i know! so relatable!
like sure, if you are privileged enough to be able to afford a nanny, to live in a huge house with a huge dressing room absolutely filled with clothes - which you buy on a weekly basis, and have at least three of most items in identical colours etc - to redecorate your house and buy all new furniture, to fund private therapy for both you and your kids, to pay for professionals to decorate your house for christmas, to be able to afford to go for regular nights out with friends and fund a social life, to be able to organise a huge party for your kids' birthday plus multiple other celebrations to make it "special" and have a huge amount of support and input from your children's father, in terms of financial support and involvement with the kids - etc etc that is obviously an incredible position to be in, and i'm not saying Tash should never share her life on SM. the issue is that she is intent on presenting her incredibly privileged lifestyle as "relatable" single mum content, when it absolutely is not relatable to the overwhelming majority of single parents, and using #singlemum hashtags etc to lure in single mothers to see her posts is actually going make people feel worse as parents, when they are working hard to provide their kdis with food, worrying about affording heating over winter etc - it seems incredibly thoughtless and crass to rub her "luck" in their faces, while simultaneously refusing to acknowledge her privilege, and believing ehr life represents that of single mothers everywhere.
it's also incredibly irritating that she has deemed herself an expert on solo parenting literally months after her ex moved out, giving advice and sharing tips as though single mothers who have brought up their kids alone for years need totally unrelatable advice from someone they can't relate too. for example, your kids may be struggling emotionally with a break up, yet Tash's advice to pay for them to have therapy is totally impossible for the majority of people in her situation.