For Frazzled Parents: How to Find Your Calm in the Midst of Chaos
Featuring Insights from Kari Kampakis, Author of More Than a Mom
I. The Morning Before the Storm
It was 7:42 a.m., and the morning was hanging by a thread. The kids were half-dressed. The cereal box had just exploded across the kitchen floor. And thatâs when the text came inâfrom her. Your co-worker. The one who sends urgent âneed-this-nowâ messages before coffee has even cooled, whose chaos somehow seeps into your day before itâs even begun.
You were still in the relative calm of your ordinary morningâscrambling eggs, tying shoes, balancing toast on a plate while reminding one child to brush their teeth and another to please stop feeding the dog grapesâwhen her all-caps WE HAVE A CRISIS pulled you into battle. Suddenly, you werenât just managing sibling squabbles. You were fending off a workplace firestorm from your phone.
II. Why Your Calm Is Their Anchor
By 8:03, youâd snapped at the kids to hurry. Youâd spilled coffee on your shirt. Youâd fired off a rushed reply that didnât sound like you but sounded exactly like someone who hadnât taken a full breath in twenty minutes. The house was loud, but your pulse was louder. And the day hadnât even begun.
Kari Kampakis, in her book More Than a Mom, offers this reminder: your calm is the anchor your family needs. When you nurture your own joy and emotional balance, you donât just improve your moodâyou give your children a living example of how to navigate life without being consumed by it.
Calm isnât about pretending the chaos doesnât exist. Itâs about pausing, resetting, and teachingâby your actionsâthat big emotions and big problems can be handled without self-destructing.
III. The Hidden Weights You Carry
Parents carry a quiet, relentless load.
- The unspoken expectationsâyour own and everyone elseâsâstack up until they feel impossible.
- Work deadlines and family demands clash like cymbals in your brain.
- Childrenâs meltdowns, sibling stand-offs, endless forms to sign, lunches to pack, reminders to repeat.
- No time for real rest.
- That gnawing guilt that youâre not doing enough, even though youâre doing more than you ever thought you could.
Kampakis urges parents to drop the myth of perfection. No one is keeping score on spotless houses or perfectly curated schedules. Real peace comes when you trade impossible standards for realistic rhythms, swap constant firefighting for small pockets of renewal, and accept that storms are a natural part of family life.
IV. The Oxygen Mask Moment
By 8:12, your co-worker had sent three follow-up texts with the kind of dramatic urgency usually reserved for actual building fires. The kids were arguing about who got the last clean spoon. The dog was barking at the mail truck. Your head felt like it might float away.
And thenâlike someone tapping your shoulderâyou remembered: if you didnât put on your own oxygen mask first, youâd be useless to everyone. So you set the phone down. You stepped outside. One breath. One small ritual. One compassionate choice.
The air was cool. The sun was warm on your face. The quiet stretched out for just long enough for your shoulders to drop. You didnât fix the world. But you fixed your bodyâs response to it. And that was enough to re-enter the storm differently.
V. Tools for the Quest
Kampakisâs work offers more than philosophyâit offers tools. Ways to build and protect the calm that allows you to show up for your children, your work, and yourself without falling apart.
- Pause and Connect with Yourself: Even five minutes alone can feel like a reset button. Step outside. Sit in a parked car. Close your eyes. Notice something beautifulâa birdâs song, a patch of blue skyâand let that moment become a tether back to yourself.
- Build Gentle Routines: Routines arenât about rigid schedulesâtheyâre about creating small, reliable rituals that make life feel less like a runaway train. Slow breakfasts. Evening walks. Sunday pancakes. âHappy Mondaysâ with an easy dinner and a favorite show. These small patterns tell everyone, this is our rhythm.
- Label Your Feelings: Say it: âIâm overwhelmed.â âIâm anxious about tomorrow.â âIâm tired and need rest.â Naming what you feel takes it out of the shadows and puts it in front of you, where you can meet it with compassion instead of judgment.
- Celebrate Small Wins: Caught yourself staying patient during a meltdown? Noticed your child quietly working through a problem without exploding? Stop and savor it. These are signs your work is paying offâlittle glimmers that keep you going.
- Ask for Help and Accept Support: This is not a solo mission. Call a friend. Swap school pickup duties. Text a neighbor when youâre running late. There is no award for suffering alone.
VI. Bonus Armor: Tapping for Stress Relief
Pair Kampakisâs message with a simple Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT) routine to help your nervous system reset when the day spikes your stress.
Setup Statement:
âEven though parenting is overwhelming right now, I completely accept myself.â
Sequence:
- Eyebrow: âThis chaos feels so heavy.â
- Side of Eye: âIâm frazzled and stressed.â
- Under Eye: âTrying to do too much.â
- Under Nose: âI want to find my calm.â
- Chin: âBreathing, letting tension go.â
- Collarbone: âReleasing todayâs stress.â
- Under Arm: âI am safe and present.â
- Top of Head: âI am calm in the midst of chaos.â
Repeat until you feel a shift. Rememberâyour children benefit from the calmer version of you far more than from the hurried, burned-out version whoâs just trying to push through.
VII. Passing the Elixir
Your children watch you more than they listen to you. When you take time to regulate yourself, youâre quietly teaching them how to handle their own storms.
- Name feelings together: âItâs okay to be frustratedâletâs take deep breaths.â
- Model taking breaks: âI need a quiet minute.â
- Use humor to dissolve tension: turn a sibling squabble into a goofy face contest.
They see that calm isnât about the noise disappearingâitâs about creating steady ground inside yourself no matter whatâs happening outside.
VIII. The Return Home
By 8:24, you stepped back into the kitchen. Your co-workerâs problem was still sitting in your inbox, but now it was just a problemânot an all-consuming emergency. The kids noticed something different in you. They were still buzzing with energy, but the shouting had faded. Someone was laughing. The air felt lighter.
You answered the work email with a clear head. You handled the breakfast mess without snapping. The coffee stain was still there, the spoon still missing, but the morning had shifted. Because calm doesnât erase the chaosâit makes you the anchor in it.
IX. Why This Matters More Than You Think
Every time you choose to breathe before reacting, youâre teaching your children something profound. Youâre showing them that life doesnât have to be lived at the mercy of every loud moment, every angry email, every spilled cup of milk. Youâre showing them that emotions are wavesâthey rise, they crest, they fallâand you can ride them without drowning.
And in doing so, youâre building something far bigger than a peaceful morning. Youâre building resilience. Youâre teaching compassion. Youâre giving them a living blueprint for how to move through the world without losing themselves.
X. Closing Beat
Moments of mindful mothering.
Breathing breaks bring balance.
One breath. One small ritual. One compassionate choice.
Kampakis writes, âDonât forget to take care of yourself.â Itâs not indulgenceâitâs essential maintenance for the life youâre holding together. So today, when the text comes from your co-worker, or the kids spill cereal, or the dog barks at the mail truck, remember: the chaos will come. But so can the calm. And the calm will come from you.