![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() But I think often, it’s a bit sad that men don’t really get that experience much. It’s fun to talk about that stuff, but it’s sort of a real part of life for working mothers. For me, there’s filming that last series of Kitchen Cabinet when my baby Kate was three months old… My producer actually held my baby in a sling, with an earpiece so she could still produce my show… I jellied my breast milk for a while because it was a way of feeding her! The absolute standout leader board winner from the book is a woman called Lisa Annese (the CEO of the Diversity Council Australia).Įvery chick who is a working parent has a stock in trade of these kind of ridiculous stories. ![]() MM: You use a terrific term in the book when describing how you meet all your responsibilities at home and at work: “I use every scrap of the day like an Italian farmer uses all of the pig.” Does that describe the lives of many working mothers you know?Ī: Sure, yeah! I mean (I know many) people who can multi-task. It gives you a sense of companionable equality. Our house is kind of a mad house, like lots of houses with these children are. Which is actually rather excellent advice.Īnd my partner, who also works full time - he works a half-day week from home, he brings home work as well, so he works at a time when he’s involved in dinner and putting the kids in bed. “You can just do less stuff,” Crabb says. ![]()
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