Finding My HEART
From climbing the corporate ladder to building a life rooted in HEART: a journey of rediscovering authenticity, purpose, and what truly matters.
My story begins long before I had a title or a business card.
It begins with hospitality—real hospitality—the kind you grow up witnessing rather than learning.
My parents modeled it every day.
They taught me to greet people with warmth, lead with empathy, and look for the human behind the job title. They showed me how far kindness can go, how important relationships truly are, and how much meaning there is in creating moments that make people feel seen.
Those roots shaped everything that came after.
But as I grew up, I did what many women do.
I believed the only way to “make it” was to climb the corporate ladder as fast as possible.
More responsibility.
More hours.
More pressure.
More sacrifice.
The title mattered.
The pace mattered.
The grind mattered.
Or at least, I thought it did.
I chased the ladder, the title, the spotlight, believing that was the only path to feeling accomplished. But somewhere along the way, the things that made me me—empathy, authenticity, relationships, trust—were buried beneath expectations that were never really mine to carry.
I lost pieces of myself trying to keep up with workplaces that valued output more than people.
I felt the mom guilt.
I felt the constant fear of the chopping block.
I felt the strain of being present for everyone except myself.
And yet, I stayed—because that is what we are told success looks like.
In many of those roles, leadership was rarely something I witnessed day to day. I was rarely inspired or lifted. I was stuck in a rat race that felt endless, and it often felt like no one truly cared. Over time, my health began to decline. My body rejected the environment—the judgment, the feeling of being overlooked, the constant pressure to prove myself.
I wasn’t just sick of it.
I was physically sick.
I didn’t realize how much I was missing until I stepped away. My body knew before my heart did that something was wrong—and that something had to change.
Everything shifted the day I took a leap into something different: a hospitality technology company that allowed me to work from home, reconnect with my family, and build a career rooted in contribution rather than survival.
I found my HEART again.
Hospitality.
Empathy.
Authenticity.
Relationships.
Trust.
Not just as values—but as a way of working, leading, and living.
My confidence came back.
My voice came back.
My creativity came back.
The mom guilt vanished almost overnight. My kids noticed. I was present again—not just physically, but emotionally.
My relationship with my husband grew stronger than ever.
I was no longer rushing from meeting to meeting, no longer sacrificing myself, my time, and my life to prove my worth.
And for the first time in years, I felt like me.
I escaped toxic work cultures, constant uncertainty, and the endless cycle of trying to be “enough.”
Instead of performance improvement plans and fear-based leadership, I found collaborators who chase progress—not perfection.
I found a space where my ideas are welcomed, my heart is valued, and my work matters.
Then something unexpected happened.
I found my voice on LinkedIn.
It became a place where I could show up as the woman I had become—honest, reflective, imperfect, and filled with HEART. I shared stories not to impress, but to connect.
And women responded.
Women who felt the same pressure.
Women who were exhausted by expectations.
Women who needed to hear, “You aren’t alone.”
Those connections became friendships, partnerships, and a community I never expected. They reminded me that when women speak honestly, we heal out loud. And when we heal out loud, we lift others with us.
This year, another piece of my HEART came to life through HEART & Hounds, our family’s small local venture welcoming furry friends into our home. What began as a practical way to help neighbors walk and board their dogs during travel became something more—a way to serve, connect, and create comfort in our community.
Dogs arrived shy, excited, nervous, and overjoyed—and our home welcomed them all.
My children joined in.
My husband joined in.
And hospitality showed up again, this time as our family’s shared heartbeat.
Everything I do now—in tech, in hospitality, in motherhood, in business, and in my marriage—comes back to HEART.
We are not here to climb ladders built for someone else.
We are here to build lives that matter, relationships that last, and communities that feel like home.
I am forever grateful for the hospitality industry—not only for the career it gave me, but for the people, the lessons, and the love it brought into my life. Hospitality taught me who I wanted to be. Tech gave me the space to become her.
If sharing my story helps even one woman feel seen, supported, or brave enough to choose a life that truly nourishes her—then every part of this journey was worth it.
This is HEART.
This is home.
This is me.