
For many of us in our 40s, life has revolved around raising our children. We built our routines around their schedules, activities, needs, and dreams. Somewhere along the way, the home became our boundary and the family became our world.

There is nothing wrong with caring for the people we love. In fact, it is one of the most meaningful roles many of us will ever have. The challenge arises when those family members continue to grow while we remain rooted in the same routines.

Our children grow into individuals with their own goals, friendships, responsibilities, and journeys. They learn to drive, become more independent, and spend less time at home. Yet many mothers remain stuck in the mindset of earlier years, when the kids needed help cleaning their rooms, preparing snacks, finding lost homework, and doing laundry.

For years, I struggled with feeling stuck and wanting more. The daily chores became increasingly mundane. I found myself staring at empty bedrooms and piles of laundry more often than I saw my boys. I had spent so many years taking care of everyone else that I had forgotten to nurture myself.

My perspective shifted because of something simple: a box of watercolor brush pens.

I was excited to reconnect with colors, creativity, and imagination. That small spark led me to explore other creative outlets. The more I experimented, the more possibilities I discovered. Watercolors led to acrylics, charcoal, ink, gouache, digital art, vinyl projects, my Silhouette machine, flower wreaths, jewelry making, writing, and countless other creative pursuits.

What I discovered was not just a collection of hobbies. I discovered a part of myself that had been waiting patiently to be rediscovered.

There is an immense world beyond errands and household responsibilities. There are skills to learn, passions to explore, and dreams that still deserve attention.

My advice is simple: take care of yourself.

When you are feeding your family, feed your soul too.

Create boundaries. Define family time, but also carve out time that belongs to you. Use your time intentionally. Reduce the mindless activities that consume precious hours. Distance yourself from negativity. Try new hobbies, side projects, classes, or creative pursuits. Explore without worrying about whether you are good at something.

Celebrate your time.

For me, creativity became the path back to myself. Through writing and art, I found a way to express my thoughts, reflect on my experiences, and continue growing.

Your path may look different, and that is perfectly fine.

Find your ray of light and follow it.

You deserve a life that includes caring for others—but also caring for yourself.


Author’s Note: The ideas, reflections, and perspectives expressed here are my own. This piece began with my original writing and was refined with AI assistance to help elaborate on and polish certain sections while maintaining my voice and message.