

Episode 28: Journaling When You Feel Like You're Failing as a Mom
If you’ve ever had a moment — or a hundred — where you thought,
“I’m messing this up.” “I’m not doing enough.” “I’m failing as a mom…”
— then this episode is for you.
I want to gently remind you: That voice in your head is not always telling the truth. And today, we’re going to journal through that together.
We’ll explore:
- Why negative self-talk feels so convincing (and what it really costs us)
- A guided journaling practice to help shift your perspective
- And how to anchor back into God’s truth about who you are and what you’re building — even when you can’t see the fruit yet.
So take a breath, grab your journal, and let’s rewrite the story you’re telling yourself — one word at a time.
Guided Journaling Exercise:
At the top, write:
✍🏼 “What am I telling myself about my motherhood right now?”
Let it all out. The raw, messy, “not pretty” thoughts. This is the awareness without judgment we practice in LMS.
Now I want you to ask:
✍🏼 “Is that actually true? Or just what I feel right now?”
Next, begin to shift with this prompt:
✍🏼 “What am I doing well that I’ve been overlooking?”
Let me help you get started:
- Did you show up again today even though you’re tired?
- Did you make your kids laugh?
- Did you apologize?
- Did you pray?
- Did you keep going?
You might not see it, but God does.
Galatians 6:9 says:
“Let us not grow weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.”
You may not see the fruit yet, but your faithfulness matters.
One more writing prompt to take it deeper:
✍🏼 “If I spoke to myself the way I speak to my child when they feel discouraged, what would I say?”
This is where we bring in grace-based thought work. We replace lies with loving, biblical truth.
✍🏼 Journaling Prompts:
- What is one thing I did today that mattered — even if no one noticed?
- What would grace say to me in this season of motherhood?
- What does God say about my identity — and how can I mother from that truth instead of fear?
Music by Aleksey Chistilin from Pixabay