When I returned from maternity leave, I was ready to dive back into work. I’d always been the dependable one — five years at the company, promoted through grit and late nights, praised for being the kind of employee who never said no. But motherhood changed how they saw me. Suddenly, my child’s cry during a Zoom call became a problem. My need for notice before late meetings made me “inflexible.” When my paycheck was late and I asked why, my manager shrugged and said, “It’s not like you’re the breadwinner anymore, right?” Then came the meeting: HR, cold smiles, and the words I’ll never forget — “We need someone without distractions.” They didn’t fire me for performance. They fired me because I was a mom who asked for boundaries. That night, I sat on my couch, exhausted, angry, and heartbroken. I recorded a video explaining what happened — how I lost my job not for failing at work, but for refusing to fail at being a parent. I posted it online. By morning, it had gone viral. Thousands of women reached out with stories like mine. One comment lit the spark: “If you ever start something, I’m in.” And so, I did. I launched The Naptime Agency — a place where talented moms could do real work on their terms. We met deadlines during nap time, pitched projects with toddlers on our hips, and built something incredible while rocking babies to sleep. Now,one year later, we’re a team of 30 — designers, developers, writers, strategists. We’ve helped nonprofits grow, startups thrive, and moms find their place in a world that too often shuts them out. They called me a distraction. But they were wrong. I was a force. And I wasn’t alone.