The First Day of April

April Fool’s Day confession from one work at home mom to another: today I have a plan. I fully intend to start my morning quietly. I will enjoy a hot coffee.

I also plan to have a color-coded to-do list and uninterrupted focus. If you believe that, congratulations, you’re officially one of us.

In reality, the coffee will be reheated three times. Someone will need a snack the second I open my laptop. My most productive work hour will happen during nap time or after bedtime, again.

And honestly? That is not a failure.

That is the magic of building a business that bends with your life, not against it.

Here at Blue Willow Cottage, we think the real win is creating work that fits into family life. It accommodates little hands tugging at you. It navigates messy mornings. It allows big dreams to happen all at once.

No pranks here.

Just the truth that this season is powerful, even when it’s loud.

6 thoughts on “The First Day of April

  1. I like the way the word ‘bend’ is used: … a business that bends with your life, not against it.
    The three sentences, running in a row, sound great. There is a neat cadence in them. It accommodates … It navigates … It allows …
    Working at home takes good planning and self-discipline. You are expert at it, Dawn. The number of Chinese moms who adopt this work-life style is marginal, I am afraid.
    Easter is on the way. I bet you will be busier prepping for it.

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    1. Thanks for the comment… As a nurse for so long (37 years), I longed for a flexible career. I finally created it for myself. It does take time and much sacrifice, but I believe that anyone could do what I have done! We are celebrating Easter in an hour!

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  2. This made me laugh because I felt personally called out by the “hot coffee” plan. If it only gets reheated three times, honestly, that’s a win. I love this so much though—because it’s real. The snacks, the interruptions, the “I’ll just start one thing” that turns into five detours… and somehow, it all still works. Maybe not perfectly, but meaningfully. And you’re right—that’s not failure at all. That’s a life being lived while the work is happening, not in spite of it. There’s something kind of beautiful about building something in the middle of the noise, sticky fingers and all. Also, color-coded list? I admire the optimism

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  3. If you’re reading this and nodding along, I see you.

    That rhythm of half-finished to‑do lists isn’t a lack of discipline, it’s a sign that life is full right now. I’m learning (slowly) that productivity doesn’t always look polished, and success doesn’t have to be quiet. If this season feels messy and meaningful for you too, I’d love to know: what are you building right now, right in the middle of it all? ~Dawn

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