You've read the books. You've followed the Instagram experts. You've tried the five-step systems and the attachment methods and the gentle discipline frameworks. And yet here you are at 2 AM, googling 'is it normal for a three-year-old to throw seventeen tantrums in one day' while your child screams because you cut their sandwich wrong. Again.
The parenting advice industrial complex has failed you. Not because the information is wrong-but because it's designed for a fantasy version of parenting that doesn't exist. Perfect children who respond predictably. Perfect parents with infinite patience. Perfect circumstances with no work deadlines, no mental load, no burned dinner while managing a meltdown.
You don't need another expert telling you what you should be doing. You need permission to be human. You need a system that works when you're tired, when your kid won't cooperate, when you've already yelled twice before breakfast. You need someone to look you in the eye and say: giving your kid screen time so you can shower doesn't make you a bad parent-it makes you a person with basic hygiene needs.
Good Enough Parenting delivers the 21-day protocol that rewires how you approach every parenting challenge-from sleep disasters to food battles to the soul-crushing comparison trap. This isn't about doing more. It's about doing what actually matters and letting go of everything that doesn't.
Inside this permission-based system, you'll discover:
This book meets you in the chaos. It speaks to the parent who feels like they're failing because they can't maintain the routines, can't implement the systems, can't be the calm peaceful presence when their toddler just smeared yogurt on the wall for the third time this morning. It gives you the research-backed truth: your kids need a present, regulated parent far more than they need a perfect one.
Each of the 21 days includes one micro-shift-small enough to implement even on your worst day, powerful enough to compound into lasting change. No elaborate morning routines. No assuming you have hours for self-care. Just practical, real-world strategies that work in actual homes with actual children who don't follow the script.
Stop drowning in contradictory advice. Stop believing that one wrong move will scar your child forever. Stop sacrificing your sanity on the altar of perfect parenting. Your kid doesn't need you to be flawless. They need you to be sane, present, and good enough. That's not settling. That's the whole point.