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Postpartum Guilt: Why You Feel This Way (And How to Cope)
You're sitting in the nursery at 3 AM, feeding your baby, and all you can think is, "I should be enjoying this."
Everyone told you these moments are precious, fleeting, to be cherished. But all you feel is exhausted, resentful, and overwhelmingly guilty for feeling that way.
Or maybe you went back to work and spent the whole day missing your baby—but also relieved to be away. Now you're drowning in guilt, convinced you're failing at both motherhood and your career.
Or perhaps you snapped at your partner, forgot to change the baby's diaper for hours, scrolled social media instead of doing tummy time, or felt nothing but annoyance when your baby cried. And the guilt is crushing.
Welcome to postpartum guilt—the unwelcome companion to new motherhood that nobody warns you about.
🤔 What Is Postpartum Guilt?
Postpartum guilt is persistent, overwhelming guilt about your thoughts, feelings, choices, or actions as a new mother.
It's the feeling that you're constantly failing, doing it wrong, or not measuring up to some impossible standard of "good motherhood."
This isn't about occasional guilty moments. Every mother has those. Postpartum guilt is characterized by:
Constant self-criticism. A running commentary in your head about everything you're doing wrong.
Rumination. Replaying perceived failures over and over. That time you let the baby cry for five minutes. The day you served leftovers instead of cooking fresh vegetables. The moment you wished you could run away.
Shame spirals. Feeling guilty, then feeling guilty about feeling guilty, then feeling guilty about not being grateful enough.
Comparison. Measuring yourself against other mothers (real or on social media) and always coming up short.
Physical symptoms. Tightness in your chest, nausea, difficulty sleeping due to worry about what you've done wrong.
How common is this? Research suggests up to 80% of new mothers struggle with postpartum guilt to some degree. You're not alone.
The Most Common Sources of Mom Guilt
"I'm not bonding with my baby instantly"
The myth of instant mother-baby bonding causes enormous guilt.
You see other mothers gazing lovingly at their newborns, seemingly enchanted by every coo and gurgle. Meanwhile, you're just trying to survive each feeding.
The Reality: Bonding is a process, not an event. For some mothers, it happens gradually over weeks or months. For others, it doesn't fully click until their baby starts interacting more—smiling, laughing, showing personality. This is completely normal.
Factors that can delay bonding:
Traumatic birth experience
Postpartum depression or anxiety
Physical recovery challenges
Breastfeeding difficulties
Unmet expectations about what motherhood would feel like
What You Need to Hear: Delayed bonding doesn't mean you're a bad mother. It means you're human.
"I resent my baby sometimes"
This is the guilt most mothers are terrified to admit. You love your baby—but sometimes you also resent them.
You resent:
The loss of freedom
The constant demands
The sleep deprivation
The loss of your pre-baby body
The way your entire identity has shifted
How much of yourself you've had to sacrifice
Feeling resentment doesn't make you a monster. It makes you someone experiencing a massive life transition with insufficient support.
You can love your child and still grieve what you've lost. Both can be true.
"I'm not enjoying this"
Our culture sells motherhood as blissful, magical, the most rewarding experience of your life.
So when you're miserable—exhausted, overwhelmed, touched-out, and wondering what you've done to your life—the guilt is excruciating.
Key Takeaway: Early motherhood can be brutally hard. The newborn phase is often survival mode, not the glowing experience portrayed in Instagram posts. Most mothers don't fully enjoy it until later—when they've healed, when sleep improves, when the baby becomes more interactive.
Not enjoying every moment (or any moments) right now doesn't mean you won't enjoy motherhood later. It means you're in the hard part.
"I went back to work" or "I stayed home"
You cannot win this one.
If you went back to work, you feel guilty for not being with your baby. If you stayed home, you feel guilty for not contributing financially or using your education/skills.
The truth is: Both choices involve sacrifice, and both choices are valid. You're allowed to work and be a good mother. You're allowed to stay home and not lose yourself in the process.
"I'm not breastfeeding" or "I want to stop breastfeeding"
Breastfeeding guilt is particularly insidious because it's wrapped in the "breast is best" message and the cultural pressure to sacrifice your body for your baby's optimal nutrition.
But formula-fed babies thrive. And your mental health matters more than whether your baby gets breast milk or formula.
What You Need to Hear: If breastfeeding is making you miserable, anxious, or depressed—switching to formula isn't failing your baby. It's taking care of both of you.
"I yelled at my baby/partner/older child"
You snapped. You raised your voice. You said something harsh.
Now you're convinced you've traumatized your child or ruined your relationship.
Here's the reality: All parents lose their temper sometimes. What matters is repair. Apologizing, reconnecting, and trying to do better next time teaches children about accountability and forgiveness.
One heated moment doesn't define you as a parent. A pattern of repair does.
"I'm not doing enough enrichment activities"
Are you supposed to be doing tummy time 17 times a day? Reading board books? Playing classical music? Teaching baby sign language? Creating a developmentally appropriate sensory experience with organic materials?
The Pinterest-perfect vision of motherhood creates guilt when you're just trying to keep everyone fed and alive.
Key Takeaway: Your baby doesn't need elaborate activities. They need you—fed, rested enough to be present, and emotionally available when possible. That's it.
"I asked for help" or "I used screens"
We're supposed to be self-sufficient, never admitting we can't handle it all. Asking for help feels like admission of failure.
And if you turned on the TV so you could shower? Or scrolled TikTok while feeding? Or gave your toddler the iPad for 30 minutes of quiet? The guilt rushes in.
✓ What This Means: Asking for help is smart, not weak. And screens won't damage your child's developing brain when used strategically to preserve your sanity.
Why Postpartum Guilt Is So Intense
Hormonal Vulnerability
Your brain is undergoing massive neurological changes postpartum.
The same hormonal shifts that can trigger postpartum depression also make you more vulnerable to guilt and shame.
Lower serotonin levels contribute to both guilt and rumination. You literally can't talk yourself out of feeling guilty because your brain chemistry is working against you.
Sleep Deprivation
When you're chronically sleep-deprived, your brain's emotion regulation system gets dysregulated.
Negative emotions hit harder. You can't maintain perspective. Small mistakes feel catastrophic.
Sleep deprivation also impairs your ability to challenge irrational thoughts—so when the guilt spiral starts, you can't stop it.
Impossible Standards
We've created an impossible image of "good motherhood":
Endlessly patient and nurturing
Selfless and sacrificial
Intuitive and confident
Breastfeeding exclusively
Working (but not too much)
Maintaining a clean home, healthy marriage, and sense of self
Making it all look effortless
No human can live up to this. Yet we judge ourselves against it constantly.
Comparison Culture
Social media shows curated highlight reels. You see mothers who appear to have it all together while you're struggling to brush your teeth.
What you don't see:
The crying jag before the photo
The chaos cropped out of frame
The help they have
The medication they're on
The therapy sessions
The filters
The Reality: Comparing your behind-the-scenes to someone else's highlight reel is a recipe for guilt.
Lack of Support
Our culture expects mothers to do the work of a village alone.
In other cultures and historical periods, new mothers were supported by extended family, community members, and cultural practices that prioritized rest and recovery.
When you don't have that support and you're struggling, it feels like personal failure instead of systemic failure.
The guilt says, "Other mothers can do this—why can't you?" The answer is: Other mothers often have more help than you realize.
Previous Trauma or Mental Health History
If you have a history of anxiety, depression, perfectionism, or trauma (especially related to your own childhood), you're at higher risk for intense postpartum guilt.
These conditions often involve:
Harsh inner critic
Black-and-white thinking
Catastrophizing
Difficulty accepting imperfection
Fear of repeating patterns
All of these amplify postpartum guilt.
The Connection to Postpartum Depression and Anxiety
Persistent, overwhelming guilt is often a symptom of postpartum depression (PPD) or postpartum anxiety (PPA), not a character flaw.
With postpartum depression, guilt shows up as:
Feeling like a burden to your family
Believing your baby would be better off without you
Guilt about not feeling happy or grateful
Shame about asking for help or admitting struggle
With postpartum anxiety, guilt manifests as:
Guilt over catastrophic "what if" thoughts
Shame about intrusive thoughts about harm
Guilt when you can't relax or enjoy anything
Feeling guilty about your anxiety itself
⚠️ Important: If your guilt is persistent, severe, or interfering with your ability to function or bond with your baby, it's worth talking to a perinatal mental health specialist.
✨ How to Cope with Postpartum Guilt
1. Name the Guilt
When guilt spirals start, pause and name it: "I'm feeling guilty about [specific thing]."
This simple act activates the rational part of your brain and creates a tiny bit of distance from the emotion. It's not much, but it's something.
2. Challenge the Thought
Ask yourself:
Is this thought 100% true?
What evidence supports this thought? What evidence contradicts it?
Would I say this to a friend in my situation?
What would a compassionate observer say?
Am I expecting perfection instead of "good enough"?
The Reality: Often, guilt is based on distorted thinking, not reality.
3. Differentiate Between Guilt and Shame
Guilt says: "I did something wrong." Shame says: "I AM wrong. I'm a bad person/mother."
Guilt can be useful if it motivates positive change. Shame is toxic and paralyzing.
💡 Pro Tip: If you're feeling shame, that's a sign you need support. Shame thrives in secrecy. Talking about it with a trusted friend or therapist breaks its power.
4. Practice Self-Compassion
Self-compassion has three components:
Self-kindness: Treating yourself with the same warmth you'd offer a struggling friend. Common humanity: Recognizing that all mothers struggle. You're not uniquely failing. Mindfulness: Noticing your guilt without getting swept up in it or pushing it away.
This is really hard right now. I'm doing my best with what I have. I'm not alone in this struggle.
Try this: Put your hand on your heart and say those words. It might feel awkward at first. Do it anyway.
5. Adjust Your Standards
You don't have to be a perfect mother. You need to be a "good enough" mother.
Good enough means:
Meeting your baby's basic needs most of the time
Repairing when you mess up
Getting help when you need it
Taking care of yourself enough to be present
Loving your child even when it's hard
That's it. Lower the bar. Your baby doesn't need perfection—they need you.
6. Limit Comparison
Social media is engineered to make you feel inadequate. Consider:
Taking a break from Instagram/TikTok/Facebook
Unfollowing accounts that trigger guilt
Following accounts that normalize struggle (search #realmotherhood or #honestmotherhood)
Reminding yourself that you're seeing highlights, not reality
Comparison is the thief of joy. Protect your peace.
7. Talk About It
Guilt loses power when you say it out loud.
Find someone safe—a partner, friend, therapist, or support group—and admit what you're feeling guilty about.
You'll likely discover:
You're not alone
Your guilt is normal
You're being way harder on yourself than warranted
Saying it out loud makes it feel smaller
Shame wants you isolated. Connection is the antidote.
8. Make Amends If Needed
If your guilt is about something you genuinely did wrong (snapped at your partner, forgot to change the baby's diaper for hours, missed a feeding), make amends:
Apologize sincerely
Explain what happened without excuses
Share what you'll do differently next time
Forgive yourself
Repair is powerful. It teaches accountability and models healthy relationships.
9. Create a "Guilt List"
This sounds counterintuitive, but it works. Write down every single thing you feel guilty about. Get it all out.
Then go through the list and ask:
Is this based on unrealistic expectations?
Is this something I can actually change?
Is this guilt serving me or harming me?
Key Takeaway: Often, seeing the list makes you realize how many of these guilty feelings are irrational or beyond your control.
10. Focus on What You're Doing Right
Guilt has laser focus on perceived failures. Intentionally redirect your attention to what's going well.
Each day, write down three things you did "right" as a mother:
"I fed my baby"
"I asked for help instead of suffering alone"
"I survived today"
These aren't trivial. They're evidence that you're doing the job.
When Guilt Requires Professional Help
Please reach out to a maternal mental health specialist if:
⚠️ Important: Seek help if any of these apply to you:
Guilt is constant and doesn't respond to self-help strategies
You're having thoughts of harming yourself or your baby
Guilt is preventing you from bonding with your baby
You're withdrawing from your baby or family
You believe your baby would be better off without you
Guilt is paired with symptoms of depression or anxiety
You're engaging in harmful behaviors to cope (substance use, self-harm, eating disorders)
You deserve support. Guilt this severe is often a symptom of a treatable condition.
What Partners and Loved Ones Can Do
If someone you love is experiencing postpartum guilt:
Validate their feelings. "I can see how hard you're being on yourself. That must be exhausting."
Counter the guilt with reality. "You're doing so much more than you realize. Let me tell you what I see..."
Don't minimize. Saying "You have nothing to feel guilty about!" usually makes guilt worse. Instead, say, "I understand why you feel that way, and I also know you're being really hard on yourself."
Offer specific help. "I'm taking the baby for two hours. Go take a nap/shower/walk."
Encourage professional help. "Would you be open to talking to someone who specializes in postpartum issues? I can help you find someone."
Model self-compassion. Share your own struggles and imperfections. This normalizes not being perfect.
A Different Narrative
What if we stopped measuring motherhood by perfection and started measuring it by effort?
What if we celebrated mothers who:
Ask for help when they're drowning
Take breaks when they need them
Admit when they're struggling
Repair when they mess up
Choose their mental health over martyrdom
You are not failing because you feel guilty. You're probably just tired, unsupported, and holding yourself to impossible standards.
Your baby doesn't need a perfect mother. They need you—imperfect, exhausted, trying your best, and brave enough to keep showing up even when it's hard.
The guilt might not disappear completely. But it can get quieter. It can take up less space in your mind. It can stop controlling your days.
What You Need to Hear: And on the other side of this guilt is something surprising: Self-compassion. Permission to be human. Freedom to enjoy motherhood without the constant weight of not being good enough.
You deserve that freedom. You deserve gentleness with yourself.
Take one small step today toward letting go of the guilt. Your future self will thank you.
📚 Resources
Postpartum Support International
Helpline: 800-944-4773
Text "HELP" to 800-944-4773
Online support groups for mothers struggling with guilt, anxiety, and depression
Therapy for Postpartum Guilt
At Bloom Psychology, we specialize in helping new mothers navigate:
Persistent guilt and shame
Postpartum depression and anxiety
Adjustment to motherhood
Self-compassion and realistic expectations
We offer virtual therapy across Texas and in-person sessions in Austin.
Schedule a free 15-minute consultation
Call us: 512-898-9510
You don't have to carry this guilt alone. Help is available, and you deserve to feel better.
*Dr. Jana Rundle is a licensed clinical psychologist specializing in maternal mental health in Austin, Texas. She has spent 15 years helping mothers release guilt, develop self-compassion, and find joy in motherhood—imperfections and all.*
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Dr. Jana Rundle
Clinical Psychologist, Founder of Bloom Psychology




