She used her performance at Glastonbury festival to give the following relationship advice to men: 'If you are married and you notice a woman does the same action every day, it means it needs doing, so do it.'
And now Paloma Faith, 43, has said that 'co-parenting' does not exist as societal expectations ensure women still do the bulk of the work.
The mother-of-two went on to explain that many mothers live in fear of being judged and said: 'When I've opened up about my difficulties with motherhood and IVF, people tell me I'm ungrateful.
'I know better than anyone how grateful I am.
'When people respond like that, it's annoying, and I think it's why so many mums have to add a caveat to any downside of parenting with how much they love their kids first, for fear of being judged.'
The Only Love Can Hurt Like This singer was speaking to Women's Health for the launch of her new book, MILF: Motherhood, Identity, Love and F***ery.
She said: 'I wanted to do it because I feel society neglects women and mums. This makes us feel isolated because we end up having to pretend that everything's magical and it isn't always; it's hard and women do struggle.
'I don't think co-parenting exists; women still do the bulk of the parenting. There are anomalies, but we need change.'
She continued: 'Being a single mother is exhausting, but I do have two nights a week when my daughters are with their dad to do as I please.'
The Lullaby singer shares two daughters - eight and three - with her ex-husband and French artist Leyman Lahcine who she divorced in 2022 after 10 years together and five years of marriage.
It was becoming parents that crippled their romance and Ms Faith said: 'I think for me, becoming a mother was such a massively life-changing experience that for the first time in my life, I needed more than nothing - and that just wasn't there.
'Our relationship ended because we have those children. And I think that was worth it.'
Last month she hit back at Glastonbury trolls and begged music fans to 'give women a break' after a slew of female artists were plagued with technical issues.
As 210,000 revellers descended on Worthy Farm in Somerset for the weekend at the end of June, millions tuned in from home thanks to the BBC 's rolling coverage.
But after SZA, Dua Lipa, Shania Twain and Cyndi Lauper were slammed and accused of 'miming' when sounds issues disrupted their sets, Paloma couldn't help but clap back.
The Warrior singer took to her Instagram Stories to remind viewers that women were not on stage to be 'shamed and ridiculed' but to be 'boss b**ches'.
She wrote to her 835,000 followers: 'The way people criticise the women who performed a @glastonbury online is absolutely appalling.'
'I think people need to understand that women are not on stage to be ridiculed and shamed we are there in all our boss b***h power and we stand by one another.
'GIVE WOMEN A BREAK.'