Wednesday, January 21, 2026

#6 A Mom's Ideal Job

 Find A Job That Serves YOU

Jobs reflect the phases of our lives.

When you were eight, you may have run a lemonade stand. When you were sixteen, you may have worked at an amusement park.

The job you choose now—as a single mother—needs to support this phase of your life.

If you are working for an employer that expects you to be married to your job, that will not serve your family. When work demands go overboard, your children lose out at home.

The goal is not just employment. The goal is support.

So what does a single-mom–supportive job look like?

Single-Mom–Supportive Jobs Tend to Do the Following:

πŸ’²1. They lower the cost of childcare

This might look like:

    • an employer who subsidizes childcare near your home or workplace
    • working in education, where your child can attend the school where you work
    • remote work, such as chat-based roles, where you may not need childcare at all

πŸ‘₯2. They offer usable sick leave

A supportive employer provides sick leave that can be used for you and your children, without penalty or fear.

πŸ₯«3. They offer fair, competitive pay growth

Market-competitive raises help you keep up with rising costs.

😷4. They offer reasonably priced medical benefits

The employer provides health insurance that you can actually afford to use.

This includes:

    • reasonable monthly premiums
    • manageable deductibles
    • coverage that includes your children
    • access to routine care, not just emergencies
    • prescription coverage
    • employer-matched benefits

Medical coverage should reduce stress—not add to it. When healthcare is accessible, you’re more likely to stay well, catch issues early, and keep your household running steadily. So, avoid jobs that do not have medical benefits.

When you work for an employer that supports your real needs, something important happens. You feel better about contributing in your position. You show up with less stress and your family benefits from that stability.

Your job should support your life—not compete with it. πŸ’›

 


#5 Mom's Sleep

Rest Is Non-Negotiable

Rest is not optional for single mothers. Rest is a requirement.

You have to understand that—and over time, your children have to understand it too.

The first step is getting your children to sleep, or at least getting them settled for the night. There needs to be a clear bedtime cue. A point where the day ends.

Meals are done. Everyone is in bed—either asleep or doing a quiet activity.

This is the moment when you are OFF THE CLOCK.

Your children may climb into your bed later in the night. That’s okay, but they need to do it quietly. The boundary is not about distance—it’s about rest.

This boundary is firm. It is not up for debate. Your younger children may not understand it at first. That’s normal. With time and consistency, they will adjust.

This boundary applies to adults too. You may feel like it’s okay to answer a friend’s call or text at midnight when they are in crisis. Going forward, it’s okay to let people know that late-night emergencies need to be scheduled before your off-the-clock time. Being available at all hours is not the same as being supportive.

Rest protects your judgment. Rest protects your patience. Rest protects your health. Get consistent rest. πŸ’›


πŸ‘€SIDEBAR on sleep:
Aim for natural sleep without using sleep-aids that leave you drowsy or foggy. If there is an emergency in the night, your children will need you clear and present.


#4 The Man Trap

 Looking for a Rescue

There is a common trap many single mothers fall into, often without realizing it.

The belief is this: that another man will fix the crisis of single motherhood.

Sometimes it’s framed as doing it, “for the kids.” Sometimes it’s about needing help, stability, or relief.
Sometimes it’s about exhaustion and wanting to share the load.

Those feelings are understandable. Unfortunately, relationships entered to solve a crisis often feel different from relationships built on health.

When a man is expected to rescue a situation—financially, emotionally, or practically—there is pressure. It can lead to rushed decisions, ignored red flags, or settling for less than safety and peace, for you and for him. Even the children could be pressured to develop a relationship with a new father based on need. This doesn’t mean partnership is bad. It means timing and motive matter.

Before adding another adult into your life—or your children’s lives—it’s important to first build stability, safety, and self-support as much as possible. So, if that man leaves, your foundation is still in place. Besides, a relationship should be an addition, not a solution.

No person can replace rest, healing, or wise structure. No relationship should be asked to carry extra stress or pressure it was never meant to hold.

Having friends are nice. It's also good to give your children the blessing of having your attention.

Put the man pot on the back burner —on simmer. πŸ’›

#3 Secure Your Space

 Safe and Secure

Whether you are in your own place, sharing space, or staying in someone else’s home, it is important to do what you can to create a safe space for you and your children, especially at night.

A good night’s rest depends on feeling secure. If your body is on alert, rest doesn’t come easily.

Safety doesn’t have to be expensive or complicated.

It might look like:

    • covering windows or using decorative stained glass coverings
    • making sure doors and windows are secure
    • placing a chair against a door if that helps you feel safer
    • using a Do Not Disturb sign during certain hours
    • adding a simple door stop or door jam
    • and adding an extra layer like prayer, if you're religious.

Making small adjustments makes you feels protected while you sleep, especially if you have children that sleep walk or wake up at night.

Do what you need to do. There is no need to explain or justify it to anyone.  Add as many layers of security you need to make you feel comfortable.  

Feeling safe allows your body to rest. Rest is the foundation for restoring well-being. Safety is not about fear. It’s about care.

Give yourself and your children the gift of a space where you can lie down and sleep well. πŸ’›

#2 Stability is Job One

Stability Is Job One

As you move through this wonder-filled world of single motherhood, there is one key to maintaining well-being- stability.

There’s an old saying, “Don’t reinvent the wheel.” For single mothers, the version of that is simply:

Don’t do the same job twice.

If you notice that certain things keep breaking down, put it on your LOSE IT list.

It might be:

  • a car that is always in the shop
  • a friend who cancels frequently
  • a service that is hit-or-miss
  • an arrangement you can’t rely on

These things add stress. Over time, that stress adds up. As you begin to look at what’s working and what isn’t, start with reliability. These are your first tweaks.

Ask yourself:  What holds up consistently? Who shows up? Which services are most reliable? 

Put these things on your KEEPER list.

This doesn’t mean you fix everything at once. You don't have to hurt anyone's feelings, just use your KEEPER LIST more than your LOSE IT list.  Eventually the things on the LOSE IT list will fade away.  

Stability creates peace. Then you can exhale a bit more. πŸ’›

#1 Take it Easy

Not an Easy Road

...but Take it Easy Anyway

There are many paths that lead to single motherhood.

Some women arrive here through divorce. Some through loss. Some by choice. Others through situations they did not want or plan.

Many of these paths come with hurt. Some come with deep loss. Some carry stress or trauma that takes time to sort through.  Having emotions is normal.

Because you are a single mother this means you maintain two fronts at the same time

  • rebuilding yourself and keeping life steady for your children.

That is real work...but you can devise a way to make it doable.

1. If there are wounds you are trying to heal, it is okay to seek help. A counselor, therapist, or trusted professional can support that process. Strategy is not meant to replace healing.

2. Take it easy. As you begin to apply ideas from this blog, go gently. Take the low-impact version, like you would in exercise. You do not need to do everything at once. You do not need to get it “right” the first time.

Progress counts—even slow progress. Be kind to yourself as you move forward. πŸ’›



About This Blog

Beloved Daughters of Strength

Strategic Living for Single Moms


About This Blog

This blog is for single mothers who are handling real life and want clear ways to manage it well.  You’ll find simple, useful tips shared by other single moms who understand the challenges of this what this season.

#6 A Mom's Ideal Job

 Find A Job That Serves YOU Jobs reflect the phases of our lives. When you were eight, you may have run a lemonade stand. When you were sixt...