My daughter sent me seventeen photos yesterday. Her toddler eating breakfast, playing with blocks, having a meltdown over socks. Each one perfectly lit, carefully framed. And all I could think was how familiar that kitchen looked—not hers, but mine from thirty-five years ago, when I was raising three kids with no smartphone to document the loneliness.
I want to tell her the truth. That I spent most of the 1980s feeling like I was drowning in isolation while everyone pretended motherhood was supposed to feel natural and fulfilling every single moment.
But how do you tell your grown child that all those photos she’s sending—her way of staying connected, of proving she’s doing it right—won’t fix the fundamental loneliness of being home with small children?
The mythology of maternal bliss needs to die
Back then, we didn’t have Instagram or Facebook to show us how inadequate we were, but we had something almost worse: the conspiracy of silence.
Every mother I knew was performing happiness. We’d meet at the park, kids running wild, and we’d talk about recipes and stain removal like these were the pressing issues of our lives. Nobody admitted they cried in the bathroom. Nobody said they fantasized about getting in the car and just driving.
My mother had been a homemaker who made everything from scratch—bread, yogurt, even our clothes—but she was anxious all the time. I inherited her dedication to doing things the “right” way but also her tendency to feel like I was constantly failing.
The difference was, she had her mother living two streets over and a sister who dropped by twice a week. I had a husband who worked sixty-hour weeks and a pediatrician who told me crying babies build character.
When did we decide mothers should do this alone? When did we accept that raising humans—the most important work there is—should happen in isolation behind closed doors?
Those perfect squares won’t capture the real story
My daughter’s photos are beautiful.
Her little one—my grandchild—glowing in morning light, covered in finger paint, asleep in impossible positions. But what those photos don’t show is what happens in between. The long stretches of nothing. The negotiations over every bite of lunch. The way time moves differently when you’re alone with a toddler, how an hour can feel like a whole day.
I remember my middle child going through a phase where they would only eat white foods. Rice, bread, milk, bananas if I was lucky. This lasted three months.
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Three months of me alone in that kitchen, trying seventeen different ways to sneak nutrition into a stubborn three-year-old while the baby cried and my oldest needed help with homework. No photo could capture the desperation of those moments. The way I’d stand at the sink afterward, dishes piling up, wondering if other mothers felt this defeated.
But here’s what really gets me: even if I’d had a camera phone then, even if I’d documented every moment, it wouldn’t have made me feel less alone. Connection isn’t about proof of life. It’s about someone else being there in the mess with you.
We’re still doing it wrong
You know what’s changed since the 1980s? Now we have more ways to document our isolation. We have mom groups online where everyone shares their wins but rarely their defeats. We have endless photos that make us feel like we’re sharing our experience when really we’re just broadcasting into the void.
My daughter works part-time from home. She’s trying to balance everything—the natural parenting choices she believes in, the screen-free childhood she wants for her kid, the organic meals she thinks she should be making.
And she’s doing it mostly alone, just like I did. Her husband helps when he can, but he’s got his own pressures. The grandparents (that’s me) live forty minutes away. Close enough to visit but not close enough to just drop by when she needs twenty minutes to shower in peace.
Sometimes I want to shake her and say: stop taking photos and start asking for help. Call me when you’re losing it, not after you’ve cleaned up and gotten the perfect shot. But I remember being her age, thinking I should be able to handle it all. Thinking that needing help meant I was failing.
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The village was never optional
Humans evolved to raise children in groups.
Anthropologists will tell you that.
For thousands of years, children were raised by extended families, communities, tribes. Multiple adults sharing the load, older children helping with younger ones, knowledge passed down through generations of people who were actually there, in your home, touching your baby, making your meals while you recovered.
What we’re doing now—this isolated nuclear family thing where one or two adults are responsible for everything—it’s an experiment. And from where I’m sitting, having lived through it once and watching my daughter live through it now, the experiment is failing.
I think about the times I felt most supported as a young mother. It wasn’t when people liked my photos (we didn’t have that), or when someone told me I was doing a great job (though that was nice). It was when my neighbor knocked on my door with a casserole. When my friend took my oldest for an afternoon without me asking.
When another mother at the playground saw me struggling and said, “This is really hard, isn’t it?”
What I wish I could tell her (and what I actually do)
I want to tell my daughter that it’s okay to admit this is harder than she expected. That feeling isolated doesn’t mean she’s doing it wrong. That all those photos she’s taking might be better replaced with a phone call saying, “Mom, can you come over? I’m struggling today.”
But I also remember being young and needing to figure things out for myself. So instead, I tell her smaller truths. When she sends the photos, I respond with more than just heart emojis. I tell her about the time her brother refused to wear clothes for a whole week.
About how I used to cry every Sunday night, dreading another week of being alone with three kids. I try to make space for her reality beyond the photos.
And sometimes, I just show up. With food she doesn’t have to cook. With arms that can hold the baby while she takes a long shower. With the admission that I felt lonely too, that I still feel guilty about how much I struggled, that none of us are meant to do this alone.
Moving forward means looking back honestly
We need to stop pretending that modern motherhood—whether it happened in 1985 or 2024—is working as designed. The tools change but the isolation remains. We need to admit that raising children without consistent, present support is unnatural and unnecessarily difficult.
I see my daughter trying so hard to do everything right. The organic food, the wooden toys, the limited screens, the gentle parenting. And I want to tell her what I wish someone had told me: none of that matters as much as not doing it alone.
A child raised on chicken nuggets in a house full of loving adults will thrive more than one raised on organic vegetables by an isolated, depleted parent.
Those seventeen photos my daughter sent yesterday? They’re her way of reaching out, of trying to share this experience, of making it feel less lonely. But what she really needs—what we all need—isn’t more documentation of our lives. It’s more participation in them. More hands, more hearts, more people who show up without being asked.
The loneliness of motherhood isn’t a personal failing. It’s a structural one. And until we admit that, we’ll keep passing this isolation down from generation to generation, just with better cameras to capture it.
