Mental Load
Sharing the Mental Load at Home
Two moms unpack why women carry the invisible weight of running a household — and how to finally share it.
In this episode of The Deconstructed Woman, hosts Elisa Marie and Jojy dive deep into the concept of the mental load — the invisible, never-ending stream of planning, organizing, and anticipating that disproportionately falls on women. Inspired by the podcast "We Are More Than Moms" and their guest Sarah Connor, they unpack why this imbalance exists and how early socialization shapes the way men and women approach household responsibilities.
Drawing from their own marriages and parenting experiences, Elisa and Jojy get honest about the frustration of delegating tasks, the temptation to "just do it yourself," and the courage it takes to let go of control. They explore practical strategies — from dividing visible chores to handing over entire task ownership — and discuss the book and card deck "Fair Play" as a conversation-starting tool for couples.
The conversation closes with an important reminder: this isn't about blame. It's about building a true partnership, raising capable kids, and protecting your own well-being before burnout takes hold.
## Key Takeaways
- The mental load is not just a to-do list — it's the invisible cognitive work of anticipating, planning, and coordinating every aspect of family life.
- Men's and women's tasks are socialized differently from childhood: boys tend to get single-outcome tasks, while girls learn multi-layered, interconnected responsibilities.
- Villainizing your partner is counterproductive; the imbalance stems from socialization, not malice.
- Maternity leave often becomes the unspoken "inception point" where the woman permanently absorbs all household management — even after returning to work.
- Delegating means handing over a task from A to Z and resisting the urge to take it back when it's not done your way.
- The book and card deck "Fair Play" (a Reese Witherspoon Book Club pick) offers a structured way for couples to visualize and redistribute tasks.
- Unaddressed mental load leads to burnout, resentment, anxiety, and relationship breakdown — sharing it is an investment in the partnership and in raising independent children.
## Topics & Timestamps
- 00:00 — Introduction and why this episode was inspired by the "We Are More Than Moms" podcast
- 01:06 — First impressions: feeling "seen and heard" by the mental load conversation
- 03:19 — How childhood socialization creates different task mindsets for men and women
- 05:34 — Why women's tasks are interconnected while men's tend to be singular
- 06:56 — "Men are not the villains" — reframing the conversation away from blame
- 08:32 — Practical strategies: dividing visible chores and handing over task ownership
- 12:36 — The doctor's appointment example: why delegation still carries mental load
- 15:17 — The inception of the pattern: how maternity leave sets the dynamic
- 18:20 — Learning to delegate and communicate expectations with your partner
- 21:35 — The Fair Play book and card deck as a tool for couples
- 25:17 — What happens when you don't share the load: burnout, fatigue, and resentment
- 28:47 — Wrapping up: the payoff of partnership, raising independent kids, and hope
## Mentioned in This Episode
- **Podcast**: "We Are More Than Moms" — episode on mental load
- **Person**: Sarah Connor — mental load expert interviewed on that podcast
- **Book / Card Deck**: *Fair Play* — a Reese Witherspoon Book Club pick; a couples conversation deck for rebalancing household responsibilities
- **Concept**: Mental load — the invisible cognitive labor of managing a household
- **Concept**: Socialization of gendered task expectations from childhood
- **Framework**: Norming, forming, storming (group development stages) — referenced as an analogy for couples renegotiating roles
## Hosts
- **Elisa Marie** — Co-host, The Deconstructed Woman
- **Jojy** — Co-host, The Deconstructed Woman