When did Valentine’s Day become a full-time job for moms?

Viral TikTok - mom talking about Valentine's Day being a full time job
Tiktok/@regular_megan

It’s the week of Valentine’s Day, which means that, as a mother of school-age children, I am expected to:

  • Decorate a Valentine’s Day box (or force my son to).

  • Buy the exact number of Valentine’s cards for my five kids’ classrooms.

  • Script names onto all of them because kids under a certain age refuse to do it.

  • Order V-Day flower deliveries to the classroom because our school layered in extra projects.

  • Plan a cute holiday treat for the family because #memories.

  • Think of a gift for my husband because the mental load doesn’t stop at kids.

  • Send love to friends and extended family because, as always, keeping relationships alive is somehow my job.

Valentine’s Day is a holiday about love—built on the invisible labor of mothers.

Which is why when I watched the following viral TikTok, I felt so deeply seen.

The viral TikTok that hit a nerve

Mom creator @regular_megan summed it up perfectly in her video, questioning how Valentine’s Day went from simple card exchanges to miniature gift bags for every child in a class.

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“Last year my kids came home with like a full-blown goodie bag from every kid in their daycare… and I’m just not doing that.”

She breaks down the sheer scale of the task, noting that as a mom of three, she’d be assembling three classrooms’ worth of elaborate Valentine’s bags—a completely unrealistic (but socially expected) workload.

So this year? She’s keeping it simple:

“I just bought Nerds Clusters that we can write our name on. Like, is that good? Is that enough?”

And then, the real question:

“Can we set the bar lower, parents? Please?”

When did Valentine’s Day become another Pinterest-worthy competition?

If you’re a millennial mom, you probably remember the old-school Valentine’s Day routine:

  • Grab a box of $3 Valentines from the drugstore.

  • Sign your name.

  • Hand them out at school.

Fast forward to today, and somewhere along the way, we turned it into a full-scale production. Now, kids come home with treat bags stuffed with personalized cards, stickers, mini Play-Dohs, and custom snacks—all curated and assembled by moms already juggling a million things.

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When did Valentine’s Day become a second Halloween—but with less fun and more obligation?

Related: All I want for Valentine’s Day is a break

The mental load of holidays—even the “small” ones

This is what mom creator Regular_Megan’s video captures so well: It’s not just about Valentine’s Day cards. It’s about how every holiday, big or small, adds to the mental load of mothers.

Because when there’s a holiday—even a minor one—who’s expected to make it happen?

  • Who buys the supplies? Mom.

  • Who remembers the deadlines? Mom.

  • Who makes sure everything gets to school? Mom.

  • Who absorbs the unspoken pressure of keeping up with what other moms are doing? Mom.

Related: This mom is over classroom treat bags and TBH, we get it

Let’s set the bar lower (no, really)

So here’s a radical thought: We don’t have to do all this.

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We can give out a single piece of candy and call it a day. We can skip the elaborate treat boxes and opt for whatever is easiest. And we can, like Regular_Megan says, collectively agree to stop turning Valentine’s Day into a high-stakes production.

Because moms already carry enough. We shouldn’t have to prove our love with glitter, treat bags, and handwritten notes on a random Tuesday in February.

Happy Valentine’s Day. May your candy be store-bought, your cards be minimal, and your mental load be light.