The parent who cancels plans for the third time this month isn’t flaky—they’re running triage on a life where everyone else’s needs arrive before theirs and their friends stopped understanding that years ago

by Allison Price
March 4, 2026

Last week, I cried in my car after canceling coffee with a friend for the third time in two weeks because I knew that text would be the one that finally made her give up on me.

I used to be the friend who showed up: The one who remembered birthdays, planned gatherings, and never missed a chance to catch up.

Now? I’m drowning in a sea of permission slips, snack rotations, and meltdowns that happen precisely when I’m supposed to walk out the door.

Somewhere between my 2-year-old’s fever spike and my 5-year-old’s anxiety about tomorrow’s show-and-tell, I became the unreliable one.

But here’s what I need you to understand: When a parent cancels on you repeatedly, they’re not choosing their couch over your company.

They’re performing battlefield triage on a life where everyone else’s oxygen mask goes on first, and by the time they reach for their own, the plane has already landed.

The invisible labor that fills every gap

You know that moment when you’re finally about to leave the house and your toddler suddenly needs to poop? Or when you’ve arranged childcare but the sitter texts that they’re sick an hour before? These aren’t excuses.

They’re the reality of parenting young children.

Every plan I make exists in a fragile ecosystem that can collapse at the slightest disruption.

A nightmare at 3 AM means a cranky child who won’t let me leave their sight the next day, while a rash that appears at breakfast becomes an urgent care visit that swallows the morning.

The cat throws up on the only clean shirt I have left, and suddenly getting dressed becomes a 30-minute ordeal involving laundry and tears (mine).

What looks like poor planning from the outside is actually constant recalculation.

Can I make it to lunch if naptime runs late? Will my little one melt down if I’m gone for two hours? Is my partner’s work meeting really done by then, or will I get the “running late” text when I’m already supposed to be sitting down with you?

When your village becomes a ghost town

Remember when we all talked about how it takes a village to raise a child? Well, my village started shrinking the moment I made choices that didn’t align with mainstream parenting.

Choosing to breastfeed past a year, babywearing, co-sleeping – these weren’t judgments on other parents, but somehow they became walls between me and potential support systems.

The mom groups that meet during my kids’ nap times don’t work, the friends who don’t understand why I can’t just “get a babysitter” have stopped inviting me places, and the family members who think I’m “making things harder than they need to be” offer help that comes with lectures I don’t have energy to deflect.

So, when I cancel plans, I’m watching another thread in my already-threadbare social fabric snap.

Each canceled plan feels like confirmation that I’ve become exactly what I swore I wouldn’t: The parent who disappears into their children’s needs and emerges years later wondering where everyone went.

The math of emotional bandwidth

Let me paint you a picture of yesterday: My 5-year-old needed help processing a friendship conflict that left her in tears, while my 2-year-old refused to eat anything except crackers and had three potty accidents.

I mediated seventeen sibling disputes, answered roughly one million questions about why leaves change colors, and pretended to be interested in the same truck book for the eighth time.

By evening, when I finally had a moment to respond to text messages, I couldn’t string together a coherent response about weekend plans.

My brain was mush.

The thought of showering, putting on real clothes, and being conversationally present felt like being asked to climb Everest after running a marathon.

This is about the reality that emotional energy is finite, and when you’re the primary emotional regulation system for small humans who feel everything at maximum volume, there’s often nothing left for adult interactions that require you to be anything other than horizontal and silent.

The guilt that compounds everything

Want to know what makes it worse? The crushing guilt.

I lie awake at night crafting apology texts I’m too exhausted to send; I watch friends’ Instagram stories of brunches and gallery openings and feel like I’m failing at friendship while simultaneously failing at being present for my kids because I’m distracted by that failure.

When I chose a more natural, attachment-focused parenting path, I didn’t realize I was also choosing isolation.

The friends who formula-fed don’t understand why I can’t be away from my nursling for long.

The ones without kids don’t get why I can’t just hire someone to watch them.

The gentle parenting approach I’ve embraced means I’m not comfortable leaving my children with caregivers who might handle their big emotions differently than I would.

So, I cancel (again).

Each time, I feel the friendship cooling a little more, like watching ice slowly form over a pond I used to swim in.

What we’re really asking for

When a parent in the thick of it cancels on you, what they’re really saying is: “I’m drowning and I don’t know how to ask for the kind of help I need.”

They’re not asking you to understand the chaos (how could you, unless you’re living it?) but, rather, they’re asking you to hold space for a friendship that might look different right now.

Maybe instead of coffee out, it’s coffee at my house while my kids play.

Perhaps it’s understanding that I might have to pause mid-conversation to deal with a crisis involving whether the blue cup or the green cup is acceptable today.

Maybe it’s accepting that the person I am right now—covered in someone else’s breakfast, speaking in sentence fragments, crying at random commercials—is still worthy of friendship.

The friend we need you to be

After transitioning from teaching to freelancing when my first was born, I thought I’d have more flexibility for friendships.

Instead, I found myself more isolated than ever, juggling work during naps and after bedtime, trying to be everything to everyone and succeeding at nothing.

The friends who’ve stuck around? They text without expecting immediate responses, offer to bring coffee to my house, and understand when I have to cancel and don’t make me grovel for forgiveness.

They remember that underneath the yoga pants and unwashed hair, I’m still the person they chose to be friends with, just currently buried under layers of other people’s needs.

A love letter to both sides

If you’re the friend being canceled on, I see you: Your time matters, and your hurt is valid.

It’s okay to feel frustrated and even to need to step back if the friendship isn’t serving you.

If you’re the parent doing the canceling, I see you too: You’re doing your best in an impossible situation where everyone needs you to be everything, and there’s simply not enough of you to go around.

Maybe what we all need is to reimagine what friendship looks like during these intense parenting years.

Less dinner reservations, more playground meetups; less keeping score, more understanding that we’re all just doing our best with the resources we have.

One day, probably sooner than we think, our kids won’t need us in the same consuming way.

When we emerge from this fog, bleary-eyed and desperate for adult conversation, we’ll need friends who remember who we were before we disappeared into the beautiful, exhausting chaos of keeping small humans alive.

Until then, please don’t give up on us because we’re still here, buried under the laundry and the snack requests, missing you more than our canceled plans could ever convey.

 

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