Reviews

Why We Can't Sleep: Women's New Midlife Crisis by Ada Calhoun

elinacre's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Torn (still) between feeling guilty for thinking my life is hard sometimes, and incredibly relieved that others like me feel that way too. Lots of great quotes in here, regardless of how I feel about the book as a whole.

As a mom, to my kids: "Whatever you want to make you happy, that's all I want for you: to be healthy and happy." (p31)

As a person who wishes she were brave enough to choose the more adventurous path sometimes: "...[it's] wonderful to have choices that our mothers didn't have, but choices don't make life easier. Possibilities create pressure." (p31)

As a quiet person who often feels like she's forgotten how to converse: "She feels invisible, but she doesn't talk about it a lot because she doesn't want to be seen as an ingrate." (p53)

As someone who kinda thought it might get better in the next decade: "Nobody, when you're forty-five, is telling you you're awesome. Nobody. Your kids aren't going to say thank you and validate you and appreciate you." (p59)

As a working parent who has missed out on more weekday evenings and bedtimes than she can think about: "Since our own childhoods, the time parents spend caring for their children's basic needs has risen dramatically. [In] 1965 mothers spent 9 hours a week on paid work and ten hours on childcare. In 2016, mothers spent twenty-five hours on paid work at fourteen on child care. Something has to give, and it's usually women's leisure time or sleep. Even so, of mothers with full-time jobs, 43 percent still lament spending too little time with their children." (p70-71)

As someone who's still working on self-care: "You know how to do this already: love when it's difficult. It's a superpower. You just need to use it for yourself, too." (p88).

siobst's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

I so very much enjoyed this book. While most of the book was spent explaining why Gen X women are experiencing mid-life crises, there was something reassuring about feeling like I'm not alone in the challenges of this life stage. And even though her proposed solutions at the end were simple and brief, I think there was some merit to them. In my opinion, this is a must-read for all Gen X women.

bak8382's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

This book is aimed at Generation X women, and as I'm only a couple of years younger than the youngest of that generation, making me an old millennial, there was still a lot here that I could relate to. There was the stark reminder that Generation X was the last to finish college without social media and all the pressure that comes with it. I graduated the same year that Facebook was invented and I think that's why I've never used it, if I was still in college when it was introduced I would have been all over it. There's a lot of uncertainty and anxiety in this time of women's lives and Calhoun covers a lot of that while also bringing some hope for the future. This was published in early 2020 before the pandemic really took hold in the US, and I wish the book could be updated to discuss that as well.

nukie19's review against another edition

Go to review page

emotional informative reflective slow-paced

2.0

connieaw's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

This book is for all of my GEN X friends. Especially the 76% of you that aren't stay-at-home moms.

katieoyama's review against another edition

Go to review page

1.0

Honestly thought about not finishing the book, but mercifully a ton of the pages were citations. While I understand this is focused on a specific generation, this book fell far short of my expectations. It’s mostly anecdotal stories from a small sample size that don’t focus on how stresses of middle age/generational struggles impact sleep. Instead, it reads like an essay on why married, upper-middle class, cis, white, middle aged women deserve to be the most miserable. The author note says she spoke to a diverse pool of 200 women for the book, but there’s very little intersectionality addressed. There’s not even mention of pay disparity based on race in the chapter on the gender wage gap.

stevensabby's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

I. Feel. Seen.

I have never felt like I “belonged” to GenX, even though my birth year says I do. But this book helped me to see myself in light of the cultural atmosphere into which I was born and raised. I never knew how *normal* my experience of my life is/has been—particularly as I have entered my 40s.

I also found myself scribbling the names of my friends in the margins, seeing so many reflections of the struggles we share with each other: care-giving, financial insecurity, the “angles and filters” necessary for social media, hormonal changes, fears for which we can find no rational basis. Except, as Calhoun so beautifully articulates, there IS a rational basis. We are not wrong: our lives (while also, often, deeply privileged) are wildly difficult in ways the generations before and after us do not experience.

If you are a woman, particularly a GenX woman in or approaching your 40s/50s, I cannot recommend this book enough.

rebecanunez's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

** Thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for providing me with the digital copy of this book in exchange for my honest review **
Como alguien que ha tenido dificultades con el sueño, ya el titulo me llamo la atención, pero el libro trata de mas que eso. Es un libro que trata sobre cómo es el estilo de vida de la mujer actual. Me encanto que el punto de vista sea femenino. Ademas tiene un punto de vista que es generacionalmente mas cercano, lo cual lo hizo más interesante para mí. La lectura es amena y fácil. Lo recomiendo.

chawkinsknell's review against another edition

Go to review page

This book felt so whiny that I was unable to care as much as I should have. I’ve really enjoyed Calhoun’s other work, so I was disappointed.

melissakuzma's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

If you’re in your 40s or early 50s, and you haven’t read this book, you’re missing out. You will feel very seen, as the millennials would say. Don’t miss the mixtape at the end!