Chaos to Calm · the essay
Why the calm you keep waiting for as a mother never arrives, and the way back to the woman beneath the role. First published July 2026, by Bokun Imoukhuede, Founder of Mama’s Escape.
Let me begin with the sentence I wish someone had spoken to me, gently, in the thick of those early years: the calm you are holding your breath for, the calm that arrives when the baby finally sleeps through, when they start school, when this hard season ends, is not coming. Not the way you have been told.
I don’t say it to take your hope. I say it because it is the most freeing thing I know, and because I wasted years waiting for a quiet that never came. And underneath that waiting was something I couldn’t see at the time, something that was costing me far more than tiredness ever could.
I was performing.
Performing calmly, I didn’t feel. Performing the bounce-back. Performing the mother who has it handled, the woman who needs nothing, the one who is fine, thank you, we’re all fine. Performing even when no one was watching, because by then the audience had moved inside my own head. This essay is about putting that performance down. It is about the permission almost no one gives a mother, the one I want to hand you now: you are allowed to stop.
What this is
Three honest truths about why motherhood feels like chaos, and a way back to yourself that isn’t another routine, another rule, or one more thing to get right.
Who it’s for
The mum who is overwhelmed. The mum who has quietly lost herself. The mum who feels she is doing it all alone, especially the African and Caribbean women carrying it far from the village that should have carried them.
It takes a village to raise a child. But no one ever asks who is raising the mother, or what becomes of her when the village is an ocean away.
Truth I — The calm you’re waiting for is a horizon
You know the horizon. You walk toward it all day and it never gets closer. That is what calm has become for most mothers, a line on the far edge of someday, always one season ahead.
We tell ourselves the story in instalments. I’ll breathe when she sleeps through. I’ll feel like myself when they start school. I’ll come back to me when this phase passes. But here is what no one warns you: the noise does not stop. It changes shape. The newborn becomes a toddler. The toddler becomes the school run. The school run becomes a teenager who needs you in a way you didn’t see coming. If your calm depends on the load lifting, calm will never arrive. You will simply keep moving the finish line and calling the exhaustion your fault.
So before we go further, let me trade you a better definition. Calm is not the absence of chaos. It is clarity in the middle of it. It is not a quiet house, an empty inbox, or a child who never unravels in the supermarket. Those things come and go and were never yours to control. Calm is steadier than that, and far more yours to keep: it is you, rooted, in a loud life.
Calm is not a quiet house. It is a settled woman in a loud one.
Truth II — The exhaustion isn’t the work. It’s the performance
Mothering is hard, honest work, the nights, the carrying, the endless small needs. But that is not the thing hollowing you out. What empties a woman is doing all of it while wearing a mask that never comes off.
We were handed a script before we ever held a child. A good mother is endlessly capable. She bounces back, her body, her mind, her old self, as though nothing earth-moving has happened. She copes. She doesn’t complain. She needs nothing. And for those of us raising children far from home, without the aunties and grandmothers and neighbours who were meant to share the weight, the script turns cruel: we perform the strength of an entire village, alone, and then blame ourselves for buckling under it.
I should be able to handle this on my own, says almost every mother. Says who, and at what cost.
Here is what I have come to believe, and I want to say it plainly, because it is the heart of everything I build: the strength we have been sold is not strength at all. The mother who shows nothing, needs nothing, and never lets the mask slip is not strong; she is performing with no interval, and it is quietly bankrupting her. Real strength is rarer and far more powerful. It is the woman secure enough to be seen, tired, unsure, human, and to lose none of her power in the seeing. It is the courage to stop performing and simply be.
There is no interval in a performance that never ends. And there is no medal for it either.
Truth III — You cannot perform your way to peace. You have to be seen
When mums come to me drowning, they almost always reach for the same thing first: a better system. An earlier start, a tidier routine, more discipline, if I could just get on top of it all, I’d finally feel calm. I understand it completely. I tried it too. But you cannot organise your way back to a self you have stopped looking at. You can run a flawless home and still be a stranger inside it.
So over the years, the hard way, far from home, with no village to catch me, I built the way back I couldn’t find. I call it Chaos to Calm. It is not a set of tips, and it is not a quick fix. It is a guided journey, in three movements, made for the mum who is overwhelmed, the mum who has lost herself, and the mum who feels she carries it all alone. And it does not begin with doing. It begins with being seen.
You’ll notice the order matters. We do not start with optimising and routines, that is where most advice begins, and it is exactly why most advice fails. We start with seeing. Everything after it, the peace, the boundaries, the rhythm, is strung from that first honest look. Nine steps in all, like pearls on a single thread, carrying you from the noise to yourself.
Phase one — Discover: coming back into view
Unveil. Clear, honest sight of where you truly are, not where you should be, not the highlight reel. You cannot reclaim a self you refuse to look at.
Explore. Self-discovery without the self-doubt, getting curious about who you are now, instead of judging yourself for who you’re not.
Embrace. Self-acceptance without the fear of judgement, meeting yourself, this season, this version, with kindness instead of shame.
Phase two — Transform: putting the weight down
Uplift. A new sense of inner harmony, without the mum-guilt that taxes every moment you dare to give yourself.
Flow. Moving from awareness to acceptance of where you are, without losing sight of what genuinely matters.
Align. Letting your own well-being become a real priority, without apology, and without fear of being judged for it.
Phase three — Flourish: building a life that holds you
Optimise. Managing your time, energy and resources with intention, embracing change instead of bracing against it.
Thrive. A roadmap that is genuinely yours, built on a support system you can actually lean on.
Bloom. Focus and flexibility together, steady in the daily demands without losing sight of the larger life you’re building.
Read it as one motion and you can feel the shape of it: see, then soften, then sustain. Not a checklist to perform. A thread to follow home.
The Performance, and The Return
Most of us were only ever taught one way to meet the overwhelm. There is another.
The Performance
Do more. Try harder. Optimise the schedule. Hide the cracks, keep the mask on. Bounce



