A home for
the everyday Mama.

everydaymama.co is the home for Mamas who manage homes everyday. The Mamas who exchange their social lives, alone time and space for constant laundry, mealtime messes and just about 472 dirty diapers a day.

Stay-home Mamas are often unseen, unheard and unappreciated so staying empowered while the routine is the same everyday can be difficult – most times lonely.

We hear you. We see you. In fact, we are you.

It’s a wild journey, but you don’t have to go it alone. Welcome home.

From a blog about Mamahood, to a Community of Mamas

everydaymama.co was the second child to founder and self-proclaimed BLW advocate Ameera Binsemait. Despite the many “little clusters” of Mamas here in Singapore, she saw what was missing: a space exclusively for Stay-Home Mamas.

So, she built it. 

What started off as a blog to document her motherhood journey slowly became the platform for her to work on her dream.

everydaymama.co aims to build a community of Stay-Home Mamas – to connect, support, empower, uplift, encourage and be the hype gang every SAHM secretly needs.

Photo by Diyana Taha.

Meal Planning Just Got Easier

Mamas, I know that it can get challenging having to think of what to serve on the table every single day.

The “Easy Peasy Lemon Squeezy” eBook consists of 50++ meal ideas for the whole family. 

It ranges from easy 15-minute one-pot meals to snacks and air-fryer saviours.

Get your copy from the shop today, and stop stressing in the kitchen already!

You. Are. Welcome!

– A

 

Most popular posts

Yes I don’t have much free time for myself anymore. And yes, nothing I do is solely for me. But everything, every single minute, means double as much to me now. Because I am a Mama.

I need to teach myself that I have every right to ask for help. I may have gotten used to being able to handle everything on my own but in marriage and parenthood, I should not have to. I have to strike a balance, and I have to learn to be okay with being the “bad guy” and asking for things to get done.

Personally, what hit me more was having to mentally adjust to the fact that my spending power had significantly reduced. Losing some of that power meant losing some…autonomy?