There’s no balance. Let’s start there.
If you’re reading this looking for the system that lets you do an excellent job at work AND an excellent job caring for your aging parent AND show up fully for your spouse and kids and friends and self — that system doesn’t exist. The people selling it are lying.
What’s real is a different question: how do you do both well enough, for long enough, to come out the other side without losing yourself, your job, or your relationship with your parent?
That’s the honest version of “balance.” It’s not about doing it all perfectly. It’s about doing it sustainably for the years this is going to take. Here’s how that actually works.
Read more: How to Balance Work and Caring for Aging ParentsAcknowledge the math.
The average caregiver provides about 24 hours of care per week (NAC/AARP, Caregiving in the United States 2020). For working adult children, even a fraction of that landing in work hours — appointments, phone calls, sibling coordination, paperwork, emotional decompression — adds up. Over a year, that’s hundreds of hours redirected from career to caregiving. Those are real hours. They have to come from somewhere.
If you’re not actively choosing where they come from, they come from the wrong places — your sleep, your spouse, your health, your sanity. The first step in “balancing” is acknowledging the math is real and being intentional about which buckets the time comes out of.
Decide what’s getting less attention. On purpose.
You can’t add more hours to the day. You can decide which parts of your life will get less, temporarily, and which will get more.
For most working caregivers, the honest decisions look like:
- Career velocity slows. You’re probably not going to get the promotion this year. You’re not pursuing the stretch project. You’re maintaining trajectory, not accelerating it. That’s a choice you’re making with your eyes open, not a failure.
- Discretionary time disappears. The hobby, the volunteer commitment, the project you’ve been meaning to start — these go on hold for a while.
- Your relationship with your spouse takes intentional repair work. It will not maintain itself in this season. Schedule it, plan it, make it explicit.
- Your kids might see less of you in some ways and more of you in others — less weekend time, but more “I’m here when you need to talk.”
The mistake is letting these things happen to you instead of choosing them. Choose them. Out loud, with your spouse, with yourself.
Time tactics that actually work.
Specific things that move the needle for most working caregivers:
1. Calendar block, don’t react. Put recurring time on your work calendar for caregiving — “Caregiving appointment, 2–4 PM Thursdays.” This isn’t dishonest; it’s accurate. Treat that block as immovable.
2. Batch caregiving tasks. All medical appointments on the same day if possible. All phone calls returned in a single block, not scattered. All paperwork in one Sunday afternoon, not interrupting your week.
3. Build buffer days into your work calendar. A few mornings a month with no meetings, intentionally. These become the catch-up days when caregiving has eaten into your normal schedule.
4. Stop the multitasking lie. You cannot read a hospital chart and be on a Zoom call at the same time. You cannot fully listen to your parent and check email. Switch contexts cleanly. The cost of doing both badly is higher than the cost of doing one well.
Energy management beats time management.
There’s only so much productive energy in a week. Caregiving uses a different kind than work — emotional, relational, decision-heavy. After a hard day with your parent, your brain is wrung out in ways that aren’t fixable by drinking coffee.
Things that actually preserve energy:
- Sleep is non-negotiable. Whatever you have to do to protect it — protect it. Tired caregivers make worse decisions everywhere.
- Move your body. Even 20 minutes a day. The research is unambiguous about this.
- Eat real food. Not aspirational meal plans. Just regular, decent food, on a regular cadence.
- Carry less news. Whatever you’re scrolling through during 5-minute breaks is taxing your brain too. Caregivers who consume less media report less burnout.
This isn’t a wellness lecture. It’s the truth that comes from watching adult children burn out and seeing the patterns. The ones who lasted protected their basics aggressively.
The systems that make it sustainable.
You cannot do this alone. The single most predictive factor for caregiver burnout is whether you’re carrying it solo.
Get help on the parts you can hire out:
- Cleaning service for your parent’s home, even monthly
- Lawn or maintenance service
- Grocery delivery for your parent
- In-home aide for a few hours a week
- Geriatric care manager if the situation is complicated or you live far away
- Bookkeeper or financial helper if you’re managing your parent’s bills
Get sibling cooperation, even from a distance:
- Distance siblings own specific things — paperwork, phone calls, financial coordination, decision support
- The local sibling owns physical presence — but not exclusively the decision-making
- Document what each person owns so it’s not relitigated every week
The toolkit’s Division of Care module is built for exactly this work.
When the answer is bigger than tactics.
Sometimes the right answer isn’t a better calendar block. It’s a different career arrangement.
Signals it’s time to consider a structural change:
- You’re missing more than you’re hitting at work, and the trend is steady.
- Your relationships are deteriorating in ways you can’t ignore.
- Your health is declining (sleep, weight, blood pressure, mood).
- Your parent’s needs are accelerating faster than your tactics can absorb.
Structural changes that real caregivers actually make:
- Negotiated reduced schedule (four days a week, with prorated pay) — increasingly available, especially in white-collar roles
- Switch to a less demanding role at the same company
- Move to a more flex-friendly company
- Take FMLA leave for the most intense stretch
- Step out entirely for three to six months, then re-enter
None of these are failure. They’re acknowledgments that you’re in a season that requires structural adjustment, not just willpower. People who take structural action sooner come out healthier on the other side.
“There’s no balance. The honest question is: how do you do both well enough, for long enough, to come out the other side without losing yourself, your job, or your relationship with your parent?”
FROM 15 YEARS OF DOING BOTH:
Because caring for my parents and stepparents lasted over fifteen years, my career changed along with my responsibilities — not in a single moment, but in stages.
Early on, I didn’t have enough flexibility. Client meetings, project deadlines, work that had to happen on someone else’s schedule. When I needed to be with my parents, I used vacation time. When I needed to be there for an emergency, I used vacation time for that too. Some years, every PTO day I had went to caregiving — there were no actual vacations.
As my career progressed and I moved into more senior roles, the flexibility grew. I could move a meeting. I could take a 2 PM call from a hospital and still close my laptop at 7 PM with the work done. I had control of my calendar in ways I hadn’t earlier.
Even at my most senior role, there were still moments when everything came crashing down. Jumping on an airplane to get across the country as fast as possible. Switching client meetings for doctor meetings. Turning down a project I’d have wanted, because the timing would take me away at exactly the wrong moment for my parents. Turning down a promotion that would have required a move because it would put me to far away from my parents.
I did lose hours a week to remote work before it was widely accepted. I lost projects that probably would have advanced my career. That was the choice we made. We only have one family. We needed to take care of them as best we could.
If your career has been affected during this season — that’s not failure. It’s accurate. The version of yourself who isn’t carrying caregiving is also not the version you are right now. The career re-accelerates when caregiving recedes. Trust that.
You can’t do this perfectly. Stop trying.
The adult children who burn out aren’t the ones who weren’t trying hard enough. They’re the ones who tried hardest — who held themselves to a standard of “doing it all” that was never realistic.
The goal isn’t to hold every part of your life together at the same level it was at before caregiving started. The goal is to make smart choices about what to prioritize, do those things well, and let the rest go for now.
This season ends. Not soon. But it ends. The version of you that comes out the other side is going to be tougher, more capable, and more clear-eyed about what matters than the version that went in. That doesn’t make today easier. It makes today survivable.
You’re doing better than you think. Keep going.
The toolkit’s Caring for Yourself module is built around exactly this — sustainability over heroics, structural choices over willpower, the systems that keep adult-child caregivers in their jobs and out of the burnout zone.
Some additional articels that might help.
- The toolkit — already linked above.
- The Setting Boundaries — link from the section “Decide what’s getting less attention. On purpose” — boundaries with parents are how you protect work time.
- The Talk to Employers — link from the section about FMLA and structural changes — readers there will need that conversation framework.
- Division of Care toolkit module in the Toolkit — already mentioned in the Systems that make it sustainable section.
Back to the Caregiver Library. Read more on Caring for yourself.
