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