Sometimes, some things slide into the system and stay there, long after they stop serving what you’re actually here to do.
If you lead ops, you know this feeling in your bones. You’re the one holding invisible layers of responsibility that would otherwise slide through the cracks. You keep the engine running. You hold context that nobody else quite sees. And you’re carrying more than most people realize.
Sometimes the bravest move isn’t tweaking the system again or another optimization. It’s admitting that one part of the system has done its job and choosing to let it go.
That’s where I am with this podcast.
In this episode, I’ll tell you why I’m ending this weekly chapter of Your Future Realized, what this run has meant to me, and what I hope it opens up for you.
When the system you built isn’t serving the mission
When I launched this show, the vision was simple: create a small, regular space where operations leaders who make the world go round could hear themselves reflected, feel less alone in the chaos, and get one useful idea at a time.
I didn’t know then that we’d end up with around one hundred and forty episodes together.
It’s not about the number. It’s about the real stories and moments you’ve trusted me with, and the way they’ve changed me too.
What 140 episodes taught me about ops execs (and myself)
Over time, the conversations I’m having with leaders and teams have changed. We’re spending more time in the hard, messy parts of real situations, the stuff you can’t compress into a quick weekly tip.
And, if I’m honest, I can feel how much energy it costs me to keep a weekly show going. There’s a point where the way something’s set up stops fitting who you’re becoming, even though it still looks fine from the outside.
Circling decisions vs. choosing a new shape
In Episode 140, I was naming how often we circle decisions instead of making them. Partway through producing that episode, I realized I was doing exactly that with this show.
What I have now—this short, tip‑style weekly podcast—doesn’t really match how my work is evolving, and I’m no longer willing to try to squeeze these deeper conversations into that box.
So somewhat off the cuff, but also really after a long quiet build, I felt moved at the end of Episode 140 to say: I’m following my own advice, there will be changes to this podcast, and I’ll share more next time.
It felt 100% right in my bones, in my nervous system, and, frankly, in my calendar.
Since then, I’ve given myself some real space—time off from work, time to step back from the mic and pay attention to what’s actually needed next. It became clear that this weekly version of Your Future Realized has done its job. It’s time to stop keeping it going just because I can, and to let it stand as a complete body of work.
When I started, 25 weekly episodes was unfathomable, let alone 140 of them. I just wanted that small, regular space for ops leaders. Over time, it has become a surprisingly rich part of my business and my life, and one of the clearest mirrors for how ops execs actually live their work.
Why ‘enough’ is a choice, not an amount
And now, the same part of me that loves building things also knows that editing our lives is part of grown‑up leadership—letting go of good, solid things so that what’s most important has room to grow. I’ve said before that “enough” is a choice, not an amount. This ending is one of those choices. I’m making space for what’s next, even before I know exactly what that is.
So, I’m choosing.
This version of Your Future Realized—a weekly, solo show—is ending with this episode. I’m not letting it quietly fade; I’m closing it on purpose.
Closing this chapter on purpose
The episodes you already know and lean on aren’t going anywhere. The archive will stay live. You’ll still be able to dip in when you need something on burnout and boundaries, on managing up, on transitions, on self‑trust, on operations team dynamics.
My focus now is shifting toward fewer, deeper conversations; more specific, thoughtful ways of working with you—whether that’s in the room, in your organization, or, someday, in your ears again; and work that’s at the level you’re operating at and the level I expect of myself.
I’m still doing what I do: coaching, partnering with leaders, working inside complex systems. But with even more depth around what I offer and how we use our time together. This doesn’t mean I’m gone; it just means my attention isn’t split in as many directions. I’m putting more of that attention into real conversations and quieter, more fulfilling spaces, and a little less into online visibility.
I do love podcasting, and you may hear from me in audio again. I’m just not forcing myself to continue this weekly rhythm. I’m letting the next shape emerge in its own time.
Before I step back from the weekly cadence, I want to say thank you.
Thank you if you’ve been here since Episode 1.
Thank you if you just found the show this week.
Thank you if you’re a client, a former client, a business buddy, or someone I haven’t met yet who’s been walking your dog or doing the dishes or commuting with my voice in your ears.
If you’ve listened to one episode or all 140, I’m genuinely honored you’ve spent this time with me.
Over more than two and a half years, this podcast has given me a structure to show up every week, to try out ideas in public, and to stay close to what ops leaders are actually dealing with day to day. You’ve listened, you’ve shared your stories and ideas, and you’ve helped me sharpen and grow.
You can always find me on LinkedIn or through my website at yourfuturerealized.com. I’ll be in touch from time to time with little updates from out here: What I’m experimenting with and what’s unfolding.
As you consider your own work and life—the systems and commitments you’re carrying—I’ll leave you with this last question:
Where are you maintaining something mainly because it proves you can handle it, when what’s really called for is a different shape that fits who you are as a leader now?
My hope is that this ending gives you a little permission to do whatever is right for you; to complete a season that’s done, and to choose a next chapter that fits today’s reality and the direction you’re heading now—even if that means trusting yourself over everyone else’s advice.
I trust our paths will cross again when they’re meant to. In the meantime, remember: you can’t stop the chaos, but you can change the game you’re playing!
If you’d like to talk about your own ‘enough’ moment, you can book a chat with me at yourfuturerealized.com/VIP.