
Thanks for taking the Working Mom’s Hope Score Assessment™.
(Oh wait, what? You didn’t take it? Well let’s get you going…)
If you’d like a tailored, in-depth assessment that automatically calculates your scores, head on back to the quiz, enter your email, and we’ll get you your results.
Don’t want to enter your email? No worries, you can calculate them yourself and find an abbreviated Working Mom’s Hope Score Assessment™ below.
To find your results, click the link that best describes your answers. Click if you chose mostly…
- none of the time, a little of the time, and some of the time
- a little of the time, some of the time, or a lot of the time
- some of the time, a lot of the time, or most of the time
- a lot of the time, most of the time, or all of the time
🌱 You scored Low Hope.
You’re not making it up—this is genuinely difficult. Low hope usually starts with trauma (almost 70% of Americans have childhood experiences that impact their hope), and motherhood has a way of bringing it all back through tiny fingers and toes.
Right now you’re struggling with both pathways and willpower, which makes complete sense given what’s stacked against you:
- Productivity culture
- Isolation
- Tech designed to steal your attention
- Systems that convince you it’s your fault
But here’s the truth: you are not powerless. You are powerful. Hope can rise—usually in small increments at first—and the research shows that rising hope can become a protective factor and can change destinies. That includes you, mama.
🔥You scored Hopeful.
You’re standing in the middle ground—and that’s actually a really good place to be. You’ve got strength in one area of hope but you’re struggling in another. You might see the pathways but lack the energy to walk them, or you’ve got the willpower but can’t find the way forward.
Here’s what researchers know: anger and frustration are actually the emotions closest to hope, and they’re normal responses when your expectations don’t meet your lived experience.
Most people aren’t high hope all the time or low hope all the time—you’re experiencing the normal ebb and flow of hope in an abnormally challenging season. You’re not stuck, you’re not failing—you’re navigating. And you’re doing such a good job at it.
đź’Ş You scored Moderately Hopeful.
Let’s cut through the noise: you’re actually crushing it, even when it doesn’t feel like it. You have solid strength in most areas of hope:
- You know what you want
- You can usually see how to get there
- You have the energy to pursue your goals most of the time
Given your moderately high-hope levels, you probably have good, healthy relationships with people besides your phone, despite living in an isolation epidemic. That’s incredible. The systems are seriously stacked against you, but despite all of this, you’re showing up.
High hope is never constant or linear—we achieve goals, then have new goals we can’t achieve and must find new goals. Even the highest hope people sometimes struggle with low levels of hope. You’re navigating this beautifully, even when it feels messy.
✨🚀 You scored High Hope
You are a powerhouse. You’re high hope in a world designed to steal it from you—do you understand what that means? You’re not just surviving, you’re thriving in ways that defy every odd stacked against you.
You have solid strength in all three areas of hope:
- You set meaningful goals
- You can identify multiple pathways to reach them
- You have the willpower to keep moving forward even when obstacles appear
Nearly 70% of Americans have childhood experiences that negatively impact their hope, but you’re maintaining high hope as a working mother with small children. That’s extraordinary. Even when you feel like you’re drowning, you’re actually walking on water. And you’re showing your children what it looks like to live with goals, pathways, and willpower—even when life is hard.
That’s it!
If you’d like a tailored, full Working Mom’s Hope Score Assessment™ based on your Hope Scale responses, head on back to the quiz and enter your email to get your tailored results.
It’s better place because you’re in it.
Thank you for being you.❤️

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