Life with children can make even strong couples feel like exhausted co-workers, trading shifts and messages about pick-ups and packed lunches. Days blur into logistics, evenings vanish into screens and tidying, and the idea of romance feels distant or unrealistic. Underneath the teamwork, many pairs quietly wonder where their old connection went and whether it is possible to get it back without abandoning their children or their sanity. This book is a practical guide for parents who still like each other but are tired of feeling like housemates. It helps couples untangle mental load, rebalance chores, and rebuild emotional and physical closeness in ways that fit real schedules. Through simple scripts and small experiments, readers learn how to handle resentment in marriage, turn conflict into collaboration, and use couples communication tools that work when everyone is short on sleep. Along the way, it offers realistic maps for sex after children, creative micro dates for parents, and gentle ways to nurture busy parents intimacy without pressure or perfectionism. Whether you are craving more laughter, hoping to start reconnecting after kids, or simply want a calmer rhythm of parenting and partnership, this is a handbook for finding your way back to each other while you are still in the thick of family life. Ideal for anyone searching for grounded, hopeful relationship books for parents who want their love story to grow up alongside their children.
Love After Kids
SKU: 9789376551798
$22.99 Regular Price
$18.50Sale Price
- Kaia Solander writes about love in the years when the washing machine never quite stops and someone is always asking for a snack. Her work centres couples who are trying to stay kind to each other while raising children, holding down jobs, and juggling family expectations. She brings a clear, non-judgemental voice to subjects that many pairs avoid: resentment over chores, mismatched desire, and the quiet loneliness that can creep into busy homes. Kaia is especially interested in how ordinary routines either support or slowly drain long-term relationships. Drawing on stories from different cultures and generations, she contrasts the duty-heavy marriages of the past with today's hope for warmth, equality, and shared parenting. Her pages offer scripts, checklists, and realistic examples designed for tired people, not perfect ones. Above all, she believes that protecting space for the couple is not a luxury but a legacy that children quietly absorb.


















