The Artificial Intelligence Agent Advantage
The complete AI agent system for individuals, entrepreneurs, small businesses, and organiz…
A guide for when life gets hard
The most profound transition of your life — and nobody prepares you for it.
Becoming a parent is extraordinary and exhausting in equal measure. The love is enormous. So is the loss — of sleep, autonomy, identity, and the relationship you had before. Both things are true. Both are allowed.
The books in this collection take new parenthood seriously as a genuine identity transition, not just a practical challenge. They address the emotional upheaval, the relationship shifts, and the quiet grief that often accompanies the joy that nobody talks about.
Your recovery pathway
Five science-backed stages from crisis to thriving
Every title below has been chosen because it speaks directly to where you are right now — and where you are going.
The complete AI agent system for individuals, entrepreneurs, small businesses, and organiz…
A 21-day, body-first somatic workbook for resetting an exhausted nervous system. Grounded …
Personalised guidance
The free 5-minute Strong Through Change Assessment reveals exactly which stage of the framework you're in right now — and gives you a tailored reading path to help you move forward.
Becoming a parent is the most common transformative experience in human life — and one of the least honestly discussed. Here is what it really involves.
Read the full article →You're not the first to feel this way — and you won't be the last. Here are honest answers to the questions we hear most.
Get personalised guidance →Baby blues are mild, short-lived mood fluctuations in the first week or two after birth, affecting up to 80% of new mothers. Postnatal depression (PND) is more persistent (lasting weeks or months), more intense, and significantly impairs functioning. PND affects both mothers and fathers, and is highly treatable.
Because you have, in some important ways. The psychological transition to parenthood (what some researchers call "matrescence" or "patrescence") is a genuine identity shift. The person you were before is not gone, but is integrating a fundamental new role. This takes time and usually some deliberate attention.
Very. Research consistently shows relationship satisfaction declines for most couples in the first years of parenthood, particularly those with high expectations. Sleep deprivation, role strain, and the loss of couple identity all contribute. This is survivable — couples who navigate it often report a deeper bond on the other side.
Reframe asking for help as competence, not failure. Isolated parenting is historically anomalous — humans evolved to raise children in community. Asking for help is adaptive. It also models for your child that needing others is not weakness but wisdom.