Good Inside with Dr. Becky - Can We Really “Have it All”?
Episode Date: November 4, 2025Modern parents are stretched to the limit: careers, childcare, and expectations keep growing, but the day is still only 24 hours long. In this episode, Dr. Becky and economist Dr. Corinne Low unpack t...he data behind parental exhaustion and share realistic ways to reclaim your time, reduce resentment, and feel more present in daily life.Get the Good Inside App by Dr. Becky: https://bit.ly/4fSxbzkYour Good Inside membership might be eligible for HSA/FSA reimbursement! To learn more about how to get your membership reimbursed, check out the link here: https://www.goodinside.com/fsa-hsa-eligibility/Follow Dr. Becky on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drbeckyatgoodinsideSign up for our weekly email, Good Insider: https://www.goodinside.com/newsletterFor a full transcript of the episode, go to goodinside.com/podcast.Thank you to our sponsor Hot Wheels. Check out our full series with Hot Wheels at hotwheels.com/challengeaccepted.Thank you to our sponsor, Airbnb — because during the holidays, it’s nice to love your family and have your own space. Find your getaway or host your home at airbnb.com/host.Thank you to our sponsor DREO. Check out the DREO Baby Humidifier at https://bit.ly/3WtcliS and use code Becky20 for 20% off.Ever feel like you love your kid but don’t really like them right now? Join Dr. Becky’s live workshop, “Why Is Everything a Battle?”, on Wednesday, November 19th, to learn why your “resilient rebel” acts the way they do—and get real strategies to make power struggles easier. Visit goodinside.com/defiance.At Good Inside, we’re shifting the narrative - away from instinct and toward education - because parenting isn’t something that just comes naturally. And the first step to real, cycle-breaking change? Understanding yourself—and the patterns you fall into.I’ve said it before: every parent has a pattern. But have you ever stopped to ask… what’s yours? Take the free quiz at **goodinside.com/better** to discover your parenting pattern. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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If you're a mom, you have probably felt pressure to have it all.
What does that mean?
I'm a present parent.
I have a supportive and connective relationship.
I cook the healthy meals.
I show up at every drop off.
And maybe also I'm working outside of the home.
And my picture of my family on the weekend looks perfect on Instagram.
Okay, let's first myth bust.
This human does not exist.
And if you think I'm that human, you are sorely mistaken.
today I'm talking to Dr. Corinne Lowe. She's incredible. She's an associate professor of economics at
Wharton, but this is not a financially related episode. She actually has developed a framework
for thinking about how women think through decisions and how we spend our time. And she focuses
her studies on women and moms who think about this concept of having it all and helping us
look at it differently so we can feel a little more free and a little more grounded in our
values. Trust me, this is an episode that you are going to love and that I think every parent
needs. You're going to end up saying, oh my goodness, yes, so many times. I'm Dr. Becky,
and this is good inside. We'll be back right after this.
Hi, Corinne.
Hi, I am so happy to be here.
I am so excited for you to be here about a topic.
Like, I just have to say when I saw the title of your book, and I'm just going to say it,
having it all, what data tells us about women's lives and getting the most out of yours.
I saw having it all.
I was like, this woman is going to tell me how to have it all.
Amazing.
Someone has finally correct.
The code and there's data involved.
So I feel like that's not exactly what's inside.
So tell us a little bit about the book, but really about that phrase having it all,
how so many women, so many moms want to have it all.
Does that just mean you're doing it all?
I don't know.
Yeah.
And that's, I think, like, the cover of the book is so important to tell that story
because we really wanted to show that we were being a little tongue-in-cheek with that
phrase having it all because it's like having it all and there's all and there's all this stuff,
but also dinner is on fire and your heel is broken and your coffee is spilled and your baby is
crying by the way. So we were like, you know, it's that having it all moment for me it's been
when I've been pumping in planes, trains and automobiles on book tour and then I didn't seal
one of my breast milk bags and it leaked in my backpack and now my laptop doesn't work. The
screen is blacked out. So that's the like having it all, right? Because it is. It's a lot. It's all too
much. And it's actually harder than ever right now for a lot of reasons that I actually didn't
know until I started looking at the data. And I really wanted to share that with people.
So there's two different things. I want to say one thing, but then maybe go in a different direction.
That one image of Corinne, who just had a baby, who's a Wharton professor, who wrote this
amazing book with all these accolades on book tour, like headline picture.
on Instagram to someone who sees that is this woman has cracked the code.
She has it all.
And which is just so interesting is the micro moment underneath.
I'm pumping.
I spill the milk onto my computer.
I can't even get through, you know, this moment.
And everything is kind of cracking underneath.
And there's such a big delta there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I just want to say thank you for naming that.
I think sometimes people, you know, say to me, oh, my goodness, you know,
your career and you're on book tour and yeah like there's a fire somewhere or there's a very
neglected part of my life whenever i'm traveling for work which i love like i come back my friends
are like hello like you have not been and i'm like you're right i haven't been around and maybe i
even miss one of their birthday dinners or you know i have to spend extra time with my kids and then
that's not the same thing as spending time with your partner i mean it's just it's so much so you are
coming at this, from the perspective of an economist. So tell me a little bit about that.
So I study these issues because economics, I know people hear economics and they're like,
finance, is it stock? Are you giving me stock tips? I'm like, I absolutely am not. I study the
economics of being a woman. And economics at its core, it's the science of maximizing subject to
constraints. And if there's anybody who knows about maximizing subject to constraints,
it's moms, right?
Yes.
And so part of what the book tries to look at is to say, look, when you're trying to feel like
you're having it all or trying to, you know, jam all of these things into your life,
you've got to figure out what are you actually maximizing?
Like, what is your goal here?
Yep.
Because as you said, we could pursue anything because there's always somebody who looks like
they're having it all at any given moment.
And we tend to just see that image.
We see the person with a successful career, and we're like, wait, why don't I have that?
We see the person whose house is, like, neat and tidy and well-decorated.
We see the person who always cooks the most delicious, healthy meals.
We see the person who, you know, whose kids are always, like, well-dressed and on time every single day.
And, you know, everybody is smiling, right?
And we just are trying to, like, take all of those and fit them all into a basket that's not big enough.
And that is our time.
So interesting, you know, one of the things that my husband has said to me that's not the most helpful way my brain works is I'll see people with certain things in their life.
And I'll be like, I want that.
And he's like, you have this thing where you imagine like all the good things in your life transfer over.
Yes.
And then you add that other thing.
Like everything is additive.
And I'm just, I feel like that's kind of along the lines of what you're saying.
No, that's exactly right because there's tradeoffs.
That's why we talk about constraints.
There are tradeoffs and especially with time.
And so I'll just get into the data really quickly that the reason our time doesn't feel like it's adding up is because for women who have careers, those careers are more demanding than ever, right?
More and more workers are working greater than 50 hour weeks, 60 hour weeks, right?
But men have not changed their roles at home.
So as women have stepped into the labor force, men's time at home has actually stayed relatively
constant. And I want to talk about that because I know dads are listening to. And I really want to talk
about this because no one ever asks men about having it all. But a lot of people don't know that
men do the same amount of housework as they did in the 1970s, the same hours of housework.
Meaning laundry, making sure they just rush are starting. Cooking, cleaning, home management.
Does that mean child care? It doesn't mean child care. Okay. So then the third fact of
why all of this stuff isn't fitting in our time basket is that it's the kids is that time it's not
their fault okay but it's that time with our kids skyrocketed starting in the 1990s so moms today
spent twice as much time with our children as moms a generation ago and I'm trying to add up all
the hours that you just the work is more mm-hmm and that's why we're sleeping less and we have
less leisure time huh so and then the thing is with dads by the way
dads are like, well, we're spending more time too, right?
And they are, actually.
So if housework hasn't changed, dad's time in child care has increased
because we all spend so much more time with our kids
and I'll get into some of the reasons why.
But because women's time has increased more,
the gender gap in the household has actually gotten larger, not smaller.
Interesting.
So if you go back to the 1970s, there was a smaller gender gap in child care
than there is today, even though dads are doing more,
but moms are doing so much more, more.
So I'm just, I just want to digest that because, look, I think the dads who are listening, this is not about it's all your fault.
And of course, there's differences.
Like, you might be listening and thinking, that's not me and you're right.
But we're talking about these general patterns.
So it's so helpful not to personalize about that.
These are just general patterns, not any specific family.
If you're a woman who works outside the home, work is demanding more of your time.
I think a lot of that is also the Slack never stops.
The emails never stop, right?
Things like that.
So that time is going up.
the average then woman who's married to a man doesn't have more help with the laundry
or the household tasks and we're spending twice as much time with our children yeah and so this
whole idea of having it all all all I'm thinking about is I don't even know how we get to 24 hours
in a day it sounds like a 30 hour day yeah what it all is has changed and that's why people who are
listening, you're like, oh, I thought it was just me and I thought it was just me. Like, I write this
from a place of like, it was me search, right? The research I did in this book, it was trying to
understand my life because I was exhausted all of the time and I felt like I was falling behind my
male colleagues at work and I didn't feel like I had the space or time to be the type of mom I wanted
to be. And I was like, what is wrong with me? Right. And then when I looked at the data, I was like,
oh, well, my male colleagues at work
aren't facing quite the same time constraint
because they've got one of me at home
kind of managing the invisible labor, right?
And kind of keeping the household running.
And in terms of the parenting,
the type of parent I wanted to be
was a type of parent
that is much more intensively time available to my child
than my own mom or my own childhood, right?
Every parent listening knows the bedtime routine.
I love bedtime, the like,
I've come to love it.
The processing highs and lows, you're reading stories.
Like, I love, my older son is eight, and so I can feel it slipping away.
And that's why, like, I used to resent it.
Like, oh, God, I still have to lie here.
He won't let me leave kind of thing.
And now I'm, like, the fact that he wants to, like, cuddle and tell me a story, I, like,
I'm holding on to it.
So, but when I grew up in the 1980s, my bedtime routine was go to bed.
Like, what we do with our kids has literally changed.
that parents in the 80s were not holding their babies.
They were not doing extended breastfeeding and pumping when they go back to work.
They were not sitting on the floor doing enriching activities with their toddlers.
They were not sitting at the kitchen table doing homework with their grade schoolers.
And they weren't driving to travel soccer on weekends.
And by the way, to the four practices during the week.
Yeah.
Like literally four practices, two tournaments, right, and one extra, you know, game on Sunday.
I'm thinking about all this.
And I'm just thinking about how many people listening, really, there is a deep breath.
of I'm not the only one.
Like this is very real
and I'm not failing.
This isn't my fault.
It's not like I'm someone
who doesn't have my stuff together.
I am trying to fit into a 24-hour day
things that are truly more than 24 hours.
Like the math doesn't math.
We can't change a number of hours in a day.
Right?
And so I'm curious in your research then.
What's the alternative?
So that's where we go back
to what we started with,
is really figuring out what you're maximizing, what your goal is, what's most important to
you, and then making some hard choices about how to invest your time, the same way we're
careful about investing money, facing this kind of impossible constellation of time
constraints, we have to make choices, we have to say no, we have to be strategic in investing
our time, and enlist our partners to get more support.
And so the book has a bunch of strategies for how not just women, but kind of all parents can do this,
how we can kind of get back some of our time and get rid of some of the guilt that sometimes comes along with that.
So let's keep going on that because, you know, I actually used to be someone.
And what I used to say is I hate tradeoffs, right?
And I kind of would say, I hate tradeoffs, like, you know, because I want to have it all.
And then someone said something to me about how they described tradeoffs that really stuck with me.
And I think, I'm thinking about it now because I think it's really in line with what you're talking about.
They said, I love tradeoffs.
And I was like, what?
Why?
And they were like, tradeoffs clarify what my values are.
And it's always really helpful to know what my values are.
And I thought about tradeoffs that way.
it gave me like a new a new perspective bingo well i think like your friend was thinking like an
economist because that's exactly right like we we think about what you're maximizing as something
called your utility function okay so i'm going to go into you're going to be the class i'm in
your wharton class right now exactly you're in my intro MBA class um so what is a utility
function it's like your individual profit function because when we think about firms they're maximizing
profit and they're maximizing profit subject to the constraints of how much they have to pay people,
how much their inputs cost, who's going to buy their stuff, right? Well, individuals are maximizing
utility, but the difference between utility and profit is that any accountant could look at a firm's
profit and agree about the same, say like, look, this is how much profit they made. But nobody could
actually say how much utility you're getting from something because nobody from the outside
knows what your values are. It's individual, it's personal. Utility is the sum.
total of the joy, fulfillment, meaning, and contentment that you can fit into a lifetime. And
the sources of those things and how much weight you place on each of them is only known to you.
So, so beautiful what you're saying. And what it makes me think about is something I hear from
people all the time, especially women. I think there's a lot of reasons for this. But I don't, I
I don't actually really know what I want.
I don't really know what I value.
And I think this is so core to so much of what we're really talking about.
It's almost easier to be like, well, that person works this job and seems to like that.
So maybe that's what I want.
Wait, this person spends these days with her kids at soccer and actually maybe that's what I want.
And sometimes we have to try things on to know.
I love that.
But at the core, there is no barometer.
There is no blood test for you are making decisions that are in line.
with your values. Good job. It's something that we have to kind of practice figuring out and getting
to the core of ourselves. I think you're so right. And I think another thing that we tend to do
is just mistake what other people want and caring for them and helping them get what they want for
what we want. And that can be part of how we end up so exhausted. Because if we don't know what we
value, it's just like, what makes my kids happy, what makes my friends happy, what makes my boss
happy, and we just run ourselves ragged chasing their utility functions.
Ooh.
And then we get rageful and resentful.
Yes.
Yes.
And sick.
Absolutely.
So here is the exercise I'm going to tell you.
And it feels a little wistful to do it, but it's worth it, okay?
The exercise is really close your eyes and picture, what would your life look like if
you were a mega billionaire, you were independently wealthy, money were no object, okay?
so what would your life look like how would you spend your time what would your house look
like what would your days feel like okay what would your relationships feel like that's what
you value that's unconstrained maximization all of that stuff that you pictured is what you
are maximizing subject to the constraints the reality and the reality is okay if some of the
things you pictured are things that you buy with money well that's why you have a job because
your job turns your time into money, right?
But when I tell people to picture that,
a lot of the women who will say,
oh, I love my job, it's so important to me,
it's so fulfilling, in that picture where they were unconstrained,
they might be doing that job for like 10 hours a week or 15 hours a week,
but they're not doing it for 60 hours a week.
They're not doing it for 70 hours a week, right?
A lot of times what people picture is time with their loved ones, right?
time with their kids, time to be fully present, time with their friends and their partner.
And if we put all of our time into the money machine into our careers, it takes away from
the time we can spend on those other things.
So if you can get in touch with, okay, this is what I value, this is what I'm pursuing,
then you can figure out how to invest your time to say, okay, yes, some of what I valued,
some of what I pictured was stuff that I need to buy.
I want to take a nice vacation, right?
I want to not worry about being able to fix the car, right?
And for those things, I have to turn my time into money.
But because I value all these other things I do with my time,
I have to figure out how to turn my time into money as efficiently as possible.
And we've almost been brainwashed to view our careers as like the end in themselves.
Like that's the purpose of your life.
And I feel like that's kind of the lean-in era.
It was like, this is what you're maximizing.
You're maximizing your salary.
You're maximizing prestige.
you're maximizing accolades, right?
But when you actually picture what you value,
those things do not get you everything that you value, right?
Because some of the things that you value, you need time for.
It's so interesting.
And look, there's realities we all live with.
I imagine someone thinking, okay, like the life I have now,
which I do like or to school I send my kids to the neighborhood.
It requires me working a 50 hour or a week job.
But still, I think the exercise is an.
to imagine that you have an unconstrained life
like no one really has that like we don't have
that none of our listeners I think really have that okay
but the exercise clarifies what you value
which might give you more direction
let's just say you're thinking I have to have
this job of working this many hours a week
well in the other hours it might just clarify
like how you really want to spend that time
what really really matters and a little bit on the margin
do I need to be on Slack right now
can I put my computer away my phone away
can I be fully present for 20 minutes
for dinner instead of distracted for 40 minutes for dinner, whatever it is, right?
Can I, I always think about my calendar as my value system.
Anybody who knows me knows I take my calendar very seriously because I do what my calendar
tells me.
But I have to have a lot of agency in that.
So as someone who's now working and feeling very lit up by that, I do want to still
see my friends.
Okay, if I don't put in a lunch or a dinner with my friends, weeks in advance.
Yeah.
My calendar will fill up.
And so I have to do that.
or my son's, you know, sports game in the calendar.
And so now when someone says, oh, can you meet 3.30 on Thursday?
I'm like, oh, I can't.
I can do this time instead because it's my calendar is kind of a force function for making me represent what I really care about.
Well, you have figured out a physical manifestation of the idea of investing your time in what you value, right?
Is that by blocking it out in your calendar, you are saying I'm investing this much time and I'm not letting some other thing eat that time up, right?
Exactly it. Yes. And the other thing about the calendar that I just have to say to you and to everyone else is even though I say I do what my calendar tells me, I'm the boss of my calendar. So like often, you know, someone say, hey, can you come out to dinner this night? And I look at my calendar two Wednesdays from now. And I just want to be very concrete. And I'm like, oh, I'm free on Wednesday night. Doesn't mean I'm going to say yes. I then zoom out and I look at my week. I know for me, I'm just saying, and this is not right. I don't think this is some parenting gold. It's just my what I've realized for my values. I at my
go out one week night and on a Saturday night. Generally, I always go out on a Saturday
night, see some friends, me and my husband one week night. And so if I have something on a Thursday
and a Saturday, my Wednesday might say free, but I RCP no, with obviously exceptions, right?
Yeah. And so I think that's so mind-blowing for a lot of people that your calendar might say free
and you still say no. Or alternatively, I put something on the calendar. That's not my
soccer practice or my meeting at work, that's walk around the block for half an hour. And I
protect that meeting with myself the same way I would protect our podcast time today.
Yeah, absolutely. And that's actually like one of the strategies I tell people do in the book is like
actually take your leisure time. And what I mean by leisure time is something that actually
serves your utility function as a primary purpose. Okay. So when people say like, oh yeah,
this is my leisure time, I was helping my friend or this is my leisure time. I was baking
cookies for my kids class. It's not actually your leisure time, right? That's called parenting,
that one, right? That was part of your parenting time. So when I say leisure time, I mean something
where the first beneficiary is actually you, which is really hard for us to do. I love that language.
The first beneficiary. It's actually such a concrete way of visualizing it. Tell me more.
And how do we mistake that? Yeah, well, because I think we say,
like, well, I love baking cookies for my kid, right? And I understand that you love it. And that's
great because then that's a way to show your love because you can't, you don't want to fill up
your basket with all the things that everybody else is doing to show their love. You want to pick
the one that you love. And if you love baking cookies, bake the cookie, if you love practicing
soccer, practice soccer, if you love bedtime, do the extended bedtime, right? But that's great.
But that's still not leisure time. Okay. And at the end of the day, the week, the year and the
years of our life. If we don't take leisure time to fill our own cup, we cannot be relaxed.
We cannot be happy. We cannot be present and patient and joyful with our kids. We can't parent a la
Dr. Becky and all the great advice we're getting because we're just so depleted. And so for me,
like the biggest cure for my mom guilt was seeing my relationship with my son blossom when I was
getting my needs met, that I was such a better parent when my cup was full, that that was
what he needed more than all of the other things I was trying to give him that were making things
not add up. Okay, two questions. First, let's say someone's thinking, even if my kid didn't have to
bring cookies the next day, or if my kid was on a field trip overnight, I'd be baking those cookies
anyway. Is that an example of someone who's like, oh, maybe that is for me? Then it's for me. Then it's
like I actually like this.
I'm the first kind of recipient of the benefit of this.
And the same thing if you're like, well, you know, going and helping my friend Garden,
it was actually first for me because I actually love getting outside and they're like having
someone to talk to, right?
But you know, are you the first, the primary beneficiary of this or not?
And that's what I mean by leisure time.
And I want you to block that out the same way you block out the appointment for your kid's
soccer game, the, you know, podcast taping or the meeting with your boss.
because you, moms who are listening and the dads who are listening to who, if you feel stretched
for time, you're a member of your household.
Yeah.
We so often forget that, like, mom is a member of the household.
And that was a huge mistake that I made in my own life and how I got to the point of being
so depleted where I ended up making big changes.
You can read about them in the book.
But I forgot that to even consider my own needs in the equation.
and if something is not working for you, it's not working for the family.
Yeah.
Because you're part of the family.
Yeah.
You know, I find this phrase you just said very provocative and I like things that are provocative
because it gets our body to respond and, you know, remember.
I just keep hearing my head.
first for me. What do I do in my life? That is first for me. And the reason I like the language
is it sounds so close to selfish. Like, and so many of us have been trained to think self-care is
selfish. First for me is selfish, right? And again, we don't have to think in extremes.
You don't need to be first for me with 100% of your time. Like I always, you know, say when I talk about
self-care as a mom, I'm not really talking about you going to Paris for three years and be like,
hey guys, I just need to live in Paris
the three years. See her when you're 15.
No, obviously.
But that is what we imagine
when we think about saying to our kid,
no, you can't come with me for a walk around the block
because the whole point is that I'm not with you
for my walk around the block.
Right?
And we do kind of equate the emotionality of that
as if I'm saying to my kid,
I'm going to Paris for three years,
fend for yourself.
And so I just love our listeners right now,
her viewers, thinking about the phrase, first for me.
I am doing something first for me.
And I like saying it boldly because I want people to be uncomfortable.
First for me.
And just to notice what comes up for me.
Yeah, how that feels.
Yeah.
And what have you noticed comes up for women around that?
I mean, yeah, for women, for myself, right?
Just this idea that you feel like you're letting somebody down or you're not being as good
of a mom as you possibly could be.
And that's the problem with that idea of mass.
maximizing on all fronts at once is that you're like, I'm not as good of a worker as I possibly
could be. I'm not as good of a mom as I possibly could be. I'm not as good of a PTA volunteer as I possibly
could be. And it's like, no, because there's one 24 hour day and you're trying to do all of those
things. So you're going to be the best that you can in each of those dimensions while also
holding onto this core of yourself. Because if you let go of that core of yourself, then you can't
show up in those other spaces either. That's so right. And the other thing I just want to
everyone listening to know because I'm sure people say a lot's coming up for me. Like Dr. Becky,
I feel like you're giving me a panic attack just thinking about that phrase. Okay. That panic is a sign
that you're thinking about something new, not wrong. And here's how I know that it's not wrong.
Okay. I don't know one baby who came out of the womb thinking, I feel like I can't scream at 2 a.m.
For food, it just. I need to think about other people. I don't know. Like, would my friends scream?
and I don't, is this too much?
No, you know, babies are first for me at 2 a.m.
At 4 a.m. at 10 p.m.
They don't care.
Okay, first for me.
So it's really interesting.
And by the way, that's adaptive.
Because if a baby was always thinking about a parent's needs,
they wouldn't scream.
No parent is willingly waking up at 2 a.m.
being like, I'm just going to check if the baby needs to eat again.
And so being first for me comes from an adaptive evolutionary place.
Yep.
And somehow, most of us women went from, I wear my personal needs and desires on my sleeve
to my personal needs and desires are scary or they're so distant for me.
Like, I don't even know, I don't even know where they are, right?
But they do, I always tell people, they're in there.
Yeah.
You wouldn't have survived without personal needs.
And yes, it's a balance of, of course there's times we all don't do me first because we have to go.
you know, do something for other people.
That's just what it means to be in a healthy relationship.
But so many of us have lost the first for me.
We've lost the balance.
And then we almost lose the experience of our lives, like being present in the experience
of our lives.
And that was how I felt in my own life.
I felt like I was like standing outside of it.
And I was just doing, you know, running, rushing, trying.
Right.
And I didn't have experiences.
Like we lose sight of ourselves as the protagonist of our life.
of our lives.
And I will give listeners, watchers, like one more piece of permission to do this because
we need that.
Yes.
Which is that when people hear the stats about, you know, men not doing as much in the
household and how that really needs to change, we're like, well, part of it is how we parent
our boys, right?
There's things we can do in parenting our boys proactively and bringing them into the
work of the household.
But actually, a huge thing that you can do to change this for the next generation is protect
your own needs.
and recognize yourself as a person who has feelings and desires
and a multiplicity of desires within the household.
Because if you let yourself become an angry, empty, depleted shell
in service of your children and your family,
you are modeling for your sons that they can expect that of their wives.
A hundred percent, yes, like right on the nose.
That kids learn from what we do, not from what we say.
So you can have all the good conversations, but if your kids watching you run into, run yourself into the ground in the name of love, then that's just modeling what a loving relationship is, which is not what we want.
So you can think of yourself as a warrior for gender equality when you actually take care of yourself.
I love that.
And just to make that one more level of concrete for people, you know, I'll use myself as an example.
So I'm going on a girl's trip in a couple of weeks with some of my, you know, friends.
And now my kids are used to me, you know, traveling for work or different things.
But when this started like the first time, of course, I was like, oh, my goodness.
And you're always missing something, you know.
Oh, you know, I want to be there for even the night before my kids test, whatever it is, right?
And I remember one of the times when early on my kids said, oh, like, what, you're going away for, you know, I don't know, three, four nights, whatever it was.
Why are you doing that?
And why can't we come with you?
So when I think sometimes in these situations, because we're uncomfortable, we kind of put
something parentified on our kids, don't you want me to be happy?
Like, oh, ish, right?
And it's so unsturdy, you know?
And so I remember hearing myself say, I love being your mom.
I love it.
I love our time together.
I love putting you to bed at night.
Like, I love, you know, the dinners and those conversations and the Play-Doh, all the
things, okay?
And I love the time I have with my girlfriends, orphan.
I love going out to dinner with your dad when it's just the two of us.
It's inherently different.
And that is still a very important part of me.
And my job is to make sure I keep it alive.
And so I think also what I don't always say is you can be mad.
I don't need you to say, this is going to be really good for you, mom.
Enjoy that trip.
You deserve it.
And I never going to come back more refreshed to be my parent win-win.
Like my kids have never said that.
But the more you're aware of your values and knowing the importance to yourself and your whole system,
of having me first some of the time,
the more you can tolerate some of that messiness
than people's response to.
Yeah, that's right.
Like, tolerate the discomfort
because you know that by filling your own cup,
that is supporting.
That's part of the scaffolding
of you being able to show up
as the type of parent that you want to be.
That's exactly right.
And, you know, the other thing that struck me about this
is, you know, I'm a Duke basketball fan.
I'm going to do it.
Duke, do you know that?
I don't know that.
Duke undergrad.
Oh, me too.
No, I had no idea.
Go Blue Devils.
And you wouldn't see people, we still love you.
Multiple things can be true, okay?
But I won't be rooting for you on the next game.
But I'm pretty sure this is right, right?
It shouldn't speak out of turn.
But I think there's this game last year where Cooper Flagg, right?
This like amazing, amazing star.
You know, he's this amazing player.
He can score.
He also is amazing in his assist, defense, like blocks, everything.
And there was a game where I think he was reflecting
or maybe he was the coach John Shire reflecting
that there are certain moments
when they need him to quote be more selfish
where yeah we know you can pass
like when the game's on the line
and you know you can score the team
needs you to score and even if someone's like
pass to me pass to me and you're like I just know
I've got this like the greater good
and if the team is the family
is for you to do your thing
and sometimes when I'm thinking about a moment
where I'm like I know still it can feel uncomfortable
go on this trip.
Like, I'm like, I'm just going to channel my Cooper flag.
Like, the team, the team isn't going to tell me, I need you to go on this trip.
But like the team, the team wants to win.
Yeah.
Period.
The team wants to win.
My family wants to win as a family.
And this is sometimes a part of that.
And like with parents always, like the thing that we see a little bit more than our kids is
the bigger picture, right?
When it's a toddler, you're seeing a much bigger picture that really focused on that tiny
moment.
But even when it's a teenager.
you're still seeing a bigger picture, a longer view than what they're seeing. And so even though
they want you in that moment, for me it was like going to yoga. My son used to be like, I don't
want you to go to woga. So then you're like, oh my God, it feels so bad. Right. But what you see that
they don't see is like, yes, but then for me to spend an hour hucking you into bed and reading
stories and listening to you and then be patient when you're pushing back on a limit or when
you're telling me no. And then I'm able to sit there and be patient. And then I'm able to sit there and be
patient and let you have your feelings, that is because I went to yoga.
That's right. And it's okay. I just want everyone to know this. You can know that without having
to explain it all. Yeah. To explain it. Right. And your kid isn't going to say, I understand the bigger
picture. They are the kid. You are the adult. And actually, I think this becomes a little bit easier
when you can kind of look at yourself in the mirror and say, I'm going to go to yoga. My son's going to be
upset. Looking in the mirror, I know I deserve this. I know. I know. I know.
I need this. I know this is one of those me first moments where, yes, it's going to be
uncomfortable because it's new, not wrong, and this is for the greater good. This is so our team
can win. And the other players in this moment might not give me a high five because they want the
ball. Yeah. That's okay. And I have clarity. Yeah. And I can proceed. And so I just,
I love that.
Let me ask you, just as we kind of come to an end, I'm picturing the parent who's going to end up lying in bed at night and just thinking about, oh, my goodness, all the things they have to do and how they don't have enough hours in the day.
What is a small step someone could take to rebalance, to reprioritize, to re-center on your own values?
So one is that I want you to find something that you're going to actually take off your plate.
Okay.
And that could be because you're going to reallocate it to your partner, right?
And I talk in the book about promoting our partners from low-level junior employees to co-CEOs of the household.
Congratulations.
Yeah, it's empowering.
You say, guess what?
You're getting a promotion.
You're going to take end-to-end ownership of the lunchboxes.
Instead of me delegating it to you, you're going to be in charge of, you know, the
shopping and the packing and the cleaning up and then you're going to learn that if you send
wheat thins instead of triscuits they come back uneaten and it's not going to be my job to tell
you that okay so giving your partners a promotion um so could because you're giving it to your partners
it could be because you are actually outsourcing it and that can be a scary charged word because
people hear outsourcing and they hear like oh uh this and her like disposable income who wants
me to outsource right but actually what i want us to remember is that we're actually
comfortable outsourcing male-coded tasks and uncomfortable outsourcing female-coded tasks.
So even very modest income families, probably most of the people here listening, take their car
to the mechanic for an oil change. And it's 70 bucks, 80 bucks, and everybody could do it themselves
if they spend an hour on YouTube. But we assign value to men's time, so we think it's normal
to hire people for male-coded tasks. I just, this is one of the moments I wish I could snap.
I actually am unable to snap because I would just be like snapping so hard.
core right now. So I'm snapping in spirit. Yeah. So just if there is something where, you know,
you are not outsourcing, it means hiring yourself to do it. And, you know, just like the mechanic,
sometimes it's okay to bring in an expert, an outside expert for something rather than hire yourself.
And then the last thing is then maybe there's some stuff that you just don't do. And I call this
throwing out your houseplants, okay? Because all of my houseplants are dying. Okay. I'm on book
tour and they make me feel guilty and like a failure and I would plants and I would love to be the
type of person that has like the herb garden on the windowsill that I can like snip the fresh herbs
and sprinkle them on the chicken or whatever right and maybe I'm not going to be that person right now
right now in this chapter of my life it's a period that I call the squeeze where everything is
pushing down at once maybe that's not who I am and that's okay and so finding a house plant to
throw out something you're just saying I'm going to put
this down right now, right? Because all of this doesn't fit in my time basket. That's okay. So I hope
that's the one thing I would ask everyone to do is to just find something to get off of your plate
through one of those different strategies. It's so actionable and so helpful and possible.
Thank you. This has been an amazing conversation. I can't wait to talk to you about so many more
things in the future. This is so helpful. And thank you for your really important work.
Thank you so much. Yeah. It was great to talk to you. And, you know,
I think there's so much more I wish I could fit in, but there's more strategies in the book,
and I hope that people will find it.
Absolutely.
Having it all, what data tells us about women's lives and getting the most out of yours,
it's incredible, so thought-provoking and so practical, and that's a marriage I always love.
So thank you.
Thank you so much.
I have so many takeaways from this conversation, but I'm going to talk about the three
that are kind of loudest in my mind.
Number one, this idea of throwing out a house plan I just find so accurate.
actionable. Is there something we can all just say, I'm not going to do that in this season of my life
this week. Try it. Experiment and just see what happens. Number two, this idea that we think about
outsourcing traditionally male tasks completely differently than we think about outsourcing traditionally
female tasks has got me really thinking. Actually, right after recording, Corinne and I were talking about
the idea of hiring a professional organizer and she knows someone who does it.
for $50 an hour, which is less money than the per hour cost of getting an oil change.
And so just think about that a little bit.
And number three, I just keep thinking about the importance of boundaries.
At the end of the day, our ability to carve out time for ourselves, to have hard conversations
with our partner, and definitely to tolerate the pushback and the whining and the meltdowns
that might come from our kids.
It all comes down to, do I know the skill of setting and holding a boundary?
And a lot of you know that's actually my favorite skill to teach, and I just keep thinking about
how important that is. All right. Let's end the way we always do. Place your feet on the ground
and a hand on your heart. And let's remind ourselves, even as we struggle on the outside,
we remain good inside. I'll see you soon.
