In this episode, Dr. Brittany McGeehan sits down with Kelly Hubbell, founder of Sage Haus, to unpack the mental load high-achieving women carry—and why doing it all is quietly costing more than we realize.
Why does life still feel overwhelming… even when everything is handled?
In this episode, Dr. Brittany McGeehan and Kelly Hubbell break down the reality of invisible labor, emotional labor, and household management—and why traditional support systems like childcare and cleaning services don’t actually solve the problem.
Through Kelly’s personal story—from overwhelmed working mom to founder of a company providing house management services across the U.S. and Canada—they explore what’s missing in most homes: true operational support.
This conversation goes beyond productivity. It addresses the mental load women carry, how overfunctioning becomes normalized, and how burnout, resentment, and disconnection build when there isn’t enough support at home.
You’ll hear how the invisible labor inside your household directly impacts leadership, business growth, emotional regulation, and relationship dynamics—and why building a support system is not indulgent, it’s strategic.
If you’re a high-achieving woman navigating career, marriage, and motherhood—and feeling stretched thin despite your success—this episode will help you understand the root of that pressure and what it looks like to create real support.
You’ll also hear a clear breakdown of what a house manager actually does, how house management differs from a nanny or assistant, and how families begin redistributing the mental load in a sustainable way.
What You’ll Learn in This Episode
• What the mental load actually includes—and why it leads to burnout for high-achieving women
• The difference between childcare, cleaning services, and true house management
• How invisible labor and emotional labor impact relationships, leadership, and nervous system regulation
• Why overfunctioning becomes the default pattern—and how to shift out of it
• What a house manager does and how to implement this level of support in your home
