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Motherhood Quote by Cathy Rindner Tempelsman

"Many working mothers feel guilty about not being at home. And when they are there, they wish it could be perfect. This pressure to make every minute happy puts working parents in a bind when it comes to setting limits and modifying behavior"

About this Quote

Guilt is doing double duty here: it punishes working mothers for leaving, then punishes them again for returning as anything less than a one-woman happiness factory. Cathy Rindner Tempelsman isn’t just describing a feeling; she’s naming a modern parenting trap where time scarcity gets converted into emotional perfectionism. The line “when they are there, they wish it could be perfect” lands because it captures a recognizable spiral: the fewer hours you have, the more you try to make those hours “count,” and the more brittle family life becomes under the demand that it be relentlessly joyful.

The subtext is pointedly gendered. She starts with “working mothers,” then widens to “working parents,” acknowledging how the burden is often framed as a mother’s moral dilemma even when the household is a shared project. That rhetorical move mirrors the cultural reality: paid work is treated as neutral for fathers, suspect for mothers. The “pressure to make every minute happy” is a critique of the curated, Instagram-adjacent expectation that good parenting is measured in mood management rather than steadiness, boundaries, and repair.

Her final clause is the reveal: perfection isn’t merely exhausting, it’s counterproductive. If every moment must be happy, discipline becomes a threat to the whole fragile enterprise; limits feel like wasted time, conflict feels like failure. Tempelsman is arguing for a different metric of care: not constant delight, but the unglamorous consistency of saying no, tolerating tears, and accepting that a good home isn’t a performance - it’s a system that can survive an imperfect Tuesday.

Quote Details

TopicParenting
SourceHelp us find the source
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Tempelsman, Cathy Rindner. (2026, January 17). Many working mothers feel guilty about not being at home. And when they are there, they wish it could be perfect. This pressure to make every minute happy puts working parents in a bind when it comes to setting limits and modifying behavior. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/many-working-mothers-feel-guilty-about-not-being-42331/

Chicago Style
Tempelsman, Cathy Rindner. "Many working mothers feel guilty about not being at home. And when they are there, they wish it could be perfect. This pressure to make every minute happy puts working parents in a bind when it comes to setting limits and modifying behavior." FixQuotes. January 17, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/many-working-mothers-feel-guilty-about-not-being-42331/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Many working mothers feel guilty about not being at home. And when they are there, they wish it could be perfect. This pressure to make every minute happy puts working parents in a bind when it comes to setting limits and modifying behavior." FixQuotes, 17 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/many-working-mothers-feel-guilty-about-not-being-42331/. Accessed 4 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Cathy Rindner Tempelsman is a Writer.

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