This week we talked about exhaustion, guilt, lack of support, and invisible pressure.
None of that is separate from parenting.
Because parenting doesn’t only happen in what you do for your children,
but in how you hold yourself while you hold them.
The self-sacrifice myth
Many parents were taught that good care means putting yourself last.
Enduring. Postponing. Adjusting endlessly.
But constant self-sacrifice doesn’t teach safety.
It teaches depletion.
Children don’t need perfect adults.
They need present ones.
Your inner state teaches, too
Children don’t just receive words and limits.
They absorb states.
They learn from:
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how you handle exhaustion
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how you speak to yourself when you make a mistake
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how you ask for help (or don’t)
Caring for yourself doesn’t weaken the bond.
It stabilizes it.
Care doesn’t have to be big
Self-care isn’t always about ideal free time or major life changes.
Most of the time, it’s smaller and more realistic.
It can look like:
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lowering one expectation
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saying no to something you can’t hold right now
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resting without explaining yourself
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naming what feels heavy
Small acts regulate, too.
Your care is part of the family system
When you care for yourself:
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your regulation improves
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limits become clearer
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connection flows with less effort
Not because everything is solved,
but because you’re not pushing from the edge.
🌱 Free resource: Huellac Self-Care Pack
This pack isn’t about optimizing yourself.
It’s about supporting you.
Inside, you’ll find simple resources to:
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offer emotional support
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regulate during the day
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remember that you matter too
📦 Download the Self-Care Pack
(Use it without pressure, whenever you need.)
A conscious closing
Caring for yourself isn’t selfish.
It’s coherence.
It shows your children
that care includes you as well.
Thank you for walking through this week with honesty.
We keep going together. 🌿
Y. Vargas. 💬💖
