Craig Barritt/Getty Images for Emma Grede
- Emma Grede’s comment on being a “max three-hour mum” on weekends sparked a heated parenting debate.
- Grede’s remarks highlight the challenges faced by ambitious working moms.
- Business Insider spoke to four high-achieving moms. Some agreed with Grede, and one pushed back on her style.
Three hours was all it took to ignite the latest parenting debate.
When Skims cofounder Emma Grede, a mother of four, described herself as a “max three-hour mum” on weekends in a recent Wall Street Journal interview, saying that instead she focuses on creating “high-impact, core memories” with her children, reactions ranged from validation to outrage.
Grede responded, saying during an April 14 appearance on “Today with Jenna and Sheinelle” that she was “caught off guard” by the intensity of the viral response and that women entrepreneurs are “held to such an impossible standard both as parents, but also as businesswomen.”
The author not only sparked a broader conversation about parenting styles but also highlighted the pressures working mothers face to be present at home while remaining ambitious at work — a balance that often feels impossible to get right.
The reality is that there is no universal formula for how much time you need to spend parenting your children. And yet, the expectation that mothers should somehow get it exactly right persists.
When Grede put a number on her own experience, it didn’t just spark discussion; it forced a conversation many women are having privately. About trade-offs. About ambition. About the quiet recalculations of work-life balance happening every single day.
So Business Insider asked four working mothers to share how they think about time, presence, and managing competing demands of work and family.
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