There was a time when I thought I just needed more time.
More hours in the day. More energy. More motivation. The truth is, I didn’t need more time. I needed better systems.
Earlier this year, everything came to a head. Postpartum anxiety, burnout, and the constant feeling that I was always behind forced me to take a hard look at how I was running my days, my home, and honestly, my life.
What I realized was simple: I wasn’t failing. My systems were.
So instead of trying to do more, I started building small, realistic systems that could support me on the days when I had zero capacity.
These are the five that changed everything.
1. The Morning Reset

I stopped chasing a perfect morning routine. Instead, I focus on a reset that works even when mornings are messy, which they usually are.
My non-negotiables are simple:
- Get everyone fed
- Do not wear sweatpants during the week (even though I work from home)
- Open the blinds
- Make beds if possible, or at least pull the blankets and pillows together
After daycare drop-off, I do a quick 10-minute tidy while my coffee is brewing.
That’s it.
Some days it feels calm. Some days it feels chaotic. But this small reset keeps the day from spiraling before it even starts.
2. Weekly Planning System

This is the system that clears my mental load the most.
At the start of each week, I loosely plan meals and build a grocery list. I try to include one new homemade item each week (After 4 months of failed attempts, I just mastered sourdough. IYKYK) When it happens, it feels like a win.
I map out key appointments on our family calendar and pick two to three priorities for the week. Not a massive list. Just a few things that would actually move life forward.
Things like:
- Wash the couch blankets
- Wash the dog
- Plant seeds
I am not planning every second. I am just giving the week a shape.
When everything lives in your head, everything feels urgent.
When it is written down, you can actually breathe.
3. A Realistic Cleaning Routine

I used to think cleaning meant everything had to be done all at once.
Now I focus on rhythm instead of perfection.
- One load of laundry a day
- A clean kitchen every night with no dishes in the sink
- One focus area each week
I used to pay for cleaners every other week. It was about $180, and honestly, it was amazing. But I made the decision to cut back on that spending so I could prioritize saving and eventually stepping away from corporate life. Letting go of a perfectly clean house has been a tough pill to swallow, but a manageable home that supports our goals is more important right now.
4. Toy Organization System

Kids do not need more toys. They need less overwhelm.
I store a lot of toys in bins in the basement and rotate things out. It is not a perfect system. It is actually a little chaotic.
But it works.
It keeps my boys from being overwhelmed, and it makes cleanup faster and easier because there is just less out at any given time. At this stage of life, that is more than enough.
5. Manage the Mental Load

This is probably the most important system I have.
I stopped trying to remember everything.
I live by my to-do lists and journals. A part of me will always love pen and paper, so the Passionate Penny Pincher planners have been my ride or die (seriously, they are so comprehensive). Over the last couple of years, I switched to using my iPad, and now it is basically my second brain.
I use Goodnotes for everything. To-dos, ideas, random thoughts, things I do not want to forget. For my workday, I live in Notion. And I am fully a ChatGPT person. I even created a “Miss Mom Assistant” for our household. She knows everything and keeps me sane.
It is simple, but it is powerful.
Because the mental load is not just about what you have to do.
It is about trying to hold it all at once.
That’s it.
None of these systems are complicated. That’s the whole point.
They are designed for real life. For busy days. For hard seasons. For the version of you that does not have it all together.
I am not trying to run a perfect home anymore.
I am trying to build one that supports my life instead of overwhelming it.
And these systems are how I do that.
I will be breaking each of these down in more detail in future posts, because small changes like these add up fast.

