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Read moreThere is a particular kind of exhaustion that high achievers rarely talk about. It does not show up in a performance review. It does not get flagged in a quarterly report. It lives somewhere quieter, in the gap between what you have built and whether any of it actually feels like you.
Jillian MacKenzie knows that gap well. She has lived in it, worked through it, and built an entire body of work around helping others find their way out of it. As the founder of Purposefully Align, she works with corporate professionals, entrepreneurs, and women at pivotal crossroads who are performing at a high level on the outside while quietly wondering if they are living the right life at all.
Her answer is not to slow down. It is to align.
Jillian did not start out as a coach. She started out as someone who refused to be underestimated.
Fresh out of the University of Alberta with two degrees, she took a job at a private airport in the remote Oil Sands of Alberta, initially just to cover the mortgage on a house she had just bought while building her teaching career. What followed was one of the more quietly remarkable professional runs you will hear about. Within four years, she had worked every role in the operation: check-in agent, luggage handler, aircraft fueler, heavy equipment operator for snow removal, and team leader. By the age of 26, she was managing the entire airport and its staff.
She was also the only woman in most of those rooms.
Being a young female in a male-dominated industry teaches you things no course ever could. You learn very quickly who you are, or you learn what happens when you do not.

What she also learned was that performance alone was not the whole picture. She watched colleagues burn out. She watched managers leading from fear. She saw an entire workforce grinding through long rotations in a remote industrial camp with no real support for the human side of what they were experiencing. So she launched a yoga program in the Oil Sands and began teaching weekly classes to camp residents alongside her regular responsibilities.
It was the beginning of something she could not yet name.
The shift from logistics manager to coach did not happen all at once. It happened the way most real changes do: gradually, then undeniably.
After leaving the airport, Jillian moved into a Logistics Management role at a new company. Again, she performed. Again, she rose. And again, she noticed a deeper need beneath the surface of the work. She began offering informal coaching alongside her management responsibilities. Within ten months, that internal coaching role became her full-time position. Three months after that, she left the corporate world entirely and founded Purposefully Align.
The name is not accidental. Alignment is the whole point.
She had been devoting her time and energy to things that did not serve her or her community the way she knew they could. She knew there was more to life than a big paycheck and what society tells you success looks like.
She went on to study Dharma Coaching, yoga therapy, embodiment, and holistic nutrition. She became a certified Spiritual Life Coach and a Master Coach and Trainer at Highest Self Institute, where she has guided over a thousand students through the process of uncovering their purpose. She published a guided journal, Purposefully Plan, that has helped hundreds of people build more intentional daily practices. She speaks at industry events and works at the intersection of spirituality and professional development.
Here is what makes Jillian different from most coaches operating in this space: she does not traffic in vague inspiration. She is specific, direct, and uninterested in surface-level fixes.
Her framework is built around three movements: Awareness, Alignment, and Action. The sequence matters. Most people in high-performance environments skip straight to action, hustling harder at things that were never right for them to begin with. Jillian slows that impulse down long enough to ask a better question: what are you actually building toward, and does it belong to you?
She describes herself as the soulās Project Manager. There is warmth in it, and humor, and also genuine accountability. She is known for calling her clients out on their own patterns with a directness that is equal parts challenging and clarifying.
Healing does not have to be heavy. She holds space with deep compassion and a lot of humor. But she also holds people accountable, because that is where the real change happens.
One of the stories Jillian returns to most often is from her early days in the Oil Sands, when she poured everything she had into mastering her role only to be repeatedly dismissed by people who could not see past her age and gender.
She remembers feeling crushed. Questioning her worth. Wondering if she was even cut out for this. What she did next shaped everything that followed. Instead of retreating, she got curious. She asked herself what the experience was there to teach her. That reframe, from fear of failure to trusting the feedback, is now one of the core practices she passes on to every client she works with.
Fear does not have to be the thing that stops us. It can be the thing that shapes us. That is not a platitude. For Jillian MacKenzie, it is a lived truth.
Today, Jillian continues to expand Purposefully Align into something larger than a coaching practice. Her online community, The Accountability Club, helps entrepreneurs find their footing and direct their energy toward what actually moves the needle. She is building a global community for people who are done settling and ready to live with intention.
She is also, by her own account, living proof that building something meaningful and doing your own healing work are not mutually exclusive. They feed each other.
For the executives carrying quiet burnout, for the entrepreneurs second-guessing every decision, for the women who have spent years being capable in rooms that did not always honor that: Jillian MacKenzie is someone worth paying attention to.
Follow her on Instagram at @jillthedharmacoach, and visit her at purposefullyalign.com.
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