There is a particular hour in a working parent's life that no one warns you about. It happens around 7:42 in the evening. The dishes are not done, one child cannot eat dinner because the chicken is touching the rice, your phone is buzzing with a work message that begins with the word "quick," and you sit down on the kitchen floor for a moment, not because you decided to, but because your legs decided for you. Christina Okeke, a mother of three and a former product manager, wrote this book for that hour.
This is a book about the mental load and invisible labor, the category of household work that does not show up on any pay stub: the tracking, the remembering, the running of the family operating system that you only notice when it crashes. Okeke shows working parents how to make the load visible, redistribute it by domain rather than by chore wheel, and survive the parts of working parenthood that the influencer in your feed never performs. It is not a book about doing more, achieving balance, or branded gentle parenting. It is a book about doing less, more honestly.
The hardest part of being a working parent is not the work and it is not the children. It is the moment you start to believe that the tiredness in your bones and the low-grade guilt humming underneath everything are a sign of personal failure. They are not. They are a sign that you are doing a genuinely hard thing, in an economy that was not designed to make it easy. You are not failing. You are doing it, and the doing of it is the thing.
For readers of Jonathan Haidt's The Anxious Generation and Mel Robbins's The Let Them Theory.
Publication : 5 juin 2026
Intérieur : Noir & blanc
Support(s) : eBook [ePub]
Contenu(s) : ePub
Protection(s) : Aucune (ePub)
Taille(s) : 635 ko (ePub)
Langue(s) : Anglais
EAN13 eBook [ePub] : 9798905161049