People ask me how I do it all. The honest answer is: I do not do it all. I do the things I have decided to do, fully and intentionally, and I leave the rest. That distinction — between doing everything and doing what matters — is where balance actually lives.
I have a career in digital marketing and lifecycle automation that moves fast. Campaigns, data, strategy, a team that needs direction and deadlines that do not care what else is on my plate. Outside of work I have a full social life — dinner parties I host, group trips I organise, friendships I invest in properly. I have a daughter and grandchildren in Indianapolis I fly to see regularly. I have a home in Wellington that I keep to a standard I am proud of. And now I have Style & Soul 35+, which I am building from scratch on top of all of that.
If you are waiting for me to tell you I have unlocked some secret productivity system or that I survive on four hours of sleep, I am going to disappoint you. What I have is a relationship with my own mind that took decades to build — and a planning discipline that is non-negotiable. That is it. That is the whole answer.
that makes everything
else possible
on commitments
I actually make
I have decided
not to do
equal weight on both sides
The image most of us carry of work-life balance is a set of scales — work on one side, life on the other, both perfectly level at all times. That image is not just unrealistic. It is counterproductive, because it sets you up to feel like you are failing whenever one side tips.
Balance, in the way I actually experience it, is more like navigation. Some weeks work takes everything I have. Some weeks family takes precedence. Some weeks I host three dinners and spend Saturday morning doing nothing. The scales tip constantly. The goal is not equal weight at every moment — it is that over time, nothing important gets consistently neglected.
Once I stopped measuring myself against the impossible standard of the perfectly level scales, I stopped feeling like I was failing. And once I stopped feeling like I was failing, I had a lot more energy for everything else.
in your mind
I have high energy. I always have. But energy alone is not what makes a full life manageable — plenty of high-energy people are exhausted and overwhelmed. What makes it manageable is what I do with my mind before I do anything with my calendar.
The chaos of a busy life does not live in the diary. It lives in the mental load — the constant background hum of things undone, things owed, things worried about, things that need to be remembered. The single most impactful thing I do for my own wellbeing is to get that out of my head and onto paper. Every week, without exception.
When it is in your head, everything feels urgent and everything feels heavy. When it is on paper it becomes a list — and a list is something you can work through. The anxiety of a full life is mostly the anxiety of trying to hold too many things in your mind at once. Externalise it. Give it somewhere to live that is not inside you.
Every week. Without exception.
I am a planner. Not in the aspirational, I-own-a-beautiful-notebook sense — though I do own a beautiful notebook. In the sense that planning is the infrastructure everything else in my life runs on. Without it, the energy I have goes in ten directions and produces less than if I had half the energy and a clear plan.
My weekly planning process is not complicated. It has three steps. First, I review what is already in the diary. Work commitments, travel, family, anything fixed. Second, I look at what I want to add — social plans, personal projects, time for myself. Third — and this is the step most people skip — I assess whether the week I am looking at is actually achievable. Not optimistically achievable. Realistically achievable, given that things always take longer than expected and something unexpected always comes up.
If the week looks too full at the planning stage, I remove something before I have made the commitment rather than after. Cancelling is expensive — it costs relationship capital, it creates guilt and it produces the exact opposite of the controlled life you are trying to build. Not committing in the first place costs nothing.
"The diary is not where balance is built. Balance is built in the five minutes before you add something to the diary — the five minutes where you ask yourself whether you actually have the capacity for this, right now, this week."
— Anjie, Style & Soul 35+I follow through
This is the principle I am most reluctant to compromise on. Not because I am rigid — I am not rigid, I am practical — but because I have seen what happens to the quality of relationships and professional trust when commitments are made and then unmade. It erodes both slowly and then suddenly.
The reason I can follow through consistently is not that I have remarkable willpower. It is that I am selective about what I commit to in the first place. The two things are inseparable. High follow-through is the result of careful selection, not heroic effort. I only say yes to what I genuinely intend to do. Which means I say no to a great deal.
Saying no is a skill that takes time to develop — especially for women, who are socialised to be accommodating. The version of no I use most often is not a hard refusal. It is a reframe: "I cannot do this week but I would love to do it the following Thursday." That sentence preserves the relationship, honours my capacity and buys me the time I need to actually do it well.
is not a luxury
When people talk about cutting back to find balance, social life is almost always the first thing they sacrifice. A dinner is rescheduled. A girls' trip is postponed indefinitely. The friendships that sustain you are quietly deprioritised in favour of the urgent.
I do not do this. Not because I have unlimited time but because I understand the value of what I would be giving up. My social life is not separate from my wellbeing — it is a significant part of it. The dinner parties I host, the group trips I organise, the friendships I have built across multiple cities — these are not extras. They are the thing that makes the work sustainable.
What I protect the social life with is the same thing I use to protect everything else: planning. I put social commitments in the diary with the same firmness I apply to work meetings. They are not optional. They are not the first thing to go when the week gets full. If anything, they are the last.
and why it is not optional
I want to say something specific about friends. Not the networking kind, not the acquaintance kind — the ones you have chosen, over years, who know the whole of you. Who were there before the career got complicated, before the kids grew up, before life accumulated the weight it accumulates. The ones you can sit across a table from and feel your shoulders drop before you have even said a word.
Those friendships are one of the most underrated forms of stress relief available to us. Not therapy, not a spa day, not a productivity hack — just a meal with the right person. Something extraordinary happens in those hours. The volume on everything else turns down. You laugh at things that were not funny an hour ago. You say something out loud that you have been carrying silently for two weeks and the other person says "me too" and suddenly it weighs half what it did. There is genuinely nothing like it.
It does not have to be elaborate. The most restorative versions of this are often the simplest ones. A coffee on a Tuesday morning that was not planned three weeks in advance. A film on a Friday night with someone who already knows you well enough that you do not have to perform being fine. A long dinner that starts at seven and somehow ends at midnight because nobody wanted to be the first to leave. Those evenings are not indulgences. They are medicine.
What I have found — and this is something I feel more clearly with every year — is that the friends you invest in properly become a kind of infrastructure. They hold the version of you that your work does not see and your family takes for granted. They witness you. And being witnessed, really seen, by someone who chose to know you — that does something to the nervous system that nothing else replicates.
I want to leave you with something that I genuinely believe: the next story is always better than the last one. Every time I sit down with my closest friends there is something new — a trip someone took, a decision someone made, a plot twist in someone's life that nobody saw coming. We are at the age where life is delivering its most interesting material. The children who are now adults making their own complicated choices. The careers that have taken unexpected turns. The second acts nobody planned for. The losses that changed everything quietly and the gains that changed it loudly.
Do not wait for a special occasion to gather the people who matter. The ordinary Tuesday evening is the occasion. The coffee that turns into a two-hour conversation is the occasion. The film you have both been meaning to see for three months and finally just book — that is the occasion. The next story is already happening. Get there for it.
to let go
A full life requires a willingness to leave some things undone. Not the important things — the things that feel urgent but are not actually consequential. The email that could wait until tomorrow. The meeting that could have been a message. The social obligation that exists entirely out of habit rather than genuine connection.
After 35, I became much clearer about which category things fell into. The clarity came partly from experience and partly from necessity — the more I took on, the more ruthlessly I had to edit. What I let go of was mostly obligation without meaning. The commitments I was honouring out of a sense of should rather than a sense of want.
The things I hold firmly: my work, my family, my close friendships, my home, my own health and this site I am building. Everything else is evaluated weekly. Not every obligation survives the evaluation. That is by design.
about doing it all
There are weeks it does not work. There are weeks the work overwhelms everything, or a family situation takes all of me, or I am simply tired in a way that a good night's sleep does not fix. Those weeks happen. They are not failures — they are information. They tell me something about my capacity that I need to factor into the weeks that follow.
The difference between now and a younger version of myself is that I do not spiral when those weeks happen. I do not use them as evidence that I am doing something wrong or that my life is unmanageable. I note it, I adjust, and I plan the following week with what I actually learned rather than the optimistic version of myself I sometimes plan for.
Self-knowledge is the foundation of everything. Knowing how much I can take on before quality suffers. Knowing which depletes me and which restores me. Knowing that I need a quiet morning to think before a big week, and a social evening to decompress after a difficult one. That knowledge — specific, personal, hard-won — is worth more than any productivity framework I have ever come across.
01 Balance is not equal weight at every moment — it is that nothing important is consistently neglected. 02 Get the mental load out of your head and onto paper every week. 03 Plan the week honestly, not optimistically — if it is too full at the planning stage, remove something now. 04 Only commit to what you genuinely intend to do. High follow-through requires selective commitment. 05 Protect your social life with the same firmness you apply to work. It is the fuel, not the reward. 06 Let go of obligation without meaning. Ask: if I did not do this, what would actually happen? 07 Know your number — not how much you can do when things go right, but when things go slightly wrong.
You do not need more hours. You need a clearer relationship with the hours you already have. Everything else follows from that.
