I thought the wildest part of my year would be getting an $840k job offer as a stay-at-home mom — turns out, my husband’s reaction to it blindsided me way more than the offer itself.
I’m 32. I’ll call myself Mara.
For a long time, I thought my life was already locked in.
I was a stay-at-home mom to Oliver, 6, and Maeve, 3. My days were school runs, snacks, tantrums, laundry, and trying to drink my coffee before it went cold.
I loved my kids.
That was never the problem.
The problem was I didn’t feel like a person anymore. I felt like a system. Feed kids.
Clean house. Reset. Repeat.
Before kids, I was an athlete.
I lifted, I competed, I coached some.
My body felt like mine, not just a thing that had been pregnant twice and lived on Goldfish crumbs.
After Maeve, I barely recognized myself.
When she started daycare three mornings a week, I suddenly had nine free hours.
Everyone said, “Use it to rest. Clean. Start a side business.”
I joined a grimy local gym instead.
No neon lights, no fancy equipment.
Just racks, barbells, and loud music.
The first time I got under a bar again, something in me woke up.
That’s where I met Lila.
She was clearly in charge. Clipboard. Headset.
People listened when she spoke.
One morning, she watched me squat. When I racked the bar, she walked over.
“You don’t move like a hobbyist,” she said.
I laughed. “I’m just trying not to fall apart.”
She shook her head.
“No. You move like a coach.”
“I used to compete,” I said. “Before kids.
That’s it.”
“Yeah, I can tell,” she said. “I’m Lila, by the way.”
“Mara.”
On my way out, she called after me.
“For what?”
“Because you don’t belong in a strip-mall gym forever,” she said. “There might be something better.”
I handed it over, assuming nothing would happen.
A few weeks later, she texted: “Can you talk tonight?”
We got on the phone after bedtime.
I was sitting at the kitchen table, staring at a pile of dishes.
“So,” she said, “I work for a high-end performance center. Pro athletes, execs, people with more money than sense. We’re opening a new flagship.
We need a head trainer who can coach and lead a team. I recommended you.”
I almost dropped my phone. “I’ve been out of the game for six years.
I’ve got two kids. I’m not exactly peak anything.”
“Send me your old resume,” she said. “Worst they can do is say no.”