For when you know what you want to do — but actually doing it alone isn’t working.
You have the intention. Maybe even the plan. You’ve thought it through, committed to it privately, told yourself this time will be different. And then life gets loud, or old habits creep back in, or the energy just isn’t there on the day you needed it to be.
This isn’t laziness. It’s rarely laziness. It’s more often exhaustion, overwhelm, perfectionism, or the quiet weight of carrying everything on your own with no one really checking in.
Traditional accountability can feel harsh all deadlines, pressure, and someone asking “did you do it yet?” in a tone that makes you want to disappear. That’s not what this is.
Instead, accountability here is gentle, curious, and deeply practical. We check in regularly, not to judge what you didn’t do, but to understand what got in the way. We look at patterns without shame. We adjust expectations when life shifts. And we celebrate follow-through not as a pass/fail test, but as information about what works for you.
Sometimes accountability means having a regular slot where someone simply expects you to show up, and that expectation holds you gently in place. Sometimes it means breaking a goal down until the first step is almost laughably small. And sometimes it means naming out loud what you’ve been avoiding, and discovering that saying it makes it less powerful over you.
This work doesn’t assume you lack discipline. It assumes you lack the right kind of support, the kind that doesn’t add more pressure to an already heavy load.
Accountability sessions are held online, short, and focused. We agree on what matters to you, and then we simply keep showing up around it. No guilt. No lectures. Just a consistent, low-pressure space to actually do the things you keep meaning to do.
You can learn more about how I approach accountability by scheduling a meet up.
