When motherhood feels overwhelming, sometimes the most helpful thing is simply stepping away for a moment. This is why every mom needs a reset spot.
Sometimes motherhood feels overwhelming all at once.
The baby is crying. Someone is asking for a snack. Someone else can’t find their shoes. The house is loud, everyone needs something, and suddenly your nervous system feels like it’s on fire.
It’s not that you don’t love your kids. It’s that everything is happening at the same time.
There have been moments in motherhood when I could feel myself getting closer and closer to the edge. The kind of moment where you know you need a pause, but there’s nowhere to go.
Over time, I realized something important.
I needed a place in my home where I could step away for a few minutes and reset.
When Everything Feels Like Too Much
There was a day when everything felt like too much.
My two-year-old was melting down because I said no to another piece of candy. The baby was crying to be picked up. My five-year-old needed help with something for school that felt very urgent to them but impossible for me to solve in that moment.
And I could feel it building inside me.
The overwhelm. The sensory overload. The feeling that my brain just needed five minutes of quiet or I might just explode.
But instead of taking that time, I kept pushing through. Like many moms do.
And eventually I did explode.
Then came the guilt for letting the sensory overload get the best of me. And it would happen again and again.
Until recently I realized something simple but important:
Sometimes the most loving thing we can do for our families is step away for a moment so we can come back calmer.
What a Reset Spot Is
A reset spot is simply a small place in your home where you can go for a few minutes when everything feels like too much.
It doesn’t have to be fancy.
It might be:
- a chair by a window
- a corner of your bedroom
- a step outside on the porch
- a quiet spot in the backyard
The purpose isn’t to escape motherhood.
The purpose is to pause long enough for your nervous system to settle.
Sometimes five minutes of quiet breathing can change the entire tone of the next hour.

What I Do in My Reset Spot
My reset spot is the old rocking chair I’ve had since my firstborn. It sits by a window in my bedroom. There’s no side table, no cute lamp, no soothing candle. It’s literally just the chair. I actually still use it to rock my youngest, but when I need a moment it’s the spot that made the most sense in my home.
When I step into my reset spot, I try to keep things very simple.
I make sure my kids are safe before going in my room. My baby is in her pack and play in the living room, and I turn the TV on for my older two. I go in my room, close the door, and turn on the sound machine so I can drown out the crying for 5 minutes so I can gather myself.
Sometimes I just sit quietly and breathe.
Sometimes I close my eyes for a moment and let my body settle.
Sometimes I remind myself of something important.
This moment is overwhelming, but it is also temporary.
This moment is survivable.
You are allowed to pause.
And when you’re ready, you can come back and begin again.
Why This Matters
Motherhood asks a lot of us.
We are constantly responding to needs, solving problems, and holding emotional space for everyone around us.
But we are still human.
We still have nervous systems that get overwhelmed. We still need quiet moments to gather ourselves.
Creating a reset spot is a small way to give yourself permission to pause.
Not because you’re failing.
But because you’re human.
A Gentle Encouragement
If motherhood feels overwhelming sometimes, you’re not alone.
Every mom reaches moments where the noise, the needs, and the emotions feel like too much.
When those moments come, it’s okay to step away for a few minutes.
Find a chair. Sit by a window. Step outside for fresh air.
Take a breath.
This moment is survivable.
And when you’re ready, you can come back and begin again.
A question for you
Do you have a small place you go when you need a moment to breathe?
If you do, I’d love to hear about it in the comments. And if you don’t yet, maybe today is a good day to create one.
Warmly,
Violeta
Mom Unhurried
Breathe. Reset. Begin again.