A loved one’s illness steals your time.

It steals your lunch breaks and your sick days. It steals the hour you were supposed to spend studying, the weekend you were going to use to catch up on sleep, the career momentum you spent years building. You’re part of the 56% of employed caregivers who have to go in late, leave early, or take time off for caregiving, and when was the last time you used PTO to rest?

It steals your savings. Nearly half of caregivers report using up savings or taking on debt. It steals your patience. Some days, it steals your ability to feel anything at all.

You steal fifteen minutes between conference calls to fight with an insurance company. You steal a half-day of PTO to sit in a waiting room.

You do this so you can more easily steal moments with your person, and you hold onto those moments like they're borrowed from a clock that won't stop running.

And the good days are so good that you can't believe you have to interrupt this moment to manage the admin slushpile that caregiving comes with. Or maybe you’re too exhausted to be fully present.

If your loved one is like my mother, this can make them feel like a burden—and that’s the last thing you want them to feel.

Stealing Time is for the 30 million people in the United States who are both working and caregiving, and who understand that the responsibilities won’t go away, however burnt out you may be.

The systems that exist weren't built for working family caregivers. The language is wrong, the assumptions are wrong, and the resources assume a life stage most working caregivers haven't reached yet.

This organization connects folks who know that time is precious and fleeting with professionals who are dedicated to making American health and wealth systems easier to manage.

Let’s steal time back.

The butt-ugly statistics of working family caregivers:

30 million people living in the United States are working family caregivers, meaning they are employed while also providing the primary source of care to someone living with an illness or disability.

The economy is missing out on $1.01 trillion in unpaid labor costs of the demands of these particular caregivers.

There are approximately $107 billion in lost earnings annually due to leaving the workforce, retiring early, or reducing their hours to care for loved ones.

U.S. businesses lose between $17.1 billion and $33.6 billion each year because of employee absenteeism, workday interruptions, and turnover due to caregiving.

This is where you come in…

We’re writing an honest and gritty caregiving playbook, Life’s a B**** and Then They Die: a clear, real-world guide that connects the dots between the American health and wealth systems through the lens of working caregivers.

Most caregiver resources are built for people who are retired and have already built or inherited wealth.

We’re writing one for people ages 18 and older who find themselves overwhelmed by all of the aspects of caregiving on top of trying to establish a career, finish college, or start a family.

Stealing Time is looking for professionals to help working caregivers navigate the American Health and Wealth systems, as well as address the avalanche of admin tasks that feels impossible to manage on top of caregiving duties.

With input from professionals like you, we’ll translate expertise into steps, decision support, and pathways that working caregivers can actually use and make it a foundation for a shared standard of support across every aspect of life.

Who We’re Looking For

We're seeking professionals whose expertise intersects with the realities working caregivers face every day. You don't need to specialize in caregiving, healthcare, insurance, or finance. All aspects of life are affected by caregiving, especially the ones nobody warns you about.

If you offer a service or knowledge that you believe caregivers will benefit from, we'd love to connect.

Healthcare & Mental Health

  • Healthcare navigators and patient advocates

  • Therapists and counselors

  • Geriatricians and condition-specific specialists

  • Respite care coordinators

  • Pharmacists and medication management specialists

Social Services

  • Social workers

  • Case managers and community resource specialists

  • Government benefits navigators

Financial

  • Financial advisors and financial planners

  • Financial coaches

  • Tax professionals

  • Debt counselors

Legal

  • Legal aid professionals

  • Elder law, disability, and benefits-related legal support

  • Estate planners

  • Advance directive and end-of-life planning specialists

  • Guardianship and conservatorship specialists

Insurance

  • Medicare and Medicaid specialists

  • Supplemental insurance specialists

  • Long-term care insurance specialists

  • Patient advocates and claims assistance professionals

  • Life insurance specialists

Benefits & Workplace Support

  • Benefits counselors and benefits specialists

  • HR and workplace accommodations experts

  • FMLA and leave policy specialists

  • ADA accommodation specialists

Career & Education

  • Career coaches

  • Academic advisors and student services coordinators

  • Vocational rehabilitation counselors

Home & Daily Life

  • House cleaners

  • Nutritionists

  • Home modification and aging-in-place specialists

  • Professional organizers

  • Home care coordinators

Community & Peer Support

  • Support group facilitators

  • Faith-based care coordinators

  • Caregiver peer mentors

What We’re Asking

An initial 30 to 40 minute conversation. We’ll talk about your area of expertise and how it intersects with the realities working caregivers deal with. Your insights in subsequent conversations will directly shape the Playbook and you will be fully credited.

What You Get

  • Cited as a contributing expert in the Life’s a B**** and Then They Die, (then you get to explain that wild title to your friends and family…)

  • Listed as a founding member in the upcoming Stealing Time professional resource network with a free membership

  • Ground-floor involvement in a growing caregiver awareness practice