When Mother's Day Feels Hard: What New Mothers Actually Need

New mother resting beside her sleeping newborn on Mother's Day, reflecting the tender reality of early postpartum life

When Mother's Day feels hard — support for new mothers in Singapore

If Mother's Day feels tender, complicated or heavy rather than joyful — especially in the early months after having a baby — that's normal, and it doesn't mean you're doing anything wrong. Motherhood is a process of becoming, not a single moment of arrival, and the version of this day sold in flowers and smiling photos rarely matches where most new mothers actually are.

This one's a gentle read for anyone in the in-betweens.

The Mother's Day that doesn't photograph well

There's a version of Mother's Day that's easy to sell: fresh flowers, a long brunch, well-behaved children, everyone beaming.

But most mothers aren't living in that version. They're somewhere in the in-betweens:

  • Still healing from birth.

  • Still figuring out feeding.

  • Still wondering if they're doing this "right."

  • Still carrying the weight of a birth that didn't go to plan.

  • Still waking at 2am with questions no one prepared them for.

For many women, especially in the first months, this day can feel complicated and heavy in ways that don't photograph well. If that's you, you're in far more company than the highlight reels suggest.

Motherhood is a process of becoming

We don't say this enough: motherhood is not a single moment of arrival. It's a constant process of becoming.

There's even a word for it — matrescence: the profound physical, hormonal, emotional and identity shift a woman moves through as she becomes a mother. Like adolescence, it's a major developmental transition, and like adolescence, it can be disorienting. Feeling not-quite-yourself isn't a sign that something has gone wrong — it's often a sign you're in the middle of an enormous change.

You don't have to feel grateful every second

Two things we wish more new mothers heard:

You don't have to feel grateful every second to be a good mother.

You don't even have to feel like yourself right now.

Love and exhaustion can live in the same body. Gratitude and grief can share the same week. Holding both doesn't make you ungrateful or broken — it makes you human, in the middle of one of life's biggest adjustments.

A better question: what do mothers actually need?

So instead of asking "How do we celebrate Mother's Day?", maybe the more useful question is: what do mothers actually need right now?

Often, it isn't a bigger bouquet. It's:

  • More sleep.

  • More support.

  • More honest conversations.

  • More spaces where they don't have to perform or pretend.

That last one matters more than it sounds. So much of early motherhood is spent managing how things look. Permission to simply show up tired and unsure — without curating it — can be its own kind of care.

Spaces where you can come in tired and still belong

At Mother & Child, this is what we try to build: spaces where you can arrive tired, unsure or overwhelmed and still feel like you belong. No performance required.

That includes gentle, low-pressure community sessions through the year — relaxed Baby Café meet-ups over a coffee and a slice of cake, quieter Mindful Mums gatherings for when you need a pause more than a party, and practical sessions on things like postnatal pelvic floor recovery. Come if you want to, and leave early if you need to.

Mother’s Day Baby Café (Friday, 8 May, 11am–1pm)

We’ll keep this simple.
A little cake. A drink. A conversation that doesn’t feel forced.

There will also be a session on pelvic floor recovery with Danielle from Physiomatters with some grounded advice which might be useful for your body right now.

Come if you want to and leave early if you need to.

Baby Cafe

Mindful Mums Group (22 May, 2:30–4:00pm)

A quieter space.
For mothers who need a pause more than a celebration.

Mindful Mums 

If it feels hard, you're not doing it wrong

If Mother's Day feels joyful for you — hold onto it. If it doesn't, you're not alone, and you're not doing it wrong.

One gentle note worth adding: many mothers have low, weepy or anxious days in the early weeks — often called the "baby blues." For some, those feelings linger or deepen. If that sounds familiar, please know it's common and that support helps. Talking to your doctor, a midwife, or our team is a strong and completely normal step to take.

Wherever you are this year — arrived, becoming, or somewhere in between — you belong here.

Frequently asked questions

  • Yes. For many women, especially in the early postpartum months, Mother's Day can feel complicated, tender or heavy rather than purely joyful. Mixed feelings are common and don't mean you're a bad or ungrateful mother.

  • Matrescence is the physical, hormonal, emotional and identity transition a woman goes through as she becomes a mother. Much like adolescence, it's a major developmental stage — which is why many new mothers feel "not quite themselves" for a while.

  • Becoming a mother involves enormous physical recovery, hormonal change, sleep disruption and a shift in identity, all at once. Feeling unlike your old self is a very common part of this transition rather than a sign of failure.

  • Often the most valuable support is practical and emotional rather than ceremonial: more sleep, more hands-on help, honest conversations, and spaces where they don't have to perform or pretend everything is fine.

  • Yes. Carrying disappointment, grief or distress after a difficult or unexpected birth is common. Acknowledging those feelings — and talking them through with a professional if they linger — can be an important part of recovery.

  • Some low or anxious days are normal in the early weeks. If difficult feelings persist, deepen, or start affecting your ability to cope or care for yourself or your baby, it's a good idea to speak with your doctor or a healthcare professional. Reaching out early is a sign of strength, not weakness.

Mythili Pandi

Director | Family Physician, Senior IBCLC Lactation Consultant 

I graduated from the University of Sydney, Australia in 2008 and moved to Singapore and worked in the exciting field of Obstetrics and Gynaecology in a busy hospital practice, before deciding that my passions lie in Family and Lactation Medicine. 

I love working with mothers and young children to get them started on their breastfeeding journey on the right footing. Armed with medical knowledge, I provide evidence-based information so that the new parents are able to make the best decisions for themselves. 

I am a proud momma to 3 beautiful children and 2 rescue furbabies and is often found baking sweet goods for her ever-hungry offspring. 

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