Finding Yourself Post-Separation (While Someone Screams “MUM” Every 3 Minutes)

There’s a myth that after separation you “find yourself.”


Like you pop into a quiet yoga studio, stretch once, and boom there you are.
Centered. Serene. Wearing linen.

In reality, finding yourself as a newly separated mum looks more like standing in the kitchen at 2:17am, eating cold pasta straight from the container, wondering how you became a person who owns four types of baby wipes but no matching socks.

Welcome. You’re doing great.

Step One: Realising You’re Alone… But Never Actually Alone

The first shock post-separation isn’t loneliness.
It’s the opposite.

You are never alone.

You shower with the door open.
You pee with an audience.
You conduct emotional breakdowns while bouncing a baby like an Olympic sport.

There is no space to dramatically stare out of windows anymore. Your baby will simply spit up on you and ruin the moment.

And yet, in the middle of all that noise, there’s a strange quiet realization:

Oh. It’s just me now. I make the calls.

Terrifying? Yes.
Empowering? Also yes.
Do you still Google everything? Obviously.

Step Two: Grieving the Old You (While Keeping the Baby Alive)

Post-separation grief is sneaky. You’re not just grieving the relationship, you’re grieving versions of yourself.

  • The woman who slept until 9am

  • The woman who could leave the house with keys and vibes

  • The woman who had hobbies that didn’t involve sterilizing something

Sometimes you’ll catch yourself thinking, “I miss who I was.”
Then your baby smiles, and your brain short-circuits with guilt.

Here’s the truth no one says loudly enough:

You’re allowed to miss your old self and love your new life.

Both can sit at the table. One just has a baby on her hip.

BEFORE DATING AGAIN

Step Three: Identity Crisis, But Make It Domestic

Finding yourself now happens in tiny, ridiculous moments.

Like:

  • Realising you’ve been listening to kids’ music so long that adult songs feel aggressive

  • Feeling wildly proud of assembling furniture without crying

  • Discovering you’re actually quite good at budgeting when fear is your financial advisor

You’ll stand in the mirror one day, hair in a questionable bun, wearing leggings you slept in, and think:

Who am I now?

Answer:
You’re someone who can survive on four hours of sleep and still function.
You’re someone who has learned strength you didn’t audition for.
You’re someone rebuilding brick by emotional brick.

That counts as an identity.

Step Four: Dating Yourself (Because Someone Has To)

At some point, you’ll realise no one is coming to rescue you.
So you start rescuing yourself.

You buy the fancy coffee.
You watch the show you want.
You take yourself seriously  even when no one else does.

Self-love doesn’t look like affirmations whispered at sunrise.
It looks like:

  • Saying no without a full explanation

  • Resting instead of proving

  • Letting yourself be “good enough” instead of impressive

Romantic, honestly.

Step Five: Laughing Because Crying Is Too Loud

You will laugh at things that would’ve broken you before.

Like when:

  • The baby explodes mid-nappy change and you calmly sigh instead of screaming

  • You realise you’ve had the same conversation with a tiny human 46 times today

  • Someone asks, “How are you?” and you respond, “Alive.”

There’s a dark humour that comes with survival. You earn it.

And one day  quietly, unexpectedly  you’ll notice something:
You’re not just surviving anymore.

You’re becoming.

Not the old you.
Not the imagined “together” version.
But a new, sharper, softer, stronger woman who knows she can lose everything and still build something beautiful.

Usually while holding a baby.
Usually with one sock on.
Usually with crumbs in her bra.

And honestly?
She’s kind of amazing.


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