Posted in Life, Meetings, Miles, Parenting

The School Run Sprint: Guarding My Peace Between the Drops and Pickups

As a remote professional, I’ve realized my most valuable currency isn’t actually money. It’s focused time.

When the kids are home, my brain is permanently split in two. One half is trying to solve a project bottleneck while the other is subconsciously listening for a “Mommy!” from the next room. It’s exhausting. That’s why the moment I drop them off at school at 7:00 AM, the clock starts. I have a precious window to be 100% Sherwin the Professional, and I’ve learned the hard way not to waste it just reacting to emails.

I’ve started using a method called the 30-30-30 rule to keep me on track, but the real magic is in how I protect the different phases of my day, especially with a split schedule.

The Fortress of Deep Work

The hours between 7:30 AM and my first pickup at noon are sacred. My brain is sharpest right after that morning school run, so I treat those hours like a fortress. This is when I tackle the “frogs,” those big, intimidating strategy projects or writing tasks that need my full heart.

During this block, I am essentially a ghost. My notifications are muted, my phone is in the other room, and my inbox stays closed. I finally realized that if I start my day answering everyone else’s “urgent” requests, I’ll never actually get to my own “important” goals before that 12:00 PM alarm goes off.

Syncing the Meetings and the Midday Shift

With one child finished at noon and another at early in the afternoon, the rest of my day is all about the “sweet spot.” As much as I can, I batch my meetings into the block after that first pickup. Since I’m usually coordinating with teams across Southeast Asia, I’m always hunting for the time zone gap where we can all be online at once.

Grouping these calls together saves me from the context switching that used to drain my energy. It’s so much easier to stay in meeting mode for a solid block than to have 15 minute calls scattered throughout the day, constantly breaking my focus just as I’m getting into a groove.

The Clean Break

The final sprint from the time we are back home from school is when I shift into what I call my Admin Hour. This is when I clear the inbox, schedule my posts, and finalize the logistics for the next project.

This block of hours is my closing ceremony. It allows me to shut my laptop with a genuine sense of completion for the day.

At this stage of my life, I’ve realized I just don’t have the patience for busywork. I want my work to be impactful so that my time with my family can be intentional.

Time blocking isn’t about being a robot or living by a rigid timer. It’s about building a fence around the things that matter. It’s what allows me to work hard for a project and still be the person who is 100% present when I’m sitting at the dinner table that night.

Posted in #featured, Meetings, Miles

The 24-Hour Jakarta Hustle: Meetings, Miles, and Motherhood in Motion

There is a very specific kind of adrenaline that comes with being a remote professional in Southeast Asia. One minute I’m tucking my kids into bed in Bulacan, and the next I’m boarding a red-eye flight to Jakarta. My office for the day isn’t a cubicle or a home desk. Instead, it’s a fast-paced sequence of airport lounges, event stages, and hotel lobbies.

People often ask me, “Sherwin, how do you manage it all without losing your mind?” The truth is that I don’t try to balance it anymore. I just integrate it. Here is what a typical 24-hour project trip looks like for me at 40.

The Art of the Red-Eye Sync

Because the Manila to Jakarta route relies so heavily on red-eye flights, my day starts while the rest of the world is still dark. I usually arrive in Jakarta in the early morning of the event day and I have to hit the ground running immediately.

I’ve learned to treat my transit time as my most productive time. You will often find me in the airport lounge with a coffee in hand, attending a final sync meeting with my team just minutes before my boarding group is called. I am also endlessly thankful for the airlines that now provide reliable Wi-Fi. Being able to stay in touch with my team at 30,000 feet means that by the time I land, my inbox is clear and I can be 100% present for the event itself.

Efficiency is My Love Language

When you only have 24 hours on the ground, you don’t have time for baggage carousels or heavy suitcases. I travel incredibly light, packing only the exact number of clothes I need because, honestly, I don’t have the time to overthink a wardrobe. I need a uniform that works as hard as I do.

While Jakarta is my destination, my heart always beats a little faster for Changi Airport in Singapore. Its efficiency is really the benchmark for my life. Everything there is seamless and fast, which is exactly what a working mother on a deadline needs.

The Village Behind the Miles

I could never manage these miles without the incredible support system I have back home. Success is never a solo sport. Weeks before I leave, the preparation begins. I tell my kids that Mommy is going away for work so they can visualize the journey with me.

I am so lucky to have a husband who truly steps up and supports my role. He manages the fort and handles the daily rhythm of the house so I can focus on my professional goals without worry. Alongside him, my mother-in-law is always there to look after the kids, and knowing they are safe and loved allows me to give my all to my project.

The FaceTime Ritual

No matter how exhausted I am after an event or how early my return flight is the next morning, my FaceTime call is non-negotiable. Connecting with my husband and hearing my kids talk about their day at school is the reset button I need.

Hearing about a math test or a playtime story is the best way to decompress after a high-stakes day. It reminds me that while my work takes me across oceans, my heart never actually leaves home.

Turning 40 has taught me that you don’t have to choose between a global career and being a present mother. You just need a great village, a light suitcase, and a very strong Wi-Fi signal.

Posted in #featured, Life, Meetings, Miles, Parenting

Welcome to Meetings, Miles, and Motherhood: Why I Started This Journey

Welcome to Meetings, Miles, and Motherhood—a space where we navigate the intricate dance of career, travel, and parenting together.

Life has a way of taking us on unexpected journeys, and mine has been no exception. As a remote-working mom without house help, balancing a 9-to-6 job, frequent business trips, and raising two beautiful daughters with my supportive husband, I’ve experienced firsthand the challenges and triumphs that come with this lifestyle. From managing virtual meetings while preparing lunchboxes to catching flights and missing bedtime stories, the juggle is real.

This blog is born out of a desire to share these experiences and create a community where we can support and learn from each other. Here, you’ll find:

  • Personal Anecdotes: Stories from my own journey, reflecting on the highs and lows of balancing work, travel, and motherhood.
  • Practical Tips: Insights on managing remote work, efficient travel hacks, and strategies to maintain a harmonious family life amidst a busy schedule.
  • Thought-Provoking Discussions: Conversations on topics like freelancing, upskilling, and the evolving dynamics of modern parenthood.

Your thoughts, opinions, and experiences are not just welcome; they are an integral part of this blogging journey. I encourage you to share your insights and let me know what topics you’d like to see discussed here.

Thank you for joining me on this adventure. Let’s embrace the chaos, celebrate the small wins, and create a life where we thrive in meetings, miles, and motherhood—together.

Welcome aboard! I look forward to our conversations and the community we’ll build.