Pocketful of Mojo
Pocketful of Mojo
Small Steps, Big Wins: Unlocking Your Work Mojo
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What if overcoming obstacles at work was as simple as taking one small step at a time? On this episode of Pocketful of Mojo, we introduce our empowering mantra of the week, "I take small steps forward to help me overcome obstacles and challenges," and explore how this mindset can transform your professional life. We discuss the benefits of breaking down tasks into manageable steps, allowing you to build confidence and tackle challenges head-on while maintaining your personal boundaries. Work should be an empowering part of your life, not a definition of who you are.
We then venture into the inspiring journey of Leanne, the visionary behind the successful women's retail store "Must Have Pockets." Leanne's story is a masterclass in overcoming fear, embracing research, and taking actionable steps towards your dreams. With the support of a close friend, she transitioned from an unfulfilling career to becoming a thriving entrepreneur. Leanne shares valuable insights on the importance of seeking advice, thorough planning, and embracing confidence over perfection—a must-listen for anyone contemplating a significant career change.
Wrapping up, we reflect on the pivotal moments that shape our successes, featuring insights inspired by Tom Selleck's career and personal experiences. We delve into the "Law of Thirds" and its application in both professional and personal settings, emphasizing balance and perseverance. Alongside, we celebrate the opening of the Roasted Nomad café, and share our excitement for an upcoming trip to France. By staying authentic and consistent, you can navigate the highs and lows of life while embracing future adventures with unshakeable mojo.
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welcome to pocket full of mojo, where you're, you and I'm steph, and we tune in here to tap into some mojo. What do you mean? What's mojo? Mojo is that feeling of unshakable confidence, that booming self-worth, like you're an unstoppable force of nature. You know that feeling you get when it makes you want to strut like a 90s supermodel, and I'm here to show you how you can have that feeling every single day. You see, I think I've cracked the code to being happy. I'm happy all the freaking time every day, at least most of the day, possibly to an annoying degree, but hey, I wasn't always this way. And not to flex, but I have had breakdowns on multiple continents and in two languages. But by paying attention and living with more intention, I've curated this self-love first aid kit and it's full of amazing tools that help me level up and navigate life with that main character, energy that everyone's talking about. And I'm not here to gatekeep. In fact, I'm on a mission to help you tap into your best stuff and remember that you have everything you need to live your life into your best stuff. And remember that you have everything you need to live your life on your own terms. So settle in, we are here for some positive change. So let's dig in and find out where your mojo meets the road. In today's episode, I'm going to review the mantra for the week and then we're going to dig into our main topic, which is take your mojo to work day. That's right, we're bringing our mojo to work and seeing how it all fits together. But, plot twist, we are taking it on the road and shaking things up once again, this time with a travel buddy Best way to road trip. So you stick around, and I'm going to make sure that you're glad that you did.
Speaker 1:Let's get started with today's mantra and get tuned in, tapped in and turned on. Hello, hello, hello. And welcome to the 36th episode of Pocketful of Mojo. I'm Steph, I am your Mojo Maven, your emotional Sherpa, and I'm so glad you're here. I'm here to reflect all your awesomeness and your potential right back to you. So let's settle in. Let's start by digging into today's mantra.
Speaker 1:Now, today's mantra is I take small steps forward to help me overcome obstacles and challenges. This mantra is an accountability mantra, perfect to gear us up and get ready to take to work, because it's here to anchor us in the antidote to fear, and that's action. When we look at this mantra, it's affirming that we are taking personal responsibility for how we respond when it comes to our working life. We respond by moving forward. What I love about this mantra is that it meets you right where you are. Whether you're working in a corporate environment or working at the gas station or the hair salon. There will indeed be challenges and obstacles, and what's an obstacle for you may not be an obstacle for someone else, and what this mantra captures is that it doesn't matter. It's what's in front of you that matters and underlines what you're capable of, and that is your ability to keep going.
Speaker 1:I take small steps forward to help me overcome obstacles and challenges. I think I read somewhere that taking small steps is the fastest way to get anywhere you want to go. When your steps forward are small, they are achievable, and when you're tackling obstacles and challenges, it's important to move forward with intention and purpose. It's important to tune in to what the challenge or obstacle is, what it isn't and what your role is when it comes to overcoming it. This gives you the grace and the time to identify if this is even your problem to solve. Can you imagine carrying around a problem and worrying about something that you don't have any control over or responsibility for. Think of all your free time when you put it down. Now, when you do encounter an obstacle that you face, you won't be bogged down with problems that aren't yours to solve. I take small daily steps forward to help me overcome obstacles and challenges.
Speaker 1:Obstacles and challenges almost always make us feel like we're stuck or restricted or that we're not moving forward. But what if you flip the script? What if, with small daily steps forward, you were able to then see the obstacles as a learning moment, a chance for you to learn a new skill, uncover some new information or research, and then you're positioned to better execute the next steps and deliver better results than if you didn't have the challenge at all? I take small daily steps forward to help me overcome obstacles and challenges. Remember work is what we do, it's not who we are.
Speaker 1:This mantra is void of emotion, because when we are approaching obstacles and challenges with emotion, things get messy. And it's when we're faced with struggles that the jerks start showing up to the party, overthinking imposter syndrome, feelings of less than and those jerks are liars. The truth is is that when we're faced with obstacles and challenges, we are in the resistance of growth. We are learning, we are uncomfortable, and those are surefire signs that we are outside of our comfort zone. So do not retreat, take a breath, observe the feeling and say I take small daily steps forward to help me overcome obstacles and challenges.
Speaker 1:This is where confidence comes from. It comes from facing challenges and working them through. To the other side, confidence is doing it messy and learning along the way, while letting ourselves off the hook for it not being perfect. Confidence is saying I don't know, let me find out, instead of stumbling and feeling inferior and not knowing. This mantra gives you permission to fuck up. Keep trying and celebrate yourself, because you have the superpower needed to keep going.
Speaker 1:I take small daily steps forward to help me overcome obstacles and challenges. Now, that was a mantra. Remember my friends, when we go to work, we are there to be of service. You have a special set of skills and talents that help move your work forward, but it's okay to ask for more. It's okay to ask that your job, your work, your project gives back to you as well. We are here on this earth not to work, but to serve and to experience. So be mindful, as you go through your day-to-day at work, that you are squeezing all the juice out of your experience, that you can Sign up for the professional development. Stretch yourself, volunteer, do the presentation, reach out, network and do what you can to make sure that your work experience is just as rich and fulfilling as your day-to-day life.
Speaker 1:I know when I was at the end of my time at Starbucks, I had this feeling that I couldn't leave. I know weird right, a huge multinational, fortune 500 publicly traded company, and I thought that they needed me and what would they do if I wasn't there. But the real question was what would I do if I wasn't there? And the answer is a lot. After 15 years, I had lost my spark and my passion for the work and the company and I was taking up the space of someone who was willing to do what I wasn't, which was trade my time and health for success, which is what it would have taken from me if I had stayed. Then my very good friend Susie and I were talking and she said you know what? You never signed a contract saying that you'd be there forever or that you'd dedicate your whole life to making other people's dreams come true. You do you your whole life to making other people's dreams come true. You do, you, and that inspired me to take back my life, pursue my passions and move to France Now.
Speaker 1:Mojo doesn't only come when you blow up your life like that, and that move is not for everyone. However, if you are interested, I highly recommend it. So, for more on the topic of how to bring your mojo to work, we've coordinated a very special segment of Mojo on the Road, this time with our good friend Leanne, who is my business bestie and entrepreneur extraordinaire. So, without further ado, let's go to Mojo on the Road. Okay, let's get this going. Here we are micing up. You are attached to my scarf. We are pocket full of Mojo on the go. You didn't get to hear the car start and the car rattle because we are pocket full of mojo on the go. You didn't get to hear the car start and the car rattle because we are in the company of a 21st century vehicle and the amazing, the incomparable, the one and only leanne ryan. Leanne has been on the podcast before. She has been our only guest. She is a lot of things. She's my bestie, she's my work. Confidant, true, you're my work confidant, we're work besties yes, we're life besties.
Speaker 1:We're rupaul's drag race besties, yes, and we're on the road. We're taking a little road trip today. We just came from the market and it was great and so now we're RuPaul's Drag Race besties and we're on the road. We're taking a little road trip today. We just came from the market and it was great, and so now we're gonna talk about Mojo on the Road. And who better to talk about the business of Mojo than my fellow entrepreneur, leanne Ryan? Welcome to the podcast, hello welcome back.
Speaker 2:thank you for having me, as, as usual, always an honor.
Speaker 1:And your car doesn't rattle? Tell me about that.
Speaker 2:How does.
Speaker 1:How does one have a?
Speaker 2:car Cause you just trade in the lease. Follow us for more. Follow us for more tips and tricks.
Speaker 1:Tips and tricks on how to not have a rattling car. Yeah, so we've got some upgraded audio and we're going to have a really great upgraded conversation we're going to talk today about take your mojo to work day, because some not everybody loves their work. I love my work. Do you love your work? I love my work. Does that mean that it's easy? Hell, no, absolutely not. Hell, no, absolutely not Hell, no. So where does Mojo come in? That's what we're going to talk about today. You up for it. I am Very much so Nice. So Leanne and I have been friends for a really long time, but we reconnected when I came back to Canada and I was a shell of a human and still step at your core still my lovely step, still your amazing step at your core and when you're around amazing people, the amazingness comes through, and that's what Leanne did for me.
Speaker 1:She let my, she let my mojo come out. Don't cry, there's no crying on this podcast no crying in baseball. Anybody's gonna cry on this podcast. It's gonna be me, all right now that we've laid the ground rules.
Speaker 1:Yeah, those are the rules of the podcast, and we've both been watching our dreams come true in a in a work context over the last couple of years. So let's dig into it. Let's talk about mojo at work, and I specifically want to hear from you, leanne, like the mindset that was required to go from the idea to now creeping in on your one year anniversary of must have pockets the best women's retail clothing store in. I'm gonna go for it. The world. You are. You are very kind. Thank you. I'm a great hype man you are.
Speaker 2:Well, you know, honestly, if, because I've thought about this a lot in the sense that you know it's coming up on the year and so obviously it's a time of reflection, and so I would say that, if I boiled it down to like kind of one thought is like when are you going to stop talking about it? When are you going to stop talking about it? When are you going to start doing it? And if you really think about it, that that could be true for anything.
Speaker 1:We were just talking about that.
Speaker 2:Yes, and so I I think it was one of those things, like you know, when you have a thought and for me it was that thought when am I going to stop talking about it? And that was the one that really hooked in.
Speaker 2:Right and felt like it was the tipping point. It was the tipping point to say like I I do need to. I need to either stop talking about it and just own where I was right, because I wasn't obviously happy where I was, but it was to the point where it was. I either have to stop bitching about the work that I'm doing currently and move on to something else, or I just need to stop bitching right um and in the case for me it was then I need to move on to that other thing, and that other thing for me, luckily, was then taking the steps into pursuing my entrepreneurial career, and I think the thing and you always knew what that was.
Speaker 1:You weren't like. I'm going to be an entrepreneur. I'm going to go shop around and see what fits. You would always been talking about having a shop with your name on the door.
Speaker 2:Yes, right, and and I think there was also a part of that that was, you know, like I just I hadn't done enough research. I thought I had, but I really hadn't. And so I think that's the other thing that I would give as a takeaway for someone else who's pursuing it is, by doing the research, like I had taken the business course, the Women's Entrepreneurial Business Plan course, and I got a lot of great information from there, but I didn't ask all the questions that I was there, like, for example, I knew I had to give my own financial buy in. That's all they said, and I never asked how much. Interesting, and that's ridiculous that I didn't ask that question, because in my head it's like $100,000. It's like no, no, that wasn't the amount, yeah, but so I should have just asked more questions and as well, because we're so confident in our assumptions, yes, and we're scared of looking like we don't know.
Speaker 2:Looking like we don't know, and I think that was part of it too, is you know? And I also started like I found some people that I felt like I could trust with the idea and from there I seeked out maybe people that had more information than me, like, even though I had experience in buying and experience in corporate experience with small business I had never owned a small brick and mortar business yeah, you'd never shopped for commercial real estate, you never owned a small brick and mortar business.
Speaker 1:Yeah, you'd never shopped for commercial real estate, you've never built a website, you'd never come up with a marketing strategy, right? So it would be really easy to talk yourself out of it, because there's so much you don't know, and it doesn't take a lot of research to come up with that list. Our brains are really good at highlighting our deficits sometimes.
Speaker 2:Well, and I think so, my the other thing that I started to do was to really break down what those to do's were seek out somebody that I could talk to them about again, a trusted source, or or somebody where I felt like I could share this information with and they wouldn't make fun of me, they would give me honest opinions, like all of those things, as opposed to you know, um feeling like I I didn't want to share and then like feel like I wanted to take back my share moments. Yeah, exactly so.
Speaker 1:Um, so, yeah, I would. So it was curiosity, it was determination and it didn't. And I think I've been thinking a lot about the confidence podcast that I did a few weeks ago, which was lovely. Well, thank you, one of my faves so far. And I keep getting reminded that confidence isn't doing it perfectly, it's not doing it right, necessarily. Confidence is doing it anyway. Confidence, yes, not knowing what you're doing, yeah, but figuring it out.
Speaker 2:Confidence is seeing the roadblock and being like, hmm, I wonder how I'm gonna get over that yeah, confidence is the willingness to try a hundred percent, yes, and I'm not gonna take credit for that, like someone's smart, someone said it, but yeah, it's the willingness to try, and so I think that's. The other thing too is I've also been reflecting a lot on like remember, how did we have this? We might have had this in the other. The other time we recorded the podcast was when we talk about like if you see somebody that gets up and does something and they might not do it well or they fail, and it's like well, they did better than I could do, better than I could do, and so I think that's the other thing too is that we're so, we're so scared of failure, and so then it just becomes a.
Speaker 2:Then that becomes a barrier, yeah, and I really honestly think that we just start rotting in our comfort zone. Well, and we like, if you think about it, if you look back on some of your failures and I think part of it is is we all think like well, what will other people think? Who?
Speaker 1:cares, who cares? They're not thinking about you, and so I think that's the thing is.
Speaker 2:We get so wrapped up in, oh my god, what will other people think they might think about it when they hear about it for that moment and say like, oh, did you hear about Leanne? She started a business and then it failed and that'll be the end of it? Yeah, and then life will go on? Will it be hard? Like I'm not saying that, yeah, shame is a real thing, shame is a real thing. Or, like I also don't to minimize, like if somebody started something and then perhaps, like you know it, drained their bank account. I don't want to. No, nobody wants that, nobody wants that for anybody, but I I just mean like, if you try something, at least you tried, yeah, man, and we just don't get enough credit for that.
Speaker 2:What if yeah?
Speaker 1:What if? What if it works? You meet some amazing people.
Speaker 2:What if?
Speaker 1:you're actually really good at this.
Speaker 2:What if?
Speaker 1:you end up, you know, creating an empire.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 1:I was listening to a podcast with I think it was like Tom Selleck, oh, and he was just like, well, if this doesn't work out, I'll figure it like I'll find something else. Yeah, and then he became Tom motherfucking Selleck. You know and imagine if he did end up just like working at a garage. He would be robbed of magnum pi, yeah, and short shorts, those short shorts, that hawaiian dream you know, so fun is that even living is that if?
Speaker 2:we don't have.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I agree the reference point of magnum pi and everything amazingly came after and that iconic mustache.
Speaker 2:Like I can't live in that world, no but I, I so, to pick back up, I think I think that's the thing is like. We really are like shame, all of it, embarrassment, whatever we want to say, but I think it really is like a, it is a huge limiting belief.
Speaker 1:And even I remember, I remember telling you, it's fear, right, and the antidote to fear is action, yes, and action doesn't have any emotion attached to it. It's not good, it's not bad.
Speaker 2:You know, know, we assign happy action or sad action, or absence of action, based on a feeling, but that's where we're overthinking things well, and I think as well, like um, I know sometimes for myself I think this happens every week where I'm like I'm gonna lose 10 pounds and then I tell my husband and then like so, don't buy cookies, ice cream, whatever. And then like you know.
Speaker 1:And then snack attack Leanne, and then a real pissed at that.
Speaker 2:So I think we also get wrapped up in like like well, like I said before, if I, if I say I'm gonna do it, am I gonna do it. So I remember sitting down or actually I remember telling like two different groups of girlfriends and kind of thinking, like am I going to say this out loud? And I remember even saying to them, like I'm saying this out loud, like this is a thing I am protecting what I'm about to say.
Speaker 1:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2:But also just like I'm really going to actually put it out into the world and I'm going to announce it. And when I announce it, I wanted to make sure that I there was like a little bit of parameters. Like I'm working on the business plan, I have a meeting at Women's Enterprise Center, I've secured, like my I don't know my commercial, uh, real estate agent, like those things where there was also some like, don't bombard me with a million questions about what my paint color is going to be, because I'm at step one and a half.
Speaker 1:Yeah, and that's a step seven question.
Speaker 2:But there was also the part where at least I was also saying, like I didn't say to them, I'm thinking about opening a clothing store.
Speaker 2:It was within the actions that had already been taken. Yes, when I made the announcement, um, because I wanted to make sure that. Like so, the very first thing that I did and I would recommend this to anyone who's wanting to go into business is do some comp shopping and see what's out there and go and explore and ask questions. Like so, do your research first and then because I think sometimes too and I would even recommend this for anybody who's looking like maybe you want to become a nurse go talk to another nurse. Yeah, Talk to 10 nurses. Talk to 10 nurses and just and and see if talk to former nurses yeah, Like all of the things doing it anymore.
Speaker 1:Yeah, absolutely, and I think what I really love about your journey through entrepreneurship is your confidence comes from how well you know yourself, like you knew that this was right for you, because it's. It's in your DNA, it's in your hardwiring, it shows up in all the jobs that you've had prior to this one, but now you're doing this on your own terms, yes, and you didn't have to be like oh, it sounds like a good idea and something I might like.
Speaker 2:You're like no, I actually can't finish this life without opening my own store well, and it's actually funny in in the last few weeks, um, in this store I've caught myself where I'm like I'm a really good salesperson and I know the funny thing self-talk right there. Well, and the funny thing is I also think that, like 20 years ago, I felt like there was a lot of let's say, a lot of shame in making that proclamation Like all I am as a salesperson. Now I really really do wear it with a badge of shame in making that proclamation like all I am is a salesperson. Now I really really do wear it with a badge of honor, especially in the sense that I feel like it's kind of a lost art.
Speaker 1:No, you're there to create experience. Exactly, which is why I think you know that's a big key to your success too is that you're not transactional, you're experiential, yes, and that you know when you weave yourself into your work, whether it is whether your name's on the door or not. I think that's what we're here to do. I think that's what we're because it's not about because I don't want to come, you to come on and listen to this podcast and think that I'm trying to tell you that the solution is be your own boss, and that's for everyone, and that's how you know.
Speaker 2:That's not no, that's not it entrepreneurship is absolutely not for everyone. It isn't, and. I have a lot, I have a lot more respect for that now, too sure, in the sense that I think everybody thinks that wouldn't you want to be your own boss and I? I get that there's a certain romance to it, but some people you know what they don't. Yeah, they not.
Speaker 1:Everybody is built that way, yeah and it's a really specific skill set and we don't all have to be the same. Happiness doesn't look the same on everybody, no, it doesn't.
Speaker 1:I did really well. Having a boss. I really loved it. In fact, not having a boss is one of my least favorite things about being an entrepreneur. I like being told what to do and doing a good job at it and having someone lay out those steps for me. But we, you know, we figure it out Right and you know, I think when it, when I think about kind of that moment where the rubber met the road and you went to your friends and you said this is what I'm doing. I'm doing this, I'm doing it for myself, I'm doing it because I've always wanted to. What was their reaction?
Speaker 2:Everyone was ridiculously supportive and they were oh my God, tell me more, what is it going to look like?
Speaker 2:And ask questions.
Speaker 2:And, and it was look like and ask questions, and, and it was, I think, because, as well, of course, they knew that I wasn't happy where I was and I hadn't been happy in a long time, sure, and so, um for me that I don't think the happiness had to do with not, um, pursuing the dream, it just I was in the wrong place, right, and I think all of those things had to happen for me to get to where I am today.
Speaker 2:So I don't want to discount the experiences that I had in my corporate career. They all taught me something oh my God, that's everything, it is everything. And so that's where I think that, again, when it comes to people's personal experiences and there's nothing wrong with taking the time and, you know, doing the job, whatever it might be a side hustle and I do think that the other thing that I feel a little embarrassed about currently is I still lack confidence when it comes to speaking with other, like boutique owners specifically, because I kind of feel like I'm despite the fact that I've had years of experience in the corporate world. I don't have years of experience as an entrepreneur, so I kind of feel like I can't be a part of the cool girls club the ones that have owned these businesses for right years because I haven't earned a veteran.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I'm not a street friend yeah, yeah, kind of like looping all the way back to the mojo, um mojo in the workplace of look with like, the good, with the bad, and can you handle the bad, like, for example, um, everyone told me who I talked to, where there's been uh like people who had brick and mortar. Uh, they would say, like you have to be prepared for $0 days, and so I was like, yep, okay, got it, and you gross. No, thank you.
Speaker 2:Yeah, and like so, and I'm not going to be arrogant enough to say that I it'll never, it'll never happen. I've had them, I've 100% had them. And so I remember, like the day, the first day that that happened, I was like okay, sit in this, like sit in this discomfort, yes, but also shake it off like it won't.
Speaker 1:tomorrow could be a huge day, you can visit this place. Yeah, you don't get to live here. No, um, this doesn't mean that tomorrow you close your doors. And I I saw this really great interview with an olympian who was saying that she was working with her mentor and coach and they were trying this one thing. I think she was a long, uh long, jumper. Okay, she was working on this one piece with her coach and he's like okay, how does it feel? And she's like not great. And he's like okay. He's like well, that's the law of thirds for you, okay what's the law of?
Speaker 1:thirds, and he said well, when you're working on anything, you won't be a hundred percent feeling good about it all the time. Thirty percent of the time you're gonna feel good about it. Thirty percent of the time it's not gonna feel good at all. Thirty percent of the time it's just going to feel good about it. 30% of the time it's not going to feel good at all.
Speaker 1:30% of the time it's just going to kind of feel okay and that means that things are in balance with regards to that specific activity. And I guess you can look at that in life in general, because if everything's easy all the time, maybe you need to look at how hard you're pushing yourself. Maybe you need to see where in the areas are that you can grow. If things are hard all the time, maybe you need to get on a different bus right, and so it's that it's tapping to that into that awareness and giving yourself that grace that sometimes there's gonna be highs, there's gonna be lows, and this is just gonna be a low day. This is gonna be a day that your exercise or your, your runs don't feel that great.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 1:That just means that you can check that off your list of things to do, that you've had a bad day because they're going to be there.
Speaker 2:Well and I think that was the thing too is that understanding that the bad days will be there Like cause, it is like the. The takeaway as well for entrepreneurship is the highs are amazing highs and the lows are like valley lows.
Speaker 1:Because it's wrapped in your identity when you're an entrepreneur, because your name is on everything. Yes, and so protecting that self-worth piece is so important.
Speaker 2:Very much so.
Speaker 1:I'm still an amazing entrepreneur and I had a $0 day.
Speaker 2:Yeah. Or like you know, someone left me a bad review, or yeah.
Speaker 1:When you're in business. I think if you want to show up and have credibility and authority, then you need to really be in tune with your message, whether that's in the boardroom, working for someone else in a corporate environment. You need you need to be able to show up as authentically if you want to be taken seriously, if you want to be considered for the promotion. Um, but living on the other side of fear, where you're letting kind of your conditions and your environment and the expectations dictate how you show up, then there's some tweaks that need to be done and some some reflection that you get to do in this life because we get to change our mind we don't have to work at the same place for 45 years like our parents did no, and I think, um, and here's the thing that I do want to at least give credit to our parents generation is there is nothing wrong with that, if that's what you, oh my god no.
Speaker 2:I think it's amazing. I think it's amazing too, and I and I think for some reason it's lost its credibility. But we won't go down that path. Today, I do think as well, um, like, in terms of at least showing up every day, being present every day. It's no different than, kind of, when I talk about the be beautiful, be intentional side of it is that it's like I can be dressed to the nines every day, do my hair and makeup, but if I'm walking into wherever I'm walking in with shitty mojo, that follows you too, you bet. And so I think that that's the part like I guess that ultimately, we're trying to talk about here and the mojo at work but it's the mojo anywhere is that if I'm just going to be constantly walking around with that I don't know monkey on my back, let's say, with a gray cloud over your head, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2:Then I've already given up. I haven the gray cloud over your head, yeah, yeah. Then then I've already given up. I haven't even left the house and I've already given up.
Speaker 1:Yeah, so I think. And then don't be surprised when the world meets you there exactly and you get the parking ticket and the bill comes overdue and you know what? I mean, like there there is a ripple effect to that.
Speaker 2:There is, uh, that is a vibrational frequency and I think um, oh, my god, I'm so hungry I'm so glad we're here the roasted nomad. I'm so excited, we're so excited for you.
Speaker 1:Coffee and more I will have, the more please yeah, we're gonna have one of everything I think I want. Did we have a good talk about taking mojo?
Speaker 1:we so did I think so, my goodness. Let's give a shout out to roasted nomad. We're super proud of you for opening this up. You took a classic diner and you're keeping it alive, and you did it on your own, so high fives to you for doing that. Shout out to Leanne and must have pockets. Check the links in the show notes and buy something online, cause that those clothes are amazing and we're gonna go fill our faces with some breakfast. Yay, awesome. Thank you for being on this podcast. Thank you for having me all right, we're gonna send it back to the studio. Ciao for now.
Speaker 1:And that was Pocketful of Mojo Road Trip Edition. Tune in next week for a very special episode where we take this international. That's right, I'm going to be coming to you direct from France and sharing more mojo magic with you, if I can find a spare moment between shoving my face with croissants and cheese. But seriously, thanks for tuning in and I hope this helped you tap into some of that mojo of yours, because you're worth it, baby. And in the meantime, if you feel like your mojo could use a tune-up, I've gotten up with lots of ways that we could do this again sometime. Make sure you take a couple minutes to subscribe to the podcast, and extra good juju to you if you leave a review.
Speaker 1:Follow me on Instagram for daily mantras and affirmations at moststefinitely, and be sure to show your love with all the likes and the comments. I am a recovering people pleaser, after all, so you know it means the world when you do. And look, you found me at the very beginning of all things mojo, and there's so much cool stuff on the way. All of the links are found in the show notes, so please go have a look, because I mean you're here anyway, right, and while you're at it, share this episode with a friend. Not only is it good for your karma, but it will also give you something to discuss when you go on your next awareness walk together. So be sure to tune in next week and until then, stay classy, stay kind and put love in everything you do. Ciao for now.