I’ve lost count of how many broker-owners, recruiters, and agents have sat across from me and said some version of the same thing: “Mark, I just don’t have enough time.”
Here’s the uncomfortable truth I usually offer back: the leaders crushing their goals and the ones drowning have the exact same 168 hours a week. The difference isn’t the number of hours on the calendar. It’s how they manage the tilt.
In Life On The Wire, Todd Duncan makes the case that perfect work-life balance is a myth — and chasing an arbitrary 50/50 split doesn’t produce fulfillment. It produces guilt, stress, and eventually burnout.
If you want to win the day, stop fighting for balance and start mastering purposeful imbalance.
The Reality of the Tightrope
Duncan builds the book around a wire-walker, and the image is worth sitting with. A tightrope walker is never perfectly balanced and never perfectly still. They stay upright through constant, small, deliberate corrections — one step at a time.
That’s how real life actually works. The broker-owners and agents who thrive aren’t the ones who found some immovable equilibrium. They’re the ones who learned to embrace the lean.
Purposeful imbalance means you deliberately lean toward work when work demands it — recruiting season, an office acquisition, a market shift that requires all hands — and toward life when life demands it: a new baby, an aging parent, a marriage that needs your attention. The secret is that neither lean becomes permanent.
Seasons of intense imbalance are natural and often necessary. The danger isn’t the tilt. It’s when the tilt becomes accidental and open-ended instead of intentional and temporary.
Four Moves to Defeat “I Don’t Have Enough Time”
Feeling starved for time is rarely an hours problem. It’s a symptom of accidental imbalance — drifting reactively through the day instead of deciding it in advance. Sound familiar? It should. It’s the same Friday-at-4-p.m. moment we’ve talked about before: the recruit ghosts you, the deal dies, and the drift begins.
Here’s how you regain your footing:
1. Decide the lean on purpose. Name your current season and declare — out loud, to yourself and the people who count on you — what deserves priority right now. Half the “no time” stress you feel comes from the exhausting anxiety of trying to give everything equal attention simultaneously. A recruiter in a Q4 growth push and a team leader with a newborn at home should be leaning in opposite directions. Both can be right.
2. Be fully present where you are. When you prospect while feeling guilty about home, or sit at dinner mentally locked into a stalled transaction, you double the mental drain and halve the output. Full engagement in one place at a time effectively creates the time you think you lack. Your family knows when you’re half there. So does your roster.
3. Make the imbalance temporary. Leaning hard into the business is fine — provided the lean has an end date and a concrete plan to lean back. “I’ll slow down after this market” is not a plan. “I’m all-in through the spring selling season, and in July we’re taking two full weeks off the grid” is. Open-ended leaning without a finish line is precisely where burnout lives.
4. Take it one step at a time. Don’t overhaul the calendar overnight. Wire-walkers don’t make dramatic moves — they make the next small correction. Cut one commitment that doesn’t serve this season. Protect one evening. Finish one priority before opening the next.
The Mindset Shift
Winning the day doesn’t require discovering more hours. It requires fewer simultaneous obligations, a conscious choice about which direction you’re leaning today, and full permission to drop the guilt once that imbalance becomes purposeful.
Your Next Move
Ask yourself one honest question today: Is my current imbalance a decision I made, or a drift I’ve been tolerating?
If it’s a drift, name your lean — and not in your head. Say it to your spouse, your business partner, your team: “I’m leaning into the business until the spring market closes, and then I’m leaning back.” The declaration is what turns an accidental tilt into a purposeful one.
Identify your lean. Make your correction. Own your season.
Win the day.






