The Summer Edit: Permission to Let Go, Stay Present, and Still Run a Life
Because Summer Isn’t a Problem to Solve — It’s a Season to Navigate
There’s a shift most of us can feel coming by late spring.
The school calendars start filling up with end-of-year performances. The camp emails hit the inbox. The group texts start buzzing with “Wait — what are you doing for the kids this summer?”
And if you’re a working mom, a business owner, or a mompreneur juggling both — there’s a quiet panic underneath it all.
How am I supposed to keep my kids enriched, my business running, my calendar sane, AND actually enjoy a family vacation without guilt?
Let me say this first, mama:
You are not failing. You are transitioning seasons — and transitions always require recalibration.
Summer doesn’t need to be perfect. It needs to be intentional.
Start With a Shift in Mindset, Not a Jam-Packed Schedule
The instinct every summer is to over-plan. Back-to-back camps. Every museum visit. Every beach day. Every enrichment opportunity we can cram into 10 weeks.
But kids don’t remember the itinerary. They remember how summer felt.
Before you build the calendar, ask yourself:
- What do I want my kids to feel this summer?
- What do I want me to feel this summer?
- What can I intentionally let go of?
That short list becomes your summer compass — and it’ll save you from overcommitting before June even starts.
How to Keep Kids Enriched Without Burning Out
Enrichment doesn’t have to mean expensive camps or perfectly curated Pinterest activities.
Some of the most meaningful summer growth happens in the in-between moments — the library visits, the backyard science experiments, the neighborhood bike rides, the unstructured afternoons where boredom turns into creativity.
A few low-pressure ideas that work:
- One anchor activity per week — a camp, class, or community event that gives the week structure
- A summer reading rhythm — local library programs often have free incentives and events
- Rotating “theme days” — Maker Monday, Water Wednesday, Friday Field Trip
- Life skills time — cooking a meal, budgeting an allowance, learning laundry
- Friend swaps — trade childcare days with another mom you trust
Enrichment isn’t about filling every hour. It’s about giving kids space to discover who they are when no one is scheduling them.
How to Actually Unplug on Family Vacation (Even When You’re the Boss)
This one is hard. I’ll say it plainly.
When you own the business, the business doesn’t stop when you board a plane.
But here’s what I’ve learned: your kids don’t need you to be on vacation. They need you to be with them on vacation.
There’s a difference between physically present and emotionally available.
Before your next trip, try this:
- Communicate your absence in advance. Let clients and team know dates clearly — at least two weeks ahead.
- Designate a point person. If you have a team, empower one person to handle decisions.
- Set an auto-responder with a real answer. Not “limited email access” — something honest like “I’m offline with my family through [date]. I’ll respond personally when I return.”
- Create a 15-minute morning check-in window. If fully unplugging feels impossible, contain the work to one defined block — then close the laptop.
- Leave the phone in the hotel room. For the beach. For dinner. For the hike. The business will survive 3 hours without you.
You built the business so you could have this life. Don’t let it rob you of the life you built it for.
The Guilt You’re Allowed to Set Down
Mom guilt in summer has a very specific flavor.
It sounds like:
- “I should be doing more with them.”
- “Other moms are taking them to all these enrichment programs.”
- “I’m on my laptop too much.”
- “I took a work call during the beach day.”
- “We’re not doing a big vacation this year.”
Here’s the truth: the guilt is not a sign you’re doing something wrong. It’s a sign you care.
But caring and carrying aren’t the same thing.
You are allowed to set down:
- The pressure to make every summer “magical”
- The comparison to the mom who posts every outing on Instagram
- The guilt of working during summer — your work matters too
- The expectation to entertain your kids 24/7
- The belief that rest has to be earned
The Permissions I’m Giving Myself This Summer
I’m writing these down because saying them out loud helps. Borrow any that resonate:
- Permission to have slow mornings — no rushed school drop-offs for a few months
- Permission to say no to invitations that don’t fit our family’s pace
- Permission to close the laptop at 3 PM on Fridays
- Permission to take a real vacation without apologizing for being unavailable
- Permission to let the kids be bored — it’s where creativity lives
- Permission to rest without justifying it
- Permission to still be ambitious — motherhood doesn’t cancel my goals
A Gentle Reminder for the Working Mom & the Mompreneur
If you’re a working mom: I see you trying to flex your schedule, stretch your PTO, and coordinate summer logistics while still showing up at work.
If you’re a business owner: I see you trying to run your company, lead your team, protect your family time, and resist the urge to “just check one email.”
Both of you are doing something hard. Both of you deserve a summer that feels like summer — not just another season to survive.
You don’t have to choose between being a great mom and being great at your work.
You just have to be intentional about the season you’re in.
Your Summer Starting Point
Before June arrives, take 30 quiet minutes — the same 30 minutes we talked about in The Financial Wellness Edit — and answer three things:
- What is one thing I want to let go of this summer?
- What is one thing I want to protect this summer?
- What is one permission I’m giving myself this summer?
Write it down. Post it where you’ll see it. That’s your summer blueprint.
You don’t need to do everything. You just need to be present for what matters.
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