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Book Cover for: Balancing the Big Stuff: Finding Happiness in Work, Family, and Life, Miriam Liss

Balancing the Big Stuff: Finding Happiness in Work, Family, and Life

Miriam Liss

While the current conversation about work-family balance and "having it all" tends to focus on women, both men and women are harmed when conditions make it impossible to balance meaningful work with family life. Yet, both will benefit from re-evaluating what it means to have it all and fighting for changes in their relationships and society to make greater equality possible. Here, Miriam Liss and Holly Hollomon Schiffrin discuss the ways in which we all define "having it all" and how we can obtain it for ourselves through a better evaluation of what we want from ourselves, our families, our jobs, and each other. Determining a 50/50 division of labor around the house may not be the thing that works for everyone. Working from home or not at all may not be the thing to bring us satisfaction, but learning what studies show and how to feel balanced and make those decisions to bring balance is crucial.

The authors argue that people can find balance in their roles by doing things in moderation. Although being engaged in both parenting and work is good for well-being, people can avoid the pitfalls of over-parenting and over-working. They show that balance can come from a meaningful consideration of what happiness and contentedness mean to us as individuals, and how best to achieve our goals within the limitations of our current circumstances. They illustrate that balance is not simply an individual problem. Social issues such as the lack of parental leave, flexible work schedules, and affordable, high quality child care make balance difficult. With attention now on the issue, they argue that it's time men and women advocate for better services and better opportunities to achieve balance, happiness, and success in all their roles.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
  • Publish Date: Nov 10th, 2017
  • Pages: 264
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.80in - 5.70in - 0.60in - 0.70lb
  • EAN: 9780810895645
  • Categories: Life Stages - GeneralParenting - General

About the Author

Schulte, Brigid: - Brigid Schulte is the author of the bestselling Overwhelmed: Work, Love, and Play When No One Has the Time and an award-winning journalist formerly for the Washington Post, where she was part of a team that won a Pulitzer Prize. She is also the director of the Better Life Lab, the work-family justice and gender equity program at New America. She lives in Alexandria, Virginia, with her husband and two children.

Praise for this book

[T]he book is heavily research-based and contains extensive notation for further reading. It is . . . approachable for non-academics.-- "Free-Lance Star"
Balancing the Big Stuff offers a very readable guide on how to simplify and enrich life in those areas where we need it most, providing anecdotes about working parents, stay-at-home moms (and dads), and single parents. Supported by pertinent research, the authors offer up concrete suggestions about parenting, work, division of household chores and activities that can further enhance happiness and meaning in one's life. But it's not just up to individuals to make balance more attainable -- long-term systemic changes are also needed in challenging gender stereotypes, establishing flexible leave policies, eliminating the gender wage gap and providing affordable childcare to all Americans.-- "Daily Press, Newport News, Virginia"
Balancing the Big Stuffoffers an important critique of doing it all and offers compelling suggestions for better prioritizing time use to maximize individual and family happiness. Written by psychologists, it offers different perspectives, complementing the vast body of extant sociological literature on the topic. It would be an excellent springboard for book club discussions, undergraduate courses, and graduate courses seeking to offer guidance on balancing life as well as an understanding of the social-structural complexities involved. In a seminar style course the suggestions offered might best be discussed in the context of for whom they work, under which set of circumstances. That might spur consideration of the ways society might address work-life balance more broadly.-- "Sex Roles: A Journal of Research"
It's rare that I read a book and wish that I had written it. Liss and Schiffrin have penned the definitive book on work-life balance--an elegant blend of engaging stories, illuminating examples, and cutting-edge empirical evidence. If you read Lean In and want to dig deeper into the complex terrain of the pitfalls and joys of achieving work-life (or any kind of) balance, this book is for you.--Sonja Lyubomirsky, professor of Psychology, University of California; author of The Myths of Happiness, and The How of Happiness
Miriam Liss and Holly Schiffrin have written a wise guide to negotiating the complexities of modern life. Balancing the Big Stuff provides actionable recommendations based on up-to-the-minute results from some of the best research in contemporary psychology. This book is for anyone who finds modern life just a little too hard to manage.--Barry Schwartz, professor of psychology, Swarthmore College; author of The Paradox of Choice and Practical Wisdom
Written smoothly and descriptively by psychologists Miriam Liss and Holly H. Schiffrin, Balancing the Big Stuff is a road map to the 'Good Life.'-- "SUCCESS"