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Kerr-Ching! Motherhood's Not a Runway Roadblock for This Mogul




She strides into the room, a whirlwind of caramel cashmere and quiet confidence. A phone is practically glued to one ear, the other adorned with a diamond stud the size of a baby’s fist (and let’s be honest, she probably has a few of those running around somewhere). This is not your typical boardroom titan. This is a woman who’s conquered the cutthroat world of… well, we can’t tell you exactly. Let’s just say it involves a lot of zeros in her bank account and even more zeroes in the sizes she sells.


We’re here to talk about her latest venture, a lifestyle brand that screams “I’ve got it all” without being obnoxious. Think Gwyneth Paltrow, but with less kale and more… well, you’ll see. But the conversation keeps circling back to a topic that seems to fascinate us all: motherhood and moguldom. Can you really have it all?


She laughs, a surprisingly girlish sound from someone who could buy and sell most of us. “Listen, I’m not going to lie. There are days when I feel like I’m failing at everything. Days when I leave a trail of Cheerios and board meeting agendas in my wake. But then I look at my kids, and I realize they don’t care about my last quarterly report. They just want to build a pillow fort and eat cookies.”


And there it is. The unglamorous truth behind the glossy facade. Because for all the talk of “leaning in” and “having it all,” the reality of juggling a high-powered career and a family is messy. It’s about late-night conference calls punctuated by the soft snores of a sleeping child. It’s about missing school plays and making up for it with extravagant vacations. It’s about the constant, nagging guilt that you’re never doing enough.


But here’s the thing: she owns it. She doesn’t pretend to be Superwoman, effortlessly gliding between board meetings and bedtime stories. She’s honest about the sacrifices, the trade-offs, the sheer exhaustion of it all. And in that honesty, there’s a strange kind of power.


“I used to think I had to be perfect,” she admits, toying with a chunky gold bracelet. “Perfect mother, perfect CEO, perfect wife. But then I realized perfection is boring. And impossible. Now, I just try to be present. Present for my kids, present for my work, present for myself.”


Present. It’s a simple word, but loaded with meaning. Because in a world that’s constantly demanding our attention, being present – truly present – is perhaps the greatest luxury of all.


As we wrap up the interview, I can’t help but think about my own chaotic life. The deadlines, the school lunches, the constant feeling of being pulled in a million different directions. But I also think about the moments of joy, the belly laughs, the quiet satisfaction of a job well done. Maybe, just maybe, “having it all” isn’t about achieving some impossible ideal. Maybe it’s about embracing the mess, the imperfection, the beautiful chaos of it all.


And maybe, just maybe, it’s about time we stop asking women how they do it all and start celebrating the fact that they do.

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