Before we talk about “balance”, it’s worth talking about what’s actually happening.
Care isn’t just childcare. It’s checking in on a parent between meetings. It’s managing anxiety quietly. It’s being the person friends call in crisis. It’s holding a team together emotionally while still hitting deadlines.

In creative industries especially, care can feel invisible.
We’ve heard things like:
- “Can you just keep this between us?”
- “I know you’ve got a lot going on at home but we really need you on this.”
- “You’re so good at holding everything together.”
Sometimes that’s appreciation. Sometimes it’s expectation.
Work-life balance often gets framed as a personal time-management issue. But often it’s structural. Who feels safe to say they’re at capacity? Whose caring responsibilities are seen as legitimate? Who gets flexibility without being penalised later?
We’re not going to pretend we have all the answers at Alive. But, what we do have is a commitment to handling situations like humans.
Flexibility, for us, has looked like:
- Adjusting deadlines when someone is overwhelmed.
- Redistributing work temporarily.
- Trusting people when they say they need space.
- Having honest conversations about what’s realistic.

And it also requires trust both ways. Flexibility works when there’s openness about capacity and responsibility. It’s not a perk. It’s a relationship.
One of our team once said, “The difference isn’t that life doesn’t happen here. It’s that I don’t feel like I have to hide it.”
That feels like a good place to aim.
We’re still learning. Every situation is contextual. Every person’s needs are different. We won’t get it right every time.
But we’re trying to build a way of working where people don’t have to choose between staying in the industry and staying well.
We’d love to hear:
- What has made work sustainable for you?
- When has flexibility genuinely helped?
- Where does the system still feel rigid?
Send us an email at hello@alivewithideas.com or drop us a comment on LinkedIn.
Part three will look at leadership and what it means without pedestals.











