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Transcript

I Left My Toddler for 8 Days. Here’s What Actually Happened.

(New Episode Drop) Travel chaos, mom guilt, a midnight ER visit…

Click above to listen on Apple or click HERE to listen on Spotify.

Show Notes: What we Talked About + Products

This week on Get Mom Ready, we started with a travel horror story.

Airport chaos.
A toddler meltdown on a plane.
And a mom crying under a blanket mid-flight.

You know… the usual.

But somewhere in the middle of swapping travel stories, the conversation turned into something bigger:

How do we actually set ourselves up for success as moms?

Not just when traveling.

But anytime we’re trying to juggle work, motherhood, logistics, identity, and our own sanity.

This episode is one of those conversations where we start talking about travel…

…and end up talking about support systems, guilt, experimentation, and what it takes to feel present in our own lives.

Also, purely by accident, all three of us showed up wearing denim.

Completely unplanned.
Completely on brand for moms everywhere.

So if you want to witness the accidental Denim Day, you can watch the episode at GetMomReady.com.

In this episode we talk about…

What it actually looks like to navigate travel as a mom.

The logistics.
The emotions.
The unexpected curveballs.

We get into:

• traveling with kids vs. without them
preparing caregivers before you leave
• the difference between real guilt and fear of what other people might think
• the tiny logistical decisions that dramatically reduce mental load
• how to ask for help without apologizing for it
• why a spirit of experimentation might be one of the healthiest mindsets in motherhood

And yes, we also talk about what happens when your kid gets the flu on a work trip and you find yourself in an ER at 2 AM in Tampa.

Motherhood keeps things humble.

The mindset we keep coming back to

One of the biggest themes that came up in this conversation was something we all want to hold onto more:

The spirit of experimentation.

Instead of asking:

“Am I doing this the right way?”

What if we asked:

“What happens if I try this?”

Motherhood changes constantly.

What works when your baby is 6 months old
might not work when they’re 2.

What worked last year
might not work this year.

Experimentation gives you permission to:

• try something
• learn from it
• adjust
• change your mind

And honestly? That might be one of the most freeing parenting tools there is.

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A few things that actually helped

A lot of what made travel feel doable weren’t huge life changes.

They were small, practical decisions.

A caregiver “playbook”

Before leaving, we talked about how helpful it can be to create a shared note with things like:

• routines
• preferences
• school logistics
• important contacts
• pet instructions
• random household things you don’t want someone guessing about

Not because everything has to be perfect.

But because preparation helps everyone breathe easier.

Identifying your triggers

Every parent has a couple of things that spike their anxiety more than others.

For some it’s choking.

For others it’s driving.

For others it’s sleep.

Instead of pretending those concerns don’t exist, sometimes it helps to just name them.

Sometimes readiness looks like saying:

“Hey, this is one of my things. Will you humor me?”

It’s not about control.

It’s about giving your nervous system a little more peace.

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Making travel lighter (literally)

One travel tip that came up in the episode was a portable car seat option that made traveling so much easier.

The RideSafer Travel Vest works like a wearable car seat and folds into a small bag.

If you’ve ever tried to manage a toddler, a suitcase, a backpack, and a giant car seat through an airport… you know why this matters.

When the plan falls apart

Of course, motherhood loves to test our plans.

In this case, everything was going perfectly…until a toddler woke up throwing up at 1 AM.

Cue the ER visit.

Cue the Uber ride in the middle of the night.

Cue the moment where you think:

“Why did I think traveling with a toddler was a good idea?”

But the interesting thing?

Even in the chaos, the takeaway wasn’t “never do this again.”

It was actually the opposite.

Sometimes the things we’re most nervous about are the things that remind us:

We can handle more than we think.

A reminder about support systems

Another theme that kept surfacing in this conversation:

People often want to help more than we realize.

Grandparents who love extra time with grandkids.
Friends who are willing to be “on call.”
Partners who hold down the fort.

We’re not meant to do motherhood alone.

And sometimes the bravest thing we can do is simply let people show up for us.

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If this episode resonated

We’d love to hear from you.

Tell us:

• what season of motherhood you’re in
• what you’re experimenting with right now
• what topics you want us to cover next

You can reach us at: info@thereadynetwork.com

And if you’re in a season where work, motherhood, identity, and life logistics all feel like they’re colliding…we offer Get Mom Ready coaching.

You can book a discovery call and choose the coach who feels like the best fit for your season here.

Book a Discovery Call

If this conversation resonated…

You’re exactly who Get Mom Ready is for.

Every week we share honest conversations about motherhood — the identity shifts, the mental load, the work-life tension, the things nobody really prepares you for.

If you want these conversations delivered straight to your inbox, make sure you’re subscribed.

Because motherhood is a lot easier when you realize: you’re not the only one figuring it out.

Subscribe below and we’ll see you next week.

One last thought

This episode may start with travel.

But the deeper question we kept coming back to was this:

What helps us feel ready for the life we’re living?

Ready to leave.
Ready to ask for help.
Ready to try something new.
Ready to change our minds.

Ready to grow.

And sometimes…

ready to handle a midnight ER visit in Tampa.

Listen on Apple, Spotify, and Getmomready.com on your way to the grocery store or in the drop off line today.

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