This one's for the mom who gave away her whole day before she even had coffee. It's about holding onto one small thing that belongs to you and nobody else, and why that isn't selfish, it's survival. Keep this if you've forgotten what you actually like anymore.
Balance is a lie somebody sold you to make you feel behind. There is no perfect split between you and your kids and the house and the job. There's just today, and today has too many hands reaching for it.
So forget balance. Pick one thing.
One thing that's yours. Not the family's. Not the kids'. Not something you do so you can be a better mom, though it'll probably do that too. Something you do because you're a person, and you existed before them, and you'll keep existing alongside them. That distinction matters. The second your one thing becomes about serving everyone else, it stops being yours and goes back into the pile with everything else you carry.
I've watched too many women — myself included — hand over every hour and then wonder why they don't recognize their own reflection. You didn't disappear all at once. You gave yourself away in tiny pieces, a skipped walk here, a canceled coffee there, until there was nothing left with your name on it. Keeping one thing is how you stop the bleed.
Here's where most of us mess it up. We decide our one thing is going to be an hour of yoga every morning at 5 a.m., or a whole side business, or reading a book a week. Big. Ambitious. Impossible with three kids and a life. Then we miss it twice and quit and feel worse than before we started.
Go smaller. Embarrassingly small.
Ten minutes of movement in the living room while the coffee brews. A walk around the block with your headphones in, no stroller, no one asking you for a snack. Fifteen minutes with a cup of tea before the house wakes up, just sitting, not scrolling. The point isn't the size. The point is that it's consistent and it's yours.
Movement is the one I always come back to. Not because it's the right answer — because it's the thing that gives me back to myself faster than anything. When I move my body, even a little, my head clears and I stop feeling like a machine that dispenses fruit snacks. If you're rebuilding a habit around movement, the Physical Activity Guidelines from the CDC are a solid, no-pressure place to see what your body actually needs, which is probably less than you think. Start where you are. Ten minutes counts.
I'll be honest about something else that's been part of my own routine — peptides have been part of how I've helped myself feel stronger and more like me. That's my personal experience, not a prescription, and not something I'm going to explain the science of. Your one thing gets to be whatever genuinely makes you feel like you. Mine happens to include moving my body and taking care of it. Yours might be painting, or singing badly in the car, or gardening. There's no wrong answer as long as it's actually yours.
The hard part isn't picking the thing. It's protecting it once the day starts eating everyone alive.
Your kids will interrupt. Someone will need something the second you sit down. This is not a sign you should give it up — it's the exact reason you can't. So you guard it, and you guard it out loud where they can hear you. "This is Mom's ten minutes." "I'll be back in fifteen, I'm going for a walk." You don't apologize for it. You don't earn it by finishing every other task first.
And here's what happens when you do that consistently. Your kids learn that their mom is a whole person with things she cares about. Little girls watch how their mothers treat themselves and file it away for later. When your daughter sees you take ten minutes that are yours and not feel guilty about it, you're teaching her she's allowed to do the same someday. You're not stealing time from your kids. You're showing them what a strong woman looks like up close.
That's not selfish. That's the most generous thing you can model.
You will lose it. Some seasons swallow everything — a newborn, a move, a stretch where you're just trying to keep everyone fed and alive. Your one thing will slip. Don't turn that into proof that you're failing.
Losing it for a season doesn't mean you've lost yourself. It means you're in a hard stretch, and hard stretches end. The thing about a small habit is that it's easy to pick back up. You don't have to rebuild from scratch. You just start again tomorrow, ten minutes, no drama, no big speech about getting back on track.
I believe God built women to bend without breaking. We come back. We come back after the setbacks and the exhausting seasons and the years we barely remember because we were so deep in raising tiny humans. Never underestimate how strong you actually are, even when you feel like a shadow of yourself. That woman is still in there. Your one thing is how you keep the door to her open — a small, daily reminder that you're still here, you still matter, and you're worth ten minutes of your own life.
Pick your one thing today. Make it small. Guard it like it counts. Because it does, and so do you.
Wear Your Power.
OK Tease Co. is a modern women’s apparel brand rooted in purpose, confidence, and intentional storytelling.
Stillwater, Oklahoma
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