When my son was born, my calendar turned into five-minute windows, and my attention span followed. I run Marquet Media and FemFounder, so pressure is familiar, but motherhood reframed it: success stopped being about perfect routines and became about repeatable ones. I started looking for tiny rituals I could do on my most chaotic days—things that took minutes, not hours, and still moved the needle on calm, clarity, and momentum.
The first shift was a decision habit I call the 15-Minute Decision Rail. It’s a single page in Notion that every choice runs through: one-line question, non-negotiables (budget, brand guidebooks, ICP), and at most three options scored for impact and reversibility. We give ourselves fifteen minutes to choose, assign an owner, and set a fourteen-day check. If nothing clears the bar, the default is “not now.” This one change cut our decision time in half and stopped the quiet burnout that comes from revisiting the same choice six times in a week.
Next, I rebuilt how we write and design important pages using a “two-path” layout. Instead of leading with a wall of text, we open with a tight 60-word summary and a single call-to-action for skimmers, followed by a jump-linked table of contents for deep readers. It’s kinder to humans and clearer for search—semantic headings, clean hierarchy, and answers where people expect to find them. On FemFounder’s PR Starter Kit page, that simple shift increased time on page and conversions without adding a single gimmick.
My brain works better when my body moves, so I turned stroller walks into a brainstorming ritual. I call it the Baby Walk Brain Dump: ten minutes outside, voice memo running, saying every loose idea, task, or worry out loud. Movement plus sunlight clears the static, and by the time we loop the block, I’ve captured a to-do list I didn’t have to “sit down and make.” Later, I tag the best ideas and let the rest go. It’s therapy, product development, and cardio, all before nap time ends.
Environment matters more than motivation, so I keep a Two-Song Tidy in my back pocket. I press play on two upbeat tracks and clear one surface—desk, kitchen counter, or entry table—nothing heroic. Visual order creates mental order, and the boundary (one surface, two songs) keeps it doable on days when ambition is low and baby toys are everywhere. Strangely, that small win often unlocks a bigger one—like finishing a proposal I’d been avoiding.
Finally, I built what I call the Proof Shelf: a private folder of screenshots and snippets—client wins, kind DMs, press mentions, a quick metric spike. On hard days, evidence beats pep talks. I skim the folder for sixty seconds, remember that growth leaves clues, and get back to work. It also makes monthly reporting easier; the “wins” are already captured, and my team sees momentum in black and white.
If you try only one of these, make it the Decision Rail. Speed is a kindness you can give yourself, and clarity is the cheapest luxury in a busy life. The rest—reader-first pages, brain-dump walks, two-song tidies, and a shelf full of proof—are how I turn stress into strength on the days when perfection is a fantasy and done is a gift.
At work



