Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

How to Have a Kid and a Life

A Survival Guide

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Continue to have and grow your life, Mom—for your sake and your kids'.
 
When did being a good mom come to mean giving up everything that used to make you ... you? That's the question millions of 21st-century mothers grapple with every single day as they parent in our madly kid-centric culture. Contrary to the incessant messaging from everywhere, committing to yourself and your own needs is what makes for a good mother and happy kids.
 
With How to Have a Kid and a Life, popular journalist and Good Morning America parenting expert Ericka Sóuter shares her tips for being a happy, whole person while still being a great, and sometimes just good enough (which is plenty fine), parent. Sóuter blends her own stories of surviving the seismic challenges of parenthood with testimonials from stay-at-home and working moms; interviews with therapists and researchers; and findings from the latest studies on happiness, self-care, and parenthood. What she delivers is a wonderfully irreverent survival guide to motherhood, featuring:
 

  • Advice on keeping your career on track while parenting
  • Tips for handling clueless and unhelpful partners
  • Taking back ownership of your body
  • Creating a reliable village of support (even with moms you didn't think you'd like)
  • Staying connected with child-free friends
  • What to do if you feel like you're missing the "mom gene"

    • Creators

    • Publisher

    • Release date

    • Formats

    • Languages

    • Reviews

      • Library Journal

        August 1, 2021

        Here Souter draws on her work as a journalist reporting on parenting, as well as her own experience as a Black American mother of two who found herself struggling during and after her pregnancies, which she says were at once rewarding and difficult. For this book, she spent hundreds of hours interviewing mothers from a variety of racial, religious, and socioeconomic backgrounds about their experiences of becoming parents; the interviews confirmed that she wasn't alone in struggling. Souter examines factors compounding motherhood's difficulty (poor maternity and paternity leave policies, unsubsidized childcare, inflexible work, weak labor protections, bias against working mothers) and offers guidance for returning to work after parental leave and dealing with the particular changes (to work, parenting, relationships) wrought by the pandemic. VERDICT Helpful for readers navigating the changes parenthood has brought to career and lifestyle.

        Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

      • Publisher's Weekly

        September 6, 2021
        Journalist Sóuter debuts with an encouraging guide for new mothers who are overwhelmed by the expectations held up by the media, mommy culture, and one’s own preconceptions of what parenting should be like. Sóuter sees becoming a mother as a “roller coaster” growth experience rather than a sudden event, and parenting skills as learned rather than innate. She considers friendship changes, marriage and sex, the oppressive idea of “maternal instinct” (calling it “cultural lore”), and the dark side of the “mommy needs wine” trope, all with an eye toward cutting through to the conflicted and difficult feelings that often underlie self-judgment. Touching only lightly on research, Sóuter relies mostly on anecdotes, both from her own life and others’, sharing her experience as a working mom and interviewing child-free women. Each chapter opens with a clever “What To Really Expect” summary of the topic at hand, and closes with a “Your New To-Do List” section that distills her advice into easily actionable bullets and questions for reflection. Sóuter’s analysis doesn’t quite break new ground, but her prose connects well and her persistence in building readers’ compassion hits its mark. Parents unsure how to tackle lofty expectations will find this a balm.

    Formats

    • Kindle Book
    • OverDrive Read
    • EPUB ebook

    Languages

    • English

    Loading
    Check out what's being checked out right now Wisconsin's Digital Library is a project of the Wisconsin Public Library Consortium (WPLC), with funding from Wisconsin Public Libraries and Public Library Systems. Additional support is provided by Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) funds awarded to the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction by the Federal Institute of Museum and Library Services