Woman Wednesday: Avy


Q and A with Avy from
Atlanta, Georgia

“When you design your life and business around how you actually function—not how you think you should—everything becomes more sustainable, more humane, and ultimately more successful.”


Q: What are you passionate about? 

A: I’m passionate about building systems that actually work for real humans—especially women, parents, and neurodivergent people who have been told (explicitly or implicitly) that they’re “too much,” “too scattered,” or “bad at follow-through.”

At the core of everything I do is this belief: when women are properly supported, they don’t just succeed—they lead better, build better, and change the rules for everyone coming after them.


Q: What were your younger years like?

A: My younger years were a mix of high expectations, deep responsibility, and a lot of internal pressure to “have it together.” I grew up in a family that valued contribution, intellect, and community, which meant I learned early how to be capable, reliable, and useful. I was the kid adults trusted. The one who could be counted on. That shaped me in powerful ways—and also quietly taught me that being needed was the same as being valued.

Choosing social work later on wasn’t accidental. It came from years of watching how poorly designed systems punish people for being human—and how often women, especially, are expected to absorb that failure quietly. My upbringing taught me resilience and leadership, but it also taught me how easily capable people can become overextended when support is missing. Looking back, those years didn’t just lead me to where I am now—they explain it. They’re why I build systems that don’t rely on self-sacrifice, why I’m allergic to hustle culture, and why my work today is about creating structures that let people succeed without disappearing themselves in the process.


Q: What is something valuable you’d like others to know?

A: One of the most valuable things I’ve learned is that struggling doesn’t mean you’re broken—it usually means the system around you is poorly designed.

If there’s one takeaway, it’s this: you are not meant to do everything alone. When you design your life and business around how you actually function—not how you think you should—everything becomes more sustainable, more humane, and ultimately more successful.


Q: What does feminism mean to you?

A: To me, feminism means autonomy, access, and honest choice.

At its core, feminism is about women having sovereignty over their time, energy, bodies, and labor. It’s about designing systems—at home, at work, and in society—that don’t rely on women’s burnout to succeed.


MORE ABOUT AVY: One thing I’d want to add is that a lot of what I do now comes from learning—sometimes the hard way—that being strong doesn’t mean being endlessly self-sufficient.

That belief shows up in everything I build, everything I teach, and the way I choose to lead.


Thank you for reading!

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