You start with gratitude.

For the job that let you work from home.
For the flexibility during school pick-ups.
For the supportive team.
For the steady paycheck that held the family through transitions.

You tell yourself — “This is good. I should be content.”

And for a while, you are.

But then, quietly… something shifts.

You stop feeling excited.
You feel like you’ve learned what you came to learn.
Your brain — and heart — start nudging you:

“What now?”

But here’s the thing no one really says out loud —
You’re allowed to outgrow a role.
Even when it gave you stability.
Even when everyone else thinks it’s a great fit.
Even when you don’t have the next thing perfectly planned.


You’re not ungrateful. You’re evolving.

Working mothers are experts at making things work.
We adapt. We manage. We keep things running.

So when something no longer fits — we often blame ourselves.

But maybe it’s not you.
Maybe it’s the container that’s become too small for what you’ve grown into.


Signs you might be outgrowing your role (even if no one sees it yet):

  • You’re performing, but not progressing
  • You don’t feel stretched — you feel stuck
  • You’re constantly adjusting your ambition to keep things “balanced”
  • You feel guilt for wanting more — or something different
  • You crave conversations that challenge you, not just depend on you

What you can do (without burning it all down):

  1. Get honest with yourself
    What parts of the role still feel aligned? What parts feel like a compromise?
  2. Start learning in the direction you want to grow
    Take a course. Read. Ask questions. Spark something — even if it’s just 30 minutes a week.
  3. Have low-stakes conversations
    You don’t need a big move yet. Just open some doors. A DM. A coffee chat. A “Hey, can I pick your brain?”
    Clarity comes with motion.
  4. Stop apologizing for evolving
    You’re not unstable. You’re expanding. And that’s brave.

You’ve changed. That doesn’t erase your gratitude.
You’re ready for more. That doesn’t make you selfish.
You feel a shift. That doesn’t mean you’re wrong — it might mean you’re finally listening.

So if something feels off — trust the whisper.

You’re not stuck. You’re growing.

And it’s okay if others don’t understand it yet.


One response to “Signs You’re Outgrowing Your Job Role: A Guide for Working Moms”

  1. Amazing blog.

    Liked by 1 person

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