Women’s History Month is a time to celebrate progress.

To honor the women who came before us.
To recognize how far we have come.
To acknowledge the opportunities we now have.

And those things matter.

Yet if we are honest, there is another experience many women carry quietly.

Pressure.

Not only to lead.
Yet to live up to an unspoken standard that seems to stretch across every part of life.


The Standard That No One Actually Defined

Somewhere along the way, the expectation became more than leadership.

It became everything.

Be successful in your career.
Be present at home.
Be a supportive partner.
Be an engaged mother.
Keep a beautiful, organized home.
Stay healthy.
Show up for your friends.
Give back.

And do it all well.

And do it all at the same time.

No one formally hands us this list.

Yet many women are living it every single day.


The Reality Behind the Highlight Reel

From the outside, it can look like it is working.

The meetings are happening.
The kids are cared for.
The home is functioning.
The responsibilities are handled.

Yet behind the scenes, it often feels like:

This is not a capability issue.

Women are incredibly capable.

This is a sustainability issue.

Because no one can operate at that level, across that many roles, without cost.


The Right-Hand Leader Reality

For Right-Hand Leaders, this becomes even more layered.

You are not only leading inside the business.

You are often:

Then you go home…

And step into another full set of responsibilities.

Different environment.

Same level of expectation.

There is rarely a true off switch.


When “Doing It All” Becomes the Identity

At some point, doing it all stops being something you do…

And starts becoming who you are.

The reliable one.
The strong one.
The one who handles it.
The one who makes sure everything is okay.

And while that identity can feel empowering, it can also become limiting.

Because it leaves very little room for:


A Different Way to Lead and Live

What if the goal is not to do it all?

What if the goal is to:

Lead well.
Live fully.
And choose intentionally.

Not perfectly.

Not all at once.

Not at the cost of yourself.

Strong leadership is not defined by how much you carry.

It is defined by how clearly you decide what matters… and how intentionally you build your life around it.


HOW TO: Stop Trying to Do It All in Work and Life

1. Redefine What “Doing It All” Means to You

Pause and ask yourself: what am I actually trying to achieve? Is it perfection, or is it alignment with what matters most?

2. Separate Expectations from Reality

Identify which expectations are real… and which ones you have internalized over time.

3. Decide What Season You Are In

Not every area of life will receive the same level of attention at all times. Give yourself permission to prioritize based on your current season.

4. Share the Load

At work and at home, ask: what can be delegated, shared, or redesigned? You were never meant to carry everything alone.

5. Release the Need to Appear Perfect

A perfectly clean house, a perfectly executed schedule, a perfectly balanced life… these are not the measures of success.

6. Build a Life That Supports Your Leadership

Instead of fitting your life around your work, begin designing your work and leadership in a way that supports your life.


The Shift That Changes Everything

When you stop trying to do it all, you do not become less effective.

You become more intentional.

More present.
More focused.
More grounded.

And you begin to model something powerful for others.

A version of leadership and life that is not built on exhaustion…

Yet built on clarity.


Closing Reflection

Women’s History Month reminds us of how much has been built before us.

Yet progress was never meant to come at the cost of ourselves.

You do not have to prove your worth by how much you carry.

You do not have to succeed at everything, all at once, to be successful.

You are allowed to lead.

You are allowed to live.

And you are allowed to choose how you do both.


Call to Action

This week, choose one thing to release.

One expectation.
One responsibility.
One pressure that is not serving you.

And notice what changes.

If you are a Right-Hand Leader navigating both the demands of leadership and the realities of life, you do not have to do it alone.

Join us at HERverse.com and connect with women who understand the full picture of leadership and are committed to rising together.

Let’s change the world, together.