



Many intelligent, successful women secretly feel unprepared for what’s ahead.
Not because they lack discipline.
Because life became more complicated than expected.
Nobody prepared them for this combination:
Career pressure.
Aging parents.
Adult children.
Retirement concerns.
Healthcare uncertainty.
Rising costs.
Emotional exhaustion.
And yet somehow…they’re still expected to hold everything together.
Traditional advice treats these issues separately.
But real life doesn’t.
That’s why so many women feel stuck.
They’re trying to solve connected problems with disconnected advice.
Keep Your Life™ approaches this differently.
Because retirement planning without caregiving planning is incomplete.
And caregiving planning without family conversations is fragile.
The goal isn’t perfection.
The goal is preparation with support.
Real people.
Real conversations.
Real structure.
Start here:
Stop trying to solve every issue separately
Bring family, care, and financial decisions into one strategy
Learn from people facing similar realities
One woman described it this way:
“I finally realized I wasn’t failing at planning. I was trying to plan without enough perspective.”
That realization changed everything.
Complex lives require coordinated planning
Community reveals blind spots
Preparation creates confidence
Exercise your power while you have it.
Still waiting for the “right time”? CHECK THIS OUT.
HOMESCHOOLING: Haven or Havoc?
Your child's school years are precious and fleeting.

Now could be your best time to step up where your school is letting your child down. Let this series of myth-busting short chapters encourage you.

2 Major Mistakes
Which one will you make?

Which of these 2 retirement mistakes are you making right now? It's impossible to entirely avoid both mistakes.
You won't know for sure which mistake will work out better for you until it's too late.
How to choose?

Finding the Will
(Part 1)

Have the will to arrange for a smooth transition when you’re no longer around to answer questions (Part 1)
Ensuring your children or other Loved Ones can readily access your important papers when you die entails a sound process versus one or two conversations. You must overcome aversion to the subject of death, procrastination of anything that is long-term, and the tendency to assume things will be fine. Family dynamics can be sweet, spicy, or dicey.

Finding the Will
(Part 2)

While the internet permits convenient access to accounts, policies, and stored documents, it presents a plethora of password management problems. which too many people avoid by succumbing to password laziness, such as:

Embrace Your Clarence

Is Clarence your future?
Golden insight from a golden retriever.

Post-Pandemic W.E.L.L.ness

Where life drastically changed forever two years ago, everyone adjusted to the best of their abilities.
Here are a few of the key adjustments--"pandemic pivots"--that sustained some and prospered others.

Prenuptial Adulting

“Mom, Dad, we’re getting married!"
“Wonderful, congratulations! Here’s what you both need to do first.”
Equipping newlyweds with essentials of responsibility leaves plenty of life yet to be discovered on their own. Adults understand that love isn’t oogly feelings; it’s a hard choice. It’s putting your commitments and your money where your mouth is.

Rethinking Competing Funds for College and Retirement


Married? Is Your Endgame 100% or Just 50%?
Are you single? That other 50% could be whoever is most important to you.

Are you more of a planner than your spouse? It’s all too common for one spouse to blindly trust the planning spouse. Countless endgame “plans” were created by 50% of a couple: