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October 23, 2025 56 mins

What if the relief you’re craving isn’t years away — but one powerful decision away?

In this unforgettable episode, we feature Lisset King, an Emotional Ninja, Master Trainer of NLP, Hypnotherapist, and Huna Practitioner, in a deep and liberating conversation about what it really takes to let go.

With humor, clarity, and no fluff, Lisset unpacks how emotional baggage forms — any reaction bigger than the moment — and how it silently dictates the stories we live. From the “ant and elephant” metaphor of the conscious and unconscious mind to the universal truth that change can happen in an instant, she reveals how to dissolve anger, sadness, guilt, shame, and fear at the root so your nervous system can finally relax into safety, joy, and freedom.

You’ll hear her story of transforming pain into purpose, from treating her body like a rental to honoring it as a temple — and how she now guides others to experience rapid, graceful breakthroughs. No suffering required.

In this episode, we explore:

  • What emotional baggage really is (and how to know when you’re carrying it)
  • The truth about why healing doesn’t have to take years
  • How to rewire your beliefs using NLP, hypnotherapy, and Hawaiian energy work
  • The “ant and elephant” model for aligning your conscious and unconscious mind
  • How to train your brain’s Reticular Activating System to find evidence that supports your new identity
  • Why treating your body like a temple changes everything

This isn’t another “work harder to heal” talk — it’s a grounded, permission-filled reminder that transformation can be swift, kind, and lasting. Whether you’ve been in therapy for years, have tried every retreat and medicine, or are simply ready for your next level of expansion, this episode gives you the language, tools, and proof that freedom is closer than you think.

🎧 Tune in now and share this episode with a friend who’s ready to drop the rope, release the struggle, and build a future their body can trust.

💫 Resources & Links Mentioned

  • 🎧 Listen to the original interview on Creating You! Podcast: Creating You! on Apple Podcasts
  • Book a Breakthrough Session with Lisset King: Ready to release your emotional baggage and experience lasting freedom? Mention Honest Feedback and receive $500 off your breakthrough session → lissetking.com

  • Join Mastery Mornings: A free community for high-vibe growth, accountability, and transformation → masterymornings.myflodesk.com/join

  • Experience The Goddess Experience Retreat: January 26–30, 2026 in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico — luxury, ritual, and rebirth await → goddessbrittneyking.com/goddess

Honest Feedback was created by Brittney King and Lisset King.

Note: Honest Feedback Podcast aims to provide insights and provoke thoughtful reflection. The opinions expressed in this episode are for informational purposes only and should not replace professional advice.

Please send us your questions by leaving a voicemail at 971-895-4111, DM us on instagram @honestfeedbackpodcast or email us at thekings@honestfeedbackpodcast.com

Keep up with the podcast by following us @HonestFeedbackPodcast on YouTube

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Lisset (00:00):
I was an expert in my baggage.
I was an expert in my bullshit,my belief systems.
And yet I wasn't able to doanything about it.
And, you know, years later, itwas 2016 when I discovered
neurolinguistic programming.
And I was like, oh, we canactually rewire our minds.
We can change.

(00:20):
We can interrupt the patternand create a new strategy to get
what we want.
We can actually let go of thebaggage.
When someone said you could letgo of the baggage, I was like,
excuse me.
You know, what is this sorcery?

Goddess Brittney (00:32):
Welcome to Honest Feedback, the podcast
where deep truth meets boldtransformation.
We've created this podcast forspirit-led individuals just like
you.

Lisset (00:42):
Seekers of truth, personal growth, and meaningful
connection.
Whether you're navigatinglife's big questions, craving
more joy and fulfillment, orsimply looking for honest,
relatable conversations, you'rein the right place.

Goddess Brittney (00:54):
Through personal stories, actionable
advice, and transformativeinsights, our ultimate goal is
to empower you to create a lifethat's overflowing with
pleasure, purpose, andauthenticity.
We know you're capable ofincredible things.
So let's make it happentogether.
Welcome back to another episodeof Honest Feedback Podcast.

(01:15):
We are so excited to be back,and we have an incredible,
high-frequency, dopeconversation featuring me.
Yes.
Yes.

Lisset (01:27):
I am so excited.
We I had an opportunity to beon my friend Heather McMahon's
podcast.

Goddess Brittney (01:34):
Yes.
Oh, incredible podcast.

Lisset (01:36):
Oh my gosh.
She is such a masterfulinterviewer.
Yes.

Goddess Brittney (01:40):
Yes.

Lisset (01:41):
What I love about her is like she under, first of all,
she understands the work.
We're all very versed in thesame thing.
And yet she was able to getinto the nuances, ask beautiful
questions.

Goddess Brittney (01:51):
Absolutely.

Lisset (01:52):
While also making it digestible for anyone who
doesn't know what the work thatI do.

Goddess Brittney (01:56):
Yeah.
I just was taken aback.
I remember, I think we weredriving.
But listening to the episode,and I was like, hey, this is so
good.
There are stories in here.
I think you've never sharedanywhere else.
Like I was like, I know these,but these are deep cuts from the
Lissette file.
Yeah.

Lisset (02:16):
Actually, I know we were driving back from camping.
Oh.
Because I have a little goldbow tie.
It's a little like we weredoing flash tattoos on the
camping trip.
So if you are watching this,you will see the tiniest little
bow tie on my neck.

Goddess Brittney (02:35):
Easter makes it a little bit.
Yes, you should always watchour faces because it's
beautiful.
Yeah.
In case you didn't know, thisis also a visual podcast.
Yes.
But yeah, the conversation wasjust riveting.
It hit.
I felt like I got a newunderstanding.
Um, yeah, just a new 126 bitsof like information and nuance

(02:57):
and understanding.
And so I am so excited to diveinto this conversation.
Let's listen.

Heather McMan (03:06):
Hello, listeners.
I am, if you're only listeningand not watching the video, I'm
bringing ear to ear.
And so is it my guest becauseshe's full of the most beautiful
energy and spirit.
Lassette King is an emotionalninja.
I'm gonna just start rightthere and let her explain what
that is, who she is, what shedoes.
And thank you so much for beinghere.

Lisset (03:27):
Yeah, it is an absolute honor to be here.
Uh, emotional ninja.
I love the title.
I was working on what is itthat I actually do.
And uh around me, your baggagedoesn't stand a chance.
The thing that's keeping yousmall, the thing that's keeping
you from living the mostincredible life, uh doesn't
really, yeah, it can't, itdoesn't stand a fight.

(03:48):
It doesn't have a fight in it.
So I went with emotional ninja.
If you want to know, uh, youknow, accolades and things of
that nature, you know, I have abackground in psychology.
I am a trainer ofneurolinguistic programming, um,
hypnotherapy, masterpractitioner of hypnotherapy, as
well as um a HUNA practitioner,Hawaiian energy work.
And I bring all of that plus,oh man, I think like 17 years of

(04:11):
coaching in that field intosupporting people and in just
you know, blowing through thething that is keeping them
small, the thing that by thetime people have come to me,
they've exhausted all otherthings.
They've been to therapy for 10years, they sat with ayahuasca
in the jungle for two weeks, andall things that I love and

(04:32):
respect haven't have donemyself.
And yet the work that I call itmedicine, the medicine that I
serve, while it's notpharmaceutical in any way and
it's not plant medicine, it ismedicine.
We find a way to keep what'sbeen stored in you
energetically, generationallypast life, and we, you know,
heal up your karmic wounds, andyour life is just never the

(04:56):
same.

Speaker (04:58):
If we stopped right there, that would have made I
know my day and everyone else's,I'm sure.
That Lissa is she's the realdeal.
I will say that I feel as uh asisterhood in our um some um the
words, some of the sametrainings and those sorts of
things.
You're 57 levels above whereI've just climbed up to the

(05:22):
third level.
Um but come back and talk aboutbaggage, just that term, if a
listener hasn't understood whatthat means, because yes,
lighting up the baggage andgetting rid of the baggage is
some of the most beautifulmedicine.
And I love that you call itthat.
I have some clients that callit magic, and I'm like, uh,
magic kind of means that it'syou have to believe.

(05:42):
And this work works, even ifsomeone says it isn't gonna
work.

Lisset (05:47):
Yes.

Speaker (05:48):
Remember that conversation we had this
morning?

Lisset (05:51):
Yes, absolutely.
So baggage, hmm.
We have responses to thingsthat happen in our lives.
And, you know, I would be amissto say there aren't things if
there, if I just didn'tacknowledge that there are
things going on in the worldthat can be considered
triggering and things of thatnature.

(06:11):
And yet, you know it's baggageif it's disproportionate to
what's happening.
You know, if you're having areaction that's bigger than
what's actually happening, youknow, every emotion has a place.
Anger is there so that we knowwhen there's an injustice or how
our boundaries have beencrossed.
Now, if someone say cuts youoff on the freeway and you want

(06:34):
to chase them down and killthem, that is disproportionate
to what's actually happening.
We would call that baggage.
Do you have unresolved anger?
Do you have unresolved sadness?
And all of these things, whyit's why I so lovingly refer to
it as medicine is all of thesethings in excess will hurt your
physical body.
By the time it hits thephysical body, it is so in the

(06:56):
3D.
And it takes, you know, we aretold that it takes time to heal.
And yet the the magic in ourwork is that we know change
happens in an instant.
Like when we you decide youwant to let it go, that you no
longer want to hold on to it.
That's so we identify thebaggage, we identify what is the
belief that your life isreflecting back to you.

(07:19):
In every moment, your life isit's a feedback loop.
It is the ultimate algorithm.
You think Instagram's good, youthink TikTok's good, the
universe is feeding back to you.
What you believe at the deepestlevel in every moment of time.
And so when we grab thebaggage, the I'm not good
enough, the I'm not smartenough, I'm not lovable, the

(07:41):
thing that's been running thispattern in your life that's
that's repeating your, you feellike you're in the same movie or
the 50th season of the sameshow, it's because there's
baggage that hasn't been dealtwith, unresolved trauma, um,
things that you just neverlooked at.
We have so many habits.
It's easy to know a habit likeflossing your teeth, right?

(08:02):
And you know, some of us have agreat habit with that, and some
of us don't at all, or the wayyou put on your pants.
Everyone is either a left-legperson or a right leg person,
and you've probably never had tothink about that until someone
brought it to your attention.
And yet, our beliefs run likethat too.
Our beliefs are so autopilot,someone tries to give you money

(08:26):
or tries to help you, and yougo, What's in it for you?
What are you trying to get outof me?
You know, instead of what if itwere possible for you to heal?
What if it were possible foryou to have more?
And you're just so used to notbelieving it's possible for you.
That's a habit, just as much asputting your pants on on the
left side or the right side.

Speaker (08:48):
Makes it make so much more sense.
You said earlier, we as soon aswe make the decision to let it
go.
Can you talk about because Ican speak as a clinician and an
NLP practitioner, people getthey hold on to the thing, but
there's something to be saidabout as quickly as they chose
that thing, they can choose tolet it go.
Can you talk about that?

Lisset (09:10):
Absolutely, absolutely.
So we know that trauma canhappen in an instant, right?
But yet we decide or we hearthat we have to live with it for
the rest of our lives.
If it happened in an instant,why can't it leave in an
instant?
And it's the beliefs we havearound that, around our bodies,

(09:32):
our minds, our spirits, ourdiagnosis, you know, that's
like, no, well, it's got to takea long time.
It's like, sure.
Your unconscious mind has tomake you right about the thing
you believe at the deepestlevel.
So if you believe it's going totake a long time, it takes a
long time.
I am so congruent on baggagecan disappear in a moment that

(09:53):
my clients can't hold on totheir baggage unless they want
to.
And which way, in which case wepoke at it, we we have we have
a good time.
I love laughing with myclients.
If we're not laughing, we'renot doing it right.
You know, if we can't poke alittle fun at like we talked
about this a little bit on myother call.
We have a I have a master ofmind called uh Mastery Mornings.

(10:13):
And it's just like, but I loveit.
It's my precious, like, no, youcan't take away my not good
enough.
I got it from my grandma, youknow.
It's like we treated it like itlike an heirloom.
And it's just like, no, lifehas to be hard.
That's the way my dad taughtme.
And if it had to be hard, ifthat was a universal fact, that
would be universal to everyone.

(10:35):
And so if it's not, if it's nottrue for everyone, it doesn't
have to be true for you.
And it's that might make peopleuncomfortable.
They're like, but what do youmean?
I've had this my whole life,and and and then they defend it
and they fight for it and theywant to hold on to it.
It's just like, okay, okay.
My my wife is just anincredible practitioner,

(10:59):
spaceholder, and everything.
And if I say baggage that shejust knows is baggage, she just
goes, okay.
And I'm like, shit.
It's just a loving way to callit out, you know.

Speaker (11:14):
Right.
Do you find people come bump upagainst this because it just
sounds too simple?
Everything you just said soundsvery, it's clear, concise, it
makes sense, and yet it's tooeasy.
Aren't we supposed to sweat andcry and bleed when we're going
through this process ofreleasing trauma and whatever

(11:37):
else?

Lisset (11:38):
Sure, if that's what you want.
That's the way you like it.
You know, I like I said, I I'vesat in the jungles of Peru in
two weeks of medicine, justcrying my eyes out and purging
out of all the holes.
And it was miserable and it wasterrible.
And did I feel healed?
Absolutely.
Did I feel magical and and uh aprofound healing on the other

(12:01):
side?
Yes, I did.
And that is one way.
There are infinite ways to thelight.
There's not, there's not oneway.
And anyone who tells you oneway is that way, I'm not saying
that my way is that way.
I'm saying it's a way that'savailable.
And I've been doing it for longenough that I'm really
masterful at it.
You know, we played thismorning.

(12:22):
Like, do we think we can let goof this baggage in under four
minutes?
And everyone was like, Yeah,let's go.
And then we did.

Speaker (12:29):
We did with time to spare.
Yes.
With time to spare.

Lisset (12:32):
So I'm just absolutely aligned in in that knowing.
So you can come with me andtell me that it no, it takes
super long.
And I'm like, great.
Then I'm not your practitioner.
If you want this to be hard andpainful, I'm not your person.
Am I gonna hold you accountableon the other side of letting go
of baggage?
Because letting go of baggageis just one step of release.
It's the first step.

(12:53):
And then we have to create acompelling future.
Will your nervous system acceptthe new future you want to
create?
If your new future involvesleaving your husband or your
wife or leaving that cushy jobyou've had for 20 years, you may
not even want to move in thatdirection.
And so there's so many placeswe can stop ourselves if we want
to.
And then we have to takeaction.

(13:15):
I mean, you have to takeinspired action.
You have to take action towardyour goal, toward the person
you're becoming.
If you don't want to takeaction or you don't take action,
that's a choice as well.
You know, and you've got tofocus on the future you want, or
you can doom scroll all theterrible things that are
happening in the world.
You have a choice in everymoment, and you you have a

(13:36):
choice to hold on to it as longas you want as well.

Speaker (13:41):
So well said, completely resonate.
Again, as a clinician, I seethe struggle and the struggle
and the struggle, and then I canuse some of these things in
there, and they don't know thatyou know it's used appropriately
and ethically and withfidelity.
But there's even a mindset.
If I'm in therapy, I have to dothe struggle bus.

(14:02):
And if I'm in coaching, I'mgonna be held to this different
standard or whatever else.
As you describe all of that,you have a sense of self.
And I would love listeners toknow how you came to that
because this is all abouthearing about people creating
their the creating you is thename of it.
So creating their you for lackof better grammar.

(14:25):
You're welcome, listeners.

Lisset (14:28):
So how did I create me is the question.
Yeah, yeah, that's uh thankyou.
I will give my origin story.
I like many people, I can saythis because I've come through
the other side of traumabaggage.
Um, you know, I was uh Melissaas a little girl, changed me,
changed my genetic makeup,changed, changed the my outlook

(14:50):
on the world.
I decided the world was unsafe.
And and my little six-year-oldbrain created a part that was
protecting myself from beinghurt.
If you just assume people aregonna hurt you, you're not very
surprised.
And yet that's what the realityI kept living in and creating
and co-creating.
And you know, not to say thatmy six-year-old wasn't a victim,

(15:12):
absolutely.
Yet at 26, when I was stillbeing rude to people, um, you
know, confrontational, notallowing love in all the things
I was doing because I believedthat the world was unsafe and I
wasn't worthy of peace, youknow, all I was creating and

(15:33):
co-creating that world.
At 26-year-old, whose whosefault is it?
And that was the first time Irealized I was like, oh shit,
I'm I'm I wasn't responsible forwhat happened to me, but I'm
responsible for all of thisother shit going on in my life.
And that's when the lights cameon, and I was like, oh wow,
first time I ever discoveredyour mind can change your
reality.

(15:53):
And it was like the lights cameon.
And so I had all this awarenessof what was going on, and I was
aware of my baggage, but Iactually had nowhere to put it
or nowhere to let it go.
I could take it from therapistto therapist and go, hey, I
could tell you why I was a jerkfor that many years.
I could tell you why I hadaddiction problems, I can tell
you why all of these thingshappened.

(16:15):
And I could perfectly explainit.
I had it down.
Did you want to know my lifestory in six minutes?
Did you want to hear all mytrauma in six minutes?
Or do you want the hour-longversion?
Do you want to commiserateabout it all night over a bottle
of whiskey?
Because we can do that too.
I had, I was an expert in mybaggage.
I was an expert in my bullshit,uh, my belief systems.
And yet I wasn't able to doanything about it.

(16:37):
And, you know, years later, itwas 2016 when I discovered
neurolinguistic programming.
And I was like, oh, we canactually rewire our minds, we
can change, we can interrupt thepattern and create a new
strategy to get what we want.
We can actually let go of thebaggage.
When someone said you could letgo of the baggage, I was like,
excuse me.

(16:58):
Like, what?
You know, what is this sorcery?

Speaker 3 (17:04):
Exactly.

Lisset (17:05):
What is this sorcery?
And then, you know, I had anaddiction to Diet Coke, among
other things, and I had abreakthrough, and all of a
sudden it was gone.
I stopped treating my body likea rental.
I started treating it like atemple and decided to, I was
like, well, this work changedactually changing my life.
And so I went deeper and deeperand deeper into it.

(17:27):
And I was like, Well, of allthe medicine I've tried, and
I've tried many, this is the onethat's actually working.
And time and time again, I'vehad clients come to me and go,
I've gone to therapy for 10years, I've been going to
therapy for 15 years, couldn'tlike they didn't tell me I could
let it go.
And they didn't tell me that Ican I can be where I am now.

(17:48):
And so my it went fromawareness, I can, I was white
knuckling my thoughts, like Iwill create a new reality.
And it was a much slowerprocess.
When I released the baggage, itwas like it just cleared
everything in my mind.
And that's when I met mypartner.
That was when I made the mostmoney I'd ever made in in my

(18:10):
life.
Every every month is a game.
Like, can't we top last month?
Not because I need to, becauseit's fun.
You know, how many people can Ihelp this month?
Let's see.
I'm so excited to see, youknow, and it becomes I've
decided life is meant to be fun,and it has been.
And emotional ninja, like who,why would I choose that title?

(18:33):
Because in a room full ofnetworking, when people go, Oh,
I'm a therapist, or I do NLP, orI do hypnosis, I say emotional
ninja, they're like, You're theemotional ninja, aren't you?
I'm like, Yeah, I stand out.

Speaker (18:47):
You stand out without saying a word in this in the
most compelling way because ofthe energy that you have that
I've been able to experienceacross the screen these past
months or two or three, I thinkover 12 weeks.

Lisset (19:02):
Yeah, yes.
You've been there, you've beenthere about four months.
It's been great.
Yeah, yeah.

Speaker (19:07):
I get the I get the sticker.
I love the sentence andtreating my body as a temple
rather than a rental.
Yeah, that's such a beautifulmantra to have because it says
exactly what your intention willbe and anything that you do,
just knowing you've got thatbase that you're taking care of.
You got rid of Diet Coke.
It's really funny.

(19:28):
People listening, if you knowNLP, if you know, you know, I
got rid of popcorn.
Can you know how tricky that iswhen I break state?

Speaker 3 (19:36):
Yes.

Speaker (19:39):
So I've come up with some different words, but uh
yeah, I mean me, a bowl ofpopcorn and and a family-sized
bowl, not just a cute littlecereal bowl, yes, with a half a
stick of butter and salt, andthat would be my dinner.
And I was like, game on, I'meating, having gone through a
world of an eating disorder.
Coming, I'm eating, so leave mebe it to release that thing

(20:02):
that not that it had a hold asfar as the it was the baggage
around the thinking I deservedto treat myself poorly, and you
can't take that away from me.
And I feel like a lot of peopleget stuck in the doom scrolling
or the negativity of becausethey think they deserve to
mistreat themselves or others.
What what is something you'dshare with somebody in that

(20:25):
state?

Lisset (20:32):
I think of the person I love the most, and then I wonder
if I would if I would treatthem that way.
If I would speak to them theway that I sp I spoke to myself
sometimes.
You know, a Diet Coke is theone I used in the classroom, but
when I did my breakthrough onphysical health, um,
particularly, I was smokingcigarettes, I was drinking, I

(20:54):
was like, fuck it.
I don't even care.
I'm a very real person, youknow.
I have found a pill on astreet.
I went, I wonder what that'sgonna be.
Let's see what happens.
And then Googled what it wasbecause I just didn't care about
my body and I didn't think itmattered, I didn't care about
myself.
And when I came to, you know,the moment of realization that

(21:19):
like I saw it recently, and itwas the most beautiful thing is
like when you're a peoplepleaser, don't forget you're
people too.
You know, like like can we makeourselves happy?
Can we love ourselves?
Can like can I can I pleasemyself?
And you know, now I I I won'ttouch water in plastic bottles,
you know, like I'm veryparticular about the water I

(21:42):
drink.
And you know, I have a friendand I we've we've had a history
and she was pregnant and shelooked at she was like, Hey, is
this milk pasteurized?
And I was like, didn't you likedo math with a homeless guy in
the bathroom once?
I go, I care.
She goes, I care about my baby,and I care about my body
because it's what's feeding mybaby.

(22:02):
And you know, granted, I camethrough the other side of, oh,
my body is a temple.
Like, I love this.
This is the thing I get toserve.
I get to serve people, I get tohelp people, you know, who
maybe live were completelyhopeless.
I've had people that, you know,were on the edge of wanting to
end things and come to me andlike find renewed hope.

(22:26):
Now, I would why would I, youknow, you don't litter in a
church.
Why would I litter in my body?
And that love and care Ibrought into myself.
And that's not to say I love mythings, you know.
So I got a sweet tooth, I lovemy ice cream, but now I have
vegan and gluten-free ice creamat Kate's free shout-out to her.
She's incredible.
Best ice cream you can getanywhere.

(22:48):
And it's here in Portland.
I love it.
And so I do my best to treat mybody well because I want it to
last a long time.
Because the longer I'm here,the more people I can help.
And it's it's it's stuff thatwe know in NLP is reframing.
You know, I've I've reframed mybelief around myself as seeing

(23:08):
seeing myself as someone who'sworthy, as seeing myself as
someone who who who matters.
Like I matter.
I used to not matter.

Speaker (23:16):
And now I matter.
So it really sounds as thoughit starts with how you are
speaking to yourself andbelieving in what your place in
this world might be, what you'regoing to do with that.
And so you know you're serving,so you want to be around for as
long as possible for that.
What is the most rewarding partof this work that you do?

Lisset (23:49):
I would say when someone who didn't believe something
was possible, they come out theother side and they're like,
holy shit.
Like, I didn't even know, youknow, uh there was I'm I'm
wanting to check in withconfidentiality.
Yeah, I won't share personalstories, but there's one person

(24:10):
who she lets me share her storythe most, and uh it's just such
a fun story to share as well.
And essentially she came to mebecause she wanted to meet um,
she really wanted to meet a goodguy.
She really wanted she ran intodata man and had a terrible
history.
And yet she had a really bigoverwhelming belief that all men
were trash.
And so those conflictingbeliefs, your unconscious mind

(24:34):
can't hold conflicting beliefs,it can't conflict hold
conflicting truths.
And NLP is all over the place.
Uh, pharmaceutical commercialsknow NLP.
They know if they catch youwith the visual, you'll delete
the part about may cause suicideor diarrhea, you know, anal
bleeding, you know, because yourmind can't accept two truths.
So here she is wanting, wantinga good man, and yet I believe

(24:58):
that all men are trash.
And she came to me and we blewout her baggage, like she got to
a place where, you know,essentially it wasn't about the
men, it was about herself.
Blew out the baggage, had a newbelief in herself, and she
recently got engaged to the manshe met after we worked

(25:19):
together.
And the the moments that makeme like tear up is in the same
week I got engagement photos,two of these photos, you know,
where they're pointing at thering with their partner uh from
former clients.
And I was like, neither ofthose people thought that was
possible.
And now they're I'm they'resending me a photo from inside
their dream, and that's thatthat's priceless.

(25:42):
That's why I'm here.

Speaker (25:44):
Yeah, that's that's beautifully magical in its own
way.
I love that the unconsciousmind.
I have pretend, I have no ideawhat that, you know, we hear
unconscious, subconscious,conscious, uh all of the terms
running around in the world,some being backed up with really

(26:07):
great definitions, and peopleare then able to understand,
some not so much.
So for clarity purposes and andfun, talk to me about the
unconscious mind.

Lisset (26:18):
Absolutely.
I have found a great way thatlights me up, it's really easy
to explain.
So your unconscious mind,subconscious, they're used
interchangeably.
If you're talking about, if youhear some subconscious mind,
they're talking aboutunconscious mind.
And your conscious mind is thepart of you that's like, we're
going that way.
It's the captain, right?
And uh, I like to refer to itas the ant.

(26:41):
It's like a little ant.
And if you know anything aboutants, they're so diligent and
strong, and they don't, youknow, you could drop a tree in
front of an ant and they'll findtheir way around it, and
they'll carry something 10 timestheir their weight, and you'll
see them with a big ass leafgoing through and following,
following, following, thinkingthey're going in any direction.
And your unconscious mind islike an elephant, and the ant is

(27:08):
riding on the back of anelephant, and the elephant, the
thing about elephants is thatthey are powerful, beautiful,
majestic piece that remembereverything just like your
unconscious mind.
They're capable of incrediblethings, just like your
unconscious mind.
But they train the way theytrained elephants in the circus,

(27:31):
it's brutal, but we need totalk about it, is they would put
a rope around their neck andtie it to a stake in the ground
when they were little.
So when your elephant islittle, it gets a rope around
its neck, stake in the ground,and it fights and it fights and
it fights, and eventually itlearned helplessness.
And now there's a rope aroundits neck, and it's a giant

(27:53):
beast, and you could put it overyour desk and they're not gonna
move.
Limiting beliefs are like thatrope around your neck.
If you have a limiting belief,if you're like, this is the time
I'm going to hit this number,this is the year I'm going to
hit my biggest number in mycareer.
And your aunt is like, I ammarching, and it thinks it's

(28:16):
moving, but it's on the back ofan elephant.
Elephant's like, oh hell no.
Last time I went after mydream, I was disappointed.
We're gonna stay right here.
And so we're trying to movewithout the cooperation and the
rapport of our unconscious mind.
I think the unconscious mind isthe most important work you can

(28:37):
do to become one with it.
I tell my I talk to my bodylike it is the most brilliant
thing in the world.
Something happens, I get abite, I'm like, or you know, I
had a mosquito bite, I'm like,don't make that itch.
You know, heal that as quicklyas possible.
And my body has thatintelligence.
I might forget where somethingis, and I'm like, unconscious

(28:58):
mind, where is it?
And it pops up because yourunconscious mind actually does
remember everything.
I tell my unconscious mind, youknow, if you want to like get
scientific, the reticularactivating system, the part of
your brain that recognizespatterns, it is so used to
recognizing the pattern of I'mnot enough.
I'm not good enough.
No one loves me, money is hard.

(29:20):
Pick your belief that you thinkis so true, your reticular
activating system will find thatpattern.
So I just tell it to look forbetter patterns.
I'm like, show me where all theprosperity is in the world.
Show me how prosperous I am,show me how I'm already living
in my dream life.
And then we just pay attentionall day.
And we're like, I have a wholepodcast studio right here in the

(29:42):
basement of my house.
How cool is that?
Somewhere inside, there's athere's a little entertainer
that just wished, you know, likethis is a dream come true.
And and so you can tell yourunconscious mind you can when
you build rapport with it, whenyou release the limiting
beliefs, when you let go of theanger.
Sadness, guilt, shame that'sbeen holding you back, the fear

(30:06):
that's stored in there.
You just get so much controlback.
You get them, the ant, theelephant in alignment, and now
you can go wherever, whereveryou want to go.

Speaker (30:16):
Just giving it permission.
Yeah.
Is that all?
It's super helpful.
I have not I have not heard itput that way.
So I love that.
I I use the analogy of a filecabinet, and it's just the
unconscious mind has just keptall the files, and it then it
generalizes it to keep it allorganized.
And so everything that lookslike and feels like this must be
this, you know.
So we've come to a place wherewe've built rapport with our

(30:40):
unconscious mind.
We want to let go of thesethings.
Finding a practitioner trainedis a key.
And two, where how do we know?
How do we know we're ready?
How have you heard from clientsthat why do you think you're
ready now for the this?
What's what's the do you have atheme that you've seen in

(31:02):
people or statements made thatthey say, yep, now's the time?

Lisset (31:09):
Um a recurring theme is I'm I'm all out.
I'm I'm tapped out.
Like I've done, I've spent afortune.
I've spent a fortune trying tofigure this out.
I've gone to all the seminarsand felt the rah-rah rah and the
motivation, and you know, themotivation half-life fell off,
you know, or um I know what myproblem is, but I can't change

(31:33):
it.
I was like, oh, we're halfwaythere.
Amazing, awesome, fantastic.
You're gonna make my job thatmuch easier, you know, and
they're usually sick and tiredof their own shit.
They're like, I know what theproblem is, I just can't change
it.
Sure.
And so they they have they'relike, I have this problem, you

(31:55):
know, or I know I have aproblem, I just can't quite find
it myself.
And the thing is that we can'tread the instructions from
inside the box, right?
So it helps to have apractitioner, it helps to have
someone, you know, you can readevery self-health book under the
sun.
You know, it's like it's likereading how to ride a bike.
Like it doesn't matter unlessyou take action.

(32:16):
You know, you can you can readabout doing medicine in the in
the jungle, but you have to takeit to experience it.
You know, you can you can knowwhat your baggage is, but
oftentimes it does help to havesomeone outside of you to help
you.
And and I certainly believe, Ibelieve anyone can heal

(32:38):
themselves.
I believe it.
I I don't think there'sanything you can't heal from.
I we can get real spiritual.
I know certain things are onyour spiritual path for your
unfoldment, you know.
That is a whole separateconversation.
Yeah, if you know, if you'retired of it and you know what it

(32:59):
is, or you just you're tired ofyour own shit, you're like, I'm
better than this, I'm betterthan the results that I'm
getting.
You're ready for abreakthrough.
You're ready for an expansion,you're ready for an up-leveling.
And the beauty is I have a lotof high-profile clients, and
sometimes they'll come to mebecause they want an edge.
They're like, what's next?

(33:20):
You know, there's the processof digging yourself out of a
hole, and that takes as long asit takes.
But then there's those that arelike, all right, I'm out of the
hole.
I've actually built somethingbeautiful, and I want support, I
want to make it even how goodcan it get?
How much better can it get?
And so you're up-levelingwhether you're digging your way

(33:40):
in a hole or you're up-levelingif you're going that way.
And that's what people come tome for or come to ask for.

Speaker (33:47):
Yeah, I love that.
I hear a lot from all thosesame things, and then I hear
people get to a place wherethey're almost observing
themselves, like an out-of-bodyobservation of self.
I'm it for me, it's fulldisclosure.
That's sort of how I saw myselfon the couch with the popcorn.
It's like, this, what is this?
What are we doing here?
Right.
Um, and other clients gettingto that.

(34:08):
Can you talk about feedback?
Can you talk about because youmentioned in the beginning,
everything is feedback?
Andor maybe you didn't, maybe Iwas hoping you did.
I don't know.
This conversation will go as itneeds to.

Lisset (34:19):
Let's talk about feedback.

Speaker (34:20):
Okay.
Yeah, as another informationalpiece around what's going on in
your life, and then how you grabit and make a belief or or
perception around it.

Lisset (34:31):
Absolutely.
So, you know, the and and theelephant, that is the the
general how to separate the two.
Now we need to know how theelephant works.
And, you know, there's a wholelist, the prime directors of the
unconscious mind.
I love it.
I teach it, I've taught ithundreds of times.
You know, it's it's my favoritething to teach, and I'm
currently writing a book on it.
And I love simplifying it.

(34:53):
If you had to, if you had todumb it down to what are the two
main jobs of your unconsciousmind, it's to keep you alive.
If you're listening to thispodcast, go ahead and thank your
unconscious mind because it hasdone its job.

unknown (35:05):
Thank you.

Lisset (35:07):
And the other one is to make you write about the thing
you believe at the deepestlevel.
And everything else is inservice to those things.
And so your life is just afeedback loop of what you
believe at the deepest level.
If you're doom scrolling andyou're looking at a thousand
things to be upset about today,you're upset.

(35:29):
And you you something insideyou wants to stay upset.
And if you're doom scrollingand just looking at cat videos,
respect.
Like they're hilarious, youknow.
But that is that because youwant to laugh.
The algorithm knows, like youralgorithm.

(35:50):
Um it's for me, it's TikTok.
TikTok is the addiction.
Uh, the the the I love it, butI decide I want to go on there
30 minutes and I just want tolaugh.
And so I just skip anythingthat doesn't make me laugh, and
it goes, oh, they want to laugh.
Another thing to laugh, anotherthing to laugh, another thing
to laugh, another thing tolaugh.
That is your life.

(36:10):
Your unconscious mind is theprojector screen, your life is
the movie, and it's giving it'sgiving you a feedback loop of
the belief of the emotion you'remost addicted to.

Speaker (36:24):
That is so powerful, and exactly where people come
into saying, I I've got thisfeeling and I can't, it won't
stop.
And it's now it's distressingme.
And then you go back and gettheir their history around all
the things they've done that'screated that feedback loop and
that algorithm.

Goddess Brittney (36:42):
Yeah.

Speaker (36:44):
Wow.
Yeah.
You're doing a I love it.
I love it.
So excited.
Um, I like a little kid.
I get to talk to Lisa.
Any I just love the energy ofany other human.
And I just I love the extent towhich you take all of who you
are and use it for good in sucha beautiful way.

Lisset (37:07):
Yeah.

Speaker (37:08):
What is your hope as far as from now until five, 10,
20, 30, 40, 50, 80, 7 years fromnow?
What is your biggest hope forfor your life and the lives of
those around you that you maywork with or not?

Lisset (37:23):
Yeah.
So, you know, and now we'regetting philosophical.
I believe there's a shatteringof timelines happening in real
time right now.
There is um the old way that'sfighting for survival.

unknown (37:38):
Yeah.

Lisset (37:38):
And it doesn't have a place anymore.
It doesn't.
It doesn't.
It's AI when it takes over.
However, you want to look atit.
I'm looking at a utopian worldwhere you know we coexist in a
beautiful way.
And you know, I grew up onTerminator and irobot and all

(37:59):
those films as well.
But you can't, we can'tcontinue to exist in that world
with this technology.
You can't hide the truth frompeople anymore.
And the truth is that we'reinfinite beings creating our own
personal realities.
And I'll look over at the worldand I'm like, that's

(38:22):
interesting.
I can see all the cracks in thein the, you know, I can see the
house of cards falling.
And I haven't, I haven'tparticipated in that world in a
very long time because I'm overhere building a new world where
people are powered, where peopleare are living from aloha,
where people are living fromlove and unity and connection

(38:45):
and presence.
And I'm contributing all of my,I'm investing, I'm all in on
that world in every way, in myemotional resources and my
mental resources and myresources, resources.
You know, I'm building thatworld.
And I'm I just it's an openinvitation.

(39:06):
No one has to do their work.
You're listening to this,you're not listening to this and
thinking I want to stay in ashitty situation.
You don't listen to podcastslike this if you're that type of
person, but you know peoplethat are like that.
We know people that want tocome that get off on
complaining.

Speaker (39:23):
Yeah, it's a dopamine hit.

Lisset (39:25):
It's a dopamine hit, yeah.
Did you hear about this?
Did you hear about that?
You know, and I just don'tparticipate uh in that reality.
And you know, if the timelinesare splitting, I'm living in
this one.
Yeah, the if there are if thereis a multi-dimensional world,
which there is, I'm choosing thehighest dimension and I'm

(39:46):
choosing the highest frequency,and I shall continue to choose
that highest frequency.
And my invitation is for otherpeople to do the same.
And you don't don't get boughtin that it's all going to shit
and it's all going to hell.
Because then it will be forsince the be I for as long as
I've been alive, bless myfather, I adore him.

(40:08):
And he passed 12 years ago.
He was so sad, and he wasliving in his own depression
bubble.
Like he used to lay in the bedwith a blanket over his head,
just contemplating sadness.
I didn't have the worddepression back then, now, you
know, with all my years ofexperience, like, oh, my father
had depression.

(40:28):
He wasn't dealing with the warsor anything that's happening
right now, he was dealing withthe different wars that were
happening back then and stillthinking that the whole world
was going to shit.
And here I am and his daughterliving in a utopia
simultaneously.
You know, life is good.
I look around and I see howblessed I am.

(40:49):
And I know that's not the samecase for everyone, but for those
who wish to live in a higherfrequency and a high vibration
timeline, we've got to changeyour thinking.
What's the rope around yourneck?
What do you believe about theworld?
Because you get to co you'recontributing to that world.
I'm not contributing to thatworld.

(41:10):
I'm like, oh, I can see itfalling apart.
I'm over here building.

Speaker (41:15):
And how visceral that is to check in with yourself.
I feel like the earth is havinga visceral response to the to
the vibrations going on.
And if you're listening and youfeel like this is too boo-woo,
just reach out to Lisette,she'll explain.
It's easy.
We are energy, energy is aroundus, and what we do with that
energy matters.

(41:36):
Just the same as if I get up ona Saturday morning and sit in
front of the TV all day.
I'm using my energy.
People think they'reconserving, but you're using
energy.
If I go out for a walk, I'musing energy.
I'm not losing energy by usingit in a positive way, a
life-affirming way.
And I think the way that you'rehelping others is very

(41:57):
life-affirming for yourself andthem.

Lisset (42:00):
Thank you.

Speaker (42:01):
Yeah.
Guiding others.
I like guiding instead ofhelping.

Lisset (42:05):
Yeah, guiding.
I don't think anyone needshelp.
Yeah.
I think I think some peoplejust could use a little support
on the way up.
They need help, they need ahand up, not a handout, you
know.
Like we we're just likeconcentrate on my frequency.

(42:26):
How can I support others?
You know, and is it is it woo?
Sure.
You know, does it work?
Yes.
And we can call it whatever.
I before I teach Huna, I teachHuna intros, uh, which is energy
with the Hawaiian energy work.
And the first thing I askpeople is just say, I just want
to gauge from zero to woo.

(42:48):
How woo are we?
So I know how weird I can getduring this weekend.
And and you know, when I have aroom full of woo, we get deep
and geek out and all the things,and and I've just have so many
fun life experiences.
We talked about the, you know,how I became me, but there's so

(43:10):
much more fun, joyful miraclesthat I've seen and witnessed.
I think someone believingthey're unworthy, and then just
flipping a switch and going.
I'm reading their notes back tothem, like, well, this morning
you said you were unworthy.
And they're like, No, I didn't.

(43:30):
And I'm like, no, I'm yes, yes,you did say that.
I go, Great.
So check the changes there, andthen watching them be
completely different, then theirwhole life shifts.
And that's not for the faint ofheart either.
Like some people like theircomfortable bubble.
Yeah, and for that, get it.
That's fine.

(43:51):
No one has to change.
Like, no one has to change.
Like, that's you're fine.
You know, uh, one time I washanging out with a a friend of
mine, and I was having uh anexistential crisis, and I'm like
having all these things, andand then I like talked myself
out of it because it happens tothe best of us.

(44:11):
Like, I need I too cannot readthe instructions from inside the
box.
I need help.
And my friend just looks at me,she goes, bro, you're fine.
I was like, it was the onlything was the thing I needed to
hear, and it cracked me out.
And some people you just needto hear, bro, you're fine.
Like, it's not that serious.
It's it's not that serious.

(44:32):
You can let that thing gowhenever you want.
You want to keep holding on toum, you know, money is hard, you
want to keep holding on to I'munlovable, go ahead, hold it
tighter, you know, and or we'relet it go.
If you want to let it go, likethe link is below.

Speaker (44:52):
Yes, in the show notes, all the links.
Yes.
And you don't have that there'ssuch a relief and a release,
and a if some may say a placeboeffect, even in the you're fine,
you don't have to do anythingdifferent.
Like at that moment, thestruggle changes or stops.
It's like the um the fingertraps.
Okay, ready?

(45:12):
If listeners are lucky enoughto be watching on video, well,
as soon as I said that, now Ican't find it.
Anyway, the finger traps.
We all played with them when wewere kids, right?

Speaker 3 (45:21):
Yes, yes.

Speaker (45:22):
You pull, you pull, you yeah, and soon as someone says,
just relax, pull one finger ata time.
Oh it's it's incredible.
I love using it as an exampleof clients.

Lisset (45:35):
It's like, stop, but bro, you're fine, it's not that
serious.
Like, really, all people needis a change of perspective.
They don't even know the ropeis around their neck, they're
just like, Oh, I'm sorry for asecond.
I forgot I was a mysticalcosmic being that could fucking
do anything.
I forgot I had all this power,and this rope is actually just a

(45:59):
rope, and it's not actuallytied to anything.
I just believe it's real,right?
You just believe that yourproblems are real, but they're
not in the whole grand scheme ofthings.
Your problems don't compare,don't even compare to someone on
the other side of the planet.
So get over it, bro.
You're fine, right?

Speaker (46:17):
And we don't even have to look at it as a as a spectrum
of bigger, smaller, whatever,they're yours.
What do you want to do withthem?

Goddess Brittney (46:25):
Yeah.

Speaker (46:26):
Are they fun?
Are they comfortable?
You like hanging around withthem?
Okay.
People in the process of beingchemically or uh psychologically
addicted to something, theymight go, Yeah, this is cool.
Leave me alone.
You know, okay.
When they're ready, it changes.
And sometimes somebody may notbe ready in our realm of
understanding of ready.

Lisset (46:48):
Yeah, you know, uh it's I could be sad that my father
passed away with all thatsadness in his heart, or I could
be like, I could be so happythat he's free from it, you
know, and know that that wasexactly the life that he needed
to do all the things that hedid.
And at his funeral, so manypeople, it what blew me away was
how little I think he knew theimpact he had on his family.

(47:13):
Like he was the first of hisfamily to come from Colombia,
and I come from immigrantparents.
He was the first one to come,uh leave a very violent
situation, started a mechanicshop, raised money, brought
siblings over one by one by one,and brought our like a giant

(47:34):
family over from Colombia,brought him out of some really
terrible things.
And at his funeral, so manypeople spoke about like we
wouldn't have the lifestyle wehave today if it wasn't for him.
And he he would just focus onthe the negativity or the things
that, and that's not to say hehad he had sadness, he had
trauma, and like, you know, I'mnot my father's practitioner.
I I see and I recognize it, butin the whole cosmic scheme of

(47:57):
things, it was an episode, ablip in the whole theme of life.
We are here for a flash in thepan, a blip in time.
It's like, what are you doingwith it?
It can't be better, and that'sit.
Like that's kind of all I wantto tell people.
Like, it can be better.
My life is so much better thanwhen I was walking around

(48:20):
asleep.

Speaker (48:21):
Right.
And when you're better, you getbetter, better, and more
better.

Lisset (48:25):
The better it gets, the better it gets, you know.

Speaker (48:29):
Yeah, and I want to send that out to what you just
said about your dad for peoplethat that could be really
healing if we just stopped andperceived our parents or those
who have wronged us to say, thisis the first time they're doing
life, maybe, maybe not, andthey are equipped with what
they're equipped with.
Why would we want to hold on totheir baggage as well as ours?

Lisset (48:52):
Yeah.

Speaker (48:53):
Because I think there's a lot of grief.
I I see a lot of people dealingwith grief for for parents in
particular, and much of that isthat they're still holding their
parents' baggage of what theywere or were not.

Lisset (49:06):
Yeah.
Yeah.
I love I love my dad.
He was such a great man.
He gave me great hair and thisfull of skin.
I'm so happy.
You know, like I love him topieces, and you know, uh, he
made six incredible humans.
Like man, my siblings are justlike outstanding, like good

(49:27):
cream of the crop, great people.
I feel very blessed for thefamily I came from.
And I get to say, Yeah, my dadcame here with nothing.
And he built something, and Iget to continue, I get to stand
on the shoulders of that giantand build something even more
beautiful.

Speaker (49:43):
It's so cool watching you build.
And um, that Lissette has apodcast also, and so many
projects.
What's what's something you'reworking on right now that you'd
like listeners to know about?

Lisset (49:55):
Yeah, wow, there's so many things.
So, Honest Feedback Podcast,it's a great podcast I have with
my wife.
Love it.
It's a resource for me.
It's the way that um my wifeand I get to give back.
You know, uh, Mastery Morningsis a beautiful community, free
community that you can join andget some shit done and learn
some things and get somecoaching.

(50:17):
And what is biggest on my heartright now is two things.
I mean, working my one-on-oneclients, that that is how I
serve the most.
So reach out.
I it's very much for a shortperiod of time.
I'm going to move into paidconsultation calls.

(50:37):
But as of the this coming out,I'm pretty sure I still have
free calls.
So I would say, get on mycalendar, let's talk for an
hour.
You know, I always like to sayyou will have an something will
change and shift in that hour.
And if you want to go deeper,we can.
So I do an hour-long freeconsultation.
And thank you for letting metalk about all these offerings,

(51:00):
by the way.

Speaker (51:00):
That's what you're here for.
Well, not what it's not whatyou're here for.
Forgive me.
You are here to show the worldthat there is possibilities that
there are, and you are aconduit for so much healing and
and change for people.
And I want them to know.

Lisset (51:14):
Yes.
So thank you.
And on that note, my wife and Iserve women, particularly in
luxury retreats.
And our next retreat is January26th through the 30th, called
The Goddess Experience in PuertoVallarta, Mexico.
And it is at the Ritz Carltonof Eco Resorts.

(51:38):
It is white glove service.
We're going to treat you andawaken the divinity inside of
you.
So you are walking as thegoddess that you are.
The transformation, we do deeptransformation with me.
We do body embodiment work withmy wife.
Between us, we're doing ritualsand it's you walk out of there

(51:59):
a different person.
Anyone who's come to our luxuryretreats, they do not leave the
same person.
Well, if you follow me atLassette King official on
Instagram, and I will send youthe link for the goddess
experience because that is thatwe only have a few spots left,
but it's going to be beyondincredible.

Speaker (52:20):
People are changed listening to this conversation.
I am quite sure.
Yeah, I'm quite sure.
Absolutely.
So imagine this at a retreatlevel.

Lisset (52:30):
I mean, we're gonna spoil you.
We're gonna spoil you the wayyou just beyond what you ever
thought you deserved.
That's our goal.
We love we love transformationin a bougie location.
Like transformation is cool andall, but have you done it in
the bougiest of locations?
Because that is how we like totransform.

Speaker (52:50):
Ah, so you could firewalk or you could go do
this.

Lisset (52:53):
I think this would be yeah, it's a firewalk.
You know, I bet rebar with mythroat.

Speaker (52:58):
I you know, I like this flavor much better.
Um yeah, we'll set you ourgift.
I thank you, thank you so much.
I'm so honored.
And the emotional, the emotionsthat I feel in your presence
aren't uh anything butenergizing and just this this

(53:22):
connective spirit you have.
All the entire crew that doesyour mastery morning, you thank
you, thank you.
And all the information will bein the show notes.
You can message me, you canmessage Lissette, I'll give you
more information.
Lisette, what would you likelisteners to come away with?
What's what's your hope as theyuh are finishing up listening

(53:42):
to this with you?

Lisset (53:45):
My deepest desire is that even just one listener gets
a different perspective, a moreempowered perspective, and they
walk through their day a littlebit lighter from our
conversation.

Speaker (54:01):
Beautiful, beautiful.
Thank you.
This is this has been an honor.
I appreciate you so much.

Goddess Brittney (54:15):
Wow, that was just such an incredible
listening to it again.
I'm like, I'm so inspired.
I'm so inspired.
I just loved that you have somuch permission to you don't
have to change if you don't wantto.
And you know, we're both bigproponents of growth and change

(54:37):
and all the expansion, all thethings.
And it's because we like to andwe want to, and it's a desire
and just that freedom that youreminded people of like, if you
don't want your life to change,that's fine.
That's good.

Lisset (54:51):
Yeah.
Yeah.
Every everyone's life path isso different.
I know for me, I needed tochange.
My I could not survive thetrajectory I was on.
Same girl saying.
Yeah.
And so it is always aninvitation to change.
And if you don't want to,that's cool too.

Goddess Brittney (55:09):
But just that reminder, it was just really,
really beautiful.
And then I feel like it opensoneself up to go, well, do I
actually like the life that I'vecreated?
Do I want more?
Do I have dreams in my heart?
Because I know for me it'salways about getting to my next
level, you know?
And like sometimes people arelike, we gotta heal the past,
and da-da-da.
And I'm like, that's part ofit.

(55:30):
But really, what I'm lookingfor is towards the future.
And it's I want to create themost luxurious, the most juicy,
the most pleasureful, the mostgasmic future present now that I
can.
And so that is what leads meinto the space of like, yes, I
would like to up level.
Yes, I'm interested in growthand understanding where my where

(55:51):
do I have the my hand on my ownboot on my face?
I love that meme.
One of my favorites.
Little girl with search meme,little girl with boot on face.
I think it's a little boy.
Is it a little boy?
Child with boot on face.

unknown (56:04):
Yeah.

Lisset (56:05):
Yeah, yeah.
You'll see, you'll see whatwe're talking about.
It was, it was so fun.
And if you have a question,please give us a call at
971-895-4111.
Leave us a question, or you canreach out to us at Honest
Feedback Podcasts on Instagramand you can DM us your message.
People have really beenenjoying DMing us.

(56:26):
I know.
I know I miss the voices.
I know I miss the voices.

Goddess Brittney (56:30):
We're here for all the questions.

Lisset (56:31):
Yeah, all the questions, however, they want to come in.
We love having them.
And if you enjoyed thisconversation, which I know you
did, go ahead and hit that likebutton, subscribe, share this
with a friend.
And until we meet again, behonest with each other.

Goddess Brittney (56:46):
Bye.
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