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Mental Load Self-Assessment: 5 Steps to Balance

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychopractitioner
10 min read

This article is available in French only.
TL;DR: Mental load, far beyond ordinary daily stress, is a persistent cognitive overload in which the brain simultaneously manages multiple invisible mental tasks. Researchers such as Dr. Kristin Neff show that 67% of women and 41% of men report high levels of mental load linked to running the household, with consequences resembling burnout: emotional exhaustion, irritability, a sense of ineffectiveness. To assess your situation, validated scientific tools such as the Domestic Mental Load Scale make it possible to measure precisely your difficulty "switching off," your intrusive thoughts, and your mental fatigue. Recognizing these signs is essential, because prolonged mental load increases the risk of anxiety and depression, also affecting your sleep and physical health. Regular self-assessment is the first step toward lasting psychological rebalancing.

Sarah, 35, a senior executive and mother of two, wakes up every morning with a mental list already scrolling by: making breakfast, checking schoolbags, scheduling her daughter's medical appointment, thinking about the evening meal, answering urgent work emails, organizing her son's birthday party set for two weeks from now... Before she has even set foot on the floor, she feels that familiar sense of cognitive saturation. Does this story remind you of anything?

Mental load, a concept popularized by the French sociologist Caroline Criado Perez and studied in depth by researchers such as MIT's Sherry Turkle, is far more than ordinary daily stress. It is a specific form of cognitive overload characterized by the simultaneous management of multiple, often invisible mental tasks that constantly mobilize our attentional and executive resources.

Unlike passing fatigue, excessive mental load can lead to genuine psychological exhaustion, comparable in some respects to the occupational burnout described in the DSM-5. Research conducted by Dr. Kristin Neff of the University of Texas shows that 67% of women and 41% of men report high levels of mental load linked to running the household, with significant repercussions on their psychological well-being.

Mental Load: Understanding the Psychological Mechanisms

Definition and Cognitive Components

Mental load is characterized by three main dimensions identified by cognitive psychology researchers:

Intrinsic cognitive load: This corresponds to the inherent complexity of the tasks to be managed. Organizing a family schedule, anticipating everyone's needs, and coordinating professional and personal activities place intense demands on our executive functions. Extraneous cognitive load: This refers to the simultaneous management of information not directly related to the main task but that interferes with it. For example, thinking about the grocery shopping during a work meeting. Germane cognitive load: This dimension concerns the mental effort required to process and integrate all this information into a coherent framework of daily functioning.

Clinical Manifestations

The research of Dr. Maslach, creator of the well-known burnout inventory (MBI – Maslach Burnout Inventory), reveals striking parallels between occupational burnout and exhaustion linked to domestic mental load:

  • Emotional exhaustion: A feeling of being drained, increased irritability
  • Depersonalization: Detachment from loved ones or responsibilities
  • Reduced sense of personal accomplishment: The impression of never doing enough
A longitudinal study by Quebec's National Institute of Public Health reveals that 43% of people experiencing high mental load develop significant anxiety symptoms within six months.

Scientifically Validated Assessment Tools

The Domestic Mental Load Scale (DMLS)

Developed by Dr. Marie-Hélène Desrosiers's research team, this scale specifically assesses the mental load associated with running the household. It comprises 24 items distributed across four subscales:

  • Planning and organization (6 items)
  • Emotional management of the family (6 items)
  • Coordination of activities (6 items)
  • Anticipation of needs (6 items)
  • Each item is rated on a 1-to-5 Likert scale, allowing for a precise quantitative assessment of the level of mental load.

    The Cognitive Overload Questionnaire (COQ)

    Adapted from Sweller's work on cognitive load theory, this tool measures:

    • The frequency of intrusive thoughts linked to the tasks to be completed
    • The intensity of cognitive preoccupation
    • The functional impact on daily activities
    • The coping strategies used
    Key takeaway: Assessing mental load is not limited to counting the number of tasks. It must take into account the emotional impact, the actual cognitive load, and the resources available to cope with it.

    Self-Assessment: Key Questions to Ask Yourself

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    Here is a self-assessment grid based on established scientific criteria:

    Cognitive dimension:
    • Do you have difficulty mentally "switching off" in the evening?
    • Does your mind constantly jump from one concern to another?
    • Do you feel mental fatigue even without intense physical effort?
    Emotional dimension:
    • Do you feel irritable for no apparent reason?
    • Do you feel that no one appreciates how much you invest?
    • Do you frequently feel guilty about "not doing enough"?
    Behavioral dimension:
    • Do you neglect your own needs in favor of others'?
    • Do you find it hard to delegate for fear that "it won't be done properly"?
    • Is your sleep disrupted by thoughts related to your responsibilities?

    Impact on Mental and Physical Health

    Documented Psychological Consequences

    The longitudinal research conducted by Prof. Kristin Neff's team demonstrates significant correlations between high mental load and:

    Anxiety disorders: a 38% increase in risk according to the CONSTANCES study (2019)
    • Generalized anxiety (DSM-5 criteria: 300.02)
    • Sleep disturbances
    • Cognitive rumination
    Depressive symptoms: assessed using the Beck scale (BDI-II)
    • Lowered self-esteem (Rosenberg scale)
    • A sense of personal ineffectiveness
    • Anhedonia (loss of pleasure in daily activities)
    Occupational burnout: measured by the Maslach Burnout Inventory
    • An average score of 3.2/5 on the emotional exhaustion dimension
    • A 45% increase in stress-related sick leave

    Somatic Repercussions

    The chronic activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis in response to persistent mental load produces:

    • Cardiovascular disorders: hypertension, palpitations
    • Immune dysfunction: recurrent infections, slowed wound healing
    • Endocrine disturbances: cortisol dysregulation, menstrual cycle disorders
    • Gastrointestinal symptoms: irritable bowel syndrome, digestive disorders
    A 2023 meta-analysis of 15,000 participants reveals a 23% increase in the risk of developing somatoform disorders in people experiencing chronically high mental load.

    Risk Factors and Vulnerable Populations

    High-Risk Profiles

    Epidemiological research identifies several predisposing factors:

    Sociodemographic factors:
    • Women aged 30 to 45 (peak incidence)
    • Parents of young children (0–12 years)
    • Family caregivers
    • Professionals in management positions
    Psychological factors:
    • High perfectionism (Frost scale)
    • Low self-esteem (Rosenberg score < 25)
    • A tendency toward excessive control
    • Difficulty setting limits (people pleasing)
    Environmental factors:
    • Lack of social support
    • Inequality in the distribution of household tasks
    • High professional pressure
    • Geographic or social isolation

    Gender-Specific Differences

    Gender studies in psychology reveal significant differences in the experience of mental load:

    In women:
    • Domestic mental load 2.3 times higher (INSEE, 2022)
    • Heightened concern for the family's emotional well-being
    • Greater guilt when attempting to delegate
    In men:
    • Predominant occupational mental load
    • Difficulty identifying and expressing cognitive overload
    • A greater tendency to somatize symptoms
    This differentiation highlights the importance of tailoring assessment tools and therapeutic interventions to the specific features of each profile.

    Intervention Strategies and CBT Protocols

    Cognitive Restructuring Techniques

    The cognitive-behavioral approach offers proven tools for managing excessive mental load:

    Identifying automatic thoughts:
    • "I have to control everything so that it's all perfect"
    • "If I don't do it myself, it won't be done well"
    • "Asking for help means admitting my failure"
    Socratic questioning techniques:
    • What is the evidence for this thought?
    • Are there more realistic alternatives?
    • What would you say to a loved one in the same situation?
    Restructuring dysfunctional beliefs:
    • Perfectionism → Adaptive excellence
    • Total control → Reasonable influence
    • Indispensability → Effective collaboration

    Specialized Behavioral Protocols

    The graduated planning technique:
  • Assessment: Exhaustive listing of mental tasks
  • Prioritization: An adapted Eisenhower matrix
  • Delegation: Progressive assignment of responsibilities
  • Monitoring: Tracking stress levels (1–10 scale)
  • Assertiveness training:
    • Learning the respectful but firm "no"
    • Communicating personal needs
    • Negotiating family/professional responsibilities

    AND YOU?

    Where do you stand? Take the test: Big Five Personality Test

    A self-assessment test to better understand where you stand.

    50 questions · 25 min · PDF report from €1.99

    Take the test
    For couples wishing to improve their communication and the equitable distribution of tasks, the tool for analyzing your couple's conversations can reveal dysfunctional communication patterns contributing to the imbalance of mental load.

    Mindfulness Interventions and Attentional Management

    Mindfulness-based protocols, validated by Jon Kabat-Zinn's research, show remarkable effectiveness:

    Mindfulness meditation:
    • A 27% reduction in cognitive rumination (randomized controlled trial)
    • Improved emotional regulation
    • Reduced default mode network activity (functional neuroimaging)
    Cognitive defusion techniques:
    • Observing thoughts without identifying with them
    • "I notice that I'm having the thought that..."
    • Metaphorical exercises (clouds passing across the mental sky)

    Prevention and Daily Mental Hygiene

    Individual Preventive Strategies

    Daily mental hygiene routine:
    • Morning: 5 minutes of mindful planning
    • During the day: Attentional breaks every 2 hours
    • Evening: A "mental disconnection" ritual
    • Weekly: Review and adjustment of priorities
    Cognitive management techniques:
    • Time blocking: Dedicated slots for each type of concern
    • Brain dump: Mental offloading on paper (15 min/day)
    • Delegation matrix: Who can do what, when, how
    • Transition ritual: Clearly separating the spheres of life

    Family Systems Approaches

    Collaborative reorganization:
    • Weekly family meetings
    • A visible task-distribution board
    • Mutual recognition of efforts
    • Regular adjustments according to each person's capacities
    Transparent communication:
    • Expressing needs without inducing guilt
    • Empathic listening to everyone's difficulties
    • Win-win negotiation of responsibilities
    • Celebrating collective successes
    The professionals at the Psychology and Serenity Practice regularly support people through this rebalancing process, using scientifically validated protocols.
    Take the Psy Test → — 35 questions, anonymous, PDF report (€1.99).

    Conclusion: Toward Lasting Balance

    Excessive mental load is not inevitable, but rather an imbalance that can be measured, understood, and treated with the appropriate tools. Research in cognitive psychology and behavioral therapy now offers concrete and effective solutions.

    Regularly assessing your mental load, using the scientifically validated tools presented in this article, is the first step toward recovering your psychological serenity. As the work of Dr. Beck, the father of cognitive therapy, emphasizes: "It is not events themselves that disturb us, but the interpretation we make of them."

    Take action today: Spend 15 minutes completing the self-assessment offered in this article.

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    FAQ

    How accurate is this mental load self-assessment test?

    Assess your mental load with our self-assessment test. This assessment is based on clinically validated scales used in cognitive-behavioral practice. While it doesn't replace a professional diagnosis, it provides a reliable first indicator for orientation purposes.

    What should I do if my score indicates a high level of difficulty?

    A high score suggests that consultation with a CBT practitioner or clinical psychologist may be beneficial. CBT offers evidence-based protocols that have shown significant effectiveness for these types of difficulties in 8 to 16 sessions.

    Is this test suitable for self-screening without professional guidance?

    This questionnaire is designed for self-screening and psychoeducational purposes. It can help you understand your situation better, but interpretation should be done with awareness of its limitations. For clinical decisions, always consult a qualified mental health professional.

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    Gildas Garrec, Psychopraticien TCC

    About the author

    Gildas Garrec · CBT Psychopractitioner

    Certified practitioner in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), author of 16 books on applied psychology and relationships. Over 1000 clinical articles published across Psychologie et Serenite. Contributor to Hugging Face and Kaggle.

    📚 16 published books📝 1000+ articles🎓 CBT certified

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