Weâve all heard it: âYou canât pour from an empty cup.â But for many neurodivergent mums, that cup doesnât just feel empty â itâs cracked, hidden under a pile of washing, and someoneâs probably using it for glitter slime.
Self-care sounds simple in theory, yet in practice it feels like another impossible task on the already-overloaded list. And thereâs a reason for that â actually, several. If you live with ADHD, Autism, or both, or if youâre still discovering how your brain works after becoming a mum, this is for you.
1ď¸âŁ Matrescence and the rewiring of the mum brain
Becoming a mum â a process known as matrescence â is a total neurological and emotional metamorphosis. Research shows that motherhood literally rewires the brain, strengthening the neural pathways responsible for empathy, vigilance, and nurturing. Your focus shifts toward protecting and responding to your childâs needs.
For neurodivergent mums, that wiring can feel amplified. ADHD often brings hyper-focus, while Autistic sensitivity can mean deep emotional attunement. We notice every detail â every sound, every sigh, every possible âwhat if.â So when thereâs a choice between us and them, they win every time.
That doesnât make you self-sacrificing or bad at balance. It means your brainâs built-in empathy has become the ultimate safety system. Youâre running on high alert for love â but that constant vigilance drains your energy and leaves little space for yourself.
2ď¸âŁ Habit-making is a full-time cognitive job
Most self-care advice assumes habits can run on autopilot.âJust do it for 30 days and itâll stick!â they say. For ADHD, Autistic and AuADHD brains, itâs rarely that easy. We live with executive function differences that make planning, starting, switching, and remembering tasks require conscious effort every single time. Even routines we love â morning coffee, vitamins, journaling â arenât truly automatic. They depend on dopamine, energy, and mental bandwidth.
So when the day is already filled with decisions, deadlines, and sensory input, remembering to rest or stretch feels monumental. Self-care becomes yet another task instead of a recharge. And thatâs when the cycle of overwhelm and burnout begins.
Itâs not a failure of motivation; itâs brain chemistry and context.
3ď¸âŁ Overwhelm makes it hard to hear your body
The mental load of motherhood â remembering everything for everyone â collides with the internal noise of a busy neurodivergent mind. Between school notes, meal plans, sensory overload, and the ping of constant notifications, thereâs little quiet left for interoception â that inner sense that tells us when weâre hungry, thirsty, tired, or stressed.
For Autistic and ADHD mums, interoceptive awareness can be patchy or muted. You might forget to eat until your body crashes, or miss the early signs of sensory overload until it turns into shutdown or meltdown.
This isnât carelessness; itâs how your nervous system filters information. When youâre juggling ten invisible tasks, your brain naturally prioritises what screams the loudest â and your own needs rarely shout.
4ď¸âŁ The burnout spiral
By evening, your tank is empty. The quiet house feels too quiet, and the idea of âself-careâ â yoga, journaling, baths â feels like more output. Youâve been masking, multitasking, and micro-regulating all day. What you really need isnât a productivity routine; itâs restoration.
Neurodivergent burnout isnât just tiredness â itâs full-system depletion. Your brain, body, and emotions have been operating in survival mode for too long. When you hit this stage, even enjoyable things can feel out of reach. The solution isnât to push harder but to lower the load â fewer expectations, more gentleness, smaller sparks of comfort.
5ď¸âŁ Redefining self-care: the micro-moments that matter
True self-care for ND mums isnât about bubble baths and perfect. Iâs about noticing: tiny pauses, soft breaths, a minute of sunlight, or listening to a song that matches your mood. Itâs about recognising that rest is productive and that doing less can be the most powerful reset.
You might call it âmicro self-careâ â little acts of compassion for yourself that donât require a schedule or supplies.
Putting your phone down for one minute and stretching.
Letting the laundry wait so you can sit in silence.
Texting a friend who gets it.
Eating something that feels grounding, not just convenient.
Each small act tells your nervous system: Iâm safe. I matter too.
You donât need to overhaul your life. You just need permission to listen inward again.
6ď¸âŁ You are not alone đ
If this sounds familiar, please know: youâre not lazy, broken, or failing at self-care. Youâre navigating motherhood and neurodivergence in a world that rarely accounts for either.
The constant overwhelm, the burnout, the guilt about never doing enough â theyâre all signs that the system around you needs adjusting, not you.
Self-care isnât about doing more. Itâs about reducing demands, honouring your energy, and noticing your needs when you can.
Itâs about meeting yourself where you are â imperfect, exhausted, human â and taking small steps that bring you back into connection with your body, mind, and joy.
đ Coming next weekâŚ
Next week weâll explore Co-Care â the neuroaffirming idea that self-care doesnât have to be solo. Weâll unpack how connection, shared support, and community rhythms can create winâwin care systems that work with your beautifully rewired brain, not against it.
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