I used to wake up before the sun, the sound of my son’s cries pulling me out of sleep like clockwork. His face red and scrunched, fists balled, he was my tiny, relentless alarm. I’d scoop him up with one arm, and with the other, open my laptop. Emails. Slack pings. Calendar reminders for meetings I hadn’t had time to prepare for. Somewhere in the kitchen, a forgotten cup of coffee sat cold on the counter.
That was my new normal—feeding schedules and analytics reports colliding in a blur. I was balancing lullabies and deadlines, bouncing a baby in a wrap while drafting weekly summaries. There were Zoom calls with my camera off and mic muted while I quietly hummed him to sleep.
One morning during a meeting, someone asked, “Is that a baby crying?”
Without missing a beat, I smiled. “Probably just my ringtone.” They laughed. I didn’t. I just turned off my mic more often after that.
Before I became a mother, I was the one they leaned on. I had climbed the ranks from admin to project lead. Took night classes, earned my certification in digital marketing, and helped redesign the company website when a major rebrand almost tanked us. I pulled two all-nighters in a row. Never complained. Not once.
My manager, Rob, used to say, “If I had five of you, we’d be unstoppable.”
He once called me the dream employee. And I believed him.
But that was before motherhood. Before my son, before the sleepless nights and daycare runs and the invisible shift that changed how they saw me.
When I returned from maternity leave, I came back ready—tired, yes—but eager to jump back in. “I’m on,” I told Rob. “Early logins, late logouts. Let’s go.”
He nodded. “Love the attitude. Just keep the momentum.”
I tried. I really did. But cracks formed fast.
“You look tired,” someone from accounting said one morning, not with concern, but with judgment.
“Just baby stuff,” I replied with a tight smile.
“Mm,” she said. “Hope it doesn’t affect your deadlines.”
Rob started scheduling late meetings. One popped up for 6:30 p.m. on a Friday.
I messaged: “Any chance we can do earlier? I need to pick my son up from daycare.”
He replied: “Let’s chat later.”
But we never did.
Then my paycheck came in late. I asked him directly, and he leaned back in his chair like it was no big deal. “It’s not like you’re the breadwinner anymore, right?”
I froze. “Actually, I am. I’m divorced.”
“Oh,” he said. “Thought you were still with that guy.”
I didn’t fight him. I needed that paycheck. So I said, “Just wanted to check.”
The next meeting came with a calendar invite: me, Rob, and an unfamiliar HR face named Cynthia.
“We appreciate your time with the company,” Rob said, folding his hands like he was offering a gold watch at a retirement party. “But we need someone without… distractions.”
I stared. “Distractions?”
“Someone fully available,” he clarified. “Someone who won’t mind late nights, weekend calls…”
“You mean someone without a child,” I said flatly.
He hesitated. “We’re not saying that.”
“You are,” I said. “You’re saying being a mother makes me a problem.”
I stood up. My hands shook, but my voice didn’t. “Thanks for the honesty.” I walked out.
That night, after putting my son to bed, I sat down on the couch, still in my work clothes. I turned on my laptop. Pressed record.
“Hi,” I said into the lens. “Today, I got fired. Not for being bad at my job. But for being a mom.”
I didn’t cry. I didn’t beg. I just told the truth.
“They called me a distraction.”
And then I posted it.
At first, it got a few likes. A couple shares. But by morning, it had over two million views. Messages flooded in from women who knew exactly what I was talking about.
“This happened to me too.”
“I cried watching this.”
“Thank you for saying it out loud.”
Then came one comment that changed everything:
“If you ever start something, I’m in.”
And just like that, The Naptime Agency was born.
I filed paperwork. Bought a domain. Put up a one-page site. Within a week, we had a waitlist—moms who were coders, writers, designers, virtual assistants. All brilliant. All exhausted. All ready.
We worked from kitchen counters and playrooms. During naps and after bedtime. There were meetings with babies in laps and emails sent while holding bottles. No one apologized.
Three months in, one of my old company’s biggest clients reached out.
“We saw your video,” they wrote. “We’d rather work with people who understand real life.”
That quarter, we signed six contracts. Hired twelve women. More kept coming.
And now? A year later?
My son is two. He picks out his own socks, insists on singing the ABCs his way, and sleeps through the night.
And The Naptime Agency? We’re thirty strong. Designers. Developers. Copywriters. Project managers. All moms. All unstoppable.
We’ve launched campaigns for nonprofits, built e-commerce sites from scratch, and helped businesses triple their reach. We’ve created not just a company, but a blueprint for a future we needed—and had to build ourselves.
They once said I was a distraction.
Now I lead a team that won’t be silenced, sidelined, or shamed. Not for being mothers. Not for setting boundaries. And definitely not for knowing our worth.
Turns out, what they saw as a weakness?
Was just the beginning of something powerful.