I’m Looking For New Clients
Hi, I’m Lindsay — an ICF-PCC-certified life coach. I have a few virtual coaching spots open. If you’re a woman who got sucked into hustle culture and you’re done telling yourself that stress is just “part of being successful.” Then you’re my people.
You Didn’t Land Here By Accident.
Something brought you here. Deep down, you know there’s a better way to live. One where success doesn’t come at the cost of your freedom and well being. Where your value isn’t tied to how much you do or how hard you hustle.
Maybe you’ve been grinding for years, pushing through stress and burnout, telling yourself this is just the price of ambition. But something inside is whispering, “Damn. Can’t I succeed without wearing myself out?”
You want to rewrite the story of hustle and redefine what success means—beyond the constant grind. To have real work/life balance, learn to quiet that relentless judgemental self-talk, and finally release the endless cycle of “do more.”
If any of this sounds like you, you’re in the right place. You’re ready to slow down, reset, and create a life where ambition and ease coexist beautifully.
Could success feel softer, slower, and still satisfying?
YES. You don’t have to be exhausted to be accomplished.
You go from this: While checking your calendar for the day, you’re staring at back to back appointments with a liiiiittle sliver of space in between each one. You excitedly think, “Hell yeah! My re-cap is going to be stacked! My boss is going to be pleased with how much I’m getting done today.” But as the day begins, that excitement turns to frustration and anxiety. Your second appointment is late, which puts you behind. Then you run into traffic which puts you more behind. “Okay, I’ll be working past 5:00 today. Again.” At 2:00pm, you realize you haven’t eaten. Or checked your emails. “It’s fine. I’ll snack on the way to the next appointment and get to emails after I wrap up.” All of a sudden, you get a heated call from a customer. “Why haven’t you called me back about this?? I sent you an email this morning. This is an emergency!” And you realize that you have to cancel a meeting because you don’t have time to do it all. As you end your day—at 6:30pm—you’re exhausted and left wondering why no one appreciates how hard you work. You boss didn’t even thank you. You think, “Why do I keep doing this if no one even notices? I’m working like this is my company!” (and it’s not).
To this: You shut your laptop and silence your phone at 4:30pm, zero guilt, knowing it will all be there tomorrow. You smile because you had a productive day AND you finished early. You go for a walk with your best friend and laugh until your belly hurts while soaking up the sun. Then return home, turn up your favorite playlist, and cook a nutritious dinner.
Or this: You leave your appointment with the biggest smile on your face knowing you just crushed it. Walk next door to your favorite lunch spot, sit down on the patio, and check your phone to see you have a full hour before your next appointment. You grab your bag, pull out your sunnies and latest book, and toss your phone inside. You proceed to get lost in a couple chapters of your book and yummy meal—looking up occasionally to soak in the cuteness of the dogs passing. You show up to your next appointment, fueled, relaxed, and ready to crush it again.
The Shift Is Real
Because “pushing through” is no longer the vibe.
You go from this: You’ve been looking forward to brunch with your girlfriends all week. But by the time Saturday afternoon rolls around, you’re already exhausted from all the morning errands. You’re thinking about how you have to get up early on Sunday and work out before a whole list of other things to accomplish. Maybe you should just cancel? And here comes the criticizing thoughts, “You can’t even find the energy to go hang with your friends? What’s wrong with you?” “You’re not even gonna try?” “You’re a shitty friend.” So you go anyway. After getting home later than expected, you sleep like shit and miss your workout Sunday. You’re not rested and struggling to finish the productive things you had planned. Now the criticizing thoughts creep back in again.
To this: You’ve been looking forward to playing pickleball all weekend with the gals. But when Sunday afternoon comes, you're drained from your morning errands. You also had a family barbeque yesterday. You want to go, and you know they’ll be disappointed, but you also know your body. If you go, you’ll be too exhausted to have the mental energy to finish your book. Plus, pickleball usually leads to cocktails after. You confidently choose yourself, text them, and bow out. Not only do you finish your book, you’re extra rested and ready for work on Monday. AND you get a text from a girlfriend who went saying, “I wish I would have stayed home too. I’m struggling hard today.” You set your phone down with a smile.