Running one business is enough to make most people want to throw their planner out the window by Wednesday. Running two—while raising neurodivergent kids, managing staff, and trying to eat something other than toast crusts—feels like a chaotic dance between brilliance and burnout. But it’s not impossible.
With the right mindset, systems, and boundaries, it’s more than doable. I run a dance school, For the Love of Dance, and a science education company, For the Love of Science. Trust me, I’ve had to build the kind of structure that lets both businesses grow without their owner combusting.
Progress beat perfection
I used to think I needed a clean inbox, a quiet house, and eight hours of sleep to be productive. Turns out, those conditions are a fantasy most small business owners don’t get. Now I work in pockets of time and imperfect progress. Ten minutes between school drop-off and a staff meeting? I’ll knock out payroll. Waiting in the car at footy training? I’m responding to emails. Progress beats perfection—every time.
Systems
The biggest sanity-saver? Systems. I track the chaos using digital tools and old-school routines. I block out time in my calendar like my life depends on it—because some days, it actually does. I pre-schedule social posts, automate repetitive tasks, and batch anything I can. The more that’s locked down by process, the more freedom I actually get. And when it comes to handing things off, those systems make delegation less terrifying. Delegation without systems is just spreading the stress around.
Delegation
That brings me to one of the hardest lessons I’ve learned: I’m not the only one who can do things well. I care. I’m fast. I’m thorough. But I’m not scalable. If I want my businesses to grow and not just survive, I have to let go of things I’ve clung to for too long. That means hiring people who don’t just show up with skills, but with values that align with the heart of what we do. It means trusting them to work things out without me breathing down their neck. When I lead like a CEO instead of a martyr, everyone wins.
Boundaries
Here’s the kicker, though—none of it works without boundaries. Burnout doesn’t show up like a storm. It creeps in quietly, through late-night messages, weekend “quick jobs,” and a calendar with no space to breathe. So now I block off non-negotiable time. No early morning meetings. Friday afternoons are for myself and my family. My phone lives on “Do Not Disturb” when I need to recharge. People respect the boundaries you actually enforce.
Balance
I’d love to say I’ve got it all figured out, but there are still days I forget what planet I’m on. That’s business. That’s life. Balance isn’t something you magically arrive at—it’s something you rebuild constantly. With trial and error. With tears and laughter. With caffeine, therapy, and a ridiculous number of browser tabs open. The goal isn’t perfection. It’s sustainability.
Goals
And while we’re talking about goals—can we drop the idea that success only looks like revenue targets and team expansion? Sometimes, success is a child in one of my classes who finally feels like they belong. Sometimes, it’s watching a group of kids squeal during a science demo. Sometimes, it’s getting through a Wednesday without yelling into the void. That’s valid. That’s real. And that’s enough.
Get Smart
Running two businesses doesn’t mean doing twice as much—it means getting smarter about how you do it. It means knowing your limits and protecting your energy. It means knowing when to hustle and when to rest. And it means knowing that even when everything feels messy and undone, you’re still showing up, still building something, still making it work.
Some days, that’s more than enough.








