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17 contributions to Income Without Burnout
The Balance We Actually Have to Figure Out
I woke up this morning and instantly thoughts about this week’s 12 Week Year execution score. 0%. And I’m okay with it… and I’m also paying attention to this feeling! This is my second trip in a week. I’ve had slow work mornings. Then fully with them the rest of the day. It felt like the life I say I want. Calm. Present. Spacious. Balanced. And it showed me something important. I maintained my life this week. I didn’t grow it. At first, I told myself this is the goal. A part time retirement kind of life. Space. Flexibility. Presence. Then I noticed something deeper. I didn’t choose this as a no growth week ahead of time. I flowed into it. At the same time, I opened Skool here and there and felt that pull. New trainings. New ideas. That shiny object energy that makes everything feel important at once. And I realized that is exactly why I use the 12 Week Year. Not to do more. But to decide what actually counts during work time. This feels like a big thing we have to figure out as business owners who want to grow without burning out. Growth and maintenance are always happening. Life keeps moving. Business keeps moving. So the balance becomes the practice. For me, this week showed me a version of that balance I really like. Light mornings. One small action that keeps things moving. Then fully with my family. A rhythm that feels steady and calm. A way of building that fits into real life. I peek into early retirement. Because the goal isn’t just growth. It’s a life that grows with you. Curious… What is your rhythm right now between maintaining and growing? 👇
The Balance We Actually Have to Figure Out
4 likes • 9h
I’m definitely in growing, but with my type of work that means that I’m doing much more consulting and interacting with clients, and less time available for the back-end admin part of the business. It ebbs and flows, and I’m enjoying this phase! Still haven’t started the 12-week Year, but want to do it soon!
1 like • 3h
@Sybil Hall awesome!
Write by hand?
I realized something this week as I carried my journal, planner, and lined notebook with me to the mountains. I write by hand all day long. My planner. My journal (most days). Sticky notes all over the place. Notes on videos or courses Whiteboard in the kitchen. Even my grocery list. I’m not trying to be old school. It’s just what helps me feel clear. When I start my day on my phone or computer, I feel scattered. When I start on paper, I feel grounded. It’s that simple. There’s something about slowing down enough to actually see what I’m thinking. Not just reacting. Not just typing and moving on. And honestly… it doesn’t slow me down. It saves me time. I’m not rethinking the same things all day. I’m not constantly checking a calendar on my phone. I already know what matters. I’ve read that writing by hand helps with memory and focus… and I feel that every day. Curious… Do you still write things by hand? Or has everything moved to your phone? 👇 Tell me one thing you still write (or want to get back to)
Write by hand?
3 likes • 2d
Yes!! I still write a lot of things by hand, especially when planning or mapping out an idea! I like to doodle and sketch along with the words, so I always have notebooks and journals lying around!
2 likes • 2d
@Demetra Lambros yes!! There's actually science behind that! Writing with by hand opens up more neural connections, which helps with the creativity and decision-making parts of the brain!
💰 Extra income would solve what for you right now?
One word 👇 No overthinking… just drop the first thing that comes to mind. Bills? Debt? Freedom? Time? Stress? I’m really curious what everyone’s working toward right now 💛
💰 Extra income would solve what for you right now?
1 like • 3d
Freedom!! Extra income means I can have my team run my business more on autopilot so I have the freedom to travel, work with nonprofits, and create real change and growth in communities around the world!!
📔🤔 What book(s) changed the way you think?
I love this question because books have quietly shaped so many turning points in my life. Some books shift your mindset. Some help you see the world differently. And some arrive at the exact moment you needed them. For me, a few books completely changed the way I think about work, life, and how I spend my time. The Daily Stoic helped me slow down and think about how I show up each day. A New Earth made me reflect deeply on ego and presence. And The Alchemist reminded me to listen to that quiet voice that nudges you toward the life you are meant to live. I am always collecting good books. What book changed the way you think? Drop the title in the comments so we can all add it to our list ⬇️📚 *Thanks @Katya McEwen for this book brainstorming post idea!
📔🤔 What book(s) changed the way you think?
5 likes • 4d
I am such a book lover, I read daily from my library, and am always amazed at the transformational effect of just a few words from a page sometimes! I love The Alchemist too, and refer to it often whenever I feel discouraged in my path building my business. “The Power of Starting Something Stupid” by Richie Norton and “The Big Leap” by Gay Hendricks gave me immense courage and insight for pursuing my big business goals for 2026!
1 like • 4d
@Rebecca Stoneman I really enjoyed listening to this one on Audible as well, I'm excited to hear what you think of it!
Let’s talk about household chores
It’s not the most glamorous topic. But it is one of the quiet systems that shapes how a home feels every day. 🏡 When chores are flowing well, life feels lighter. The kitchen resets at night. Laundry appears folded. The house feels calm. When they are not flowing well, tension creeps in. And most of the time, it is not really about the dishes. It is about the mental load. Noticing the trash is full. Realizing the fridge is empty. Remembering the dog needs medicine. Seeing that the kids need clean clothes for tomorrow. That invisible layer of noticing and remembering is often the real work. Another challenge is that most homes never define what “clean” actually means. If someone says “clean the kitchen,” one person might think that means dishes and counters. Another person might think it includes wiping the stove, taking out the trash, sweeping the floor, and clearing the table. Different standards create frustration, even when everyone is trying. And then there is motivation. Most chore systems are built around “people should help.” But humans respond better to a few simple things: clear ownership, visible progress, and predictable rhythms. Homes that run smoothly often have a few quiet systems in place. Ownership instead of helping. Someone fully owns the laundry. Someone owns groceries. Someone owns the trash. Not because it has to be perfectly equal, but because ownership removes the constant reminders. Rhythm instead of randomness. Daily resets. Weekly cleaning. Monthly deeper care. When chores have a rhythm, they stop feeling like interruptions. And visibility helps too. A whiteboard. A simple checklist. A rotating chore chart. When the system holds the reminder, people stop needing to remind each other. And that changes the tone of the whole house. Most chore conversations get stuck on the idea of fairness. But sometimes the better question is simply: What helps the house run smoothly so everyone has more energy for the things that matter?
Let’s talk about household chores
1 like • 6d
I love that you brought this up, since my husband and I both work from home regularly, the state of our home and the mental load there does affect how we show up in business! A chore that I fully own is laundry, although I have requirements to keep the system going. For example, everyone in the house is required to fold their dirty socks into a ball BEFORE putting them in their basket. Saves me tons of time on the other side when matching them!
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@janna-hubert-2932
Helping entrepreneurs & creatives build a business that works the way that *they* work best, with workflows & systems powered by their zone of Genius

Active 3h ago
Joined Feb 28, 2026
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