You know that moment when your husband takes the kids to the grocery store solo and comes back to a hero’s welcome from friends and family?
Meanwhile, you’ve been doing the weekly shopping with both kids in tow for years, and nobody’s ever thrown you a parade.
I was thinking about this last week when my husband got home from taking our two little ones to the park.
Our neighbor actually stopped to tell me what an “amazing, hands-on dad” he is.
There’s something worth examining in how we collectively respond to fathers doing basic parenting tasks versus mothers doing those exact same things day after day.
The bar for being called an “involved dad” sits somewhere around ankle height, while moms are expected to leap tall buildings without anyone noticing.
1) Taking kids to doctor appointments
Remember the last time you scheduled, rescheduled, and finally dragged both kids to the pediatrician while juggling work calls in the waiting room? Yeah, me too.
I’ve memorized our insurance card numbers, know exactly which pharmacy has the grape-flavored antibiotic, and can predict with scary accuracy how long we’ll wait based on which day we go.
But, when dads take kids to one appointment?
“Wow, he’s so involved!” gets thrown around like confetti.
A friend recently told me her husband received actual applause from the nurses when he brought their daughter in for her shots.
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Applause! I’ve been bringing kids to appointments for five years, and the most recognition I’ve gotten is a reminder card for the next visit.
The mental load of tracking immunization schedules, developmental milestones, and which kid is allergic to what?
That’s just assumed to be mom territory.
2) Handling bedtime routines
Every single night, like clockwork, I navigate the chaos of teeth brushing, pajama negotiations, story selections, water requests, and the seventeen different ways a toddler can delay sleep.
I’ve perfected the art of reading a book while mentally planning tomorrow’s lunch boxes and remembering to switch the laundry.
Yet when dad handles bedtime solo because mom has book club?
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The group texts light up with “You’re so lucky!” and “What a keeper!”
As if participating in the nightly routine of getting your own children to sleep is some extraordinary act of service rather than, you know, parenting.
3) Staying home with sick kids
How many times have you answered the daycare’s call about a fever, dropped everything, and spent the next three days covered in various bodily fluids while trying to work from home?
For moms, this is just Tuesday.
We keep the Pedialyte stocked, know exactly how to get medicine into a resistant toddler, and have mastered the art of the one-handed email while holding a feverish child.
But when dad takes one sick day to stay home with a sniffly kid? He’s practically nominated for sainthood.
“Such a dedicated father!” people say, while mom has burned through her entire sick leave for the year and nobody bats an eye.
4) Managing meal planning and cooking
Three meals a day, seven days a week, factoring in preferences, allergies, nutrition, budget, and the mysterious phenomenon where yesterday’s favorite food becomes today’s poison.
I plan, shop, prep, cook, serve, and clean up more meals than I can count.
When my husband makes Saturday pancakes (which he does religiously and wonderfully), visitors act like he’s performed actual magic.
“He cooks! How amazing!”
Meanwhile, I’ve prepared approximately 1,825 other meals this year, but apparently that’s just what moms do.
5) Remembering all the things
Who needs to bring what to school tomorrow? When is picture day? Did we RSVP to that birthday party? Where are the spare clothes for accidents? Which lovey absolutely cannot be forgotten?
This mental calendar runs constantly in the background of every mom’s brain.
We’re walking, talking family management systems, keeping track of shoe sizes, favorite snacks, friend drama, and which kid is going through what phase.
When dads remember to pack the diaper bag correctly once? “He’s so thoughtful and prepared!”
When moms do it daily? That’s just expected.
Nobody’s impressed that you remembered the wipes, the spare outfit, the snacks, the toys, and the backup pacifier.
That’s just baseline mom performance.
6) Taking kids on errands
Dragging kids through Target, the bank, the post office, and the car wash is my weekly cardio routine.
I’ve perfected the art of keeping a toddler entertained in checkout lines and negotiating with a five-year-old about why we can’t buy every toy we see, but watch what happens when dad takes the kids to run errands.
Photos get posted, and comments roll in about what a “hands-on father” he is.
The grocery store clerks practically throw him a ticker-tape parade.
Meanwhile, I’ve been hauling these same kids through stores since they were newborns, and the only recognition I get is judgy looks when someone has a meltdown in aisle seven.
7) Handling morning routines
The daily miracle of getting small humans fed, dressed, teeth brushed, bags packed, and out the door on time?
That’s my morning marathon.
I can make breakfast while braiding hair, finding lost shoes, and signing permission slips simultaneously.
When dad handles one morning routine solo, the daycare teachers act like they’ve witnessed a miracle.
“Dad did drop-off today!” they announce, as if a father bringing his own children to school is breaking news.
Never mind that mom has done the previous 247 drop-offs without fanfare.
8) Managing the emotional labor
Who noticed that one child seemed quiet at dinner? Who remembers which kid is worried about the upcoming field trip? Who tracks the subtle friendship dynamics and knows when someone needs extra cuddles?
This emotional attunement, this constant monitoring and responding to our children’s inner worlds, is invisible labor that moms do every single day.
We’re nurturing their emotional development, mediating conflicts, and providing a safe space for big feelings.
When dads have one heart-to-heart with a child? “He’s such an emotionally available father!”
Yet, when moms do this emotional heavy lifting daily? It’s just motherhood.
Finding the balance
Look, I’m not here to bash dads or suggest they don’t deserve recognition.
My husband is genuinely wonderful, and I want him to feel appreciated.
What bothers me is the stark difference in how we respond to mothers versus fathers doing identical tasks.
Where dads taking kids to appointments is as unremarkable as moms doing it; where the standards and expectations are the same regardless of which parent shows up.
Until then, I’ll keep doing what I do every day without applause or recognition because that’s what parenting looks like.
The real work happens in those countless, unnoticed moments.
Honestly? Both moms and dads who show up for those moments deserve credit, whether they get it or not.
