PERHAPS A GIFT VOUCHER FOR MUM?: MOTHER'S DAY

Close Notification

Your cart does not contain any items

Work, Parent, Thrive

12 Science-Backed Strategies to Ditch Guilt, Manage Overwhelm, and Grow Connection (When Everything...

Yael Schonbrun

$34.99

Paperback

Not in-store but you can order this
How long will it take?

QTY:

English
Shambhala Publications Inc
10 January 2023
Twelve practical strategies to experience more joy and feel less guilt as a working parent, drawn from ACT, the groundbreaking therapy technique that has helped countless people.

Dr. Yael Schonbrun calls out the myth of the work-life balance and offers practical strategies that can help us reframe our approach to working and parenting from the inside out. Based in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), these strategies won't create more hours in the day, but they can shift how we label our experiences, revise the stories we tell ourselves about working and parenting, and recognize the value we get from each role.

Differing values and commitments pull working parents in opposite directions and the social supports families desperately need are lacking. Yet even with these very real challenges, we can find more peace and less stress.

Some of these strategies include- Getting clear on our values and using these to help us make what often feel like no-win choices around time and resourcesPracticing mindfulness in both parenting and workingSubtracting less meaningful obligations from our lives These steps can help you crush both roles, with examples from the author's research that show families of many shapes and backgrounds.

By:  
Imprint:   Shambhala Publications Inc
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm, 
Weight:   369g
ISBN:   9781611809657
ISBN 10:   1611809657
Pages:   272
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

YAEL SCHONBRUN, PhD, is assistant professor of psychology at Brown University, a family therapist, and co-host of the podcast Psychologists Off the Clock. In 2014, she wrote a piece on motherhood and ambition for the New York Times that went viral. She has since contributed a chapter to Double Bind- Women on Ambition alongside Roxane Gay, Molly Ringwald, and others and has written for Psychology Today.

Reviews for Work, Parent, Thrive: 12 Science-Backed Strategies to Ditch Guilt, Manage Overwhelm, and Grow Connection (When Everything Feels Like Too Much)

Work, Parent, Thrive is an essential antidote to today's stressful working-parent culture. Yael Schonbrun shares simple and useful strategies for parents who want to feel grounded, connected, and fulfilled in all aspects of their lives. -Melinda Wenner Moyer, author of How to Raise Kids Who Aren't Assholes Combining work and parenting is overwhelming, and too often we feel they are in conflict. This book provides simple, practical tools for making them work together. -Emily Oster, author of Cribsheet and The Family Firm This might as well have been called 'How to Be a Happier Working Parent'-and it will, indeed, help you do just that. -KJ Dell'Antonia, The New York Times best-selling author of The Chicken Sisters and How to Be a Happier Parent If you want life advice from a dry scientific text, put this book down now. But if you want a book that feels like a conversation with a smart, empathetic friend who's seen it all and helped countless clients improve their lives-and can help you with yours-read Work, Parent, Thrive. -Alex Soojung-Kim Pang, author of Rest This book is for every working parent who thinks they don't have the time to read it. Make time! Yael Schonbrun combines academic scholarship, clinical expertise, and personal experience as a mother of three to offer deeply wise advice on how to manage our inner lives while we wait for society to make the outer lives of us working parents more manageable. -Barry Schwartz, author of The Paradox of Choice and Why We Work Parenting is hard. Working is hard. Caring deeply about both is even harder. In an area rife with judgment, hot-takes, and 'hacks,' thank goodness for Yael Schonbrun. She offers much-needed nuance and complexity and provides an evidence-based framework to harmoniously integrate what, for many people, are the two most important parts of their lives-family and craft. -Brad Stulberg, author of The Practice of Groundedness and Peak Performance Reading Work, Parent, Thrive is like chatting with a knowledgeable best buddy, one brimming with fascinating stories, cutting-edge science, and practical tips from the therapy room. Yael Schonbrun offers a way to accept our working-parent reality and use elements from both worlds to our advantage. It's just what every working parent needs! Michele Borba, Ed.D., educational psychologist and author of Thrivers: The Surprise Reasons Why Some Kids Struggle and Others Shine You likely picked up this book to find a way forward as a working parent. That's a fine start, but not just any solution will do. You are a living, breathing human being, not a broken dishwasher. A truly effective way forward needs to help you become aware of your own self story, to focus on how you relate to your own insides, and to aid you in finding meaning and purpose. Those are the kind of processes that pay off in every area of life. It will take both knowledge and practice, but this wise and well-written book will deliver scientifically sound know-how in clear, bite-sized units-you just need to supply the energy and commitment to learn and to grow. Ready when you are! I can highly recommend the journey. -Steven C. Hayes, PhD, originator of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, Foundation Professor of Psychology, University of Nevada, Reno Work, Parent, Thrive is an invaluable roadmap for thriving in working parenthood. -Lori Gottlieb, The New York Times bestselling author of Maybe You Should Talk to Someone In a moment when we're all drowning in demands, this book is an engaging, evidence-based analysis on how we can stay afloat. As a working parent, it will save you more time than it takes to read. -Adam Grant, The New York Times bestselling author of Think Again and host of the TED podcast WorkLife


See Inside

See Also