The Moment That Checked Me: A Lesson in Professional Growth

The Moment That Checked Me: A Lesson in Professional Growth

I’m sitting at my desk when I get that Teams ping from my manager:

“You got a minute?”

My stomach drops.

As I type “yes,” my mind starts racing replaying every task, every email, every decision—trying to figure out what this could be about.

We walk into the nearest meeting room, and he tells me it’s time for my PMP review.

And honestly? I already knew.

It wasn’t going to be the worst review… but it definitely wasn’t going to be my best either.

Why? Let’s be real.

I hadn’t been applying myself.

I had been doing just enough to get my check.
Just enough to stay afloat.
Just enough to be “good”… with a little coaching along the way.

But mentally? I wasn’t fully there.

So walking into that meeting, I wasn’t surprised I was prepared.

The Truth I Didn’t Want to Admit

Looking back, there were signs everywhere:

  • I spent more time applying to other internal roles than growing in my current one
  • I asked for feedback on PowerPoints… while mentally already checked out
  • I wasn’t taking initiative beyond my assigned responsibilities
  • I wasn’t actively contributing to team growth or improvement
  • I lacked confidence in areas I should’ve been building strength in—like training and development

And the hardest truth?

I felt entitled to growth I hadn’t earned yet.

I was so focused on where I wanted to be…
that I completely ignored the steps required to get there.

I didn’t want the process.
I wanted the outcome.

The Shift

After that meeting, I made a decision:

I was going to show up differently.

Not just for myself but for my team.

I had to stop chasing the idea of growth
and start doing the work that creates it.

Getting Intentional About Growth

I’ve always had a desire to help people professionally and personally.
But I realized I thrive most on the business side, especially in:

  • Process improvement
  • Change management
  • Team development

So I asked myself one simple question:

“What problems keep happening and how can I help solve them?”

That question changed everything.

Instead of waiting for opportunities,
I started looking for ways to create value where I already was.

The Real Reason I Was Stuck

For a while, I told myself it was lack of experience.

But if I’m honest?

After about a year and a half, that wasn’t the issue anymore.

The truth was:

I wasn’t being intentional.

I had the qualifications on paper but nothing to show for them in action.

And that realization?
It humbled me.

The Mentor That Helped Me Refocus

I decided to do something different.

I reached out to someone in a role I wanted and asked them to mentor me.

(Yes… the same person I interviewed with and didn’t get the job.)

Instead of being discouraged, I got curious.

I asked:

  • What am I missing?
  • Where can I grow?
  • What should I be focusing on next?

His advice?

Project management.

Why I Chose Project Management

I already had:

  • A degree in management (with a supply chain focus)
  • A Six Sigma certification

But I hadn’t fully tapped into what those meant in practice.

So I started studying for the Certified Associate in Project Management (CAPM).

And let me tell you
it changed my perspective completely.

I started to understand:

  • How projects actually move
  • How strategy connects to execution
  • How I can contribute beyond my role

I haven’t taken the exam yet, but the learning alone has already started shaping how I show up at work.

The Lesson

Growth isn’t about what you deserve.
It’s about what you’re demonstrating.

I had to accept that:

I wasn’t stuck. I just wasn’t ready.

And once I owned that?
Everything started to shift.

If You Feel Stuck Professionally, Read This

Before you say you deserve more, ask yourself:

  • What is my actual end goal?
  • What does that role require daily?
  • Am I practicing those skills right now?

Because the truth is:

You don’t get promoted into readiness you prepare for it first.

How to Start Showing Up Differently

If you’re ready to grow, start here:

1. Learn with intention
Use platforms like:

  • LinkedIn Learning
  • Udemy
  • YouTube
  • Your company’s internal training tools

2. Find a mentor
Learn from someone already where you want to be.

3. Solve problems where you are
Stop waiting for a new role to grow, start contributing now.

Final Word

There is value in where you are right now.

Even if it doesn’t feel like it.

Even if it’s uncomfortable.

Even if it’s humbling.

Be patient. Be intentional. Be consistent.

The opportunity meant for you will come
but only if you’ve prepared yourself to receive it.

Photo made with AI

The Importance of Self-Care for Busy Moms

Good day, beautiful.

This one is for my moms.

Before you read another word, I want you to pause and give yourself a round of applause… because honey you’re doing it. You are trying. And those babies? They see you.

I know we get caught up in the idea of what a “good mom” is supposed to look like. The picture-perfect version. The Pinterest version. The social media version.

But listen, honey…

If your babies are safe, healthy, cared for, and loved you are already doing an amazing job.

It does not have to look like anyone else’s version of motherhood.

And that was something I had to learn the hard way.

I used to think being a “good mom” meant taking my kids to extravagant places, creating magical moments all the time, cooking five-star meals every night…

But reality?

I work two jobs.

Some nights… it’s spaghetti.

And guess what? That’s okay.

Because being a good mom is not about perfection it’s about presence.

And truthfully? The only people whose opinion should matter about your motherhood… are your kids.

But here’s the part I had to face:

Somewhere in trying to be everything for my kids… I stopped showing up for myself.

Taking care of yourself as a mom?

It’s always the first thing to get pushed to the back burner.

It becomes this constant mental battle:
“I gotta do this for the kids.”
“I need to handle that.”
“Let me make sure they’re good first.”

And if you’re working, managing a home, maybe even a relationship?

That to-do list in your head never stops.

Even when you do have support… it can still feel hard to slow down and choose yourself.

And I think part of the problem is we make self-care feel too big.

We think it has to look like:
Working out five days a week
Eating perfectly healthy
Reading, journaling, socializing, healing… all at once

It becomes overwhelming before we even start.

For me, I realized I was so focused on being a “perfect mom”… that I wasn’t pouring into myself at all.

And we’ve all heard the saying about pouring from an empty cup, right?

So I won’t go too deep into it but I will say this:

You cannot consistently show up for others if you are not showing up for yourself.

Eventually, you will run dry.

And when that happens… it shows up as irritability, burnout, isolation, snapping at the people you love, emotional overload…

Things you never intended to give to your family.

My wake up call didn’t come gently.

It came all at once.

I was facing health concerns—high blood pressure, high cholesterol.
I was diagnosed with bipolar II.
I was dealing with family court.
Financial stress.
And then… I became a single mom of two girls.

I had every excuse to put myself last.

And for a while I did.

Until one day, after feeling everything all at once, I made a decision:

This is not who I want to be anymore.

I didn’t just want to survive.

I wanted to show up for myself and for the people I love.

So I started doing something different.

I started dating myself.

Because if I didn’t have someone showing up for me the way I needed…

I was going to do it for myself.

I decided to love myself the same way I so freely loved others.

And I started small.

I bought myself flowers.

Nothing fancy just a simple bouquet of purple carnations from the store.

But I brought them home, put them in a vase, and actually enjoyed them.

That moment?

That was the beginning of me learning how to love myself intentionally.

One thing I had to unlearn was this:

I don’t have to wait for someone else to give me what I need.

And I don’t need excuses for why I can’t show up for myself.

Because let’s be honest…

We’ll say we don’t have time or money but then spend it on things that don’t pour into us at all.

So here’s what I recommend:

Start with your love language.

Figure out what actually makes you feel loved.

Then make a list of things you’d enjoy—no matter how small.

And after that?

Ask yourself what’s stopping you.

Is it time? Money? Guilt?

Whatever it is find a way to work around it.

Not everything has to be big or expensive.

For example:
If you want a five star dining experience but can’t afford it…

Create it at home.

Cook the meal.
Play music.
Light candles.
Dress up if you want to.

Make it an experience.

Because showing up for yourself doesn’t mean changing your life overnight it means adjusting what you already have.

For me, dating myself didn’t stop at flowers.

It grew.

I started working out three times a week—not for perfection, but to feel strong and take care of my body.

I started writing again.

This blog… my book Beautiful Shambles… journaling… reading…

These were things I loved long before life got busy.

And somewhere along the way, I had abandoned them.

Coming back to those things?

That felt like love.

Real love.

And because of that I’ve been able to show up for my kids, my life, and myself better than ever before.

So let me remind you, mama:

You are worth the effort.

Love is a choice.

And choosing to love yourself should be at the top of your list—not the bottom.

Because when you do?

Everything else in your life gets a better version of you.

Here are a few simple ways to start showing up for yourself:

Get closer to God — spend time in the Word, pray, go to church
Learn something new — a skill, a hobby, anything that excites you
Move your body — gym, walks, yoga, Pilates, at-home workouts
Build community — mom groups, Bible studies, book clubs
Go outside — take a walk, breathe, reset
Create something — draw, write, color, DIY
And most importantly… date yourself

Show up for yourself, mama.

You deserve to feel that love too.

— Mariah 💜