Archive for month: January, 2026

Burnout doesn’t always arrive with flashing lights and a dramatic collapse. Sometimes it builds quietly, when you push through too much year after year, until one day your body and mind simply refuse to keep going. Looking back, that’s exactly what happened to me — though at the time, I didn’t have the language for it. I just knew I was tired. Deeply tired.

My career started in my twenties on the State Farm catastrophe team, handling homeowners’ claims. It was intense work — long days, constant travel, and a crash course in home construction so I could write accurate damage estimates. Oddly enough, that part came naturally. Something about understanding how homes were built just clicked. But the day to day was exhausting.

When I wasn’t traveling, I poured myself into designing the adorable house I had bought. For fun, I’d scroll through furniture stores and mentally catalog what each one carried. I didn’t know it then, but I was building the foundation for a future career.

Eventually, I sold the house and enrolled in design school in Chicago. I worked for high‑end designers and remodelers, collecting some wild stories and valuable experience — but also realizing that world wasn’t a good fit for me. I never identified with massive budgets or the idea that beautiful design was only for a select few. I kept thinking back to my catastrophe‑team days, seeing how many people just needed a little bit of help. HGTV was booming, the internet was still new, and I saw a gap: everyday people wanted design guidance, but they didn’t need (or want) a full‑service designer.

So I created a simple, affordable model: You send me photos and measurements. I design the room using retail sources. You put it together.

It worked — sort of. I only charged $350 for a full room, which wasn’t nearly enough. At one point I was juggling three part‑time jobs just to stay afloat. I was exhausted, creatively drained, and eventually broke. I thought that was my first real taste of burnout. But the truth is, burnout had been building long before that.

I went into design school thinking it would be a relief from climbing roofs 12 hours a day, six days a week, living in hotels for 10 months out of the year — which I’d done for four straight years. But it wasn’t a relief – it was just a different kind of hard.

So by the time I returned to property claims, I was already down right depleted. Then came early‑pandemic COVID, when no one knew anything about it. Factor in being 42 years old at the time — prime for perimenopause — and my body simply hit a wall. It felt like everything broke at once. Three years later, I was fighting panic attacks daily, barely able to eat or sleep.

Only later did I learn how profoundly stress depletes minerals, disrupts hormones, and affects every system in the body. And that all stressors play a part, even the good ones. So all that exercise that I was cramming into my schedule because I thought it was helping my mental health? Not helping. Especially not when I wasn’t eating enough to properly fuel the workouts in the first place.

I was literally running on empty. 

Unfortunately, historically for me, life has had to really slap me in the face to get my attention. This time I decided to use the opportunity to slow down and really look at all the stresses I was inflicting on my body. And it wasn’t pretty. I quickly realized that I needed to make a big change to the biggest stressor: my job. The rest of my career needed to look differently.

I really wanted to help everyday people love their space. But I needed to not wake up to an alarm anymore (3 years later and it still sends me into panic). And I needed a flexible schedule – including an afternoon most weeks to take a hammock break. Mostly, I needed to redefine what success looked like: I’m not looking to build the biggest business, just a sustainable one. And I know from experience that creativity is hard to come by when you’re constantly in survival mode. So if I’m going to find any kind of success as a designer, it’s going to have to work this way.

Could it actually be that taking a break is literally good for business?!

I know not everyone can pivot and just decide to scale back their life. But everyone can – and should – have at a space that supports them. Feels like a hug. Even if you need to start with one corner of one room. Much like the importance of minerals when it comes to stress, our physical environment has a profound effect on how we feel day to day. Let it be your friend, not your enemy.

How does our physical environment impact how we feel and function?

There’s plenty of science about how color affects mood, but one of the most important things I learned in design school was much simpler: Form follows function. It doesn’t matter how beautiful a chair is if it’s uncomfortable or oversized and you bump into it every time you walk by. It doesn’t matter how pretty your office desk is if it’s too small to work efficiently. It doesn’t matter how many storage bins you buy if none of them actually solve the problem.

When your home doesn’t function well, stress accumulates in tiny, constant ways:

  • Papers pile up because you don’t have the right storage.
  • The guest room becomes overflow storage, so you stop inviting people over.
  • You avoid certain rooms because they feel chaotic or unfinished.

Little frustrations compound until home becomes a drag instead of a lift. But the good news? The reverse is also true. When your home supports your life, everything feels a little easier.

Insighed Designs - office remodel 3D rendering

How can your space support you better?

Start with function. Always. Make the space work for you first — then make it pretty. Take a home office, for example (I’m reworking mine right now, so this is top of mind):

  • Your desk should probably be bigger than you think.
  • Invest in a comfortable chair. Your back will thank you.
  • Use closed storage for paperwork and anything visual that stresses you out.
  • Use bookshelves for actual books or for neatly organized containers — not endless décor. Too many objects create visual noise.
  • Choose colors, artwork, and styles that YOU love, not what’s trending on social media. Trends don’t live in your house — you do.

Insighed Designs - office remodel 3D rendering

What’s one simple shift anyone can make?

Paint. It’s the most affordable, high‑impact change you can make with the least effort. The hardest part is choosing the right color. A few insider tips:

  • If you’re choosing a “color,” go grayer than you think.
  • Always look at samples against a white background (printer paper works great), not your current wall color.
  • Compare samples next to trim so you can see undertones clearly.
  • Get a large paper sample or paint swatches directly on the wall.

How do my design services help without the overwhelm?

No more guessing whether something will fit, match, or work together. No more endless scrolling trying to find the right pieces within your budget. I’ve already done the research — let me help.

Most of our furnishing packages are done virtually, so first you’ll send me photos and measurements of the space. Or if you’re in Madison or within 25 miles, I can come take those photos and measurements for you. We’ll talk about your style and how the room needs to function for your daily life. Then I’ll create a design using retail stores and give you a clickable catalog to piece it together in your own timeline.

Similarly, we offer Kitchen + Bathroom Designs for folks looking at remodeling. Having both personal and professional experience getting remodel bids, I know that process can be challenging to get actual apples-to-apples bids. But if you go into that process with a design in hand? Much easier to see how they compare.

Burnout taught me many things, but one lesson stands out: Your home should support you, not drain you.

You deserve a space that helps you breathe, reset, and feel like yourself again — even on the busiest days. And if you need help creating that space, I’m here.

Welcome to the final stop on this leg of the remodel tour – the kitchen and dining room!

This room sees the biggest transformation in this remodel. As a reminder, we started with the stairwell access in the living room and the dining room as a small bedroom. The main purpose of this entire remodel project is to redirect the stairs back to their original orientation – aligned with the back entry door. The previous owners had six adults living in this space during the pandemic. Can you imagine?! They needed this small room to be a bedroom and the kitchen to have more work and storage space. So they turned the stairs around and cretaed a little pantry above backend of the stairwell. We would rather have an official dining room than a 4th bedroom – and we think most folks that would want to live here after us would agree.

Insighed Designs - our house remodel - main level before

Since we are working on the stairs, we are going to take the opportunity and lower the walls on either side of the stairwell to unite the kitchen and dining into one big room.  Then the coat closet gets rotated onto the shared wall with the primary bedroom along with a built-in bench to create a bona fide dining room.

Their orientation along that wall allows the entry to get relocated to align with the front door. This new view into the backyard from the front door and uniting the two rooms make this modest home feel so much bigger than it actually is. Score!

Before we get too far into this new plan, let’s take a moment to look back and honor these rooms’ past lives. Here’s the oldest photo we could find – from when it was listed for sale in 2013. My guess is that these are the original cabinets from 1955; mainly because my friend has the same layout in a nearby neighorhood and her kitchen layout is identical – true story!

And this is how it looked when we bought the house back in 2022 and largely how it looks today…

And here’s how it could look with a modern makeover!

 

As for the dining room, it was shown as a bedroom in the 2013 listing…

…and with a very awkwardly placed, too big dining table in 2022.

But just look at how much bringing down those stairwell walls opens up the space!

Let’s stay here and chat about the dining room before getting too far into the kitchen.  Can you even with this new layout?!?! I seriously love how open it feels, how much more functional it is (a real dining table!), and these shades of green against a blank canvas paired with wood and black accents just make my heart so happy. The sleek lines of the table and low profile of the chairs bring function and simplicity to this relatively small space.  The playful mult-globe pendant light set in front of the old entry wall insert (love this so much!) as inset shelves set a mid century vibe and a fun juxtaposition of basic shapes.

One more moment to appreciate how much bigger this space feels….and this view from the new range location?! Yes. Please.

This view of the kitchen from the dining room isn’t too bad either, eh? I love the natural light this new modern yet mid-century french door brings inside. But the space between this door, the stairwell, and the kitchen is tricky. There’s no good way around it, literally. It’s tight. In order minimize to traffic jams here, we’re going to place a tall but thin pantry perpendicular to the cabinets along the sink wall. This allows the range to move next to the refrigerator, at the lowered portion of the stairwell wall.  If there were full depth cabinets in both of these places, it would be uncomfortable for even one person to move through. Like I said….it’s tight.

So we found a way to open it up! This set up is a great example of how a small space can maximize storage and still feel easy to move around. While open shelves aren’t for everyone, they actually function really well for those most used dishware and gives easy access to cookbooks. And an opportunity to add some touches of personal decor here, too! Who says a kitchen can’t have family photos??

 

Speaking of….did you know that we now have affordable kitchen accessories in The Collection? For just $125, you’ll instantly receive a clickable catalog with 8 items to refresh your kitchen!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We can also help if you are dreaming of a full kitchen remodel! You can choose from our basic kitchen + bathroom package with 8 standard items or customize your package to change / add catalog items. You can also add space planning or work with us in person if you are within 25 miles of Madison, WI!

Each of our designs come with a photorealistic image of the room, design narrative, and a clickable catalog. You can then do the work yourself or give a copy to contractors for comparable bids!