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Show Notes: Monday through Friday, Kathleen works her full-time marketing job and manages early kindergarten mornings, school pickups, dinner, and bedtime routines. Her weekdays are maxed out. So when does she build her creative business? Weekends. And it's not what you might think.
In this honest episode, Kathleen pulls back the curtain on what it's really like to pursue a creative dream when you're already working full-time and raising kids. This isn't about disappearing every weekend or having superhuman energy—it's about her and her husband trading off parenting time, communicating constantly, and accepting that rest is sometimes the thing that has to give.
If you've ever thought "I'd love to start something, but I have a full-time job and kids—there's literally no time," this episode will show you it's possible. Hard, exhausting, guilt-inducing at times—but possible.
You'll hear about:
Takeaway: There will never be a "perfect time" to start. If you wait for everything to line up perfectly, you'll be waiting forever. You can be a good mom, a good employee, and still pursue your dream. It's hard, but it's possible. And the example you're setting for your kids? That's worth the tired. That's worth the weekend shift.
By Kathleen LyonsShow Notes: Monday through Friday, Kathleen works her full-time marketing job and manages early kindergarten mornings, school pickups, dinner, and bedtime routines. Her weekdays are maxed out. So when does she build her creative business? Weekends. And it's not what you might think.
In this honest episode, Kathleen pulls back the curtain on what it's really like to pursue a creative dream when you're already working full-time and raising kids. This isn't about disappearing every weekend or having superhuman energy—it's about her and her husband trading off parenting time, communicating constantly, and accepting that rest is sometimes the thing that has to give.
If you've ever thought "I'd love to start something, but I have a full-time job and kids—there's literally no time," this episode will show you it's possible. Hard, exhausting, guilt-inducing at times—but possible.
You'll hear about:
Takeaway: There will never be a "perfect time" to start. If you wait for everything to line up perfectly, you'll be waiting forever. You can be a good mom, a good employee, and still pursue your dream. It's hard, but it's possible. And the example you're setting for your kids? That's worth the tired. That's worth the weekend shift.