So many moms tell me: “I got so much done today… but it still doesn’t feel like enough.”

Sound familiar?

You check off a dozen things.
You ran around all day.
You didn’t sit down once.
And still—at the end of the day—you feel behind.

You’re not lazy.
You’re not doing it wrong.
You’re not broken.

You’re just using a broken system.

That system? Your to-do list.

The Real Problem: Your To-Do List

You probably think your to-do list helps you stay productive and organized.
But it’s likely the very reason you feel so overwhelmed, scattered, and behind.

Here’s why:
Your brain can’t conceptualize the time each task will take.
So the list always feels unfinished—even if you crushed it.

You keep adding more.
So there’s no finish line. No moment to say, “Yes, I did it.”

You have no benchmark for success.
So your mood and self-worth become tied to how many things you did—not how you felt doing them.

And that “not enough” feeling creeps in every single day.

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Why Mindset Work Alone Isn’t Enough

Of course, you can do thought work on this.
You can choose a more helpful thought like: “I’m doing enough. I’m a great mom. I deserve rest.”

And that can help. But if you want to get more done and feel better doing it, just working on your thoughts about a broken system isn’t the full answer.

Mindset work isn’t about convincing yourself to be okay with less.
It’s about feeling empowered—and that has nothing to do with how much you do.

This is about creating a new system that actually works for the kind of mom, woman, and human you want to be.

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What To Do Instead: Stop Using a To-Do List

The solution to never feeling behind again is to stop using a to-do list altogether.

I don’t use a to-do list at all, and I haven’t for years. As a professionally certified coach, I’ve coached hundreds of women to give up their to-do lists and finally feel peace at the end of the day.

Giving up your to-do iist changes everything.

Instead of writing down a million things I “should” do and judging myself for not doing them…
I plan intentionally using my calendar.

Not as a strict schedule.
But as a reflection of what actually matters.

I include white space.
I include self-care.
I include connection time with my kids.
I include margin, rest, and even time to do nothing.

Then, I follow my plan.

No guilt.
No chaos.
No “never enough” narrative.

At the end of the day, I feel good about my day and about the day ahead.

It’s life changing.

It’s not about over-planning or being rigid. It’s about being intentional; like a budget for my time.

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A Real Mom Example

I was just coaching a lawyer, CEO, and mom of two the other day.
She told me this:

“No to do list has been life changing. It’s weird, because I have always had a 10 page running list, but boy, does everything get done now and I don’t feel that feeling of “I will never be done with this”.”

That one small shift away from using her to-do list changed everything.

She felt calm.
She felt focused.
She felt accomplished at the end of the day instead of defeated.

This is the power of making this one small change.

How To Calendar

Calendaring is how you can start planning intentionally instead of using a to-do list.

This is exactly what I teach inside the Mom On Purpose Membership, inside the Better Time Management Course.

You get immediate access to the course, coaching, private podcast, and accountability.

All you have to do is get started: Learn more about the Mom On Purpose Membership

This framework and toolkit will change the way you manage your time in the very best way.