Finding Peace in Motherhood: Trusting God in the Overwhelm

You’ve probably heard this before—motherhood is just hard. That overwhelming and exhausted feeling that makes you snappy? It’s normal. People say you just need to “push through” until they get to school. And then? Just wait until they become teenagers.

But I won’t just wait, and I won’t believe that this is just how it is—that we have to grind through motherhood like we’re paying our dues. God never designed motherhood to feel like survival mode. What if peace didn’t have to be some distant dream but something you could experience right now?

If you’re a Christian mother who would do anything for her family but spend your days in constant stress, going to bed at night weighed down by guilt, this message is for you. God is working it all out for you, and I want to show you how to trust Him in the process.

Choosing to believe God’s Truth over the World’s Advice

Baking ingredients are in containers prepared to make muffins and laid out on a table with a white table cloth

The world will tell you to just “try harder.” Control your emotions. Push down the frustration. Take deep breaths. But white-knuckling your way to peace will never work because peace isn’t something you manufacture—it’s something you receive.

I spent my homemaking days battling anger, crying constantly, and feeling overstimulated from the moment I woke up until I collapsed in bed.

Motherhood was my dream, yet I despised who I was. And worse, I feared who I might become if things didn’t change. I tried everything—diet changes, supplements, detox protocols, routines, decluttering—but nothing brought lasting peace.

But here’s the truth: God was working it all out for my good and the good of my family. And He can do the same for you.

Psalm 46 paints a breathtaking picture: mountains crumbling, waters roaring, nations raging. And in the middle of it all, God’s voice cuts through the noise:

“Be still, and know that I am God.”

The Hebrew word for “be still” means to let go, to loosen your grip, to stop striving. This isn’t just a comforting phrase—it’s a command. Peace doesn’t come from a perfectly quiet home; it comes from surrendering and resting in God’s presence.

God’s grace is powerful. He can take you from where you are now to a drastically different place in a short time. I thought I was a lost cause, but in less than a week, I felt drastically better—and even my husband noticed the difference. In my free workshop, I teach exactly how I made this transformation. Join using the link below.

Embracing Your Weakness

A young boy whisks a bowl of muffin batter at a kitchen counter while looking at a cookbook open to a muffin recipe

The key to peace in the midst of motherhood overwhelm is letting God be God and embracing your weakness.

“But he said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.’” — 2 Corinthians 12:9-10

I used to believe if I just tried hard enough, I’d stop losing my patience. But every day, I failed. Then one day, I realized: I wasn’t meant to do this alone.

So I started a new habit—every time I lost my patience, I immediately confessed, repented, and asked for forgiveness. And slowly, things changed. God was sanctifying me.

Confession and repentance keep our hearts soft and dependent on Christ. When we do this, something beautiful happens: Our hearts soften. Our words become gentler. We begin to mirror the patience and kindness of Christ.

Motherhood is Kingdom Work

A homemakers hands are pictured at a kitchen counter spooning muffin batter into a muffin tin.

The moments that feel ordinary now will become the ones you cherish the most. Your toddler’s mispronounced words, the silly dances—there will be a last time for each of these little quirks, and most of us won’t realize when it happens.

Next time your children are happily playing and you’re rushing to get things done, do something crazy—just stop for a second. Watch them. Let gratitude well up in your heart. Feel it in your throat, your eyes, even to the point of tears. Recognize how blessed you are.

When you do this, you’re surrendering your to-do list to the Lord in order to delight in what He has blessed you with.

The world tells you that being a mother is small—that your highest calling is outside your home. But in God’s eyes, motherhood is Kingdom work.

If you’ve bought into this lie—if you’re wishing you were doing grander things—remember: Your mission field is your home. It’s the daily sacrifice, the meals, the bedtime prayers, the wiped tears. God sees every single act of love as worship.

A Practical Step

Baked muffins sitting on a kitchen counter cooling with an open window and white flowers in a vase

When you feel overwhelmed, use a simple focus phrase to remind yourself of how you want to show up for your family. For example, mine is: “Speak gently—even when you’re upset.” Just that one phrase can shift the atmosphere of your home.

You are a mother chosen for such a time as this. God is not asking you to do this alone. He is working in you. All you need to do is be still and let God be God.

Surrender. Slow down. See the sacred moments. And remember: the work you’re doing today echoes into eternity.

It’s always such a joy to have you here. Please join me for my free workshop using the link below. And if you’d like to learn how I completely changed my life in six months, click on the next video.

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