“I don’t need a personal assistant; I need a personal uninterrupted thought.”
Every mom knows the rare and mysterious experience called:
Almost finishing a thought.
It usually begins with good intentions. A simple task. A quick idea. One complete mental sentence.
Then suddenly:
“Mom?”
“Mommmm.”
“Where’s my charger?”
“Can you open this?”
“I forgot to tell you something important.”
“Also… where’s the other shoe?”
And just like that, the original thought disappears forever into the same dimension that stores missing socks and untouched hot coffee.
At some point, motherhood transforms thinking into a competitive endurance sport.
Today’s reminder about mom brain survival:
- Finishing a sentence uninterrupted feels luxurious
- Walking into a room and forgetting why is now part of the routine
- “What was I saying?” becomes a daily catchphrase
- Silence sometimes feels suspicious instead of relaxing
Honestly, many moms are managing dozens of thoughts simultaneously while also handling schedules, reminders, emotional support, snacks, appointments, school updates, household tasks, and conversations happening from three different directions at once.
That level of mental multitasking deserves formal recognition.
And somehow, despite the constant interruptions, moms continue showing up. They restart conversations. Rebuild forgotten thoughts. Answer repeated questions. Solve problems mid-task. Adapt instantly when plans change.
Again and again.
Because motherhood often means living in a permanent state of partial concentration while still somehow keeping life moving forward for everyone else.
And beneath the humor is something meaningful too:
those interruptions usually come from people seeking attention, comfort, guidance, help, or connection from someone they trust deeply.
Exhausting? Definitely.
Important? Absolutely.
So maybe today’s reminder is this:
A mom losing her train of thought does not mean she is failing.
It usually means she is carrying many people in her mind at the same time.
And honestly, that’s a remarkable thing.
Inspired by the relatable humor and emotionally honest motherhood moments featured throughout the funny mom-focused collections at Good Humans Bookstore, where parenting interruptions, mental overload, and everyday family chaos are shared with warmth, honesty, and laughter.

