The Servant’s Pivot: How Volunteer Leadership Prepared Me for a Federal Career and Beyond
From Stay-at-Home Mom to Humanitarian Leader: Why Your Unconventional Career Path Is Your Greatest Strength
The Myth of the “Gap”
As we advance in the professional world, we are often told that a résumé with “gap years” or extensive volunteer service requires explanation—or worse, an apology. During my years as a stay-at-home mom, I felt this pressure deeply. I constantly worried that my time spent raising a family, organizing community events, or leading local boards would be viewed by hiring managers as a pause in my career.
As I prepare to step into a new professional role, having navigated a federal career and now transitioning into a leadership position with the American Red Cross, I have realized something revolutionary: there is no such thing as a gap.
My years with Mothers of Preschoolers (MOPS), now MomCo, weren’t just about community and having other adults to talk to; they were my first high-stakes management role. Serving military families as a Key Spouse—now Key Support Liaison—for my husband’s squadron wasn’t simply a liaison position; it was a masterclass in crisis communication and advocacy for a community that sacrifices daily. These roles were not placeholders on my résumé; they were training grounds for my potential.
In these unofficial spaces, I sharpened the very tools I would later utilize to secure PACAF approval for international protocols in Japan. I learned that influence doesn’t require a paycheck, and you don’t need fancy formal titles to lead with integrity. If you are leading from a servant’s heart, you are building a toolkit more valuable than any single training—and transferable to any boardroom, federal office, or humanitarian mission in the world.
Translating the Skills
My leadership journey didn’t begin in a boardroom; it began with a Care Team. At MOPS, I learned that authentic leadership is rooted in empathy—the ability to sit with people in both their highest and lowest moments. Those years of sitting with mothers turned that “soft skill” into my greatest professional asset.
While stationed in Japan, I noticed fragmentation within our squadron. Despite being physically present at events, spouses were often isolated. Drawing on my own experience of feeling “left out,” I launched a Secret Sister initiative. I acted as a human algorithm, matching spouses based on shared struggles, complementary strengths, and common interests.
When COVID-19 hit, this network became a lifeline, transforming into a base-wide movement of porch-dropped comfort—even when I myself had reached a low point. I was learning to bridge gaps in human connection, a skill that translates directly to organizational diplomacy.
When I returned to the workforce and launched my federal career, I carried that same gap-filling lens with me. In 2022, during the planning of Operation Christmas Drop—the U.S. Air Force’s longest-running humanitarian mission—I noticed a glaring friction point: the mission commanders were pilots, not diplomats, yet they were being buried under a record-breaking list of international Distinguished Visitors (DVs).
I took a chance and made a bold proposal: let the pilots fly; let me handle the diplomacy.
I researched everything, analyzed partner nation and DV requirements, and authored the formal task order for a Protocol Specialist. My proposal was accepted by PACAF and approved for implementation that year. PACAF even noted that it was an excellent idea.
I wasn’t prepared for the heartbreak. I received a call from the mission commander, his voice defeated. The task order had been approved and added, but despite his advocacy on my behalf, the seat would not be filled by me. Someone else was sent to execute my vision.
For a long time, that stung, and I carried that hurt. Over time, however, I realized something profound. My servant’s heart hadn’t just helped a few moms in churches, living rooms, or parks—it had fundamentally improved the infrastructure of a major military operation.
I left a lasting impact on the largest humanitarian mission in the Air Force.
The Strategic Pivot (The Federal to Nonprofit Move)
As a civil servant, I proved my tactical worth, but I felt the need for a pivot. I wasn’t initially aiming for the American Red Cross, but it’s where I landed. Moving from a government desk to a global humanitarian powerhouse is more than a change of scenery—it’s a leap of faith built on two key foundations: education and mentorship.
My servant’s heart has always been my foundation, but to reach my goals I needed a formal plan to build something bigger than where I was. Pursuing my master’s degree was about more than credentials; it was about translating my intuitive leadership into a recognized professional language. It took my on-the-job instincts and turned them into a strategic toolkit, allowing me to expand my knowledge and open doors that highlighted my professional accomplishments and volunteer work in a way the Red Cross could understand.
Ultimately, I realized I was a specialist in human impact.
Transitioning from the federal system to the nonprofit world can feel like learning a new dialect, but the core values remain the same. My federal service taught me the importance of protocol—the formal dance of diplomacy. As I step into my new role with the Red Cross, I can apply those same principles to Disaster Programs, where the stakes are human lives.
The insight was simple: I didn’t have to start over. I simply had to walk across the bridge I had already built toward a mission that allows me to lead with both my head and my heart.
Navigating this point in my career required more than determination and a new degree—it required a mentor. Someone who could see the executive in me even when I was still feeling the sting of being left behind and adjusting to a new position after moving.
My mentor reminded me that while leaders sometimes make decisions that overlook the best person for the job, only I could decide the trajectory of my career. They helped me see that my “why”—serving those who serve—was portable, and that my skills were stronger than I believed.
I simply had to take the first steps.
Integrity and Conduct
From sitting in churches, living rooms, or parks with other moms, to navigating the rigid hierarchies of federal service, to overseeing Disaster Programs for the Red Cross, I have learned one undeniable truth: the greatest tool a leader has is their own conduct.
We often imagine leadership as the person at the podium or the individual who radiates authority. But real influence is softer and quieter. It is the integrity you demonstrate when no one is watching. It is how you respond when someone else receives the credit for work you did.
In Japan, I learned that my conduct was my currency. If I wanted to bridge gaps between military spouses, mission commanders, and partner nations, I had to become the proverbial bridge—strong enough for others to trust as they crossed.
Servant leadership is often viewed as weak or soft. In reality, it is one of the most disciplined forms of leadership.
It means:
- Listening first: understanding the “protocol gap” before trying to fix it.
- Accountability: owning the proposal from research to execution, even if you don’t receive the credit.
- Consistency: being the same person in a crisis that you are in a casual conversation.
In the nonprofit world—especially in disaster relief—you frequently encounter people on one of the worst days of their lives. They don’t care about the degrees you hold or the positions you’ve previously occupied. They care about your integrity.
My philosophy is simple: regardless of what the day holds, lead in a way that allows you to look in the mirror at night and know that your “why” for leading remained unshaken.
The Roadmap for Others
I spent years worried about gaps in my résumé and a career pivot that I eventually realized was inevitable. What I have since learned is that the traditional career ladder is a myth that limits our potential.
Authentic influence is not about climbing a single path that everyone else is trying to climb. It’s about building a toolkit of skills that sets you apart.
My years with MOPS gave me the tools of empathy and community building.
My years as a Key Spouse gave me the tools of crisis management and radical inclusion.
My federal service gave me the tools of protocol and institutional strategy.
My master’s degree gave me the language to unite them all.
As I step into my new role at the Red Cross, I won’t use just one of these tools—I will use the entire toolkit. Every “no” I have received, including the one in Japan, was a purposeful redirection toward a larger mission where I was needed and where my specific skills were needed most.
To the woman staying home to raise her children and wondering whether volunteering will be enough to return to the workforce, or whether these years will stall her career: this is your executive training ground.
To the professional feeling stuck in a career: your “why” is portable, not stationary. The skills you have honed are professional currency. Your conduct is your strength.
Stop apologizing for the winding road. The curves in your path are your training grounds—the experiences you could never gain if your path were meant to be easy. Offices may change and titles will evolve, but leading with a servant’s heart and unshakable integrity—that is what your legacy is made of, and no one can take that away.
So build the bridge. Write the proposal. Lead from exactly where you are.