I used to dread the drop-off.
Not because I didn’t want to see my kids. I did. Desperately.
But because I knew what came next.
The questions. The comparisons. The quiet inventory of everything I wasn’t giving them.
What did you do at Dad’s? Did you go somewhere fun? What did you eat? Did you have a good time?
I told myself I was just interested in their lives. But I knew the truth.
I was measuring. Counting. Trying to figure out if I was winning or losing the invisible competition I’d invented.
The other house had more space. More money. More spontaneous trips and takeout dinners.
I couldn’t compete with that.
So I tried anyway.
I overplanned our weekends. I filled every moment with activities. I exhausted myself trying to prove that our time was just as good.
Until one day, I stopped.
Not because I won. Because I realized I was running a race no one else was even in.
The invisible competition I couldn’t stop participating in

No one told me to compete. My ex never compared. The kids never complained. The competition was entirely internal. A voice in my head that said “you need to be better” every time they walked through the door.
So I tried to be better. More fun. More organized. More present. I planned elaborate outings. I bought the snacks they liked. I made sure every minute was accounted for.
But the more I tried, the more exhausted I became. And exhaustion doesn’t feel like good parenting. It feels like survival.
I was so focused on making our time special that I forgot to just be with them. I was performing. And kids can tell when you’re performing.
I remember one weekend in particular. I’d planned back-to-back activities—zoo, movies, a trip to the arcade. By Sunday afternoon, everyone was exhausted and cranky. My youngest looked at me and said, “Can we just stay home next time?” That stung. But she was right. I wasn’t giving them what they needed. I was giving them what I thought would prove something.
They know exactly who I am now
Here’s what I didn’t understand before. Kids need to know what to expect from you.
When I was anxious about competing, my anxiety leaked into the house. They could feel it. Even if I didn’t say anything. They were navigating my mood, trying to figure out if I was okay, if they needed to perform happiness to keep me steady.
Now they know exactly who I am when they walk through the door. Not a version trying to prove something. Just me. Calmer. Slower. Less reactive.
That predictability allows their nervous systems to settle. They don’t have to guess what kind of weekend it’s going to be. They don’t have to manage my feelings. They can just arrive. Be here. Relax.
That’s not a small thing. That’s the foundation of everything else.
The gift of making things low stakes
I used to think our time together needed to be memorable. Big outings. Special activities. Things worth reporting back to their other parent.
Now I know better.
A quiet Tuesday night making pasta together can be more grounding than a high-energy weekend at a theme park. Not because the spaghetti is special. Because there’s no pressure. No performance. No agenda.
Low stakes means we can just be together. No one is trying to win. No one is keeping score. We’re just… here. Making noodles. Eating it. Talking about nothing.
Those ordinary moments are the ones they remember. Not the elaborate plans. The calm. The presence. The feeling of being together without anyone trying too hard.
Last month, we had a whole weekend with nothing planned. No reservations. No tickets. Just us and a few days of empty space. We made popcorn and watched old movies. We took a walk that turned into a two-hour conversation about nothing. We sat in the backyard and watched the clouds. That weekend wasn’t memorable in the way I used to chase. It was memorable because it was easy.
What love looks like when no one’s performing
This is the part I didn’t see coming.
When I stopped competing, I stopped teaching my kids that their value is tied to what they have or do. I stopped modeling that love is about performance.
Instead, I started showing them something else. That connection is about presence. That being loved doesn’t mean being entertained. That their worth isn’t measured by how much fun they had or how many activities we packed in.
They’re learning, quietly, that the quality of a relationship isn’t about the big moments. It’s about the small ones. The ones where no one is performing. Where you’re just two people, in a kitchen, making toast, being together.
That’s the mirror I want to hold up. Not “look what I can give you.” But “look who we are when we’re not trying.”
What I stopped apologizing for
For years, I apologized for our quiet house. For not having a bigger yard. For cooking simple meals instead of elaborate feasts. I was always explaining, justifying, making up for something I thought we were missing.
I don’t do that anymore.
I don’t apologize for our ordinary weekends. I don’t explain why we didn’t go anywhere special. I don’t compare our time to their time at the other house. This is our life. It doesn’t need a defense.
The kids have never once complained about a quiet weekend. They’ve never asked for more activities or fancier meals. They’ve never compared out loud. The only person who was keeping score was me. And I’ve finally put down the scorecard.
Related Stories from Bolde
- Psychology says people who reread books they’ve already finished instead of starting new ones aren’t unadventurous — they’re choosing the certainty of a world they can trust over the small gamble of a new one, usually after a stretch where too little felt safe
- Psychologists say many women experience these 7 unexpected feelings of freedom once they stop quietly managing men’s behavior
- These 4 quiet forms of gaslighting may be showing up in your relationship without you knowing, according to psychologists
What grounded actually feels like
Grounded doesn’t feel exciting. It doesn’t feel like a vacation or a highlight reel.
It feels like Saturday morning in pajamas. Like pancakes that come out lopsided. Like a walk to the park without a plan. Like sitting on the floor playing a board game no one is trying to win.
It feels ordinary. And ordinary, I’ve learned, is where connection actually lives.
Not in the big moments. In the small ones. The ones you can’t plan. The ones that happen when you stop trying to make everything special and just let it be what it is.
What the kids get now
I asked my oldest once, casually, what they liked about being at my house.
I braced myself for something about the activities or the food or the things I’d planned.
She said, “You’re calmer now. It’s easier to just be here.”
That was it. Not the outings. Not the snacks. Not the elaborate plans. Just my calm. My presence. My willingness to let them just be.
That’s what they get now.
Not a super-mom. Just a mom who stopped competing and started showing up.
The real version. The tired version. The one who’s learning, right alongside them, that enough doesn’t have to be extraordinary.
It just has to be here.
Editor’s Note: This piece is part of our “As Told to Bolde” series where we share personal stories from individuals we have interviewed or surveyed. For more information on how we create content, please review our Editorial Policy.
Related Stories from Bolde
- Psychology says people who reread books they’ve already finished instead of starting new ones aren’t unadventurous — they’re choosing the certainty of a world they can trust over the small gamble of a new one, usually after a stretch where too little felt safe
- Psychologists say many women experience these 7 unexpected feelings of freedom once they stop quietly managing men’s behavior
- These 4 quiet forms of gaslighting may be showing up in your relationship without you knowing, according to psychologists