Episode 59: Gender Inequity in the Mental Load at Home with Paige Connell

In this powerful conversation, host Hannah Morgan sits down with content creator and motherhood thought leader Paige Connell to explore how gender inequity shapes the way families share the mental and physical load at home. Paige unpacks how cultural expectations around motherhood, work, and value still drive invisible imbalances — and how that dynamic affects everything from wage gaps to emotional wellbeing.

Together, they discuss how to move beyond blame and start building more equitable partnerships — ones where both parents’ time, energy, and contributions are valued equally, whether paid or unpaid. Paige shares how reframing these roles can reduce resentment, improve communication, and create lasting balance at home and at work.


Key Takeaways

  • Gender equity begins at home: The division of labor in families influences opportunities and equality at work.

  • Value unpaid time equally: Household and caregiving work hold real value — even when it isn’t compensated.

  • Start open conversations: Replace blame with curiosity to create shared understanding and lasting change.

Quotes

  • If things feel unfair at home, it’s probably not your fault — but it’s absolutely within your power to change.”

  • “Your time has value, even when it’s unpaid.”

  • “The fight about the dishwasher is never really about the dishwasher — it’s about equality and respect.”

  • “Gender equity isn’t just a workplace issue. It starts in our homes.”

Resources Mentioned

  • Paige Connell (@sheisapaigeturner) – Content creator and motherhood thought leader sharing honest conversations about gender equity, mental load, and the realities of modern parenthood.

  • ⁠Heron House Management⁠⁠ – Virtual house management for busy families: we handle your to-dos so you can focus on what matters most.

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This episode of De-Stress the Nest is sponsored by Heron House Management.


About Heron House Management:

Heron House Management⁠ is a virtual house management service that takes the stress out of your busy life by taking on your mental load and managing your To Do list. We provide fractional virtual house management for busy families at 10, 15 and 20+ hours/month.

Meal planning, signing up for kids activities, scheduling doctor's appointments, finding a house cleaner, planning your kid's birthday party, getting quotes for that home renovation project, or scheduling a monthly date night with your significant other and so much more. We do it all!

  • [00:02] Hannah Morgan:
    Welcome to De-Stress the Nest, a podcast for busy parents where experts share bite-sized tips on how to create systems that minimize stress at home. I’m your host, Hannah Morgan.

    [00:12] Hannah Morgan:
    Today’s episode is sponsored by Heron House Management — the first-ever virtual house management service that lightens your mental load by handling your to-do list with monthly subscriptions of 10, 15, and 20+ hours per month. From meal planning and doctor’s appointments to birthday parties and home projects, Heron House Management helps busy families reclaim their time and live their best lives. Learn more at heronhousemanagement.com.

    [00:40] Hannah Morgan:
    On today’s episode, we sit down with Paige Connell, a content creator and thought leader in the motherhood space. We’re diving into how gender equity and mental load are deeply intertwined — and what it looks like to build more equitable partnerships at home. If you’ve ever wondered how to have this conversation with your partner or what the larger implications of balancing the mental load might be, this episode is for you.

    [01:05] Hannah Morgan:
    Paige, welcome to the show! Let’s start by hearing more about who you are and the work you do.

    [01:10] Paige Connell:
    Thank you so much, Hannah. I’m a working mom of four and a content creator who focuses on the mental load of motherhood, gender equity, and the childcare affordability crisis — and how all of these pieces connect. My work centers on bringing awareness to these systemic issues that impact families every single day.

    [01:33] Hannah Morgan:
    That’s such important work. I love following your content — you’re really sparking critical conversations. Let’s dive into this topic of gender equity and how it relates to the mental load at home.

    [01:45] Paige Connell:
    Absolutely. Many people think of gender equity as something that happens either at home or at work, but not both — when in reality, the two are deeply connected. We still live in a time where men and women are operating under very different expectations in both spaces. That imbalance often means women are carrying the majority of the work at home, which limits their opportunities in the workplace.

    [02:15] Paige Connell:
    So for me, gender equity is a conversation that needs to happen in all three places — at work, at home, and in society at large.

    [02:25] Hannah Morgan:
    Yes — and I feel like that’s something we see every day with our clients at Heron House Management. At home, we talk a lot about valuing everyone’s time equally and breaking the assumption that women automatically take on the majority of household or emotional labor.

    Have you seen examples where empowerment in one area — home or work — carries over into the other?

    [02:50] Paige Connell:
    Definitely. There are so many systemic expectations that shape how we show up — for both men and women. For instance, men are still often expected to be the primary providers, while women are expected to manage the home and childcare. These roles impact how we divide labor, how we view our worth, and even how we’re treated professionally.

    [03:10] Paige Connell:
    One major shift that could make a huge difference is paid parental leave — for both parents, and with the expectation that both actually take it. Right now, many men have access but don’t use it, either because of workplace stigma or fear of career repercussions. That alone perpetuates inequality at home — because women end up taking on the bulk of early caregiving and never really “recovering” that balance later.

    [03:40] Paige Connell:
    At home, the lack of paid leave and affordable childcare pushes many women to take on more unpaid labor — even in relationships where both partners work full-time or where the woman is the higher earner. And because unpaid time isn’t valued the same as paid time, that imbalance quietly expands into the wage gap, the leisure gap, and even the retirement gap.

    [04:05] Hannah Morgan:
    Exactly. It’s fascinating — and frustrating — how the invisible load compounds across all these areas. And I think you’re right, these conversations often don’t happen openly at home.

    [04:18] Paige Connell:
    That’s a big part of it. In many homes, resentment builds silently because one partner begins to recognize patterns of inequity while the other doesn’t even realize it’s happening. It’s why we call it the invisible load.

    [04:32] Paige Connell:
    These inequities often show up in small moments — like remembering birthdays, knowing when trash day changes, or managing the kids’ schedules. They seem minor, but they’re mental and emotional labor that usually falls disproportionately on women.

    [04:52] Hannah Morgan:
    Yes — the “dishwasher fight” that’s never really about the dishwasher, right?

    [04:56] Paige Connell:
    Exactly! The visible argument is about dishes, but the real conversation is about fairness, respect, and shared responsibility. It’s complex — full of emotion, nuance, and systemic conditioning.

    [05:15] Paige Connell:
    And to your point, many men are doing more than their fathers did — and yet many women still feel deeply unsupported. Both can be true at once, and that disconnect can only be bridged through open, blame-free conversation.

    [05:35] Hannah Morgan:
    That’s such a good reminder. These are heavy topics, but it sounds like you’ve found ways to make them approachable. For anyone listening who’s realizing this imbalance for the first time — what’s your message to them?

    [05:50] Paige Connell:
    The first thing I’d say is: if things feel unfair, it’s probably not your fault. Most of this is systemic and cultural — we’ve all been shaped by generations of expectations.

    But once you recognize it, you can start unpacking it. Ask: What beliefs am I carrying about what makes me valuable? Is it doing everything perfectly, or is it sharing that load equitably?

    [06:20] Paige Connell:
    Your time has value — whether it’s paid or unpaid. And reframing that mindset is where the real change begins. When we can take the blame and shame out of it, it opens space for honest, constructive conversations about how to do things differently at home and beyond.

    [06:45] Hannah Morgan:
    So good. Taking the macro-level systems we’ve absorbed and rethinking them in our own homes. Thank you for that reminder — and thank you for joining us today, Paige.

    [07:00] Paige Connell:
    Thank you, Hannah. It was such a pleasure.

    [09:20] Hannah Morgan:
    Thanks for listening to De-Stress the Nest — the podcast where experts share bite-sized tips on how to simplify your life. Don’t forget to subscribe and tune in every Tuesday for more ways to make home feel easier.

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Episode 58: The Mental Load of Managing Your Kids’ Wardrobe with Stacey Blea