You’ve made it through work emails, a childcare pickup, a missing sock incident, and a living room floor full of LEGO. And now? It’s 6:30 PM. The day isn’t over—it’s just entering Phase Two: dinner, cleanup, bedtime, meltdown (possibly yours).
Being a single parent means doing everything. Being a single dad often means doing it while people assume you’ve got it all under control… or none of it. You’re managing drop-offs, deadlines, spaghetti-stained onesies, and somehow you’re also supposed to prepare a balanced, home-cooked meal and get everyone to bed at a decent hour?
Let’s be honest: some nights, the win is simply showing up.
Weeknights with a little one can feel like a never-ending loop of tiny crises: someone’s crying, something’s boiling over, there are bananas in the bathtub and you’re answering work emails with one hand while cutting grapes with the other.
You’re not doing it wrong. You’re doing it all.
You're thinking about tomorrow’s school outfit, what’s left in the fridge, whether screen time lasted too long, and how on earth to finish that project by Friday.
You're the emotional anchor, the house manager, the snack dispenser, the safety net.
And while it’s rewarding, it’s also exhausting.
Decision fatigue is real. If you find yourself standing in the kitchen at 7 PM staring into the fridge like it holds life answers—you’re not alone.
If there’s one parenting trick that works more than 50% of the time, it’s this: kids love routine. You will too.
Forget bubble baths and silent retreats. For single dads, self-care can look like:
You are also a human.
Some nights you cook. Some nights it’s toast and fruit. And on the nights where you have nothing left, that’s when a bit of planning saves your sanity.
We put pressure on ourselves to do everything. But sometimes, one small win is more than enough.
That is the win.
You don’t have to get everything right. You just have to keep going. And some nights, letting dinner be easy is the smartest move you’ll make.