Meet Claire.
- Caregiving calls and visits are scheduled, not reactive where possible
- Tuesday and Thursday mornings are protected for business work — phone on silent
- When I feel the pull to drop everything, I pause for 10 minutes before deciding if it’s urgent
- I am allowed to feel love and frustration at the same time without acting from either
- I do not have to solve every problem the same day it surfaces
- My three deep-work blocks per week are non-negotiable before social commitments
- I do not pitch or take calls before I have clarity on what I’m actually offering
- A busy week is not the same as a productive week — I track both separately
- Reorganising my systems is not working on my business
- When I avoid the real work, I name what I’m avoiding before I do the easier thing
- His support is real. His understanding of what I’m going through is limited. Both are true.
- I do not perform certainty I don’t have to make him comfortable
- I share what I need, not just updates on progress
- His travel schedule is not a reason to shrink my work — it’s a reason to protect it
- Nothing active yet.
- Nothing here yet. That’s fine — start when you need to.
When the Career
Worked and the
Life Didn’t
How a VP-level corporate professional redesigned her life from the inside out — instead of just recreating what she left.
Who This Client Is
Life Proof is designed for people who want to build a life and business that actually works the way they do — fluid, flexible, and designed on purpose. This client knew exactly what that meant. She had spent 22 years building a career that worked perfectly on paper. Respected, well-compensated, VP of Operations at a mid-size professional services firm. She was excellent at her job.
She gave notice four months before coming to Life Proof. Her youngest had just left for college. Her mother’s health was beginning to decline. And somewhere in a hotel room after a conference, she had a quiet moment of reckoning — she couldn’t name a single thing in her life that was actually hers.
She wasn’t in financial crisis. She had savings, a supportive husband, and a strong professional network. What she didn’t have was any idea who she was outside of her title — and the blank page of “what now” was producing far more anxiety than she expected.
She came to Life Proof mid-transition, in the middle of chaos, not before it. And she came not to build a business — but because someone in her network mentioned it and she was open enough to try something that wasn’t another productivity framework.
What She Brought — and What Was Getting in the Way
Twenty-two years of high performance leaves marks — most of them useful, some of them costly. The Life Proof process doesn’t pathologise the patterns. It maps them so the client can choose which ones to keep and which ones were never hers to begin with.
- Systems thinking — she can see structure, gaps, and leverage points immediately
- Execution discipline — 22 years of getting things done without being told how
- Emotional intelligence — she reads rooms, people, and dynamics with precision
- Strategic patience — she knows how to hold a long-term view under short-term pressure
- Network depth — relationships built over decades that are genuinely reciprocal
- Identity fusion — her sense of worth was inseparable from her title and output
- Performing productivity — staying busy to avoid sitting with uncertainty
- Defaulting to the obvious — planning to “just consult” because that’s what people like her do
- Editing out desire — consistently cutting what she actually wanted because it felt selfish or impractical
- Caregiver override — her mother’s needs had a habit of swallowing everything else
What Life Proof Delivered
The foundation package runs a clear arc across three sessions: surface the full picture, build the architecture, integrate it into a personal operating system. For a client mid-transition and mid-chaos, the shape of that arc mattered — the first session had to create enough stability and clarity to make the next two possible.
| Deliverable | What It Did in This Engagement |
|---|---|
| Three Sessions | Identity and transition mapping → life design and want/should excavation → personal operating system integration |
| Strategy PDF | Full life and business roadmap, boundary framework, decision protocol, and values clarification in a reference document |
| Life Proof Tool | Interactive personal operating system built around identity — not output — with daily check-ins, decision filter, values tracker, identity anchor, boundary protocols, and contemplation prompts |
The first session didn’t start with the business. It started with the moment in the hotel room — and worked outward from there. What was the life she actually wanted? Not what she was planning to build, but what she would build if she let herself want something without editing it for practicality.
What emerged was a significant gap. The plan she had — start a consulting practice in her existing field — was a direct recreation of the life she’d just left, just with fewer meetings. She hadn’t designed a new life. She’d just removed the employer.
Output: a full picture of the client’s actual desires and values, separate from her professional identity, and a clear map of where the default plan was quietly reproducing the old constraints.
The second session built the architecture around what she’d surfaced. A central question ran through it: is this something you want, or something you think you should want? The answer changed almost every element of her plan.
The consulting practice didn’t disappear — but its shape shifted dramatically. The client realised she wanted significantly less client-facing work than she’d planned for, more space for caregiving without resentment, and a personal life that wasn’t scheduled around a business that hadn’t started yet.
Boundary design was a primary output of this session: three explicit protocols covering caregiving, business-building, and the marriage dynamic — written in her language, not as rules imposed from outside but as agreements she made with herself.
The third session assembled everything into the personal operating system — built live and exported as both an interactive tool and a PDF reference document. Every element was drawn from the client’s specific sessions, patterns, and language.
The session also included work on the identity grief pattern — the specific weight of mourning a professional self that had been her primary identity for over two decades. That grief wasn’t an obstacle to progress. It was part of the transition that needed naming before she could move through it cleanly. Naming it changed how she held the whole process.
Key Strategic Outputs
The default consulting plan was redesigned around what the client actually wanted — not what made sense for someone with her CV. Fewer clients, deeper work, more personal time than she’d originally allowed herself to plan for.
The most repeated pattern in her sessions was editing out desire before it could land. The decision filter built into her tool makes this visible every time she makes a choice — turning a subconscious habit into a conscious question.
Explicit agreements for caregiving time, business-building time, and the marriage dynamic — designed to protect both without creating conflict between them. Written as her own words, not someone else’s rules.
The mourning of her VP identity was acknowledged as real and appropriate — not pathologised or rushed. Naming it as grief rather than resistance changed her relationship to the transition entirely.
The daily check-in in her tool starts with identity, not productivity. This single structural choice — built into every morning — is doing more active work than any business plan she could have written.
A running record of things she notices herself genuinely caring about — separate from work. The pattern it reveals over weeks tells her more about what she should be building than any market research could.
The Life Proof Tool
Claire’s tool is built entirely around identity reclamation and the want/should distinction — because those were the two things standing between her and the life she actually wanted. It’s not a productivity system. It’s a daily practice of becoming someone who trusts her own wants.
Opens with who she is, not what she’s producing. Includes “I am enough because” before the calendar opens.
Four-step want/should filter. Runs any decision through body response, motivation, direction, and audience.
Her eight personal values as weekly touchpoints. Which ones are lit up? Where’s the gap?
Running log of things she genuinely cares about, separate from performance. The pattern it builds over time is the map.
Three named frameworks — caregiving, business, marriage — with a weekly log for what held and what didn’t.
Five dark-card prompts including the worthy-without-producing prompt, identity grief, the should audit, and the life design check.
Where She Landed
- A rebuilt life and business plan that reflects what she actually wants — not what her CV suggested she should do
- A daily practice anchored in identity rather than output, running every morning before she opens her calendar
- Three explicit boundary frameworks that protect her caregiving, her work, and her marriage simultaneously
- The want/should distinction as a living practice — built into her decision-making at the tool level, not just the intellectual level
- Identity grief named and moved through — the transition is no longer something happening to her
- A personal operating system that gets more accurate over time as she adds to her identity anchor and refines her values
- Permission — finally — to want what she actually wants, and a structure that makes acting on it possible
Is This You?
This case study is for the person who has done everything right by every external measure — and is standing on the other side of it wondering why it doesn’t feel like enough.
is a designed thing.
3 sessions + a strategy built around how you personally operate + an interactive Life Proof tool you’ll actually use. Intentional. Fluid. Yours. If it feels like the right fit, the next step is a conversation.
