Episode Transcript
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Baz Porter (00:00):
Ladies and gentlemen
, good day.
Welcome to another episode ofRise from the Ashes podcast, and
I am really excited today tointroduce a special guest.
Her name is Dr Amanda and shehas such a powerful story behind
her.
She's a coach, she is anentrepreneur.
She also runs a podcast forherself, but I, as always,
(00:21):
because I'm dyslexic, I'm gonnalet her introduce herself,
because that's the person whospeaks about them the best.
Amanda, please say hello to theworld and tell them who you are
and what you do.
Dr Amanda (00:33):
Hello world, I'm
dyslexic too.
I don't really ever share that.
I don't know what it shows upfor you as, but it's an
interesting thing.
I keep meeting entrepreneurswho are dyslexic.
I'm like, huh, maybe there'ssomething in the brain that
causes that to be the case.
I like to always start withinspiration and have people
question for themselves when wasthe last time today you thought
(00:54):
about money?
When did you think aboutdisempowerment?
When did you like, when youwake up in the morning, what are
the thoughts that are runningthrough your mind?
Because we have 60,000 thoughtsa day 60,000, which just blows
my mind in and of itself and 90%of them are the same as
yesterday and up to 85% of themare negative.
(01:14):
So the reason that I love towork with people on power is
because we often havedisempowered thinking and
disempowered ways of being,which cause us to lead miserable
lives and feel like we have nocontrol.
And so my whole business andeverything that I do is about
teaching law of attractionstrategies to help people really
thrive in what they're creatingin business.
(01:36):
So I do law of attraction forentrepreneurs.
I love to help people get clear, get aligned, get focused and
feel that powerful sense of Ihave a magic wand to create what
I choose, to create in a placeof fulfillment and really
freedom of choice.
So we'll start there.
My journey started in the pitand now I get to teach people
(01:57):
how to get out of the pit andthen really thrive and build a
life in business from thatupward spiral growth curve.
Baz Porter (02:04):
I love that and I
like the way you've mentioned
law of attraction because it hasmany elements of what it
actually is.
It's too a lot of people teachit as too generic.
The actual nuts and bolts ofits quantum physics it's using
your own energy, your thoughtpatterns, vibration, frequent
and also a lot of universalconsciousness to collaborate and
(02:26):
hone in on what you want.
Is that my correction?
Dr Amanda (02:29):
in the overview of
that, yes, yeah, yeah, I think
that it can be kind of abuzzword and a lot of people
don't really understand it.
And it's amazing when you do,because you realize, oh, I'm
always living by the law ofattraction, whether I'm
conscious of it or not, so Imight as well have it benefit me
and benefit the people I workwith.
(02:50):
And so, yeah, it's state ofbeing is what you're talking
about.
It's really your state of being.
So it's your feelings, yourthoughts, your beliefs, your
decisions, your actions are allwrapped up in law of attraction.
Baz Porter (03:03):
How did you stumble
across doing this?
It's not something that youjust walk into.
It's a cool way, in a way.
Dr Amanda (03:11):
How did that happen
for you?
Yeah, it's been such a funjourney I would say fun,
challenging roller coaster ride.
For me, entrepreneurshipstarted when I was on the floor
crying one night.
So here I am I left my 15 yearmarriage having an affair, and
my next relationship wasn'tworking, so he had moved out and
our basement was empty and Iwas sitting like literally
(03:33):
laying on the floor crying andjust going oh my God, my life is
a mess.
I was already on food stamps,three kids in grad school as a
single mom, and I'm going wow, Iam really bad at relationships
and I have no money and my lifeis falling apart.
And I was scanning my history tothink who can help me or who
can I blame.
And as I was scanning thehistory, I thought, whoa, in
(03:55):
every scenario I'm the commondenominator.
And it really awakened to me toI've got to change, I've got to
do something different.
No one's coming to save me.
This is on me.
I'm totally alone, I don't knowwhat I'm going to do.
And I got to figure this outand it was in that moment.
I wouldn't have used thesewords at the time, but really I
made a declaration and it wasI'm willing to do whatever it
(04:15):
takes to have a betterrelationship and more money.
And I was stuck and scared.
And so I started listening topodcasts and everything my brain
started to change.
I started to teach differentlyand relate to people differently
and parent differently.
And it led me.
One step led me to the next.
And it was so amazing because,also while this was happening,
(04:35):
my graduate department had thisnational news fallout where
professors were leaving thedepartment and I thought, ooh, I
don't want to be a professor,this does not look like a fun
path.
And so I finished my degree.
And then I thought all of thesepeople that I'm listening to
podcasts by our coach typeentrepreneurs, and so I'm going
to take the leap and become acoach, because I really loved
teaching in university.
(04:56):
And so I took the leap.
And that first year of businessI went food stamps to six
figures.
And in every step I've taken, Ijust keep getting led down the
road.
I tell people I love this quoteby Rumi.
He says as you take a step on,the way appears.
And that's really how the lawof attraction works when you're
clear about what you want andyou take steps in the direction,
the way will appear for you.
And so steps just keptappearing and it led me down
(05:19):
this road to where I am today,having my own podcast that has a
really wide reach and helpingentrepreneurs learn the rules of
the game of life.
And so you're right when Istarted, of course, I'd heard of
law of attraction, but I neverthought I'm going to become a
law of attraction coach.
I just thought I want to helpmyself get unstuck, and as I
started learning for myself, Ihad this drive and, like you
(05:40):
said, this calling to teachother people, and so it started
with a wealth buildingmastermind, and then it just.
That led to another thing andanother thing, and here I am
today getting to have a reallyfun business that I love,
because it's amazing to watchpeople, the light bulbs go off
and unblock those parts thathave kept them stuck for so long
(06:00):
, even at high levels, work withpeople that don't have a ton of
money to multi-millionaires,and we all get stuck.
So it's been a really amazingjourney.
Baz Porter (06:10):
I love what you just
said, then, about learning and
the experience and takingsomething from that bottom
moment of that basement scenarioin your case, and the husband
being unfaithful.
But you've empowered yourself.
But not only that you've setyourself a standard, a platform
for others to follow, and you'rehelping them do it, which is
(06:34):
amazing.
What makes your company unique,what makes your stamp on it
going?
This is who I am, this is how Ishow up.
Can you share a story thatactually proves that or sustains
that within your experiences?
Dr Amanda (06:52):
It's an interesting
question when you say what makes
you unique?
Because I never know what tosay.
I always go.
I'm unique because I'm uniquelyme and it's everyone's unique.
How do we label that?
I would say.
Something I love about myself isthat I'm really big-hearted and
big-thinking at the same time,and I'm really good at taking
(07:12):
spiritual and universal laws andturning them into practical,
actionable steps.
So it's like I bridge this gapbetween business and spiritual,
and that's pretty rare.
I haven't found that in thatmany people.
Sure, it exists, and yet Ithink everybody has that
capacity as well, and so Ialways think of building a
business as a spiritual growthjourney, because it unearths all
your shadow parts.
(07:34):
As you build a business, youface all of your deep, dark
fears, you face your limitedthinking, you face your money
blocks, you face it's wild whatbusiness brings up, and so I
love the entry point of workingwith someone being hey, they
come to me to get help with abusiness and, realistically,
they need help with transformingtheir spirit, and so I love
that.
I love that I see that and Ican intuit where people are
(07:57):
stuck and help them take thenext best step for them.
And it's unique to each personbecause it depends on their
starting points and what they'rethinking and their mindset is.
Baz Porter (08:07):
I like what you're
describing there is channeled
work and the concept of being achannel.
I'm a channel.
I channeled various works, oneof them being cosmic law.
So it's the 74 cosmic laws andI'll send you.
It is public, awesome, I can'twait to read it.
But it's applying what you justsaid.
It's applying thespiritualistic side of things,
(08:29):
the intuition, the energyaspects, into a business setting
.
That's influence.
So you said you didn't know howto show up to answer that
question.
You did very well, becauseyou're being authentic by
sharing who you are.
Many people struggle with thatbecause they're afraid of who
they are and their own power,firstly, and then how to express
(08:51):
it in a non egoic way.
We're all channels, we're allconduits of information on
different levels and differentaccess points.
People call it mediumship,people call it transmedia.
Whatever you have a name for it, we're all a receiver and also
a.
Joe D'Aspenza speaks about howto use it and change your energy
(09:14):
systems, change your life.
You've done that and you're aperfect example of how to do it
on the conscious level andbusiness structure level.
Is there anybody that's helpedyou or influenced you in doing
what you're doing today?
Is there a model or role modelyou've had that has gone.
I like to be that person.
Dr Amanda (09:34):
Many.
My very first main mentor thatI would say just completely blew
my life up in the best ways wasDr John DiMartini.
So to me he's one of thegreatest teachers of all time.
I love his work.
I think it's universal,law-oriented and it's brain
transformation and traumatransformation.
(09:55):
People get really stuck in theirvictimhood and it's balancing
out your perceptions andrealizing that everything is
perfect as it is.
To me it's so groundbreakingand what everybody needs to own
radical responsibility in law ofattraction.
Where you go, oh, I'm thecreator of my reality.
So, whatever my imbalancedperspectives are going to
(10:15):
influence what I attract, andthat's not the way he teaches it
, but that's my overlay on itafter I worked with him and then
I got all those certifications.
I am an avid learner.
So, like I said, I take a stepon the way and the way appears.
So I find a teacher and thenlearn what I can and then find
the next teacher.
Some great influences.
Dr Jondi Marti dispendsabsolutely.
I started meditating when I raninto dispensa and that
(10:38):
completely transformed my wholelife.
I'd say it opened me up to thechanneling world where I
realized, oh, I guess I've beenchanneling my whole life when I
meditate and connecting me inthat spiritual way.
I do that really well inmeditation and so meditation and
Abraham Hicks huge follower ofAbraham Hicks in law of
attraction, the way that theyteach Debbie Ford, so she's the
(11:01):
main streamer of shadow work.
So many good ones, so I'd saythose are some that stand out
immediately.
Baz Porter (11:07):
What I've noticed
within doing this is everybody
has a role model, several rolemodels, but what they've done is
added their own light or anauthenticity to that and that
makes you that person.
People, you said I don't knowhow to explain myself.
Who am I?
You just did, and this is whyI'd love going into this,
(11:28):
because you're doing itsubconsciously and that's
important to remember.
Courage and resilience are alsoa huge part of entrepreneurial
life.
Is there anything that isshowing up for you in respect,
resilience, and how would youdefine resilience for yourself?
Resilience?
Dr Amanda (11:47):
That's such an
interesting one.
I was born premature and in anincubator for the first two
months of my life, and so I'mlike that's resilience, the
first thing that popped into mymind, which was interesting.
So I think in my life I'vealways been a resilient person
who has decided to.
I would say at first it wassurvive through it, and now it's
thrive through it.
Resilience is a choice.
(12:08):
Maybe not when you're younger.
Sometimes you are resilient andyou persevere through the
things that are happening to you.
And so I think for me, in thatevolutionary consciousness, it
goes from resilience might belooking like reacting and
surviving into responding andchoosing.
And so now I get to choose tobe resilient.
(12:29):
And in the entrepreneurialendeavors it's fun, because
there are always challenges tobe resilient and see what you're
made of.
I love to see what I'm made of,like I take on big challenges
all the time just to see whatI'm made of and test myself at
the next level.
Not because it used to be, Ithink, because I wanted to prove
myself, because I didn't thinkI was good enough.
(12:49):
Now it's ooh, let's have funand see how far I can expand.
And so it's that evolution ofresiliency across a life course
from, I'd say, a disempoweredplace to a more empowered place.
Baz Porter (13:04):
So resilience to
disempowered to empowered.
For you, what's the differencebetween courage and resilience?
It's interesting.
Dr Amanda (13:11):
I wouldn't typically
equate the two.
I think it depends on whatyou're creating from a law of
attraction perspective, becauseto me, courage is often you're
going to do something eventhough you might feel afraid,
and when fear isn't something Iresonate with much anymore.
Fear doesn't exist in me.
(13:32):
I don't get afraid easilybecause I'm not aligned in that
frequency anymore, and socourage to me I don't feel that
courageous because there's nofear for me to overcome, whereas
, similarly with resilience,they're not really words I would
necessarily use to describemyself.
Yes, I've been resilientthrough time and it's such a
(13:53):
choice-based thing.
Now Courageousness is just sucha part of me being, but it's
past that.
Baz Porter (14:00):
I like that.
The reason I ask that questionis simply because some people
have a comparison of fear andthat shows up for them in
different ways.
Fear is often felt or fear isoften viewed as a negative.
It's actually not Because youneed the fear to know, first of
all, you're alive.
Secondly, to overcome somethingand drive you forward, knowing
(14:25):
that something is impossible orpossible.
Afterwards, how do you identifywith or how do you define the
impossible versus what youthought was impossible but now
becomes possible?
That makes sense.
Dr Amanda (14:39):
Yeah, let's start
here.
I think it's interesting.
I always teach that we live intwo states of being either fear
or love.
Those are really the only twostates that we can be in.
I think of fear as the futureexpectation of awful results.
You're projecting into thefuture something that hasn't
happened and putting a twist onit that is fear-based Unless, of
course, a lion is actuallychasing you.
(14:59):
Then, yes, be afraid.
The thing is that 99% of thetime, we're not actually in a
state of survival threat, yet wemake up stories in our mind all
the time about fear.
The way I think of it is fromthat perspective.
I think I go like how do youcreate a reality based on
inspiration instead of fear?
(15:20):
Most people create their futurereality based on fear because
they're afraid they're going tolose something.
They're afraid they're notgoing to be good enough.
They're afraid that they're notgoing to get what they want.
They're afraid they're going todie before they can make it all
happen.
Most people live in that statemost of the time and they create
their future, their present,their future based on a past
that has caused them to havesome fear.
(15:42):
I go how can you create from aplace of just total inspiration
and see what's possible fromthat place.
When you're in a state of fear,most things are very hard, and
not necessarily impossible, butmuch harder to reach because
you're creating resistance inthe moment, which causes the
future that you desire to beattracted to you to be pushed
(16:03):
away from you.
For me, I go.
Let's be aware of our fears,because pretending they're not
there it doesn't work either.
You create resistance that way,so you go.
What are my fears and how can Ireframe them so that I can
create a future of inspirationor even a present moment of
inspiration?
Because you manifest from yourpresent moment.
Baz Porter (16:19):
You said then about
manifesting from the present
moment, and it's done by a bitof total awareness of who you
are, your core, and raising thatvibration.
You mentioned fear.
There is only two fears One isthe fear of not being loved and
one is the fear of not beingworthy for something.
Everything else is a concept ofand derived from them two
(16:40):
places, and if you get back, youcan change the origin of it,
change the belief systems.
But how do you go in from?
I'm scared from jumping out ofthe plane.
You're not scared from jumping,you're scared for the possible
outcome of something going wrong.
But what if you could trust,complete trust and love within
(17:01):
yourself?
That's the place you createfrom, that's the power, as you
so put it earlier, that powerplace where love exists, where
every possibility, everydimensional reality exists,
every frequency is there in thattrust, love, unconditional
(17:22):
place of self-worth,self-authenticity,
self-expression.
So when you talk about aninspirational movement, if you
could today, what inspirationalmovement would you start from?
That place of love?
Dr Amanda (17:39):
I have serendipity.
This morning in my meditation Idid such a fun one and it was
an inner child meditation and itwas seeing yourself as eight or
up to the age of eight andwhatever pops into your mind
first, and then talking to yourinner child and going from the
place of what your core being is, and it was, for me,
big-heartedness.
I'm in a big-heartedinspiration.
(18:01):
One of the main things peoplesay after they hang out with me
is do you just feel inspiredafter you hang out with Dr
Amanda?
Yeah, studs, and it's not evenwhat I try to do, it's just who
I am.
And so it's like that thing ofcreating from a place of
inspiration to me is aboutreally knowing who you are and
being and doing what you are,and then that is what emanates
(18:22):
from your state of being andthat's what gets reflected back
to you in whatever realityyou're creating.
And it's like inspiration-basedmanifestation is the most
magnetic, the most powerful.
Inspiration is such a highvibrational frequency and for
people listening it's like dowhat you enjoy.
(18:42):
It's so simple.
We make it so hard, we do somany things that we don't enjoy,
and then we wonder why we leadlives that are miserable.
And it's because we think, oh,I have to do this.
So anytime you're doingsomething you think you have to
do, you are already creatingresistance.
So it's like getting up in themorning and go what feels good,
what do I enjoy doing?
(19:03):
How can I build a life in abusiness I love and just take
one step every single day andplay with inspiration, play with
joy, play with flow and fun andfreedom and be that in the
present moment and then have itattract to you?
So I don't know if thatanswered your question, but
that's what came to my mind whenyou asked.
Baz Porter (19:22):
But this is why I'm
asking these questions, because
they're authentic and everyanswer that I receive is
different because everybody'sexperience is different.
Can you give some tips oninspiration that you've learned
over the years and how to stayinspired or derivative from the
(19:43):
Latin and to barato in yourspirit?
I love that.
It's about you having theawareness that, yes, you're
powerful, but you can onlycreate from that authentic
center, that spirit center, andmost people get sucked into this
dense reality of 3D and,although I can't, I'm asked the
(20:07):
news, the radio, other people'sopinions.
Is there anything you can sharewith the audience that you've
learned over your time that youcan take and go?
This is what I did and theseare the tips I suggest you do.
You start today as in pause,make a list and do them now.
Dr Amanda (20:25):
Yeah, yeah, this is
going to sound.
It's.
My whole business really ishelping people learn how to get
inspired.
My why statement is that I loveto help people get inspired to
do what it takes to lead totransform into the most
empowered versions of themselvesso they can lead fulfilling
lives and businesses.
Right, and it's like that placeof it starts with inspiration.
(20:48):
You got to be inspired and it'sa choice.
I think that people have oftensome sort of projected myth in
their mind that inspirationhappens to people.
You create inspiration.
You got to discover yourinspiration.
It's the unveiling of your soul, right, that's inspiration.
It's letting your light shinein the world and that doesn't
just drop in your lab.
(21:08):
I don't know anybody who isfulfilled, and when I'm talking
fulfilled, I'm not talking likemoney, success or outer
appearance of success.
I'm talking like deep soulfulfillment where you wake up
every day and you're like I lovemy life.
And that's a journey ofdiscovery, I think, and steps to
(21:28):
take where I started from,because that is definitely not
where I started.
I started.
I've been suicidally depressedbefore.
I have been on food stamps,facing homelessness, broken
relationships, abuse, history,like all kinds of stuff in my
background that I could easilybe a miserable person right now
and I chose to do somethingdifferent and start learning how
(21:50):
to lead a life that's inspired.
So I love this question you'reasking and it started with
shifting my state of being, andfor me that started with
learning everything I could frompeople who were doing it.
And what I realized over andover again is just like I'm
saying, it doesn't just happen.
They practice daily.
It's a daily practice to be aperson who lives in a state of
(22:13):
joy.
It's not something that justmagically happens.
Once you start attuning to itin your frequency, it starts to
attract more things to be joyful, so it gets easier and easier
to do every day.
And it starts with thatinitiation of generally speaking
.
It starts with a lot ofdiscomfort because for most
people, because we're animalsand we live by the pleasure paid
principle, we won't changeuntil we're in enough pain to
(22:34):
change.
Most people don't change easilyjust by choice, if they're
comfortable, because we're likeoh, I'm pretty comfortable, it's
like the golden handcuffs right.
Like I'm pretty happy, I'm okay, life's not that great, but I'm
not in enough pain to change.
So often it starts from a placeof discomfort and then you
start to recognize oh, when Imeditate I feel real good.
(22:55):
Oh, when I listen to music thatI love and create space in my
day for just blocks of whitespace, I feel good.
And a tip a very practical tipfor people is create what I call
an emergency shift list.
So write down 10 things thatbring you joy and then make sure
that you do them and do energycheck-ins.
(23:15):
So I set alarms on my phone.
I teach my clients to setalarms on their phone that says
energy check-in a couple oftimes throughout the day and
they have their emergency shiftlist.
This could be 10 squats in youroffice.
You're shifting your energy.
This could be going on a walkaround the block, it could be
petting your cat, it could belistening to music, it could be
whatever brings you joy for afew minutes and gives you a dose
(23:36):
of up-leveling your vibrationalfrequency.
You start to reprogram yourselfover time.
So my inner power formula isrecognize, reframe, repeat to
reprogram.
So number one recognize.
Number two reframe.
Number three repeat toreprogram.
When you do this over time, youstart to up-level your
vibrational frequency just inlittle stages over time and
that's all it takes.
It's actually that simple, butmost people make it this huge
(23:59):
big project and they create somuch resistance around it and
they have a hard time justshifting their energy in the
moment.
It could be 3D breaths, likeright now.
If people just take 3D breaths,like breathe in and out and in
and I teach 3D breasts to peopleand they're like whoa, I feel
(24:21):
completely different after 3Dbreasts.
That literally takes 30 secondsand then you start to reprogram
yourself for feeling moreinspired in a line.
I like that.
Baz Porter (24:30):
It's the little
steps, the baby steps and
building the muscle ofrepetition over that time period
.
People say, oh, it takes toolong.
Three months or six months or12 months a long span of time
and considering you've got tolive with yourself for a minimum
of 50, 60, 70, 80 years, youcan put that working.
Now you're pretty much screwedbecause you're not looking at a
(24:54):
bigger picture, you mentionedearlier.
You look at a macro, but you'realso focused on the micro and
day-to-day routines andeffective, not just routines,
but effective routines thatactually work.
Which is what I love aboutpeople like yourself, Because a
lot of these coaches going intothis don't have that knowledge.
It's not because they don't,are not aware, not willing to go
(25:17):
and get it, but they turn upand show up as a coach, as a
life coach, as a business coach,but deep down, they've actually
got a huge amount of pain,post-synchronicus.
They're trying to show up assomething molded by someone else
that they've not truly embodiedor even built the muscle to do,
(25:37):
such as having the awareness of.
I want to take a pause, I wantto breathe, I want to chill out
for 10 minutes, I want to resetmy day, I want to go back to bed
for half an hour, meditate andthen get up again.
These things work.
I was speaking to a guest a fewweeks ago and she was in the
(25:59):
corporate world for 25 years.
She was a model.
She was working as a veryhigh-level CEO and she was
working for Vogue and in thatindustry.
She had a car accident and adeer came through her window
screen, completely wiped her outand she woke up in the hospital
.
She was eight months in thehospital for multiple surgeries.
(26:21):
She said to me she'd never hadto be grateful for anything.
She didn't physically, mentallyor emotionally know what
gratitude was.
And then she went deeper inwithin herself and a month, two
months later around her house,she had 250,000 post-it notes
around her house reminding herwhat to be grateful for.
(26:43):
Now she speaks on stages andbusinesses, but for 35 years of
her life nearly, it was just I'mjust a state of being, this is
who I am, Until she had awake-up call and that gratitude
came through.
She didn't have any otherchoice of awareness of I can be
this person.
(27:03):
I can do that, and that's thething that sets people like you
apart.
You've got that story.
You've got the experience to gointo that and go stop what
you're doing.
You're an absolute num becauseyou're not seeing a bigger
picture.
You're focused on the fear,what you don't have, blah, blah,
blah, blah, and that's what'screating your reality.
(27:25):
That's why I love theseconversations.
So the global movement of whatyou're doing is the ripple
effect.
The ripple effect isn't justall through our stone.
It's much in your case, it'smuch bigger than that.
This is what I've done myselfand I've been where you are.
This is coming from experienceand knowledge-based, proven
(27:48):
techniques that you haveacquired to elevate your life in
business.
That's why I love having thesediscussions.
If there was one person youcould have a conversation with
past, present or, equally,future who would it be?
So many people.
Dr Amanda (28:03):
Yeah, I know I love
this.
I'm sure you've read NapoleonHill's Thinking Groovage.
So I teach people in my programto do a power mastermind
committee where they communewith people that are alive as
their mastermind committee in ameditation process, and so we
just did that this week and it'slike, oh, there's so many
(28:25):
brilliant minds and hearts andsouls.
I'd say, one person who's nolonger alive, who I haven't
gotten to commune with otherthan in my mind, would be Debbie
Ford.
So she wrote a book called theDark Side of the Light Chasers,
and she is the person who reallymainstreamed the term shadow
work from Carl Jung and she, tome, is one of the most brilliant
(28:45):
women, just humans, that justdeep soul, goodness you know.
So I would love to hang outwith her and have some tea and
just chat for hours.
So, oh, absolutely yes, forsure.
Abraham Hicks is on my list aswell.
Yep, bob Proctor, I never gotto hang out with.
Bob Proctor in person, so thatwould be nice to.
Baz Porter (29:08):
I've got a friend of
mine she worked for she's one
of the CEOs of Disney executivesand she actually had the
opportunity to go to New Zealandto see her live and I haven't
had the opportunity to, but shesaid it blew.
It changed her entire life.
Dr Amanda (29:24):
For Abraham Hicks
yeah, yeah, I just saw her live
in a couple of months ago inDenver.
Baz Porter (29:30):
Yeah, I'm in just
outside of Boulder, so we're
very oh funny, I mean ColoradoSpring.
Dr Amanda (29:35):
I lived in Boulder
for 25 years.
We didn't know that about eachother.
Yeah, yeah, I love Boulder.
Baz Porter (29:41):
I'm often down in
Elizabeth in that area and also
in Colorado Springs.
One of my board members and I'mon his board as well.
He lives in Colorado Spring inElizabeth.
Dr Amanda (29:52):
These are full-style
caranel yeah, that's amazing.
I didn't know that about you.
Baz Porter (29:57):
See, it's having the
most strangest places as you
can, as you see yourself now.
Where would you like to be inan ideal world you can create in
three years time?
What's your aspiration for thefuture?
Dr Amanda (30:11):
So many.
I'd say my lifetime businessgoal is to impact a minimum of
five million people, and impactmeaning like podcast books,
getting to work with me in groupcoaching or in any of the
programs that I create in theworld.
I really like what you saidabout ripple effect, because
let's say that I impact fivemillion people.
Those five million people thenripple effect that out into the
(30:34):
world and for me, I just go.
When I set that goal at thebeginning of my business, it
felt huge.
I was like I don't know if thisis possible.
And now I go okay, I'm on trackfor 2024 to have a million
downloads on my podcast and I'mlike, okay, this is five million
.
Might've been planned small,but so it's just fun to think,
like, with the way that we canstructure business as
(30:58):
entrepreneurs and onlineentrepreneurs wow, the impact is
just phenomenal.
And so my lifetime goals dowhat I love, be in my zone of
genius, help other people dothat and just let that ripple
out into the world in whateverway is in the highest good of
all, and play from that field.
Baz Porter (31:15):
And I was about to
say, I think, with what you're
doing in the world, five millionis very modest because of how
you show up and that's mypersonal opinion on that.
Is there anything you wouldlike to share with the audience
that they can go to?
If you're gonna weigh somethingIs, as I said, it's complete
your service to you.
So if you use a link you wannagive, this is somewhere you
(31:36):
wanna send them.
And, by the way, are youplanning to be an author?
Dr Amanda (31:41):
I have a book.
Yes, I have a.
Yes, so, if they go, I havemany fun things.
I don't wanna overwhelm peoplewith links, so one that's an
absolute must listen to mypodcast, interpower Entrepreneur
.
That's a really great place toget to know me.
If you're liking what you heardhere today, you'll love the
podcast.
So Interpower Entrepreneurpodcast, I would say Law of
AttractionForEntrepreneurscom.
(32:02):
So Law ofAttractionForEntrepreneurscom
it's the way I play with peopleevery morning to help them get
aligned for whatever level ofsuccess that they choose.
So seven day free trial.
Really, I'd say that this islike my heart program.
It's all the experience I have,all the knowledge, all the
wisdom wrapped up into thisprogram that is just people are
(32:25):
loving.
So Law ofAttractionForEntrepreneurscom
yeah, I have a ton of incredibleresources for people.
So Interpower Daily is mycompany.
So everything's underInterpowerDailycom and they can
find the Law of Attractionprogram, access to me through
coaching, free courses, my book,my podcast, like everything I
do in the world, is housed there.
So InterpowerDailycom.
Baz Porter (32:48):
Awesome.
Thank you very much.
Is there anything you'd love toadd to the audience or to share
with anybody before we depart?
Today we're not partying, butwe yeah, I'd say remember this.
Dr Amanda (32:58):
I always tell people
this is a universal principle.
Your outer world is areflection of your inner world.
So that's a universal principle.
So then I add to this yourouter world is a reflection of
your inner world.
If you don't like what you'regetting on the outside, change
what's within.
Make radical responsibility andstop blaming the world for
where you're at and insteadchoose to learn the universal
(33:19):
principles that will help youmaster the game of life and have
fun, because now you have amagic wand to create whatever
you choose to create consciouslyand deliberately.
I love that.
Baz Porter (33:31):
And I wanna thank
you, dr Amanda, for showing up
and spending time with me today.
I love this conversation.
It's very rare that I findsomebody so versed in the
energetics and the mechanics.
For all of attraction, as yousaid earlier, it's a generic
buzzword for a lot of people.
My advice, if you're listeningto this, please go and check Dr
(33:53):
Amanda out on what she's doingin the world.
Don't be shy.
Give that feedback, ask her foradvice.
Entrepreneurs are going.
I strongly believe this.
They will save the world goingforward because of their
knowledge, their advice andtheir real world experiences.
So please go and check her outand don't be shy.
(34:13):
Send her an email, have a callwith her, have a conversation.
For myself, it's been an honor.
Thank you very much, dr Amanda,for your time, your love and
your energy here.
Thank you.
Dr Amanda (34:24):
Thank you, it's been
pure joy.
Baz Porter (34:27):
For myself.
You know what to do.
Guys, thank you very much forjoining me.
Please share, download if youwish.
If not, share it with a friend.
You may actually changesomeone's life.
For myself, I'm Bars Porter.
Live with purpose and inspirewith legacy.
My friends have a blessed day.