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September 25, 2025 28 mins

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⚠️  This episode contains sensitive topics such as explicit language; discretion is advised!

Welcome to Spark & Ignite Your Marketing, the podcast where real conversations meet real strategies. I'm your host, Beverly Cornell, founder and fairy godmother of brand clarity at Wickedly Branded. With over 25 years of experience, I’ve helped hundreds of entrepreneurs awaken their brand magic, attract the right people, and build businesses that light them up.

In this episode, we dive into true embodiment, exploring what it means to speak your truth, trust your power, and market your brand through radical self-ownership. We discuss the connection between sexual energy, creation, and wealth, and how shame and societal conditioning have held women back. From mastering the mind to reclaiming pleasure and making bold moves, this is a powerful reclamation. If you’ve ever felt “too much” or afraid to share your message, this is your permission to embrace being wildly and Wickedly Branded.

Three Key  Marketing Topics Discussed:

  1. The Edge of Creation: We explore the “edge”, the place where fear and desire meet, and how marketing from that place builds brand resonance and deep client connection.
  2. Embodied Business Systems: Forget rigid to-do lists. Alara shares how she runs her business with flow, embodiment, and internal wisdom guiding her every move.
  3. Magnetism Through Stillness: Discover how meditation, embodiment, and conscious breath reset your nervous system and amplify your brand’s energetic reach.

Follow Alara:
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Alara Sage | YouTube
Alara Sage | Website

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker (00:00):
Hello.

(00:00):
Before we dive into part two ofthis episode, I gotta ask, did
you catch part one?
If not, hit pause real quick.
You'll wanna start from thebeginning to get the full
effect.
The link to part one is rightdown in the description below.
Go ahead, catch up, and we'll beright here waiting for you.
Ready to dive into part two whenyou're all set.
It's worth it, I promise.

Beverly (00:19):
One of my content buckets is about confidence and
visibility because when IreBranded in March, I reBranded
from BC and Associates Marketingto Wickedly Branded.
And the shift.
Yeah.
I just got like chills as well.
The shift in just the name wasincredibly powerful.

(00:43):
And I remember looking to myassistant, I said, I don't know
if I'm ready for all this, butthis is it.
It's pushing the button.
We're doing it.
And it wasn't that I didn'ttrust myself necessarily.
It was more of letting it go ofI'm not sure what this is gonna
bring, but I'm like, down forthe ride, whatever that looks
like.
And I remember looking at herand saying, let's do it.
And when we did it, we pushedthe button.
It was something very shifted inthe universe that happened.

(01:07):
And I've never felt morealigned, never felt more in my
purpose, zone of genius.
All the words people use in mypower than.
That was the first step.
And every step since then hasbeen more confident in, I can
handle this power, in myawareness and trust of myself
with this gift that I have beengiven.

(01:28):
And I feel like so many of theentrepreneurs I work with are in
that same space.
They have this gift, they havethis magic, they have all this
stuff in their head that'stamping it down.
I call'em the flying monkeys.
So I have a lot of Wizard of Ozand Wickedly Branded.
So I talk about impostersyndrome and perfectionism and
self-doubt, and all those thingsare the flying monkeys that just
when you think you're gonna getit all together, then the flying

(01:49):
monkeys come at you and you'relike, what do I do now?
So you've looked for the manbehind the curtain and you
realize that's not fit, notreal.
So not another certification,not another course, not another,
whatever's gonna fix theproblem.
It's you that you need to workon.
Then the self doubt and theperfectionism and the imposter
syndrome raise their uglyrearing heads and say, oh no,

(02:10):
you're not enough And then youhave to unpack the should
suitcase of, I don't need tocarry this, I don't need to
carry that.
I can do this.
But what you're saying, Alara isso true to me and my experience
and what I see with my clientson their journey.
And I only work with women aswell, for the most part.
I have a couple men who I feelare enlightened and lovely men

(02:31):
who get it and are in that samespace.
My marketing speaks to them.
But there's a lot of naysayers.
There's a lot of people who maynot even believe in this Alara.
There's a lot of people who thisscares the crap out of them.
So what do you say to thosepeople?

Alara (02:44):
I don't really say anything to them.
I don't need to say anything tothem.
I don't need to say anything tothem.
I don't need naysayers to changewho they are.
They wanna be a naysayer if theydon't wanna believe more power
to them.
I'm all about everybody being intheir lane and being what lights
them up.
The people that I attract, ofcourse, believe in what I do,
and I'm not here to defend ortry to preach this.

(03:06):
I am here very much to carrythese frequencies because I
believe that when we say yes tothese frequencies, those of us
who have a deep knowing we aretransforming humanity on the
level of consciousness.
And that hits those naysayersand all of the structures of the
patriarch in a completelydifferent way.
We don't need to fight them.
I just let them go, let them bewhoever they are, I will come at

(03:29):
it on a much more magical andsubtle frequency.
That they won't even know thatit's happening to them.
And then all of a sudden one daythey're like maybe it is
possible.
Because I've had that happen.

Beverly (03:40):
Oh, this is such a big conversation.
Alara I'm married to a soldier.
Okay?
Talk about patriarchy embeddedin every system that exists in
it.
There are women soldiers, butit's a very strong system of
that.
It's like everywhere.
And maybe that's the problemI've experienced.
Maybe that's my fault becausemaybe I thought I had to fight
it in some way and maybe I needto let that fight go.

(04:03):
So that's interesting that yousay that.
I feel like I've had to call itfor what it is, name it out loud
for people to see it.
And maybe I don't need to dothat as much.
Maybe that's not a fight that Ihave to actually be having.

Alara (04:15):
I definitely call things out and name things, but I just
don't get into a fight about itbecause as soon as I feel that
somebody's not in a receptivemanner it doesn't matter
anymore.
They're just gonna push.
Yeah.
Whatever that is.
You be, you my love.
I will love you regardless,because they're not available.
To hear other perspectives orreceive.
Otherwise it's like there's ahard shell and you're just

(04:37):
sitting there hammering on it.

Beverly (04:38):
Yeah.
Is there a belief or patternthat you've had to release in
order to finally get to thisplace?
Is there beliefs and patternsthat you've worked harder to
remove that have been obstaclesfor you?

Alara (04:50):
Yeah, definitely the belief that, desiring wealth was
somehow wrong or bad.
And also the belief that, sexualenergy is promiscuous, it's
dirty, it's manipulation.
That most beautiful realizationI had with that was the mother
took me back to when I was likethree years old and my sexual
energy came on as it does witheverybody.

(05:11):
It's innocent.
Our sexual energy is innatelyinnocent.
And I got to reclaim myinnocence in that moment.
Because you don't know, all youknow is that when you touch
yourself it feels good.
And how could that be wrong?
That is not wrong.
That's innate.
It's wisdom in our bodies.
And it's so interesting'cause insociety it's like we're
manipulated and sold sex andthen we're shamed for it
simultaneously, right?

(05:32):
So it's oh here, let's use sexto manipulate and sell it to
you.
But no, if you are in yoursexual power, you are a slut,
you're a whore.
That's sinful.
That's a shame.
That's disgusting.
And I stand very strongly'causeit's very much of what I do is
teach erotic wealth.
That it is natural, it is who weare innately.

(05:52):
And anything can bemanipulation.
Anything can be extortion.
It's up to us.
It is again, the responsibilityof power.
Anytime you hold power, you areresponsible for that power.
What are you gonna do with thatenergy?
That's up to you.
It has nothing to do with sexualenergy.
That's the energy of power.
So I stand very strongly forwomen in reclaiming this and

(06:16):
what does that mean for them andtheir bodies and their
businesses, and how they bringthat erotic wealth through
themselves and re-own it.
And it feels good and trust it.
Because again, it is that streamof creation through you.

Beverly (06:32):
I love it so much.
So one of the other things thatwe talk about is activation.
We talk about awakening themagic.
So now you've a awakened it,right?
Now you know it exists.
You feel a little bit and itfeels good.
And now you're activating themagic you have in your business.
We call it the activation ofthat part of it, which is the
real feelings.
You have your sole purpose andeverything out in the world.
The messaging, the logo, all ofthat.

(06:54):
That's my Wickedly Branded rightnow, existing in a space that is
embodying the voice of my magic.
How have you brought your voice,your magic?
How have you activated it in theworld?
What does that look like foryou?

Alara (07:09):
It was always about saying the things, doing the
things that scared the shitoutta me, there was a point
where my voice was activated inthese sound healing and Kali Maa
was working with me and she waslike, open your mouth and say
what's coming through?
And it was speaking in tongueand it was these tones and this
very powerful sound healing.

(07:29):
And it triggered deep traumawithin me'cause I'd always been
told I was tone deaf.
I kept saying I can't sing.
And she kept saying, this is notsinging.
Open your mouth and say thething.
It took me years to show upconsistently.
I kept showing up whenever I wastold, by my intuition, by the
mother.
I would go online, live and openmy mouth and let it come out.
And the whole time I'm like, Ican't sing.
I don't know what I'm doing.

(07:50):
Nobody's gonna this is so weird.
And what is this?
Showing up consistently becauseagain, that inner voice is
telling me to, even though Ifeel the fear, even though I
feel the doubt, even though Ifeel all the things.
I trust that voice is for mebecause it always comes through
loving.
It is a love within me.

(08:11):
It loves me and it is here forme.
And I trust that above fear.
I trust that above, otherpeople.
'cause I've been shamed online.
I've had women attack me.
And it doesn't matter, like Iknow where I'm coming from, I
know why I'm doing what I do.
So it's that consistent actionon what I feel I'm supposed to

(08:31):
do no matter what.

Beverly (08:33):
So what part of the thing that you're supposed to do
scares you?
What part of that are you mostproud?
And maybe that proud is not theword, but most excited to share
that once actually held youback?
Because I feel like when I talkabout Wickedly Branded and I
talk about confidence andvisibility and all those things,
I used to think like the workshould speak for itself and I

(08:54):
should just to put my head downand do the work.
And now I share and I proclaimand I excitedly go on other
people's podcasts and talk aboutmy journey.
Although I do feel vulnerablesometimes.
'cause you're right, people canbe very mean.
However, I know that this iswhat I'm supposed to do.
Despite that fear, despite thatwhat I even know will happen, I
still do the thing knowing thatthis is what I know I'm supposed

(09:16):
to do.
Is there some part of yourmessage or your brand that
you're really excited about orproud of to share that actually
once was like holding you back?

Alara (09:26):
It's always been the conversation of sex, power, and
money.
And that's where I've beenshamed.
I've never been shamed when I'vebeen vulnerable.
It's when I'm speaking to thepower of the sexual current, the
erotic current, the arousalwithin us and how women can use
that to create, that's when Iget shamed, right?
That's when the feminine attacksme.
Men never attacked me in thatstate.

(09:46):
It's always been the womanbecause of what I am exposing.
I'm exposing deep pains.
And again, I had to go throughthat first and foremost in
myself.
I did not want to speak aboutsex.
I did not want to speak aboutmoney.
I did not want to speak aboutpower.
I didn't wanna speak about anyof that.
And it was that, again, thatinternal wisdom that kept
saying, this is what you need tospeak to.

(10:07):
And following that and pursuingthat and being triggered in
myself as I put content outthere, and then putting it out
there for a little while, andthen being like, yeah, I don't
need to do that.
And retracting and then comesback around no, this is who you
are.
This is what you need to speakto.
And I'm so passionate about itbecause through my journey of
facing those deep wounds, I seehow important it is.

(10:29):
For women, and when women attackme or shame me, I don't see the
attack or the shame.
I see the wound in that womanthat I'm triggering.
And that is what makes me sopassionate about this because I
will no longer stand for shamein women.
I will no longer stand for womenhaving to, step into their
masculine and be in thisperformance and bro market and

(10:49):
all this shit that doesn't feelgood to their bodies.
I won't stand for it anymore.
I won't stand for the oppressionof our voices and our
authenticity and our genius.
I am very much for the power ofthe woman and everything that
each woman in and of herselfwants to be.
Whatever she wants to be, I'mall for it.

Beverly (11:07):
You've shared a lot of your philosophy and your process
and how you came away from shamearound many of the things and
where you focused now based onwhat you hear you're supposed to
be doing, and you feel thatpower in.
Let's talk about the businesssystems that have helped you
become sustainable and do moreof this kind of stuff.

(11:28):
Has there been somethingspecific that you've either
automated, delegated, created,that have helped you be able to
focus more on the philosophicalpart versus the doing part?

Alara (11:38):
For one, I don't try to do it all.
Most of my business I didn'thave assistance, but again, I
don't subscribe to do lists.
I have things I know need to getdone, but again, my wisdom will
always guide me in that process.
I don't need to know how it'sgonna get done.
I don't need to know when it'sgonna get done.
There's a magic to how weembody, and that's that state of

(12:00):
surrender that, when we are froma mental plane, like these are
the things I need to get donethere's no magic in that.
There's a divine orchestrationin everything, and there's
always divine orchestrationhappening where, okay, I think
something's gonna happen and itdoesn't, it gets rerouted.
And that was actually a muchbetter time and date and moment
for that to occur, right?
So most of my business, I'vedone completely by myself

(12:23):
outside of bookkeeping.
I now have more assistance, butI don't think it's a
requirement.
It's about really where's thealiveness now, right?
And what feels really good, whatfeels available to me to do now,
and doing those things.
And again, it's followingthrough.
It's the taking the action.
I think most women, they eithermake a to-do list and they just

(12:46):
take the action regardless, andthey just suffer, or they just
put everything on the backburner and they're not really
looking at any of it or doinganything.
So my system has been myinternal wisdom and taking
action on that, and that alwayscreates the most amount of flow
in my business.
So I don't have to do all thethings.
I just have to do what is infront of my space right now.

Beverly (13:08):
So you said listen earlier, listen to yourself.
Listen to the voice.
Do you meditate?
How do you quiet your mind tolisten to?
'cause I do feel like we live ina very noisy world, Alara.
So how do we quiet the mind andquiet our space to be able to
listen and hear what's beingshared with us?

Alara (13:25):
That is a very good question, Beverly.
You have to learn how to, firstoff, recognize the mind and its
frequency.
And learn how to quiet it.
Learn how to master your mind,because your mind is a computer.
And it gets programmed and itjust spits everything out that
has been told.
That's what your mind does.
And it'll do it on asubconscious level.
95% of your day is run by yoursubconscious mind.

(13:47):
What has your subconscious mindbeen fed, right?
Mastering your mind.
Absolutely.
I've meditated for many yearsand my mornings are mine.
I am most creative in themornings, but I do not give that
creativity to anybody.
That creativity is for me.
I wake up, the first thing I dois I go to my altar.
I just bless life, bless God,bless the mother, and then I

(14:12):
meditate.
And learn.
I've learned how to master mymind, learn how to focus, learn
how to not think, learn how tobe in stillness, presence,
isness, beingness, purepotential.
And then I go out into MotherGaia and I just be with her
without any expectation.
Some days I walk and conversely,the other days I jog and it's
all about presence.

(14:32):
Then I take a shower and I getready and that takes me up until
about 10.
I get up at five, 10 o'clock inthe morning is when technically
I start.
And then, I have very little onmy plate every single day and
most of my day is spent inmeditation out in Mother Gaia,
dancing in my erotic current,just being with myself.
Because again, this is thefeminine, this is magnetism.

(14:54):
The more time we spend in theseenergies, the more magnetic we
are.
The more that when I do make apost, when I do come on to these
podcasts it has a frequency toit.
So mastering the mind isimperative, but we master the
mind through the body.
There's a trinity to everything,a trinity to creation, the law
of one.

(15:15):
And from that law of one is thethree primary distortions of
creation.
There's lots of different waysto call it, but it's body, mind,
spirit, the thing we hear allthe time, but how many people
are embodied?
Very few.
Even those spiritual mentors andguides.
Embodiment is a lot of effort.
Yes.
That is something that you haveto learn to do.

(15:37):
You don't have to give yourselffive hours like I do in the
morning.
That's just the point that I'vecome to, that I just fucking
love myself so much.
I can't do anything other thanthat.
Excuse my language.
But you can spend five minutes.
You don't even have to spendfive minutes in the morning.
You can break it apart.
One of the things I love to tellpeople is if you're first
learning this, just pausethroughout your day.
You can set a timer on yourwatch.

(15:58):
You can do it.
Every time you go to thebathroom is something that, you
start to create a rhythm aroundand you just pause, you breathe
and do your body, feel your bodygo back to work.
Go back to your things.
It's not just in activeembodiment.
You actually reset your nervoussystem.

(16:20):
You reconnect through the breathto your nervous system and your
subconscious and conscious mindsconnect.
There's biological aspects toconscious breath, so if it's
just that, if that's where youstart, that is huge, right?
We all have to start from wherewe are at, and it just can be a
tiny little step to the nextthing of learning how to master

(16:43):
your mind and be embodied inyour power.

Beverly (16:46):
So many good things.
In that answer, you gave Alara,I've meditated and there's times
where I'm really good at stayingfocused and there's times where,
like you said, the mind has beenprogrammed to do other things
and you get distracted.
And I was recently diagnosedwith A DHD, and so there's like
this whole other side of mybrain.
I think it's my superpower.

(17:06):
But I'm trying to learn tounderstand the power that it
has.
But there's this whole we livein a busy, noisy culture, right?
And this idea of stillness, thisidea of stopping this idea of
five hours for your freakingself, oh my gosh.
Alara go you.
And I have children, and I'msure you're teaching them this
is awesome, but you're teachingthem to give to themselves

(17:27):
before they give to the worldthat is so important, to balance
and root and ground yourself inyour power before you give any
of it away to anybody else.
In some ways.
I'm not there yet.
Absolutely not.

Alara (17:39):
That's not for everybody.
And I want the women to reallyhear that's not what you have to
be.
And this is not okay, this isthe standard.
It's really about.
Each individual woman and whatit really resonates and what is
her life.
And so again, I wanna be reallyclear on that.
'cause I'm not trying to makeanybody feel like that's what
they have to be.

Beverly (17:56):
No, I just think it's awesome that you do.
I'm not there.
I am not in that place yet.
If I can get my coffee, sit onmy back porch and do some
intentional breathing and intendfor my day, I'm very happy.
And that's 10, 15 minutes.
So I'm not five hours.
I'm an only child.
I think I'm used to being withmyself and I like myself.
There are a lot of people whoare not used to be by themselves
and they turn on the tv or theyturn on the device, or they call

(18:18):
a friend.
They can't still themselvesenough to just be alone with
themselves, which I find veryfascinating from our culture
that just sitting and beingseems lazy, just sitting and
being seems unproductive.
So this idea of just being seemscounterintuitive to everything
our culture has.

(18:39):
I was alone a lot more left myown imagination and devices and
my own little world that Icreated where so many other
people didn't have thatexperience and are very
uncomfortable being in their ownlittle world they've created for
themselves.
So my world exists with unicornsand rainbows and sparkles and
magic wands and all the things,and I love it.

(19:02):
And it's shiny and sparkly, andI have taken that into my work
and into my world because itmakes me happy, it brings me
joy.
It radiates for me the way Ifeel on the inside when I can
share those symbols on theoutside of what I'm doing.
For my listeners Right Now,you've heard a lot, we've talked

(19:22):
about a lot so far.
And if this is resonating orconnecting in any way, I would
love for you to leave us areview and tell us like the
thing that like struck yourchord.
Was it the pussy and thetesticles, was it the five hours
of meditating?
Let us know because it helps usunderstand where you're at, what
you're feeling, what'sconnecting with you.

(19:42):
Or maybe there's somebody youknow, maybe there's a friend
that you know, is strugglingwith this, trying to be
everything to everyone, andmaybe this is exactly what they
need to hear is a wake up call.
It's okay to spend five hours onyourself.
It's okay to not listen to theworld.
That doesn't treat us very well,that has been scared of us for a
long time.
Our power, our energy.

(20:03):
So if this connects, I wouldlove for you to share and, or
send to a friend.
'cause I think we need to havemore of these kinds of
conversations.
We need to have powerfulconversations.
We are amazing creatures andtell, we fully accept that they
win.
I love this for lots of reasons.
I'm gonna change things up alittle bit in this conversation.
If you've listened to one of myprevious episodes, I have a

(20:25):
magic hat round, which is myequivalent of the the rapid fire
questions.
There are lots of quite funquestions in here, and we'll
just go through a few and seewhere it takes us.

Alara (20:36):
Beautiful.

Beverly (20:36):
What's been your most humbling lesson as an
entrepreneur?

Alara (20:40):
That moment that I went to create everything back, and
instead my business crumbled andI went into debt because I was
literally in the energy ofscarcity and lack.

Beverly (20:51):
If your brand had a theme song, what would it be and
why?

Alara (20:55):
This girl is on fire?
Because I feel like I'm alwayson fire.

Beverly (21:00):
I love it.
What was the moment you realizedyour business was successful?

Alara (21:05):
When it felt really good.
And when I had a deep reverencefor everything that was
happening, whether that beclosing offers, clients coming
in, new things being created,everything felt honorable.

Beverly (21:18):
What does something in your business that brings you
pure, I'll call it joy, you cancall it erotic energy.
What is the thing that bringsyou pure joy about your
business?

Alara (21:28):
Everything.
I don't create anything in mybusiness that isn't that
literally.

Beverly (21:32):
What is one thing people overcomplicate about
business or marketing?
That's actually really simple

Alara (21:37):
Relevancy.
Understanding that when you'rein your genius, you're relevant
to exactly who you need to be.
Trying to figure out yourrelevancy from outside
perspective is not the way.
So again, that embodiment, thatrecognition of your genius
automatically creates therelevancy for your unique
clients.

Beverly (21:59):
Yes.
What's been your mostunexpected, serendipitous moment
in business?

Alara (22:05):
Oh my god, I've had so many, so literally so many.
I'll speak to one recently awoman invited me to be a
co-creator of a erotic wealth inperson luxury event in Dubai.
And I had already been feelingthat I was gonna be a part of
some live events that I'm notcreating.
And sure enough, I got invitedto two of'em this year.

(22:26):
And I didn't do anything to makethat happen.
Nothing just dropped out of thesky.

Beverly (22:32):
Love that.
Wonderful.
So the next thing I have is awand.
And the wand is helps us timetravel.
And we're gonna go back to avery young Alara like think 18
years old.
What is one piece of advice orbelief that you wish you'd had
at 18 that you have now?

Alara (22:50):
That her sexual energy is innocent and she can work with
it and release her shame andlearn to trust it.

Beverly (22:57):
What would she think of you now?

Alara (22:59):
It would blow her mind because she only knows it as
deep pain.
The fact that it would be me,right, would make her see it.
But I think if it was somebodyelse, she'd be yeah, that's
somebody else.
That's not me.
I experience it painfully.

Beverly (23:12):
So if I wave the wand and we go far into the future
and we look at, once you're pathin, this life is done.
What legacy do you hope peoplewill say about your work at your
eulogy?

Alara (23:26):
Truly powering women and their authenticity and their
sexual power, and creating amovement of remembrance that we
are an exhaustible wealth.
And we get to reclaim that herein the physical reality, not
just as a beautiful spiritualmetaphor.

Beverly (23:44):
So good.
Okay.
I'm gonna wave my wand and we'regonna come back to today.
I hope.
The trip was nice.
I didn't give snacks, but I hopeit was nice.
The last thing I ask ofeverybody is a magical tip.
What does being Wickedly Brandedmean to you?
And how do you show up WickedlyBranded?
And what advice would you giveto our listeners to be more
Wickedly Branded?

Alara (24:04):
It kinda goes back to what I was saying about the
thing that you feel called tospeak to, or to say, or to write
about, that also scares youbecause that's what I call the
edge.
It's the edge of creation.
It's where pleasure meets pain,suffering meets grace, and that
edge is where everything occurs,where creation is literally
exists.

(24:25):
So when we're willing to look atwhat we feel like we need to
say, but it also scares us,that's where all the juiciness
is.
That's your edge, and it'sunique for everybody.

Beverly (24:35):
So good.
I love that.
Alara where can our listenersconnect with you and your work
and hear more about what's upwith you and what you're doing?

Alara (24:43):
Alarasage.com is my website and they can go on there
and do what's called a wealthkink quiz and learn how wealth
likes to move through them fromfive different blueprints.
So it's really quite eye-openingfor people.
They love it.
They feel very seen, and a lotof my clients had immediate
shifts just simply from thatinformation.
And then I'm on social media,Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn,

(25:07):
Substack, YouTube at Alara Sage.

Beverly (25:11):
Awesome.
I love it.
Thank you so much for being withus today and having this
incredible conversation.

Alara (25:17):
It was really incredible.
Thank you, Beverly.

Beverly (25:19):
To my listeners, I really hope today's episode
maybe lit a little fire underyou, maybe a little bit more
erotic wealth for you, and gaveyou some new ideas, and most of
all, inspired you to take someaction in some area of your
life, whether it's to meditatemore, whether it's to lean more
on the edge and to get morecreative.
Maybe it's to create from yourwomb.

(25:41):
But here's the thing.
Your message matters.
Your work deeply matters, andthe world needs to hear what you
only, you have to say.
Marketing isn't just aboutvisibility.
It's about impact.
It's about connecting with theright people in a way that feels
deeply true to you.
So keep showing up.
Keep sharing your brilliance andkeep making your magic in the

(26:04):
world.
And hey, if you ever feel stuck,know that you don't have to do
it alone.
Both Alara and I are here tohelp you turn your little spark
into a wildfire.
Until next time, dare to beWickedly Branded.
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