing up your kids? She’s not telling the truth. She’s echoing old wounds that convinced you that you’re not enough.
Try this: When you catch yourself thinking “I’m failing them,” pause and ask:
• Is this actually true, or is this my trauma talking?
• What would I tell my best friend if she said this about herself?
• Am I judging myself by impossible standards?
Professional Help That Actually Fits Your Life
Let’s talk about therapy. You need it, you deserve it, and yes, it’s worth the investment – even if it means eating beans on toast for a week.
What to Look For:
• Trauma-informed therapists who understand how trauma shows up in parenting
• Online sessions you can do during nap time or after bedtime
• EMDR or somatic therapy that works with your body, not just your thoughts
• Therapists who get it – preferably ones who are parents themselves
Can’t afford therapy right now? I get it. Start with journaling. Get those swirling thoughts out of your head and onto paper. It’s not a replacement for professional help, but it’s a bloody good start.
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Setting Boundaries When You’re Too Tired to Fight
Boundaries aren’t selfish – they’re survival. But when you’re trying to heal trauma while parenting, even thinking about confrontation feels impossible.
Start Small:
• Say no to one unnecessary obligation this week
• Ask for help with one specific task
• Limit social media to certain times of day
• Create a “no visitors” rule when you need space
You don’t owe anyone an explanation for protecting your peace.
Dealing With Unsolicited Advice
When someone says, “Have you tried just staying positive?” you have permission to:
• Change the subject
• Say “Thanks, I’ll think about it” and move on
• Set a firm boundary: “I’m not looking for advice right now”
You’re not required to educate every person who doesn’t understand trauma or mental health.
Breaking the Cycle (Without Breaking Yourself)
One of the biggest fears I hear from mums is: “What if I’m passing my trauma to my kids?”
Here’s the truth: Awareness is already breaking the cycle. The fact that you’re conscious of your patterns, that you’re actively working to heal – that’s generational healing in action.
What Your Kids Actually Need:
• A mum who’s trying (not perfect)
• Emotional honesty (age-appropriate, of course)
• Repair when you stuff up (and you will)
• Unconditional love (which you’re already giving)
Perfect parents raise anxious kids. Real parents who own their mistakes and keep trying? They raise resilient humans.

The Support You Actually Need
Stop trying to do this alone. I know it feels like admitting weakness, but isolation makes everything harder.
Build Your Village:
• One trusted friend who listens without judgement
• A mothers’ group (online counts)
• Professional support when you can manage it
• Family members who actually help instead of criticise
If your own mother is part of your trauma, it’s okay to limit contact whilst you heal. You’re not obligated to maintain relationships that harm your recovery.
When Partners Don’t Understand
“Just get over it” or “That was years ago” – sound familiar? Your partner’s lack of understanding doesn’t invalidate your experience.
Consider couples therapy or having them read about trauma. But don’t let their discomfort stop your healing.
The Marathon, Not the Sprint
Healing trauma while parenting is a bloody marathon, not a sprint. Some days you’ll feel strong. Other days you’ll cry in the pantry whilst eating your kids’ snacks. Both are okay.
Progress looks like:
• Noticing your triggers faster
• Apologising when you react from old wounds
• Asking for help without feeling guilty
• Believing you deserve healing
You don’t have to be healed to be a good mother. You just have to be trying.
Your Permission Slip
You have permission to:
• Heal at your own pace
• Have bad days without guilt
• Prioritise your mental health
• Not be grateful for trauma just because it made you stronger
• Take up space with your feelings
• Rest when you need to
Healing trauma while parenting is messy as hell, but it’s still worth it. Not just for your kids, but for you. Because even when shit gets dark, you still shine.

You’re not broken. You’re not failing. You’re a warrior healing trauma while parenting in real time. That’s not just survival – that’s transformation.
And love? You’re already enough, exactly as you are.

If this hits you hard….
You’re exactly who I write for. You don’t have to grieve this alone.
- Download my FREE 60 Second Nervous System Reset Cards
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Briony Bianca
Hi, I'm Briony
I’ve lived through trauma, chronic illness, and a lifetime of being misunderstood. Now, I’m here to turn my pain into purpose. This space is for women who feel unseen, exhausted, or broken but still want to heal, grow and find light again – in real, imperfect ways.
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