Sign Up for the Hybrid Mom eNewsletter
Powered by thefind.com
You Can't Have It All (At The Same Time) | Print |  Email
Written by Heather Cabot   

busymom51908.jpgIt was the epitome of modern motherhood. Snow delayed my flight to New York and I was scrambling to find out whether I would be able to catch another. With the cordless phone pressed to one ear, my cell phone on the other, I struggled to figure out my arrangements while my daughter clamored for another blueberry waffle and my son tugged at my bathrobe. As a mom in pursuit of wellness, I have written about the goal of "being present" in each distinct realm of my life. But at this particular moment, all I could do was laugh. Sometimes it's just not possible.

The morning got me thinking about how despite our best intentions; it's really tough to keep parts of our lives from colliding once in a while.

I recently had the privilege of chatting with Laura Stack, otherwise known as, "The Productivity Pro." The mom of three is a time management guru who counsels companies including, Microsoft, IBM, KPMG, Cisco, Sunoco, Nationwide, and Nestle. Even the woman who coaches others on organization admits she had trouble balancing everything once she hit motherhood.

But the realization didn't hit her until she missed a major milestone in her 14-month-old daughter's life.

"I was out of town on a business trip...and found out from our nanny that my daughter had walked (for the first time)," she recalls of the pivotal moment that forced her to switch gears.

By the time Stack realized she needed to focus more on the home front, she says it was too late to save her marriage.

Suddenly, she found herself a single mother to a toddler and looking for work that didn't require any travel. But instead of giving up her dreams of speaking to audiences worldwide, she altered her short-term goals to fit her new situation. Stack honed a "laser beam" focus on drumming up business within driving distance of her home in Denver, Colorado. It was a counterintuitive decision for someone with aspirations to go global. But she decided she was going through a certain "season" of life and that eventually, she would be in a position to expand.

"I knew my daughter was only going to be two years old once. I knew I had time to be famous later," she says.

Eventually, Stack did remarry and had two more children. And by the time she did, her reputation as an expert speaker on time management was taking off. Her husband became an integral part of the business and today he often stays home with the children so Stack can travel far and wide to speak to corporate audiences about being more productive.

I love the idea of approaching the work-life balance as a season. Just because you shift gears for a little while doesn't mean you are losing ground or off the radar or that your skills are not as sharp as they always were.

I know, I know. In many demanding professions, downshifting or taking some time off or saying no to out of town travel doesn't seem like an option. It's tough to wrap your mind around the idea when you've been charging ahead for years turning your professional aspirations reality - or when you are the primary breadwinner.

I think we all agree that employers need to do more to retain off-ramping women and to make the work environment more family friendly. But I do think that it also requires an attitude shift on our end as women and as mothers in that at some point we do have to make some choices. I guess what I am saying is that now that I'm a mother myself, "having it all" at THE SAME TIME doesn't seem so feasible - at least when the kids are still in diapers.

I asked Stack for her advice to other moms trying to navigate this complicated, guilt-ridden part of motherhood and their feelings of "losing time" when faced with scaling back work to accommodate personal priorities.

"You have to think of it as, I'm not losing time - I am just changing focus," she says

Stack says the key is being honest about what one can really handle.

"I see so many women trying to wedge themselves into a job that doesn't fit...They don't know when to make adjustments...Too many women hang in there under the auspices of bravery for too long," she told me."

The Well Mom (www.thewellmom.com) is a weekly ezine and newsletter to empower moms to better care for themselves in mind, body and spirit. From tips and tricks to inspirational stories, The Well Mom is like the best friend who reminds you it's okay to take a little YOU-time. In fact, it's a necessity.  Founded by former ABC News anchor and mother of twins, Heather Cabot, The Well Mom offers an everywoman perspective on managing motherhood and the pursuit of wellness.

Comments (1)add comment

katrin said:

I often think the key is to understand that the goal of being balanced ALL THE TIME is simply not possible and leads to incredible stress for busy mothers. More realistic is accepting that your life is like a see saw, with periodic ups and downs.

As a mom, making a commitment to your own needs is key to finding any sort of balance, whether temporary or longer-lasting. Of the 500 women we spoke to while researching our book, Mothers Need Time-Outs Too (www.momstimeouts.com), the vast majority said they felt happier and were more patient when they had stepped back from all the mayhem and taken a breather. That can mean five minutes on your way to a meeting (one working mom told us about going to conference rooms early and sitting alone for a few minutes) or it can mean stepping away from working outside the home all together. The key is tapping into what makes you tick, and going from there.

Katrin
www.momstimeouts.com
May 21, 2008

Write comment
smaller | bigger

busy
 
insidethisissuecg4.png

QUICK LINKS: » inside this issue   » subscribe  

hmmarketplacead300.png

 

Copyright © 2007 Hybrid Mom. Web & Digital Edition Solutions by MDigital Design, a division of Infoswell Media, Inc.

Magazine Web Design - M Digital Design Solutions for Publishers