
Your energy crashing during business conversations is not random. It is your body giving you crucial information about who and what belongs in your life. When you're managing chronic illness while building a business, learning to trust these signals can be the difference between sustainable growth and complete burnout.
Alison Kero is a professional organizer who has spent over two decades helping people create calm, clarity, and balance in their lives. After being diagnosed with chronic Lyme disease in 2014, she had to completely rebuild her approach to work and life, ultimately discovering that organizing isn't just about physical spaces, it's about decluttering the guilt, shame, and emotional baggage that keeps us stuck in cycles that harm our health.
In this episode, you will learn:
- How Alison's energy tanking during business calls became her decision-making system
- Why she kept guilt-inducing items for decades and what happened when she let them go
- The daily systems that help her show up for herself without burning out
- How decluttering physical space helps you recognize emotional patterns
- Why decision fatigue is especially dangerous when you're managing chronic illness
- The connection between boundaries and physical health
- Simple systems that make life easier instead of harder
This episode is for you if:
- Your business falls apart every time your health does
- You ignore your body's signals because you think that's what success requires
- You're tired of trying to fit your capacity into business models designed for unlimited energy
- You want to understand how organization can be a tool for healing
- You're ready to build systems that protect your energy instead of drain it
🎧 Want to learn more about today’s guest?
Connect with Alison Kero
Website: https://www.fromcluttertoconfidence.com
Visit our show, Business With Chronic Illness, for guest details, key takeaways, and extra links mentioned in this episode.
🌿 If you’re navigating entrepreneurship and chronic illness, or simply craving a more sustainable way to grow your business without sacrificing your health, energy, or self-care priorities. Join our community designed for women entrepreneurs, creatives, and women with chronic illness who want sustainable growth and burnout support while keeping life and wellness first. Join Our Free Community, The Gathering Room of The Rooted & Profitable Collective.
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Foreign.
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.
Speaker BLifing 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 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, you're building differently and you're in the right place.
Speaker AI am excited to have Alison on the show.
Speaker AWe are going to get talking about some organization or I like to say it's just like really creating more ease peace in your life.
Speaker AI think we we don't talk about it in that context.
Speaker AOrganization feels heavy, right?
Speaker AI don't know, it feels heavy for some people.
Speaker ABut please tell us who you are, where you're from, a little bit about you Alison.
Speaker COkay, so I am Alison Kiro, born and raised in Vermont, but now I live in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina and I started my career as an organizer back in 2004.
Speaker CI was living in New York City and I worked with kids, I worked with seniors, I worked with hoarders, I worked with kind of you name it, did it oversaw moves, did you know, kind of anything, closed down offices.
Speaker CSo I did a lot of different types of things.
Speaker CAnd in 2014 I got sick unexpectedly and started out as a flu and I never got healthy.
Speaker CI had no energy.
Speaker CIt took probably about nine months before I think somebody finally diagnosed me with chronic Lyme disease or Lyme disease.
Speaker CAnd then it took another like eight years before I finally found a doctor that I could work with consistently who could help and they helped somewhat.
Speaker CBut at that same time I started taking care of my mom and then we moved down to Myrtle beach and her health started declining.
Speaker CHer mental health, her physical health, my mental health and physical Health started declining and it got really difficult.
Speaker CAnd then thankfully, I think we both realized this is not working.
Speaker CShe needs more help.
Speaker CShe went back east, she's now in Vermont, living in assisted living, where she has a lot more help that she deserves.
Speaker CAnd I was able to sort of focus on myself.
Speaker CI did kind of quit the industry for a little bit for about a year and a half.
Speaker CWas working for a corporation and I loved the job.
Speaker CThe other stuff that came with it was making me absolutely miserable and it was destroying my mental and my physical health again.
Speaker CSo cut to last February 2025.
Speaker CI. I would be driving to my office, miserable thinking to myself, if I got into a car accident and died, I don't think I would feel bad, I think I'd be grateful because if I have to continue this for the rest of my life, I don't want to be here.
Speaker CAnd thankfully.
Speaker CThis sounds weird, but thankfully I got sick because it was a small office, no one wore masks except for me.
Speaker CAnd I caught somebody else's something or other and I got sick and it re triggered my Lyme.
Speaker CAnd then I kept trying to go back to work and I got sick again week and a half later and it just cut me out.
Speaker CThere was no way I could have gone back to work.
Speaker CI couldn't think, I had zero energy, I was slumped over at my desk, my muscles were very weak, I could barely move.
Speaker CAnd so I had to end up going on short term disability.
Speaker CAnd I thought to myself, this is an opportunity for me to create the life that I want.
Speaker CI'm tired of getting stuck in this cycle and I'm going to change it.
Speaker CAnd I found a Lyme disease specialist who didn't do a one size fits all kind of a thing, but did it exactly for my needs only.
Speaker CAnd then I hired myself a coach that I'm still working with so that I could work on my mental health.
Speaker CAnd then I used my own system to really implement strategies and systems so that I could improve on my mental health, my physical health, and maintain a healthy, happy, well balanced home so that I could create the life that I really wanted to live.
Speaker CAnd I think you're right about organizing does feel heavy because it feels like a lot of work.
Speaker CAnd you almost automatically go into straight decision fatigue because it is a lot of decisions.
Speaker CSo it's really more about creating a life for yourself that feels where there's calm, where there's clarity, where there's balance, where there's harmony, where you are showing up for yourself in an act of self.
Speaker CLove, so that you put on healthy boundaries about what and who you are letting into your life and why.
Speaker CYou have awareness around why you're letting these things into your life.
Speaker CYou listen to yourself, your intuition, because your intuition knows best.
Speaker CAnd you are using that to make smart decisions for yourself so that you create the space for yourself, so that the good things come in, you put up the boundaries so that the things that you don't want in your life stay away.
Speaker CAnd it's incredibly empowering.
Speaker CIt's not something you see overnight, but as I continue to do it, this is my year of boundaries.
Speaker CIt's my word of the year.
Speaker CI'm seeing more and more progress in my physical health, my mental health, and in my business alone.
Speaker ASo, I mean, that is, you just shared so much with us about, you know, just where you've come through and what you've moved through.
Speaker AAnd it sounds like you have found.
Speaker AI don't want to say you've gotten on the other side of all of the craziness, but it does sound like there may have been a period of burnout and emotional burnout and all of those type of things.
Speaker AAnd it has also affected, you know, it affected your health.
Speaker AWhat are some of the things that you feel like in the way that you show up in your business or just in the way you show up in your life?
Speaker ALiving with, you know, Lyme disease, we've had.
Speaker AWe've had lots of women on the show who've come and shared their experience with Lyme and also shared their experience with, like, burnout because of trying to heal it or trying to manage it or just trying to understand what the heck is going on.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AWhat has been some, you know, how has organization been a tool for you in this, like, healing journey of that.
Speaker CIt has helped me set up smart systems for myself so that I make my life easier rather than harder for myself.
Speaker CAnd it has also helped me start to recognize the emotions below my decision making.
Speaker CSo I had a lot of guilt that I was carrying, and I sometimes were surrounding myself with the physical guilt and then sometimes the emotional guilt.
Speaker CAnd when I started to become aware of how it felt in my body, how it was taking up space in my brain, sometimes taking space in my house, I've been able to start to put up boundaries and eliminate that shame.
Speaker CShame's a huge one.
Speaker CI think that's something I've inherited from both sides of my family.
Speaker CThat's something that I really wrestle with along a lot of times.
Speaker CAnd the other week I was meeting with someone it was a short conversation, and halfway through, through, I noticed my energy just tanked.
Speaker CAnd I was like, huh, that's really interesting.
Speaker CAnd I got off the phone and I thought, okay, what this means is that this is not the right person for me, and that is okay.
Speaker CBut that is a clear signal that my body is trying to tell me.
Speaker CAnd in the past, I would have, because I think the language he was using was kind of shaming, trying to shame me.
Speaker CAnd I recognize that because my awareness, because I've gotten rid of a lot of the mental clutter in my brain, I recognize that.
Speaker CAnd instead of deciding to go and work with her, which would not have had a good result because she wasn't the right person for me, I was able to go, you know what?
Speaker CThat's not good.
Speaker CI'm not going to accept the shame.
Speaker CI'm going to just let her go with love and find the right person for me.
Speaker CAnd then a little while later, I had a conversation with someone else about the same topic.
Speaker CThat person I ended up feeling really energetic and excited with, and I knew that that was the right person.
Speaker CBut if I hadn't started taking away the layers of the guilt, the shame, the fear, the apathy, you know, the grief, all of it, I wouldn't have gotten to that point where I could hear myself because there was so much internal clutter.
Speaker CSo I. I love organizing because you can start getting rid of that.
Speaker CThose emotions by taking out the physical items in your house and recognizing it there.
Speaker CAnd as you start taking out those layers, you can start recognizing it in your brain and in your body and decluttering your life in those ways, too.
Speaker AIt's so interesting that you mentioned systems when you first started talking, like how, you know, you start implementing systems and then you also started sharing, you know, how that kind of translated into those systems being that you started to acknowledge and be more aware, it seems like more like, attuned to the feelings, the vibe, the energy of other people and things like that.
Speaker AAnd it's interesting because I think we talk about systems.
Speaker ALike, my therapist asked me.
Speaker AShe's like, what are your life systems?
Speaker AAnd I'm like, girl, I get up, I do a thing.
Speaker AYou know, I'm doing the stuff.
Speaker AI'm like, I don't call them systems, but how would.
Speaker ALike, if someone is like, okay, Allison, so what kind of systems are we talking about?
Speaker AAre we talking about, like, a very rigid.
Speaker ALike, this goes here in my house, and this happens every day in my house.
Speaker ALike, when you talk about systems, what does that mean for you.
Speaker COkay.
Speaker CSo there's a lot of different ways to put in systems, and they don't need to be super rigid, because if they get super rigid, I get annoyed.
Speaker CI don't like super rigid.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CBut there are specific things that I do every day because I want to show up for myself.
Speaker CAnd so one of the ways that I do it is I get up and I journal for 10 minutes, because if I do that, if I'm cranky, I get it out.
Speaker CAnd it also allows me to plan my day.
Speaker CSo I've allowed myself 10 minutes to just sort of be.
Speaker CAnd then I brush my teeth.
Speaker CAnd then I have another system where I'm going to stretch my body.
Speaker CI'm going to start doing some exercises to make sure that my body moves because I need a lot of rest.
Speaker CSo it's important that I get this exercise for my mental health and my physical health.
Speaker CI eat my healthy breakfast, I go out for a walk because I want to get the sun before it gets that, you know, before it starts damaging my skin and get some exercise.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CAnd then I have a specific time where I start my work day.
Speaker CAnd then, you know, but I've already planned out, like, what are the three things that I really need to get done that day.
Speaker CI don't have a whole list of to dos, because, my God, that's overwhelming and exhausting.
Speaker CBut what are my priority things that I would like to get done today and then I get done when I need.
Speaker CI make sure I have some time in the afternoon where if I need to rest, I can rest.
Speaker CI quit at a certain time.
Speaker CI have a system where I clean off my desk so that it's nice and tidy.
Speaker CI shut down my computer so that my brain shuts down.
Speaker CI eat a healthy dinner, and then I go do whatever I want to do.
Speaker CSo it's not a huge.
Speaker CAnd I usually end the day by reading something fun and writing down three things that I was grateful for that day.
Speaker CAnd so it's not super structured, but it's a helpful system for me so that I know that I have time to get everything done that I really want to accomplish.
Speaker CAnd I'm showing up for myself, my mental health, and my physical health.
Speaker CBut you could do a simple system, like for laundry, when I am, you know, I just did laundry the other day.
Speaker CI put it all out on my bed.
Speaker CMy system for doing laundry so that I'm not running all over the place, is I put all of the, like, things together.
Speaker CSo the socks with the socks and the Towels.
Speaker CWith the towels.
Speaker CAnd then I put the things, like, they either go into an armoire, a closet, a bathroom, or a kitchen.
Speaker CAnd so I put the things that belong in the kitchen together, the things that belong in the closet together, the things that belong in the bathroom together, so that I'm not taking extra trips.
Speaker CThey're all together.
Speaker CI can just go in and make it easy.
Speaker CAnd so it's creating these small systems.
Speaker CLike, when I leave my house, I don't want to go looking for my shoes or my keys or my glasses or my wallet.
Speaker CSo I have a system where I set up all of those right in one area so that when I come in, I put everything where that belongs, and then I can put it away easily.
Speaker CAnd then I know exactly where everything is.
Speaker CAnd I am a big stickler of designating a spot for everything, because when you know where it belongs, you know where to find it, and more importantly, you know where to return it so that pockets of clutter are less likely to start piling up on you.
Speaker CBecause a lot of times it's, I don't know where this goes.
Speaker CLet's just put it here for now.
Speaker CAnd then there becomes a lot of things of, I don't know where this goes.
Speaker CLet's just put it here for now.
Speaker CAnd then you're like, oh, I don't know where that thing is.
Speaker AMm.
Speaker AIt's so interesting.
Speaker ALike, I think we.
Speaker AYou know, when I hear you talking about this, I can't help but think about the Netflix series about, like, the organizing queens.
Speaker AAnd then.
Speaker AWhat is it?
Speaker AMarie?
Speaker AKondo.
Speaker CKondo.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AAnd just, like, there is so much.
Speaker AThere's so much emotional.
Speaker AAnd you brought this up earlier.
Speaker AThere's so much emotional baggage with our baggage, like, with our literal spaces.
Speaker AThere's so much emotional trauma, like, that's connected to the spaces in our home or the things that are not even.
Speaker AMaybe it's not even cluttered.
Speaker AIt's just kind of, like, unpersonalized because there's an aspect of, you know, trauma or guilt or shame and things like that that, you know, we're talking about.
Speaker AI'm curious for you.
Speaker AHow have you seen in the past?
Speaker AAnd I know we're kind of talking a little meta here from, like, coming from a place of being, like, working through healing, working through the trauma and experiences, living with chronic illness, being in a job that you didn't want to be in to.
Speaker ALike, now I have these system in place.
Speaker ANow I have this.
Speaker ALike, now I know what I'm doing.
Speaker AI know where I'm going, I know what's happening.
Speaker AI'm curious to hear how emotionally is that different from before, when you were not in this space, what did that look like in your home?
Speaker CI was still fairly neat, but I was still miserable.
Speaker CI hadn't completely worked on the clutter in my head.
Speaker CAnd it also sort of took a long time to find the right systems that actually worked for me.
Speaker CBut there have been times where, you know, I have held on to it may not be where there was a lot of it, but there still was some of it.
Speaker CLike items in my closet of, I gained weight, and I don't fit this anymore.
Speaker CAnd I'm going to keep that as a way to get me to lose that weight.
Speaker CAnd you're using that to shame yourself.
Speaker CAnd honestly, if I had lost the weight, would I have gone and put those things back on?
Speaker CMost likely no.
Speaker CI would have gone and bought new clothes.
Speaker CLike, yay, me.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CAnd so there was that.
Speaker CThere were gifts that people had given me that I just did not like.
Speaker CAnd instead of being like, thank you so much.
Speaker CI really appreciate it.
Speaker CAnd then letting it go somewhere else, I kept it in my home.
Speaker CAnd it made me feel guilty or in some cases, just.
Speaker CIt was a gift that maybe wasn't a very nice gift for somebody to give me.
Speaker CAnd it made me feel bad about myself.
Speaker CI had lost a friend, and she had crocheted a yarmulke.
Speaker CNeither one of us are Jewish in high school.
Speaker CAnd I felt so guilty about the way the friendship was when she had passed away.
Speaker CAnd I couldn't get that time back.
Speaker CAnd I missed my friend.
Speaker CI held onto it for, like, 20 years until finally I was like, what am I doing?
Speaker CShe wouldn't care if, you know, I think she's probably looking up at me going, or looking down at me going, what are you doing?
Speaker CJust get rid of it.
Speaker CLike, you don't need that reminder.
Speaker CYou have pictures, you have memories.
Speaker CYou don't need to hold on to everything, making it seem like that that's her.
Speaker CIt's not.
Speaker CShe's not there anymore, but her spirit is, and the memories still are.
Speaker CSo when I was able to sort of recognize that these little things here and there, I was holding on to for the wrong reasons and they weren't supporting me, it felt lighter.
Speaker CAnd it creates a space so that you can show up more authentically for yourself and so that you can start letting in newer, better things.
Speaker CAnd it helps make you just feel like with these systems in place, I feel calmer.
Speaker CI know Where I'm going, I know what I'm doing.
Speaker CI don't have to start from scratch every day.
Speaker CI'm not reinventing the wheel every two seconds.
Speaker CAnd I'm not.
Speaker CI'm struggling with decision fatigue.
Speaker CBecause if you don't have systems in place, you're constantly having to make new decisions that if you had just a simple routine in place, half of those are done for you.
Speaker CYou don't really have to think about it.
Speaker CAnd then the stuff that you really need to think about, you've got the energy and the wherewithal to be able to focus on those big things that you need to make a decision on.
Speaker AYeah, you made a point about decision fatigue.
Speaker AHow does that show up when we're talking about organization?
Speaker ALike, when you work with clients, where do you see this, like, predominantly a strong thing?
Speaker CWell, I think a lot of them are.
Speaker CThey're exhausted by their own stuff.
Speaker CI see that a lot in clients.
Speaker CYou know, when I used to go and do it in people's homes and offices, I often would see people walking away from it, and I'm like, I need you back.
Speaker CI need your input.
Speaker CYou can't just walk away.
Speaker CAnd I think it's that if you're looking at it as a big picture, that's exhausting.
Speaker CAnd there's hundreds of decisions to be made there.
Speaker CSo if you take a drawer or you take, like, just your sweaters in your closet, or just one surface area, or you set a timer for 15 or 30 minutes and you just take one area, that means there's fewer decisions that you have to make.
Speaker CAnd so there's different systems that you can set up.
Speaker CYou know, there's a Swedish death.
Speaker CCleaning means there's a condom, Marie.
Speaker CThere's four boxes.
Speaker CThere's 12, 12, 12.
Speaker CThere's lots of different ways to do it.
Speaker CI don't think one size fits all.
Speaker CAnd so it's about creating a system that works for you, that works for your time, that works for your energy, that works for your abilities.
Speaker CAny challenges that you have, all of that needs to factor in so that you can find something that works for you effectively and makes you motivated enough to keep showing up for yourself, to keep doing it.
Speaker AYeah, I love when we talk about, like, there's so many ways.
Speaker AWe all know there are so many ways to do all of the things.
Speaker AThere's so many ways.
Speaker AJust that alone feels at times a bit overwhelming.
Speaker ABut kind of tying this to a point that you mentioned before is like, really knowing yourself.
Speaker AKnowing, like, okay, this doesn't work for me.
Speaker AAnd that doesn't mean that you're not a good.
Speaker ALike, you can't organize.
Speaker AI think I hear this message a lot.
Speaker ALike, a lot of people have been like, well, I tried it such and such way and I'm just a bad organizer.
Speaker AI'm just a bad this and I can't do it.
Speaker AJust the thing thing.
Speaker AAnd when I hear that, it's kind of like how I hear when people are like, when you have chronic illness and you're trying a protocol and it didn't work for you, I'm like, well, that doesn't mean all protocols or things won't work for you.
Speaker AJust means that one didn't.
Speaker AThere's, like, other ways.
Speaker AAnd so, yeah.
Speaker AWhat would you say to someone who's like, I have tried a couple, and I feel like I just am not made to be organized.
Speaker AI'm not made to be, you know, have a system in place.
Speaker AHow would you coach them or support them in, like, realizing, well, it's possible.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CWell, number one, it's a learned skill.
Speaker CSo not everybody grows up in a household where that is is taught.
Speaker CYeah, right.
Speaker CAnd you might have grown up in a household where there were things everywhere and there's a lot of chaos and you gotta dig out from under there.
Speaker COr maybe it was super rigid to the point where it was like, not healthy.
Speaker CAnd you are kind of rebelling against that.
Speaker CAnd so it's really about if you don't focus on the, oh, this is a job to do.
Speaker CAnd you create a system of.
Speaker CI want to surround myself with things that are meaningful to me, the things that represent who I am right now.
Speaker CBecause I feel like you're kind of an archaeologist and you're digging beneath your past to find out who you are now and to find out the things that are supported, supporting you in who you are now.
Speaker CYou know, it's like you don't have the items from your bedroom, like your clothes and stuff like that from when you were 10 years old, because that's not who you are now.
Speaker CThey don't fit, they wouldn't work.
Speaker CThey don't make any sense.
Speaker CAnd I think we forget that when we become adults and feel like, oh, you need to keep this for the rest of your life.
Speaker CYou're not who you were in your 20s, when you were in your 40s or your 60s or anywhere in between.
Speaker CYou keep growing and you keep changing and you keep needing different things to support you in the who you are now.
Speaker CAnd if you continue to hold on to the Past, it never allows you to come into the present, much less the future.
Speaker CSo it's really about creating a system where you figure out who you are by unearthing the stuff that don't have meaning to you anymore, that don't symbolize.
Speaker CThis is the me who I want to be.
Speaker CThis is how I want to show up for myself.
Speaker CAnd these are the things that support who I am now and where I'm going in the future.
Speaker AOh, that's.
Speaker AI mean, just that bit alone, everybody.
Speaker AI think we all struggle.
Speaker AI know for myself, I struggle with that in general, just being okay with the change that I am not or not attached to something that I used to be.
Speaker AYeah, I know for me, part of my growing has always been, like, the idea that I'm indecisive or the idea that I can't stick with anything.
Speaker AAnd it's those narratives that can get in your head and, like, make you keep stuff and stay a certain way, but you are not those.
Speaker AYou know, that's not you.
Speaker AAnd I think what you're sharing here is, like, we evolve.
Speaker AWe change as people.
Speaker AWe.
Speaker AWe have to embrace that about us.
Speaker AAnd sometimes we don't allow ourselves to do that by keeping all of the stuff right, like, just keeping everything.
Speaker ASuch a good point.
Speaker ASuch a good point.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CAnd then, you know, if you go into it with a narrative of I don't make good decisions or I keep changing my mind, it's going to be really hard because you're getting in your own way, and that's a shame, because that's not who you are.
Speaker CThat's what people have maybe said about you.
Speaker CAnd then you've internalized that.
Speaker CAnd then you're building a life based on lies that were said to you that aren't innately true.
Speaker CAnd so part of it is just.
Speaker CJust digging beneath those lies to find out the truth of who you really are.
Speaker CAnd it can be a really beautiful process if.
Speaker CIf you are willing to take a look at this is who I am.
Speaker CAnd no matter what it looks like, I am beautiful and amazing and worthy of a good life no matter where I am at any point in my life.
Speaker AYeah, I think when I think about this, too, in the context of the.
Speaker ABuilding a business.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ABuilding a business.
Speaker AYou know, we.
Speaker AWe've heard so many sayings, like, throw spaghetti at the wall and, like, you know, build the plane while you, like, are, you know, flying it.
Speaker ALike, you know, all these, like, sayings of, like, you're kind of just figuring it out.
Speaker AYou're kind of Just going.
Speaker AAnd you won't know what's going to work for you until you know is what's going to work for you.
Speaker AAnd to me, there's always a foundational basis for.
Speaker AFor organization in your business, but it still has to align with who you actually are.
Speaker AIt cannot be based on everyone else.
Speaker AAnd so as you approach, you know, your business, but also your personal business, like helping clients, but also for you, is there systems in your actual business as a person who, you know, probably still deals with the challenge of the chronic Lyme and things like that that you've realized is a huge part of your organizational process for creating success in your business?
Speaker CI think I've had to learn the hard way several times of, I think you're right.
Speaker CI would listen to other people's advice of, you need to do this, you need to do that.
Speaker CAnd there would be times where I'm like, I don't really want to do this, or this doesn't feel aligned with me.
Speaker CBut I'd be like, oh, but they're saying that you have to do this.
Speaker CYou have to be on Facebook, you have to be on this thing.
Speaker CYou have to do this, you have to do that.
Speaker CYou do not have to do anything that doesn't feel aligned with you.
Speaker CAnd again, I kind of go with, how does my energy feel?
Speaker CIf I feel completely wiped out after someone has told me I should try and do something, it's not right for me.
Speaker COr if I'm doing something and this feels more like a chore than enjoyable, why am I doing it?
Speaker CI feel like you're wasting your time because you're going to procrastinate on doing it.
Speaker CSo that's not going to be fun.
Speaker CYou know, you're not going to really show up for yourself, and it's probably going to get stuck in your way because you're going to have it in your head all day of, I need to do this, I need to do this.
Speaker CSo when I built this business, this time, I kind of built it with going, I am no longer to listen to people who tell me I have to do something.
Speaker CI was on a workshop recently where someone was very heavily going into Facebook.
Speaker CI am not a fan of Facebook personally.
Speaker CI don't like being on there at all.
Speaker CAnd she had told me, oh, no, I don't talk about Facebook that much, and you can use it for other things.
Speaker CAnd she just went heavily into Facebook.
Speaker CAnd I thought, I'm getting annoyed.
Speaker CI'm gonna listen to that and I'm gonna get off this the people who are on there and they're excited about listening to it should be on there, because that's gonna work for them.
Speaker CThe system, she is telling me, is not gonna work for me because I feel stressed and anxious and annoyed.
Speaker CAnd you know what?
Speaker CThat's okay.
Speaker CAnd I can find different ways to getting to that success that work for me.
Speaker CYou don't have to keep doing everything the exact same way as somebody else.
Speaker CAnd maybe I'll find something else that works for me.
Speaker CYeah, that does give me joy.
Speaker CThat does fill me with energy.
Speaker CSo it's, you know, go ahead.
Speaker CWhen you're building a business and starting out, try different things, because you don't know until you try it.
Speaker CBut if you're in the middle of something and you're thinking, oh, God, I don't want to be here, here, leave.
Speaker CYou're not stuck anywhere.
Speaker CYou don't have to.
Speaker CYou can just say, thank you so much.
Speaker CI have learned that this is not for me, and walk away, because then otherwise you're wasting time and building up a bunch of extra clutter in your head by thinking, I should do this when you're shoulda, coulda woulding yourself.
Speaker CIt's not for you.
Speaker AYeah, so true.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AI always think it's interesting that we.
Speaker AI feel like that comes from just like school, the way we were taught about school.
Speaker ALike school, you, you know, you have to do it by what they said to do.
Speaker AI used to get so frustrated as a kid because I'm.
Speaker CI'm.
Speaker AI'm not great at math, but I could always figure it out.
Speaker ABut because I didn't figure it out the way they told me I had to figure out, like, by doing the exact formula, I would still get, like, docked half.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThe half of the point.
Speaker AAnd I used to get so irritated by that because it's like, I got the answer right.
Speaker AIt doesn't matter that I would about it a different way.
Speaker AI got the answer right.
Speaker ABut because I didn't do it in that.
Speaker AThat way.
Speaker AAnd I think in business and life in general, I think we kind of put ourselves in that box of being like, yeah, they said it works only this way, so then only I can do it this way.
Speaker AAnd that's the only way it can work.
Speaker AAnd we have seen that that's just not the case.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CYeah, it's not true at all.
Speaker CAnd hey, you never know, you might invent a new way that then helps a ton of other people.
Speaker CSo if there were just one path in life, I don't think that There would be a point where to life.
Speaker CBecause I think half of what we're here to do is to forge our own path.
Speaker CFigure out what works for you.
Speaker CYou know, I've heard stories of, oh, CEOs get up at 4:00 clock in the morning and they do this, that and the other thing.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CI've seen other tremendously successful people who don't start their day until the afternoon because that's when they work best.
Speaker CSo what time of day are you at your best?
Speaker CThat's when you should be doing the most amount of your work.
Speaker CThe big stuff that takes the most brain power, you know?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CAnd that could be different for everyone and that might change.
Speaker CI used to be a night owl, and now I get up at 6 or 6:30 in the morning.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd it's okay that you change.
Speaker AI think that this, when I think about this, an organization, like if we bring it back into the context of organizing the systems that you create for this period or season of your life might change like the way you do.
Speaker ASo how do you.
Speaker AI guess my question is, how do you balance, you know, those transition periods of like, this system used to work and now it doesn't work because I'm in this system.
Speaker AHow do you work through that?
Speaker CWell, the first part is becoming aware that it's not working for you any longer.
Speaker CAnd usually, you know, if it's like a functioning system within your home, you're finding like, oh, I'm not putting that there where it belongs anymore.
Speaker CInstead I'm putting it here.
Speaker CAnd maybe that's because you're using it where you're putting it and you need to change it.
Speaker COr recently I had one pair of scissors.
Speaker CI was in the middle of two projects.
Speaker CIt got stuck in a little bit of pile of clutter because I didn't finish one of the projects and needed to hire someone.
Speaker CAnd then I thought to myself, I'm using scissors in one room, but I need them in three different rooms.
Speaker CAnd that is why I'm getting it lost in different areas, because I'm sometimes forgetting to put it back.
Speaker CSo I ended up buying another two pair of scissors, found the third pair, put that in the kitchen, and now I have them.
Speaker COne in my living room, one where the cat or the pets are so that I can, you know, use them to open up litter boxes and stuff like that.
Speaker CThat has made my life easier.
Speaker CAnd it's a simple little system where I notice something's not working.
Speaker CHow am I using the scissors?
Speaker CYeah, where is it working for Me, where do I need them and how can I build a new system that is going to work for me so that I don't have to keep, you know, walking into the kitchen and then walking into the guest room or walking into the.
Speaker CAnd then walking, walking back?
Speaker CYou know, that was a lot of, of walking around and time and energy wasted.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CSo how can I build a new system for myself that is going to be easier for my time and for my energy and my brain power and it was just I need more scissors and that's okay.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYou know, I always think people think that organization or decluttering means that it has to be less.
Speaker ALike I can imagine someone saying, but that's three scissors when that's just adding more into your space.
Speaker AAnd I wonder what that looks like for you when you have that kind of conflicting.
Speaker AI don't know, I don't know if that's a vibe or organizing.
Speaker CIt's not about never buying something again.
Speaker CYou know, first of all, you might need an organizational product in order to hold the items.
Speaker CYeah, I always recommend decluttering first.
Speaker CSo then you know what you have.
Speaker CThen you have to figure out where you want to put it, measure that space.
Speaker CSo then you have information of how much do I have, where can I put it and what can fit in here.
Speaker CAnd then you can go find an organizational product that will fit in the space, function the way you need it to so that it makes your life easier, not harder.
Speaker CAnd then also looks good because.
Speaker CBut you want it to function first and then you want it to look good.
Speaker CAnd you need to make these systems stupidly simple.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CYou don't want to be.
Speaker CI think that's the thing that people do is oh, a system has to be hard.
Speaker CNo, you make it so much easier for yourself because you're never going to maintain it if you make it hard.
Speaker CIt's about making it so Easy like a 5 year old can understand it because then you don't have to think about it.
Speaker CIt's about not only freeing up your space, but freeing up your time and freeing up your brain space so that you can focus on stuff that really deserves your time.
Speaker CThe stuff that you don't have an automatic answer to.
Speaker CThe rest of it.
Speaker CYou can be set up to systems so that you have the energy to be able to focus on the hard, challenging things.
Speaker ASuch a good point.
Speaker AThat is like that principle of just like it needs to be simple is in every aspect of everything that we ever do.
Speaker AI truly believe that we over complicate things.
Speaker AAll of the time.
Speaker AAnd we do that in our businesses, we do that in our relationships.
Speaker AWe do that in everything, like, everything that we do know.
Speaker AI'm curious to hear from you as someone who is like, the chronic being, living with chronic illness, running a business, and like, life stuff.
Speaker AYeah, I feel like there can constantly be this, like, shift between following your intuition, doing things that's in alignment, and there's always a growth curve.
Speaker ALike, there's just to your point, like, some of us didn't grow up being organized queens and like, feeling great about it.
Speaker AWhere do you find that there is that, like, where is the.
Speaker AIn the middle of being, like, I'm not quite aligned, but I want to be.
Speaker AI want to be this, like, I want to have this function or this tool in my life, even though I'm uncomfortable with it.
Speaker ABut it's not because it's not because I hate it.
Speaker AIt's just like I'm trying to figure it out.
Speaker AWhere do you find that balance between, I'm uncomfortable because I've never done this before and it doesn't fill a line because I don't know what that's supposed to feel like.
Speaker AAnd doing the thing.
Speaker AIf this makes any sense at all, what I'm saying.
Speaker CIt does.
Speaker CYou have to have some grace with yourself.
Speaker CI think, you know, first of all, if you wanted to go run a marathon and you are couch potato to begin with, you're not going to go grab a pair of shoes and just head out the door and run the miles.
Speaker CYou would hurt yourself.
Speaker CIt doesn't make any sense.
Speaker CWhat you're going to do is you're going to plan it like, you know, start with maybe a half a mile or a mile and see how that feels.
Speaker CSo it's about kind of pushing yourself a little bit every day to do a little bit more, and then celebrating that win of, hey, I did that.
Speaker CI stood up and I. I did something for myself to try and make my life better.
Speaker CBut there's always a transition of there's new emotions coming up, there might be old emotions coming up, and to be aware that that's going to happen and to kind of maybe observe them, try to learn from them, not have them dictate who you are and how you're showing up.
Speaker CThat's easier said than done in a lot of situations because we immediately react and think, ooh, bad feeling.
Speaker CI don't like it, I don't like it.
Speaker CAnd that can help us go into resistance.
Speaker CBut if we're willing to continue showing up knowing that it might be a little bit uncomfortable, but knowing that it's going to be better for us in the end.
Speaker CYou know, it's like if you go on a new diet.
Speaker CIf I try and go on, like, a new diet where I'm like, I'm gonna go on a diet, I want to eat everything in sight and everything bad, too.
Speaker CBut if I'm like, I want to show up for myself and I want to be healthy and I want to feel healthy, then it is much easier for me to make smart choices about the food choices that I put into my mouth and feed my body with.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CAnd so if you kind of go in gently of.
Speaker CI really want to feel like my home is.
Speaker CWhen I walk in, I feel balanced.
Speaker CI feel like it's my place to go and feel calm.
Speaker CI want to get a better night's sleep.
Speaker CI want to.
Speaker CI want to know where everything is.
Speaker CI don't want to feel like I'm in pure chaos.
Speaker CAnd I'm going to start a little bit at a time.
Speaker CI'm going to pick, like, the easiest room that I can find, maybe has the least amount of clutter, and I'm going to pick one surface, and I'm going to do maybe 10 to 15 minutes a day, and I'm going to keep doing that.
Speaker CAnd when I can feel I can do more, I'm going to do more.
Speaker CI mean, last year, I have a home.
Speaker CThe weeds grow here insanely quickly.
Speaker CAnd I was like, okay, I do not have any energy.
Speaker CAnd so what I did was I would go out for two minutes at a time, and I would pick a little section, and then I would go inside and I would rest.
Speaker CAnd when I had more energy, I would go back out and I would pick a little section, and I eventually got it all done.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CAnd I just gave myself grace of, you know what?
Speaker CI have no control over anything except for myself.
Speaker CBut I want to show up for myself, and I want to make sure that my home looks and feels good.
Speaker CAnd if that means that, you know, it's a little bit messy today, but maybe I could clean a toilet, I'm going to pick that, and I'm going to celebrate that win.
Speaker CAnd then tomorrow, I'm going to do maybe a little bit more and then a little bit more, and then it starts looking and feeling good, and it becomes easier to maintain.
Speaker CBut it's going to take a while.
Speaker CI mean, you can't go from 0 to 60.
Speaker CDoesn't work, especially with organization.
Speaker AI agree with you.
Speaker AThat's, again, Another principle we need to apply to our businesses.
Speaker ALike, you're not going to be, you know, the Instagram queen yesterday.
Speaker AOr if you, you know, maybe you were like, I know for myself, I, like, used to do a lot of social media content.
Speaker AAnd I mean, I've been in business for 10 years online.
Speaker ASo for me, it's like, yeah, I used to really enjoy it because it was new and it was fun and exciting and everybody was, like, doing it.
Speaker AAnd now I hate it.
Speaker AAnd now I'm like, okay, how else am I going to show up and what am I going to do?
Speaker AAnd what is that going to look different?
Speaker AAnd I think a lot of us just don't give ourselves permission to do it differently because we're afraid that that means one, we failed.
Speaker AWe have guilt and shame about it, and then on top of that, we feel like we should be doing it faster.
Speaker AIt should get done faster.
Speaker AI should be organized faster.
Speaker AI should have my room together faster.
Speaker AAll of these things.
Speaker AAnd I think to your point, it's like, give yourself the grace.
Speaker AGive yourself the grace to figure it out.
Speaker CWell, I think the biggest lie is the overnight success that they talk about.
Speaker CIt's a fat lie.
Speaker CNobody ever.
Speaker CIt was years in the making of blood, sweat and tears.
Speaker CAnd for anyone to expect true, lasting results, you have to realize that it's going to take some time.
Speaker CThere's no magic pill to take you from I just started a business to I'm a massive success.
Speaker CYou have to learn.
Speaker CAnd even if you do become successful, there are still.
Speaker CYou're still learning.
Speaker CYou're still growing.
Speaker CThere are still going to be challenges.
Speaker CIt's not like you reach a level in anything and you're like, I'm done.
Speaker CI don't need to eat healthy anymore because I've lost all the weight.
Speaker CWell, that's great.
Speaker CYou're going to do all the good things.
Speaker CYou have to keep showing up for yourself, no matter what level you're at.
Speaker CAnd it's harder in the beginning because you're not used to doing that.
Speaker CIt gets easier once you set up the system.
Speaker CSystems.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BSo, so true.
Speaker ASo, Allison, if someone's listening to this today and they're like, okay, so take my time, you know, set up some systems.
Speaker AHow would you support them in creating that support for them?
Speaker ALike, what does it look like if they were in your world?
Speaker COkay.
Speaker CAnd my website is in the process of being changed, so hopefully by end of the first week of March, it'll be implemented.
Speaker CBut I'm offering three services.
Speaker COne is Like, I need a little bit of help.
Speaker CIt's just a very intense two hour session where we go through everything and then I'm going to create a plan for you that you can use.
Speaker CAnd then a couple weeks later you're going to follow up with like an hour session to make sure that everything is working, tweak what needs to be tweaked.
Speaker CSo that's great for people who need a little bit of support and just, you know, can probably do it on their own.
Speaker CAnd then I offer three and six months.
Speaker CThree months you're probably going through a room every other week.
Speaker CAnd the six months you're probably doing it two sessions on one room.
Speaker CAnd you know, we're going to learn, like, who are you?
Speaker CWhat are your struggles?
Speaker CHow much clutter do you have?
Speaker CHow do you want this place to look and feel?
Speaker CAre there anything that might be getting in the way of the success?
Speaker CHow do you set up systems?
Speaker CYou know, let's take a deep dive into who you are so we can create a working plan for you so that you can be successful.
Speaker CBecause I want you to stay motivated.
Speaker CI want you to see small successes and be able to build on that.
Speaker CSo by the end of it, you walk away and you've built systems that you can tweak yourself and that you can easily maintain without needing continuous guidance.
Speaker CIf you want that continuous guidance because you feel like that helps you with accountability, that's fine too.
Speaker CBut I want you to at least feel comfortable being able to do that on your own.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI hear so often from women who have chronic illness, feel like they don't know who they are anymore.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AYou know, you're going through what you're going through depending on the phases.
Speaker ABecause I have, you know, I talk about this in the show, different phases.
Speaker AYou know, either you're a baby, like baby chronic illness warrior, like you just decided to discovered you have chronic illness.
Speaker AThen you have what I call like the figuring out the teenager version of chronic illness, where you're figuring out, you getting into your, you know, your, your stride, you figuring how things go.
Speaker AAnd then I call it OG where you've been doing this for years and you have started to really understand that there are ebbs and flows.
Speaker AThere's no, you know, stagnant way of you being.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AHow can you help someone who's like, you asked me who I am.
Speaker AI don't know who I am right now because I don't even understand what's happening with me.
Speaker AI want to be more organized.
Speaker AI think a Lot of people want to be more organized because they feel like it gives them a little bit more.
Speaker AIt does.
Speaker AIt gives them a little bit more clarity, more peace, less decisions.
Speaker ABut if part of the purpose is to discover who they are, is this a process that helps them with that?
Speaker CI think so.
Speaker CAnd I mean, honestly, with someone like that, because you never know from moment to moment where your energy is going to be.
Speaker CAnd it's really about, like, making a plan of, like, what is one small thing I can do for myself today where I can show up for myself and just sort of starting with something small, and maybe it's just putting a dish in the dishwasher, you know, starting really small where I can do that one small thing, and then maybe the next.
Speaker CNext day you have a little bit more energy to do another small thing, and it's just about creating these small little changes that you can then build on.
Speaker CAnd again, I had this last year.
Speaker CI was doing, you know, weeding for two minutes and then stopping and resting.
Speaker CAnd maybe that's.
Speaker CYou do a little bit, you stop your rest.
Speaker CYou do a little bit, you stop your rest.
Speaker CAnd, you know, there's.
Speaker CSometimes it's taken me, you know, an entire day to get through changing the sheets on my bed, but I did a little, I stopped, I rested, I did a little.
Speaker CI stopped, I rested.
Speaker CAnd it's.
Speaker CIt's doing that, and maybe.
Speaker CMaybe it's setting a timer for one minute and you clearing off as much of a surface as you can and just.
Speaker COr clearing up the surface by saying, this is garbage.
Speaker CThis is garbage.
Speaker CThis is garbage.
Speaker CThis is garbage.
Speaker CAnd then the next time I go, I'm going to say, these things don't belong in this room.
Speaker CI'm going to put it in a box.
Speaker CAnd when I can put them where they belong, then I'm going to take the next.
Speaker CNext time I go, and I'm gonna put the items back where they belong in that room.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CInstead of on the table.
Speaker ABaby steps is what I hear.
Speaker ABaby steps.
Speaker AGive yourself permission for those baby steps.
Speaker CAnd then celebrate the wins.
Speaker CBecause, yeah, to somebody else, maybe that's nothing.
Speaker CBut to you, you did that.
Speaker CThat's amazing.
Speaker CAnd then the more that you sell.
Speaker CThat's why I like the gratitude thing.
Speaker CSometimes I'm like, I had energy today.
Speaker CI did this and I did that.
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker CAnd to some other people, they might be like, whoop dee doo.
Speaker CAnd I'm like, I'm whoop.
Speaker ADoin okay.
Speaker CYeah, I am.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CYou know, by ending my day by just recognizing three Things that I'm grateful about or that I accomplished.
Speaker CHelps me go to sleep easier and feel like, yeah, I'm showing up in my own life.
Speaker AYeah, I love that.
Speaker AWell, thank you so much, Allison, for sharing everything that you've shared today.
Speaker AI think it's gonna be super helpful for someone who's in that.
Speaker AThat space, who's shaming or guilting themselves or beating themselves up.
Speaker AI feel like this is such an encouraging conversation around, like, just give yourself the space and, like, you don't have to do it a one kind of way.
Speaker AAnd it sounds like too, when you do it with someone else, it also brings you some more of that peace and ease as well.
Speaker CYeah, it does.
Speaker AAll right, how can we find you?
Speaker AIs.
Speaker AAre you on?
Speaker AWell, if you're not on Facebook, are you on.
Speaker AWhere are you?
Speaker AAnd where can you.
Speaker AWe find you?
Speaker COkay.
Speaker CSo my business is called From Clutter to Confidence.
Speaker CSo my website is from clutter to confidence.com.
Speaker CI'm on LinkedIn, Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube.
Speaker CAnd LinkedIn is.
Speaker CBut with my name, Allison Kiro.
Speaker CEverything is.
Speaker CElse is From Clutter to Confidence.
Speaker AGreat.
Speaker AAnd we'll have everything, of course, in the show notes.
Speaker ABut thank you so much for being here.
Speaker AI have one last question for you.
Speaker AWhat is something that, when you started your business that you thought was true, that is no longer true?
Speaker AYou know it's a lie.
Speaker AYou know it's a lie.
Speaker COh, that's a good question.
Speaker CI mean, we kind of covered a lot of that.
Speaker COf just, you know.
Speaker CYeah, I have to be like, well, have to be on Facebook or, you know, I think it's.
Speaker CYou have to be what everybody else wants you to be.
Speaker CAnd if you try to be that perfect somebody to everybody, you're no good to anybody, and you don't have a target market.
Speaker CYou really have to figure out who are the people I can really help and just keep focusing on them because then they're going to see that message go, this is for me.
Speaker CThis is the person I'm supposed to be working with.
Speaker CAnd you, you'll run yourself ragged trying to be the perfect person for everybody.
Speaker ATrue.
Speaker AVery true.
Speaker ASo believe you?
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AWell, thank you again.
Speaker AThank you so much.
Speaker CThank you.
Speaker CI really enjoyed this conversation.
Speaker AMe too.
Speaker BThat's a wrap for this episode of Business with Chronic Illness.
Speaker BIf you enjoyed this conversation, be sure to follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review.
Speaker BIt helps more entrepreneurs living with chronic illness and autoimmune disorders find these conversations.
Speaker BYou can check the show notes for links, resources and ways to stay connected.
Speaker BAnd if you have a question or story you'd like to share, visit craftedtoothrive.com to leave a voice message for the podcast.
Speaker BI'd love to hear from you.
Speaker BUntil next time, remember, you can build a thriving business without sacrificing your health, your peace, or your profit.







