The Mom Weekly Volume 143: May 5, 2026
You can read this, or any other previous Mom Weeklies, by going to the home page here. https://themomweekly.com/
Notes:
Many of you know I’ve been sharing points & miles content on LinkedIn on weekdays since the beginning of the year. And I do plan to start an email list to share some of this content, but I haven’t gotten to that yet. It’s underway!
In the meantime, I’m going to share a recent post. (Not points & miles related, sorry).
Occasionally on LinkedIn, I will repost someone else’s post, and add my own take to it.
This is my reply to a dad’s post reminding other dads to remember Mother’s Day and to plan accordingly—get your cards in advance, order flowers, etc. I took this up a notch, and I really enjoyed what I wrote. I think it would be helpful not just for Mother’s Day (I don’t need anything, really! I would just enjoy a phone call time with each of the kids), but for when you have kids of your own. And I also think it is a helpful framework for really any holiday.
Since Dad’s birthday falls right around Mother’s Day each year, we are often doing this process together. But give it a try with your next
Plan A Mother’s Day Weekend (LinkedIn Repost)
I liked so much of this dad-to-dad reminder about Mother’s Day next weekend.
But also, I hope dads will take sound advice from an older mom who’s had decades of Mother’s Days:
—Plan a Mother’s Day Weekend—
I love Laura Vanderkam’s framework for looking at the weekend as seven distinct periods. With that, the weekend seems much more expansive:
Friday night
Saturday morning
Saturday afternoon
Saturday evening
Sunday morning
Sunday afternoon
Sunday evening
But we don’t want to give Mom another job by having her plan the whole weekend, do we? So: I suggest you propose one and have her fine-tune it with what she’d like best.
With a Mother’s Day weekend, you could offer something like this:
Friday night:
Pizza & movie night with kids
Dad & kids order/pickup pizza, serve, and clean up
Mom picks movie
Dad takes care of bedtime while Mom reads, enjoys time alone
Saturday morning:
Mom goes out for a walk/coffee with friends
Dad, obvi, on kid duty
Saturday afternoon:
Family lunch out (Mom choice) and Family hike
Mom gets post-hike nap, Dad takes care of the kids
Saturday evening:
Casual (or fancy) date night dinner
Dad arranges babysitting, suggests three places for Mom to choose from
Sunday morning:
Church, Mom’s choice of time
Sunday afternoon:
Brunch/lunch with extended family, perhaps takeout (restaurants are so full on Mother’s Day itself, we rarely eat out then).
Later: Mom time alone, ideally with chocolate and a good book
Sunday evening:
Simple supper cooked by Dad and kids
Special dessert, cards, and “presents” for Mom
Obviously, your wife’s preferences would differ from my sample weekend (mine differ from the sample!).
But the genius move is offering a plan of thoughtful ideas and letting her edit it to what she likes.
Consider presenting your wife a proposed Mother’s Day weekend plan the next day or so, and letting her have the fun of personalizing it. By planning ahead, your whole family can enjoy a great Mother’s Day weekend.
Action Item: Plan A Weekend in the Future
With the framework I talked about above, consider planning a future weekend. I promise this is a fun exercise, and I think you’ll enjoy both the planning process and the weekend.

Interesting/Notable
Rise of the Blood Populist: The Atlantic Gift Article
This is such an important article. An important quote from it:
Over the years, many experts have warned me that periods of entrenched political violence are difficult to escape. We know exactly what conditions make a society ever more vulnerable to political violence, and we’re swimming in them now: highly visible wealth disparity, declining trust in civic institutions, a perceived sense of victimhood, intense partisan estrangement based on identity, rapid demographic change, flourishing conspiracy theories, violent and dehumanizing rhetoric against the “other,” and a belief among those who flirt with violence that they can get away with it.

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