Bharosa Neuropsychiatry Hospital

The Mother Who Cannot Celebrate Herself Without Her Children's Achievements | Bharosa

Her friend asked her, over coffee, what she had done for herself lately. She opened her mouth to answer. Nothing came out. She tried again. Her daughter had just won a debating competition. Her son had got into a good school. Her husband had been promoted. Her father-in-law was finally recovering. These were the answers she had ready. The question had been about her. She realised, sitting there at that coffee shop, that she could not remember the last thing she had done that was hers alone — the last book she had finished for herself, the last hobby she had given energy to, the last compliment she had accepted without immediately redirecting it to her children. She went home that evening feeling strangely hollow, as if someone had asked her to introduce herself and she had forgotten her own name.

If you recognise this emptiness, this article is for you. At Bharosa, we see mothers presenting with borrowed self-esteem regularly in our LB Nagar outpatient department. Borrowed self-esteem is a psychological pattern in which a person's sense of worth comes entirely from the achievements of others rather than from anything they own themselves. For devoted mothers, it is one of the most common and least-discussed mental health concerns. It is treatable, and treatment changes the texture of daily life in ways the mother often cannot imagine until she experiences them.

What Borrowed Self-Esteem Actually Is

Borrowed self-esteem is not a formal diagnosis but a well-described clinical pattern in which the person has no independent internal source of self-worth and instead relies entirely on the accomplishments, approval, or status of others — most commonly a spouse or children. The American Psychological Association, the leading body of psychologists in the United States, has documented that externally sourced self-esteem is fragile, unstable, and associated with elevated rates of anxiety, depression, and identity difficulties. When the external source is successful, the person feels fine. When the external source falters, the person collapses inwardly in a way that feels disproportionate and mysterious.

Harvard Medical School, one of the most respected medical institutions in the world, has published research on self-esteem and its sources, consistently finding that people with stable internal self-worth are significantly more resilient to stress, loss, and disappointment than those whose worth depends on external validation. The World Health Organization recognises identity and self-worth as core components of mental health, and identifies the erosion of personal identity as a significant contributor to depression, particularly in women whose lives have been organised around caregiving roles.

Why Indian Mothers Are Particularly Vulnerable to This Pattern

Indian motherhood has traditionally been constructed around selflessness. A good mother is one who thinks of herself last. A devoted mother is one who gives up her hobbies, her career, her time, and her interests for the sake of her children. These are celebrated virtues, and the women who embody them are celebrated in turn. The quiet cost is that the mother, after two or three decades of living entirely for others, often discovers that she no longer has any access to who she is as a separate person. The self-esteem that was supposed to come from her own life has been outsourced to her children's lives. When her children are doing well, she feels okay. When they struggle, she has nothing of her own to stand on, and the ground beneath her feet simply gives way.

The empty-nest phase often makes this visible for the first time. When the children leave home, the mother suddenly confronts the reality that she has spent twenty or thirty years building their lives and almost no time building her own. The hobbies she gave up are not easy to restart. The friendships she let lapse are not easy to rebuild. The career she paused is not easy to return to. The self she was in her twenties is, in many ways, gone. Many of our mother-patients describe a specific kind of grief in this stage — not grief for the children, who are fine, but grief for the woman she was supposed to become and somehow did not.

The Specific Symptoms of Borrowed Self-Esteem

Difficulty answering questions about yourself without referring to your children. Inability to identify personal hobbies or interests that are yours alone. Mood that rises and falls entirely with the fortunes of your children or spouse. Discomfort accepting compliments directed specifically at you. Loss of a sense of purpose when the children are independent. Reluctance to spend money or time on yourself. A pervasive feeling that your own preferences are not worth considering. Depression that emerges in the empty-nest phase without clear cause. Anxiety at the thought of being alone with yourself. Difficulty remembering what you enjoyed before you became a mother. A sense that you would be nothing without your children. If three or more of these are present, this is not devotion. It is a pattern that has taken something from you, and you deserve to get it back.

How Bharosa Helps Mothers Rebuild a Self of Their Own

At Bharosa, our consultant MD Psychiatrists and clinical psychologists treat borrowed self-esteem with care and patience. The work is not about convincing the patient that she matters — most of our patients know this abstractly but cannot feel it in their daily lives. The work is about helping her rediscover what she likes, wants, and enjoys as a separate person, and slowly rebuilding the internal sense of worth that was quietly traded away over decades of caregiving. We use evidence-based Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) to address the underlying beliefs, and where depression or anxiety has set in, we treat those directly.

The goal is not to turn a devoted mother into a selfish one. The goal is wholeness. A mother with a self of her own is a better mother, not a worse one — because she is no longer silently depending on her children to justify her existence, and the children can therefore grow up without carrying that invisible weight. Many of our patients tell us, months into treatment, that they have rediscovered parts of themselves they had forgotten existed — and that their marriages and their relationships with their children have become lighter and closer as a result.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Is it selfish to want a self of my own?

A: No. Having a self is not selfish. Losing it is not love.

Q: Will therapy mean neglecting my children?

A: Never. It means being present to them without needing them to carry your worth.

Q: What if my children are already grown?

A: It is never too late to rebuild an internal sense of self.

Q: Do I need medication?

A: Only if depression is significant.

Q: Does Bharosa treat this in Hyderabad?

A: Yes. Women's mental health care is available at our LB Nagar facility.

You deserve to feel good about yourself on days when nothing exciting happens to anyone else. Bharosa walks with you in Hyderabad. Call +91 95050 58886.



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Delaying treatment can extend suffering, but taking action now can bring relief and clarity.

Mental health struggles do not define you, and you don’t have to face them alone. If you notice any early signs of mental health disorders in yourself or a family member, take the first step today.

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