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What to do When Self-Care Seems Impossible

Solo Parent

Release Date: 10/27/2025

Dating Differently show art Dating Differently

Solo Parent

This week we’re discussing Dating Differently. Dating after divorce can feel layered and heavy for solo parents. Curiosity and hope often exist right alongside fear, grief, and loneliness. Add children into the mix, and the emotional stakes rise even higher. This conversation speaks directly to the pain of wanting connection while also protecting your heart, your healing, and your kids. Dating differently matters because the choices you make now do not just shape your future relationships, they shape your sense of stability, wholeness, and emotional safety at home. In this episode, Robert...

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Solo Parent

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Conquering Loneliness During the Holidays show art Conquering Loneliness During the Holidays

Solo Parent

This week we’re discussing Conquering Loneliness During the Holidays. For solo parents, the holidays can magnify loneliness in surprising ways. Maybe you are watching your child leave for the other home on Christmas morning, sitting in a quiet house that used to feel full. Maybe you are surrounded by family and noise, yet painfully aware that you are the only one without a partner by your side. Maybe old traditions feel broken or impossible now, and you are not sure how to make new ones that actually feel like you.  Today, we cover three main points: Naming and normalizing holiday...

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More Episodes

This week we’re discussing What to Do When Self-Care Seems Impossible 

Solo parents often feel squeezed by nonstop responsibilities, financial strain, cultural pressure to be endlessly strong, and isolation that makes help hard to ask for. “Self care” can even feel like a trigger when planning it adds guilt on top of exhaustion. These pain points matter because chasing idealized me time can keep us stuck. Reframing care as something we sometimes practice with our kids helps restore connection and models healthy boundaries in real life.

Today, we cover three main points:

  • Why me time is not always realistic for solo parents
  • How “us care” builds connection and rest at the same time
  • Practical ways to create shared rhythms of care with your kids

If “me time” feels out of reach, do not wait for perfect conditions. Choose one small shared rhythm this week, make it simple, and repeat it. Presence is the point. When care becomes something you practice together, home can feel safer for your kids and more restorative for you.

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