Have you ever wondered which matters more: doing the right things — or simply doing things right?
Kutvostyle is a work-life philosophy grounded in science and shaped by real experience inside high-responsibility environments.
It helps you work smarter, not harder. More importantly, it helps you separate your worth from your work. No matter how important your role may be, you remain more important than the system you serve.
At the core of Kutvostyle lies a simple but demanding principle:
Calm precedes clarity.
When pressure increases, most systems demand speed, resilience, or optimisation.
Kutvostyle takes a different position: under sustained pressure, clarity erodes first. Without clarity, judgment deteriorates. Without sound judgment, performance eventually collapses — even if effort intensifies.
Preserving calm is not softness.
It is the precondition for sound decision-making.
Kutvostyle is developed by Valpuri Taulasalo, MD. Her work and thinking are shaped by long-term experience in high-responsibility, high-pressure environments where calm, clarity, and judgement are not optional. She is a specialist, senior-level medical professional, and successful gymnastics coach. She has experience in leadership as a head of department, manager of change in a hospital setting, and volunteer manager in national and international gymnastics federations.
Through this experience — and through studying stress responses and human physiology — she has formed her own perspective on professionalism at senior level, quality in management, and how to apply inspirational leadership in practice. Most importantly, she has observed what slowly consumes our professional work ethic and resilience — and how it can be restored.
We must preserve calm to preserve the quality of decision-making and the sustainability of our actions.
Kutvostyle is rooted in lived experience across high-stakes environments where decisions carry real consequences.
In elite sport, training alone does not determine success in decisive moments. Mental preparation and the ability to regulate stress are often the difference. Adrenaline must be managed, not suppressed — and used deliberately.