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6 Things Every Parent Should Know Before Becoming the Default Parent

May 5, 2025 | Leave a Comment

Image by Kelli McClintock

In every household, there’s often one parent who becomes “the default.” The one who remembers the school picture day. The one who knows which kid is afraid of thunderstorms and which one will only eat pasta with butter. The one who gets called from daycare, organizes playdates, handles doctor appointments, and keeps it all together—until they’re barely holding on.

It’s a role that many fall into without realizing it. Sometimes it’s expected. Sometimes, it’s assumed. But either way, it comes with a silent weight that can take a serious toll.

Before you become the default parent (or if you already are), it’s important to understand what the role really involves, why it matters, and what you can do to protect your sense of self in the process.

It’s Not Just About Who Does More. It’s About Who’s Always “On”

Being the default parent doesn’t necessarily mean you’re doing 100% of the work. It means you’re carrying the invisible load. You’re the one anticipating needs before they arise. You know the babysitter’s schedule, the kid’s favorite snack, and how many diapers are left without even checking.

This kind of mental labor is constant and often goes unnoticed. Even if your partner helps out, the emotional energy of always being the one “on call” takes a toll that’s hard to measure but very real.

It Can Slowly Erode Your Identity If You’re Not Careful

When you’re the go-to for everything, it’s easy to lose sight of where your role ends and you begin. You may stop doing the things that used to bring you joy or feel like you’re on autopilot, existing solely to manage the family machine.

The more invisible your labor becomes, the more your identity gets swallowed by your responsibilities. That’s why it’s crucial to carve out space for yourself, not just for self-care, but to remember who you are outside of parenting.

Your Resentment Is a Signal, Not a Failure

If you feel burnt out, touched out, or frustrated that everything falls on your shoulders, it doesn’t mean you’re a bad parent. It means your current situation is unsustainable.

Resentment is a clue that something needs to change, not proof that you’re failing. The sooner you listen to that signal, the sooner you can start having honest conversations and rebalancing the load.

Image by Juliane Liebermann

Kids Notice More Than You Think

Children are incredibly perceptive. They might not understand the emotional complexity of what’s happening, but they can tell when one parent is always available and the other isn’t. This can subtly shape how they view emotional labor, caregiving, and gender roles as they grow.

Modeling healthy boundaries and shared responsibility teaches your children that parenting is a team effort and that no one person should have to carry the whole burden alone.

Communication With Your Partner Matters. A Lot

Many default parents assume their partner just should know what needs to be done. But the reality is mental loads are invisible unless they’re talked about.

Having open conversations about who handles what, how you’re feeling, and what kind of support you need can prevent a lot of future resentment. You don’t need to ask for help like a guest. You need to divide labor like a team.

You Deserve to Be More Than the Family’s Safety Net

Being the default parent often means you’re the emotional cushion everyone falls back on. But who’s catching you?

You deserve breaks, rest, hobbies, dreams, and uninterrupted sleep. You deserve to feel like your needs matter, too. The household doesn’t run smoother when one parent burns out. It functions best when both parents feel seen, supported, and respected.

Taking on the default parent role without clear communication or balance can drain even the most devoted caregiver. But it doesn’t have to be that way. Awareness, boundaries, and honest dialogue can go a long way toward redistributing the emotional and physical workload and ensuring you don’t disappear under it.

Have you ever found yourself in the default parent role?

Read More:

Real Talk: Blunt Parenting Advice You Won’t Hear Elsewhere

Parenting Fairness: 10 Tips to Make Sure Both Parents Share the Load

Riley Schnepf
Riley Schnepf

Riley is an Arizona native with over nine years of writing experience. From personal finance to travel to digital marketing to pop culture, she’s written about everything under the sun. When she’s not writing, she’s spending her time outside, reading, or cuddling with her two corgis.

Filed Under: Parenting Tagged With: default parent, emotional labor, family dynamics, mental load, mom burnout, parenthood balance, parenting advice, parenting roles, parenting support

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Basic Principles Of Good Parenting

Here some basic principles for good parenting:

  1. What You Do Matters: Your kids are watching you. So, be purposeful about what you want to accomplish.
  2. You Can’t be Too Loving: Don’t replace love with material possessions, lowered expectations or leniency.
  3. Be Involved Your Kids Life: Arrange your priorities to focus on what your kid’s needs. Be there mentally and physically.
  4. Adapt Your Parenting: Children grow quickly, so keep pace with your child’s development.
  5. Establish and Set Rules: The rules you set for children will establish the rules they set for themselves later.  Avoid harsh discipline and be consistent.
  6. Explain Your Decisions: What is obvious to you may not be evident to your child. They don’t have the experience you do.
  7. Be Respectful To Your Child: How you treat your child is how they will treat others.  Be polite, respectful and make an effort to pay attention.
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