Happy Monday!

As I poured my coffee this morning, I was thinking about a question I get asked surprisingly often — usually by other women, usually said with a mix of admiration and exhaustion:

“How do you do it all?”

And every time, I pause — because the honest answer isn’t the one people expect.

I don’t.

The Myth We Keep Feeding Each Other

The real superpower of women in leadership — and why we need to stop pretending otherwise.

Somewhere along the way, women got handed a story that went something like this:

You can have the career. The family. The relationship. The health. The friendships. The passion projects. The clean house. The home-cooked meals. The personal growth. All of it. At the same time. With a smile.

And if you’re struggling to hold it all together — well, you just need better time management. A better morning routine. A better system.

I believed that story for a long time.

I built my calendar around it. I measured myself against it. I felt guilty every time reality didn’t match the picture.

It took me longer than I’d like to admit and to realize:

The story was never true. And chasing it was costing me everything that actually mattered.

What Running a Business Actually Taught Me

When I made the leap from IT into healthcare staffing and started building Protean Med, I quickly discovered that the skill I needed most had nothing to do with industry knowledge or business strategy — at least not at first.

The skill I needed most was this:

The ability to ruthlessly, unapologetically decide what gets my best energy today — and make peace with what doesn’t.

Some weeks, that means my business gets 90% of me and my home runs on takeout and grace.

Some weeks, a school event or a difficult conversation with my husband takes center stage — and the business gets the version of me that just shows up and handles it.

Some seasons, I have poured everything into a client relationship, a hiring decision, or a strategic pivot — and let my inbox sit longer than I’d like.

None of that makes me a bad entrepreneur. None of that makes me a bad mom or wife.

It makes me a leader who knows that priority is singular for a reason.

The Women I’ve Watched Do This Best

The women I admire most in business — the ones who are building real things, leading real teams, raising real families — they share one quiet trait that rarely makes it into the highlight reel:

They have given themselves permission to choose.

Not permission to be perfect at everything simultaneously.

Permission to look at a full plate — an overflowing, absolutely unreasonable plate — and say:

“This. This is what gets my whole heart today. Everything else gets what’s left, and that is enough.”

That’s not settling. That’s not giving up on ambition.

That is the most sophisticated leadership skill I have ever witnessed — and it is overwhelmingly, disproportionately practiced by women, because we have had no other choice.

What I Want You to Sit With This Week

As we head into a week that closes with the celebration of International Women’s Day, I want to offer you something more useful than a list of productivity hacks or a reminder to “practice self-care.”

I want to offer you this reframe:

The juggle isn’t the goal. The juggle is the obstacle.

The goal is clarity — knowing what matters most in this season, this week, this day — and having the courage to give it your full presence while letting the rest wait.

You are not failing because you can’t do everything at once.

You are leading — imperfectly, bravely, and in a way that most people will never fully understand — because most people have never had to carry what you carry.

This week, I want to ask you one question:

What is the one thing that deserves your full presence right now — and what have you been letting distract you from it?

Sit with that. Let it guide your week.

And come back next Monday — because I have a story I’ve been wanting to share with you, just in time for International Women’s Day. One about what it really looks like to build something while being everything to everyone — and what I’ve learned about doing it without losing yourself in the process.

See you then.

Rajee Hari | Founder, Protean Med | Speaker on Resilience, Leadership & Entrepreneurship Every Monday morning — real growth, real talk. www.proteanmed.com | rajee@proteanmed.com

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