10 BEST BOOKS FOR BUILDING A DAILY SELF-CARE ROUTINE THAT ACTUALLY STICKS

I have a confession to make, and it's about the morning routine. I used to be the person who set five alarms and hit snooze four times and stumbled into.

I have a confession to make, and it's about the morning routine. I used to be the person who set five alarms and hit snooze four times and stumbled into.

The email came at 11 PM, which should have been my first red flag. My friend Rachel was asking if I could watch her kids the following weekend — again —.

There is a particular silence that happens in a good book club meeting — the kind that comes after someone has said something true and everyone is sitting with.

I need to start by admitting something: when my son Eli was first evaluated for autism at age five, my first instinct was to ask what we could do to make him.

The moment happened somewhere between Bozeman and the west entrance, in the kind of silence that in my house usually means someone is upset about something. My.

Okay so this is for people like me who have spent way too much time on BookTok, who have added approximately forty-seven books to their TBR after watching one.

Here's what I used to think about optimism: it was for people who hadn't paid.

My oldest daughter Siobhan turned twelve last year, and I made the mistake of asking her what she wanted for her birthday. She said she wanted a book, which is.

This isn't as dramatic as it sounds. I was a literature graduate student — I read constantly. But somewhere between the required syllabi and the critical.

I spent eight months not writing anything worth keeping. Not a journal entry, not a letter, not even a text message longer than three sentences. The cursor.