Medium Lady Talks: Burnout Recovery for Millennials and Mothers

Erin Vandeven

Welcome to Medium Lady Talks, the podcast for burnt-out millennial moms who want to reclaim their time, energy, and joy—without the pressure of perfection. Host Erin, a working mom and mindful living advocate, shares refreshingly honest conversations and practical strategies to help you navigate motherhood, career, and self-care with medium effort. If you’re overwhelmed by unrealistic expectations and craving a more sustainable approach to life, you’re in the right place. Tune in for relatable insights on burnout recovery, self-care that actually fits your life, simplifying daily routines, and embracing imperfection with confidence. Through thought-provoking discussions, expert interviews, and personal reflections, Medium Lady Talks is your go-to resource for mindful, realistic growth—because you deserve a fulfilling life, not just a busy one. Let’s ditch the guilt, redefine success, and find joy in the small moments. Follow Erin on Instagram @medium.lady and start your journey to a more intentional, balanced life today.

  1. 3D AGO

    Episode 170: Scraping the Bottom of the Barrel - An Almost-Spring Check-in

    Erin drafted this episode during a false spring — bright light, warm temps, a few days without a winter jacket. Then she sat down to record on a Sunday and it was snowing. Again. Which is exactly why this episode needed to exist. This is a guided end-of-winter reflection for everyone who has been holding on through the hardest months of the year. It names the specific disorientation of almost-spring, validates the depletion that comes from a full winter of reserves being drawn down, and offers a gentle self check-in before we sprint toward a spring we may not quite be ready for yet.   "The cruelest part of almost-spring is how much it asks of our patience right when we have nothing left to give."   The episode's guiding question: What does it look like to finish the winter well? Not crawl across the finish line. Actually arrive at spring with your identity, your core values, and your sense of self intact.   IN THIS EPISODE What We Cover Why almost-spring is its own kind of exhaustion — the gap between anticipation and reality The 'lights on before you're ready to get up' feeling — and why burned-out women feel this as pressure, not relief Winter fatigue as cumulative — how we've been drawing off reserves since November Why rushing the thaw — emotionally, physically, mentally — can undo the quiet work of winter The grief of letting go of the slower season, even when it was hard A five-question guided self check-in (interactive — grab a journal) Building reserves for the final stretch without over-scheduling spring A full care package: books, albums, a color, and three small practices   THE SELF CHECK-IN Five Questions for the Thaw Erin walks through each question on mic — modeling the practice and answering for herself in real time. Grab a journal or your notes app and do this alongside her.   Question 1  What did this winter actually ask of me? Not what you accomplished or managed. What did the season ask you to carry? What was the central question of your winter? Erin's answer: The winter asked her to carry her own point of view at the top of the priority list — not putting herself first exactly, but leading with her own thoughts and feelings rather than orienting around everyone else's. Her word of the year: sovereign.   Question 2  Where am I still depleted — and have I been honest with myself about that? Erin uses the image of a mixing board — every dial at a solid medium, which actually tracks for where she is. Her depletion: staleness. Ready for something new. Scraping the bottom of the barrel when it comes to whimsy and joy. Key reframe: You don't have to stare directly into the sun of your vulnerability. You can look just northwest of it — at the things contributing to the drain — and that's enough.   Question 3  What am I rushing toward — and is it something I actually want, or just relief from the dirty snowbank of March? March is a dirty snowbank. And sometimes we rush toward whatever offers escape from it — a summer dress in a shopping cart, a new creative direction, a reinvention. The almost-spring energy can manufacture urgency that isn't real. "The sense of urgency is manufactured. I can confront that limiting belief. Am I really out of time?" Erin's example: She felt the impulse to rush toward creating AI content after one listener expressed interest — then caught herself and let it cook instead.   Question 4  What from this winter do I want to carry forward into spring? Winter strips us bare and contracts our field of vision — but it also teaches. The whimsy has to live with the struggle. That's actually where whimsy does its best work. Erin's answer: Carrying her own point of view forward. The ownership of the hard stuff alongside the spring strut and the dangly earrings and the daffodils.   Question 5  What do I need to let go of before spring arrives? Some things served their purpose in the dark season. They don't have to come with you. Erin's answer: Comparison. Specifically — the way that deeply owning her own point of view this winter also opened the door to measuring herself against others. The comparison served a purpose. It helped her name the difference. She doesn't need to bring it into spring.   BUILDING RESERVES How to Finish Winter Well The goal is not to arrive at spring perfectly rested, perfectly reflected, perfectly ready. That's just not available to most of us. The goal is to arrive as yourself — with enough in the barrel to meet what spring asks of you.   Return to the micro-rituals from Episode 168 — don't abandon them just because the light is changing Protect your sleep after the time change — your body needs 36–48 hours minimum to readjust Protect slowness even as the energy around you speeds up — create a container for it Resist the urge to over-schedule spring before winter is actually over Remember: the calendar filling up is not the same as being ready Name one thing you are still protecting in this season — and keep protecting it   THE CARE PACKAGE Borrow This Until You Find Your Own Erin has been reluctant to be prescriptive — she wants people to do the metacognitive work of figuring out what they actually need. But she also knows the blank page is its own barrier. So this is a starting kit, not a destination. Doors, not prescriptions.   "Think of these as doors in a room. Walk through, look around, notice what resonates and what doesn't. The noticing is the most important part."   📖  Book Option 1 — The Slow Thaw: What Happened to the McCrarys by Tracey Lange. This book moves the way the season does — starts cold and tight, and slowly chapter by chapter something loosens. A portal to feelings that January, February, and March stir up. A beautiful quiet character-driven love story that lands at an ending that feels like spring.   📖  Book Option 2 — The Big Feeling: We All Want Impossible Things by Catherine Newman. Funny, voicey, completely devastating, and somehow full of hope. About saying goodbye to your best friend — one of the hardest things adult life can ask of someone. Doesn't flinch from that, but doesn't leave you there either. Both books understand that hope and the hard stuff live together.   Both books are available from your library or on audiobook. Let Erin know which one you chose — find her at @medium.lady on Instagram.   🎵  Album Option 1 — Slowness Made Delicious: Norah Jones — Come Away With Me. Put this on in the late afternoon. Don't multitask. Let it be in the room with you. There is something about this album that makes slowness feel acceptable and delicious — perfect for the new late-afternoon light the time change brought.   🎵  Album Option 2 — Feel Something Move Through You: Lauryn Hill — The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill. Warm and aching. Lands you somewhere really solid, really knowing. Your body probably already knows every word — let it access that knowledge and those memories. Both albums are nostalgic for a reason. Your nervous system needs something familiar right now more than something new.   Bonus mentions: Homewrecker by Sonder, and Rae's new album dropping soon — something to look forward to.   🎨  The Color: The watery yellow of a new daffodil petal. Not the confident buttery yellow of April or May — the slightly translucent, almost hesitant yellow of a petal just opening. Find it somewhere in your home: a candle, a mug, a piece of art, something in your wardrobe. Let it be a visual cue that the transition is already happening — without you forcing it, without you being ready.   🌱  Practice 1 — One Living Thing: Bring one living thing into your home. A grocery store bouquet, some tulips or hyacinths, a plant cutting to propagate. Choose one thing. This is the piece of spring you're letting in right now. Not all the growth — just one living thing to nurture.   ✨  Practice 2 — One Analog Pleasure You've Been Saving: A bath ritual, a tea, a book you've been meaning to reread, the journal you got for Christmas and haven't opened, the colored pens, the LEGO set. Stop waiting for things to calm down. Things probably won't calm down until you do the activities. The calm doesn't show up when the chaos ends — it shows up when you start.   🎧  Practice 3 — One Walk Without Headphones: Raw dog the walk. Notice what's changing outside — the light, the ground, the temperature, the smell, the sounds. Erin heard birds. It made her very happy. This is you checking in with yourself. That's the whole practice in one walk.   Erin's note: She loves when you put Medium Lady Talks in your earbuds. But this is a walk she wants you to take without her.   SERIES CONTEXT Happy in the Winter — Where This Fits Episode 166 — Happy in the Winter (Especially When the World Is on Fire): Can I stay oriented when everything feels like too much? Episode 167 — Why Your Burnout Is More Obvious in the Winter: Naming the cumulative weight. Episode 168 — The Micro-Rituals Saving Me This Winter: Small acts of resistance and reclaiming attention. Episode 170 — Scraping the Bottom of the Barrel: How do we finish the winter well and arrive at spring as ourselves?   The through-line of the series: You don't have to perform okayness. You don't have to rush the thaw. You are allowed to move through hard seasons at the pace they actually require.   THE CLOSING How the Episode Ends The light is coming back. That's real, and it matters. Spring is coming whether or not you've processed the winter — and that's okay.   "The winter always ends. And the ice always melts. But it actually rarely happens all at once — and neither do you. You're allowed to arrive at the spring slowly."   CONNECT Find Medium Lady Instagram: @medium.lady Patreon: www.patreon.com/mediumlady  Email: mediumladytalks@gm

    53 min
  2. MAR 2

    Episode 169: Tiny Experiments for March - The Tally Project

    In this high‑energy solo episode, Erin introduces a brand‑new self‑reflection framework she’s calling The Tally Project. Inspired by the book Tiny Experiments by Anne‑Laure Le Cunff (and the creators who inspire her), Erin shares how a simple tally system can create visible proof that you’re showing up for the life you want—without pressure, streaks, perfectionism, or rigid goals. She walks you through her four tallies for March: movement, reading, growth, and phone boundaries. Each one is intentionally designed to be binary, gentle, and achievable. This episode offers a transparent look at Erin’s emotional landscape at the tail end of winter, the desire for quiet momentum, and the need for small pockets of self‑trust to carry us into spring. If you’ve been feeling stuck, scattered, reactive, or pulled off‑center by the winter months, this episode will help you reset with kindness—and maybe even join Erin in your own March Tally. WHAT YOU’LL HEAR IN THIS EPISODE • Why the concept of a “tally” can be more effective than traditional goals • How Erin builds identity‑aligned habits through measurable evidence • The inspiration behind the Monthly Tally from Tiny Experiments • What Erin is tracking in March and why each tally matters • Honest reflections on burnout, doom‑scrolling, winter emotions, and self‑trust • A gentle invitation to create your own March Tally (or observe and try later) ERIN’S MARCH TALLY Movement: Move intentionally for more than 24 minutes, 15 days this month Mind: Read nonfiction and capture one thought about it, 12 days Growth: Read two thought‑provoking pieces about AI Phone Boundaries: Stay off Instagram before 8 a.m. and after 10 p.m., 15 days CONNECT WITH ERIN Instagram: @medium.lady Patreon: www.patreon.com/mediumlady  Email: vandeven.erin@gmail.com  Explore more book-related content on "Medium Lady Reads." - link to Spotify Instagram: @mediumladyreads If you join the March Tally, tag or message Erin—she’d love to cheer you on.

    27 min
  3. FEB 23

    Episode 168: The Micro Rituals Saving Me This Winter

    How do you move through winter without numbing out, gritting your teeth, or waiting for spring to fix you? In this episode of Medium Lady Talks, Erin shares the small but powerful micro-rituals helping her stay present, intentional, and connected to herself during one of the heaviest seasons she’s had in years. This isn’t about productivity hacks. It’s not about aesthetic morning routines. And it’s definitely not about toxic positivity. It’s about participation. If winter often feels narrowing — emotionally, mentally, culturally — this episode explores how small, deliberate practices can widen your thinking, reduce decision fatigue, and help you reclaim your point of view in a season that tempts many of us toward passive consumption and burnout. In This Episode, You’ll Learn: Why micro-rituals can be more powerful than big resolutions How reducing decision fatigue supports mental health in winter The difference between consuming inspiration and activating it Why analog living isn’t aesthetic — it’s neurological How music appreciation can retrain your attention span The benefits of slow reading and commonplace journaling What critical thinking actually is (and why it matters now more than ever) How asking “What do I think?” can protect your identity in overwhelming seasons The Three Micro-Rituals Erin Shares: 1️⃣ Activating Inspiration Instead of Saving It Using simple outfit formulas (inspired by creator Laura Owens) to eliminate decision fatigue and translate digital inspiration into real-life embodiment. The power isn’t in watching someone else get dressed — it’s in getting dressed. 2️⃣ Music Appreciation as Attention Training Moving beyond background noise to study instrumentation, arrangement, and emotion in music — and how building a “cinematic winter playlist” creates presence and pleasure without productivity. Inspired again by an amazing creator Owen Cutts !! 3️⃣ Slow Reading + Journaling for Deeper Thinking Pairing fiction and nonfiction, tracking themes, and practicing commonplace journaling to metabolize ideas rather than speed-consume books. Why This Matters Winter often reveals our overload. When the world feels heavy and cultural panic is escalating, it becomes easier to outsource our thinking, scroll instead of reflect, and numb instead of participate. These micro-rituals are small daily acts of resistance: Resistance to burnout Resistance to passive living Resistance to losing your point of view They are not dramatic. They are not monetizable. They are not optimized. But they are helping Erin feel like herself in one of the hardest winters she’s had in a long time. And maybe they can help you too. A Gentle Invitation If you’re feeling narrow, constricted, or numbed out this winter, ask yourself: What do I think? What do I want? Where is my attention going? You don’t have to reinvent your life. You don’t have to survive on autopilot. Choose one small ritual that shifts you from passive to deliberate. From outsourcing your mind to inhabiting it. Winter doesn’t have to take everything from you. 🎧 Listen now and share this episode with someone who needs a life raft this season. If this resonated, screenshot the episode and tag @medium.lady on Instagram so we can talk about it. You’re doing such a good job. Connect with Erin: Instagram: @medium.lady Patreon: www.patreon.com/mediumlady  Email: mediumladytalks@gmail.com  Explore more book-related content on "Medium Lady Reads." - link to Spotify Instagram: @mediumladyreads

    27 min
  4. FEB 17

    Episode 167: Why Women Admit Their Burnout in the Winter

    Winter doesn’t create burnout. It reveals it. In this episode of Medium Lady Talks, Erin explores why so many women quietly admit their exhaustion during the cold months — not because winter breaks them, but because winter strips away the distractions that helped them outrun what they’ve been carrying all along. Drawing on personal reflection, cultural observation, and insights from All We Want Is Everything by Soraya Chemaly, this episode unpacks: Why women are socialized to absorb emotional fallout and smooth discomfort How invisible emotional labor accumulates quietly across seasons Why reduced light, stimulation, and dopamine in winter make burnout undeniable The seductive pull of despair and doomscrolling Why “collapse” in January isn’t the same as rest And how to redistribute your load instead of reinventing yourself This is not an episode about hustling your way out of exhaustion. It’s about recognizing when winter is revealing a structural mismatch between what you carry and what you are resourced for — and responding gently but honestly. If you’ve felt bone tired. Soul tired. Existentially tired. This episode will help you see your burnout not as weakness — but as information. What You’ll Hear in This Episode Why winter reduces capacity and exposes overload Emotional labor and the cultural conditioning of women How smoothing and anticipating needs compounds exhaustion The rise of “analog wellness” as nervous system relief The 1% rule for sustainable adjustment Practical ways to drop invisible tasks Why spring doesn’t fix structural mismatch — redistribution does A Gentle Invitation Name what you’re carrying. Drop one invisible task. Replace one scroll with one analog act. Aim for 1% more steadiness. Winter is not attacking you. It may just be asking you to notice. If this episode resonated, share it with someone who’s been quietly holding too much. And as always — you are not weak for feeling this. You are overloaded. And overload can be adjusted.   Connect with Erin: Instagram: @medium.lady Email: mediumladytalks@gmail.com  Explore more book-related content on "Medium Lady Reads."  Instagram: @mediumladyreads Website: www.mediumladycommunity.com

    31 min
  5. FEB 9

    Episode 166: Happy In the Winter (Especially When the World is On Fire)

    Winter can be heavy — physically, emotionally, politically, spiritually. And for many of us, January in particular can feel destabilizing, tender, and overwhelming. In this opening episode of Season 6, Erin shares honestly about where she’s been this winter: a painful injury, heightened fear and grief, and the emotional toll of witnessing human suffering in the world. She names what it feels like to be sad, scared, and grieving — while still feeling like herself. This episode introduces the guiding idea for the season: happiness is not forced optimism or denial — it’s orientation. It’s about where we allow our attention to return, even when things are not fine. Rather than chasing positivity, Erin invites listeners into a gentle, non-judgmental practice: choosing a word for the winter — not as a goal or personality test, but as a lens to widen perspective and soften the edges of a difficult season. This episode is for anyone who: feels emotionally porous or overwhelmed this winter is tired of performative positivity wants language for being distressed without being lost is looking for steadiness, beauty, and connection in small, human ways You don’t need to feel happy all the time. You don’t need to fix the winter. You’re allowed to move through it — one day at a time — with a little more capacity than yesterday. Mentioned in this episode: The concept of orientation vs. optimism Seasonal emotional patterns and January destabilization Choosing a word for the winter (Erin’s word: cinematic) Happiness as a North Star, not a destination Listener Invitation: Choose a word for your winter. Let it guide what you notice (light, movement, connection, meaning) without judgment or pressure to share.   Connect with Erin: Instagram: @medium.lady Email: vandeven.erin@gmail.com  Website: www.mediumladycommunity.com Explore more book-related content on "Medium Lady Reads." - link to Spotify Instagram: @mediumladyreads

    21 min
  6. JAN 5 · BONUS

    [BONUS]: I’m Not Waiting Anymore: A Quiet Reflection for 2026

    What if you didn’t end the year with a big goal — but with clarity? In this quiet bonus episode closing out Season 5 of Medium Lady Talks, Erin shares a personal year-in-review reflection inspired by Laura Tremaine’s 10 Questions for the End of the Year. Rather than offering resolutions or strategies, this episode explores what happens when we stop waiting for permission, external validation, or the “right time” to move forward. Erin reflects on her word for 2026 and what it means to live from inner authority instead of urgency. She unpacks three gentle but powerful realizations from the past year: why rescuing isn’t leadership, why depth matters more than speed, and why self-trust can be more radical than having a plan. This episode is for anyone ending the year without a bold intention — and feeling oddly okay about it. If you’re craving permission to slow down, listen inward, and trust yourself before chasing the next strategy, this conversation is for you. What You’ll Hear in This Episode What Erin chose as her word for 2026 — and what it actually means for her year ahead. The hidden cost of being the rescuer at work, in family life, and in relationships Choosing depth and rest without abandoning ambition Letting go of urgency, perfectionism, and incomplete projects without self-judgment Why self-trust can be more grounding than goal-setting A compassionate reframe for listeners who feel unsure about what’s next Notable Quotes “I realized I’ve been waiting for something that doesn’t exist — permission, legitimacy, or other people catching up.” “Rescuing isn’t leadership. Rising up without abandoning myself is.” “I didn’t end this year with a strategy. I ended it with self-trust — and that feels more radical.” “You’re not behind. You might just be listening to yourself on a new level.” Who This Episode Is For Burnt-out women and millennial mothers navigating ambition and rest Listeners who feel pressure to set goals but crave something quieter Anyone tired of hustle culture and performative self-improvement Leaders, caregivers, and creatives who are ready to stop waiting for permission Mentioned in This Episode Laura Tremaine’s 10 Questions for the End of the Year reflection practice The Summer of Real Rest theme and its lasting impact The idea of “negotiating the timeline, not the result” What to Do Next If something resonated: Sit with a word that stood out to you Notice where you’re done rushing or rescuing Ask yourself where you might trust yourself a little sooner There’s no homework here — just space. Connect with Erin Follow along on Instagram for more reflections, bookish content, and gentle encouragement: @medium.lady If this episode spoke to you, screenshot it and share it — and tag Erin so you can continue the conversation.

    18 min
  7. 12/31/2025

    Episode 165 Walking Away from the Myth of the Superwoman with guest Dr. Nikia Smith

    What happens when being “strong” stops working? In this deeply affirming and practical conversation, Erin is joined by Dr. Nikia Smith — practicing anesthesiologist, wellness coach, and founder of She Is Fire Forged — to explore how the Superwoman myth quietly fuels burnout, especially for high-achieving women and women in healthcare. Together, they unpack how resilience, people-pleasing, and productivity can become liabilities rather than strengths — and why rest is not something to earn, but something to prioritize before everything else. This episode is for anyone who: feels exhausted despite “doing everything right” has built a good life but still feels depleted or disconnected has been praised for being strong, capable, and reliable — at great personal cost 🧠 In This Episode, You’ll Hear About: • The hidden cost of the Superwoman identity Dr. Smith explains how being “the strong one” often masks chronic exhaustion, emotional suppression, and self-abandonment — particularly for women of color and women in caregiving professions. • Burnout doesn’t always look like collapse You can love your job, love your life, and still be burned out. Burnout often builds slowly — like a simmer — long before it reaches a breaking point. • Why rest must come before boundaries Many women struggle to set boundaries because they’re already depleted. Dr. Smith shares why beginning with rest builds the capacity and courage needed to sustain boundaries over time. • The ‘simmer’ metaphor for catching burnout early Instead of waiting for total collapse, this episode offers language for identifying irritability, restlessness, resentment, and exhaustion before burnout boils over. • The difference between sleep and real rest Sleep matters — but it’s not the whole picture. Emotional rest, creative rest, social rest, and physical rest all play distinct roles in recovery and sustainability. • How identity work is central to burnout recovery Burnout often forces the question: Who am I beyond my roles and titles? This episode explores how dismantling inherited expectations opens space for self-trust and agency. 🔄 Reframing Strength, Productivity, and Success This conversation challenges the idea that: rest must be earned productivity defines worth success looks the same for everyone Instead, Erin and Dr. Smith explore how true sustainability often means: adding friction at work removing friction at home offloading invisible labor questioning “shoulds” that drain energy without adding meaning You’ll also hear honest reflections on: outsourcing household labor redefining success based on values (not aesthetics) letting go of guilt around support, rest, and ease 🌿 Key Takeaways Burnout is not a personal failure — it’s often the result of social conditioning and moral injury You don’t need confidence to make changes; courage is enough Rest creates the capacity needed to move from survival to intention You are allowed to want a life that feels good, not just one that looks successful Strength doesn’t mean doing everything alone 🩺 About Today’s Guest: Dr. Nikia Smith Dr. Nikia Smith is a practicing anesthesiologist, wellness coach, and founder of She Is Fire Forged, a platform supporting high-achieving women of color through burnout recovery, rest, and self-trust. Through her coaching and content, she helps women: identify hidden burnout unlearn the need to earn rest build sustainable lives rooted in clarity and softness Connect with Dr. Smith: Instagram & TikTok: @sheisfireforged Email: @medium.lady Explore more episodes of Medium Lady Talks for grounded conversations about rest, burnout recovery, identity, and sustainable living. And remember: Rest is not weakness. It’s a right.

    55 min
  8. 12/22/2025

    Episode 164: Living the Life You Worked Hard to Build - Wrapping Phone Free Fall and Reflections on Winter Solstice

    On the winter solstice — the darkest day of the year — Erin closes the Phone Free Fall series with a quiet, honest reflection on presence, capacity, and what it means to actually live inside the life you worked so hard to build. This episode isn’t about advice, challenges, or optimizing your habits. It’s about noticing. About naming the ways we slip out of our own lives — into scrolling, distraction, and emotional distance — not because our lives are bad, but because they are full. If you’ve felt restless, overstimulated, or disconnected even while living a life you once dreamed of, this episode offers orientation, not pressure. A reminder that real life isn’t something you get to later — it’s already happening, and you’re allowed to be inside it. 🧠 In This Episode, Erin Reflects On: • Why Phone Free Fall was never about quitting your phone This series was about noticing how often we leave our lives without realizing it — and gently choosing to come back. • The paradox of living a “good” life and still wanting to escape it Full lives are often heavy to inhabit. Phones offer distance and numbness, but not true restoration. • How rest, capacity, and phone use are deeply connected Even when we rest, our phones can quietly drain the capacity that rest is meant to restore. • What listeners discovered when screen time went down Pride, boredom, boredom with scrolling — and then a strange, honest sense of being lost. Not a failure, but a re-entry. • Why winter — and the solstice in particular — asks us to stay, not optimize This season invites inwardness, stillness, and tolerance for what feels unfinished or unresolved. • The practice at the heart of Phone Free Fall Not discipline. Not restriction. Just noticing when you leave your life — and when you come back. ❄️ A Winter Solstice Reframe The solstice doesn’t ask us to improve or shine. It asks us to stay. Just as the light returns slowly — almost imperceptibly — presence returns minute by minute. With each moment we’re less interrupted. With each moment we choose to be here. 💬 Key Takeaways You’re not escaping your life because it’s bad — you’re escaping because it’s full Distance from your phone isn’t the same as restoration, but it can create space for it Boredom and quiet are not problems; they’re thresholds Your real life isn’t waiting for you to feel better — it’s already happening You’re allowed to live inside the life you built, even when it’s imperfect, slow, or overwhelming Noticing is the practice 🌿 As Phone Free Fall Comes to a Close As Erin wraps both Phone Free Fall and Season 5 of Medium Lady Talks, she invites listeners into a winter pause — one that makes room for quiet, reflection, and enoughness. You don’t need to do this better. You don’t need more discipline. You just need to keep noticing. 🎧 What’s Next Episode 165: A conversation with physician and coach Dr. Nikia Smith on rest, boundaries, and care that actually sustains us Season 6 of Medium Lady Talks returns in February after a January winter hiatus 🧡 Continue the Conversation If this episode resonated, Erin would love to hear from you — especially how Phone Free Fall shifted your awareness, not just your screen time. Follow along on Instagram: @medium.lady And thank you for choosing to spend your time and attention here — they matter.

    20 min
5
out of 5
5 Ratings

About

Welcome to Medium Lady Talks, the podcast for burnt-out millennial moms who want to reclaim their time, energy, and joy—without the pressure of perfection. Host Erin, a working mom and mindful living advocate, shares refreshingly honest conversations and practical strategies to help you navigate motherhood, career, and self-care with medium effort. If you’re overwhelmed by unrealistic expectations and craving a more sustainable approach to life, you’re in the right place. Tune in for relatable insights on burnout recovery, self-care that actually fits your life, simplifying daily routines, and embracing imperfection with confidence. Through thought-provoking discussions, expert interviews, and personal reflections, Medium Lady Talks is your go-to resource for mindful, realistic growth—because you deserve a fulfilling life, not just a busy one. Let’s ditch the guilt, redefine success, and find joy in the small moments. Follow Erin on Instagram @medium.lady and start your journey to a more intentional, balanced life today.

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