Why Syncing Your Business To Your Menstrual Cycle Is The Key To Financial Success and Nervous System Regulation
Month: September 2024
Listen Wherever You Get Your Podcasts
Are you an intuitive entrepreneur stuck in a cycle of burnout, anxiety, and second-guessing, no matter how hard you push for success?
What if the missing key to growing your business and feeling at ease in your body was hidden in your menstrual cycle?
In this episode, you will learn how to sync your menstrual cycle with your business to achieve financial stability, mental clarity, and physical ease.
Join FLOW:
Go from overwhelmed and stressed to aligned and thriving with FLOW – the group training. For updated information and to make sure it’s the perfect fit for you DM me FLOW via Instagram www.instagram.com/_sheridanruth_ or by emailing sheridan@sheridanruth.com
FLOW will help you go from
- Experiencing cramps, migraine and tummy troubles each month… to flowing through your cycle and your period surprised at how it just happened without any pain or discomfort.
- Anxiety and second-guessing yourself… to feeling so confident in your inner knowing and your ability to take action with ease to get exactly where you want to be.
- Riding a roller coaster of emotional ups and downs each month that makes you feel exhausted… to spending more time in pleasant exciting emotions and loving your ability to efficiently extract the wisdom from your difficult emotions, resulting in spending extra energy finding fun hobbies and creations!
- Feeling overwhelmed by your todo list and dreading Monday mornings… to finishing each day having completed your doo list, feeling on track, proud of yourself and able to disconnect and be fully present with your loved ones and hobbies
- Relationships that feel like there is constantly something ‘off’, and struggling to manage conflict, set healthy boundaries and know what you want… to more genuine connections with less anxiety and a sense of closeness you didn’t know was possible before.
Maintaining Motivation, Avoiding Narcisistic Mentors & Healthy Boundaries in Online Coaching – Sustainable Entrepreneurship with Mark Walsh
Month: September 2024
Listen Wherever You Get Your Podcasts
WTF is purpose…. How do you set boundaries and why is the online coaching industry so TOXIC?!
Whether it’s dealing with narcissistic mentors, avoiding burnout, or balancing business growth with personal well-being, Mark Walsh and I explore all these themes in today’s podcast.
By the end of this episode you’ll know:
- How to feel purpose in your body
- Common myths about boundaries propagated online
- How to set embodied, firm, and effective boundaries in relationships and business
- How to choose between authentic loneliness with purpose or inauthenticity.
- How to re-connect to yourself after losing motivation and hobbies after trauma healing
- Why high levels of success in any field often come with some level of neurosis or unhealthy drive.
Plus, we explore the trap of entitlement in online coaching…and that no one is entitled to an easy, fulfilling career—success requires effort, talent, and sometimes luck.
Who’s Mark Walsh?
Mark Walsh is the The Embodiment Podcast, co-leader of The Embodiment Conference, and co-founder of the Embodied Facilitator Course and Certificate of Embodiment Coaching, with extensive experience in trauma education, resilience, and martial arts across 40 countries, including work with corporations like Google and Unilever.
https://embodimentunlimited.com/
TRANSCRIPT:
[00:00:00] What the hell is Pappas. And how do you feel it in your body? How do you set boundaries and why is the online coaching industry? So toxic? Whether you are dealing with narcissistic Mentos or avoiding burnout, or balancing your business growth with your personal wellbeing.
[00:00:14] Mach Walsh. My guest and I are going to explore all of these themes in today’s podcast. But then at this episode, you will know how to feel purpose in your body. Common myths around boundaries that are propagated online. And even by therapists. How to set, embodied feminine, effective boundaries, how to choose between authentic loneliness. With purpose or in authenticity and pain. How to reconnect to yourself after losing motivation and even your hobbies and identity after trauma healing. [00:01:00] And why high levels of success in any field often come with some level of neurosis or unhealthy drive. Plus we explore the trap of entitlement in the online coaching industry and the fact that no one is entitled to an easy fulfilling career.
[00:01:14] So sex success requires effort, talent, and sometimes luck. So, who am I speaking with? Mach wall is the host. Of the embodiment podcast. He is also leader of embodiment conferences and courses, and he’s been doing embodiment, coaching and support online. Offline. All of the weld for many, many years, he is a leader in embodiment industry, and I’m really privileged and honored to have him on.
[00:01:41] He has a lot of experience in trauma, education, resilience, martial arts. He’s worked with corporations. He works with individuals and. You know, corporations like Google and. all that. And also in Ukraine, in war-torn areas, you know, teaching a buddy man outside of a bombshell inside of a bomb
[00:02:00]shelter. Uh, Let’s get into it. Let’s ask the questions.
[00:02:05] This is going to be a very entertaining. entertaining. episode for you guys.
[00:02:11] Sheridan and Mark: Can I rapid fire some questions at you from my own personal curiosity? Sure. Cool. One of the things that. I respect and admire in you is your ability to have your hands in so many pots at the same time, uh, and find a way to serve so many people.
[00:02:29] But it feels like it’s pretty clear what the purpose and the mission is. How do you, what does that? How do you use embodiment and your training to support you in having all of these different pieces and all of these different purposes and missions and like, what does it actually feel like for you on the inside?
[00:02:49] I mean, I only really do one thing, which is I teach embodiment. And then I kind of run practicalities around that. So there is a degree of complexity in, [00:03:00] you know, running YouTube channel and writing books and making time for all that, managing staff, et cetera. Um, how does it feel? It feels one of two ways.
[00:03:08] So either I’m doing the main thing I love, which is teaching or coaching embodiment. And that is just pure flow. Like I’m in just in a flow state while I’m doing that. I almost don’t feel much because I’m just in it. I’m dissolved. Um, or I’m doing all the other stuff, which feels kind of like a chore and slightly annoying.
[00:03:30] Um, and I try and minimize the other stuff and I’ve worked various systems trying to figure out how to minimize it. And there’s no perfect answer as far as I can tell. I agree. What would you say to the person who’s At that point where they need to make a decision around whether or not they prioritize doing the boring stuff.
[00:03:49] To get to the point where they get to do the flow work, what would be your words of wisdom? Yeah, I mean, there’s this saying, don’t do anything that isn’t play, and there’s some truth in that and some bullshit in that.
[00:04:00]So, I will always, for example, employ people I like, so I’m never in a meeting with someone I hate.
[00:04:05] Like, I like my team just as people, you know, they’re fun, cool, lovely people. Um, so when I have a marketing meeting with Steve, We are joking, and we had a marketing meeting yesterday, I was literally just walking along talking to him about the latest ideas for our trauma course. And we’re making jokes, and we’re telling stories, I’m asking him about his wife, who’s pregnant, so it’s nice.
[00:04:24] So that’s the first thing I’d say, is make sure you don’t work with dickheads, like that’s something to live by. Like I employ on personality more than anything else. Um, secondly, You will need to outsource if you’re going to have any time. I don’t do anything. I really am merciless in having boundaries around not doing crappy things.
[00:04:46] So even though I make most of my marketing and other things playful and enjoyable, both in the methods, like I like podcasting. So even though it’s marketing, I really enjoy learning on the podcast. It doesn’t feel like marketing. Um, everything else that[00:05:00] can’t feel like play, I try to outsource. Like I’m getting on a flight.
[00:05:03] today to go teach in Vienna. I haven’t booked a flight in over 15 years. I just don’t enjoy it. So I pay someone else to do that. That then creates the problem of management. So now I’m managing whoever I’m outsourcing to, right? Whether it’s full time employee or part time person or just, yeah, gig economy, whatever, I’ve still got to manage it.
[00:05:23] Right. And if I employ someone to manage that, I’ve still got to manage them. So that. Isn’t always the most fun and there are tensions there. You know, people want to do different work, less work, more work, whatever. So that creates a different challenge. Um, so I don’t, I’ve had models of one man band. One man band plus good PA that works quite well.
[00:05:45] Um, what we’re on now, it’s like five full time employees plus a few gig economy people and 25 employees, medium sized company with 2 million pound turnover. I hated that last one cause I was just managing the one we’re doing now seems to [00:06:00] be the best mix. Cause when I was one man band or plus PA, I had to do too much stuff.
[00:06:05] I didn’t like that. I didn’t have any management. So. That, and I think there’s no solution here, and there’s no perfect solution, and it depends who you are as well. Some people might really like management. They’re much more people, you know, I’m highly disagreeable. So for me, it’s less, less fun than for someone who might be a real people person.
[00:06:23] So, um, yeah, that’s, that’s the balance I’ve struck at the moment is to have a small company. Yeah. You mentioned something about boundaries. And I would love to, I’m going to take us a few different places. Cause I feel like you have so much to teach both from the embodiment perspective and also just live life experience that people are going to be asking, but podcast listeners always ask me, well, you know, how do I, how do I.
[00:06:47] How do I understand boundaries? How do I work my own? How do I know where my boundaries are? How do I know when I’m setting a boundary and it’s manipulating or controlling? How do I, how do I set a boundary? How do I have boundaries with my clients or with my employee [00:07:00] or with my mother? What’s your big take on boundaries and how do we set them?
[00:07:04] Okay. I think you’re overthinking it a bit for starters. I mean, it’s just being able to say no to people. I mean, where it gets complicated is that is an embodied skill. So it’s not a cognitive thing. It’s actually an embodied capability. You know, I do run eight week courses on boundaries from time to time.
[00:07:20] So there’s a lot I could say. Um, the main thing is, do you have the embodied capacity to say no? Uh, can you say a polite no, a firm no, and an aggressive no? You need to be able to have a scale of no, because sometimes it’s no thank you. And sometimes it’s no, fuck you. Right? How dare you get the fuck out of my office.
[00:07:36] Like, both of those are necessary. How you say no to a 10 year old child is not how you say no to your mother, is not how you say no to your boss. Like, I actually teach my employees to say no to me. I say, hey boss, would you like me to do X or Y? Because I only have the capacity for one. Which would you like me to do?
[00:07:55] Right? Because what I hate is when employees just drop things. They say, Oh, I didn’t have time. I’m like, yeah, but that wasn’t the [00:08:00]priority. You know, come on, come and talk to me about priorities. So, you know, there are some skills to learn technically, but mostly people overthink it. And as soon as we start saying like boundaries, it’s this weird, abstract, therapeutical thing.
[00:08:13] Everybody’s watching too many bloody Instagram videos on it. And it’s just being able to say no to people. Yes, I agree with you 100%. And it, I hate that term. Because it becomes this, yeah, like convoluted strategy and whenever we’re in strategy led, I feel uncomfortable because I feel that we’re coming from fear.
[00:08:34] So, and not embodiment. How do you, can you walk us through a super, super, super simple way? I understand that there’s nuance to this, but how would somebody identify inside of their body a no, and how, What do they do when they’ve identified inside of their body that it’s a no, but their mind is going into what if
[00:09:00] scenarios that get them in their head.
[00:09:03] Uh huh. What do you mean? So there’s the embodied capacity for no. So the easiest way to find that would be to do a push up, like do a chaturanga. Like if you do a push up or a chaturanga, that’s a push away, right? So that’s the feeling of no. Yeah. And you know, wouldn’t do that aggressively. You wouldn’t do that passively.
[00:09:20] You could contrast being too floppy and passive, being aggressive and off center and tense and finding that sort of relaxed, boundary firm middle point. Like that’s how you’d find the somatic. capacity for it. And then you need to practice that because we need to practice embodiment. You can lean on a wall.
[00:09:36] That’d be another way to find that firm. You know, nobody’s unboundaried when they lean on a wall because you’d smash your face in it, wouldn’t you? So it’s like, like we could all do it. So that’s the feeling of it that you then have to find a way to embody in life in a sort of micro way without, you know, having to do a press up, which obviously wouldn’t be appropriate in the middle of a business meeting or something.
[00:09:53] Um, I mean, what people are looking for is also that they’re tuning into their body. A lot of people are missing their distress response. [00:10:00]So if you’ve not built body awareness through meditation, through yoga, through practice, you’ll miss that you’re saying yes, but no. So as a coach, for example, I really look for this.
[00:10:09] I’ll say like, Hey Sheridan, is it alright if I tickle your nose? And you’ll be like, yeah. So your body’s actually saying no, your body’s having a distress response, even if your words are saying yes. So I take that as a no. Right. So when I hear that as a coach, I’m like, are you sure? And then I help people find their note as a coach by being like, Oh, I say like, take a breath.
[00:10:32] Do you really want me to tickle your notes? And I’m like, actually, no, it’s weird. I’m like, okay, yeah, I won’t then. Okay. So like giving people that space to notice their stress response when they’re saying yes, it’s part of the process. There’s lots more I could say, but that’s the basics. Yeah. I like, I like that.
[00:10:49] I like that.
[00:10:53] I remember years ago, my teacher put his hand on my thigh. He’s an old man, right? He puts his hand on my thigh and I’m like totally weirded out. And he’s like, is that [00:11:00] okay? I’m like, yeah, cause I trust you. And he’s like, what’s your body telling you? I’m like, my body’s telling me to get the fuck off. He’s like, well, tell me then.
[00:11:06] I’m like, get off me. He’s like, okay. Right. So he was like training me through like a body process to notice that, that bodily though. Yeah. Yeah, and it’s really interesting because I’ve noticed, I was speaking about this with a client this morning, that there are certain people, you and I are probably more attuned to it because our jobs have been reading and attuning to other people and probably many of our listeners will be more attuned of like, we, we, we’ve picked, we learned to pick up on those things.
[00:11:34] We’ve spent many, many hours. practicing it. But I had a client this morning and we’ve noticed that in her, uh, relationship, she tends to have a lot of people who she’ll express no and their response to her no, and I think it’s a cultural thing in the culture that she’s living in, but also a very personal thing.
[00:11:56] Their response to her no is always to move forward. Oh no, [00:12:00]it’s fine, don’t worry about it. Oh no. And that’s where, that’s where you need to be violent. So, um, I’m half joking, that if you’ve trained people not to say you’re, not to listen to you, because you always say yes, first of all, that’s your fault, take responsibility for that.
[00:12:14] Secondly, you might just be in a culture where that’s normal. Thirdly, families do this all. The time, like if your mother doesn’t do this, I would be surprised, right? To listeners. So, um, that’s where you need to be more assertive, right? So you can’t just have a, no, we have a no pose and a system called toolkit.
[00:12:31] I teach and it has a fist in it because the first no is no. The second no is, don’t do that. The third no is, I will hurt you if you keep pushing. And like, if there’s no teeth, there’s no no. There are people who will abuse you out of habit, out of culture, or because they’re psychopaths. You know, there are real predators out there.
[00:12:53] But most people aren’t predators. They’re just used to getting what they want. They want what they want. They’re used to you being a pushover. And now [00:13:00] you’ve got to retrain them. And that might mean some arguments. There’s one girl I’m coaching at the moment, Who I’d say is going to lose about a third of her friends, because she just learned to say no.
[00:13:09] And a third of them, she’s in Italy, and there it’s very social, communal culture like Spain. And people are like, well, you have to come out. It’s my birthday. You have to, you have to. Don’t you love me? And they start trying to be manipulative. And she’s finding it really difficult, but she’s getting there and I’d say a third of her friends got it really quickly and were happy for her.
[00:13:26] A third of her friends got it painfully, but they’re getting it. And a third, she’s going to have to cut loose because they’re just, they’re just essentially abusive people. Yeah. I have clients like that as well. What’s your take on that? Like where, here’s the question I want to ask. Cause this is the question that they ask me.
[00:13:43] It’s how do I be in that middle space? Where I’ve just lost a large part of my community that I was relying on because I’ve been prioritizing myself. But I’m not yet at that next point where I’ve got these amazing relationships. I
[00:14:00]feel so seen. How do I navigate that? No man’s land in between. Yeah, so first of all, people, there’s one more piece here that often people go through what I call the obnoxious stage when they’re learning boundaries, where they’re actually being overbounded.
[00:14:13] Now, I’m not doing it. And I’m like, you probably shouldn’t speak to your boss that way. You know, it’s like, maybe don’t say it like that to your mom, you know, maybe cut your mom some slack because you were in her womb. So she’s a bit unbounded with you, you know, so it’s like, like, there is a stage where people overshoot and they get a bit bratty kind of thing.
[00:14:29] Like I had one employee who was going through that stage. It was just a pain in the ass. I just eye rolled for a couple of years till they got over it. And it’s like, you know, it’s, it’s, it’s a learning stage, so you could be overshooting it. That’s the first thing to understand, you know, that relationship, this whole, like, I’m the boss of me and nothing else matters.
[00:14:44] It’s not very relational. So, you know, that is also necessary. Uh, what people really want who are like people, pleaser people is to have boundaries, but for everyone to love them and they need to first of all, accept that’s not fucking possible. Yeah, that, that, that they’re going to lose some people. Um, [00:15:00] then I would say it’s like, well, if.
[00:15:02] Your meaning in life comes from a sense of purpose. Other people are a bonus for that. I mean, it’s just codependent to need other people, like, in the sense of like, I mean, we’re all social animals. So it’s nice to have friends. Solitary confinements are a pain in the ass, you know, solitary retreats are hard, but that’s a bonus.
[00:15:20] Like, that’s not like, I’d say a big thing I’m interested in is like meaning in life and where society is at currently. If you have a strong meaning in life, you know, Nelson Mandela is willing to sit in a prison cell on his own if necessary, he’d rather not, but he’s got a good reason to do that. Yeah, sure.
[00:15:38] There’s going to be times when it’s lonely. So what? Suck it up. I mean, you’ve got a choice, right? You can be someone who’s lonely and hated from time to time, and is doing something significant on purpose, saying original things, being authentic. Or you can be a drone who’s inauthentic and tries to make everyone loves them and dies lonely anyway, because no one is really seeing them.
[00:15:59] [00:16:00] So, I mean, the choice is between one kind of loneliness and another. Yeah. And I want to get your intake on the, on the purpose. Cause I, whenever I’m working with somebody, I noticed this pattern. And I don’t know if you’ve will have noticed the same thing where they’re very, uh, motivated to achieve something.
[00:16:20] Then we do a lot of trauma healing. They discover that their motivation to achieve that thing. Was possibly not the healthiest and it’s no longer, or just is no longer motivating. Cause it’s like that loop has been closed and then we have to figure out, okay, well, what’s my frigging purpose? What, how do you figure out your purpose?
[00:16:41] Yeah, it’s a great question. I love talking to you, Sheridan. Um, another example, this is like, I have martial arts friends. I do a lot of martial arts and sometimes they do their trauma healing and they no longer want to do martial arts because the world doesn’t seem dangerous, you know, and they kind of lose their hobby.
[00:16:54] Um, and some of them just go, you know what, I’m going to keep turning up to teach the kids class because, you know, whatever that has meaning and then eventually [00:17:00] they find another meaning to do martial arts other than their original pathological one. I mean, we’re all neurotic, right? We’re all driven by, I need everyone to love me or I need to be seen or something deeply neurotic, right?
[00:17:10] I, particularly when you meet like famous, successful people, they are crazy. Like I’ve met some really successful people and they’re the nuts. They’re absolutely nuts. Totally. Like to it, particularly given the sort of global competition to be like a. top podcaster or a top basketball player or anything.
[00:17:26] You have to be nuts these days. Like we’ve almost made a system where if you’re not nuts, you probably won’t make it. Um, so yeah, you need to keep reassessing that. And it’s like, what’s the healthier version of this? Is there like my motivation to teach embodiment over the years, it goes up, it goes down, it changes.
[00:17:44] You know, like I wanted to be a real someone and then I did the embodiment conference, which was like three or four years ago now. And that was really big and a half a million people came and I was like, Oh, I got that and saw that it was pretty unsatisfying. And now I’m just not interested in that. So it’s like, okay, I’ll run a smaller[00:18:00] business, quiet thing.
[00:18:00] I’m not going to do such big things. You know, then I went to Ukraine. It’s like, I’m going to be a hero in a war zone. And then I realized that was partly pathological. And I was like, why am I seeking danger? That doesn’t make sense. Uh, still supported that project, but you know, they were like, come back to Ukraine.
[00:18:13] I was like, no, let’s do the next training in Poland. Not in a bomb shelter where it’s nice. Cause Krakow is lovely and you can get on the train. I’m not doing it in a bomb shelter. So, you know, your motivation changes over the years. I think of purpose, not as a. thing that you find, but it’s more like a, a magnetic north you have to keep orientating to.
[00:18:34] And that means regular reorientation over the years. Yeah. And how do you feel that in your body? How would you know in your body that you found it? Usually this is one of two things. So it’s either like energized. So it’s like, yeah, I want to get up. I’ve got loads of energy for this. You know, like, this is great.
[00:18:49] Like, yeah, cool. You know, I don’t mind doing an interview at 8am, whatever, let’s do it. You know, there’s not the energy for it. And the second one is more like a kind of deep. Ease or like, you might feel this with a [00:19:00]partner. You’re like sitting on a couch next to them and it’s just like really easeful.
[00:19:06] Like, Oh yeah, this is the right place for me. So it’s usually a mix of the excitement and the ease, like a good marriage is those two things, right? It’s like you see them and you want to jump their bones, but also they’re the person you can just sit and not talk with. It’s like, they’re the two feelings I think in a relationship that are also worth feeling for.
[00:19:24] And if you just have one, you might want to be a bit. Yeah. Something’s missing definition. That’s so good. And because it’s also about, well, I don’t know. I think about, uh, the, for me, that feeling of, am I motivated to do this because it’s coming from, uh, an insecure part of me that feels that it needs to prove something or achieve something.
[00:19:45] I’m not enough, or am I motivated to do this because You know, perhaps it’s influenced by my past experiences, but it’s also where I fit in, in the world. And that excitement, it’s [00:20:00] like a toxic boyfriend. It’s like, Oh yeah. Like the chemistry is there, but like, I’ll do this work for free forever for 12 hours a day.
[00:20:10] You know, you’ve got to be careful with that one. No, no, no, no. We want the other one. You also said something earlier that I think for me is what helped me to find what my skills are Purpose, I suppose, like dissolving, feeling like you melt into it. Yeah. So when I teach, time just flies by. So, you know, if you look at, I’ve had various experts on flow states on my podcast and, you know, various teachers on this, I value.
[00:20:38] And timelessness, uh, ease as well. Like, it’s just very easy for me to teach. Like, since I was a kid, like the first time I ever taught, everyone was like, Oh, you’ve done this before. I was like, no. And of course, you know, you get better without like any skill that you build. Yeah. Um, you know, 000 hours probably of teaching right now.
[00:20:54] So there’s, you know, experience is part of it, but that, uh, flow state for me, [00:21:00] like entering into sort of timeless flow state, I’m not thinking about myself. And when I went for a period where I was like burnt out and depressed and the only relief I ever got from that was when I was teaching or coaching and it’s kind of like, you know, Yoda, when he goes into fight and he crawls there and he’s got his little stick and then he does the Jedi fight and he’s jumping around, he’s mad with his lightsaber and afterwards he gets his stick back and he hobbles off.
[00:21:20] It was like that, it was mad. Cause it was like, okay, this is the thing that’s, um, just my happy place. So, yeah, I think finding that means, you know, you, you minimize the amount of actual work you have to do. This, this concept of work is actually quite a strange one. So, um, yeah, if you can find that, then that’s wonderful.
[00:21:39] And you know, you’re Australian adults, there’s going to be chores, right? Like, it’s okay. Like, I brushed my teeth this morning. I wasn’t like, oh my god, I’m not on purpose. What’s the problem? You know, it’s just, you know, there’s chores. That’s fine. Sometimes some, you know, checking my taxes is chores. It’s fine.
[00:21:51] I’m a grown up. Yeah. Yeah. We’re grown ups and sometimes we have to kind of accept that. And also it’s really cool because [00:22:00] now we’re a grown up and we have agency and choice, which means that all that other shit that happened when we were a kid, probably less likely to occur. So like. You know, two sides of one quite, uh, yeah.
[00:22:11] Question. Can you speak to me about leadership and embodied leadership? I see you smiling, so what’s happening inside ? Yeah, I just, I, I recorded a 30 hour course on that topic. Literally 30 hours of content. Okay. So can have a bit more specific, can I be, I’ll give you more specific specificity. How do I go?
[00:22:36] How, how would you recommend our listeners who are probably, they’re at the beginning of, I think, the journey as it relates to leading a team or leading a movement or leading a purpose. So they’re transitioning from just me and what I want to, what am I leading? Who am I leading? What is mine? What am I protecting?
[00:22:59] What am I [00:23:00] pursuing? Like who am I as a leader? They’re transitioning into that first place of identity around leadership. And they’re learning
[00:23:10] to feel that way. Okay. So how can I help? How would you encourage them? Or what things would they need to focus on to actually integrate that into their system? To go from that place of they they, if they had the insight, yeah. Oh, I’m a leader. I have this thing, I have this purpose. Like, oh my god. Yeah. So they’re exciting.
[00:23:36] They’ve got a thing they love. Yep. They’ve got a thing they love, but then they go back to like their job or their work and they just kind of forget about it. Okay, so they are leading people, or is it they’re more on the self leadership part? Because when people talk about leadership, the first part is self leadership, right?
[00:23:54] So this is, for example, their ability to self regulate. Like the person you just channeled there was pretty unregulated, right? They’re excited, they’re a [00:24:00] passionate, which is great. You’ve got to find the passion, but you also need to find the regulation. Like, you know, I’m getting on a plane today, right?
[00:24:05] Imagine if the pilot’s like, um, hi, welcome to EasyJet. And, um, I’m really excited. I hope we get there on time. Like, that’s very different than, you know, welcome to British Airways. Here’s your captain. My name is Colin. I’ve been doing this for 30 years. I’m terribly calm and your mother would find me attractive.
[00:24:21] You know, like, so part of the self regulation is the beginning of building trust with others. So that’s the first things like that. Are they aware of their own embodiment? Are they aware of their own typology? You know, knowing, you know, we have a system for this, that we take people through self awareness as part of it, then self regulation after self awareness.
[00:24:38] Then it’s the tuning into others, right? Like if you’re going to be a leader, you need that skill of empathy, of listening. Like we were talking about earlier, you noticing people’s boundaries, you tuned into people, you know, my employees, happy, unhappy, exhausted, energized, uh, being them, we have embodied leadership proper, which rests on those three skills.
[00:24:54] So in my book, I. Break this down in terms of like skill sets. So it’s, you know, the business people love this because it’s very [00:25:00]concrete. It’s like, you know, HR talks about capacities and things. And embodied leadership proper is the ability to inspire, to regulate, to up and down regulate people. And that’s very natural, right?
[00:25:10] Like you do that. Anyone who has kids does that, you know, you’re like, calm down kids. Or you’re like, come on kids, time for school. You know, there’s an embodied capacity there. And we understand that someone being purely cognitive as sort of, you know, hello, my name is Norman. I’m your manager. You know, it’s.
[00:25:25] Just not in their body that’s not got those skills. It’s not compelling in the same way. I’m not sure if I’m asking you a question, answering your question, but maybe that gives you some stuff to orientate around. Can I tell you what I’m hearing and what I really want to encourage the listeners to take away?
[00:25:40] You actually can’t skip the self leadership. Oh no, that’s the beginning. And you have to do it really, really freaking well. Before you can probably consider doing it effective in an embodied way with other people, not to say that there aren’t leaders out there that aren’t self regulated that aren’t leading.
[00:25:57] There’s lots. I wouldn’t follow them. [00:26:00] Yeah. I mean, most people help others too soon, myself included, like, you know, the first half of our coaching course is self, is like self awareness and self regulation, the first 50 percent at least. So it’s, that’s like people that work with trauma, myself included, nearly always do it before they’re healed enough to be doing it effectively.
[00:26:19] Yeah. Yeah. And it’s like, modeling is the most, um, effective thing anyway. People copy what you do, not what you say. You know, I do an exercise, a fun game with this, I do a workshop and I’ll, I’ll say everyone touch your knees and I’ll touch my elbows and everyone touches, everyone touches their elbows.
[00:26:37] Cause that’s what I did. They ignore what you say. Yeah. So yeah. Jumping prematurely into helping others when you haven’t got your own shit together I think is um, an understandable, forgivable mistake. Yes. And we all do it and I’ve done it and we try to do our best. I agree. Okay. I’m going to ask you one more question.
[00:26:59] Then we’re going to pop [00:27:00] off. This is for my listener who is working really hard and building their business and building their practice and doing all the things. And they are anxious about money and figuring out how to build their practice in a sustainable way without burnout and, and feel confident in their finances.
[00:27:22] Okay. I know that this is a really big topic. What is one way that you wish that you could support people? Cause you know, you and I know these people, we’ve seen them around. What is one thing that you wish that they could, um, understand or play with or practice? Understand that money is a form of self care.
[00:27:47] And self abusing around it isn’t kind or wise. It doesn’t make you spiritual. This is sort of inner work that often needs to be done. Sometimes it’s trauma work. Sometimes it’s just belief work. It’s a bit more shallow. Sometimes it’s just re you know, rehab it for me, [00:28:00] but understanding that how you orientate to money is a form of self care and, um, The other thing I’d say is, you don’t have a right to do something awesome.
[00:28:10] Most of the world are rice farmers, and factory workers, and just people working bullshit jobs in admin, and you know, Crawley, or somewhere terrible like that, no offense if you’re listening from Crawley, it’s a place in England that’s not very inspiring. And um, Nobody says you get to be a yoga teacher who lives virtually in Portugal out of a caravan, has a cool life and surfs in their lunch break.
[00:28:32] So if you want that life, then yeah, you’re going to have to really grind. You’re going to have to do some serious work. Uh, I think, uh, if you’re not prepared to do that for at least some of your life, not saying you should have to work hard forever. You could work smart eventually. Um, why do you get to do the yoga teacher on the beach in Portugal?
[00:28:50] rather than the shitty factory worker or office job. So, um, don’t be entitled about it. Like, understand that that is a, it’s a huge opportunity we have. Like, we have an opportunity that [00:29:00] my dad, or definitely my granddad could have just dreamt of, you know, today. If you’re smart, you’ve got a laptop, you’ve got an amazing opportunity.
[00:29:06] Uh, but no one owes you anything. So, uh, good luck. Yeah, I appreciate that perspective because I don’t know about you, but I feel I honestly have just felt like vomiting at the coaching industry for the past couple of months because it seems like there’s such a level of, this is me being transparent, a level of entitlement that we just don’t have.
[00:29:29] Like, and it’s not wrong or bad, but it’s uncomfortable to me. It’s bad and wrong. It’s bad and wrong. It’s right on our system. It’s bad and wrong. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. It’s obnoxious. Uh, travel more, speak to poor people, read more history, understand the position of massive good fortune you’re in to even have a shot.
[00:29:50] Um, but you have a shot based on your talent and hard work and still luck, right? Those three factors are still there. You need all three to succeed. [00:30:00] So just to get a good roll of the dice, you need the talent and the hard work. So, um, yeah. Enough. Entitled. Obnoxious. Why is my decaf oat soy latte not hot enough?
[00:30:13] Peasant. Uh, Portuguese cafe worker, you know, I’m trying to be a digital nomad. Fuck that it’s obnoxious. It is. And also like guys, good travel. I like, I lived in Columbia for 10 years and it’s the best fricking thing I’ve done. And I didn’t, they speak English for five years and I would not take it away.
[00:30:28] And that’s the thing that, and you’ve been, you’ve done similar things. And what I’m hearing from you is like, Your friends are a privilege, your relationships are a privilege, they are add ons, your business and your purpose is an add on, it is all, it is all an add on, you’re not entitled to any of it.
[00:30:43] Every day where you’re not starving or getting bombed is a good day, like one of my friends in Ukraine just sent me a picture, I said, hey, do you remember X, and I was like, yeah, here’s a picture of him with his wife and his three kids, well, the wife and the kids are all dead now, they got bombed in Lviv yesterday, and I was just like, ow, you know, that’s a [00:31:00]bad day.
[00:31:00] That’s a bad day. So today, if I’m complaining about, you know, my flight being an hour late, or the easy jet lounge being sweaty, and there being no chairs to sit on, always annoys me. Um, you know, I should probably go, you know what, let’s practice a bit of gratitude here. Let’s pad out. Let’s look at the fact that, I mean, let’s end positively.
[00:31:19] Like we live in the weirdest time in human history. It’s totally bonkers the time we live in this weird, strange, post modern world. But it’s like, It’s also just a massive opportunity, like my granddad was Irish immigrant who couldn’t write, my dad went to university, first one in my family, and you know, was a teacher, did okay, but had very limited life possibilities, um, and I’m in 20 countries a year, I get to speak to cool people like you on the other side of the world on Zoom, but a podcast, you know, I was interviewing a philosopher from Oxford University yesterday on my podcast.
[00:31:55] I’m talking to my publisher about the next book that’s going to be out. And like, I get to teach
[00:32:00] really interesting things on self care and coaching. It’s like, my dad didn’t even know what a coach was. Like, he was a teacher, because that was the sort of nearest thing. Cause he also had the same calling, I think, you know, but he didn’t have the entrepreneurial opportunities and the creative opportunities, you know, all the healing or spiritual opportunities.
[00:32:17] Like my dad was an alcoholic, you know, I was too, but the difference was I got to do martial arts, meditation, 12 step trauma healing. I’d sorted my shit out by the time I was 28, you know, so I didn’t have a life wasted because I had access to all those psycho technologies. So it’s like externally and in terms of the internal possibilities, we’re just massively beneficial.
[00:32:40] And the correct response to that is to like cry with gratitude, really. Yeah. It’s true. What’s your favorite episode on your podcast that our listeners can go listen to now? Oh God, I’ve done 620. Favorite one right now, in this moment? No, I did Ken Wilber recently. Lee [00:33:00] was philosophical is one ages old with a guy who’s dying.
[00:33:03] That’s really deep. Uh, who’s dying a week before. Um, that was what I remember. There’s a really funny one with Paul Linden, who’s my embodiment teacher and Shinzen young, who’s a meditation teacher, and they’re both like these wily wise Jewish old guys, and it’s part of the sort of Jewish tradition to tell a lot of jokes.
[00:33:24] So that one would Shinzen. Um, I think that’s probably my all time favorite one. Yeah. Shinzen young and Paul Linden is an old one, but they’re so funny together. All right. Love it. I’m going to get, not for the, not for the easily offended as is all my work, by the way, this is me on good behavior today. You have that.
[00:33:42] You’ve been very, very pleasant. Um, yeah. Thank you so much for today and for your work in the world and for facilitating all of this. I’m super, super excited to share. Any last words for our listeners?
[00:33:57] Well, just in terms of self promo, [00:34:00] embodimentunlimited. com if they’re interested in training as a coach or anything like that. Um, but, last words, I mean, I’m an embodiment guy, I love embodiment, I’d say do something with your body you enjoy. Like, it doesn’t have to be the perfect practice. Do something you can fall in love with.
[00:34:16] I fell in love with Aikido, I’m currently in love with weightlifting. Like, just do something. You can fall in love with and then geek out about it and make friends for it. And whatever, ever it is, it’s not hurting you or anyone else. Why not just geek out, enjoy your body. That’s been my last message. Fall in love with the body.
[00:34:35] I love that. And guys go and check out the podcast and check out the website and like the thousand million resources there. We’re doing women’s rising. I’m teaching on the father wound in November, which I’m super excited about, but mostly because Mark, every single person that you, you create and is able to facilitate through those programs and all of the resources of yours that I’ve consumed, super grounded in reality.
[00:34:58] And I’m very [00:35:00] grateful for that. We’re very pragmatic. We’re very pragmatic. I think, I think It’s my vibe and I scare off, I call them the crystal shaggers. We scare those guys off. Uh, we scare off the white crowd who are just no fun. So, uh, what’s left is like lots of cool Aussies, Americans who are like, not too far left, they’re just sort of normal and pragmatic.
[00:35:21] Like, I think someone even said, they even said to me once, I said, Mark, I don’t. like you, but I like who you bring together. And I was like, you know what, I’ll take it because it’s not just me, right? Like, I know my course is like, you know, I’m not teaching on the Women’s Rising course. There’s like 15 awesome female teachers.
[00:35:36] So yeah, I, I think we filter well for the other teachers too. Yeah, I agree. Oh, beautiful. Thank you so much. A real pleasure Nice to speak with you. Hope this was useful for your free audience.
How Your Nervous System Impacts Your Financial Freedom & Business Goals (Healing Trauma and Anxiety with Somatics)
Month: September 2024
Listen Wherever You Get Your Podcasts
Do you ever feel like no matter how hard you work, stress and anxiety keep you from reaching your full potential in your business?
Many visionaries like you are struggling with the emotional rollercoasters of business — whether it’s overthinking emails, waking up anxious about money, or feeling disconnected from loved ones. What if the root cause is deeper than you think? And what if ease, resilience and creativity aren’t so far away?
In this episode, you’ll learn how to:
- Tap into your nervous system to fuel creativity, innovation, and ease in your business.
- Recognize the hidden signs of nervous system dysregulation affecting your income and productivity.
- Use nervous system regulation to improve relationships, decision-making, and your ability to take intelligent risks.
Recommended resource:
Nervous System PDF – Help your body feel safe enough to embrace life’s challenges and stresses with ease & feel confident no matter what comes your way. Click here to download.
2x Your Email Conversions with Concise Content as a Sensitive and Anxious Leaning Entrepreneur
Month: September 2024
Listen Wherever You Get Your Podcasts
Are you tired of feeling overwhelmed and anxious every time you create content for your business?
I’m going to be direct, and honest and save you YEARS of trial and error (been there, done that for you!).
This episode dives into how leveraging your body’s natural wisdom can transform your content creation process and boost your business outcomes.
You will learn:
- My favorite, most consistently used techniques to double your email conversions without feeling ‘icky’.
- 3 strategies to communicate concisely and confidently without relying on scripted messages.
- What to do if you dissociate, freeze or get anxious when creating content
Recommended resource:
Nervous System PDF – Help your body feel safe enough to embrace life’s challenges and stresses with ease & feel confident no matter what comes your way. Click here to download.
How To Heal Perfectionism by 10% This Week – Tips From A Trauma Therapist for Entrepreneurs
Month: September 2024
Listen Wherever You Get Your Podcasts
No matter how hard you try, it feels like nothing is working, and your stress levels just keep rising?
Yeah, I’ve been there… it’s HARD… And, ease is closer than you think (at least, it was for me, and that’s been true for the clients that implemented what I’m about to teach you here!)
In this episode you’ll learn:
- The reason your attempts to regulate are create more stress
- How remove self-criticism using the most effective tool we have – our body
- What to focus on today to heal perfectionism by 10% this week
Next best listen:
Episode 135
This episode addresses the fact that the answer to lack of motivation isn’t to go look just for something that will get you motivated, it’s actually to look at the ingrained nervous system patterns that are creating a lack of motivation. Click here to listen.
TRANSCRIPT:
[00:00:00] If you’ve been working really hard on your mental health, but it feels like nothing is working, you’re beginning to get more anxious, you can feel the tension in your body and you’re looking at your bank account and you’re thinking, that’s not where I want the numbers to be. Perfectionism might be the reason that things are feeling so hard.
[00:00:17] In this episode, you’re going to learn the reasons that your attempt to regulate are actually creating more stress. And the science behind that, how to remove self criticism by utilizing the most effective tool that we have our body and what to focus on today to heal perfectionism by 10 percent this week.
[00:00:51] Cool. This episode is inspired by a couple of clients of mine who are currently enrolled in body based business, which is my six month one on one coaching [00:01:00] program that Utilizes somatic strategies and business strategies to basically build a business that is aligned with what your nervous system needs to feel successful, to feel satisfied, to feel fulfilled, and to have financial freedom Alongside of that and.
[00:01:18] It’s this pattern that I have seen come up in clients, individuals, and even in myself, related to having a perfectionist attitude to our job, to our business, to ourselves. We put these extremely high expectations on ourself. We think like, Oh, I’m going to listen to this podcast, I’m going to learn this thing, or I’m going to do this program, and I have to always I have to always do this new tool.
[00:01:50] Like I said that I was gonna, I don’t know, do a body scan, uh, twice a day or twice a week. And now I have to do it. Or I said that I was going to check in with my coach once a [00:02:00] week and now I have to do it. Or I said that I was going to prepare for all of these meetings and now I have to do it. And if I feel like I have trouble sleeping or if I feel like, I have tension in with my relationship with my partner, or if I don’t make more money this month than last month, then that means that I have failed basically, and I didn’t get it right.
[00:02:24] And I’m wrong. Your hormones inside of your body, create your thoughts, but your thoughts also create your hormones. So when we’re in this perfectionist loop, we’re having these perfectionist, like I shouldn’t have, I could have, I, um, this could be better, um, kind of self deprecating thoughts that are even uncomfortable to say out loud.
[00:02:44] And. That puts the body in a stress response, which creates cortisol. And we all know that, well, we don’t all know necessarily, but cortisol actually creates more stress. And cortisol is what can lead to really long term health problems, [00:03:00] um, peaks and valleys in your emotions. It can lead to depression long term.
[00:03:05] It increases belly fat. Um, it can lead to heart disease and things like that. So cortisol then, so now that we have cortisol, we had some thoughts of perfectionism and we have cortisol inside of the body, which means that it’s in a survival state now. It’s like, okay, well there is presence of cortisol, a stress hormone, which tells me that I need to protect myself from something.
[00:03:31] And that means that we’re moving out of safety, out of feeling safe in the body, safe to be ourselves, safe to connect with other people, safe to take on challenges and tasks. And we’re moving into a state of protection, protection from ourselves, protection from other people, protection from the mountain that is our work or our business or the uncertainty of the future.
[00:03:54] Because we’re in that state of, can. Of protection. Our body is not concerned [00:04:00] with things like self-compassion. It’s not concerned with understanding, you know, things are hard. You’re doing something new. It’s not, it’s just concerned with criticizing you. It’s, it’s operating under this conditioning, which is very much a, a female conditioning and an estrogen based conditioning, and something that a lot of females in particular experience, which is under, operating under this belief of like, if I can get this right, if I can be perfect.
[00:04:26] Then I will be safe if I can perfect myself and my business and I will be safe That’s what your nervous system is saying if I can be perfect and my business can be perfect Then I will be safe, which is really hard because it’s not true so your attempts to regulate and you trying to get your regulation, right?
[00:04:43] and you trying to get your business right are putting you under expectations and That you are, that are impossible to me because it’s impossible to be perfect all of the time. You are always going to change. We can’t know everything about ourself immediately, which is then creating a stress response inside of your body, which is
[00:05:00] then activating more self criticism because it’s bringing upon that same state that we’re activating a sense of, I need to protect myself.
[00:05:09] Therefore, I think I need to protect myself or I think, okay, if I’m going to criticize and just kind of attack either myself or others. Therefore, Did that make sense? Because there’s a danger now and I need to attack and then we kind of go into this cycle and I keep attacking myself and then I keep trying to do better and then I keep attacking myself and I keep trying to do better and it’s freaking exhausting.
[00:05:27] So tiring. What we need to do is we need to break that chain and you have probably tried to break that chain by thinking positively or being grateful or doing mindset work or being less hard on yourself. I wish you could see the way I’m saying this, it’s like, ah, we’ve tried those things. We have tried those things.
[00:05:47] And sometimes they are helpful, but most of the time they are not because they, they do not effectively, efficiently, and quickly address the levels of cortisol inside of your bloodstream that are telling you that there is a
[00:06:00]threat. However, there is one thing that science shows. My personal and professional experience over many years and hundreds of people shows and also that of literally thousands of other professionals and even thousands of years.
[00:06:23] It shows us that we connect with a curiosity and a growth mindset of learning and compassion. Curiosity and learning and compassion. These are actually states that bring the body into regulation. So yes, I want you to go and I want you to do your body based practice for regulation. I want you to do like your assignments.
[00:06:47] You’re a sympathetic sigh. Um, I want you to go out into nature, but also could you just find today, today, could you find curiosity? Could you be curious? Ooh, what [00:07:00] does this mean? What am I learning from this? Could you find compassion?
[00:07:05] And then you will increase, and I’ll teach you how to do that in a second, but by activating curiosity and compassion, you increase the amount of time you are regulated, you decrease your cortisol and you experience less perfectionism. You activate an upward spiral of wellbeing instead of a downward spiral of stress.
[00:07:25] Here are some tangible ways that you can activate curiosity and compassion. And it’s by really coming into number one, that growth mindset, which is, I kind of hate that, but I like to think of it as what am I learning? So it’s understanding and positioning yourself through your entrepreneurial journey of, I’m always learning something.. What am I learning at the moment? And so when you notice that things go differently to how you expect it or different to your higher expectations, the question you can ask yourself, what did I learn
[00:08:00] that I want to keep doing or keep with me? What did I learn that I would change?
[00:08:08] What did I learn about myself?
[00:08:09] And then how can I implement what I’ve learned next day, week, month? The second would be to validate the emotion below the thoughts. So this is when we’re talking about really being with your emotions. So find the emotion and learn how to validate the emotion without affirming the thoughts.
[00:08:36] This is something. That inside of all of my group programs inside of my one on one, you will learn how to do, and we have supporting resources to help you do that. You’re validating the emotion below the thought. So we’re getting into the body and we’re changing the chemical makeup of the environment that we’re in.
[00:08:53] In the body by addressing the emotions, the energy in motion inside of your body so [00:09:00] that cortisol can reduce so that you feel less need to protect yourself and less need to be self critical. That’s it. Two things, growth mindset. What am I learning? Number two, validate the emotion below the thoughts. And voila!
[00:09:16] Doesn’t that make sense? That’s so good. So go ahead and take those two actions. , if you notice that perfectionism is something that you struggle with on many different fronts and it’s impacting your ability to make money, I would recommend that you listen to episode number 135.
[00:09:34] It’s called making money, feeling hard lately, listen to this for the real way to get motivated. during a slump. So this addresses the fact that the answer to lack of motivation isn’t to go look just for something that will get you motivated. It’s actually to look at the ingrained nervous system patterns that are creating a lack of motivation, address that at the root, and then [00:10:00] Utilizing less energy, we can move forward and you can do the things that you’ve been putting off because you haven’t been motivated.
[00:10:06] I’ll put the link to that episode in the show notes. So that’s number 135, making money, feeling hot lately. Enjoy.
The #1 Key To Decision Making with Somatic Intelligence for Anxious Entrepreneurs (Financial Freedom Client Story)
Month: September 2024
Listen Wherever You Get Your Podcasts
Are you learning to distinguish between anxiety and intuition in your business decisions?
The body knows your path of least resistance – the question is, are you willing to listen to it?

Jelena had done many training sessions, she had achieved prestigious titles in her industry, she had bought courses on marketing and all the things.. But she still felt she lacked the knowledge she needed to create consistent income.
As a result, she struggled with decision making which made her procrastinate all day, ruminate on her anxieties and fears, hide on social media (her method of gaining new clients) and filter her opinions when called to speak on panels.
Until she started working with me.
In this episode, Jelena shares with you her own embodied and integrated wisdom that has allowed her to:
- Stop spending so much time and moneyon courses and trainings that she never really gets that much out of.
- Spend more time with her family.
- Be invited as key note speaker to industry leading events, and be recognised as a leader for an entire generation of female journalists in her country.
- Reclaim her sense of confidence, audacity and unapologetic opinions – and share them with the world.
Through her story, you will learn
- How tapping into your body’s wisdom can guide your business and personal decisions.
- Embodied manifestation techniques to bring forward your business goals and achieve financial milestones.
- How to make career decisions that align with your values and long-term goals.
Follow Jelena’s path. Join Body Based Business, where you are going to learn exactly how to distinguish between anxiety and intuition and feel confident about every single decision you make.
Apply by booking your Embodied Sales Call. Click here.
This episode is featuring my beautiful client, Jelena Pantic-Panic – mentor for young German-speaking journalists.
Photo credit: Ifeta IbračevićJ
Contact Jelena:
https://www.instagram.com/medien.geil/
TRANSCRIPT:
[00:00:00] Are you learning to distinguish between anxiety and intuition in your business decisions? The body knows your path of least resistance. The question is, are you willing to listen to it? in this episode. You are going to learn from a past client of mine, Yelena. Through her story, you’re going to learn how tapping into your body’s wisdom can guide your business and personal decisions.
[00:00:36] embodied manifestation techniques to bring forward your business goals and achieve financial milestones and how to make career decisions that align with your values and your long term goals. Yelena had done so many trainings and she had achieved all of these things inside of her industry. She is a journalist.
[00:00:56] Uh, she’d also bought courses on marketing and all of the
[00:01:00]things, but she still felt that she lacked the knowledge that she needed to create a consistent income. As a result of this and some other things that had affected her personal life for a little while now, she struggled with decision making, which led to her procrastinating a lot of the day, then ruminating on her anxieties and fears, feeling like she was never getting anything done, feeling like she was never getting anywhere, making it more difficult for her to show up on social media, which was her method of gaining new clients.
[00:01:31] And she was also filtering her opinions when she was called to speak on panels. Until she started working with me in this episode, Yelena shares with us her own embodied and integrate was integrated wisdom from our work together that has allowed her to stop bending, stop spending so much time and money on courses and trainings that she wasn’t really getting that much out of spend more time with her family, [00:02:00] including literally taking months off to vacation in the summer.
[00:02:04] Oh my God. I sound like such an American saying vacation is holiday. We’re in Australia now. Oh my gosh. Okay. Uh, be invited as a keynote speaker to industry leading events and be recognized as a leader for an entire generation of female journalists in our country and reclaim her sense of confidence, audacity, and really unapologetic opinions, and then share them. what were some of the things that you were experiencing that told you, ah, I think it might be helpful to reference with Sharon? Well, we actually started working together. because of like anxiety.
[00:02:45] Jelena: And when I first started, I thought these were different things. But as you are an entrepreneur, everything is connected to you. So you are your business. So my anxiety in my personal life was also showing up in my [00:03:00] business. So there’s actually not really, um, they’re not really separate. Um, and So we started together, working together on these anxieties.
[00:03:12] And what I experienced was that I never really knew, kind of, I had this blockage where I thought, I don’t know what to do. That was one of my biggest blocks. I just didn’t know what to do. And you know, I bought a lot of courses and I did a lot of trainings and a lot of stuff to kind of acquire this knowledge that I felt I needed.
[00:03:34] But actually that wasn’t the problem. The problem was not that I didn’t know what to post or didn’t know what to do. I did know. I just had some, you know, block of being or fear of being perceived, fear of being seen. So that was actually blocking me. It was not like the 17th block. course I needed, it was more like trust in myself and in my abilities and the like, and to, um, be able to [00:04:00] tap into this wisdom I, I didn’t know I had at first.
[00:04:06] Yeah, that’s actually such a good,
[00:04:12] I guess, what is the biggest
[00:04:18] contrast now
[00:04:27] in receiving the benefits, I guess, of this program, but there’s a lot of help. How, how did this pass to you, to current day you? What have you learned? Because that was the thing I was looking outside for answers and for someone [00:05:00] to know you to make the decisions for me or to give me input on how I should make something, but I knew best what was best for my business.
[00:05:07] I just had to tap into my body. And so we created the somatic blueprint, which helped me. I think that’s one of the most helpful things I’ve ever acquired in my life, to be honest, because I use it all the time. I use it on whether, well, like what I should post or what content I can make, but also like what I’m going to eat in a restaurant, you know, it’s, it’s the same somatic intelligence.
[00:05:31] It’s the same blueprint. And that was so, so helpful for me. They are
[00:05:58] really powerful. [00:06:00] And so every morning I bring my kids to kindergarten and then I go on a walk. And I kind of pretend I’m talking to a friend and I’m sharing my accomplishments with her. Um, sometimes I talk to you, sometimes I talk to a friend, but it’s not like, um, Um, I, I, that’s how I, I say it. I say Can you imagine I had my first 10k a month?
[00:06:30] I’m so excited, but I like, I don’t tell it in a way that sounds like, yeah, I’m making 10k a month, you know, I really have to believe myself. So I’m like really excited to tell my friend that I made 10 K this month. I don’t like really excited and I get really into it. Can you believe I signed my first check?
[00:06:49] It was 10, 000 and I can’t believe it. And, um, you know, the month after that. Obviously, I had my first 10K month and what [00:07:00] we did together was, um, we, uh, I didn’t know why it was working exactly. Okay. Manifestation law of whatever, but I didn’t really know why it was working. And then we, uh, you recognize that it is obviously very important to me to be in a space of it’s possible.
[00:07:17] Which makes sense, because my human design also have, I have the motivation of hope. So if I think something is possible for me, it’s very, very likely for me to make it possible. And so this manifestation walks kind of really, um, you know, tap into this energy of it’s possible. It could work and then it works.
[00:07:39] Yeah, that’s cool. Because that’s part of one of[00:08:00]
[00:08:00] the, So one of the biggest things, like you said, The
[00:08:10] decision around
[00:08:16] manifesting, that, you know, tell us why was that decision important? Because I think a lot of the listeners here are often listening when they’re in a time where they need to decide what they’re doing. Like, where do I go all in on my business? Like, do I get a coach? Do I join a buddy based business? Do I go all in on my business?
[00:08:37] Do I stay in corporate or in something else? Do I quit my job? Do I look for more jobs? How did you make that decision and why was [00:09:00]it such a big deal? Which is what many of us rely on, you know, to, to make a logical decision. But actually, like, I found, I find that like body based decisions are way better, way more effective.
[00:09:20] And what I did was tap into my somatic intelligence. And I know in my body through our work that, um, like, All the pain and anxiety. I feel kind of in my chest or in my like solar plexus area. So everything that’s like contracting, not so good. But when it’s like a really, really, you know, expanding thing, it’s like expanding in my sacral.
[00:09:47] it’s, or in my womb area that’s very, um, uh, actually easy to differentiate. Um, but this time it wasn’t that clear because I obviously had like the, [00:10:00]uh. it was a lot of ego thing. It was a prestigious job. It was very well paid. I thought I’m going to have a lot of opportunities, but also I knew I’m going to have less time for my child, less time for myself.
[00:10:13] And we wanted a second child. And it was like, I cried when thinking about getting the job, which is very weird and not the best place to take a job. So I had what you talk about a lot. It’s not a full body. Yes. Sometimes. No, in this case I tapped into, like, first I regulated myself because when you’re all over the place, you shouldn’t decide anything.
[00:10:39] So I grounded myself. I took a deep, I took some deep breaths and then I, you know, fell into my body and I felt like that taking the job, you know, kind of, it feels like a lump in my, um, Is that how you call it? Like just a punch in, in, in my solar plexus[00:11:00] and not taking it felt very expanding. And then I was like, okay, that’s it.
[00:11:06] I’ll just have to, you know, navigate these parts. So part of me wants to have like, of course, a lot of money and a good title and prestige, but what’s more important to me are my values of having time. Um, being able to use my time how I want to use it. So it was a not a full body. No, not a full body. Yes.
[00:11:25] It was just, you know, navigating these parts and then deciding what felt best. But I didn’t know, um, earlier that, you know, always, uh, trust your God, always trust your God. When you have anxiety and OCD, that’s like, I didn’t know what my God was. I really did not know. Um, so now that I know what my intuition feels like.
[00:11:49] And that made it so much easier to navigate all these feelings and parts. And also we had sessions around that where we identified what was I scared of? I was scared of not having [00:12:00] time and not using my life how I want to use it. So it was a very, um, complex decision, but I did it once and now I do it all the time and I don’t find it that hard anymore.
[00:12:12] I’m
[00:12:28] Do you think that’s the reason that you’re able to touch into your intuition?
[00:12:37] Sorry, can you repeat the question? I am not sure if I understood it. Yeah. You said that you’re able now to feel your intuition and differentiate from anxiety or OCD like thoughts. Is that because of the work that we’ve done together? Yes, of course. Yes, it is. Because I couldn’t, I felt a lot of things and I couldn’t read them and I couldn’t interpret [00:13:00]them.
[00:13:00] And now I do. I know what it means when I’m, when I don’t know, I ask you like we can do it together. But just reading myself and knowing myself helped a lot. I think that when people are beginning to work with me, they’re in a place where they kind of want what
[00:13:26] you’re having. They want to differentiate between intuition and fear and anxiety. They want to make decisions for , but you have to make a decision to actually work with you. Do that. I would like them to be making that decision from the most embodied place possible. So I have one question for you.
[00:13:51] Why would you recommend that they do it now versus later?
[00:13:57] Because it makes life so much [00:14:00] easier and so much more manageable. And why would you wait to do that? Why would you want to make your life as fulfilled and as easy as possible right now?
[00:14:17] It’s okay, and I would recommend, you know, doing one step at a time. Like, first, have a call with you. And that, you know, you don’t, because we think like maybe they see you on Instagram and, uh, I don’t know if I, whether I should work with her or not. Just book the call first, you know, and just tap into one step at a time.
[00:14:39] That’s, that’s what helps me.
[00:14:53] Especially for you because you are a leader in your industry and I’m happy for you [00:15:00] to share whatever you choose to share around that. Um, being somebody who is different to their colleagues, that’s using a different path from their colleagues, what advice would you have to people who are kind of in a place of, where they are being perceived as they make these big decisions?
[00:15:29] It’s okay to feel cringed. I think that’s what a lot of people who are, uh, like perceived, for example, on social media. When you start out, you always start out small and that’s always a bit uncomfortable. So it’s okay to be a little cringe at first because we think about what are my former colleagues going to say?
[00:15:54] What, uh, what is someone maybe thinking? First of all, we don’t know what other people are thinking. Second of
[00:16:00] all, it’s none of our business. Third, and that’s what helped me the most. I, um, try to focus on the people who need what I have to share. They are. You know, people who don’t like me, they’re not going to buy from me, they’re not going to enjoy my content, they’re not relevant for my career, for my path.
[00:16:17] But there are people who are very relevant to my path, and these are colleagues I connect with, or my clients, you know. So if I focus on them, it’s not that much about me, so that kind of helps me a bit too. To, you know, overcome the cringe part and the, oh, I’m so scared part, because I know, I imagine there’s someone out there who just needs to hear this message, so I do it for them.
[00:16:41] That helps me, you know, zoom out a little bit for myself and make them the center. Yes. That helps. Yes.[00:17:00]
[00:17:05] Is there anything else that you’d like to share with our guests, or,
[00:17:13] So I’m a mentor for young journalists who helps young, um, German speaking journalists in Austria and in Germany to kind of navigate this very weird media industry. And, um, I do a lot of meet, uh, of, um, interviews. Uh, Instagram content and I’m called meeting guys. So if someone out there, uh, is, uh, that is listening to like German things, you can follow me on Instagram and I’m also, I want to thank you Sheridan for our time and for working together and you’ve helped me so much and I grew so, so much.
[00:17:47] And what’s also interesting. We didn’t just grow, you know, over business stuff, because it was also, um, emotions, motherhood. We talked a lot about that and I think it’s so important. Uh, for an entrepreneur
[00:18:00]to work on their private stuff too, because it’s so intertwined and connected and I just, uh, yeah, I can, I can recommend working with you to everyone.
[00:18:08]
[00:18:10] Follow in Yelena’s path, join body based business, where you are going to learn exactly how to distinguish between anxiety and intuition and feel confident every single tiny business and financial decision. And even the massive business career, lifestyle, life path, and financial decisions that you make to apply for my one on one six month body based business coaching, you can go to the link below.
[00:18:36] And book your embodied sales call. You will go through an application process. Then we will go through a short conversation and embodiment practice that will help us identify exactly what you need to get to your business goals and your mental health goals. Then if that aligns perfectly with what I am Particularly qualified and skilled in doing, I will invite [00:19:00]you to join me inside a body based business.
[00:19:02] And I will share all of the information you need to know, including logistics, pricing, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. Can’t wait to see you on your embodied sales call. The link is below in the show notes for you to book.