The Field Guide Nobody Wrote: Pat Hankin on Surviving — and Thriving — as a Single Working Mom
When Pat Hankin couldn't find a single fact-based, practical book for single parents — she wrote one herself.
A management consultant, single mom, and author of The Field Guide for Single Parents, Pat spent years moderating an online community of nearly half a million single parents, answering the same questions over and over, and realizing that the information existed — it just hadn't been put together for the people who actually needed it. So she did.
In this conversation, Pat is sharp, funny, and refreshingly no-nonsense about what it actually takes to navigate single parenthood without a backup — financially, professionally, and emotionally.
We cover:
* Why single parenthood isn't just "hard" — it's 300 tasks that all land on one person
* The unconventional financial advice Pat swears by, including why buying a used car might actually cost you your job
* Why stepping back in your career as a single mom is not a failure — and how to think about it strategically
* How to build your own "composite partner" from the people already around you
* The one thing Pat wishes someone had said to her during those years — and why shame has no place in this conversation
* Why single parents are losing their friend groups, and what the people around them can actually do about it
Pat's daughter, who grew up with a mother who had no backup, is now a scientist at a major research facility. As Pat puts it: the independence wasn't a gap — it was a gift.
Buy Pat's book here [https://www.amazon.com/Field-Guide-Single-Parents-Practical/dp/B0FVQK9W9J/ ]
If today's episode resonated with you, I'd love to stay connected. You can find me at mompire.eu [http://mompire.eu], or come say hi on LinkedIn — just search Klara Ganter [https://www.linkedin.com/in/klaraganter/]. And if you're a corporate mom wondering what your next move looks like, take my free quiz at mompire.eu/quiz [http://mompire.eu/quiz]. It takes five minutes and gives you a real starting point.