A Daily Routine for SAHM That Actually Works
The idea of a "daily routine" for a stay-at-home mom can feel like a joke. Some days you’re a chef, a nurse, and a referee before 9 AM. On others, the biggest win is that everyone put on pants. A rigid, minute-by-minute schedule is bound to fail.
So forget the color-coded spreadsheets. You need a rhythm, a flexible frame that brings a little order to the chaos. It’s not about control. It’s about creating pockets of sanity.
Start with Anchors, Not Timestamps
Instead of planning every hour, build your day around a few "anchors" that happen no matter what.
A simple structure could look like:
- Morning Reset: What happens before the day gets away from you.
- Midday Power Hour: A block for you during nap or quiet time.
- Evening Wind-Down: How you close out the day to make tomorrow easier.
Everything else—the park, the blanket fort, the errands—can flow around these.
The Morning Reset: Win the First Hour
Waking up before the kids isn't always possible, but even 15 minutes to yourself can change the tone of the day. This isn't about being productive; it's about getting your bearings.
- You first: Drink a glass of water. Stretch. Read a single page of a book. Do something for yourself before the demands start. And just getting dressed—even into clean leggings—tells your brain the day has officially begun.
- One simple chore: Start a load of laundry or empty the dishwasher. It’s a small win that gets things moving.
I remember one morning, my toddler had discovered the joy of unspooling an entire roll of toilet paper at the same moment the baby had a diaper blowout. I was running on three hours of sleep, and my big plan was to finally call the plumber about the gurgling sink. I looked at the mess, walked over to my 2011 Honda Civic, sat in the driver's seat, and just breathed for five minutes at 8:17 AM. That was my morning reset. And it was enough.