authenticity

Stop Romanticizing Rock Bottom

Stop Telling Yourself and Your Friends That Healing Requires Rock Bottom “Stop telling your sisters that pain is the only way to earn peace.” You’ve probably said it yourself. Maybe you believed it. I am not judging because I used to think this way as well. The phrase rolls off the tongue when someone is in pain, “Sometimes you have to hit rock bottom before you can rise.” That may sound comforting, even wise, but repeating that narrative can quietly reinforce the very pain we are trying to soothe. It may offer a sense of structure to struggle, but it is not the only shape that healing can take. The truth is rock bottom is not a spiritual prerequisite. It is not a rite of passage. And it is certainly not the only path to clarity or self-trust. Still, you hear it everywhere. Podcasts. Instagram captions. Rom-coms. Well-meaning advice from people who are trying to help you. Yet this idea that everything must unravel before you can rebuild is a whole lie. The truth is much more nuanced because you do not have to wait until everything breaks to begin making changes in your life. You can shift your direction, clarify your boundaries, and reclaim your peace without waiting for a crisis to give you permission. And while we are at it, let’s stop telling other women that collapse is the cost of clarity. We do not need to keep reinforcing the idea that we can only shift after devastation. You can support someone through their transformation before it life falls apart. As Black and Latina women we carry enough, we don’t need to promote breaking down. Think about it this way, if you’ve ever watched a friend ignore her own needs while caring for everyone else, and were concerned. Ask yourself, ‘How would she benefit if she could start reclaiming herself without having to lose everything to do it?’. We have been socialized to normalize exhaustion as evidence of excellence. But when you are sitting with your sister through their crisis while quietly crumbling inside your own, you know the toll it takes. You know what is like to smile through the weight of responsibility while feeling disconnected from your own life. Many high-achieving women are silently carrying this heaviness every day. There Is Another Way to Heal The truth is healing does not have to involve drastic gestures, painful upheaval, or isolation. Instead, it can be a quiet yet powerful choice and it starts with deciding not to abandon yourself anymore. I know this for a fact because after doing it the hard way, I learned to heal the soft way. And then I guided other women who initially believed they needed radical change like leaving jobs, relationships, or even relocating, to regain clarity gently. Honestly what most of them needed was simpler but equally powerful. They needed to renegotiate their commitments, to redefine success on their own terms, and to start placing their peace and joy at the top of their priority list. And that looked like creating new agreements with the lives they had already created. Three Thoughtful Questions to Prompt Gentle Change (with Real-World Examples) If you are where I was, feeling overwhelmed and contemplating dramatic changes, I encourage you to pause for a moment. Try this instead, before you burn it all down or start from scratch, consider these three powerful questions to help you visualize what shifting without collapsing might look like: 1. Are you exhausted because of what you are doing, or is it how you are approaching your responsibilities? Example: Perhaps you genuinely love your career, but lately you feel drained. The real issue might not be your job itself, but rather your habit of responding to every email immediately or consistently volunteering to lead projects out of obligation rather than interest. You might simply need clearer boundaries around your availability, not an entirely new role. For me this looked like removing my work Zoom and email accounts from my phone so that I was not tempted to work during my private time. When I close the computer at the end of the work day, I focus on my personal life and that has been a game changer for me. 2. Is what you are feeling truly burnout, or might you be grieving a version of success that never authentically aligned with your true self? Example: Maybe you thought becoming a senior executive would feel rewarding, yet now that you’ve achieved it, the pressure to maintain appearances leaves you feeling empty. It might not be burnout you’re experiencing, but grief over pursuing someone else’s definition of success. Recognizing this can help you redefine your goals on your own authentic terms. While I love the work that I do in my 9 – 5, it is only one slice of me. This blog, my coaching, and my writing are ways that I connect to my true self so that I can replenish my joy. Being able to complete a collection of short stories that speak to the hearts of high achieving women is one way I am defining success these days. Getting this blog out weekly with positive images of melanated women is another way. The accolades are nice, but define for yourself what lights up your soul and makes you feel whole. 3. If you chose to remain exactly where you are but began honoring your needs in small, honest ways, what might shift? Example: Imagine staying in your current relationship, but finally speaking up when your boundaries are crossed instead of silently enduring. Or imagine remaining at your current job, but saying no when asked to take on extra responsibilities that do not align with your personal goals or wellness. Small, honest acts of self-advocacy can profoundly shift your experience without requiring drastic upheaval. In my 9 – 5 life if you don’t use all of your vacation days in a year, you are only allowed to carry five

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She Brought the Crowbar, And I Understood Why

Some scenes you watch. Others watch you back. This scene held my attention and held up a mirror. Let me set the scene. The husband took the wife to dinner to tell her that he was leaving her because he didn’t want her to cause a ruckus. Well of course it didn’t work, she definitely caused a ruckus. So then in his infinite wisdom, he puts her in a taxi while she is bereft. She calls him from the taxi crying, begging for answers. And he tells her that he went back to work. Her world is unraveling and he is doing his level best to avoid the destruction of their family with routine. At that moment, you could see the rage rise inside her. I felt the exact moment when she switched from sorrow to rage. She catches the taxi driver before he pulls off, and with a crowbar in hand, she rides to his job. She finds his X5 and destroyed his car. Not a window remained untouched. Glass littered the ground like glitter from a war zone. Her guttural screams rose up from the weight of what she had been carrying for far too long, piercing the night. Each strike to that car resonated in my soul. I imagine that it was a release from the silence she had endured, the dismissal she had felt, and the restraint she had practiced in rooms that offered her no grace. And I knew that visceral emotion well. That moment was never about the car, it was about reclaiming the parts of herself that had been ignored, dismissed, and suppressed. And let’s be honest, sometimes the repression is our choice because we believe that it is what we need to do to get a sliver of what we want. I understood her in the core of my soul. Because I know from experience that rage like that doesn’t just show up one day No.It accumulates. It builds in the workplace where your concerns are minimized. It builds in the relationship where your boundaries are treated like suggestions. It builds in the family dynamics where you’re expected to absorb the dysfunction in silence. It builds every time you smile through someone playing in your face. It comes from the address of too much for too long with no room to release. I have been there – on the brink of composure and release. There is a split second, just a breath, that stands between letting it take over or choosing something else. When I have stood in that breath, most of the time, I’ve chosen restraint. I’ve walked away from the edge, even when every nerve in my body begged for release. I’ve swallowed the scream; tucked the rage into my pocket; kept it moving like nothing ever happened clenching my jaw and grinding my teeth behind a practiced smile. But I know the other side too. I know what it feels like to let go of all reason and allow the rage to rise through my mouth, my hands, my feet. I know what it’s like to wage war on everything in my path destroying anything in my path like lava wending its way down a mountain. I have been that woman because sometimes as that final straw breaks the camel’s back it unleashes something primal in the soul that can no longer be contained. Thank God for a good therapist. I have learned not to let composure rob me of release. I have learned to choose myself differently instead of launching wooden hangers like missiles at the human provoking my spirit. I still tuck sometimes, nobody is perfect, but I also release. I hit a punching bag. I blast that one Big Sean song screaming along to his lyrics until my throat aches. I call my hate and rage partner and let it out. I call my therapist and get vulnerable. In those moments, I don’t want anything soft or gentle. I don’t want to be lady like and I don’t want to be composed. I want to expend the rage that simmers just beneath the surface of every marginalized woman navigating a world not designed for her survival, much less her joy. In those moments, what I need is a reminder that I matter – fully, loudly, unapologetically. Because here’s the truth, rage is not a failure of self-control. It is a compass pointing to what has been breached, overlooked, or violated. And while I may not always get to choose the trigger, I do get to choose the aftermath. These days, I choose to release without unraveling. I choose to feel without burning it all down. I honor my anger as a sacred signal, instead of trying to treating it like a shameful flaw. I choose to let it lead me to the version of me that does not shrink, does not beg, and does not break for anyone’s comfort. I choose to release in ways that honor my humanity, and not just my performance. In choosing to release without destroying, I am reminding myself that I matter, that I always have, and that I don’t need to bottle everything up to prove my worth. I have learned not to shrink to keep the peace. I choose me and my well-being on a regular basis because I understand that rage is really my unmet needs refusing to be silenced anymore. I choose to meet my needs routinely. So when that split second arrives, I am able to express what needs to be expressed, while remaining composed…most of the time 😉. And if you’re anything like me, here’s what I want you to know – in the space between composure and rage, there is a third way.You don’t have to bottle it up. But you don’t have to blow it all up either. If you learn to release in ways that honor you, that breath – the one between fury and peace – will become a place

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Finding Your Safe Spaces

Where Superwomen Go to Take Off the Cape (and Maybe Eat Some Chips in Peace) Let’s talk about safe spaces. Not the buzzword version people toss around in HR presentations while passing out vibes and zero actual support. I’m talking about the real places you can exhale. The spaces where you’re not performing, fixing, translating, moderating, hosting, or apologizing for having emotions louder than a whisper. Because let’s be for real, even the most magical Black and Latina women – yes, you with the planner, the Pinterest-worthy snack board, and the “I’m fine” text, you need a place where you can crash without crumbling. 🦸🏽‍♀️ So Where Do You Take Off Your Superwoman Cape? Not the metaphorical “I’m fine” cape. The actual one you wrap around you before walking into a boardroom, a baby shower, or a boundary-less family group text. Is it: The best safe spaces aren’t retreats in the mountains with singing bowls (though I’m not knocking hot stones and cucumber water). They’re the people who hand you a snack instead of a sermon and see you even when you’re torn-up from the floor up. What Does a Safe Space Actually Look Like? It’s never been about the perfect playlist or the lavender diffuser misting in the corner. Safe spaces aren’t scented, they’re soul-deep. It’s about the people who make the room feel like a warm hoodie on a hard day. It looks like: They’re the ones who hold space for your fire and your ashes without requiring performance, proving, or pressure. Safe spaces have never been about the perfect playlist or the lavender diffuser misting in the corner. Safe spaces are soul-deep, held by the people who make the room feel like a warm hoodie on a hard day. It looks like: Why Safe Spaces Matter (Especially for the Overachieving Avengers) Raise your hand if your entire personality for the past 10 years has been ‘strong’ ‘friend, fixer, family life coach, Uber driver, therapist, emotional support snack-provider, and “Oh I got it!” person. No judgement I have been some of these things too. But even strong women need softness and spaces where they can breakdown. Because while you’re out here being the glue for everyone else, who’s holding you together? Safe spaces remind us that we’re worthy when we’re productive, when we’re perfect and especially because we exist. They’re the people who love you when you’re not the one with the answers and love you even when your group chat advice takes a sabbatical. How to Build Your Own Soft Place to Land 🧘🏽‍♀️ Check your body’s Yelp reviews.Your nervous system will let you know who should be on your safe space roster. Your body will let you know that the person is five star person or when your body tells you “girl run.” Pay attention to who leaves you feeling lighter and who makes you want to fake a phone call from “Work Emergency.” 🗣️ Say the quiet part out loud.Sometimes people can be your safe space but we don’t let them know what we need. So you have to try telling them. And if you don’t have the words, try: “I don’t need advice. I just need to cry, cuss, and get a hug. Can you hang with that?” 🧹 Let go with love.If you’re shrinking, second-guessing, or prepping like you’re going on stage every time they call… bless it, block it, and keep it moving. No hard feelings, just hard boundaries. 💗 Be your own soft place.Monitor how you talk to yourself. If you wouldn’t talk to your best friend the way you talk to yourself, then shift it. Put some respect on your name. Be gentle. Be kind. Start with you so that you can explore what soft feels like for you. Final Sip of Real Talk Safe spaces won’t make your problems disappear. But they will let you take your bra off, slide into some mismatched socks, and fall apart without performance reviews. And the truths is you deserve relationships that don’t need permission slips and love that doesn’t make you audition. So check in:✨ Who makes you laugh till you wheeze?✨ Who lets you be “not okay” without calling a meeting?✨ Where can you build more of that softness for yourself. A Gentle Reminder for the Strong Ones Somewhere along the way, many of us began believing we had to earn our worth through resilience. So we internalized that love came after the sacrifice, and that rest is you are allowed to pause just because you exist. Because being human in all your wholeness, complexity, and occasional messiness, is reason enough to be held. You are worthy of spaces that nurture, and conversations that don’t require a mask. At the end of the day, we all need somewhere we can fall apart without asking permission. We deserve softness, honesty, and a place where we don’t have to translate our tone or tidy our truth to make others comfortable. A safe space is more than a buzzword, it’s a lifeline. It’s the group chat where someone sends the “girl, same” gif before you even finish typing. It’s the friend who hears the silence between your words and shows up anyway. It’s being seen without being summoned, loved without having to earn it, and held without having to explain why you need it. And if you haven’t found that space yet, start building it. Start small. One honest conversation. One gentle boundary. One moment of softness with yourself. Brick by brick, laugh by laugh, truth by truth, you will create a space where you no longer have to hustle for your humanity. Because you deserve that. You’ve always deserved that. And that, more than anything else, will be enough. Tag your safe space people, the ones who let you show up in sweatpants and still think you’re magic. And if you’re still building your circle? Start with you. 💛 Head to ChocolateSerenity.com for more truth, laughter, and reminders that you deserve softness

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When Life Breaks You Open…

…Extend Yourself Grace. Today, all I have to offer is my unadulterated truth, and the truth is – my heart is cracked wide open. So here is the raw and unfiltered truth. I’m exhausted, holding more weight than I believe one heart should have to bear. Over the past 15 months, life has surged forward relentlessly leaving me feeling like I was in the center of a windstorm. I worked through all of it. Coached through all of it. Showed up for my people through all of it. And finally last week, I created space for me to pause. I did not go on a fancy vacation or leisure, I simply took space to exhale deeply, to set down the heavy luggage of life I’ve dragged around far too long, and reconnect with my first love – writing. In that quiet sanctuary, my soul and body began a gentle conversation again, reacquainting themselves with each other intimately after months of a fling. Then Friday arrived softly, but left brutally, carrying news that my beloved pastor had transitioned. This loss runs deep. Although I knew it would come, and I thought I was prepared for it, I wasn’t. I am sad. This man was my mentor, my guide, my spiritual compass, the first soul to truly recognize me before I could recognize myself. He ordained me, protected me, showed me grace embodied. He was love made tangible. And now, he rests. And I grieve openly. Life moves in exactly this way. Just when you dare to believe you’ve weathered the worst, just as you begin to breathe deeply again, a new storm arrives, asking more from your heart than you thought possible. So today, I arrive exactly as I am, a Black woman who has to show up to work on Tuesday and lead, while holding a heart sore with yet another grief. Every new grief stirs up the old grief and leaves my spirit aching and my emotions raw. This is where I am today, and I honor it fully. Acknowledging and sitting within this raw emotion is an essential part of my mental fitness practice. I used to rush through my grief, choosing to focus on tasks so that I wouldn’t have to feel. I was afraid that feeling would cause me to crumble and then I got to a place where I couldn’t even cry. So I learned with great difficulty to allow my emotions the space they need and to allow myself to sit with them. Because strength is not only found in moving forward but also in being still. And I didn’t crumble, in fact I healed. Today, I could have chosen not to post. Or to pretend that all was well. But here I am, human, tender, and fully present in my experience. I share this openly to remind myself (and you) that grief deserves recognition, sincere acknowledgement and compassionate space. So if like me your heart is feeling tender, if your spirit feels burdened, and you are just emotionally spent, know this deeply you are not alone and you don’t have to rush through it. Give yourself an opportunity to truly see you. Gift yourself permission to pause and feel. You deserve the space that you would afford another to feel all that you hold within you. Today my plan is to be gentle with myself, to treat me with compassion, and to forgo performative strength and sit with my authentic emotions. And my friends that is enough. Until then, I am going back to bed, putting my phone on do not disturb, watching sappy movies and crying my eyes out. It is what I need because I’m tired. Deep-down-to-my-bones tired from holding too much..

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The Gentle Goodbye

If you think detaching from toxic relationships requires a dramatic exit worthy of a reality show, think again! You can gracefully wave goodbye without the clutter of anger or guilt. Embrace your inner peace, accept people’s limits, and remember, your joy isn’t a reward—it’s your birthright. So go on, reclaim that energy!

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Sitting in Your Glow: Owning the Energy You Worked For

You did it. You shifted, stretched, and leveled up. For the past 30 days, you’ve been intentional about where your energy goes, who gets access to it, and how you show up in your own life. And now? You’re glowing. ✨ Not just the “drinking more water and minding my business” kind of glow (although, we love that too). No, this glow runs deeper. This is the glow of confidence, clarity, and self-trust. The glow that comes from moving through the world in alignment. And yet… sitting in that glow? It can feel unfamiliar. After spending so much time adjusting, recalibrating, and rewiring old habits, there might be a part of you that’s tempted to dim the light just a little. To retreat into the comfort of the old you. 🚨 That’s the trap. When you step into a new level, your old patterns will try to call you back. Maybe you feel an urge to over-explain your boundaries again. Maybe you’re tempted to shrink in a room full of people. Maybe you second-guess that bold energy you’ve been owning. It’s natural. Growth is uncomfortable. But let’s be clear—this glow? It’s yours. You earned it. So, how do you sit comfortably in your glow? Let’s talk about it. ✨ Step 1: Recognize the Temptation to Revert Listen, your brain LOVES the familiar. Even if the old ways weren’t serving you, they were comfortable. That’s why, when you start walking in your power, your old habits will come knocking like: 👀 “You sure about this whole confidence thing? Maybe just this once, let’s overthink it.”🙃 “Okay, but wouldn’t it be easier to just say yes and avoid the discomfort?”😳 “Whew, you’re really taking up space now… shouldn’t you tone it down a little?” No, ma’am. Not today. When these thoughts creep in, don’t judge yourself. Just notice them, acknowledge them, and remind yourself that they’re echoes of your past—not invitations to return. 💡 New Mindset: “Oh look, an old habit trying to sneak back in. Cute. But I’ve evolved, and I’m not picking that back up.” 🔥 Pro Tip: When you catch yourself slipping into an old pattern, pause and ask: “Would past me be comfortable here? Would future me be proud?” If past-you is cozy and future-you is side-eyeing, you already know the answer. ✨ Step 2: Get Comfortable with Feeling Uncomfortable Sitting in your glow means sitting in discomfort—at least for a little while. You’ve done the work to shift your energy, and now your job is to hold it steady. Think of it like breaking in a new pair of shoes. The first time you wear them, they feel different—maybe even awkward. But after a few wears? They mold to you. They become yours. Your glow works the same way. 💡 New Mindset: “This new level feels different, but I’ve earned it. I’m not backing down now.” 🔥 Pro Tip: That urge to shrink? That little voice saying, “Maybe I should just…”? That’s your comfort zone trying to reclaim you. Take a deep breath, adjust your posture, and remind yourself—you belong here. ✨ Step 3: Protect Your Energy Like the Asset It Is Now that you’ve leveled up, your energy is premium. That means not everyone and everything gets unlimited access to it. 🔒 What this looks like in real life:✔️ Saying “no” without guilt—because your peace is not up for negotiation.✔️ Pausing before reacting—because not everything deserves your emotional labor.✔️ Only pouring into what pours into you—because reciprocity is the standard, not the exception. 💡 New Mindset: “I worked hard for this peace, and I refuse to put it on clearance.” 🔥 Pro Tip: Before saying yes, ask: “If I say yes to this, what am I saying no to?” If the answer is your peace, your boundaries, or your rest… it’s a no. ✨ Step 4: Own Your Glow. Completely. You didn’t do all this work just to dim your light now. Your confidence? Own it.Your boundaries? Hold them.Your new standards? Keep them high. Don’t let the discomfort of growth make you forget: This is the YOU you’ve been working toward. And guess what? She looks good on you. 💫 💡 New Mindset: “I didn’t do all this work just to play small. I am fully standing in who I am.” 🔥 Pro Tip: Next time you feel the urge to shrink, pause and ask yourself: “Would my highest self be proud of how I’m showing up right now?” If the answer is no, fix your posture, adjust your crown, and move accordingly. Final Thoughts: Stay in Your Glow This isn’t a phase. This isn’t temporary. This is who you are now. So take up space. Hold your head high. Sit in your glow and let it radiate. 💬 Tell me in the comments: What’s one way you’re owning your glow this week? Drop a ✨ if you’re standing in your power!

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The Self-Love Reset: Hard—But Sooo Worth It

Have you ever made a decision that’s for you—and immediately felt guilty about it? I know I’m not the only one. Maybe you finally said no to something that drained you, took yourself out to dinner instead of waiting for an invite, or enforced a boundary that should’ve been a given… and suddenly, you’re questioning yourself. Am I being selfish?Am I being difficult?Will they be mad at me? Choosing yourself sounds amazing and energizing in theory, but when you actually start doing it? Whew. It can feel strange, uncomfortable, even lonely. Like you’re going against the grain of who you’ve always been. But let me tell you something—just because it feels unfamiliar doesn’t mean it’s wrong. It means it’s new. And new is where the magic happens. If you’ve spent years saying yes when you wanted to say no, of course saying no is going to feel unnatural.If you’ve spent forever filling your schedule to avoid silence, of course sitting in stillness will feel uncomfortable.If you’ve spent your whole life making decisions based on what others want, of course choosing you will feel foreign. But discomfort is not a stop sign—it’s a sign you’re growing. And that’s exactly what the Self-Love Reset is all about. It’s not just a challenge—it’s a shake-up. A way to put yourself back at the top of your priority list and start making choices that serve you. It won’t always feel easy, and it won’t always feel natural, but every step is designed to help you shift into the next level of your life—one that’s centered on you, your joy, and your well-being. So let’s get into it: Seven days. Seven shifts. And a whole lot of self-love. Here’s what you can expect (and how to push through the parts that feel uncomfortable). What the Self-Love Reset Actually Feels Like (Not the Instagram Version) ✅ Day 8: Taking Yourself Out Solo 📍 What it feels like: You walk into a restaurant, ask for a table for one, and immediately feel seen—but not in a good way. Your mind starts telling you that everyone is watching, wondering why you’re alone. You might feel tempted to stay glued to your phone, rush through your meal, or abandon the whole thing altogether. ✨ Why it’s worth it: The moment you stop overthinking and actually settle in? You realize—Wait, I actually enjoy my own company. You order what you want, take in your surroundings, and soak in the peace of being with yourself. The more you do it, the more you realize that you were never the problem—your fear of judgment was. 💡 Pro Tip: Bring a journal or a book to ease any initial awkwardness, but challenge yourself to put your phone away and be fully present in the experience. ✅ Day 9: Saying No Without an Explanation 📍 What it feels like: You type “no” and immediately your fingers itch to soften it: I’m so sorry, I can’t because… You think about how they’ll take it, how you might disappoint them, how you could maybe squeeze it in if you really tried. Saying no feels like breaking an unspoken agreement you never actually agreed to. ✨ Why it’s worth it: The first time you say no and don’t over-explain? It feels like freedom. The more you do it, the more you realize that people adjust. And the ones who don’t? They were benefiting from your lack of boundaries, not your presence. 💡 Pro Tip: If you struggle with saying no, start with low-stakes situations (ex: declining an event invite). Once you get used to the feeling, work your way up to bigger things. ✅ Day 10: Writing a Letter to Your Future Self 📍 What it feels like: Weirdly vulnerable. You sit there, pen in hand, and suddenly feel like you don’t know yourself at all. What do you even say? It feels silly, awkward, like something from a self-help book that isn’t meant for you. ✨ Why it’s worth it: You push through, and something shifts. You start imagining who you want to be. You put words to dreams you barely admit out loud. Months from now, when you read it back, you’ll see how far you’ve come—and that moment? It’s priceless. 💡 Pro Tip: Seal the letter in an envelope and write “Do Not Open Until [Date].” Having a set time to revisit it makes the transformation even more powerful. ✅ Day 11: Making Decisions Based on What You Want 📍 What it feels like: Guilt. So much guilt. You hesitate, second-guess, and wonder if you’re making a mistake by putting yourself first. The voices of other people’s expectations are loud, and choosing differently feels like rebellion. ✨ Why it’s worth it: Then you do it, and nothing bad happens. The world keeps spinning. And you realize how many of your choices were about pleasing others rather than honoring yourself. The first time you choose you, it feels weird. The second time? A little easier. The hundredth time? Non-negotiable. 💡 Pro Tip: If you’re struggling, ask yourself: If no one else had an opinion, what would I choose? Your answer is your truth. ✅ Day 12: Starting Your Day with Music That Makes You Feel Unstoppable 📍 What it feels like: Simple, right? But then you realize how much you’ve been letting other things—emails, social media, stress—set the tone for your day. ✨ Why it’s worth it: One small shift can change everything. When you start your day with music that lifts your energy, you move differently. You show up differently. And that energy carries into every single thing you do. 💡 Pro Tip: Make a playlist called “Main Character Energy” and let it be your go-to for confidence boosts. ✅ Day 13: Creating & Enforcing a New Boundary 📍 What it feels like: Heavy. You know someone’s not going to like it. You anticipate the pushback, the questions, the subtle guilt-tripping. You feel responsible for their reaction, even though logically, you know you

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From Villain to Queen

The Truth About Letting Go I was talking to someone recently, and they shared how they’ve been letting go of invisible labor and finally prioritizing their own self-care. But then they said something that made me clutch my pearls. “I guess I’m stepping into my villain era,” they said with a nervous laugh. Now, hold up. Villain era? Let me stop you right there. Choosing yourself isn’t villainous—it’s regal. Letting go of everyone else’s baggage, deciding you don’t need to solve problems you didn’t create, and putting your own well-being front and center? That’s not destruction; that’s elevation. It’s not your villain era. It’s your queen era. But let’s be honest: stepping into your queen era can feel a little…off. That’s because for so long, we’ve been taught to be the ride-or-die for everyone but ourselves. When you start saying no, when you stop making yourself available 24/7, it can feel like betrayal—like you’re doing something wrong, even when you know deep down it’s the right move. Why Letting Go Feels Villainous So, why does letting go of everyone’s everything feel like you just turned into the bad guy in a telenovela? Let me break it down: How to Deal with These Feelings So, how do you step into your queen era without being weighed down by all this villain energy? Let me help you out: From Villain to Queen Let me tell you something: stepping into your queen era isn’t about turning your back on everyone—it’s about finally turning toward yourself. It’s about realizing that your well-being is a priority, not an afterthought. Yes, some people are going to be in their feelings about your boundaries. Yes, you’ll have moments when the guilt tries to creep in. But here’s the thing: queens don’t explain their reign. They just reign. And remember this: the people who really love you will understand. They’ll adjust, and they’ll respect your need to take care of yourself. Anyone who doesn’t? Well, maybe they don’t deserve front-row seats in your kingdom. So no, you’re not a villain for letting go. You’re a queen for rising. Put on your crown, straighten your posture, and remember: your era isn’t about destruction—it’s about flourishing. It’s time to step into your queen era and reclaim your throne! If you’ve been carrying invisible labor, saying yes when you mean no, or feeling the weight of being everyone’s go-to, this is your sign to choose yourself. Start small—set a boundary, take a rest day, or say yes to your joy. Want to connect with a community of like-minded women who are stepping into their power? Join us for the Not My Red Wagon to Pull event! Not My Red Wagon to Pull: A Virtual Gathering for Women Ready to Reclaim Their Power In this transformative session, we’ll unpack the weight of invisible labor, explore the grief and growth of letting go, and celebrate the freedom of prioritizing YOU. This is more than an event—it’s a space for connection, healing, and stepping boldly into your queen era. ✨ When: January 20 at noon ET✨ Where: Virtual ✨ What You’ll Get: Practical tools, heartfelt conversations, and a supportive community to remind you that choosing yourself isn’t selfish—it’s revolutionary. Reserve your spot today and start your journey toward a lighter, more fulfilling life. Register here.

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