Have everything prepared the night before. I only go into the office once a week, but I will have my clothes, my daughters clothes, work bag, my lunch bag (minus fridge food) ready to go, so in the morning I’m not stressing trying to find it.
Slow cooker meals or bulk preparing a salad / soup. So you’re not spending loads of time cooking. I have a soup maker too, 20 mins and you have fresh soup for about 3-4 portions. When I’m cooking I make more and have leftovers. I try to make things my daughter can eat too (use low salt etc) and then freeze her stuff in portions (b&m has some great sized portion pots) and then I can just quickly microwave a meal up for her. Homemade hide the veg pasta is one she loves, or curry & rice.
I feel exactly the same and am in the same position as you. Life just feels so relentless and I need a break. I’ve decided to take a couple of days annual leave while little one is at nursery to catch up on jobs at home and then hopefully still have a bit of time to relax although I doubt I’ll have time for that. Any this Friday is my last Friday off and then I’ll be back at work full time and don’t know how I’ll cope then! Here’s hoping it will get easier as they get older and more independent but also want another one soon!
Yeah, I get you, my husband works out of the house 60+ hours a week so a lot is on me. I also have Fridays off. some tips Online food shopping - I refuse to spend my weekend at the supermarket. Look into cleaning routines (clean mama is one) so you do a bit each day and you don’t spend your weekends trying to clean it all. If you can work it into your budget, a cleaner. I have one for 2 hours every week. But some of my mum friends have one every 2 weeks. (I am very aware this is a privilege to have) Write down what needs to be done and split tasks with your partner. And they have to manage remembering to do them. Depending on your stance, sleep training. The Ferber method will work the quickest. Check out that sleep doc on insta who goes through all the methods though from CIO to Ferber, to no crying at all.