Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Are you ready to
master the art of creating
content that converts?
Hey, I'm Mia, a mum of two, whowent from being a burnt out
ambo to six-figure contentcreator in less than a year, all
while navigating a late ADHDdiagnosis.
And I'm Kristen, also a mum oftwo and a former corporate
branding queen turnedentrepreneur.
My dyslexic brain seesmarketing very differently, and
that's my superpower, andtogether we're showing women
(00:24):
like you how to master videomarketing and create content
that generates income.
Whether you're just startingout or ready to scale, we are
breaking down everything fromlanding brand deals to building
your own empire.
Welcome to I Am that ContentCreator podcast where we turn
scroll-stopping content intoserious income.
No filters, no fluff, just realstrategies from two
(00:44):
neurodivergent mums who get it.
So let's turn your phone into avideo marketing machine and
let's go.
Let's go, guys, be professionalguys.
Oh my God, kim.
Okay, there's that intro done.
Well, kristen, I'm going to tryreally hard not to cry in this
(01:15):
message, but we have said toeach other that we're going to
send a little private message toeach other for our 100th
podcast episode, and I can feelmy chest getting all tight and
teary already.
But I just wanted to say to you.
Thank you for messaging me thatday.
Thank you for holding my handthrough all of the marketing
(01:36):
things that I have justcompletely swept over during my
journey.
Thank you for making me laughevery single day.
Thank you for see I'm going tocry.
Hold it together, yeah.
Thank you for being that friendthat I needed, who thinks like
(02:00):
me, who builds as fast as me,who just wants more than I know.
That was given to me.
Thank you for being basicallymy best friend, who I've been
(02:29):
able to talk to every single daysince we met, about not only
business, but our lives, ourkids, our partners, our dreams,
our goals, our loves, our don'tloves, and I just wouldn't have
been able to do any of thiswithout you.
I just wouldn't have been ableto do any of this without you,
(02:50):
and I definitely wouldn't havebeen able to host a bloody
podcast 100 episodes deepwithout you.
And we've been doing this fortwo years together now and
there's not been one day or onesecond that I have ever felt
like pulling out or not doingthis anymore, and I think having
(03:13):
a business partner like you isexactly what I needed, and I
thank you for pulling me out ofmy shell, for getting me excited
, for pushing me when I need tobe pushed, for being that person
that is just there, just thereall the time.
(03:35):
Our Slack channel is like myumbilical cord to you and I'm
just really proud of what we'veboth done.
And it's just the beginning andI just want to say thank you,
and I know we're going to do bigthings and we've always had
that trust in ourselves thatthis is going to go where we
(04:01):
want it to go and we're gettingthere, and every day with you is
just so much fun and I can'twait to sit down on your deck at
the vineyard and have a fuckingwine together, because what
we've built is so deserving ofthat.
And, yeah, I just want to say Iconsider you one of my best
(04:25):
friends, not only my businesspartner, but one of my best
friends.
And, yeah, I'm going to go andcry in the corner now, but thank
you.
Welcome to the I Am that contentcreator podcast.
We're cutting through the noiseto show you exactly how to
create scroll stopping content,land premium brand deals and
(04:45):
build a thriving online business.
No BS, just proven strategiesthat scale.
Welcome.
I'm Kristen Werner, joined byMia.
Let's go Again.
So it records.
Welcome to the 100th episodewhere we've taken 15 minutes to
get our shit sorted Meet 100.
Mia's mic was like no, notgoing to work.
(05:08):
My computer was like no, no,thank you.
Just a regular day, just aregular day here at the Hive,
here on the I Am that ContentCreator podcast.
And today, mia, we don't haveballoons, I don't have fucking
whistles, I don't even have apopper, because I don't want to
clean that shit up, but I'mgoing to put some sound effects,
(05:30):
like 100 episodes.
You guys are amazing, you soundlike such a mom.
I don't want to clean that shitup.
I know I was thinking that.
I was like, how cool, would wedo some poppers?
And Because I often watchpeople do like their Instagrams
or their TikToks and stuff, andthey do them great, they make
mess and they make it all fun.
And I'm like but you have toclean that up, like that's not
(05:52):
fun.
Record that content.
Yeah, pull the shit up.
Nothing about that content thatI think shit.
I'd love to do that because my,I'm not cleaning that shit up,
I'll just talk.
It's not worth the view I justrealized.
No, it's a real shame that wecouldn't do our 100th episode in
person together.
Yeah, like we had dreamt about,but that's all right, we'll get
(06:18):
there, we'll get there.
And I feel like sometimes, um,sometimes I feel like we've let
ourselves down by not doing it.
But then I kind of go we'retrying to build this
motherfucker, and we are, we'retrying to support a community,
and we are, and we're trying tosupport our families and we are
and we're trying to be mums andwe like we can only be so much.
And you know what, just,although it'd be hilarious, when
(06:39):
we meet each other, like wow,you're fucking weird, I'm, I
don't want to be your friendanymore.
It's heaps more fun.
Who's this real fucking lifeone?
And you're like it's you toosaga.
Well, I mean, yeah, I'm justlike when we meet, there will be
a lot of alcohol, so the maskwill come down and be like ah,
(07:02):
fuck it, no, it no.
I don't think there's any mask.
I don't think we can come thisfar in business and mask
anything.
And you're the one person that Italk to the most, I think, in
my entire subset ofrelationships, yeah, yeah, even
the one that I'm married to.
I don't think I even speak thatmuch to him because I don't get
(07:22):
the response I want.
I don't want to hear andfucking grumpy with life.
I want to be like, yeah, greatidea, let's do that.
Yeah, let's start that.
Yeah, hi girl, yeah, I knowwhat did I say to you the other
day.
I'm like, oh, I wish Jason waslike me.
Like, whenever I have goodideas, it's like, oh, what about
this and what about this?
I'm like just do it, let's justdo it.
Could you imagine, though, ifyou lived in that kind of
(07:44):
relationship?
I don't think I would either belike butt broke, poor and
living in a car that doesn'twork, or like, and that's kind
of, I suppose, okay, I was gonnasay we would be in a caravan
tripping around drinking everyday.
No, we wouldn't, because wewould have kids and lots of
(08:05):
stuff.
But yeah, yeah, and I think Isuppose, first of all, mia, and
I want to say, if you arelistening down and you have been
on this roller coaster with us,thank you, like thank you for
taking the time each week tolisten to our chaos, our
creativity, our moments of pivot, our moments of inspiration,
(08:26):
our shit talking, like we reallyreally appreciate, appreciate
you, just that's it.
It's, it's means a lot to us.
All bullshit aside, yeah, yeah,and we hope that we've inspired
you at some point along the wayto just do the thing, even if
it's messy or chaotic or itdoesn't make sense sometimes and
you, you know testing thingsyou just got to do it.
(08:46):
Yeah, and we love messy, don'twe?
I love messy.
Yes, and I think that'sprobably what we wanted to talk
about today is we wanted to justcelebrate that we made it 100
episodes, I think.
Um, most podcasts make like 30.
If you're lucky, some make 50episodes, but if you make 100
like I think I think we're goodto keep going.
(09:09):
I don't think I've stuck withanything for quite as long
before I'm posting on TikTok and, um, if we go back Mia to like
when I was like I think we needa podcast, let's just talk
through your emotions, thoughtsand feelings around that
conversation.
Initially I was just like, ohhell, no, like I'm not a talker,
(09:30):
I don't think I could do that.
And it was the same thing whenwe were deciding to create this
community and I was going to behosting Zoom calls and teaching
people stuff.
I was just like, holy shit, Idon't think I can do this.
This is not me, I'm not aspeaker, but it's almost like I
don't know, when you start doingit, you start to enjoy it more
(09:52):
and you end up loving it.
It's really bizarre If I lookback on my life, and I've just
always been this introvert don'tlook at me not doing that oral
presentation to this.
It's pretty radical for me and Ithank you for that.
Oh, stop, I know we might evendo a little thank you piece and
chuck this in the podcast,because I think we've learned so
(10:14):
much from each other that wedon't even realize we have and
like for everybody that, if youare new to this podcast, oh fuck
, I'm welcome.
It is chaos.
We are challenging your chaos.
We are helping you feel reallysafe in a place that, if you're
a little neuro spicy, if you'rea little neuro divergent, you
know we've got the whole gamutof things and we celebrate them
(10:39):
actually turn that creativechaos into magic your own way
and channel that energy intosomething that you can be really
proud of and you don't feellike a failure and you can
really accept who you are inthis space.
That sometimes tells you to besomething else or do it this way
.
And if you don't do it this way, that's not right and I suppose
like, why don't we rewind backfor those that are new to the
(11:02):
podcast to how we actually met.
So Mia and I have never met inperson, but we have a business,
a digital business, that'sgenerated six figures and is set
to do that again.
And we live in opposite partsof the country I'm in Adelaide,
australia, and Mia is inMelbourne and it all started
with a little cheeky DM and thereason that we want to take you
(11:25):
back here and we'll talk to youthrough our journey and kind of
the pitfalls and the highlights.
But I suppose this is to justsay to you start and start messy
, because planning andprocrastinating and overthinking
it just doesn't serve you forthe opportunities that could
(11:47):
come across your space.
Basically, I think yeah, and sooriginally I think so, mia was
tripping Australia in hercaravan when I first caught hold
of her TikTok.
So Mia and I are mad for TikTokand I went to TikTok because
I've done a lot of work onInstagram.
I've built a lot of businesseson Instagram.
(12:07):
That's where I was living mybest life there.
But there was a constraint forme and I've never exploded on
Instagram Like.
I'm under a thousand on most ofmy accounts and that's fine.
I've helped other businessesand my background is brand and
marketing and I love doing thatand being strategic for other
people.
But when you do it yourself, aswe know, it is a lot harder.
And so I was living onInstagram and that was fine, and
(12:30):
then I just got this scratchthat I had to itch, which was
maybe I could try it on TikTok,like what would happen.
So, over, I went to TikTok and Istarted there and I started a.
If I can get to a thousandfollowers in 30 days or less,
then TikTok's my platform,because there was no fucking way
that was happening on Instagramand I had a beautiful audience
(12:51):
on Instagram.
But I did find that there werea lot of family, a lot of
friends, a lot of people thatwere cheering me the hell on,
and I love that.
But I needed customers, Ineeded to build communities and
that's that's my human design.
We go into that in pastepisodes.
But I thought, no, fuck it, I'mgonna try.
And so I thought that's my,that's my challenge and I did.
I got in under 30 days I builta thousand followers and I was
(13:11):
like holy shit, this platform ismagnificent.
So, as the manifestinggenerator, the neuro, spicy
motherfucker that I am.
I was like I know what to do.
I'm gonna create a TikTokcourse and teach people how to
do that.
So I did, and I created aTikTok course.
That sold quite well and then Igot, I created a freebie.
(13:33):
That was a great lead magnet.
So that was all well and good.
But in my journey I stumbledacross Mia.
And when I stumbled across Mia,she was tripping the van in
Australia and I was like, oh myGod, that's my dream, like to
take my kids and my husband anddo Australia in a caravan.
I was like, how is she doingthis?
Like let me know more.
And the content was really, um,you've just got a really
(13:55):
friendly mannerism and veryinviting.
Like what I love about your um,your content is that you don't
speak in this authoritativemanner.
That's like you must listen tome and this is how I do it, and
if you don't do it, you're adumb, dumb, like you've just got
(14:15):
this way.
That's like, hey, like I didthis and it fucking worked and
I'm just me and I'm just aparamedic and I'm just a little
nobody, if you will, but I didit, and so it was really it's
authoritative in its own way.
And I suppose, as we speak toyou as you guys as well.
It's about you don't have to beloud and obnoxious, and you
(14:38):
know sometimes how I can feel Iam, but very in your face, you
must do it this way, and if youdon't do it this way, you are
wrong.
But the content was just really.
I mean, you do journey contentvery well, but it was that kind
of content and so I was likeokay, so I'm starting, I'm
listening to, I'm watching herTikToks, I'm saving her TikToks.
I'm like how the fuck is shedoing this?
Like I need to know this.
(14:58):
And then I've also got my otherpodcast, um, going on the
magnetic brand builder podcast.
I was like I'm gonna see if shewants to hop on the podcast.
I think we did a few littlemessages back and forth.
It was like hey, you want to bemy podcast.
And you're like yes, and youknow that was, oh my god, no,
how could I possibly be in apodcast?
Shit, no, no, no, no, no.
(15:20):
I'm like she's so comfortable.
Of course she wants to be on apodcast.
She's just got this like greatfollowing on TikTok, and so we
tried that for a bit.
And then there was just thismoment that clicked for me,
watching Mia's content andbuilding what I was building
around.
You know, helping peopleunderstand their brand and
building a brand online andbuilding for the long vision and
(15:42):
understanding your deep why andall those things that I know
are fundamentally important tostaying the course.
And I'm building that overthere and Mia's building this
incredible community that arelearning affiliate marketing,
are learning UGC andunderstanding and following her
and like, how did you do it?
And the comments andinteractions were.
There was lots of comments andlots of interactions and I could
(16:03):
see that there was a communityfollowing her that wanted to do
what she did but didn't know howto bridge this gap between
starting online and building abrand that you can do what
you're doing in affiliatemarketing or UGC, but then take
it further and build a businessthat's sustainable.
And so I just sent Mia cheekyold Facebook voice DM.
(16:27):
We've still got it and we mighteven if I can find it, I might
even um put it into this podcast, lovely, um.
So it's good to hear fromTikTok, because I couldn't be
bothered doing the TikTokmessages anymore, because I'd
rather be insane in terms of notbeing able to do a voice
message, because I have clearlyway too much to say.
But total side note, because mybrain thinks quite fast, as I'm
sure I'm gathering yours doestoo, in terms of and I'm just
(16:49):
going to put it out there to theuniverse.
You can take it or leave it,because I just want to throw the
idea out there, but is theresomething or some way we can
pull our expertise together tocreate something that can
service our audience in a uniqueway?
For example, like yes, I lovethe whole affiliate marketing
stuff.
I have been doing it on thewithout really even knowing in
(17:11):
my business, but obviously Iwould love to get more in it on
a high ticket and I've got a fewof them, but they're not like,
they don't run crazy all thetime.
So my side of affiliatemarketing and my side of
business is obviously coming inwith really understanding your
brand and getting rock solid onwhat that is.
And I do have a course and amembership about that.
And then you've got such anincredible way of walking people
through how to do it and whatyou've done and where you've
come from, and I'd love to see.
(17:34):
I don't really know what I'mputting out to the universe, but
I just it's an itch that I wasjust wanting to scratch and have
a chat to you about.
I know that you're doing somuch, especially with affiliate.
You know affiliate marketing,e-commerce and stuff like that
but is there room or somethingthat we could combine our forces
in our community and createsomething, a course, a workshop,
a something that we can provideto our communities that will
(17:55):
really educate them in terms ofdoing this online business slash
, affiliate marketing, properly?
Yeah, I don't really, I don'tknow.
I just I just felt like I hadto send you this message and ask
what your thoughts are Like the.
Yeah, I don't really, I don'tknow.
I just I just felt like I hadto send you this message and ask
what your thoughts are like.
The first thing that came to mymind was um, on instagram,
there's those two women that didthe reels course and they were
two separate businesses and thenthey came together and created
this reels course the reelsqueens, I think they're called.
I can't remember their names,but I was like could we do
(18:23):
something?
Can we think is meaningful,that will actually create her a
business?
And I suppose one of thestrange things is, I know that I
could do this on my own, as Iknow you could too, but we're
busy and we both have audiencesthat are quite, I want to say,
busy, are quite interactive,like they want, like mine isn't
like 20, 30,000 followers, butthe followers that I've got ask
a lot of questions.
(18:43):
My email list ask a lot ofquestions um, the membership,
the courses.
I've created a really strongcommunity.
So it may be absolutely nothingand you might be like mate, I'm
so busy, thanks, but no thanks,and that's fine, it's just.
I wanted to put it out to theuniverse and just ask if it's
something that maybe we shouldthink further on what we could
create and combine our forces tobe like super freaking powerful
in this space.
But it was basically like, hey,I don't know you, you don't
(19:07):
know me, I've got this idea,what should we do?
And the reaction was what, mia?
Well, it's funny because yousent it to my other random
Facebook page like not mypersonal one, my business one
and I couldn't get the freakingpassword to get in there to read
the message.
But I could see it was thereand I knew what it was going to
say before I even read it.
(19:28):
It was weird.
I just knew exactly what it wasgoing to say and I knew in my
gut because I had been followingyou as well and I'm like, well,
it's going to be.
Yes.
I just got this weird feelingand so I opened it and sure
enough, it was you saying do youwant to team up somehow?
And yeah, that's where it allstarted.
And I mean I obviously don'tcome from a marketing or
(19:48):
branding background, so I wasjust winging it.
I was just creating a lot ofcontent, having fun, had no idea
.
I mean, obviously I started,tried to start other businesses
in the past with no realknowledge, knowledge.
(20:11):
So I came into it with thisvery naive, just winging it type
of attitude and meeting youmade me realize, holy shit, I
have skipped over so muchfundamental stuff that you
absolutely need to do inbusiness to make it work
long-term.
And you know three, I thinkit's going on.
Four years later, I was stillhere and, in the big scheme of
things, when you look at a lotof creators who are trying to
make this work, not many hangaround for that long
(20:35):
consistently and, um, that'spart of this game is just almost
being obsessed with it, butloving it along the way.
And when you meet someone whoyou just connect with, that
takes it to another levelbecause all of a sudden you've
got this business bestie and youboth think the same, you both
have the same goals and ideasand it's just blossomed into
(20:57):
this thing.
And it's only just thebeginning.
And I'm fucking grateful thatyou messaged me that day,
because if you didn't, I don'tknow, I don't know where I'm.
I assume I would still be heredoing something.
I don't know what it would be,but it's almost like the
universe just saw us both flyingaround on TikTok and just
connected.
The thing that then blows mymind as well is then you know,
(21:21):
like and me and I have builtthis fucking who knows
relationship that there hasn'tbeen many moments where we've
gone, like, had an argument tothe point of like, fuck you,
like I can't be bothered withthis anymore.
It's like okay, like we'vechallenged each other, but in a
way that's like okay, I see yourpoint All right, and we move
fast and we move quick and wepivot and there's no time to
fuck about.
We got to go, and so I thinkthat's been a huge win for both
(21:46):
of us.
But when we um had did ourhuman design with Yvette May and
when we did the frequencyproject with her and there was
one point where Yvette did ourum, our human design charts and
she's like she's come togetherbecause obviously Mira and I did
it together and she was like Idon't know what's going on.
But you two, your human designsphysically and you know,
(22:08):
astronomically and whatever theycomplement each other, like
everything that Kristen doesn'thave Mia's got, everything that
Mia doesn't have Kristen's got,and so like, for some reason,
the universe is like y'all,y'all better get together, y'all
better start a business.
You fucking take it to the moon.
So I think that blows my mind.
(22:28):
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
And we still, to this day, seeso many universe signs and all
that woo-woo stuff together andit's just, yeah, it's, it's
pretty freaking cool.
Yeah, and I think you know, indoing that, you know, once we
started then building thisbusiness, and what we wanted to
also talk today is this comingback to yourself and coming back
(22:50):
to where we started thisjourney and why we started this
journey, and we've helpedhundreds of women in this
process, and I think you know,as entrepreneurs, you can get
lost, and we've just had recentdiscussions about you know,
being a little bitneurodivergent, whatever that
looks like for you, or you mightjust be seriously fucking
(23:11):
creative and you need to channelthat energy somewhere, and
often, as an entrepreneur, itmeans putting it into a business
idea, putting it into a shinyobject, like trying the next
thing, because you know you'remeant for something more.
Like you fucking know it inyour bones you're meant for
something more, and so there'sbeen times where we've channeled
that energy really hard andwe've missed the mark a little
(23:32):
bit, and that's okay, that'sfine.
But no matter what, since westarted this journey, both
separately from where we werebefore and now come together and
now, as we refocus and regroupand keep moving, the goal aim
for both of us and correct me ifI'm wrong, but for me
personally, like I'm right now,I'm just looking at a picture
that's behind my computer.
(23:52):
That's darling, just fuckingown it.
And that is something I boughtwhen, before I started the Onnit
project, when I was maderedundant, I went to a um, an
event that was around contentcreation, because Instagram had
just come out.
I got made redundant, instagramhad kind of just launched.
So there was this new phase andwhenever I've started, I I've
only ever used social media tobuild businesses.
(24:13):
I've never used social media toactually be social, maybe for
Facebook when it first started,and so I went along to this
event and I remember it wasabout $600.
I'd just been made redundant.
I was like what are you doing?
You can't, you can't bespending this kind of money.
But my husband bless his cottonsocks was like no, go along.
I remember the women I met.
I remember what happened onthat day.
I remember buying that piece ofartwork because we'd sit around
(24:38):
the dinner that night and, um,one of the women that I'd met at
the at the this workshop, saidto me oh my God, you should buy
this.
Like you're always saying justjust own it, just fucking own it
.
And I was like you literallymet me like three hours ago and
she's like I know, but you justlike.
There's just something aboutyou Like I've heard you say it a
few times I am which is nomatter what.
And in inside our community,when the members inside our
(25:09):
community say it's hard, I can'tdo it, I don't know what to do
next, what are we like?
All we want to do is just shakeyou.
But you could fucking do this,how we?
How are we going to do it?
How are we going to take thenext step?
Okay, you don't know how to.
Let's just take one.
Don't take 10, take one.
I think and you're the same inwatching your journey as well
and I want to hear your versionof it but I think that is the
(25:32):
most powerful thing to all ofthis is maybe from the outside,
and even sometimes I think wefeel like maybe we've pivoted or
we've gone a bit this way orthat way, but we still stand so
fucking concrete in.
If you are part of ourcommunity or you meet me in
person and you say to me, oh, Ican't do it, I'm gonna shake you
(25:52):
and be like, yes, you fucking,can you take one step?
Don't take five, don't take six, take one, because one step is
closer than no steps and that isjust fucking fact and I'll take
that to the grave.
I'll stand on the hill and takethat to the second grave.
And I didn't actually realizethis was part of my deep why
(26:12):
until you made me do this deep,why work?
But I realized that I wasdocumenting all these journeys.
So my UGC journey, my affiliatemarketing journey, like I love,
just documenting what I'm doing,because I want other women to
see them in me, me in them, them, and just that is my way.
(26:34):
No, I want them to seethemselves in me.
Does that make sense?
Anyway, through what I'm doing,I'm saying girls, look, I'm
doing it, look at me, this isexactly what I'm doing, this is
how I'm getting there.
Like you can do it too, and Ithink that's why I love journey
content for myself, cause it's,you know, part of my human
(26:55):
design as well.
I respond I like to buildcommunities, and but I I'm not a
very good um, what could yousay?
Get up on stage and teacheveryone something, even though
I know I will get there one daybut being an example for other
women and just seeing me do it,I'm hoping that that inspires
(27:16):
them to do it, and that's why Ilove doing journey content, just
being like you know what I'vemade mistakes.
Yes, cool, that's what businessis all about.
And actually I heard a good.
I was listening to a podcastthis morning and she was talking
about how sort of irritatingand frustrating it can be when
you're not making money in yourbusiness.
But then she's like well, yougo to university, you drop
(27:39):
$30,000 on a university courseto learn one topic per semester
and you are earning no moneybecause you are learning.
It is a process.
You're learning, you are doingall the things, and that could
take you four years, and youknow people expect to make money
in their business week one,otherwise they give up.
So I think it's reallyimportant for mentors like us to
(28:03):
show these women that it's notall perfect.
It doesn't happen fast.
You have to enjoy it, you haveto lean into who you are, you
have to test things, try things,take bits and pieces and make
your own little package on whatworks for you.
And I want our journey and whatwe're doing to be, you know, an
(28:25):
inspiration to other women, tomake them realise oh, maybe I
can do that.
They're doing it.
Why can't I?
Yeah, and I think that's what Ilove, that's what's really
powerful and that's comes backto that.
You know the story content andthat's what brings people in,
and you know, I think what I'mproud of what we've done is that
(28:45):
we've been transparent, likethere's not been a moment where
we haven't gone.
Oh fuck, we better tell thehivers what we're doing, cause,
like you know, like we haven'ttried to cover it up, we're not
embarrassed by times we fuckedup, like some would call it
failure, and I think what'sreally beautiful about us and
our community is.
So I'm undiagnosed ADHD,whatever, probably never going
(29:05):
to get diagnosed, but I do havedyslexia.
I know that about myself.
I know that as a kid Istruggled a lot and I used to
think I was really stupid andreally dumb.
And then I found my calling andI realized that it really was
my superpower and it wassomething that I was able to
think outside the box and myvision was enormous and I can
visualize something and thencreate it like what a fucking
(29:27):
superpower.
And so for me and and I knowfrom you and the decisions we've
made we've never stopped in ourbusiness and gone.
Oh, but what will people say?
What will they think?
Like we've had moments like, ohfuck, did it?
Are we doing it again?
Have we done that?
But we've, no matter what.
It's always around the samecore thing, like it's not.
(29:49):
Like we've gone and donecrochet one week and fucking
plants the next.
It's always been around.
How can we empower women to getshit done and how can we do it
in a way that they don't feeltrapped?
You want to make some money?
Cool, do UGC.
Fucking oath, we know thatworks.
Go and do it.
And what it's going to do whileyou're there.
(30:10):
It's going to make you betterat marketing.
It's going to make you betterat video marketing,
communications, branding.
So you should go do that.
But now, if you want to build adigital product that you can
scale to six figures and beyondfuck an oath, you can do that
Like it's all around that corething.
It's all around understandingyour personal brand and how to
leverage that.
That, I think, is part of kindof our combined superpower in
terms of how and why we'rebuilding a community to kind of
(30:33):
show them that it's okay to fuckup and it's okay to what the
outside world would call fail,but we've done it in a way that
we're still making money, we'restill building a community,
we're still successful.
Does it look like the linearpath that a neurotypical person
would take?
(30:54):
No, does it look a bit chaotic?
Yeah, a little bit, a littlebit, a little bit.
But is it working Like?
Yes, it is, and it's working ina way that makes us happy, and
if we're not happy, that's whenwe've pivoted, makes us happy,
and if we're not happy, that'swhen we've pivoted, when we've
felt stuck, that's when we'vehad to pivot because our human
design and our brains, like you,will burn out to the point
(31:15):
where you will actuallydisappoint your community
because you can't lead them here.
So I think that's reallyimportant if you're listening
and you feel like, fuck, yeah, Ipivot a lot, yeah, I do look at
the shiny object, yeah, I do, Ido want the big vision thing,
but I can't do it.
I haven't been able to do ityet.
It's okay, like it's okay.
Test what that gut feeling istelling you.
Yeah, you need to fail to besuccessful.
(31:36):
And they're not failures.
It's this one big scienceexperiment and we're really
leaning into making these womenrealize.
I mean, I can't speak forneurotypicals because I'm
definitely not one, but when youare a bit neurodivergent and
you're wired differently, youcannot succeed by following
(31:58):
somebody else's rule bookbecause, yes, it may work for
them and other particular people, but if you feel this block
inside you and something isn'tright and you just want to lean
into who you are and how you'rewired, it's not going to work,
because you're going to startresenting your business.
You're going to start, you know, doing things that you don't
(32:18):
want to do.
And then what's the point ofbuilding a business for freedom
and creativity and fun when youfeel like you're just back into
a nine to five because you'refollowing someone else's rule
book and you know maybe you'relaunching all the time you hate
launching or maybe you're doingsomething.
You know you're in one nichetopic and one very niche down
box and you're feelingsuffocated.
(32:39):
Why do that?
When it's your business?
You, an adult, you can dowhatever you want and we're
teaching our students to lean sofucking hard into building your
personal brand and who you arethat you can pivot and breathe
and do a few little things toscratch the itch and it's fine.
(33:02):
You're not this chaotic failurebecause you've got three side
hustles and a business.
That's just how you're wiredand that's how you work and
that's okay.
It's normal in terms of you know, for me personally, being the
manifesting generator, I builtto do a lot of things and for so
long in my life that felt likea failure because I was like, oh
, but I'm doing that and thatand that, and even currently
(33:24):
I've got a few different thingson as well, but if you take them
away, that's like saying to meyou will fail at that, so don't
try it Like it's.
It's about how you can testdifferent things and challenge
yourself in ways that it mightbe one.
It might be that you do startdoing home plants because that's
(33:44):
something that an outlet thatyou love, but then you can build
the business here or you canstart growing your digital
product online or building yourcommunity or generating that
reoccurring income, becausethat's what you ultimately want
is that income.
So get that on a topic thatstill lights you up.
But if you've got this itch,that's like you know what but I
really fucking love house plantsI'm just gonna buy a whole heap
.
Fucking started painting pots.
(34:06):
Mate, there's a heap of pots inmy shed.
I haven't finished them.
Probably will go back to themin a moment and you don't have
to monetize every singleinterest that you have.
But as long as your personalbrand has a through line and you
have a bit of a niche audience,like the people that you want
to talk to specificpsychodemographics or whatever
(34:26):
then, and what we've done isbuilt this umbrella business
where we can breathe and doin-person events or workshops or
memberships or courses and like, have a play around with all
these different things andscratch our itches without
having to burn the whole thingdown every time we want to make
(34:48):
a little change.
For a neurodivergententrepreneur, that's gold,
because we need that, and I'mgoing to make an Instagram
carousel out of this one.
If you're feeling like you'remulti-passionate and you feel
like that is not a good thing inbusiness, because everyone
tells you to focus and nichedown and the riches are in the
(35:09):
niches and all that sort ofstuff.
Take a look at Richard Bransonfull ADHD and he's got an empire
that encompasses over 300independent companies.
And look at him now and heopenly talks about his ADHD and
whatnot.
Elon Musk he's, you know, afreak of nature and he's just
(35:32):
got companies coming out of hisears.
But the difference with ourbrains and how we're wired is
that you know we're based oninterest, like we love doing
things that are interesting tous and we're risk takers and you
know we've got a lot of goodqualities.
(35:54):
But someone looking on theoutside who's telling you to
pick one product, one launchmethod, one platform yes, that
can work.
You might look a bit messy tothose people, but you're making
it work in your own way andmaking it fun.
Who wants to just do one thing?
(36:15):
I don't, and you can make itfun in a way that still works,
that still generates you anincredible income, but you don't
have to stick to the exactrules, and I think that's
probably if we reflect over thelast couple of years there are
moments where we've stuck to therules, like, for example, this
year, our word of the year isfocus.
(36:35):
Right Now I think we've done agood job and we're not throwing
that out exactly, but we had totry this okay, let's do it by
the rules.
To try this, okay, let's do itby the rules.
And it it worked, absolutely itdid, but it crushed our creative
soul enough that we were like,hang on, I think we've missed
(36:56):
something really fucking bighere, because both me and myself
, again with our human designsand that's why inside our
community, we will celebrate youto find out your human design
and we will urge you to do that,because when you do, that's
when things really open up foryou and you understand yourself
even further.
And I think that's what youknow, both of us.
We are meant to break the rules.
(37:18):
We are meant to.
I think, in Mia's human designparticularly, one of the things
that Yvette said is like,basically, mia is on top of a
tall building and she's the onethat can look out and kind of
foresee everything that's kindof going on and see it before it
happens, and mine is to I'mbuilt to kind of forge a path
that nobody's ever fucking beenon before.
(37:38):
And you're coming or you're not, I don't really care.
And so when you put those twothings together and and when we
tried to tame that and focusthat, it worked well.
But I think what then happenedis we missed something that was
sitting right in front of us thewhole time, which was speaking
to to hopefully you who'slistening right now.
(38:00):
That maybe feels like a littlesquare peg in a round hole, that
you know you might not bediagnosed with fucking anything,
but you're like.
You know what I?
I do want to be creative and Ican't figure out why I can't
niche down, why I can't do thething while I buy the course and
then I fail, why, while I'vebought seven courses and only
got to the third module and thenI give up, the reason is
(38:22):
because you get to a point whereyour soul goes, uh-uh, I don't,
I don't, I don't, I don't getit, it's not for me.
And so you know, inside thecommunity, inside the hive, what
we really want to celebrate aswe keep moving forward is
creating a space where all thetools will be there when you
(38:43):
need them, but it's a home tocome to to get the support and
get the mentorship and get thecommunity and get the brain
dumps the bounce it off.
Have live, real conversationswith people that understand.
It's not that easy for you justto follow steps one to 10.
(39:05):
You might go one to eight, oneto nine, might go one to eight,
one to nine, come back to three.
Oh, let's go to four.
That's okay, like we're gonna.
We're gonna make sure you getthere.
It just might look a littledifferent and that's why we
really love inside our community.
It's not just a course whereyou go one to z, a to z, the
coaching and us really speakingto our community, like we can
(39:29):
show you what's worked for us.
But we want you to take thatand manipulate the fuck out of
it to suit you and how you workand how your brain's wired.
Because when you start to copyothers and do it their way, even
though it may have been verysuccessful to them for them, you
dull yourself and in a world ofAI and lots and lots of content
(39:52):
, when you start blending in andcopying other people and doing
exactly what they're doing,you're not going to stand out,
you're going to fade.
It's going to be bland.
You're going to box yourself in.
You're going to start resentingyour business.
You might have, you know, itmight take you a little bit
longer to be successful your ownway than copying somebody else,
(40:13):
but you're going to be a hellof a lot happier and more
creative and more yourself andbe more magnetic than copying
what somebody else has just toldyou that works.
And you know, even just thinkingabout the community, just what
comes to mind is we've got oneof our members.
Belle is just absolutelyincredible and, belle, you're
(40:34):
probably listening becauseyou're always listening and we
love you.
She's been with us since westarted, basically, and we've
watched her content and she'sgot incredible energy online and
we've watched how she's grownand we've given advice in our
mentoring sessions and we'vecheered her on and we've, you
know, suggested what we thinkand what we could do, and she's
just continued to just show upand show up and show up and go
(40:58):
through the uncomfortable shit,the hard shit, that I've failed.
I'm no good.
What's coming next?
She's built great businesses.
She's traveling Australia withher family, like watching it,
and then one day it just clicksand she created an Instagram,
for example, that it justclicked.
The Instagram went kind ofsemi-viral or viral and but from
(41:19):
that moment on she's been ableto show up.
I believe in this personal brand.
It's always been there, butsometimes it just takes time and
it just takes the continuousstruggle of showing up and
showing up and showing up.
And that's where confidence isa muscle.
You've got to train thatgoddamn muscle.
It's not going to happenovernight.
(41:39):
And so you can buy as manycourses and you can do as many
things and listen to as manygurus as you want, go for it.
But understand that if you arenot getting uncomfortable and
showing up and doing the hardwork and continuously testing
your content, challengingyourself, it won't click.
All that will happen is thatyou'll just change the way you
(42:01):
did that because someone saidsomething, but the actual,
physiological, whatever part ofyou won't click.
And and just bell just came tomind, because watching her
journey from when we kind ofstarted to just the last kind of
month or so, I think, is acomplete shift in her owning her
(42:22):
space in a way that I don'tthink she even knew she could.
And so, bell, if you're seeing,shout out, but I like.
That's what we're saying interms of this is not a course.
This is a place to come, to bechallenged and accepted and
shine.
When you're fucking ready, thetools are there, but unless
(42:44):
you're doing the work andsurrounding yourself with people
that get it and people that goyeah, keep going it becomes
really challenging and I thinkthat's a big thing with our
community.
I I don't know about you, butwell, I'm.
Yeah, we have talked about this,but in our normal day-to-day
lives we're not surrounded bymany people who think like us,
(43:05):
who have the big dreams, who dowhat we do.
They just don't get it, andthat's fine.
That is not for everyone.
But when you find other peoplewho think like you, it's almost
like this permission slip to belike yeah, I'm not the only one,
like, I've found my people nowand so many of our community,
(43:25):
you, you know, I feel like we'rejust really really good friends
because we all think the sameand we all want the same things
and we're all a bit, you know,wild and all this stuff, and
it's just like you need to findyour people to go on this
journey with.
Otherwise it becomes verylonely and frustrating and you
overthink and you do a lot ofdestructive things because
(43:46):
you're in your head and you'vegot no one to talk to.
So, whether it be joining acommunity like ours or finding a
TikTok friend or someone who isdoing what you're doing is so
important to your journey andI've actually done that since I
started my UGC days.
I was in a beautiful group ofUGC creators.
(44:08):
We joined a Slack channeltogether and all of us, I'm
pretty sure, are neurodivergentnow that I think about it and we
do what we do now.
We talk every day, we back andforth, we share ideas, we do
crazy stuff together and a fewI've got to meet in person as
well, and it just makeseverything so much easier.
(44:29):
So, if we reflect on a hundredepisodes, what would be a
standout moment?
Do you reckon what would beyour standout moment?
This probably goes back andwe're going to be doing this
again in a couple of weeks.
Is our boot camps again in acouple of weeks?
Is our boot camps as tiring asthey are to host and do?
(44:56):
It's a lot of work, but gettingwomen in a room for a couple of
days and seeing the comments ofthem having these big aha
moments or even crying ormessaging us saying, oh my God,
you've changed everything.
For me, those days arestandouts and you know, we
(45:19):
pivoted a little bit and focusedon a few particular things and
it became this very sort ofsurface level strategy type
stuff and that didn't get thosefeelings like what we're doing
in these boot camps, workingwith these women's mindset and
their deep why and all that sortof stuff, and we're going back
(45:39):
to that.
We're going back to thatbecause those transformations
even though these women may nothave bought anything from us
they came to the free bootcamp,whatever but those messages are
what keeps us going in thisbusiness.
Yeah, yeah, and that's right,it's.
It's those, those people thatalso I love, the people that, um
(46:03):
, you know, sit on the sidelinesand they just watch and they
listen to podcasts and then,just randomly, we will just get
a message in our dms oh my god,I listen to every single podcast
.
You girls have changed my life.
The way I think you make melaugh, like things like that
that sometimes in this game asan entrepreneur, you feel like
you're just yelling into thisbig void.
But it's moments like thatwhere somebody takes time out of
(46:26):
their life to say to you hey,like really appreciate that or
that made me laugh, or thank youfor helping, or fuck.
If, if we make a sale andsomebody invests their money
into us, mia and I instantly onslack like, oh my god, we've got
another, like we've got anotherhive, this is incredible.
Like it's not just, oh sweet,topping up the bank account,
(46:47):
that's good, it's like it's kindof the last thing on our list.
It's beautiful and that's whywe do this and that's why we
want to show you how you can dothis too.
But it's, it's going.
One person in this world hasjust said yes to themselves and
said you're the people that Iwant to take me there, and that
that weighs on us a lot morethan you may think, and that's
the part that I think keeps yougoing in this space, because you
(47:10):
wouldn't do it if it was justfor the money.
Like you can't.
It's, it's too emotionally.
The fucking roller coasters,guys, let us tell you, if you
want a roller coaster ride, justbecome a fucking entrepreneur.
And the time that goes into itoh boy, the time.
But you know, if you didn'tlove it, you wouldn't do it.
Yeah, honestly.
(47:32):
And so, mia, what do you want?
What's your vision for our nextsteps, or our next steps, you
know, in the coming little bit.
Yeah, I mean, I I'm, we'rereally good visualizers, aren't
we?
We manifest and visualize allthe time.
But I can just see it now andwe've been talking about this
for a while and it is a bigprocess but in-person events and
(47:57):
bringing these women togetherin the room, because that is a
whole new level of breaking youopen and getting to the core and
just going back to being withpeople in person.
You know, especially asentrepreneurs, you work from
home, you're in your lounge roomby yourself a lot and it can
(48:18):
get kind of isolating becauseyou can't talk to your friends
about business, because theyjust don't understand and
whatnot.
So I really am looking forwardto us leaning into building a
community that can just catch upall the time.
It doesn't have to be bigevents, we will do that.
But workshops, in-personworkshops, you know I've met a
(48:39):
few of the community members inperson and that's just so cool
to me.
So, yeah, I think morecommunity building this year.
Yeah, I think that's yeah, I'dsay the same Like now taking it
to in-person things and retreatsor whatever that looks like
workshops, small things, bigthings, like I think getting
(49:03):
that in-person contact is whatwe've always wanted.
It's just, you know it'schallenging.
These times are hard to gettogether and to make it happen,
but it's something that we'vealways known is what we want to
do, and then just to think howwe can do that and make that
happen is going to be a toughlesson.
What's happening online now,with all this AI stuff, I think
(49:25):
people are going to be reallysearching for communities,
because I don't know if you'veseen this I saw this the other
day this AI twin was selling anAI twin course how to make your
own AI twin.
Oh my God, stop it.
Stop it.
So soon there's going to needto be like online courses of
like how to be a human again,how to not use AI, which is why
(49:47):
building a community and youknow our live coaching calls I
love, because you just get toknow your students and they can
learn from you in real time andyou're not there just reading
slides and all that sort ofstuff.
So I think people are going tocrave communities more and more,
and part of what we teach andwhat we're going to be leaning
(50:07):
into a lot more with ourstudents is building their own
communities, because when youbuild a community based on your
personal brand again.
That's when you can breathe andpivot and test and do a few
different things rather thanjust selling one static course
over and over and over again.
Yeah, and so, mia, should we dosome loves don't loves of the
(50:28):
100th episode.
Should we do loves don't lovesof like moments in our journey
thus far?
Yeah, my love there's so many,so this is just one, because it
still makes me smile a bit isthat we've just continued to do
(50:48):
things like the podcast.
We've just continued to dothings because we know deep down
, it's the right thing to do.
We actually really love it Somedays.
You know, you can see analyticsbut like not a soul could be
watching or listening to thisfucking thing and we don't seem
to care, like I just I love thefact that we've said to
ourselves we've got this biggerpurpose, we want to speak to our
(51:10):
people, let's just do it, and Ithink there's the power in that
.
It, yeah, it just makes thisand we and we've done it in a
way that I don't think we'veever covered up who we truly are
like.
If you don't like us, cool,take a beat, baby, um, but if
you're listening, then you know,obviously we've done something
(51:31):
right and I, I think I I do lovethat we've managed to stick to
that in a way that it makessense and we enjoy it and we're
bringing.
You know, we don't often planthe podcast other than like, oh,
let's talk about that.
And usually, when we don't planthem, they're our best fucking
podcast, because we just havethese conversations that we know
are important because we'regoing through them or our
(51:52):
community's going through them,or we see them and we, we
respond and that's what we are.
So, yeah, I think that would be.
My love is that we've actuallyhit a hundred and it hasn't felt
like, oh, fuck, another podcast, fuck, do we have to do that?
Like it's like, yeah, cool,some weeks it's like I don't
know, let's just fucking talk.
We'll do the slack ones if wecan't find the time.
(52:13):
We just make it work and it'syeah, it's fucking enjoyable.
That's the thing.
If you don't enjoy doing it oryou're procrastinating or
putting something off, it's it'syou're not in alignment and
something needs to change.
So you've got to find a contentmedium that suits you.
Yeah, I would say my don't loveis that we haven't fucking met
yet, but that's our own faultsand I I see that, but I think
that I'm like, how did wefucking get this far?
(52:35):
But I know how we're planningon racking up some flights on
the company credit card, sowe'll get that.
That's gonna be a writer, yeah,yeah.
So one of my loves is that Idon't know how common this is,
but we have members in ourmembership who have been with us
(52:55):
since day freaking one, youknow, right, and I don't even.
What are we up to?
Are we up to two years?
We're over you two years now,yeah, and so, you know, a good
lot of our community havetrusted us for over two years to
be in our world, and to me,that's freaking incredible, yeah
, and seeing some of the goalsthat these girls are kicking is
(53:17):
just nuts, and they inspire usall the time as well.
Um, so I think that's one of mybiggest loves is just yeah,
that's what I love about Ian.
Yeah, just getting to knowpeople instead of just selling
them, selling them something andthen they're on their way.
So I love that.
Don't love, don't love.
(53:38):
I think it's something that notmany entrepreneurs speak freely
about and I, you know, havethese conversations with you
quite a bit is the pressure ofbeing an entrepreneur when you
have to show up for your family,you have to show up for
yourself, you have to show upfor your community, you have to
(54:00):
show up for your partner.
Maybe the money isn't coming inlike you would expect, or maybe
, you know, shit just happensall the time.
It's a constant rollercoasterand it can be exhausting and
although there are some lowtimes, you know you're going to
cry in entrepreneurship, it'sjust a fact.
But I fucking cried in mynormal job too.
(54:22):
So the lows are there and theyhappen.
But you know, enjoying the rideand enjoying the journey is has
to be part of it, cause ifyou're just wanting that end
goal whatever, it is a millionbucks and you don't enjoy
(54:42):
getting there, yeah, yeah.
And there's some low points allthe time, so many.
Most of them are on our Slackchannel.
It's called the rant, the ranthotline.
If you want to hear them, wewon't ever publish them.
They are on our Slack channel.
It's called the Rant Hotline.
If you want to hear them, wewon't ever publish them.
They are, for me or myself,good to imagine if people listen
to our radio.
They're out of the void, Ithink, because I knew there'd be
(55:04):
so many loves, like you said,with the community and I think
we both agree with this iswatching some of those creators
that have been with us that long, but then also the creators
that have been with us, you know, for a few months or a month or
whatever, but seeing themactually take the leap of faith
on themselves and seeing theircontent change and seeing them
(55:27):
be challenged and then seeingthem reap the reward of doing
that, like through UGC, throughcreating digital products,
through stepping into thatuncomfortable zone which we know
if you're uncomfortable, that'sgood Then you're going to start
to grow.
But seeing that we've been ableto be a part of that and show
them away, I think that, I mustadmit, still sometimes blows my
(55:54):
mind that they've taken thataction.
And then you see their contentand you hear their stories and
you see their journey like fuck,that's cool, like that's
life-changing stuff and we'vekind of been with them along
(56:18):
that journey.
It's so cool.
What I want to say first andforemost is thank you, thank you
for trusting me, thank you forshowing me a, showing me a way
that I hadn't thought aboutbefore, showing me a different
way of doing things, beingsomebody that can move as
(56:41):
quickly as I move is so fuckingrare and I think we've said that
to each other that there is not.
I think there's not arelationship I have where the
person that's in thatrelationship with me moves as
quickly as I do and can makedecisions as quickly as I do.
Are they always right?
No, have we fucked up often?
(57:02):
Yes, but what has been soincredible in the last couple of
years is building arelationship that's built on so
much trust.
He's building a relationshipthat's built on so much trust,
and I can't explain how we havenever met each other in real
life and yet we've built thisbusiness where we have served
(57:33):
hundreds and hundreds of womenbecause we give a shit.
The amount of angry, sad, happy,ecstatic, mind-blowing tears of
joy, tears of sadness that arein that psych channel I'm even
getting emotional thinking aboutit.
I think it's very rare.
It's very rare that you findsomebody in this world fuck,
it's very rare that you findsomebody in this world that is
(57:54):
prepared to just go all in andtrust something that there's no
answer Like.
Everything we have done hasbeen out of pure determination,
has been out of sheer fuckinghard work.
Out of sheer fucking hard workhas been trusting our instincts,
(58:20):
trusting our gut, going fuckingballs deep in it, and I thank
you for that.
I thank you for probably beingJason.
I knew this was going to happen.
Sorry, but also not.
I thank you for probably beingthe rocket fuel I needed to take
the action and the rock interms of, even though we bounce
(58:44):
off each other and even thoughwe take fast, messy action, I
still believe that we've goteach other's back in terms of if
an idea or a concept doesn'tfeel right, we will pull each
other up.
And I think you know I thankyou for being that rock that
when there's a new idea orthere's a new something, we
(59:07):
explore it and we look into it.
We don't always execute it.
Sometimes we do, and sometimeswe fuck it up, and I just I
think I want to thank you forshowing me I'm very stubborn, um
, and I just like to get on andget done, and I think what, what
you've been able to do for meis complement the things that I
don't have in terms of slowingdown.
(59:30):
I know we both move very fast,but you know you have the
numbers.
You your human design, thegenerator, human design.
You do the kind of the fineprint stuff and you dot the I's
and cross the T's and my man onthe investing generator, she
just flies and I need and I'mthankful that you're somebody
that has allowed me to do thatbut also kind of gone.
(59:55):
Hang on a minute, let's checkthis off.
Let's make sure this is right.
Let's look at the numbers.
Let's slow down a bit.
Even though not for one secondhas it felt like a handbrake,
and that's what I can't explain.
The magic that I can't explainhere is I've never, ever felt
(01:00:16):
like you're sitting at the otherend going fucking hell, kristen
, just shut the fuck up, oryou're pissing me off, or like I
just don't.
And you might've, but I know Icertainly haven't ever gone.
Oh, shut the fuck up, mia, likeI've just had enough of you,
like just, and that, to me, isthe rarest, most fucking
unbelievable thing to have found.
(01:00:38):
So I really look forward towhat's coming next.
I thank you for fucking hell,take your glasses off.
They're all steamy and shit.
Really looking forward to thenext chapter, what is to come.
I thank you for sharing yourADHD journey because, if nothing
, if nothing else, it's actuallyhighlighted maybe my own
(01:00:59):
patterns and my own thoughts andfeelings, and it shaped who I'm
becoming, and your honesty andyour ability to just keep on
going and always look at thebright side and the upside have
been such an empowering thing towork alongside.
(01:01:19):
I can see that, as a mum,you're so passionate about doing
this for your family and youknow that's.
That's what's powerful to watchin this space is when we know
that, even though some days areso fucking shit and some days
are hard and some days the moneydoesn't always come in and some
days it's really great and thehighs are really high and the
(01:01:40):
lows are really low and theroller coaster is real, but it's
been really, really joyful todo it alongside someone like
yourself, who is in exactly thesame place as I am in terms of a
mum with two kids around thesame age, got a partner who,
strangely enough, is alsoadjacent, so whatever but to do
that with somebody thatgenuinely accepts who you are,
(01:02:03):
understands what the biggerpicture is and isn't afraid to
say fuck it, let's go.
And so this is my long-windedway of saying fucking thank you.
The community we serve now andthe community we will serve in
the future are so lucky to havesomebody like you to guide them.
And you know, what's beenamazing is actually watching you
(01:02:25):
blossom from I'm not a coachand I don't want to do a podcast
and I don't want to do lives,and that's not my thing to
stepping completely into whoyou're meant to be.
And I know one day you'll be ona stage and hopefully we'll be
on a fucking stage togetherwhere we'll be backstage and
you'll be all like, oh my God, Idon't want to.
(01:02:46):
Oh my God, this is like I can'tbelieve this is happening and
it's just going to be thatmoment that, I think, will just
again reinforce that this iswhat you're meant to be.
We both said to ourselves,strangely enough, at the very,
very fucking start, like weimagined that there was, like we
knew that we were born forbigger things, like stages or
acting or something like that.
(01:03:07):
And I believe that that iswhere this is going in terms of
a movement, and if there'sanybody in this world that I
would want to create, a movementthis significant to positively
affect women's lives, mother'slives, in a way that will change
them forever.
Fucking stoked, I'm fuckingstoked.
I get to do it with you, andwhen you first dropped the
(01:03:32):
C-bomb and I think you called mea cunt or you said something
and all I remember is thinkingthank fuck, I have found my
person and I just we have a sicksense of humor.
Multi-passionate, we are bigthinkers, big dreamers.
We compliment each other.
(01:03:53):
I just, I'm so thankful it'sthe only word I have right now.
Thankful, just fucking.
Let's go.
Let's let's go and do.
Okay, that's that.
It's been amazing 100 episodes.
If you've stuck along the wholeway, you're a fucking legend
and we love you to bits.
If you're new, welcome, stayfor the next hundred.
(01:04:15):
Okay, bye, putting up foranother podcast.
So many good ones too.