The ModernZen Collective Podcast
Are you ready to elevate your mind, body, and spirit? Join Lizzy Sutton and Nikki Sucevic on The ModernZen Collective Podcast, where conscious women come together to explore the art of living with purpose, balance, and spiritual grounding. Whether you're a single professional navigating the pressures of urban life or a stay-at-home seeker yearning for deeper connections, this podcast is your sanctuary for holistic practices and personal growth.
Tune in as Lizzy and Nikki delve into ancient wellness secrets, expand your consciousness, and help you discover your true life purpose. We tackle the challenges of work-life stress, the quest for inner peace, and the journey of rediscovering who you truly are, to be able to live in alignment. Here, we embrace the unconventional, celebrate community, and empower you to step beyond societal norms to find balance, joy, and holistic living.
The ModernZen Collective Podcast is here to guide, educate, and connect women ready to transform their lives. Discover a world where balance, joy, and holistic living are within reach. Connect, grow, and thrive with The ModernZen Collective—your space for holistic wellness in the modern world.
The ModernZen Collective Podcast
Manifesting Abundance: Transforming Money Mindsets and Embracing Feminine Power with Alyssa Simpson
What if nurturing a positive relationship with money could transform your financial experiences just like a bag of chips? Join us as Alyssa Simpson, an inspiring mindset and manifestation coach, shares her unique journey from exploring the New Age section of bookstores to empowering women worldwide. Throughout this episode, Alyssa offers a refreshing take on holistic living and personal growth, revealing how stepping away from traditional career paths like psychology led her to create a ripple effect of wealth and abundance for women everywhere.
Alyssa's engaging analogies and insights into shifting money mindsets will encourage you to see abundance in a whole new light. We also explore the dynamics of entrepreneurship, especially in the post-COVID era, and how embracing gratitude and authenticity can shift your mindset from scarcity to overflow. Alyssa's candid discussion on financial beliefs and personal stories highlights the importance of understanding generational influences and finding a balance between masculine and feminine energies in our financial relationships.
As we wrap up, Alyssa delves into the empowering journey of balancing motherhood and personal success, offering insights on maintaining individuality amidst life changes. She shares her aspirations for creating a ripple effect of positive change, encouraging us to redefine success and wealth beyond traditional norms. Tune in to hear more about embracing your feminine power, tuning into your intuition, and the profound impact you can have on both your life and the lives of others. Connect with our conscious community and continue your journey of empowerment and transformation.
**Interested in Alyssa's workshop she hosted for our members?!? Check out the MZC Membership for instant access.
Episode Links:
- Alyssa's website
- Alyssa's Instagram
- Alyssa's YouTube
- LimitLyss with Alyssa Simpson Podcast
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Hi, I'm Lizzie and I'm Nikki. Have you ever felt that your life was missing purpose, joy or deep connection? Welcome to the Modern Zen Collective podcast, where we embrace holistic living for a joyful, purpose-driven life.
Speaker 1:In this podcast, we'll explore holistic practices, consciousness expansion and spiritual alignment. We will dive into personal development practices that connect mind, body, spirit and share secrets that ancient cultures have known for centuries. Together, we aim to guide, educate and connect individuals eager to transform their lives.
Speaker 2:Join us weekly on the Modern Zen Collective podcast and elevate your mind, body and spirit. And now on to today's episode.
Speaker 3:Hello everyone and welcome to another episode of the Modern Zen Collective Podcast. Your host, lizzie, here, and I'm so excited because I have one of our wonderful practitioners from our collective, alyssa Simpson, here today to do a little interview so that you guys can get a glimpse into her expertise. She is a mindset and manifestation coach. She lives right here outside of Weatherford area, texas in the country, and so she and I met in person and now we are continuing to grow our relationship. I have taken part in a few of her workshops and she did one for us here on the Modern Zen Collective, which you have access to if you're a member.
Speaker 3:He is the host of Limitless with Alyssa Simpson. She also has a podcast, so we will link that in the show notes for you to check out, and she is here empowering women to burn the rule book. Her mission is to create a ripple effect of wealthy, abundant women around the world and hopefully I become one of those women. I am in her sphere now. She gives like total best friend energy. This is why I really enjoy learning from her and listening to her podcast, and her Instagram is also just phenomenal, which we will also link. So please just check her out in all those places because you really get a great idea of who she is. She shows up authentically everywhere. So welcome Alyssa. Thank you so much for joining us today and saying yes to not only being a part of our practitioner collective, but saying yes to this podcast interview.
Speaker 4:Yeah, I'm so excited to be here. Thank you so much for having me. Whenever we first linked up specifically about Modern Zen, I think you said maybe two sentences and I was like sign me up because this sounds exactly right up my alley. And yeah, Lizzie and I just clicked almost immediately whenever we met, so it just made total sense to join forces with her.
Speaker 3:Yeah well, we're really, really excited to have you and I loved the workshop that you did for our membership this past month. I have my notes here with me that I looked over again because I'm just such a note taker and there's always these wonderful like boom, like sayings and you're you're somebody that gives those simple, straight to the point saying that's kind of like hit home, kind of like Jim Rohn ish, I don't know if you know Jim Rohn, but he's like one of my favorite people to listen to.
Speaker 4:Yeah, what a great compliment. Honestly, I think that's the best one I've received all year.
Speaker 3:Okay, okay, write that down and you can say Lizzie Sutton thinks this of me. You know, whenever you need to pick me up, it's 100%, that's how I feel oh that's awesome. We ask all of our guests here is what started you down this path, like this specific path of being a money mindset manifestation coach, like what started you down this wonderful journey that you've had?
Speaker 4:Yeah, wow, it feels like in my brain like such a huge long road, but really it hasn't been that long and windy. If I'm being totally honest, I was obsessed with learning about mindset and the metaphysical world when I was like 13 or 14 years old so that was about 16 years ago and I would always go to Barnes Noble and sit in the New Age section and just read any and all books that I could really get my hands on about it, any and all books that I could really get my hands on about it. And I just thought, like am I late to the game Because there's so much knowledge here in this section and all these books written by such great people? And I feel like I have to learn this immediately so I can start living the way that I want to live. And you know, you start talking to people about it and expecting them to know and they're like, what are you talking about? Like, what is this? Woo, woo, hippie, dippy bullshit. I'm like it's not it's so.
Speaker 4:It isn't like let me show you this book or let me let you borrow this, or let's both go to Barnes and Noble together and we can read all the things together. And just, you know, over the years, growing up and having society kind of, and having society kind of beat society into you, I didn't see a avenue or a path that I could go down that really allowed me to immerse myself in that world. Of course there was like psychology and therapy and stuff like that. So I dabbled in that idea of going to college to get a degree in that and I learned very quickly that there are a lot of restrictions and a lot of paperwork and a lot of you know just from the therapist side of it. Whenever I learned that all therapists like they have to have a therapist themselves, I was like so who is like the top therapist Like, or is it just one big like chain loop of all of us kind of you know, being therapists for each other in that world? And I thought this is not for me. I'm very out of the box. I'm very I don't like being told what to do. I'm much more of a let me ask for forgiveness than permission and so, just learning about all of the rules and regulations that involve that world, I quickly realized this is not for me.
Speaker 4:So what does any lost teenager do? They go into hospitality, right. Like I worked in restaurants, I made tips and I realized, like you know, what I could really move up in this world and I became a manager for Olive Garden, which is a very large corporate restaurant at 21, which honestly never happens. They don't like to hire super young, but they hired me because I was very hellbent on. I'm not going to be serving tables forever. I need to be doing something better. And when I became a manager, I really allowed myself to be like a coach for these team members and, mind you, they're all majority of them were older than me, so it was kind of like a silly little relationship I had with everyone. Where it was Alyssa oh my gosh, this is going on with my family and I'm so stressed out and it would be 45 minutes of us sitting in the office talking about it and me kind of helping them and getting to use all of that wisdom that I had learned when I was younger, putting it into them and helping them other.
Speaker 4:My dad had a five or six year battle with liver cirrhosis from alcoholism. And then my mom, after my dad passed, she emotionally couldn't handle it, spiritually couldn't handle it and she committed suicide. So it was losing both of them back to back like that. It really shook me to my core of there is more to life, really shook me to my core of there is more to life. And if I'm here to really make a difference, like I felt so called in my soul to do, I can't do it in these walls of this restaurant, like I can't. I can't be giving away 45 hours of my week every week to this place. And just the whole, like when death happens, so many things get put into perspective right and in just the way that I was expected to come back to work and show up and show out and put the restaurant first, really made me realize like we're number one, we're also replaceable, right. Like if I were to drop dead on the in this kitchen floor right now, this restaurant, they would have someone new here within days to replace me and to keep things running as nothing ever happened. And I want to leave an impact on the world. I want to meet people, reach people, impact people and let them walk away from an interaction with me and feel like that thing that she said changed my life. That thing that she did made me realize how much power I have within me, and so I quit my job.
Speaker 4:Three months later, the pandemic happened and I really felt like the universe was giving me an opportunity to put my money where my mouth was, because I could have easily been like you know what? No, like everything is so uncertain and I should be thankful that I have this job and I shouldn't quit it Like that's so irresponsible. But I didn't. I said you know what, I'm taking a chance and I'm doing this, and I didn't know exactly that I wanted to do coaching whenever I quit. But I knew I just couldn't be doing a normal job anymore. Right, and I say normal with air quotes, because what is a normal job, you know.
Speaker 4:But I left and when I left, I was gifted an unexpected $50,000 that allowed me to use the rest of the year to really figure out, like, what I wanted to do.
Speaker 4:And I know for a fact it was because I was so surrendering of everything that was going on and I really leaned into trust about just, you know, knowing that I was meant for more and I'm going to do more, and just believing wholeheartedly that the universe is going to have my back regardless. And I was shown that the universe did have my back right, like I was able to not stress about how am I going to pay my bills, how am I going to do this, how am I going to do that? And then that whole situation allowed me to really understand my own relationship with money and take an honest look at how money and I have coexisted together and worked together my entire life and a lot of the things that I grew up learning. I mean, I remember in high school we had to take, like a stupid Dave Ramsey work class in economics and I'm like this guy's full of shit. He's teaching everyone how to live in like lack and scarcity.
Speaker 4:I'm like this guy is who? Who let this man come in to start talking to all these young people about debt and whatever? And I just really got to take a look at. Okay, I feel like I bring something new to the world of finance and money and having a strong mindset around it and helping others in that realm, and I was like if I could blend this with manifestation and mindset, so many people would benefit just from hearing me talk for 15 minutes, you know. So that's kind of the avenue that I went down and I haven't looked back since.
Speaker 3:Wow, wow. It's so crazy how we get to where we are now. And first I just want to say thank you for sharing your story and being so vulnerable about you know some pretty big events in your life that really triggered different times for you to pause and like evaluate where you were and where you were going.
Speaker 3:And it takes a lot of courage to say you know what I'm not going to do, what I've been doing. I'm not going to do the easy thing. I'm going to go after what I'm really passionate about and what I really care about and the ways that I can use my strengths and my expertise to help others and ultimately help them heal. Thus, everyone they know heal Thus, then the next people, then the next people. It's like when we help someone heal, they affect. That healing in themselves affects everyone that they touch in their sphere of influence. Thus, like this whole ripple effect thing, I mean it's, it's incredible. So thank you for sharing your story and for being here to share with everyone and for having the courage to speak out your wisdom, your earned, you know, your wisdom, your pearls like to everybody to help us move forward, Like one of the things you said in your workshop.
Speaker 3:That, I swear, is like the tagline that I just remember and I can tell everyone is when you say, like money is like a bag of chips and can you share with our listeners, like what you mean by that and like why is that something that we can think of and it should like trigger us to think of money in a different way.
Speaker 4:Yeah, 100% Money is like a bag of chips y'all. You're already here first. And what I mean by that is so I'm a salty snack kind of gal. Okay, I love a good Lay's potato chip because I think they just add an ungodly amount of salt and it's the best. And because I love chips so much, I thought about how my relationship is with chips and I was like you know what, I'm never worried about not having chips. Okay, like, I always have chips Whenever I am watching my favorite trash reality show right now I just finished the Real Housewives of New York and my god was it wild.
Speaker 4:But as I'm watching my show, I'm eating my chips. I don't ever sit there and think like, what am I gonna do if all these chips run out? Am I gonna be able to get more of these chips at the store when I go? How like do I? What about the manufacturer? Did they make enough chips to supply my grocery store that I go to with the chip that I've been eating lately?
Speaker 4:And that's exactly how our relationship is with money. Chips are infinite, right? You go down the chip aisle and you're like Jesus Christ, you guys could have two more aisles of chips. They have chips stacked on shelves you can't even reach, and it's just all types of chips. There's multiple types of plain potato salty chips and they're just there taking up space waiting for someone to come and buy them.
Speaker 4:And money is the same way. Money is an infinite resource, just like chips are, and we never worry about where our next bag of chips are going to come from. We never worry about is there going to be enough? While we're eating chips, we're not sitting here thinking like, oh, I can only have 10 of them because there's only 100 in a bag and I'm only allowing myself 10 a day. I'm rationing these chips.
Speaker 4:Money is the exact same way and when we can treat money with that energy and that idea and that unshakable core belief that it is always there and it is infinite, that is how money is going to show up for you.
Speaker 4:And because money is an energy and we have a relationship with money, that also means that how we treat money in a relationship is how we are going to be treated back.
Speaker 4:Would you be friends with someone, or in a romantic relationship with someone who always talked about you not being enough or worried about you leaving them and abandoning them? Or whenever you guys go out and have some fun together, and the fun is over. At the end of the night are you sitting there thinking like, oh my God, that's never going to happen again, I'm never going to get that opportunity to go bowling again with my friend, because they're going to leave me, they're going to go be with someone else, they're going to blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. I know for a fact I don't have relationships like that in my life, because that's lack and scarcity, and so my relationship with money also reflects that too. Like a bag of chips, it's infinite, it's always there, it's readily available to us as soon as we make the decision on the chips that we want to binge on watching our favorite show.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I love that. I'm a salty girl too. I love chips and I can just eat a whole one if I'm not paying attention really easily. But I love that, especially about having the relationship with money and think about that as a relationship with another person and how you treat them and how you expect them to treat you. And it's so interesting because my husband and I are both entrepreneurs and we used to be salaried, you know, 730 to 530 PM workers on call on the weekends, double screens, whole shebang running the operations, and moving from that to being entrepreneurs, solo entrepreneurs, each starting our own businesses, and then both of us having new iterations of the business, slash, a next business. You know that kind of stuff happens through when you go out. You know the first iteration isn't normally what you end up with at the end of it, and so going from from having this steady paycheck to, if you're not working, you're not earning, you know to like figuring out how do we earn while not working, 24, seven different kinds of things you know. Now, both of us having partners in our, you know, entrepreneur journeys.
Speaker 3:The topic of money has been a big topic in our lives since COVID and I think you know you talking about COVID in your story about how you got here.
Speaker 3:I think there is a silver lining to COVID, where it was a huge trigger for a lot of people myself included, just like you where it's like looking at your life and deciding it's time to go after what I really want to do, like what I'm really passionate about, and just doing whatever it takes.
Speaker 3:And so, you know, money has been a conversation for us for six years now, you know, and this two sides of it like you're talking about, like how you speak about it, is very important. And I try and get that across to my husband and he thinks I'm just being flippant about money, like I'm not seeing the, I'm not understanding intelligently what is happening in our lives around money, what's being spent, what's coming in the businesses, all the things. And I'm like no, I see it, I understand I'm looking at everything, but I'm choosing to come from a place of abundance and seeing money as coming from all these different streams. You're talking about allowing yourself to see the different varieties of chips, the different streams of money that's coming in and wealth and abundance that we have. It is a sore, I will say I'm going to be honest, it's a little bit of a sore spot and like a rub in between him and I, because I know now that this is very important and I've taken the work like the time.
Speaker 3:So can you maybe give me some as a listener, and advice on how do you kind of approach getting on the same page as a partner, when we're choosing to see and speak about money from a place of abundance, when they're kind of maybe coming from a place of lack?
Speaker 4:100%. This is so common, Such a common thing. It's like the top four things, or five things that couples and relationships like you argue about. It's money, sex, and I don't know. There's a few others, but those are like the top two, right, how you raise your kids, I think is one of them, yeah.
Speaker 4:Yeah, exactly Like how we're going to raise our kids and having different parental takes on things, and so with money being one of those, the first thing I always tell people is you have to understand that the way that someone thinks and feels about money is not truly their story. If they have such a hard time with money, it has been passed down to them through generations. If we look back at our grandparents, great-grandparents, whatever generation that was that lived through the Great Depression, that is when the lack and scarcity started in our lineage, right, and because we're in America, a lot of American families American, you know, who were here during the Great Depression we all have that similar lack and scarcity story, depression we all have that similar lack and scarcity story. Where it was, you had one can of beans to feed a family of seven for the week, you know, and so it was like that true feeling of fight or flight, feast and famine, and that trickled into that next generation and then that next generation and then us right. So, getting able to look at it from a neutral standpoint and understanding why it is the way that we are when it comes to money, if we come from a place that's more analytical, which men naturally do. They see money as an analytical, logical thing, whereas women see it typically as more of a flowy feminine. I ask and then I receive type of thing Right. So finding the balance between that is super key.
Speaker 4:And, again, what is the most beneficial thing to do, starting out, is to have a genuine conversation of like do you know why you think of money the way that you do? And not in like an interrogating way or in any type of way like that, but just letting the other person kind of explore their own money story, because a lot of people don't understand that they have a unique money story until they get to explore it on their own and maybe they've never been asked like why do you think of money the way that you do? And, as most men will probably answer, it's like well, what do you mean? Like? Money is money, and I was told that I have to work hard to earn money and that's what it is, that's how the world works. And it's like okay, great, but where did that come from? Did you grow up seeing that be the truth for your father? Was it the truth for your mother? Was it the truth for the grandparents that raised you? You know what was your first experience of receiving money?
Speaker 4:Do you believe that you could be gifted a million dollars? And that's the question that I always love to ask, because you can really tell a lot about a person's money beliefs if you ask them that question and their first response is to like laugh or scoff or say, like a million, like no, who is going to give me a million dollars? And it's like, okay, well, there's a little nugget there, because you think that it comes from a person. Why can't it come in the form of a gift? Why can't it come in the form of winning the lottery? Or someone just at the coffee shop giving away money and you're the next in line and you're, you know, like why can't it come from all these different avenues? What do you believe is not possible for you? And then that's a whole different route.
Speaker 4:But when it comes to relationships and partnerships specifically, it can get really ugly and tacky quick, because it feels like it's an attack being had whenever you're asking your partner like well, why do you think this way? Because then they hear it as like well, what do you like? Nothing's wrong with me. You're the one who's seeing it as this flowy thing, and it's not like it's X is traded for Y, right? So the biggest piece of advice I have is to just make it something fun when you are exploring where it comes from and even being the vulnerable one and say, you know what? Like, my money story hasn't always been great and I grew up watching my mom have to work three jobs just to put ham sandwiches on the table, and this is why I believe that I have to work really hard. And you know, whatever the case is, there's so many different scenarios here that we could really get into which I, for the time being, I don't think it's beneficial to get into every scenario, but just allowing yourself to have the open and honest conversation of well, I wonder why you think the way that you do, right, like, where do you think that this belief comes from?
Speaker 4:And when you think about multiple different ways money can be delivered to you, what comes up for you? And if it's a, like I said, like the laughing and the scoffing and the, what do you? We don't live in la-la land. It's like well, why? Why can't we?
Speaker 4:Because, technically, money was created by man, right, like, money wasn't? It's not a thing that is like a universal law. So because it was created by man, it can be manipulated by man as well. Right, like, we can manipulate the energy of money. But it's you who drives the force here, and whenever you kind of put it in that perspective, especially for men, I think they can understand it more because they get to step into their masculine energy of you. Know what you're right, like, I am the driving force for this I am. I do get to be the masculine in the relationship that I have with money, and for women, we get to, we get to be in our feminine energy with money too. We simply declare and demand what it is we desire, and money gets to follow suit and be the masculine energy in that relationship too.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I think it's really interesting because once I started working on my money mindset and my abundance mindset and my thresholds for what I think is possible in my life and to come to me, things money, wealth, like free coffees, all sorts of different things have come to me without expectation, without anything, and it's just, it's really incredible how things like that flow when you allow them to like, when you it's almost like, when you like what you're saying, when you have the belief that it's possible, it becomes possible for you. And one of the other things that you said that I really love and like, take to heart and really am working with intention this year to bring more into my life is you said that gratitude is the secret sauce for everything.
Speaker 3:And like can you just expand a little bit more on that, because I just think that's just so important for us to remember.
Speaker 4:Yeah, gratitude is the secret sauce. Gratitude is the magic that makes the train run right, like it's the. It's the oil in the car, it's the oxygen in the water, it's the sunlight every day, like. Gratitude is, at the end of the day, the foundation for mastering your mindset and mastering manifestation. And if we even go back and look at ancient civilizations, if we go back and look at any type of spiritual, religious textbook, whatever, gratitude is mentioned the most, the most in every single thing, because it is the juice that makes it all happen the most in every single thing. Because it is the juice that makes it all happen. And whoever has gratitude will be given an abundance and have overflow, and whoever does not have gratitude, what little they have will be taken away. Okay, when we look at situations in society as a whole and we think my God, how can these people be so happy when they live in huts or whatever they live on the street? How can they be so happy? It's because they literally wake up every day with a fresh breath of gratitude. They're just grateful that they get to see the sun again, they're grateful that they got to have a bag of chips or a can of beans, or someone smiled at them on the street, and when you actually look at how much abundance you have in your life and start showing it gratitude, naturally because of the energy that is around us it's a universal law you will be given more.
Speaker 4:The first thing that I do with anyone that I work with is we implement a gratitude practice. So what I would love for everyone to do today is to start their own gratitude practice. What I always recommend starting to do is to, every day during your morning routine, while you're having breakfast, whatever is to write. Write down, not type, not think in your head. Write down with pen and paper, because there is an energy that happens when you are putting pen to paper during this is writing down 10 things that you're grateful for and why, and you're going to do this every day for the span of 30 days, and every day it has to be something different.
Speaker 4:So at first it might feel really challenging, like, well, I don't know God, it's been a while since I've signed a client and, man, I didn't get to book that vacation. I wanted to. So what could I possibly be grateful for? It's like you woke up, you saw the sun, you have water to drink, you get to brush your teeth, you get to brush your hair, you get to have jewelry, you get to eat breakfast, you get to have a car, you get to have a home Literally the basic needs that we have 46% of the world doesn't even have access to. So if you put that into perspective too, of like, oh my God, I'm complaining about my Wi-Fi being slow and there's people who are figuring out like how are we going to have water to survive today and I'm bitching about my Wi-Fi being slow, it puts things into perspective for you.
Speaker 4:And again, because of energy and because of universal law, when you show gratitude for the things you have, you will be given an overflow. If we're talking about money, if you only have one fucking penny to your name, show that penny gratitude, because it could be gone, it could not even be in your space. But you complaining about not having enough. Why would money come and bless you and be more for you? Right? It's thank you so much for every penny that I have. It's thank you so much for allowing me to pay my bills. Thank you so much for having money to get a coffee. To go to the store to buy that bag of apples. Go to the store to buy that bag of apples. It's the things that we take for granted every single day that is stopping us from living in overflow and abundance. Anytime.
Speaker 4:I feel like I'm in a funk. I'm like, okay, what can I be grateful for? Because it's really not that bad. I'm freaking myself out, like it's. I'm not having a bad day, I'm having a bad five minutes. Okay.
Speaker 4:On Monday I I woke up and I was like I'm going to have a nice coffee made. A nice coffee tasted like shit, whatever. Then I went to go to H-E-B to do my weekly grocery pickup and they stacked all of my groceries in there like to the brim and they didn't do a very good job. So when I opened up my trunk when I got home, my case of glass bottle mineral water fell and broke and a can of biscuits fell out and popped and broke and I was like, oh, that sucks, whatever. Okay. Then I ordered my favorite chicken sandwich that I get from a store down in Weatherford and I came home and I opened it and it was a burger. I don't eat red meat. So I was like, oh my God, what the fuck? Like.
Speaker 4:I feel like all these things are happening to me. But I showed gratitude to each of those things. I was like you know what? Like this never happens to me. I don't ever have three annoying things happen to me in a day Like this is very strange. It's very weird, like, but I'm going to laugh about it because it is silly at the end of the day. Like I didn't freak out. I did text my husband and I was like, oh, I just feel like whining, I just want to whine. Can you come home so I can whine to you? Just because I was like wanting to be a little brat about it. No-transcript, the law of polarity. Then the beautiful things wouldn't exist either. Right, like we don't get to experience light without experiencing darkness. We don't get to experience the summer without experiencing winter. So it's finding the beautiful things in the annoying things that also equals you having an overflow and abundance in your life.
Speaker 3:I love that. I love that so much especially. You know your story about having all the little things happen that can seem like when they pile on top of each other. You're like what is going on today.
Speaker 3:You know, and so I love that you're able to still have. This is the whole thing about you know practice what you preach. It's like it's so important for us to be doing the practices that we ask other people to do because they're looking to us to see is this really possible? And we're here to be like, yes, it's possible, and it's possible for you. And it starts with these small, major but, like you know, simple but majorly impactful, like activities or ways of, like habits that you just start to form, like your habit of still being grateful for things that could be seen as annoyances at the end of the day, instead of flipping a script and seeing them as something to be thankful for at the end of the day. Like those habits that really shift your life, and they can be so small. So can you share another practice besides having this morning gratitude practice that you think is something else that's very potent in shifting someone's energetics from money and abundance?
Speaker 4:Yeah, it's being unapologetic, and I will give you an example here. So when we're talking about being unapologetic, I like to think of my boy, adam Sandler, who, to me, he is unapologetic and he is still great at his craft. He has his own production company, he gets to work with his best friends every day, and this man could give less of a fuck, right, and he still has success and abundance and all of these things, things. Now, when we apply that to ourselves, because what we do as humans, and especially in the day and age that we live in with social media, is we take everyone else's issues and problems and make them our own. So being unapologetic means literally just like creating new beliefs for yourself. So getting very clear on what these new beliefs you want to be for yourself. I don't believe that work, working hard, equals more money. If that belief is something that resonates with you and you are someone who truly enjoys working hard to earn money, then that that's fine, like that can be your belief For me. That's not my belief. So that's a very clear belief that I. My clear belief is that money is infinite and it is always around me. Regardless of what work I'm actually doing, money is always supporting me. That is a belief that I have to my core and I'm unapologetic about it when I see things on social media, or if I have a client come to me and tell me about how horrible things are going for them, or I have a friend call me and say you know, my life is going to shit, I'm getting a divorce, I lost my job, I'm losing my house, blah, blah, blah. I don't take those things as my own. I have to remember that how other people's journey is playing out is none of my business. Number one and number two I have to be so solid in who I am as a person and what my beliefs are as a person as well.
Speaker 4:I talk a lot about embodiment because the manifestation formula is be, do and then have. So oftentimes people want to know well, what can I do to master manifestation? I'm like well, you master the embodiment piece first. Are you walking, talking, living, breathing, as the version of you who has it all right? Like? Does the version of you who has it all? Does she wake up and chug coffee without eating a nutritious breakfast? Probably not. Does the version of you who have it all surround herself with people who gossip and talk shit about everyone else in their life? Probably not. Does the version of you who has it all go to bed every night with a holy underwear she's had since high school? Probably not. So it's doing the things that are in alignment with the version of you who already has everything you desire.
Speaker 4:Getting that practice down is so crucial whenever we're talking about mastering manifestation, mastering your mindset, becoming a magnet for wealth and abundance. Because, again, if we're comparing it to you know gratitude, for instance how can you be supported if you're not being who you are? How can you be taken care of by the universe, by source, by God, by angels, by whatever resonates with you, if you are not authentically being who you are? And if we think about it in terms of, like, the entrepreneurial world, I always like to think of the internet, like, can you imagine sitting in a room before the internet existed and someone bringing the idea of the internet to you? We'd all be like you have lost your ever loving mind.
Speaker 4:What are you talking about? We have this thing that connects us to people in different parts of the world. What do you mean? There's this thing that we can pick up and talk to someone through a screen. Like what are you talking about? Like that doesn't make any sense.
Speaker 4:But because they were so hell bent on creating something that they believed that they could create, it was created. All the beautiful things in our world art, clothes, desserts, food, cars, homes were created from a thought and a belief that, number one, it could be done, and number two, that they could be the person to bring it to life. So having that unshakable confidence and belief in yourself too is going to be what serves you best in the long run. So taking a internal inventory of what your inner critic is telling you because we all have an inner critic Mine. Her name is Anita and she's a real fucking pill, but I always let her her come forward, I let her talk and run her mouth, so then I can have clarity of what it is that she's saying. That's kind of contributing to the way I'm being, and if she's saying things and it's affecting who I'm being, we fix it, rewire it, and it's a daily practice from there on out.
Speaker 3:Yeah, yeah, that's honestly, I feel like that's the hardest part is like fostering that sense of endless awareness, like having this awareness of, like, what is going on behind the scenes, because we often just walk through life, walk through our days, just do the things, do the things, and that makes sense. However, it's those things that we constantly and continually do on autopilot. That's where, like, those things hide, they lie in those. So having the awareness to pause and choose something that maybe isn't our autopilot habit can be it's like simple, but it's not simple.
Speaker 4:It's not simple at all Right, and what I tell people all the time, too, is focus on what triggers you, because what triggers you is a very direct response to what you need to heal and work on. Because a lot of people will tell you that I'm very laid back, I seem like I don't give a fuck, I just kind of go with the flow, and that is very true. But there are some things that irritate the shit out of me and I'm always like, oh my god, like I'm getting so irritated. What is happening? Why is this irritating me so much? And then it allows me to do some self-awareness and reflecting of why does this bother me? Does this actually affect me if someone shows up late to a lunch date? Does it actually affect me? If my family member is texting me at 8 o'clock at night when they know I go to bed at seven? You know what I mean. Like whatever, whatever it is that irritates you, like there's a reason why it irritates you, and finding out why is so so, so insightful and important.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I could. I definitely agree with you on that. So then, to like go piggyback right off of that, like, as you've progressed through your knowledge and your learning in this field of work, what's the most valuable lesson that you've learned about yourself as you've worked through all of this to get to where you are now?
Speaker 4:Yeah, that's a really great question. The thing that I've learned most about myself is I am resilient as fuck and I used to be such a ball of anxiety Like truly, I'm not very into like taking medication if there's something wrong with me, so I did everything under the sun to manage my anxiety. I'm pretty sure I gave myself a mass in my right sinus that I had to get removed because I would snort lavender oil and like rub it all over my nose, put it inside of my nostrils and I'm pretty sure the oil I was using is the best that I gave myself a mass that I had to remove. But I was always so worried Like I would have all these irrational fears and all of these like if I'm not in control then I could die or like something horrible can happen to me. And learning, number one, that I'm resilient and number two, like I truly only have control over how I feel, has been the biggest awareness piece for me. Because, at the end of the day, has been the biggest awareness piece for me Because, at the end of the day, we don't have control.
Speaker 4:The only thing we do have control over is how we feel and how we react to things, and I used to be the person who was like I'm driving everywhere because I have control over this car and we're not going to get in an accident if I'm driving. And now I'm like I don't, can someone else drive please? Like I could care less about being the one behind the wheel, and that's a really great analogy and metaphor for my life, because I've truly taken the backseat in things Like I am not so anxious and worried about the mundane, man-made bullshit, laws and strategies that we try to follow. You know, I'm like I don't care. I don't care. Am I happy? Am I healthy? Do I genuinely love what I do in my business and outside of my business? And am I excited when I wake up in the morning? And if all four of those things get a check mark, yes, for me I'm fucking rich dude, you know.
Speaker 3:Yeah, yeah, that's changing our definition of success and wealth. You know, I feel this kinship to you, not in like the anxious kind of like that piece of it, but like where we both come from, this heavy masculine like way of doing life background, and now we have almost you've done like a 180. I mean, just from sharing that and from meeting you and taking part in your workshops and stuff, you have this more free flow, feminine approach. Now, however, your foundation is like this masculine, like no, you got to do this shit, like kind of attitude, and I appreciate that because that's who I like I'm a make a list, do the things, move this along, make the decision to pull the trigger. Like that's like my who I am, like I love I'm at very action oriented, who I am, like I love I'm very action oriented.
Speaker 3:And yet, like we now see this huge benefit that we gain and this ease that we get to do life from when we lean into the feminine way of doing things and marry that along with that baseline masculine that we're all like taught, like drilled into us in the masculine way of doing things from when we're, from when we're young. So it's almost like we don't even have to think about that at all. Like the doing is something that is ingrained, that's that habit, that's that instant thing. Is the doing the masculine? So it's almost like taking this very intentional approach to lean into the feminine way, lean into the ease, lean into the energetics, into the momentum, take the action that moves with that, instead of fighting against because we think we should ought to do it in this certain way or have this certain thing, or it needs to look this way, or we have to do it in this like controlled, like you're saying, masculine way. It's just.
Speaker 4:I feel like very much like we have had that same journey towards discovering the beauty and the power that comes from the feminine side yeah, and if you really break it down into that further, because it is so ingrained in us to lean into the masculine, especially with, just like the feminist movement, right Like women want their rights and they would be treating women. Yes.
Speaker 3:I have all these thoughts and feelings around it and I just don't really know. I don't know because I'm like man. You kind of killed us in the same way.
Speaker 4:It's like you really did put the nail in the coffin while you're trying to like resurrect us from you know oppression or whatever. And I like I used to be like, yeah, man, fuck the patriarchy, burn your bra. Who gives a shit? And now I'm like no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Speaker 4:There's a healthy balance and I think that is why so many women are sick, sad, depressed, broke, because they're leaning so heavy into the masculine that there is no room for the feminine. And you and I can attribute to that wholeheartedly because we leaned so hard in the masculine and now we have that free. I asked myself straight up like what is the worst that can happen if I don't check off all the to-do's on my list, if I am not the one making the decisions for my household, if I'm not the one driving the car? Like what's the worst thing that can happen? Nothing, because your inner critic is going to tell you it's the sky is going to fall, and if you don't do it, then who's going to? And it's like fuck that, let it just be Surrender and trust and lean into who you naturally are as a person.
Speaker 3:Yeah, how crazy is it that we have to learn how to trust. It's like we've been so wired. I mean, I am one of three girls I have a. My parents got divorced when I was five, so I grew up with a single mom and thus was taught to be very independent. Growing up she, she was at your bud mom. She's like the C-suite executive at the small business that does every single job at the business you know, has your hands in everything, so it's constantly taking phone calls while you're in the car or in the grocery store. You never know if she's talking to you or not.
Speaker 3:Like you know, always wearing the earbud, you know, and so I grew up very independent, like take your own meals, make sure you do your homework and you get to play. Like, do it, like very, take care of yourself. And if you don't do it for yourself, it won't happen, it won't get done, and I would say that there, that is a blessing and a curse. There is a lot of positives to that and there are also some negatives that I've had to unlearn and so, like, from getting older, it's like how do you allow people to take care of you too? You know, we're here in this together.
Speaker 3:We used to be live in these tribes where, like, people would handle different things. We weren't expected to handle every single task. You know, I kind of think of it actually in terms of entrepreneurship too. It's like when you're alone, you handle the accounting, the invoicing, the, the content creation, the social media, the emails, the, the. How do you do the back office? You know, like it's almost like we're trying to do that in our lives, um, instead of having this team or group that moves towards the common goal, and it's like this unlearning of how do we relax and let someone carry our bags for us? How do we relax and let someone walk us to our car because it's dark out and they just want to make sure that we get to our cars safe. Why do we always have to say, oh, it's okay, I got it.
Speaker 4:Yeah, exactly, it goes back again to playing the well. What's the worst case scenario? Yeah, I love that question, yeah, and what I do too on the other side of this is like, okay, if that's the worst case scenario, then what's the best thing that can happen? And that list is always longer. What's the best thing that can happen? If I let someone carry my bag, if I let someone walk me to my car at night? What is the best possible outcome? And it always outweighs the well, what is the worst thing that can happen?
Speaker 4:And it's interesting too, because with entrepreneurs, we can get in our head and think we have to do all of it and like, okay, delegating what's that? I don't want to do that Even in life, like I don't want to delegate, like shit's not going to get done if I'm not the one doing it. And what I always like to do is ask myself, well, what do I, number one, enjoy doing? Number two, what do I feel good after completing that task doing and everything else, if it's an annoyance, if it makes me want to break my computer over my knee or, like, burn my house down, what can I offload to someone? So like, for me, thinking of what to cook for dinner is like the bane of my existence, so how can I alleviate that?
Speaker 4:decision-making Right? I like to clean, I genuinely like to vacuum and dust and white counters down and all that shit. So that's, that's mine. The dinner part. Hate it. How can I get rid of it? Entrepreneurship you will have to pry my social media out of my cold dead hands because I love it so much. But editing my podcast can, like that goes to someone else. Um, coming up with a plan to execute, xyz, that can go to someone else, because I'm very like bull in china shop, like I have an idea. We're we're doing it right now.
Speaker 4:You know like the planning part is annoying to me, so it's really getting to know you and what would your highest self do? What does the version of you who already has everything you desire to do and have? What does she delegate? Is she a one-woman show? Probably not. She probably has her hand in a lot of different pots and she needs help executing and that's leaning into the feminine, and I have had tons of opportunity where I have outsourced things and it hasn't gone the way that I wanted.
Speaker 4:But that's part of the game too. You're never going to have someone do something that is exactly how you want it. But then it's asking yourself, like why are you putting so much pressure on it? Needing to be perfect? Who gives a fuck, you know? Like why does it matter if the text is aligned left or in the middle? Like, who truly cares, you know? Or if things aren't getting done in 48 hours and instead they're getting done over a week time? Like why does it have to get done quick, right, just because you work quick, it doesn't, you know? Like it's again what is triggering me and why.
Speaker 3:Right, right. Well, you owning your own business and like stepping into this, stepping out as yourself, like having your own personal brand and stuff like that, and people come to you for a reason like what's your top strategy for success for other? You know business owners or people who are interested in kind of stepping out as, like you know someone to share, an expert in the field.
Speaker 4:Yeah, that's a really great question because I kind of going back to what we talked about, like success is defined so differently from each of us. So, like to me, success means, like you are obsessed with your life, that you don't feel like you need to take a vacation every fucking quarter because you have to get out of the house and away from your spouse and away from your kids, and like you just love life, right. Like to me, that is the ultimate success. And, of course, there are things in our life that we wish were better, that we wish were different, that blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. But honestly, like if you were to tell me Alyssa were taking it away from you, like I would be shattered. I'd be like, well, then take me too, because, like I love this life, I don't want to do anything different. Like I, like I simply cannot. If you were to take it all away from me. And to me, like that is success, I genuinely wake up happy every single day. I don't wake up and go, oh fuck another day. Oh fuck, here we go. Like I go to bed at night excited to wake up for the next day, you know, and to me that's the ultimate level of success and how you get there is you turn off the noise, you turn off what everyone else is telling you and you tune in to you. Your intuition is the strongest thing in your life. You're going to have the most insight about you and what it is you actually desire when you tune into you. There are enough copy and paste people in the world and this might be very wrong of me to say as a coach, but you don't always need to be mentored and guided. You need to learn how to tune into you so you don't have to seek outside validation from anyone. You can say, hmm, does this feel aligned to me or not? And if it doesn't, that's all the reason and proof you need that something isn't meant for you. Just because someone else found success, posting 16 TikToks a day does not mean that that's what is going to make you successful.
Speaker 4:Tuning everything out and tuning back into you is key, and what I recently did, literally this month. I was on Instagram scrolling and I was like I can't stand any of this shit, like none of this lights me up. It's all like people talking about here's your content strategy for the next 30 days, or here's how you can, you know market like a boss, and I'm like this literally makes me want to eat glass. I don't care about any of this. And then I go to my Pinterest and I'm like, oh, it's so cozy here.
Speaker 4:There's like mindset quotes and like cute interior design ideas and like just the aesthetic is so nice. So I've been trying to move that vibe onto my instagram. So I'm doing a lot of unfollowing, which I'm sure people are like why did alissa unfollow me? Oh, my god, it's, it's not you, babe, it's the shit you post. But like, like I for real just had to stop listening Cause I'm like, even though this doesn't directly like I'm not directly getting affected, it's still seeking seeping into my subconscious and my subconscious is holding onto all of these other people's opinions and ideas that do not align with me. Like this is not what I desire. And at the end of the day, too, a quote that I love is do not take advice from people who aren't living the life you want to live.
Speaker 3:Yes, I love that quote. I love that quote. Yeah, I'm still with you on that. What is your favorite quote? What's your favorite quote of all time?
Speaker 4:It's a long one. It's. The religion calls it prayer, scientists call it the placebo effect. Um, spiritual people call it manifestation. Everyone's it. What does it say? Everyone, it has a different name for everyone, but no one is denying its existence, like to me. I'm like, yeah, like we all call it different things, but it's at the base. Root of what that is, is the power within us.
Speaker 4:And the power, with co-creating, with universal intelligence, whether that's God, source, angels, universe, like whatever resonates with you, like it's that co-creation process that we all have and do. We just might call it something different, but we're not denying that it exists, you know.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I love that. I think we can get so hung up on the words. And I know, even myself, as I've taken this spiritual journey. You know, I grew up in the church, I grew up Episcopalian, and there was a lot of things that didn't make sense to me.
Speaker 3:And I think, because when I was growing up and I associate God with that, you know, with being in the church, and then as I grew up, I started to associate like universe, or source, or like divine, you know, or creatrix, even at a certain point, when I was trying to put more feminine spin on it, you know, it's like I would get hung up in the words and when someone would say God, I would almost have like this inner like, you know, like, yeah, god, god, but then it's like no, no, we're talking about the exact same thing, like the divinity within us and all around us, the creator, like the source, the eternal, you know, that thing, that that is that makes up who we are and connects all of us.
Speaker 3:And so it's so interesting, because I I totally feel you on that too. It's like same, like I love that there's a quote about that around manifestation, because it's true, like, when you say manifestation, I think it like turns some people off and it's like no, there are other words Like how do I, how do I meet you where you're at so that we can talk about the same thing? You know, get on the same page here, cause yeah, like we're literally talking about this.
Speaker 4:Yeah, like we are literally talking about the exact same thing. But you can't hear me because you're hearing me say manifestation and not prayer, or you're hearing me say universe and not god, but like we are literally talking about the same thing here and I'm not discrediting you or your background or your relationship with universal intelligence, just like I know you're not discrediting my relationship with the universal intelligence, but we, we are speaking the same language here, my friend. Like we are literally saying the same thing.
Speaker 3:Yes, yes, I totally agree, I totally agree with you on that.
Speaker 4:So what is?
Speaker 3:your. What's your? What's your favorite thing about what you do, Like how you help people, and what you do right now. What's your favorite thing in this moment?
Speaker 4:Yeah, the aha moments, the saying something that I've said a million times and having someone hear it for the first time and go, oh my God, like that is it, like I needed to hear that, or I that's exactly where I'm at and you just met me there. Like those moments to me are priceless. There, like those moments to me are priceless and knowing that universe, god source, is channeling through me to others, like because sometimes I'm like I don't even know what I said, what did I say? That was like aha to you. I don't know.
Speaker 4:I'm just sitting here literally just rambling, I feel, and to have the aha moment click and to watch it too, like to see it when I'm having a conversation with someone and to watch it like just change their energy and they're like, oh my God, like that's how simple it gets to be, or like that's how it can just be for me, like you're, like you're kidding, right, and then just watching them run with it is, it's incredible. I feel like if I were coaching a basketball team and I'm trying to teach how to um, I'm not a sports girl, so I don't know why the fuck this is the analogy I'm using um trying to teach someone how to throw free throws, or like score three points, and like watching them do it for the first time and then them celebrating like oh my god, I did it. I finally did it.
Speaker 4:it's like watching them do it for the first time and then them celebrating like, oh my God, I did it, I finally did it. It's like that's what it feels like for me when I see the aha moments get made.
Speaker 3:Well, you heard it. Listeners. Alyssa needs to hear your aha moments, so you need to go on her Instagram.
Speaker 3:Send her a DM comment on her post, whatever. Send her some some aha moments that you learned from this podcast, because she needs the juice. Give her all the juice. I need it, good, good. One thing that I do want to ask you like. I have two more things before we sign off, but Nikki and I have been talking about our words for the year. I was wondering if you do a word for the year and, if so, like what is your word for this year?
Speaker 4:2025? It's interesting that you ask that, because I've never done a word for the year. I also don't do like goal setting for the year, so I hate people like what's your goals? I'm like what Time isn't, even time is an illusion. You guys Like I don't know, let's not put no.
Speaker 3:I'm on the same train with you with that. I'm on the same train with you with that. But like here, the masculine side of me likes the calendar year, so I do lean into that as well.
Speaker 4:Yeah, I know I have a healthy relationship with time and the calendar, so that's where we're at. But my word which I, again, I don't normally do, but this year I just it's almost like it hit me like a train is impact. Like I really want to spread wide and far and reach as many people as I possibly can because of the ripple effect, right. Like I want to create a ripple effect in others so that they, in tune, create a ripple effect for their community. And then that you know, like I just want we've been, like I said, like women have been so disconnected from themselves for so long. Thank you, feminist movement. And I want to bring us back home to us. So impact is my word for the year.
Speaker 3:I love that. What a great, what a great word. I love that so much. And since we're on the topic of manifestation and you know speaking things out, co-creating, bringing it to us all the things I would love for you to share right now. Vocalize like where do you see yourself in five years? And five years from now? We can listen back on this question on the podcast, like, and everything like your wildest dreams, exactly where you want to be. What has happened, where are you?
Speaker 4:I have many cows. I have too many cows pearl and petunia great all the cows.
Speaker 3:That's why I wanted to text you the picture of those cows that I saw that were funky. I was like I've never seen these before.
Speaker 4:What are these? Yeah, whenever I saw it on your Instagram, I was like, um, excuse me, ma', where's my invite? Like I want to touch those cows next time, next time, yeah, um, yeah, uh. So my husband and I moved out to the country so that we could have some land, so that I could bring home Pearl and Petunia. Um, I'm also going to be having a baby in like 30 days, so having I will have a son in five years.
Speaker 4:So it'll be interesting to see how I've evolved and changed as a person and as a mom and all of those. And ever since I found out I was pregnant, like my give a fuck meter truly has not. Like I don't. What is that? Like I don't know what that means to care about much.
Speaker 4:So I'm curious to see how that plays even more into my life, because as soon as I really let the brakes off of caring about pretty much anything, I have seen so many random blessings, and so I just know that that's going to continue to happen throughout this journey and I also becoming a mom and doing mindset manifestation work like I really want to show women like you can be a present mom and still live your life and have success in your life, your life, and have success in your life. And to not lose your sparkle and to not let motherhood be the only thing that defines you, because I think that's what kept me from wanting to be a parent for so long is because I was so afraid of losing me in motherhood, and I have set the intention to not do that and to really be a strong voice and example of not letting that happen too. So we'll check in in five years and see if I can keep my word on that.
Speaker 3:Yeah Well, we'll check in before that because, you know, actually, with you talking about that and sharing about that right now, I would love to have you back on once you've stepped into that role of you know, mother, and stepped into that incredible, you know, side of life called motherhood, because it is so interesting, Like you're saying, like how your mindset shift during pregnancy, like afterwards it changes even more again and it's like you are still who you were before. However, you think of things totally different, like there's parts of your brains that like physiologically turn on when you become a mother. So I would be very interested to like speak to you again about that, that in particular, about how do we still be present and be successful in our own way, as our own person, as well as being a present mother that is there to raise her children, to teach them? You know how to be conscious, you know contributing human beings, you know here on this earth, because that's something that I'm finding, I'm navigating at this moment.
Speaker 3:You know, having the Modern Zen Collective in the home, present, aware, with the children, not having someone else raise them. So I would love to talk with you more about that once you're on the other side and you feel ready to like share a little bit of your story. And obviously we never have it all figured out. So you know, there's no time. There's no time it's compliment to this or like frame around this. Whenever you're ready, I'm ready.
Speaker 4:Yes, I couldn't agree more yeah.
Speaker 3:Good, good. So, lastly, if you could leave our listeners like with like the biggest pearl of wisdom, like the takeaway that you would like them to have today from listening to our conversation, like what is that, that last thing that you just want to drive home?
Speaker 4:It's not that serious. It's not that serious oh. I love that Life gets to be fun and flowy and gracious and all of the things that you desire it to be. It gets to be that way and what you put pressure on is not that serious.
Speaker 3:I love that so much. I love that so much. So where can our listeners learn more about you and get more information about working with you? Get plugged in like get your pearls of wisdom on a daily basis.
Speaker 4:Yeah, so I have my podcast called Limitless, spelled L-I-M-I-T-L-Y-S-S a little play on my name there. So clever Love it. Yeah, thank you, and it's on Apple Spotify and I recently started recording myself visually so you can watch the visuals of it on YouTube as well. If you go to my website, alyssasimpsonxcom, you can find my YouTube, my Instagram, the podcast, sign up for my newsletters and there's also a lot of really fun stuff in the making. Now I have a membership for really helping women embody how to be master manifestors, and it's called the Magnetic Movement movement membership. You can join at any time. I expect this to be like an ongoing thing to have, and then, of course, I have private coaching as well and, honestly, just come and hang out in my space and I guarantee you you're going to get some juicy goodness rubbed off on you.
Speaker 3:Oh, absolutely, absolutely off on you. Oh, absolutely Absolutely. Just being in your sphere, they'll definitely get some juicy goodness. So Alyssa is one of our vetted and trusted and loved practitioners. In our practitioner collective for the Modern Zen Collective, we are very passionate about connecting you with people that we truly feel have something to give you, like something wonderful. If you spend your money with this practitioner, you are going to get more than you even bargained for. So I have taken part in Alyssa's workshops.
Speaker 3:She did a workshop for our membership with the Modern Zen Collective. It is there. Once you join the membership, you will have access to it for your lifetime. So if you're interested in participating in a workshop she has one in there but definitely get plugged into Alyssa. We will link her website, we will link her podcast, we will link her Instagram. We want you to have access to her knowledge, her expertise, her wisdom and her as a person. If you have not gotten it at this point like she's a wonderful person with some great energy that is here to help the collective in this aspect of manifestation and mindset, so I definitely recommend you checking her out. So thank you so much again, alyssa, for being with us here today, and we're just so happy to have you as a member of the team.
Speaker 4:We really are, and thank you so much, lizzie, for having me. I appreciate all your sweet, kind words and for letting me sit here and impact all the listeners today Ripple effect right here, right now, in action.
Speaker 3:Okay, great.
Speaker 2:We'll see you all next time on the next episode collective podcast on all major platforms and take the first steps towards elevating your mind, body and spirit For all resources mentioned in this episode and to connect with us in our conscious community. Check out the episode show notes for all links and our current offerings. See y'all next time.
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