Your life is taking more than it’s giving back.
That experience has a name. You’re at the right place to learn about the framework built to address it.
You’re the person who’s there for everyone. At work, at home, in every situation where you hold responsibility. You’ve built a life that reflects your ambition, your competence and your discipline. You worked hard for it.
And you’re noticing the cost of sustaining it.
You don’t see yourself as being in crisis. Things are getting done and moving forward, and that’s what makes it hard to see what’s happening.
The deficit between what your life extracts from you and what it gives back has a name: The Vitality Gap.
This isn’t burnout. That’s because burnout is an end-stage diagnosis. You’re sensing The Vitality Gap in the space between “I’m fine” and “I can’t keep this up.”
The Fun Reset is a 16-week experience designed to close it.
I needed something to kickstart me to focus on myself. As soon as I saw what this was about, it resonated. Anne made me feel like I wasn’t alone and that’s why I committed.” — Amy C.
Why what you’ve been doing isn’t working and what does
Your ambition built this life. Your competence made you indispensable. Your discipline keeps it all running.
These are the same forces widening The Vitality Gap.
Each system, from your career to your household to your caregiving responsibilities, acts like it’s the only one. Your job doesn’t account for the trip you’re taking with your child. Your child doesn’t account for your aging parent’s upcoming surgery. Your parent doesn’t account for the work deadline.
They don’t negotiate with each other. They extract.
You’re the only one who absorbs it all.
And no one, even you, has been accounting for what this costs.
The primary issue is not that you’re ambitious or that your to-do list is too long. It’s that your plan lacks room for you.
You’ve tried the strategies available to you. You’ve improved your routines, set stronger boundaries. You’ve even worked on saying no more often. These are tactics for managing extraction. They don’t address the cost.
Burnout is the only explanation you think you have. It’s the wrong frame. Burnout is an end-stage diagnosis that builds over time and requires years of recovery. If you’re waiting for burnout to tell you something is wrong, you’re waiting too long.
Self care is foundational. You can’t address The Vitality Gap without it, but it’s not enough on its own.
Most of what gets called self care is getting taped up to get back into the game. You book the spa day. You’re feeling restored. The first notification hits and it’s gone. It isn’t sustaining because it isn’t consistent and it isn’t strategic.
These have the same limitation: they treat your vitality as something to recover after the fact.
The Vitality Gap requires something different. It requires you to build vitality as a course of action vs. crisis response.
Research tells us why.
A study from The University of Pittsburgh found that enjoyable activities buffer the negative impact of stress by changing how your body responds. The team measured what happens when people engage in enjoyable leisure activities they choose for themselves. Participants in this study, 75% of whom were women, showed lower cortisol levels, lower blood pressure and measurably improved physical function.
It’s backwards to view fun as a reward or what you get to do only after everything else is done. Or to wait until a perfect time or until you can take a month off. Neither of those is going to happen. This is what widens The Vitality Gap. Closing The Vitality Gap means applying a strategy to have fun in the life you’re actually living.
That strategy needs to be specific to you. You don’t need a pre-set profile that sort of sounds like you. You need a formula built from what it actually takes to build your vitality.
The Fun Reset gave me actual tools to look at how I was spending my time and how I felt about it. I tracked a full week and realized there wasn’t a single hour with my spouse. That data changed what I could see.” — Julie N
Why I built this.
One June morning changed me.
I had just come from the gym. Healthy breakfast on the counter in my sun-filled kitchen. By any measure I was taking care of myself. I was fine.
My kids had finished school and were talking about the summer ahead. We had planned it carefully. We started in January, coordinating with their friends’ families, lining up programs week by week. That’s what you do when you have ten weeks to manage and you want your kids to have fun. I could see them looking ahead at the summer and seeing possibilities.
Then I opened my email and the contrast hit. I was going to be full-on until vacation in late August. Their summer was exactly what they wanted. Mine was not.
I felt a bunch of things at once. Frustration topped the list. Like everyone else’s agenda mattered and mine didn’t. I felt conflicted because the chatter about camp and beach days I had orchestrated almost became hard to hear.
And then I said something on impulse.
“Hey kids. You know it’s my summer too, right?”
They agreed, unsure why the question needed to be asked at all. I was talking to myself more than to them. What struck me was how simple that was for them to accept and how impossible it had felt for me to say.
The only thing standing between me and what I wanted from the summer was my own decision to make it happen. I couldn’t take the summer off, but I didn’t need to feel this constrained. I had been telling myself a story about constraints that wasn’t accurate. My obligations were very real, but the story that there was no room for what I wanted wasn’t true. I had written that myself. I had overcranked my responsibility into self-sacrifice.
I didn’t want to escape my life. I wanted to feel like my life included me. I was experiencing The Vitality Gap. I just didn’t have a name for it yet.
That’s the piece that matters here. I wasn’t burned out. My self-care was solid. And neither concept could reach what I was actually feeling.
I’m a systems thinker. I spent years consulting on change and innovation in large-scale corporate environments, building repeatable systems that work under real conditions. I applied that same discipline to this problem. I spent two years in the research to understand what actually sustains high-achieving women over time. I translated it into a framework that works in normal life, because that’s when you need it. Not when conditions are ideal but in the life you’re actually living.
I built The Fun Reset because it didn’t exist.
How the program works
Each phase of The Fun Reset builds on the one before it.
Awareness
You start by seeing what’s actually happening. Self care becomes non-negotiable as the foundation everything else depends on. You stop the crash and recover cycle that has been pretending to be a strategy. And you see where your vitality is going. You track not just how you spend your time but how it feels.
That difference matters because 60 hours spent doing something you love feels effortless while 30 doing something that drains you does not. How extractive the experience is for you is the metric you learn to track. This is where the directional question earns its place: is this building me or draining me?
Reconnection
You clarify what matters to you, specifically. What do you value when it comes to the life you want to lead? And how do these values show up in your life? Most women have never been asked this question without extractive systems defining the answer for them. You also confront what you’ve been deferring. The experiences, the interests and the parts of your identity you haven’t given any room. This is where they come back into view.
Expansion
You build your personal formula for what actually builds your vitality. Not the one that works for your sister or best friend. You.
This isn’t a personality assessment that sorts you into a type. You build this from your data on what depletes you and what builds you, and match that data with your life conditions.
You’ll know whether it’s time to have dinner out with seven friends in a busy restaurant or time for a walk in the woods. You learn to be that specific. The formula is yours because no one else’s life produces the same pattern. This is how fun stops being accidental and becomes a strategic asset.
Integration
You build a rhythm that sustains vitality no matter what life brings. This is where the structure gets pressure-tested. Over the program’s 16 weeks, you move through at least two seasons with changing schedules, shifting responsibilities and the inevitable moments when the systems intensify. The moves you make are durable because they’ve worked under real conditions. Your actual life.
I thought 16 weeks would feel like too much. It’s exactly right. As my kids started school, my work shifted, my responsibilities changed. I’m living through those transitions differently because of The Fun Reset. It meets you where real life actually is.” — Cameron B.
What’s included
The Fun Reset is a 16-week group coaching experience. Your commitment is two hours a week. Here’s what’s inside:
For Real Self Care
You commit to self care as foundational and non-negotiable with a realistic approach that keeps it consistent when life moves fast and extraction intensifies.
The Time Maker Matrix
You see where your time is going, what it’s costing you and how to redirect it. Having the data changes your decisions.
The Someday Shelf Method
You name what you’ve been deferring and what you want to pursue and make it part of the life you’re living now. You stop treating your own needs as negotiable.
Your Fun Formula
Your personalized blueprint for which kind of fun to pursue when. You know how to build your vitality in every situation, no matter what life is throwing at you.
Live coaching & community
Weekly live calls that keep you progressing and accountable, all recorded. The community is women who understand what you’re building because they’re building it too.
Lifetime access to tools & resources
The library of exercises, reflections and frameworks stays with you. Your life and needs will change. The tools are designed for your return.
Why 16 weeks?
Vitality has to hold under real conditions. Over four months, you move through changing seasons, schedules, and demands. This ensures the shifts you make are durable and do not depend on ideal circumstances. The goal is a new baseline you can return to when life intensifies.
You commit two hours per week. The Vitality Gap costs significantly more than that.
Who is this designed for?
You’re highly capable and the cost of sustaining everything is becoming clear to you. You know academically that you should be doing more for yourself. It just has never translated to consistent action. You’ve tried self-care, productivity hacks, boundary-setting and they addressed symptoms, not the structural deficit. You’re looking for a system, not a pep talk.
The Fun Reset is designed for women who are ready to make vitality a standing priority alongside the systems that depend on them. That distinction is the design principle behind everything in this program.
Every woman in that group was driven and capable. The issue was never permission. It was having a system. Anne is tackling something that’s hard to get your arms around and the framework she’s built does it. — Jacqueline K.
You already know this matters. That’s not the issue.
The issue is knowing and doing have never been the same thing when it comes to yourself. You’ve known for years that your vitality needed more attention. You’ve known the oxygen mask advice was right. And it never translated to consistent action because every system around you had a more immediate claim on your time.
That pattern is what extractive systems produce. They train you to justify any time spent on yourself against someone else’s need. The habit of justification outlasts the systems that created it. Even when the demands ease, the reflex stays.
Here’s what I’ve seen repeatedly: the women like you who come to The Fun Reset don’t lack awareness. You lack a structure for acting on what you already know. What you need is a system that makes it operational week after week, through seasonal shifts, inside the life you actually live.
There are a few specific patterns worth naming here, because you may recognize yourself in them.
You’ve tried the conventional strategies and they didn’t hold.
Better routines, stronger boundaries, saying no more often are smart moves. But they didn’t close The Vitality Gap because they manage the extraction without addressing what gets built back. Spa days and vacations are on the other side, but the recovery fades the moment the systems resume. Neither side reaches the deficit. The Vitality Gap requires building vitality as an ongoing input alongside the extraction. That’s a different kind of move.
You feel guilt about prioritizing yourself.
Choosing something where you are the point of the experience can feel like you’re taking from the people who depend on you. That feeling is the extractive systems talking. They’ve conditioned you to believe that your vitality is indulgent. It isn’t. It’s how you sustain through the very responsibilities that are creating the extraction.
You’re not sure what you’d even do.
When free time appears, you default to whatever requires the least decision-making. Half the time the laundry wins. That’s what depletion produces. The Fun Reset addresses this directly because it’s built to help you rediscover what’s yours, test it and make it real.
You’re wondering if this is the right time.
The Vitality Gap widens every day you don’t address it. There is no season where the systems will ease up enough for this to feel like an obvious choice. The Fun Reset was designed for exactly that reality. It’s two hours a week, inside the life you have, through whatever the systems are demanding. If you’re waiting for the right time, you’re waiting for a moment the extractive systems will never offer you.
Questions you want to ask
Will I have time for this?
That’s precisely why The Fun Reset exists. It’s about changing how vitality is supported inside the life you already have. Two hours a week. The Vitality Gap costs significantly more than that.
Is this about having fun every day?
The Fun Reset isn’t about constant fun. It’s about making vitality non-negotiable, so fulfillment is present often enough to support your ambition, your perspective and your capacity. You’ll find the rhythm that works with your actual life.
Is this a lightweight lifestyle program?
No. The Fun Reset addresses a structural question: how do you want to experience the life you’re building? It’s grounded in behavior change, experiential learning, values clarification and decision-making frameworks. It’s structured, intentional and designed for lasting change.
How is this different from general life coaching?
This is not open-ended coaching. The Fun Reset is a focused intervention for women affected by over-productivity and chronic responsibility. Fun is used as a strategic asset, not a reward, to address the patterns that keep fulfillment out of reach. The outcome is a different relationship to time, choice and presence.
Here’s what changes for you
You stop treating your vitality as the acceptable cost of everything else.
That’s the structural shift. Everything that follows comes from it.
You track your vitality reserves with the same precision you once reserved for output. You know what builds them and what depletes them specifically, for you. A week at a trade show drains some reserves completely, builds others, leaves others untouched. You know which ones and you know what to do about it.
You have a personal menu of options ready for when you need them. You will not have a pre-determined list or get three types where you pick the closest fit. This formula is entirely yours. You build it based on your own view of your vitality, test it in your own life and make it specific to the depletion you’re facing.
The directional question – is this building me or draining me – becomes your lens. You see extraction coming and you act before it deplYetes you. You’re not reacting to depletion. You’re making moves ahead of it.
Your life still has the same systems. Your career, your household and your caregiving responsibilities don’t disappear. What changes is that your vitality has standing in your life alongside those systems. It’s not fitting in or happening despite them. It’s happening with them.
You’re looking at life as what’s possible, not what you survive.
When you’re in the middle of it all, the demands are running and the systems are loud. The Fun Reset means a framework that survives seasonal shifts. It offers a way of operating that holds when the responsibilities spike and the calendar fills. You have something you didn’t have before: a strategy that accounts for this.
When you’ve come through the most demanding years, the pace has eased and the question has changed. It’s no longer how do I survive this. It’s what do I actually want. The Fun Reset means building forward on your own terms, with a practiced understanding of what creates your vitality. The systems trained you to know everyone else’s needs. Now you know your own.
Different stages. Same root. The life you’re living now reflects what matters to you, not just what you manage.
The Fun Reset helped me see where my time was going, what supported me, and what didn’t. Now I have a personal menu of options ready for when I need them, instead of defaulting to whatever’s easiest. I feel more supported and more capable of sustaining change than I have in years.” — Julie N.
This is the move
The Vitality Gap is real.
It’s costing you the life you actually want.
You already know this matters. You’ve known for a while. What’s been missing is a system that makes it operational. You’ve needed a framework to use.
The Fun Reset is that framework. Sixteen weeks, two hours per week. With a sequence designed to give your vitality a seat at the table alongside everything that depends on you.You won’t be doing this alone. The women in The Fun Reset are addressing these challenges together. These are driven, capable women who understand what you’re building because they’re building it too.
The Fun Reset gave me the awareness I needed and the nudge to actually put my priorities on the calendar and follow through. Now I’m prioritizing the things I want to do rather than just the things I have to do.” — Amy C.
