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Lone parents

Use our Single Parent forum to speak to other parents raising a child alone.

Any other lone parents struggling without a regular break from the children?

53 replies

aAaAaAaAhh · 27/05/2026 22:19

Im feeling so depressed never getting a break from my kids. I can’t explain how much happier I would have been to get every other weekend to myself! All the single mums I know get eow free which might not seem like a lot but that would be loads to me. It’s starting to depress me. They’d also be happier. Is anyone else in the same boat?

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
Wishitsnows · 27/05/2026 22:31

Hey, I’m not in your situation but just want to say I hope it’s gets better. I’m sure it will as they get older. You are doing an amazing job of two people.

aAaAaAaAhh · 27/05/2026 22:32

They are older and it’s not better if anything it’s worse but thanks for commenting

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Lamanamechange · 14/06/2026 13:02

Yep, also in same situation, it’s shit. After 6 years without a break - regular, or even once a year - I feel utterly broken. And really there isn’t a light in sight. Not for me anyway. I am sick of feeling this way

putitonthewrongway · 14/06/2026 13:48

Yes it’s completely relentless. My mum does take mine occasionally though so I am grateful for that. I think the most difficult part is not having someone else to talk to or hand them over to for a second when you are at the end of your tether. Can you get a friend to stay over with you at the weekends? I do that occasionally when things are too much. It’s nice to have company whilst parenting. And if I’m lucky the friend will bring me a coffee in bed and get up with my kids. Just not being the one to have to get up really helps.

DaisyChain505 · 14/06/2026 13:57

How old are they @aAaAaAaAhh

aAaAaAaAhh · 14/06/2026 14:07

putitonthewrongway · 14/06/2026 13:48

Yes it’s completely relentless. My mum does take mine occasionally though so I am grateful for that. I think the most difficult part is not having someone else to talk to or hand them over to for a second when you are at the end of your tether. Can you get a friend to stay over with you at the weekends? I do that occasionally when things are too much. It’s nice to have company whilst parenting. And if I’m lucky the friend will bring me a coffee in bed and get up with my kids. Just not being the one to have to get up really helps.

No unsurprisingly they don’t want to spend their child free weekends with me and my kids 😓 can’t say I blame them

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putitonthewrongway · 14/06/2026 14:22

@aAaAaAaAhhhave they said that or is that what you are worried about? Perhaps if you told them you are struggling they might realise they need to support you x Or reframe it as, “I’d really like to hang out with you but it’s tricky because of the kids do you fancy a takeaway at mine?”

I do find trying to be social is the best way to combat these feelings though. Getting out and seeing adults makes me feel better. But I completely understand everything is so difficult and relentless sometimes x

aAaAaAaAhh · 14/06/2026 14:23

Yes they have said it

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aAaAaAaAhh · 14/06/2026 14:24

One is a teacher and has told me she doesn’t want to be around kids when she’s not working

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putitonthewrongway · 14/06/2026 14:50

@aAaAaAaAhhoh that is really a shame. I won’t make all the usual suggestions about babysitters and your kids sound too old for playgroups…I’m sure you’ve heard it all before (as I have)! When I’m very low I often send voice notes to a friend and it makes me feel like I can vent to someone without having any advice given!

DaisyChain505 · 14/06/2026 14:52

How old are they?

aAaAaAaAhh · 14/06/2026 14:56

I’d prefer not to say their ages as it doesn’t change things

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Lulumush · 14/06/2026 14:59

Mine are 13 and 14. Put them into air cadets when they were 12 and it's changed my and their lives. Regular weekends away and week long camps in all holidays. And they love it. As do I with the peace and freedom. Can't recommend highly enough if you have one near you.

DaisyChain505 · 14/06/2026 15:23

aAaAaAaAhh · 14/06/2026 14:56

I’d prefer not to say their ages as it doesn’t change things

Of course it does. There’s a big difference between a 3 and a 6 year old and a 10 and 13 year old couple of kids.

People can’t really give you any advice when you’re being that vague.

aAaAaAaAhh · 14/06/2026 15:28

Well this was just a vent and to see if anyone else was in the same boat, I often feel like the only single mums whose kids dad doesn’t have them (even though I know I’m not) but it would be nice to hear it’s not just me

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mondaytosunday · 14/06/2026 15:33

Sure. My DH passed away suddenly when my kids were 4 and 6. My siblings and parents lived in another country. My in laws had never showed much interest, so it was me. The kids were in school by then, but every decision, every chore, every household or parental task was down to me. It was hard, and reached peak when my son was a teenager - unfortunately coinciding with the pandemic. Physically not an issue, though childcare is tiring. But the psychological toll was, and is, immense.

junenotoffred · 14/06/2026 16:11

It’s absolutely relentless, and unfortunately people who haven’t been in the same position just don’t understand how doing absolutely everything every.single.day for years on end & never, ever getting a break destroys you. I’m 12 years in and get it, no suggestions sorry, just solidarity. It’s really tough & beyond exhausting.

MonaChopsis · 14/06/2026 16:16

I was, it's better now mine are teens and more independent. It was really tough for a long time though, and Covid lockdowns nearly broke me. I send sympathy.

Theseagullsarenowclouds · 14/06/2026 16:36

Yes. One teen has SEN which has exacerbated things.
If I didn't have to work PT I think I'd have coped better over the years. I spent many years wishing for a reason to be hospitalised just for a break, when in reality my family live miles away and my kids would be stuck.

putitonthewrongway · 14/06/2026 18:06

@aAaAaAaAhhyou are not alone in your situation, and it’s so tough and feels so fucking unfair sometimes x

Lamanamechange · 15/06/2026 00:09

I was chatting to ChatGPT regarding my problems as a lone parent. They characterised them like this:

“This setup (100% lone parenting with no other familial supports or respite) is exceeding human capacity, and without some recurring off-duty time being engineered somewhere, numbness is an expected outcome.

It’s continuous caregiving load with no recovery system available in your current environment.

In that situation, what you’re feeling—numbness, loss of joy, sense of being trapped—stops being surprising. It becomes the expected human response to sustained overload without relief.

So where does that leave you?

Not with “solutions,” but with three honest realities:

  1. You are past the point where normal coping strategies apply

Things like mindset shifts, gratitude, routines, or small breaks don’t touch the core issue if there is no actual time off.

  1. Your experience is consistent with chronic overload

Not depression in the “internal malfunction” sense—more like a system with no downtime running for too long. Even with antidepressants, that won’t fully lift if the load structure doesn’t change.

  1. The problem is now structural, not personal

And structural problems are the hardest ones because they don’t respond to effort in the same way.”

KnittyKnotty · 15/06/2026 00:12

Are you working Mon-Fri? I had to reduce my days to 4 to give me one day of bliss when I was at home having a proper chill out book reading day when the kids were at school.

aAaAaAaAhh · 15/06/2026 00:29

I don’t think a few hours will cut it tbh I get the odd few hours to myself very occasionally but thats spent running errands or cleaning it’s not really a break im talking about a weekend to myself where I don’t have to think about kids all weekend, but thanks for the comment i do appreciate them

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Lamanamechange · 15/06/2026 00:29

ChatGPT also said:

One thing that struck me earlier was that you didn’t say, “I need a holiday.” You said, “I feel numb, joyless, without freedom.”

That’s the language of someone whose life has become almost entirely duty.

I suspect there is also a grief component here that doesn’t get acknowledged much. Not grief for your children. Grief for:

  • the weekends you don’t have,
  • the relationships you can’t sustain,
  • the version of yourself who had interests and choices,
  • the ability to be a person before being needed by someone else.

That grief can sit in the background for years and masquerade as depression, exhaustion, or numbness.
….

What I’m hearing is that your life has become continuous responsibility. Not responsibility punctuated by freedom. Just responsibility.
So when you tell me you’re numb and joyless, I don’t immediately think, “How do we get more gratitude into your life?” I think, “Of course something important is starving.”

Because the version of you that exists outside of work and caregiving barely gets any oxygen.
There’s another aspect that I think deserves acknowledgment.

What you’re longing for isn’t only rest. It’s psychological release.

A weekend where the children are elsewhere but you’re still on call, coordinating, worrying, preparing for Monday, and managing logistics isn’t the same thing.l

The fantasy that seems to emerge from your words is:

For 48 hours, nobody needs anything from me.
No decisions.
No planning.
No emotional labour.
No appointments.
No household management.
No childcare.
Just being a person.

That’s a very understandable thing to want.
The difficult reality is that wanting that doesn’t automatically make it available. And that’s where a lot of grief comes from. Sometimes the thing we need most is not currently obtainable in the amount we need it.

You may find that part of your sadness isn’t just about the present. It may also be about not being able to see when this changes.

Humans tolerate hardship much better when they can see an end point.

A marathon runner knows the finish line exists.

A lot of lone parents of children with additional needs don’t have a clear finish line. The future can feel like an endless extension of the present.
I wonder whether some of what you’re feeling is not just exhaustion, but the loneliness of carrying a burden without a visible horizon.

When someone is in a state of:

  • numbness
  • lack of freedom
  • no support buffer
  • ongoing full-time responsibility
the risk isn’t necessarily immediate crisis, but gradual flattening of the self—losing access to preference, desire, and emotional range over time.

That’s why this feels so bleak. Not because you are failing, but because there is no “recovery gap” in your life where your nervous system can reset.

The only thing I can say that is still honest and not empty. If nothing external changes right now, then the realistic aim is not happiness. It is: preventing further narrowing of your world while you are in this phase”

Frankly, i think it is completely understandable that lone parents struggle so much

Lamanamechange · 15/06/2026 00:33

In short OP, yes, I suspect all lone parents are struggling without a break. You are not alone. It’s terrible to be a lone parent without any break or respite.

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