Why Supporting Moms is a Social Imperative?

I want to talk about something that often gets dismissed as personal, but is deeply political. Something that quietly shapes the future of our society: motherhood.

When we talk about moms, we often picture individual stories—sleepless nights, endless to-do lists, the balancing act of work and home. But I want to zoom out. Because when motherhood drowns moms on an individual level, when they are overwhelmed, isolated, and stretched beyond reason, it doesn’t just impact them personally.

It impacts all of us.

When moms are consumed by the mental load, by unpaid labor, by the silent pressures of doing it all, it erodes their capacity to advocate. It chips away at their ability to show up in civic spaces, to organize, to push for the policies that protect their children’s futures—things like parental leave, affordable child care, clean air, accessible healthcare, and workplace equity.

It’s not a coincidence. When systems continuously leave moms unsupported, when the village disappears, it acts as a quiet form of social sabotage. A disconnected, exhausted mother is less likely to march, to vote, to lead, to fight for the changes that make life better for all families.

But when mothers are supported—when they are connected, resourced, and seen—something powerful happens. They find their voice. They find each other. And when moms come together, systems pay attention. Change happens.

So, supporting moms isn’t just an act of compassion. It’s an investment in our collective future. It’s not just about one mother’s well-being—it’s about whether we build a society where families thrive, where future generations inherit a better world.

To drown mothers in isolation is to quietly suffocate our collective future. But to lift them up? To build communities of care? That’s how we rewrite it.

That’s why I’m building Kula. Because moms deserve more than survival, they deserve sisterhood, support, and the power to shape what comes next.

Previous
Previous

Why Supporting Mothers is a Strategic Imperative?

Next
Next

Why Moms Need a Seat at the Table NOW