Wednesday, March 8, 2023

Book Club: Book Review of The Time-Saving Mom

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I received a COMPLIMENTARY copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for my honest opinion. I was not required to write a positive review, nor was I compensated in any other way. This post contains affiliate links. For more information, please see my Terms of Use and Disclosure Policy page. Thank you.


Everyone wants to be more productive during their day. How often do you turn off the lights at the end of the day and think: I wish I had time to clean the living room, fold the laundry, or take the car for maintenance today? (Or whatever tasks did not get checked off on your list.) Crystal Paine shares insight into how she manages her time to be more productive in The Time-Saving Mom: How to Juggle a Lot, Enjoy Your Life, and Accomplish What Matters Most


About the Book 

The Time-Saving Mom is a hardcover, 248-page book published by Bethany House. There are eleven chapters, including an introduction and an appendix of practical tools for the Time-Saving Mom. Those chapters are further subdivided into four steps: pray, prioritize, plan, and prep.

At the heart of The Time-Saving Mom are practical tips described with specific examples from Paine and followers of her website and Instagram account. The 4-Step Plan involves: 

  1. Pray: Starting each day with prayer, recognizing how much she needs God each day. 
  2. Prioritize: Looking at long-term goals and mapping them out using her 6 x 2 Priority System.
  3. Plan: Paine uses a Google Calendar and a written to-do list to plan her days and weeks. 
  4. Prep: Pain discusses putting together morning and evening routines that work. 
Sprinkled throughout the book are time-saving tips and quotes pulled out from the chapters, and each chapter ends with Two Truths for Time-Saving Moms and Time to Pray sections. So after reading the book, you can easily navigate each chapter to find just what you are looking for. 


A Mom's Quest to Teach: Book Club: Book Review of The Time-Saving Mom; cover of book


About the Author

If you are not familiar with Crystal Paine, you can find out more about her at MoneySavingMom.com or in her other books: Say Goodbye to Survival Mode, Money-Making Mom, and Love-Centered Parenting. She also has a popular Instagram account (@themoneysavingmom) that I have been following for a while with a business account, and I now follow her with my blog's Instagram account. 

While reading The Time-Saving Mom, you will learn a little more about Paine's life as she shares about raising multiple children, including a medically fragile foster child, running her business, and staying active in her church and community. Paine really offers a unique perspective as a mom who is very busy.

My Thoughts 

I was very excited to read The Time-Saving Mom. After all, who doesn't want to save time? I also enjoy following Paine on Instagram and getting a look into her life and her family's life. And while I feel that this book is very well-written and well-organized, I don't think it is the right fit for me. I will be pulling a few tips from it for my own life, but at this season of my life, many of the tips are not practical. 

I also am concerned about relying so heavily upon an electronic calendar – especially the Google Calendar. I prefer pen-and-paper for numerous reasons. I do realize that many enjoy the ease of having their tasks and schedules online so they can share them with family, but that isn't for us. So while I won't be using the Google Calendar, the tip to "develop the habit of writing down everything that comes into your mind that you need to do or remember" (81) is a great one. I can do this in a notebook or a planner. 

Another piece of advice I liked was when Paine compared a schedule and a routine. "A routine, on the other hand, can seem more like a helpful personal assistant, there to serve you and provide a framework for your success. It helps you stay on track but doesn't cause you to feel stressed" (155). How many times have our to-do lists or schedules stressed us out? Too many for me to count, personally. 

And the biggest piece of advice I am taking away from The Time-Saving Mom? "Don't live hoping for the next season or trying to survive until that thing you're hoping for happens, or think, I'll finally be happy when..." (174). One of the things that often talked about while taking care of my mom during her final year with Alzheimer's was, "I'll have more time when this is all over." Do I actually have more time now that she has died? No, not really. I have new tasks ahead and problems to solve. All I did was exchange one set of responsibilities for another. As Paine said, "The only life we have to live is this one." 

If you are looking for a book to help you better organize your time, figure out your priorities, and be more productive, The Time-Saving Mom is one you should check out. It would be helpful for moms in a variety of seasons. I really believe that Paine wants you to succeed. 

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