Navigating a demanding career and parenting three kids on your own? It sounds daunting. Yet for one Seattle-based single dad in tech, this balancing act has become his everyday reality—and, strangely enough, his source of pride.
The Morning Marathon
His alarm goes off at 6:30 a.m. sharp. No snooze, because little eyes are waiting. One by one, he whisks his daughters’ tangled braids into order, polishes toothbrush rituals into art, and applies summer sunscreen with the precision of a painter on a deadline. All while mentally mapping out lunch ingredients and bus schedules.
It’s equal parts Zen and chaos. By 8:50, the three have boarded their respective transports—two daughters bound for elementary school, a son headed to preschool. And just like that, his “office hours” kick off. He logs into Zoom, pulls up code editors, responds to Slack threads. But if any meeting dares to stretch into late afternoon, he lets it slide. Because 3:50 p.m. is sacred: that’s pickup time.
Remote Work: More Than a Perk
Working remotely hasn’t been a cute trend; it’s his lifeline. He only steps foot in the company’s physical office once a quarter, if that. The rest of the time, home is where deadlines and playtime collide—and somehow dovetail.
Is this flexibility a luxury? He’d argue it’s not. It’s a necessity. After all, who will show up to the kids’ piano recital or volunteer at the classroom party if he’s chained to a commute? If he isn’t there, no one is.
Boundaries That Feel Like Lifelines
Strict boundaries might sound rigid, but for him they’re lifesavers. He never “parks a spreadsheet” between himself and his kids after work. No late-night bug fixes once the backyard games begin.
At first, drawing these lines felt almost selfish. But then he realized: to be fully present as a dad, he needed to guard that time fiercely. No side projects after 4 p.m. No last-minute code reviews at 10 p.m. That’s his rule—end of story.
Self-Care Isn’t Selfish
Here’s a confession: he’s a recovering workaholic. His tech career demands relentless focus, and he used to drown stress in late-night deadlines. But then he stumbled on a simple truth: you can’t pour from an empty cup.
Now, self-care is non-negotiable. Wednesdays are for deep-tissue massages. Thursdays are for therapy—yes, men need it, too. Saturdays get babysitter time, a window to catch up with friends or wander a bookstore without any little hands tugging at his sleeve.
His parents live nearby, ready to swoop in on early-release days or lend a hand during his Sunday therapy sessions. And the neighborhood potluck—what he calls the “street dinner”—has become a weekly ritual. It’s this patchwork of professional care, grandparents, and neighbors that keeps his sanity intact.
Embracing Change, One Day at a Time
“The only constant is change,” he often tells friends. It’s not a platitude but a mantra forged through diapers, divorce papers, and daily surprises. Some days, curveballs feel endless: a meltdown just before bedtime, Wi-Fi outages mid-presentation, or a forgotten permission slip that needs last-minute signing.
Other days, everything aligns: a smooth morning launch, a midday shout-out from his eldest for acing a test, and an evening watching the sunset through his son’s wide eyes. He soaks those moments in, knowing they won’t last forever.
What advice would he offer? Guard your boundary like your most prized algorithm. Cultivate a support network—grandparents, therapists, neighbors. And learn to laugh at the mess. Amid spilled cereal and tangled code, there’s beauty in unpredictability.
The Real Win
He’s not perfect. He’ll tell you about nights he skipped dinner to squash a critical bug, only to feel guilty at bedtime. He admits the pang of doubt when he wonders if his screen overshadows his smile. But he chose this path to give his children stability, love, and certainty that their dad will show up—at the bus stop, the recital, and the dinner table.
Have you—or someone you know—navigated the tightrope of single parenthood and a demanding career? Drop a comment below, share your wisdom, or tell us how you find balance. And don’t forget to follow us on Facebook for more real-life stories.
For some laughs, check these single dad memes that nail the chaos, love & laughs of solo fatherhood.
Sources:
- www.businessinsider.com/single-dad-remote-work-three-kids-overemployment-2025-9
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