Elaine Welteroth Spills the Tea on Mom Guilt & the Power of Saying ‘No'

Elaine Welteroth is an award-winning journalist, New York Times-bestselling author, Project Runway judge, and advice columnist for The Washington Post — but she’s also the mom of a newly-1-year-old son. And, like the majority of other moms, she is no stranger to the pressure mothers face to do it all, and do it well. If we don’t load every last obligation and request onto our already-heaping plates, we feel like we’re dropping the ball. Saying no can seem self-indulgent, a luxury that we’re sure a “good” mom would never ask for. We know that’s not really the case, though – so why is it still so hard to say no to the things that leave us feeling overextended and stretched thin?

“Guilt is what so often drives us to take on too much,” Welteroth told SheKnows, admitting that she’s no stranger to the struggle. “It’s very deeply ingrained — it’s almost surprising for my generation of millennial women who are so empowered in so many ways. I think we’re still inheriting these broken systems that don’t support us, and don’t allow us to thrive in motherhood.”

It’s a nearly-universal truth of being a mom: we feel we absolutely have to balance everything we’re asked to juggle (and even things we’re not), and that refusing any of that load — or asking for help managing it — somehow makes us less-than. Welteroth has not only experienced this herself, but has watched friends go through the same.

“Even the most independent, successful, ambitious women in my life become moms and lose themselves to feeling this insurmountable pressure of being perfect moms, perfect wives, and not being able to ask for help — not being able to delegate,” she says. This was one of the catalysts in her decision (and yes, it is a decision!) to ditch Mom Guilt for good.

“Mom guilt comes up internally and from external factors all day, every day. And I’ve just decided, like, I know what I went through to bring this baby into this world,” Welteroth told SheKnows. “And the last thing that I deserve after all of that is to guilt myself about any choices that I am making in the best interest of my child.” Does the guilt still bubble up? Of course it does; she just refuses to play into it, a valuable lesson we could all stand to learn.

“There’s a lot of unforeseen factors that play into your stress from day to day, being a working mom,” she says. “But one factor that I constantly say no to is mom guilt, because that’s something that I can control. I can control how I talk to myself, and I try to reframe throughout my day — to just, like, root for myself, to cheer myself on.”

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