Episode 44: Aligning our time to our values with courtney cecil

In this episode of De-Stress the Nest, Hannah chats with Courtney Cecil — coach, speaker, and founder of Working Moms Movement — about aligning your time with your personal and family values.

Courtney shares how busy parents can make thoughtful, intentional choices that reflect what matters most, and how defining your values creates more time freedom, reduces guilt, and strengthens family alignment.

Whether you’re managing multiple calendars, debating swim team sign-ups, or navigating work promotions, Courtney offers practical mindset shifts that help simplify decision-making and reduce stress.


Key Takeaways

  • Alignment creates clarity: When your values are clearly defined, it's easier to say yes or no without guilt.

  • Begin with the end in mind: Visualize your future family life and work backwards to guide present-day decisions.

  • Shared values reduce conflict: Partners need to align on time, money, and energy priorities to avoid friction.

  • Your “why” shapes your “how”: Understanding why you do something (e.g., sports, dinners, career choices) shapes how you do it.

  • Decision fatigue drops when your values drive the plan.

Quotes

  • “When you're clear on what you value, you know how to spend your resources — your time, money, and energy.”

  • “Just saying you value family isn’t enough. You have to define what that actually looks like in real life.”

  • “If you’re not aligned on how you spend your time, money, and energy, you’ll always feel in conflict.”

  • “Start with your 50-year vision — then make decisions today that support the life you’re building.”

Resources Mentioned

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This episode of De-Stress the Nest is sponsored by Heron House Management.


About Heron House Management:

Heron House Management⁠ is a virtual house management service that takes the stress out of your busy life by taking on your mental load and managing your To Do list. We provide fractional virtual house management for busy families at 10, 15 and 20+ hours/month.

Meal planning, signing up for kids activities, scheduling doctor's appointments, finding a house cleaner, planning your kid's birthday party, getting quotes for that home renovation project, or scheduling a monthly date night with your significant other and so much more. We do it all!

  • [00:05] Hannah Morgan: Welcome to Destress the Nest, a podcast for busy parents where experts share bite-sized tips on how to create systems that minimize stress at home. I'm your host, Hannah Morgan.

    [00:16] Hannah Morgan: Today’s episode is sponsored by Heron House Management — the first-ever virtual house management service that lightens your mental load by handling your to-do list with monthly subscriptions of 10, 15, and 20+ hours per month.

    From meal planning and doctor’s appointments to birthday parties and home projects, Heron House Management helps busy families reclaim their time and live their best lives.

    Learn more at heronhousemanagement.com.

    [00:38] Hannah Morgan: On today’s episode, we chat with Courtney Cecil, a coach for working moms, who helps us consider how to align our time with our values — figuring out what’s important to us, and how to spend our time in ways that deliver both value and alignment.

    [00:57] Hannah Morgan: Courtney, I'm so excited to have you on the show today. Let’s start by hearing a little more about who you are and what you do.

    [01:03] Courtney Cecil: Well, Hannah, first of all, thank you so much for having me and for all the work you’re doing to support working parents.

    Greetings from Charlotte, North Carolina! I’m a proud wife and mom to three boys — 8, 9, and 41 (my husband!).

    In addition to that, I’m a Fortune 50 exec, the founder of Working Moms Movement, where I help working moms go from stretched thin and stuck in their to-do lists to totally in control and fully present — both at work and at home.

    I’m also the podcast host of The Life Management System for Working Moms.

    [01:43] Hannah Morgan: Awesome — so glad to have you here today. Thanks for sharing your wisdom and for all the work you do.

    Courtney, today we’re going to talk about aligning your time around your values — I know that’s something very near and dear to you. Let’s talk about it.

    [01:55] Courtney Cecil: Yes — thank you for that invitation. This topic matters deeply to me.

    In my day job, I work in the culture-shaping space, which is all about aligning a person’s values with an organization’s values. When there’s alignment, there’s fulfillment — everyone is rowing in the same direction.

    That same thinking applies to our personal lives. When you're clear on what you value, you know how to spend your resources — time, money, and energy.

    For example, if I say I prioritize health, then I know I need to spend time and money in support of that value.

    And when people say “I value family,” that can mean a hundred different things:

    • Dinner together every night

    • Practicing faith

    • Sharing hobbies

    • Raising kids who become functional, contributing adults

    It’s important to define what valuing family actually means to you — because that will shape your choices.

    [03:19] Hannah Morgan: So talk to me about how you actually identify your values. It’s such an important exercise — but one we don’t always sit down and do.

    Earlier this year, we did a team workshop where we shared a list of 50 values and asked some reflective questions to help everyone figure out what mattered most. I'm curious how you guide your clients through that process — especially if they’ve never done it before.

    [03:53] Courtney Cecil: It’s definitely a deeper process than we can fully unpack here, but I’ll share a starting point.

    First, it’s crucial to have this values conversation with your partner. You’re both co-managing your household, even if things aren’t balanced.

    If you're not aligned on how you spend your time, money, and energy, you'll constantly feel at odds.

    Knowing your values brings time freedom. It makes decision-making faster and easier — you can say “hell yes” to some things and confidently say no to others.

    [04:45] Courtney Cecil: One simple way to start: Begin with the end in mind.

    Imagine your family 50 years from now:

    • What does your holiday time look like?

    • Your vacations?

    • Your retirement years?

    • What’s your relationship like with your children? With your grandchildren?

    Then work backwards. What values will shape those relationships? What decisions do you need to make today to support that vision?

    It might influence how you approach education, extracurriculars, or even how your children learn to treat others. All of that starts with intentionality — and living in alignment with your values.

    [05:54] Hannah Morgan: Can you give a few concrete examples of how families might put this into practice once they’ve aligned on their values?

    [05:59] Courtney Cecil: Absolutely. Here's one example from my neighbor.

    Her daughter is in competitive swim — five to six days a week, and she’s only in fifth grade. Nothing wrong with that!

    But I asked her: “What’s your goal with this commitment? Do you hope she swims in college? Gets a scholarship? Just has fun?”

    We talked through whether the goal is to develop independence, build confidence, stay close as a family — and how all of those values might lead to different choices.

    [06:45] Courtney Cecil: Now take another client of mine — they value family dinners above all else.

    So even if their child is an elite athlete, they might say no to high-travel teams, because dinner together every night is a non-negotiable.

    Maybe that means joining a casual summer swim team instead. That value helps guide what they say yes or no to — and removes the guilt.

    When you know what matters to your family, you can make decisions with confidence, clarity, and alignment.

    [09:24] Hannah Morgan: I love that. That can be such a helpful mantra for anyone listening who feels overwhelmed or over-scheduled — with kids, work, and everything in between.

    Courtney, thank you so much for your insight and wisdom. We really appreciate you being here!

    [09:39] Courtney Cecil: Thanks, Hannah — and thanks for the great questions.

    [09:41] Hannah Morgan: Thanks for listening to Destress the Nest, the podcast where experts share bite-sized tips on how to minimize stress at home.

    Don’t forget to subscribe and tune in every Tuesday for more ways to simplify your life.

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Episode 43: Breaking Down the Mental Load with Paige Connell