Not everyone started this year with "new year, new you" energy. If you're a woman entrepreneur navigating grief—from a loss, a diagnosis, a relationship, or a version of yourself you had to let go—you're probably wondering: can I grieve this AND still show up for my business? Can I hold both grief and growth while building a sustainable business?
In this replay of one of 2025's most downloaded episodes, I sit down with Amanda Guin, an emotional intelligence coach, traumatology expert, and widow who lost her infant daughter to a congenital heart condition, navigated endometriosis and infertility, and became a solo parent after her husband's suicide. We talk about why "coping" keeps women entrepreneurs stuck, what it means to explore healing instead, and how to hold the duality of grief and growth while creating a business that adapts to your capacity.
Inside this episode, you'll learn:
- Why coping feels stagnant and what exploring your emotions looks like instead
- How to hold duality: grieving AND showing up, struggling AND growing, loss AND joy
- Amanda's APPLI framework for acknowledging where you are and choosing your next step
- The difference between "big T" and "little T" trauma and why your body doesn't rank your pain
- How to build a sustainable business rooted in empathy and emotional awareness while processing grief
- Why there's no blueprint for grief—just your own process of healing to trust
This episode is for you if you're:
A woman entrepreneur is currently grieving while trying to run your business. You're feeling stuck in "coping mode" instead of actually healing and moving forward. You find yourself ranking your trauma or grief and not giving yourself permission to feel it fully. Or you're navigating loss, burnout, or a major life transition while managing chronic illness.
Connect with Amanda Guin: At growwithpurposecoach.com
Follow Business With Chronic Illness for weekly conversations on entrepreneurship, burnout recovery, and building a business with autoimmune conditions and chronic illness.
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So you started this year, and maybe it didn't feel like everyone else's New Year, new you energy.
Speaker AMaybe you're carrying grief from last year or last month or last week.
Speaker AMaybe you got a diagnosis that changed everything, or you lost someone, or you lost a kitty like I just did last week, or something shifted in your business or your body and you're supposed to just keep going like nothing happened.
Speaker AYou're wondering if am I allowed to grieve this?
Speaker AIs this loss big enough to pause for?
Speaker ACan I feel all of this and.
Speaker BStill run my business?
Speaker AHere's what happens when you don't give yourself permission.
Speaker AYou start ranking your pain.
Speaker AYou tell yourself other people have it worse.
Speaker AYou push through, ignore what your body is screaming at you, and eventually we become stuck.
Speaker ANot because you're doing it wrong, but because you've been trying to cope instead of actually exploring what healing looks like for you.
Speaker AWhat grieving looks like for you.
Speaker AThis episode with Amanda was one of the most downloaded episodes of 2025, and I think it's because so many of us needed to hear this.
Speaker AThere's no blueprint for grief.
Speaker AAmanda is an emotional intelligence coach who lost her infant daughter, navigated endometriosis, experienced miscarriage and and became a widow and solo parent.
Speaker AThere's a lot of heavy topics in this episode, but this conversation she breaks down why coping, quote unquote, can keep us stagnant at times, and what it actually means to explore healing while still building a business and showing up for your life.
Speaker AIf you didn't start this year with all the positive vibes, this one's for you.
Speaker AThis is business with chronic illness.
Speaker ALet's talk about permission, grief, and moving through it all.
Speaker BAre you tired of hearing business advice that completely ignores what real life looks like when you're navigating chronic illness?
Speaker BAutoimmune disorders, flare ups, medical appointments, and just life Lifing Business with Chronic Illness is for entrepreneurs who know they're capable of building something meaningful but need a way to do it that actually works with their body, not against it.
Speaker BThis podcast brings you honest conversations with founders, CEOs and other bosses, sharing their strategies, adaptations and lessons they've learned while building businesses alongside chronic illness, including what worked, what didn't, and what they wish they had done differently before burnout forced the lesson.
Speaker BI'm your host Nikita Williams, a globally ranked podcast host and entrepreneur who's built my business while navigating chronic illness and helping others others do the same without sacrificing themselves.
Speaker BI created this show to Open up the conversations most business spaces avoid.
Speaker BThe promise of business with chronic illness is simple to show you that you can build a thriving business with chronic illness and autoimmune disorders without sacrificing your health, your peace, or your profit.
Speaker BYou're not behind.
Speaker BYou're building differently, and you're in the right place.
Speaker CSo I have Amanda on the show today, and I think the topic of grief, trauma, healing, loss are all things that we all experience going through or living with chronic illness on top of other things that life have, you know, like, we're going to talk about.
Speaker CAnd when they compound, right?
Speaker CWhen things compound, when you're feeling all of the things and all of the different ways you can feel grief, loss, and trauma.
Speaker CI'm curious, what has your journey been when it comes to coping?
Speaker CAnd I guess I want to say, like, allowing space for it.
Speaker DThat's a good question.
Speaker DSo I like to say I try not to use the word so much as coping, like exploring avenues of healing.
Speaker DLike to use that because coping feels very stagnant to me and I don't want to sit in that place.
Speaker DI want to learn and I want to grow from everything that I've been through and all that I continue to endure.
Speaker DSo some of the ways that I do, I work through all of my.
Speaker DMy trauma and my grief, my loss is through remembering and identifying through my emotions, emotionally and spiritually, knowing where I came from and loving myself.
Speaker DSo for me, that path has looked a lot of different ways.
Speaker DBut I would say that's more of how I try to embrace the changes that I had to go through.
Speaker DJust continuing to know that keeping an open heart and making sure my mind shifts with all of those changes.
Speaker DLike I said, understanding my emotions and being able to adapt.
Speaker CI mean, just the first two sentences of, like, instead of coping, I like exploring.
Speaker CI'm like, oh, that.
Speaker CThat is.
Speaker CI haven't quite heard that before in that way.
Speaker CLove that, that place of allowing space for movement.
Speaker CWhy does the word coping feel stagnant to you?
Speaker DIt's just.
Speaker DIt feels like it's not so much movable.
Speaker DAnd sometimes you can hit these difficult places in your life.
Speaker DAnd for me, I don't want that type of movement to create more stress.
Speaker DAnd I want it to be more of a place that I can embrace rather than take that technique of just dealing with it and being able to be more mindful of it, being emotionally mindful and open to it.
Speaker CI like that because I know in coaching, we.
Speaker CWe talk a lot about reframing.
Speaker CWe talk A lot about changing, like trading words that don't, like, really serve us, that hit us differently.
Speaker CLike, for me, one of my words is like, everyone talks about consistency, and to me, that's just not a word that feels good, but being persistent does feel good.
Speaker CTo me, it ultimately creates.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CConsistency, but to me, that's a better word.
Speaker CAnd I, for me.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CSo I love that you're.
Speaker CYou're sharing, like, hey, here's another way that you could also view managing, growing through, which is not necessarily coping, but it does create a coping skills by thinking and leaning into that word of exploring.
Speaker CSo I love.
Speaker CBecause that's what.
Speaker CThat's what we have to do.
Speaker CLike, things that help us to move forward is trading, you know, trading words, trading things that mean something to us.
Speaker CSo I. I love that you shared that in your journey.
Speaker CLet's talk a little bit about that for a moment.
Speaker CLike, let's talk about how you came to realize that I prefer to think of exploring over coping.
Speaker CWhat led you to coming to that place?
Speaker DYeah, so it's been a lot of struggles.
Speaker DMany years ago, when I was younger, I struggled with negative cognitive thinking and questioning my intelligence.
Speaker DReally, I think that's where it began.
Speaker DBut then as I got older, I started realizing I had chronic physical pain at a young age.
Speaker DI struggled with menstruation and just consistent pain or passing out.
Speaker DAnd it was just.
Speaker DIt was terrible at such a young age.
Speaker DAnd eventually I did get diagnosed with endometriosis.
Speaker DAnd because of that, I was always an excruciating pain for a very long time.
Speaker DAnd then I was told by several specialists that the likelihood of me getting pregnant and having children after all I've been through and all the surgeries and laparoscopies, that was very unlikely.
Speaker DFast forward several years, and I was surprised to find I was pregnant.
Speaker DIn 2005 or 2004, I found out.
Speaker DAnd then in 2005, I had my first daughter.
Speaker DAnd Jolie was born in 2005 with something called truncus arteriosis.
Speaker DAnd my husband and I were left to make decisions on her heart surgery and what to do with that.
Speaker DAfter her second heart surgery, we.
Speaker DWe were left empty and broken by the loss of our daughter.
Speaker DAnd I began to wonder if it truly was a mom because she was only alive for three weeks and.
Speaker DAnd then a year later, I had a miscarriage.
Speaker DI began to wonder if, you know, if I was supposed to be a mother.
Speaker DMotherhood was not striking.
Speaker DWell, however, I began fertility medication soon after and was blessed to have my son.
Speaker DAnd as soon as.
Speaker DAs soon as I was able to start fertility medicine again in a safe zone, then a year later, we were blessed with another daughter.
Speaker DSo I was joyful and excited, you know, by the news of the past that, you know, that that wasn't actually going to happen.
Speaker DAnd then on May 9, 2015, my husband took his life 10 years after losing my first daughter.
Speaker DAnd while I had went through excruciating physical pain with endometriosis, I never imagined all of the pain, emotional and psychological pain of losing my child and my husband 10 years apart.
Speaker DAnd so that is really, is really what set my journey in this life to really start to wonder what, what path in life I wanted to take.
Speaker DThat's piece of my journey.
Speaker CI mean, that's.
Speaker CI think when we talked about this in our, like, get to know each other chat before this, I was just like, I am so sorry for all of that, all, like, the loss and the, the challenges that comes with that.
Speaker CAnd also I am in inspired, but more like curious in this journey of loss and grief that you seem to have found from, from where we've just briefly gotten to talk to a place of moving through that grief in a way that it hasn't consumed you.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker CBecause I think, unfortunately, loss is a part of our journey in life and, and it never comes in a convenient space or time.
Speaker CAnd I also feel like those of us living with chronic illness, especially endometriosis, I think the majority of us have been told in some way, shape or form, either you can't have children or it's gonna be difficult, or the opposite.
Speaker CThe, like, literally the polar opposite of, no, you need to have children so that you can put your endometriosis in remission.
Speaker CAnd those strikingly different experiences, Right.
Speaker CLike, it's kind of crazy.
Speaker CAnd I am one of those folks who, living with endometriosis who was told literally both things from multiple doctors.
Speaker CIt's just like, kind of baffling.
Speaker CAnd then for me to have the choice later on in life to decide that I wasn't going to have children and come to peace with that, but at the same time, there's still a grieving, there's still a loss of being like, that's not something you're going to have is.
Speaker CIt is one of those contemplative places to be wrapping your brain around, you know, and then just continue to move through life.
Speaker CAnd so I'm curious to know, you know, one of the things you mentioned was like, this physiological and mental pain, right?
Speaker CAnd you've already kind of touched on it.
Speaker CLike exploring what kind of things that you do or have you been doing to explore soothing or finding comfort or kind finding tools to get to you.
Speaker CTo get to a point that now you, you know, you're starting a business, you have a whole.
Speaker CI mean, some of your.
Speaker CYour just amazing things that you do is.
Speaker CIs amazing.
Speaker CWhen I was like looking up everything that you do between helping those who are also going through similar loss or challenges or transitions in their life, from the healthcare management system to, you know, military suicide, just so many things you've done, you've taken so many things while processing your own grief and loss.
Speaker CI'm curious to know what tools, what stories, what exploring has led you to being able to live the life that you're living today.
Speaker DI've also been told all of those same things, so I will identify that.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker DAnd having the babies was not a cure.
Speaker DI still had surgery after that.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker DThank you for the question.
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker DSo all of the things that I have ventured through is ultimately because of the losses and the pain and knowing that there has to be something on the other side.
Speaker DAnd so one of the places I started was.
Speaker DObviously started my academic career and that was in healthcare and understanding the healthcare system more.
Speaker DNo, that we all could, but trying.
Speaker CIsn'T that interesting about the healthcare system, like to go to school and kind of understand it and still be like, this is still crazy, right?
Speaker DAbsolutely.
Speaker DI absolutely was doing that in school, going, oh, okay.
Speaker DAnd.
Speaker DAnd it also changes so rapidly, you know, and then going back to school after my husband's suicide.
Speaker DSo I wanted to learn more about that.
Speaker DI was not educated in that I understood mental health.
Speaker DHe struggled a lot with post traumatic stress and other difficulties, his past and his military affiliations.
Speaker DSo he had definitely challenges.
Speaker DSo living in that was a struggle.
Speaker DBut I needed to understand myself and why, knowing all the struggles that we've been through for so many years, why I didn't catch that.
Speaker DAfter a suicide loss, you have a lot of emotions and one of those is shame and blame.
Speaker DAnd those hit me really hard after his loss and just trying to understand how to overcome that, so to speak, because it was almost debilitating.
Speaker DAnd so I went back to school to get my master's in public health and I wanted to help communities in the mental health field.
Speaker DAnd I also wanted to also understand my own loss.
Speaker DSo that's why I did most of my research was on military suicide and.
Speaker DAnd then apparently I wanted to go on.
Speaker DGod was kind of pushing me in that Direction.
Speaker DAnd I wanted to learn more about trauma.
Speaker DAnd so I went and got a doctorate degree in education community care with the emphasis on traumatology, counseling.
Speaker DAnd so I wanted to study trauma in various different avenues and just mental health and suicide, because there's a vast majority of different traumas.
Speaker DAnd so absolutely really gave me a larger perspective of what the world goes through really.
Speaker DAnd that has actually led me into going into emotional intelligence coaching because I now want to really help other people understand their emotions because I had such a vast majority of emotions going through.
Speaker DFirst my daughters and trying to understand it, and then really the complexity of suicide and my husband's and, you know, and.
Speaker DAnd instantly becoming a solo parent.
Speaker DSo, yeah, it was juggling, you know, like anger, annoyance, and then, you know, disgust of what happened and how this happens in the world to joy of watching my kids graduate from, you know, first, second, third, you know, all of the grades.
Speaker DAnd then I also had admiration because I'm admiring all these other widows that have walked this journey and also watched.
Speaker DSo.
Speaker DAnd maybe this is why I don't enjoy the word coping, because I've seen so many people cope and then get stuck.
Speaker DAnd for me, that's not something that I really felt like was going to be my voyage.
Speaker DAnd so through all of these different emotions, I wanted to embrace the growth aspect of it.
Speaker DAnd so really I wanted to come along and not just support myself through it, but support others.
Speaker DAnd that's where I became a peer mentor.
Speaker DAnd honestly, early on, it was strange that I would literally have people calling me going, oh, I know this widower.
Speaker DI know this.
Speaker DWhere the suicide loss and which complete open doors for me to allow people to come speak to me.
Speaker DBut it also helped me realize that I can help others through this journey because I had to remember that my flow isn't going to be the same with everybody else's.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker DLearning to grow and incorporate all of the pain and all of the loss and realizing that I can transform that into growth was really the thought and behavior that I wanted to put behind everything that I had been through.
Speaker CYeah, I mean, I feel I. I find it.
Speaker CI find it interesting.
Speaker CAnd I'm curious too.
Speaker CYou know, you went into it sounds like you went into like, learn it mode.
Speaker CLike learn it.
Speaker CLike grief happened and then there was all of these questions.
Speaker CWas there a long period of time before you moved into, like, let me figure this out.
Speaker CWas there?
Speaker DI.
Speaker COf course, grieving is not a one and done.
Speaker CIt's over time.
Speaker CIt's happening all of the time.
Speaker CRight but was there after the initial shock of your loss of your husband and then the culminating of, like, being a single parent, was there a time before you're like, yes, I'm going to learn about all of this?
Speaker CI would.
Speaker CI guess I would say, was there a wallowing in it period for you or was there was just like, no, I don't have time to wallow.
Speaker CI need to figure out what I'm doing.
Speaker CLike, what is this?
Speaker DI did not really have a wallow period.
Speaker DSo when I graduated my bachelor's degree, my husband and I talked about going on to get our masters.
Speaker DHe run the military, had a couple other different jobs, and had graduated and became a nurse.
Speaker DAnd so he was going to get.
Speaker DWe talked about him getting his master's in nursing, and then I was going to go get my master's.
Speaker DI was going for MBA to nph.
Speaker DSo I. I ended up sticking with my nph.
Speaker DThe next weekend, my husband took his life, and I did not want to let him down.
Speaker DAnd so I instantly applied to school.
Speaker DNow, mind you, I cried a lot during my master's degree because I thought that he was.
Speaker DWe were going to be working on it together.
Speaker DAnd I spoke to him a lot to help me get through that degree.
Speaker DIt was.
Speaker DIt was difficult, but I went right into it because I knew if I didn't.
Speaker DI didn't know if I would.
Speaker DAnd.
Speaker DAnd I really needed answers.
Speaker DThat's how I looked at it is I needed answers and I needed a breakdown of why, you know, we just.
Speaker DWe were just talking about our future.
Speaker DI know I will never get those answers.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker DBut for me, it was a piece of reshaping the way I think about it, understand a little more about how I can incorporate my knowledge into my healing.
Speaker DAnd that's really the first step that I took was going right into it.
Speaker DNow, mind you, there was a lot of pieces where, you know, I struggled to.
Speaker DI had a lot of crying days.
Speaker CYeah, of course, I can't imagine not that not being the case.
Speaker DI was also actually fighting with the VA at the same time.
Speaker DSo I had a lot of research going on.
Speaker DI had my school research.
Speaker DI was becoming a solo parent, and that was disputing with the va.
Speaker DSo.
Speaker DSo it's a challenging time.
Speaker CI can.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CI mean, there's a lot of moving feelings.
Speaker CI think I'm curious on, like, based on what, you know, now, I think a lot of us in general, when we're dealing with the transition and everything, I think we struggle with duality.
Speaker CI think we struggle with the ability to be grieving.
Speaker CAnd you mentioned this earlier, like, be grieving, laughing, and then, like, being disgusted and then being excited for your kids.
Speaker CLike, you know, I think a lot of us struggle with that.
Speaker CIn your, like, learnings and your own experience, how did you find peace or a level of understanding when it comes to being like, all of this can coexist and I can still keep going.
Speaker DA lot of it for me as a believer was praying.
Speaker DI did a lot of that knowing that that would be one big way to combat all the negative connotation that would be thrown at me or the negative thinking that I would be doing myself.
Speaker DAnd so I just had to keep that.
Speaker DThat thought pattern of that not alone and that God's with me and there's not a specific process.
Speaker DAnd so to be gentle with myself and that my emotions are going to help me move in the direction that I'm supposed to go.
Speaker DAnd between prayer and understanding that and also incorporating yoga.
Speaker DI used to do hot yoga a lot back then, and I did a lot of crying on my mat.
Speaker DThere's a lot of mat prayer meditation for me.
Speaker DAnd that was a way to find relaxation.
Speaker DThere was a way to engage in my own creative thinking of what's.
Speaker DWhat's next.
Speaker DHow can I.
Speaker DHow can I help myself in this moment?
Speaker DI didn't think back then that I was going to start my own business.
Speaker DI just wanted to come alongside other widows that had been through this.
Speaker DJust know that, hey, I'm here for support and how can I help you and what can I do to help you?
Speaker DYeah, I think that's where I was then.
Speaker CYeah, I love that you shared that point of.
Speaker CThere isn't a.
Speaker CLike, basically, there isn't a blueprint for how you allow duality, like, how you allow all of these moving parts to be.
Speaker CAnd I think so.
Speaker CI think.
Speaker CI don't know about you, but I'd be curious to hear what you think about this.
Speaker CBut I find as a coach and having a business and for you, sometimes we do just want the blueprint.
Speaker CLike, sometimes we do.
Speaker CLike, clients will ask us, like, hey, just tell me what to do.
Speaker CLike, I'll get a, you know, a message from a client that's like, hey, this is happening.
Speaker CI'm feeling all of this.
Speaker CAnd they're like, give me the framework that you use.
Speaker CAnd I'm like, I can share with you what I've done, but it.
Speaker CIt might look completely different for you, and it's not going to feel exactly the same for you.
Speaker CAnd I think in.
Speaker CIn reality, we are all looking for this, like, checkbox of, like, how do we get through this?
Speaker CAnd we miss that intuitively, our body will tell us how we need to get through this.
Speaker CLike, our.
Speaker COur awareness, our intuition, all of those different things.
Speaker CWe just have to allow it.
Speaker CBut when you're working with clients who.
Speaker CAnd I'm assuming this because I've just talked to enough coaches to hear, like, they just want the answer, and you're just like, I gave them the answer, and they're still not experiencing what I experienced.
Speaker CAnd we have to explore what that might look like differently for them.
Speaker CHow have you helped, you know, widows in those places or women in whatever area of loss or grief to realize, like, ultimately your.
Speaker CYour healing is coming within.
Speaker CComing from within you.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CWhat does that look like when you're helping women in that space?
Speaker DThat's great, because that's exactly what I was about to say, is that the wisdom is within ourselves.
Speaker DAnd I just try to help them tap into the emotions that they're feeling and the problem or the challenge or the struggle that they're facing, because it is in us.
Speaker DIt's.
Speaker DAll the answers are within us.
Speaker DIt's just learning or being guided into tapping into what those are.
Speaker DSo I try not to really, I guess, offer too many tools.
Speaker DI want them to kind of figure out their own.
Speaker DI'm sure there is definitely a blueprint.
Speaker DWe could all, you know, type it up and say, this is what worked.
Speaker DAnd my.
Speaker DMy voyage through all of this is not going to look like anybody else's, and it may not help somebody else that's going down this the same journey.
Speaker DAnd so I just like to help.
Speaker DCome alongside people and help sort of like, filter them through those emotions and realize that, you know, there's always reason for the process.
Speaker DWe can't always see it.
Speaker DWe can't see that big picture.
Speaker DRemembering that, you know, my way is not always going to be your way, but I want to help people discover that within themselves.
Speaker DSo I think each one of us has our own individual inner purpose.
Speaker DAnd just being able to discover that is really what is special and beautiful and being able to empower other people to do that.
Speaker DYeah, just what I love to do.
Speaker CYeah, I. I think it's.
Speaker CI.
Speaker CMy.
Speaker CMy best friend, she is a.
Speaker CA coach who works with trauma, and she's an emotional intelligence coach and cbt, trauma informed person.
Speaker CShe's got all these certifications.
Speaker CI always tell her, like, girl, she's like, she reminded me a little bit of you.
Speaker CWhen I, when you came on here, I was like, oh my goodness.
Speaker CIt's like my, my friend is like that.
Speaker CAnd something we always talk about is, you know, I think the world wants to define what our trauma is going to look like.
Speaker CLike I've been really anti big trauma, little like big trauma, small trauma.
Speaker CAnd I'm like, I don't think our body knows the difference.
Speaker COur body just knows that it's trauma, right?
Speaker CLike whether it's grief from like a pet passing away, whether it's grief from having a new diagnosis that is completely like unexpected.
Speaker CI know for me this year I've had multiple diagnoses.
Speaker CI've had a new one recently that it's the least life altering in most ways, but it's the most hard, like it's the.
Speaker CBeen the most difficult for me to process.
Speaker CLike what?
Speaker CLike it's a completely different feeling and it feels more gravy than other things that I've experienced.
Speaker CAnd I'm like, this is so weird, right?
Speaker CBut I say that to say like, as you've learned, working with people and also experiencing it yourself.
Speaker CIs there a difference, is there a difference between, you know, what they call big trauma and little trauma?
Speaker CIs that even a thing or is that just the way that the world has tried to, I don't know, make it feel better?
Speaker CI don't understand this logic, but I'm curious on what you think about this.
Speaker DThat's a good question.
Speaker DI think there can be some differences in trauma and just how the body reacts.
Speaker DI think everybody has their own set of big T and little T. I think big T is more like life threatening, right?
Speaker DAnd in.
Speaker DAnd that can be devastating to the body, to the mind.
Speaker DThat's where I think a lot of people don't necessarily really understand how to get past that event.
Speaker DAnd it could be even getting shot, you know, like somebody coming through, getting, getting shot and realizing that I live through that.
Speaker DThat's, that's, that could be debilitating, but it can also be transformative.
Speaker DAnd then sometimes, you know, people then change their whole life.
Speaker DLittle T. I think people, you know, there's always these diagnosis and the DSM that tell us what is and isn't trauma.
Speaker BWhat is dsm?
Speaker DSorry?
Speaker DThat's the diagnosis book that they use for clinical, clinical diagnosis of like post traumatic stress or other mental disorders.
Speaker DAnd so a lot of clinical people will go to that book and look at it and say, oh, well, this might be a trauma, but maybe bullying really isn't a trauma.
Speaker DHonestly, I don't Think we're we.
Speaker DAnother reason why I wanted to become a coach, because I don't want to diagnose other people's traumas.
Speaker DI just tell that we face them and get through them.
Speaker DAnd so, you know, a large answer of big T and the little T. Yes.
Speaker DSome can be much more extravagant.
Speaker DBut do I actually know the scientific background of evidence if it relates to the body?
Speaker DThe same.
Speaker DI, I don't.
Speaker DI haven't done enough research in that area.
Speaker DBut I think any type of trauma will affect us mentally, emotionally and physically.
Speaker DAnd I've had a child that has been bullied and we dealt with all of that.
Speaker DWas it traumatic for her?
Speaker DAbsolutely.
Speaker DDid it alter a lot of things for her at a very young age?
Speaker DAbsolutely.
Speaker DSo did losing her dad.
Speaker DSo there's a lot of factors that you can play into trauma that you may not see the big picture of all of life's events.
Speaker DI don't know.
Speaker DI think that might answer a little bit of it.
Speaker DBut I think ultimately our body, you know, kind of like the book the body keeps us for.
Speaker DOur bodies, our minds, our souls, really know when we're hurt.
Speaker DAnd that pain and hurt can alter a lot of things.
Speaker DPhysically, psychologically, emotionally, and even spiritually.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker DI just don't want to have to tell people, yes, that is a trauma.
Speaker DNo, that's not a trauma.
Speaker DNo.
Speaker CSo I've, I feel you on that.
Speaker CI feel you.
Speaker CLike, yeah, maybe that's why we're coaches, not doctors.
Speaker CLike, we're like, no, we just want to get to the root of how it makes you feel and how you need to move forward.
Speaker CLike, that is, that's, that's, that's a beautiful point.
Speaker CLike, let's help you through it.
Speaker CIt doesn't matter how big or small it is.
Speaker CIt's something that affects you and how can it help you.
Speaker CSo I appreciate you sharing that.
Speaker CAs you've moved into having your own business and dealing with your own trauma and your own pain, loss and grief, how has it been helpful in the process of building a business?
Speaker CLike, I know this.
Speaker CI personally feel that business is quote, unquote personal.
Speaker CBecause everyone says business is business.
Speaker CAnd I'm like, like, I think there are aspects of business that are actually business, businessy, like a contract.
Speaker CYes, that's totally business.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CBut like how we interact with our clients, what we do to market, what we do to sell, like how our values, like that's all coming from a personal place.
Speaker CLike, that's coming from a values driven place.
Speaker CAnd it's also Coming from our perspective, it's coming from our lived experiences.
Speaker CSo you've shared with us these your story of your lived experience of processing and going through, and still going through loss and grief, but also running a business and living with a chronic thing.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CAnd so I'm curious on how has that shaped how you have decided to run your business and is there anything you would give as advice to someone who's in that similar space?
Speaker DSo how it impacts my business is, is a lot through my empathy for others.
Speaker DSo I know that patience, it takes a lot to be patient and to understand that there's growth, but there's also people who need a little more tender, loving care to understand they have that inner purpose.
Speaker DAnd so building a relationship is really imperative to me, knowing that I can be trusted in this process and come alongside you to empower you to be able to move through the process of growth.
Speaker DBecause it is a process and there's not like a standpoint.
Speaker DIt's just knowing that we're all going to get there.
Speaker DIt's just everybody's time is different.
Speaker DSo building my business, yes, I am not a business, which is business person.
Speaker DI'm a person.
Speaker DAnd so it probably impacts me some, you know, because I, I'm still learning the business mindset, so to speak, because I'm more of a people person and emotional person.
Speaker DAnd so my loving kindness isn't always the best thing in business when you have to make those definitive answers.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker DBut I'm learning and I'm growing in that area.
Speaker DAnd so your second question was, how could I help other people understand that in harmonizing their business?
Speaker DI would say, I would say maybe incorporate your own values, what's most important to you and, and how you really want to see it fit into your business.
Speaker DSo if you're not, you know, that contract business, dotted line kind of person, which I'm not, I, I would say that you'll start to learn your flow.
Speaker DYou'll start to understand what emotions you can bring forward and what emotions you might just need to hold onto and maybe process later.
Speaker DSo self awareness is really important when you become a business owner too.
Speaker CAbsolutely.
Speaker DTo also manage those.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker DLike, okay, I'm aware of them.
Speaker DThis is hard even when you're coaching and then becoming able to manage those and to become patient even with yourself and your clients through the process so that you can be empathetic, you know, and know that you're each going to take something away from the process.
Speaker DSo, yeah, I think that would, that would be it for Me?
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker CNo, I love it.
Speaker DProcess myself, I promise.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CYeah, I think, I think that's.
Speaker CI think I would say when I'm thinking and hearing you.
Speaker ABecause I know.
Speaker CYou'Ve just like in, as a, like a coaching business, you're just kind of starting in that lane, but you have so much other experience in helping other people, like, trend, I'm sure, like move through transitions of loss and grief while trying to find a job or while starting a business.
Speaker CMaybe like there is giving yourself permission that things of what you thought might look a certain way might feel a different way and might ultimately look a different way because of your, your loss.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CBecause of your grief.
Speaker CI think that's, that's a hard thing for us to, to accept.
Speaker CYou know, there's.
Speaker CThere's a hard place of acceptance when it comes to that.
Speaker CI'm curious if, if someone were listening and they currently already have a business and they're already doing what they thought they were doing, and then they're in that place where you were at one point where it's like this loss unexpectedly happened.
Speaker CAnd now I view things differently, I feel about things differently.
Speaker CYou know, some people will wonder, do I just pause everything?
Speaker CDo I, like, tear everything down and just figure it out?
Speaker CWhat would you share with someone who's in that space, who's trying to figure out, this has changed how I view everything or how I feel about everything, what to do or what not to do in that circumstance?
Speaker DWell, I guess it would be different for everybody.
Speaker DSo for me, it would look different from the next person.
Speaker DAnd, and I don't think I could go down the path of just saying, you know, go this route, you know, back to the blueprint, go this route.
Speaker DBecause this is, this is what worked for me.
Speaker DI think it's kind of navigating and embracing all of the changes that you're going through.
Speaker DAnd for me, embracing was, was learning, obviously.
Speaker DThat's where I, you know, started books and courses and just understanding the basics.
Speaker DI then wanted to incorporate self improvement and what that looked like for me, and that was also change and learning new ways of doing something or understanding something and setting myself goals along the way.
Speaker DI then had to incorporate that movement because I didn't want all of the pain stuck in my body.
Speaker DAnd so I then incorporated physical movement, which was like yoga, Pilates.
Speaker DI would even YouTube, you know, somatic breath work and get my body moving in the process and motivation, which was more on the spiritual level for me.
Speaker DSo I think it's.
Speaker DI don't.
Speaker DI Don't have like a step by step process for somebody because like I said, everybody is different.
Speaker DBut being able to embrace the change, being able to reflect on what you've been through and what you're going through, including the pain, including the struggle, sometimes it looks or feels like defeat.
Speaker DBut just reminding yourself that I can get myself back up and I can do this again, even if that's, you know, hey, this morning I'm, I know something we say a lot is just getting up to brush your teeth during really hard grief days.
Speaker DThat's accomplishment and not negating the fact that small accomplishments will then gain upon each other and you'll continue to grow and you'll continue to incorporate something new and strengthen yourself every day.
Speaker DSo I would say also kind of adapting, you know, adapting to change because that's, I think that's really big for people.
Speaker DJust change and learning how to embrace it.
Speaker CYeah, yeah.
Speaker CAnd I like how you're saying like there isn't what that looks like for you isn't necessarily the same thing it looks like at for somebody else.
Speaker CHowever, I do still hear a relatively guide on moving through something like that, which is kind of like a resting period of realizing, okay, whatever this looks like and like identifying what your body or your, what you need out of this, where you want to go with this, and then just really embracing that however it's going to look it, it's okay.
Speaker CThere's not a, there's not a right or wrong to your grief.
Speaker CThere's not a right or wrong to the decisions you currently are going to make in that space.
Speaker CIt's just trying to figure out what is good for you.
Speaker CAnd I think sometimes that that takes permission.
Speaker CThat takes permission to give yourself that space to grieve or to get up out of the bed and brush your teeth.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CSo I love that you're sharing like it's going to look different.
Speaker CBut it's, it's, it's a beautiful thing to just allow really.
Speaker CIt's just allowing what is to be and deciding what you're going to do.
Speaker DSo I do have like a little process.
Speaker DSo my theory is I say apply and ends with an I so knowledge acknowledging where you are, who you are and what you want.
Speaker DAnd sometimes it can be really hard even acknowledging the beginning actually an event just occurred or a pain is coming.
Speaker DIt can be really hard pausing to reflect and your intercession, your breathing, just understanding, you know, where you're at, purpose.
Speaker DIt's, it's that inner desire, the intention and the direction that you want to go and then love loving yourself unconsciously, consciously and subconsciously in that process.
Speaker DAnd then, you know, as you move through that, then impacting by giving back and uplifting and empowering.
Speaker DAnd that's kind of where I find that I am.
Speaker DContinue to go around the.
Speaker DThe process, I think, you know, and I kind of came up with this because applying yourself is important and then being able to give back to those and knowing that no, no way is perfect, but.
Speaker DAnd if you have to come back and go back to the start and know, in my dissertation, so my theory, my dissertation, it was.
Speaker DIt was like this circle that I did on suicide, surviving spouses, that there was always.
Speaker DThere's always a pointing back point where you hit here and you're doing so well and you're growing and then an event occurs, right?
Speaker DYou find yourself, oh, no, I'm back at the beginning.
Speaker DBut always know that even when you find yourself back at the beginning, there's still a way to keep moving forward.
Speaker DAnd so it was just really beautiful to hear the stories of all the women I was able to interview, their story of reflecting, acknowledging, and then going back and saying, I'm not.
Speaker DI'm not done yet.
Speaker DI want to keep growing.
Speaker CSo yeah, yeah, I love that.
Speaker CI. I love that.
Speaker CAnd not to just to kind of bring it into a little bit of a lighter, lighter note.
Speaker CThat's true with Pilates too.
Speaker CLike, you know, like have been religious with Pilates and then needed to take a break because of health or life and stuff and then gone back and afraid, petrified that it will feel like I have never done this before in my life.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CAnd it's true, it feels like that.
Speaker CBut when you get into it, you realize, oh, it's really.
Speaker CMy body still remembers what this is supposed to feel like.
Speaker CIt still remembers how to do this thing.
Speaker CThere's a song recently that I've been listening to, I think by Helzy or something.
Speaker CI can't think of who it is actually.
Speaker CAnd it's the song.
Speaker CIt's like the theme song, one of the theme songs from the Barbie movie.
Speaker CI know this is going way Nikita.
Speaker CNikita's going way over.
Speaker COkay, Way on another place.
Speaker CBut it's like there's a line in the song where it's like, I use.
Speaker CI don't know what it feels to be happy.
Speaker CI used to know.
Speaker CI will know, basically.
Speaker CAnd I think we in general, with all things in life, when we have to do that cycle and we have to start back, quote, unquote, over it, that's the.
Speaker CTo me, for me personally, the starting over at that very beginning part, again, is the most challenging mental thing because it feels like a defeat.
Speaker CIt feels like you have messed something up and you've already messed up already and you're going to start over and it's going to be so much harder.
Speaker CBut literally, it's just that hump of not allowing that belief to stop you from starting back over.
Speaker CThat's the hardest part, in my opinion.
Speaker CAnd so when I'm hearing you say that about those who have some event and something happens and they have to start this process over again, it's just like I want them to also know.
Speaker CIt's like the hardest part is like the giving yourself permission to quote, unquote, start over again.
Speaker CBut in reality, your body will remember what it needs to do.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CAnd it's like Pilates.
Speaker CI didn't want to go back to Pilates, but I put my feet in the straps and it's like, oh, we know how to do this.
Speaker CLike, it is.
Speaker CYour body will not forget the things that will serve you.
Speaker CSo just sharing that.
Speaker DYeah, that's actually another piece of why I want.
Speaker DI'm actually going to eventually incorporate Pilates into my practice.
Speaker DSo I'm working on my Pilates right now certification and then.
Speaker DAnd incorporate yoga and somatic breath work because I find that all of it is part of the process.
Speaker DAnd, and as you stated, the body knows like that comes from the brain and I think it's the hippocampus.
Speaker DIt reminds us that, hey, we've been here before.
Speaker DAnd it stores all, all of that to remind us, hey, we can, you know, we can get through this, we can do this.
Speaker DAnd the amygdala is our emotional part, so they work together to help us remind us.
Speaker DYeah, in there.
Speaker DWhat are those emotions that brought you through and how can you relate back to those emotions so that you can work through the process?
Speaker DEven if it's Pilates, it's going, your brain's moving and it's going, oh, it's hard, it's hard.
Speaker DAnd then you go in your second or third time and going, oh, yeah, but I remember this and I did it again and I'm doing it again.
Speaker DAnd so that's a significant role of overcoming the fear.
Speaker DYeah, just not starting again.
Speaker DSo congratulations on that because a lot in that and it's a really big challenge.
Speaker DBut you really do you.
Speaker DThat's a process of growth and that your brain grows.
Speaker DAnd that's another one of my things is this brain health.
Speaker DSo that's another thing I like to coach on.
Speaker DAnd happiness.
Speaker DI'm also writing a book on happiness.
Speaker DSo just everybody's view is different.
Speaker CYeah, it is a beautiful thing.
Speaker CI tell people all the time.
Speaker CI have a couple of clients who I think a lot of us focus on grounding, which I think is important.
Speaker DBut.
Speaker CBut I also feel like we need to focus on releasing.
Speaker CAnd I find to your point, part of this healing, like the movement, breath work, Movement is a form of release.
Speaker CSo it's screaming and yelling and like.
Speaker CSo movement is a way of releasing.
Speaker CGrounding is great to kind of recenter and like tell your nervous system, we're safe, we're okay.
Speaker CBut we also store all of that energy energetically and that energy has to go somewhere.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CAnd so movement is a huge part of that.
Speaker CSo I love that you're incorporating that part into your.
Speaker CInto your practice or encouraging your clients to do that because that has made all the difference for me.
Speaker CI'm like, not doing it to like, lose weight.
Speaker CI'm doing it to like release.
Speaker CAnd also it just makes me feel good.
Speaker CLike I feel so much better when I have that kind of release.
Speaker CSo it's powerful.
Speaker DIt is.
Speaker CSo what's coming up for you?
Speaker CI hear you just said you're having a book coming up.
Speaker CWhat else is good that's happening?
Speaker CAnd tell us where we can find you, silly.
Speaker DSo, yes, I am working on my book.
Speaker DIt's going to be Happiness is a facade and, and growing my business like I said earlier.
Speaker DSo I am working on my certifications for Pilates, yoga and then eventually breath work to incorporate that.
Speaker DYou can find me at www.growwithpurposecoach.com and yeah, so I'm really excited for what's coming up and continuing to grow this business.
Speaker DEmotional intelligence is an exceptional piece and I want people to understand their emotions through the pain and through.
Speaker DThrough all walks of life.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker DNot just for self, but for those around us.
Speaker DBut then I also want to help people process the pain or the trauma or the hurts or the grief.
Speaker DAnd that's through movement.
Speaker DSo that's why I really want to build the business so that people can get a full understanding of.
Speaker DOkay, here are my emotions.
Speaker DThis is brain health piece to help you understand what's the best approach to health.
Speaker DWhere to eat for my brain and then movement.
Speaker DSo I want to incorporate a whole mind, body and soul practice for people to.
Speaker DTo get healed.
Speaker CI love that.
Speaker CWell, thank you so much for being on and sharing your lived experience.
Speaker CYour story and your thoughts on how we can process and kind of grow and keep growing through the grief and pain that we go through.
Speaker CSo thank you.
Speaker DThank you.
Speaker DI appreciate you having me on.
Speaker BThat's a wrap for this episode of.
Speaker CBusiness with Chronic Illness.
Speaker CIf you would like to start and.
Speaker BGrow an online coaching business with me, head to the Show Notes to click.
Speaker CA link to book a sales call and learn how to make money with chronic illness.
Speaker CYou can also check out our website@ww.CraftedToThrive.com.
Speaker BFor this episode's Show Notes and join.
Speaker COur email list to get exclusive content where I coach you on how to chronically grow a profitable business while living with chronic illness.
Speaker CUntil next time, remember, yes, you are crafted to thrive.
Speaker DIt.