BigDeal - #46 Parents in 2025 NEED to Watch This | Kimberly Van Der Beek
Episode Date: January 15, 2025🚀 Main Street Over Wall Street is where the real deals get done. Join top investors, founders, and operators for three days of powerful connection, sharp strategy, and big opportunities — live in... Austin, Nov 2–4. https://contrarianthinking.biz/msows-bigdeal On this week's episode, host Codie Sanchez delves into the themes of conception, natural birth, and the role of intuition in pregnancy with Kimberly Van Der Beek. Kimberly shares her personal experiences with home births, the importance of supportive partners, and the challenges of infertility and miscarriage. They touch on the societal pressures surrounding medical advice and the need for community support among women as well as the challenges of motherhood. Emphasizing the need for open communication in partnerships, the conversation also touches on various educational approaches for children and the acceptance of imperfection in parenting. Want help scaling your business to $1M in monthly revenue? Click here to connect with my consulting team. Chapters 00:00: Exploring the Conception Cabin and Spirit Babies 02:48: Natural Birth vs. Medical Interventions 05:58: The Role of Doulas and Midwives 08:47: Intuition in Pregnancy and Birth 12:06: Personal Birth Experiences and Surrender 14:55: The Importance of Supportive Partners 17:57: The Journey of Pregnancy and Miscarriage 20:50: The Epidemic of Infertility and Conscious Conception 24:04: The Power of Community and Sharing Experiences 26:58: Navigating Medical Advice and Intuition 29:52: Truth, Censorship, and Speaking Out 37:59: The Role of Curiosity in Understanding Truth 40:48: Navigating Relationships and Partnership Dynamics 46:37: The Importance of Communication in Relationships 49:53: The Beauty and Challenges of Motherhood 52:59: Creating Community and Support Systems 56:58: Education Choices and Parenting Approaches 01:06:00: Embracing Imperfection in Parenting MORE FROM BIGDEAL: 🎥 YouTube 📸 Instagram 📽️ TikTok MORE FROM CODIE SANCHEZ: 🎥 YouTube 📸 Instagram 📽️ TikTok OTHER THINGS WE DO: 🫂 Our community 📰 Free newsletter 🏦 Biz buying course 🏠 Resibrands 💰 CT Capital 🏙️ Main St Hold Co Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome back. I'm Cody Sanchez, and this is the Big Deal podcast for those who don't just want to be rich, but want to be free and do what it actually takes to get there.
Okay, so today we're diving into the rise of counterculture and how movements like this are becoming mainstream in any ways.
From homesteading to homeschooling to home revenues, more people are choosing to live life on their own terms, stepping away from the conventional paths.
Kimberly Vanderbeek joins us on this episode to talk about all of this.
So if you're curious about motherhood done unconventionally, modern dating and how to attract
that person to you that is supposed to be with you, and how to both homeschool kids if you want
to or homestead them, I think you'll like this episode. So I'm kind of in love with Kim.
I've gotten to be friends with her through a couple friends locally. And I'm so curious lately
about like, how do I be a feminine woman and also crush it in the workplace? Now, you might know
Kim as the wife of Dawson's Creek star James Vanderbeek. She has six kids. I don't know how she does that.
And then she also has really unique ideas into clean wellness into living on sort of a compound
with 16 cabins. In 2020, her family made the move from L.A. to a place about an hour outside of
Austin. Now, Kimberly is all about sort of community. And what does it mean in the society today where we
have totally gotten away from that? And how could, if you feel lonely today, how could you
bring it back? And I think that is exactly why I want to remind you guys that this podcast
is all about community. It's the idea that we bring the unvarnished truth about business
ownership by the many instead of the few together. So if you guys have ever thought about
how to become part of a business community, you should check out contrarian thinking community.
I do think that one of the chronic illnesses of our society today is we are lonely, we are isolated, and thus we feel weak, and we feel powerless.
And when we realize that all around us are other humans who want the exact same things we do, the world changes.
Or as Kimberly says, it shifts.
So today we're going to lean into a story that is maybe a little bit more normal here in Austin, but not around the world.
I want to jump right in with something that I was fascinated by, which was,
was the conception cabin on your land.
Can you talk about that?
What is it?
What does it do?
Okay.
There's this great book called Spirit Babies by Walter Mackie Chen.
And it talks about the different portals that are all over the world about where
spirit babies come through and go from the Spirit Baby realm into conception.
And I believe one of those portals is on our land.
So it's cabbiz.
16 and we've had two different friends conceive in this cabin.
That's wild.
Yeah.
And are there 16 other cabins on the lake?
There are 21.
Wow.
Some of the walls have come out and we've turned them into different things like offices or
movie theater area.
Love that.
And so the idea is essentially, well, I want to read Spirit Babies.
I've kind of gotten into what I'll now call woo-woo stuff lately.
Fabulous.
I know.
It's reality.
I'm literally going down such a rabbit hole.
And that's why I was attracted talking to you because it felt like all the things we were told for so long about, I'll just say the female body.
I mean, I won't even get into the broader medical establishment are sort of incomplete at best.
Yeah.
And, you know, when we're trying to figure out how to get pregnant, I look all around and all my women friends have struggled to make it happen.
They've gone through round after round of IVF.
Yeah.
And now there's sort of this like coming back to ourselves and our own knowing that I'm starting to see.
Yeah.
And so I sort of want to dive into this a little bit with you.
Yeah.
Because you have six kids, right?
And are all of those kids, you had them all naturally?
I had defined natural.
Yeah.
So my first was born in a hospital.
Yeah.
After an epidural.
Yeah.
And Potosin.
Uh-huh.
And my other five were born at home.
God, that's wild.
Yeah.
By yourself with a midwife? How does that work? Oh, yeah. Yeah. Both. Yeah. So I had midwives,
a doula and a couple. I had midwife and doctor sometimes, and sometimes my doctor missed.
Yeah. What's the difference between a doola and a midwife?
So there's a big difference, actually. A midwife helps the mother in the delivery process with the baby.
She'll observe. She'll see if, you know, something needs.
to happen medically, perhaps, and she's trained in that way. A doula is there to support the mother
and to make sure the mother has everything that she needs. Interesting. Yeah. And is there like
training for the two and how do you decide who's a good or a bad midwife or Dula? Okay. Well,
there, there's lots of training for a midwife and for a Dula and it looks very different. So
there is no governing body for a Dula actually. So there are, um,
lots of what feel a very official doula training programs, but there's not a governing body
over it. So to get a proper certificate, somebody came up with this, and there you go. Yeah.
And a midwife is different. I mean, they need to have medical background knowledge and expertise
and lots of training with births. And I think some doulas do that as well. I know a lot of
Dula's that could probably help birth, but they don't have that certification in place.
So.
Yeah.
And how do you know if you have the right midwife Ardua?
Well, for me, my process was for my first birth, I really wanted to have a home birth and I was talked out of it.
Yeah.
And so.
But that was when?
Like what year was that of that?
I mean, that was in 2010 she was born.
Which was kind of before this was.
as, I wouldn't even say it's mainstream yet.
Yes, that's correct.
But back then, if you were like, I'm going to homebirth, you know, with a doler and
midwife, and especially you were in L.A. at the time, weren't you?
Yes.
They probably told you you were crazy.
Everybody told me I was crazy.
And to some degree, I listened to them.
Yeah.
So I didn't want to, but I did.
And so my process was interviewing doctors.
And I found one that I felt when I'm interviewing a doctor, I want to, I want to be.
want somebody that is going to honor my intuitive knowing and give me space and has listened
to my birth requests. And we call them requests because a birth has its own life. You don't
really know what's going to happen. Right. So when you are in co-creation with another soul,
you're also tending to their energetic field. And maybe they want to be born via a cesarean. And that's
the right way for them or whatever it is. So I call it a birth request. Because
a mom will know what she wants. Here's my prayer. Here's my request. And then life takes this course.
But for a doctor, that's what I was looking at. Somebody that would honor me.
For my second pregnancy, Joshua, I found out he was breach at 37 weeks. And my mom delivered
my sister breach and I never looked at it as a negative thing. But-
Which means the baby is laying like this?
So there are three different breach positions.
And the one that he was in is a complete breach.
So he's like curled up like this and he's booty down.
Oh, yeah, that's not.
Yeah.
Okay.
So the head is up here.
Okay.
But I never looked at it as an emergency.
I think it's about 4% of babies are in breach position towards the last trimester.
Okay.
The end of the last trimester.
And so for me, I was told basically,
turn the baby or this is going to be a cesare.
and that didn't sit right with me.
Now, if it did sit right with me and I felt like this is the right move for us, I would have
done it.
But there was this deeper intuitive feeling to investigate.
And when I investigated further, and I think this is the first thing you do with a parent,
as a parent, you get your information and you weave in your intuition, right?
So there's no book on your intuitive knowing.
but I started to do a deep dive.
And what I discovered were there were some outdated studies on breach births
that took into account third world countries without a head-down counterpart.
So the studies were heavily flawed.
And at that time, they stopped training doctors how to do breach births.
Now, there are a simple maneuvers that can actually really help safely deliver a breach.
baby, but the doctors are no longer trained in those maneuvers. So now we do have indeed a dangerous
situation unless you have a doctor that's trained. So I actually magnetized. Dr. Stuart Fishbein,
who had delivered hundreds of breach births, got himself out of the medical system and was doing
them at home. Wow. He was bumping up against a lot. Why does he, why don't they train them on
that anymore? Is it because cesarean sections are really expensive and. Well, you could go down.
Follow the money, rabbit hole.
Of following the money for sure.
However, I guess when you're 37 weeks pregnant, you don't have the time for that rabbit hole.
It's just, I need to take care of myself and my baby.
And so this is what felt right for me.
And I had Dr. Fishpine and I had Beth Cannon, who is a midwife that works for him.
So I had that team and Medulla.
So we had a solid team.
there were it was super like a super deep privilege actually to have this team because most people actually
don't have access to a doctor like this at all and a midwife team so I feel so deeply grateful for that
and then with my next baby I said you know what this team was a reactive response for me and it was
a great privilege to have them but I actually need to choose my team now right
And so I was like, I need to make sure that this is a choice because I felt like I didn't have one last time.
And so I met people, even though I loved my birth team and I said, I love my birth team.
I still love my birth team.
And now I'm choosing them.
So I went with the same team the next time.
Interesting.
But for me, that choice really happened with watching people's responses with what I wanted to do and see how much it was honored.
Interesting.
Yeah.
Yeah, you know, it's interesting to me that today we, when a woman says, I feel an intuition about my body this way, when we say, no, I can just tell that something's off here or something's right, that people think that that sounds bizarre.
And they're like, no, no, no, go get 37 ultrasounds. Go get 452 tests instead. And, you know, don't, to your point, maybe honor that as much.
what does that mean to be like medically intuitive and to follow your own intuition?
Because, you know, my grandmother used to say, which I think is true, that a great way to fail in the medical, you know, if anything's so went wrong, your body is like doctors are trained to do one thing really well, which is like eventually kill you.
And I was like her little tongue and cheek joke about the fact that, you know, everything leads to more surgeries, more prescriptions, etc.
Yeah. So how do you actually find your intuition? Well, just like I wouldn't lump all doctors into the same category. I actually have doctors in my life that are incredibly passionate about what they do and they're willing to go on a limb for their passion. But if we take it back to the medical establishment, we can go down another money rabbit hole. So the pharmaceutical companies pay for those universities. So I know some nurses who,
they learned their food pyramid that was developed by Nestle, and that was funding their nurse program, right?
And even when it comes to food, we hear the good old, ask your doctor, ask your doctor if you should take this herb or this food.
But that is a medical, legal slogan, essentially at this point, which also I need to say, I'm not a doctor, guys.
So take my advice, listen to it, and go talk to your doctor because legally,
you have to say that. But are doctors trained in nutrition? Most of them are not. Last I checked
it was about 10% of medical schools. Even if, you know, ask your doctor about a vaccination.
I talk to a lot of doctors. What I heard from them was that it was about a half a day in medical
school. So if you take like a mom following her intuitive guidance and, you know, unraveling
and actually sitting there and going through the peer-reviewed studies and the research and all of that,
you may have somebody that's actually far more educated than a lot of the doctors.
But again, you'll have these amazing, passionate doctors that love what they do.
And those doctors, I have been so fortunate to know in my life.
And they're incredible.
So, you know, it really takes both because intuition breeds curiosity and passion.
And if you're following that thread, you are going to get.
really informed.
Kind of a bizarre question, but your other, so your first baby you had some sort of numbing agent.
Yes.
The next five you didn't, right?
Doesn't that hurt like hell?
You went back for five more time?
So the first one I pushed for almost two hours.
I was rocking and I got to the hospital and I wasn't even a centimeter dilated.
And I said that is because you guys made me sign paperwork.
when I got here and like my fight or flight I shut down and so eventually my doula had everybody
leave the room and with one hour I was to I was dilated to nine with fishing contractions.
Wow.
And so, you know, I was able to like pick really back up where I left off.
And so for me, some people find a deep comfort and security in being in the hospital.
I've been asked before like, are you an advocate of home births?
And I'm like, absolutely not.
Yeah.
Absolutely not. Where is the woman most comfortable? For me, it was not the hospital and it is shut down my labor process.
That's a great. Yeah. I mean, like everything in life, it's like, I'm not telling you how to live yours. Don't tell me how to live mine. I'm just telling you my experience.
Yes. And then now I'm having, you know, then I do get the epidural. I do get potosin. She's sort of crooked in there. And they're telling me to push and that I'm having contractions. And I couldn't feel them.
Wow.
So I actually was quite detached.
And then when they gave her to me, I just had to throw up right away.
I'm so sensitive to medication.
So she immediately had to go to my husband.
There wasn't that moment.
And that's okay.
You know, like I'm so grateful for that birth experience because I get to talk to women all over the world about hospital and home births and my experience in all of the above.
but I would say that I prefer to feel.
Yeah. It's, for me, it was like, with my births, I got to meet myself.
And with my daughter Olivia in the hospital, I got to meet the part of myself that is fully capable of surrendering to a divine unfolding.
There wasn't what I thought I was going to have.
and, you know, in that moment when she was born that I thought I was going to have,
it was like a very deep surrender.
And that's part of being a parent.
So they've all been in a different way meeting myself, but I am okay with the pain.
Yeah.
And boy, does that come.
Some people talk about these orgasmic births.
And I'm like, who are you?
I hope that whole act.
Steve Shuffle a little bit, too.
I feel like I kind of had one, though, actually.
Really?
So my third was 30 minutes of active labor.
And she came so quickly and everybody told me I was so quiet the whole time.
And then she was born.
It was so peaceful.
I'm just pouring warm water on her head.
She was born in the water.
It was so peaceful.
Interesting.
Maybe that my light is slightly orgasmic.
That's wild.
I mean, I hope I have that.
I hope them for all women.
So it didn't, it's not that's, are you scared like your third, fourth, and fifth
time before? Absolutely. There's always a point in every single pregnancy that I've ever had or my
stomach's out to here and I'm like, this baby has to come out of me at some point. Whether it's
cesarean or birth or something, there is a potentially painful process ahead. Yeah. And I definitely
every birth have had that moment of panic. Yeah. It seems totally natural. Yeah. Yeah. I have a really good
girlfriend who her first birth was a home birth. And she set a line that I'd be curious your take on.
She's like, I want to do more. She's four beautiful babies. And she's like, I wanted to do more at home.
But she's like, I didn't think my husband could handle it again because he was so freaked out for me.
You know, it was so scary for him and I was actually okay. But he was like, I don't think I can go through it again.
Like, how did James handle it?
Oh, thank God for James. I would have thrown my husband out of the room.
I think. No offense to the husband because everybody has a different way of watching their
other half like process pain. Right. But the first one at the hospital, I was in and out of the
shower and he was having to guess what I needed. I'm like hot, cold, hot, cold, like changes
the water. Do they? It's like, you need to be psychic and understand my needs. Yeah. But for the
Home births, it was really beautiful.
And for the first birth, oh, this is a little personal, but for the first birth, I'm like, you're not down there.
You're up here with me.
Yeah, you didn't want him seeing all that.
Yeah, I'm like, I don't need to change in your mind about things.
The second one, he was in their help and deliver.
Wow.
Yeah.
My doctor's like, hey, James, come here.
You felt comfortable with that.
And he was in.
I remember having a moment of thinking, like, we didn't discuss this.
But it was perfect.
It felt perfect.
And he's so deeply honoring of me and so loving and, like, worshiping of my body that I just feel so safe with him.
And I remember when I was birthing Amelia, my fifth, I wanted to have a birth where my team wasn't present.
That was my request.
Like, you guys, but I'm not a free birther.
I sort of like to know I have a team there if I need.
And so they're like listening and I call in my doula.
I'm like, I'm breathing right.
I'm pushing right.
And she's feeling a little crooked.
And like, can you just make sure I'm breathing properly?
I just wanted somebody to look and she had like, yep.
And then I eventually had my whole team come in and Amelia was all bruised on one side.
She was very crooked pushing up against a bone in there.
I felt that leading up to the pregnancy too.
I was doing this sidewalk walk off the ledge to sort of even out my body.
Yeah.
It was a pretty painful process of getting her moving through.
And there was a moment where I was in such deep pain and so surrendered really to God at this point.
Yeah.
And my husband looked at me and he said, so emotional for me.
He looked at me and he's like, I know this is so hard for you.
Oh my God, baby, you're so sweet.
He's like, I know this is so hard for you.
But this is the most beautiful thing I've ever seen in the whole world.
And he is like, you're just so beautiful.
And I was like, that gave me that little extra benefit of strength to help deliver the baby.
So I, you know, it's like the woman does everything, right?
but if we can have more men,
James just maybe should be talking about this to everybody,
like learning how to really truly support their partner in this process,
I know he was part of like my divine strength for that one.
Yeah.
Like absolutely.
For Jeremiah, my sixth baby,
I was in our bathtub and it was one of my more difficult births as well.
I'm thinking my six
When he's gonna fly
Right out of me
He was over a pound bigger than my next
Bigger's big of me
Oh yeah
And you're little
I'm fairly little
I got some birthing hits on me
But I yeah I am
And so
I had this crystal
A friend gave me
That she said she held in her labor
I picked that up
And I picked up another one
And I was praying
On all the sisterhood
That's ever birthed a child
in the entire world or that's ever held a woman in birth that has not birthed a child to
like be with me to birth this child.
And and like I held those and I was, I had all the sisterhood of the world come in.
And I had a midwife that knew stand over there.
And like I got to go into my full thing.
Nobody messed with my energy.
My friend Peggy was there.
She was like just sort of holding a rakey space.
And I, like, mustered up everything I had.
But it was like, and that's how it's like, you know, I met the surrendered part of myself with Olivia, with this birth, with this birth with Jeremiah.
I met that like female sisterhood warrior part of myself.
So each birth has been something different for me that I think for my soul process I've needed on my journey and we all have something else that we need.
Like I recently
We talked a little bit about being a medical intuitive
I recently worked on this woman
When I say work
It's really just listening to what the body has to say
That had had some deep trauma
With sexual abuse
I know
And I saw her scarred
And like, or all your babies delivered by a cesarean
She said yes
And I saw how
profoundly beautiful the gift her soul gave her children.
She was kind of like,
don't go into this energy.
You're coming out here.
And how like I had never, like, it was just this super.
And there are other people that will have abuse and still birth out so beautifully.
And it's a very deep healing process for everybody.
But in this specific scenario, I was like, what a sacred gift.
Yeah.
being born through cesarean births, you gave your children because that was her soul's way of
of holding her children as a mother for the first time.
I know.
So just for me with birth, it's just always a beautiful unfolding and it's one of the greatest
surrenders.
We can all have our plans in place.
But being a parent is like the great surrender and knowing that it's a co-creation.
Yeah. I mean, one of the reasons I really wanted to have you on here is that I have so many girlfriends right now that are struggling to get pregnant. And I think it's a nationwide, maybe a global epidemic. It is. Really? And what's wild is I have watched some of my friends go through three, five, eight rounds of IVF. I have watched them struggle with charts and graphs and 400 pills a day. And I'm not a doctor. I have no idea what is right to do there.
or what is not.
Yeah.
But then I have watched some of my friends, really oddly a lot of them here in Austin, who like,
you know, jabby, 40, pregnant twice, beautifully, easily.
Easily.
And, you know, Liz, who I think, you know, two or just had her little second.
And I'm like, wait a second.
There seems to be this other option, which is, you know, maybe this conscious contraception.
It's a little bit more woo-woo.
Like, how do you see the world now from difficulty of getting pregnant?
What do you think is happening and what are you seeing with all the women that you're talking to about getting pregnant?
Because you post group gatherings with women.
Yeah, I do.
Yeah.
And pregnancy is a big one for me.
Like, there are all sorts of divine blessings and openings and listening to the body that are present there.
So what I've personally seen is in listening to me,
a woman's body, there are many stories to be told. A lot of times abuse or a lot of times watching
a family member struggle or a lot of times just being out of touch with the body. And then there are a lot
of people that simply have this as part of their divine unfolding process, you know? So it's like,
you really never know. It's kind of like my birth with Olivia. Sometimes there is a divine
surrender. Maybe you need to make peace with medicine. Maybe you need to make peace with showing up and
going to appointments and just having another calling. I've never seen it be the same thing for
everybody. But what I wouldn't say if somebody is really struggling is the first thing I would
suggest is to sit with somebody and really learn if there's something that your body wants to
communicate with you because sometimes it can lift something like that and somebody gets pregnant
right away. Yeah. But it's not always that. Sometimes, like, there wants to be this earthly
surrender process. It's a good point. And, you know, what I found to be so helpful at how I think
about going through pregnancy, too, is just having other women around you that are open to talking about it.
This is never something I talked about. Not, not, I didn't want to talk about it, wasn't interested in it.
And I thought you really didn't talk about it.
It was like, you know, sex, religion, pregnancy, I guess.
Yeah.
And now there are these.
Yeah.
Which we should talk about.
I've had five miscarriages to late-term near-death experiences.
Oh, my God.
And I remember I first started talking about miscarriages and nobody was talking about them.
Yeah.
Like nobody was talking about them.
Yeah, it was a bit of a lonely place, but I didn't care.
Everybody has a different grieving process, and mine was just being up front.
Yeah, my mom actually was similar.
She had four miscarriages.
Yeah.
And then one baby all the way to, you know, fully, but that was my sister, Kristen, and she died.
She was just born with a tiny little heart, like not a big enough heart.
And so she only lived for a few months.
Yeah.
And that was in between me and my brother.
But, you know, I remember the statistics on it after.
afterwards. Like late-term miscarriages, you have a 90% divorce rate.
90%? And if you lose a child, it's closer to 95% as a parent. Whoa. And so watching my parents
come through that on the other side was, I didn't realize how rare that was. Wow. I had no
idea either. What I will share is that I had the one late-term miscarriage at 17 weeks with a boy.
And then I got pregnant right away.
I was not trying to get pregnant because that was not, like truly was in your death
experience.
And then the next one at 17 week, get this.
Okay, I'll tell you the whole story.
So that first one happened on November 17th, 17 weeks.
Boy.
Then I got pregnant and I was given the due date of November 17th.
Oh, that's crazy.
I can't give me the chills.
Right?
Yeah.
With a boy.
at 17 weeks, the same thing happened.
Wow.
Yes.
So then I came to Texas and I got this amazing doctor that was like, you need a stitch.
You need a cervical circlage to make sure that you're not opening up early.
And I got that.
What is that thing?
That's just how they like make your vagina smaller?
What they do is they go in and they stitch your cervix together.
So it doesn't open up.
Because that was happening?
So like the baby was like dropping up.
out? Whoa, that's wild. Yeah, perfectly healthy. I know. Yes. How did you even figure that out?
This doctor. Wow. And my doctor in L.A. too, was like, I think this may be the thing. He knew as well, but I was in Texas at this point.
So, yeah, it was pretty wild. But that's one of the benefits of being open and talking to what you were speaking to about pregnancy. And really just have.
having women get together.
Don't miss the Devil Wears Prada 2 in theaters.
Merrill Street, Anne Hathaway, Emily Blunt, and Stanley Tucci are back.
In light of the recent scandal, I'm here to restore your credibility.
I did not hire you, and all I need to do is buy my time until you fail.
On May 1st, icons.
I'm going to make something of this job.
Rain.
Pick the bridges I burn.
Night my way.
Forever.
I just love my job.
Get tickets now.
The Devil Wears Prada 2 in theaters May 1st.
Directed by David Frankel.
Yeah.
Well, I think when I was younger, I used to think women got together and you bemoan men, right?
You know, like you get together and you're like, no good guys, you know.
Oh, it's so not true.
Right.
Yeah, I was talking to, I was giving a little bit of a hard time to the ladies who do my hair and makeup for this because they're beautiful.
They're like stunning.
Kyle knows, no, just kidding.
He has a girlfriend.
He's not allowed to respond.
But they're like these beautiful young women.
Yeah.
And I was asking them, I'm like, what's going on?
Are we dating?
What's happening?
And they're like, no, there's no good men here.
I'm like, well, if you say that, what do you think you're putting out there?
What are you going to get?
I love when you say things like that.
Because that is such a deep truth.
I think it's true.
It is a deep truth.
It's we frequency match.
Yeah.
That's what we do.
Right?
So what's the part of you that stop trusting men?
Yeah.
And honestly, I've moved through that big time in big ways.
How do you fix that?
really helped blossom me open.
I think with anything, so when we're listening to the body and what the body has to say,
it's the same thing.
And listen, I'm far from a perfect person here.
I'm definitely in deep human processes.
So let me just start by saying that.
But for me, the way that I fixed my relationship with men was being curious about where it was coming from.
What have I heard growing up?
What are the conversations?
What have my experiences been?
and do I need to perpetuate this pattern or can I let it go?
I think when I was driving here today,
you're such a sacred spot to come home to, I must say.
I had this whole revelation actually on the way here that I'm dedicating myself to God.
And I did it on my drive here.
Yeah.
I was like, why not?
Like, why not? And so in doing that, you have God as your partner to bounce everything on.
Here's how I'm really feeling and I'm going to be at least super honest with you.
Yep.
You know? Just go be really honest with God and get really, really curious about yourself and where things come from and ask for help.
That's so true. I mean, you know, what's fascinating is the two girls downstairs.
I said, well, have you been, like, I went to Red Rock's church the other day in Austin, which is like, it's kind of lovely.
It's in this like old school movie theater.
And so it's a very new agey church, right?
So it's like a bunch of young people that got together, they got cheap rent.
You know, the place is slammed.
It's totally full.
But I went in because I'm doing a church tour to try to find a church that I like.
So I went with a friend of mine.
We went to a few of them.
And we walk in and I looked around and I was like.
there's so many beautiful people here.
There's so many beautiful young men and women here.
So I said that to him.
I'm like, have you been to church?
Like, we go every Sunday.
I'm like, wow.
So you're like, you know, spiritual young women.
They both say they kind of newly came back to it.
And I go, but do you talk to anybody when you're there?
Like, no, we kind of run in.
We scamper out, you know.
So you're like, well, that's probably not going to help it that much.
Yeah.
But I do feel that there's this group of humans who are all feeling comfortable enough to say,
I believe in God.
Yes.
Like that, I can't imagine very many people in L.A.
When you guys were in the midst of being famous and having all of those.
Oh, girl, I've always just been so upfront.
Did you?
Yes.
What would people say to you?
Like, was that normal that other people?
Sure.
I believe in God.
People in my life think I'm not.
I mean, I'm like speaking light language, which in church it's talking in tongues,
connecting to God, looking at like the quantum field inside somebody's body unabashedly.
at least in my private life.
And now I'm telling people a little bit.
I'm like, I'm ready to let the cat out of the bag more.
I'm so done of hiding.
So done with hiding.
It's like I'm just so done with hiding.
So done with hiding.
We are divine creatures.
Sing about it.
Like, just let it be.
Okay, you don't believe in God.
Where did we come from?
And what energy created the Big Bang?
Yeah, exactly.
There was an energy to create it.
What is that energy?
Where is all this coming from?
Trust your divine intelligence.
And if you don't want to, that's fine.
But like I've also gone so deep.
I just, I came back from Egypt this summer.
It was a profound trip for me.
Tapping into our one collective consciousness.
And you hear that so much about our one collective consciousness.
But what happens to like actually drop into it and feel that you or me and
am you. The whole world becomes your oyster. The whole world is conspiring in your divine,
authentic truth. That's what happens. So like, why not just be honest about it? And if somebody
wants to think I'm nuts, that's fine. Yeah. Well, I think the part that's interesting is we all,
like, kind of know, you know, I heard this thing the other day that really resonated with me. And it was
like truth is like a tuning fork.
Yeah.
Feel it when you hear it.
Yeah.
And you feel it.
And that's why you get the little chills and maybe at different points in your life,
you're not open enough to hear it.
But I increasingly am feeling the exact same way.
And I think it's important that we interweave the really tactical and quantitative like
business with the things that feel a little bit more qualitative, harder to touch.
And I think, I mean, what's interesting about you is you've spoken truth to power
multiple times when it was not very convenient. And, you know, like I remember in 2020 when you had a
group of friends here who were, you know, people love to think that fame is great in many ways,
but, you know, you had this group of friends who you weren't really looking for, you weren't trying
to change anybody's mind. You guys are kind of private about it as far as I saw, but you had
beliefs about vaccines and basically questions, you know, some questions about them. And I remember
reading this article that was like...
Rolling Stone?
Yeah, was it Rolling Stone?
Yeah, they wrote a beautiful article about me.
Okay, so explain what happened, because I remember it profoundly in thinking, what a bizarre
thing for Rolling Stone to focus on?
James Vanderbeek's wife speaking conspiracy theories.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, let me start by saying this.
2020 was a time of activating our shadow self.
I had been divinely instructed to not speak the way that I was speaking.
And what really activated me, and I think one of the things that they wrote about,
if I was not tapping in deeper, I would have probably been like, she's nuts, you know.
But I wrote about somebody that was getting shushed.
Yeah.
And now we actually have the information that people were actually getting censored and the real, real stories were actually being censored and removed from social media.
Now, I felt like I was screaming to the wind because I was watching somebody post a story and then watching it get deleted and then watching them have to create new accounts.
Yeah.
And these are all things that are okay to say now.
Yeah.
Okay.
We're being told they're rare.
Yeah.
Great.
Maybe they are.
aren't. I think the thing is we need to all be a little curious. And so yeah, I, it was just,
I'm just like, whatever, whatever woman. Like, it was a woman that wrote the article. I started
following her for a little bit. And I'm like, she's trying her best. Just send them love. Just
let her do her best. I think if we look deep enough, we're all going to find skeletons in the
closet. You're going to find tons about me. Of course. The things that I'm, the things that we would say
you'd be like, damn, girl, like, you should have woke up a little during that period, okay?
But fine.
So we got into a culture of trying really hard to discredit the person when the information was
ringing a truth because that tuning fork within was getting really powerful.
So let's make sure we're discrediting the vessel of the truth.
And so that, I believe, was a real strong tactic to bring people down.
So that article was done to discredit the vehicle, which I was not in my shining glory with my delivery systems.
I wasn't.
And it was very reactive.
So my frequency is sharing fear.
Like that's really not actually what I want to do.
But there was a lot of truth coming from here.
There was a lot of truth coming from here.
and I could improve upon the way that I was sharing it.
But I had, I'll tell you, hundreds of people thank me for that article.
They're like, I read that and I was like, thank you, thank you, people very unexpectedly.
And almost nobody say anything negative to me.
Interesting.
People that you would be very surprised.
I was like, all right.
Well, now they're all moving to Texas.
Well, listen, like a lot of the things that were deemed consent,
conspiracy theories have actually panned out his truths.
Well, I mean, look at Zuckerberg has come out now and said, actually, I wish we hadn't censored so many people around the vaccine.
And also the government asked us to.
And also the truth is conspiracy theory itself was something utilized by the CIA to people in their place.
And whoever is utilizing these terms or this term, it's being utilized as a way to demean somebody's curiosity about where the truth is coming from.
But in 2020, you know, I got to play a little devil's advocate here.
Some of the things people were saying, I think, were quite far-fetched from the truth.
And so, you know, conspiracy theory can be a little spark that sets off a bonfire in ways that are really not.
necessarily helpful to further our culture along. But I think if we just turn it into let's be
curious, you know, I've grown up a lot since 2020. I think all of us have. It's like, let's just
spin things into curiosity and what feels like truth and what feels like a distraction. Yeah. And I think
it should always be okay to question things. Doesn't mean you have to believe anything.
Society does not move forward without curiosity and questions. It doesn't. It doesn't.
And so we will always be if we're like science, science, science, science.
Science is a beautiful thing.
And we're limited by however far science has gone up until that point.
So what's going to propel us further?
The curiosity.
Like, let's look into it.
Let's study it.
And I always like when it's, you know, when we talk about truth again as a tuning fork,
if you don't feel like your tuning fork is clean enough to feel truth,
what you can get curious is.
about is where life feels sticky. So like where's your, let's talk about sex, sexual expression
coming from, is it coming from a place that feels sticky or do you feel in your divine,
erotic truth? Like how, where, where's that energetic coming from? Is it sticky? Is it
coming from shame? Like, you know, we, this is where our babies come from, right? So let's get really
curious with where sticky energy is because we all have it.
And what's the sticky energy holding me down from seeing what's going on?
And a lot of times sticky energy is just distraction from trauma.
Yeah.
And so when we get to a place where we can start really looking at that and then unwinding
our trauma and letting us ourselves actually feel comfortable in feeling the things that we need
to unwind, then we can have this really deep collective healing, which I believe we're having.
Yeah, it does definitely feel like there's change in the air.
Yeah.
So, I mean, let's think about that.
So for young women, I think young women today desperately do want partnership and somebody to be
with.
But they have a lot of negative commentary coming around.
Men aren't great.
You know, there's no good men, all these things.
If you were to, you know, change somebody's mind or what did you do when you started to change
your mind?
How did you, you started questioning where those, those stories came from.
What else have you seen women do to reopen themselves to partnership?
Well, let's take this like moment to just do a visual, right?
So if you close your eyes and you let the animal instincts come in, like relationships,
the differences, you're sexually intimate versus, you know, a roommate.
So, well, not all relationships, but when you're making babies and you're choosing a life partner.
So you look and you see all these people and their animal behaviors wanting to pounce on you, which is great.
Like you're wanting to pounce back.
You're an animal where, you know, creatures with these desires.
But then if you just sort of calm that system just a little bit, you will seed the needle in the haystack.
clearly looking at you.
And it's not hard to find when you're looking for it.
And when you know and you believe it's there and you walk directly to each other and you
connect.
But it's there's always going to be the needle in a haystack and your frequency will
draw you right to each other.
You don't have to play the game.
Interesting.
You don't have to play the game.
The swipe thing and the.
Yeah.
Well, if you want to, maybe that's how you're going to find the eyes.
I don't know if you can see the visual the same way I did, but it's like there's just,
everybody feels like a shark when they're not your one.
Yeah.
You know?
But your person will be there.
You just have to meet them.
You have to be willing to see them.
Yeah.
And you have to be willing to look through and know they're there.
Interesting.
How did you, because you and James have been married for 14 years, right?
How does you two meet?
We met in Yuffa.
I don't know how to know what that is.
Really?
Yeah.
Are you Jewish?
No, we were both on a spiritual trip.
We both studied Kabbalah.
Our teachers were really close.
And James tells this story way better than me.
But I was asking, I came up to his teacher to ask him a question while James was saying he's ready to meet his woman, meet his wife.
He had gone through a divorce and was still going through a divorce, actually.
but he was ready for like that serious relationship and I interrupted that conversation.
Like I'm literally here.
And so it took him like, I remember he was holding me in the water in the Mediterranean Sea.
Like what are you looking for in a relationship?
And I'm looking at him.
I'm thinking, God, this guy's amazing.
But like I said, I'm not looking for a relationship.
I actually wasn't looking.
And there he wasn't.
It took him not very long.
to figure that out.
To work me down.
And I think the magic of, you know, when you can see somebody that, like, he was looking
right at me, there's like an openness, but there wasn't, and I find this with my friends
a lot when they meet a super special somebody, they're not like desperately yearning
for.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, it's this sort of blossoming that happens inside where you feel good about who
you are.
Yeah.
and you're comfortable in it.
And of course, there's always exceptions.
You know, people meet each other and grow together all the time.
But I think it's the first thing that you have to recognize is that, yeah, there are special men out there.
You may have met a lot that aren't the ones for you, but maybe they're super special to somebody else.
Maybe it's when two people have the right.
chemistry, they make each other feel really special.
Yeah.
It's a great point.
I mean, I'm sure I always joke with my husband.
You know, he always says that he was a saint before me.
There were no one before me, but I'm like, you were a Navy SEAL in San Diego.
Like, come on, let's be honest about what's happening there.
Many fruits of the loins.
But I think the beautiful part about it is, you know, if you were to talk to a lot of the women before me with him,
I'm sure they aren't his biggest fan.
Yeah.
And, you know, he's always been very kind and honest to a fault, sometimes badly.
But I'm sure it's the same with James.
It's like, of course they're, and with me.
I'm sure if you talk to some of my exes, they'd be like, that broad was crazy.
Same.
You know?
Oh, and I definitely was.
Yeah.
But it's like, what do you bring out in each other?
And even, like, weaving in different ways, you had said so many people get a divorce when they go through the miscarriage.
Yeah.
When James and I went through those back to back, and then his mom passed.
way. We have had years of grieving and wanting to kill each other. Like, it's like this deep love
snuggle and then like, yeah, because we need a safe place to take out our feelings. And unfortunately,
a lot of times we do that with our partner. That's true. Yeah. And so, you know, we have been through
so much since we moved to Texas that had made us grow in these incredible ways. But also it's like
relationships you really have to show up. You do have to show up. You really have to show up. Yeah. Chris is
incredible at making me show up because I'm totally avoidant often. Yeah. And I can really get into
work and focus on everything else. And he is like, we are here. We will have the hard conversations.
And that's the most important thing that we can ever do. Yeah. And so everything else kind of doesn't
matter if the two of us aren't working. And it's a real testament to him. I think the relationship that we have
today in a lot of ways.
Yeah.
You know, but I think in the beginning, you know, I was trying to think, you know, with young
people today, I'm like, God, I don't think that there's a better gift than finding a person
that you can do life with and realizing it's going to be super hard.
There's no, like, rainbows and sun shines.
You know that more than anything.
You have six kids.
I don't even have kids and it's hard.
Yeah.
But, like, what a gift.
Yeah.
And I want that for people.
Was it uncomfortable for you to show up when he, like, pull up?
you and it made you show up. Oh yeah, of course. I'm like, we'll just deal with that later.
Shove that down deep inside. Yeah, that's not
how my family deals. It means back to a lot of our, you know, how we're socialized.
Yeah. You know, so for my family, it was like feelings. You know, we kind of,
we don't talk about them aggressively. We're kind and calm. Even if we don't feel kind and calm.
We don't say the quiet part out loud. And he's not like that.
Same with James. It was the most uncommon.
Expansion. Interesting. Yeah. I'm still working on it. Yeah. So is he the more like we're going to talk about this? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Okay. When I sell my business, I want the best tax and investment advice. I want to help my kids. And I want to give back to the community. Ooh. Then it's the vacation of a lifetime. I wonder if my out of office has a forever setting.
An IG private wealth advisor creates the clarity you need with plans that harmonize your business.
your family, and your dreams.
Get financial advice that puts you at the center.
Find your advisor at IGPrivatewealth.com.
When a country's productivity cycle is broken,
people feel it in their paychecks,
their communities, their futures.
What does this mean for individuals,
communities, and businesses across the country?
Join business leaders, policymakers, and influencers
for CGs' national series
on the Canadian Standard of Living,
productivity, and innovation.
Learn what's driving,
Canada's productivity decline and discover actionable solutions to reverse it.
Yeah.
Thank God.
Thank God.
Because now I don't implode.
Yeah, yeah, 100%.
You know.
Interesting.
Yeah.
And I share all of this because there's this whole idea of, you know, there's no good guys.
But it's like, what's the communication and how is everybody communicating?
And are you showing up to work through things together?
It's not always going to be your person to work through things.
Or I found two people that have incredible relationships.
And then they just find, oh, this is done now.
We've actually feel pretty complete.
This was super magical and a little painful.
But like, it's time to move on.
And I've seen people do that in such beautiful ways.
Yeah.
Yes, 100%.
I mean, I was not quite like that with my ex when I got divorced.
Yeah.
I mean, I tried to be, but just.
the two of us were young and not very evolved in that way.
Yeah.
But now I think, you know, there's just so many ways to not villainize the other person,
which is kind of what you're saying.
It's like, hey, maybe this other person isn't a terrible narcissistic, you know, bad human.
Yeah.
They're just not right for you and you're not right for them.
And I think if we could have more of that in the world and less of the casual, loose sex,
who cares about your other person,
You know, men are bad, women are good.
The world would be a little bit better.
And like part of this podcast is pushing back on this, this philosophy.
And I think it's really important also to show the beauty of motherhood, which like, we don't really get to talk about that much.
Like, unless you're listening to a motherhood podcast and who's listening to a motherhood podcast?
They're not.
Mothers.
Yeah.
Like, that's it.
Yeah, that's it.
And here's the thing with the beauty of motherhood.
So I feel like I'm on the phone call that a lot of people make when they get pregnant.
or, you know, they're feeling isolated in their motherhood.
That's what I've heard about you.
I do not think society supports motherhood.
I actually think it is setting mothers up for failure.
And it's really devastating.
How?
Everybody calls me and tells me how lonely they are.
And like, they can't take a shower.
You know, and some people can take a deep pleasure in that, but everybody needs time for themselves too.
What happened to being in the same house together?
What happened to having families in the same house together or living like a village?
We all have, you know, at our best, our own pool and our own sauna and our own kitchen and our own big bedroom or, you know.
And sometimes I see these families not being able to.
to afford all those things.
And they are living together.
And they feel supported.
And they take care of each other's children.
And I'm like, who is the joke on?
Yeah.
You know, why are we doing this so separately?
You know, I was in the middle of Beverly Hills living the life.
Right?
Yep.
And it's like, I want to wake up and do breakfast with a sister.
and their kids.
And, you know, so I came here and community was so important to me.
And we moved on to a spot where I could have friends move on.
I have my sister and her son at the house right now.
Do you know how psyched my son Jeremiah is to wake up and see his three-year-old cousin every morning?
Yeah.
We have one, two more mornings of that.
But why not more?
Because we all have to work to pay our property taxes.
so we can get medical insurance and so that we can pay for more roads and pay for more separation
and pay for more trips.
But what happened to like just being together?
I'm so sick of this culture, honestly.
Like I'm so sick of it.
And I'm like, okay, but I need to show up for the game.
You know, I need to show up for the game.
So I'm the person that could absolutely live in a year in the middle of a forest.
I get that loud from you.
I'm so serious.
I will build my Hobbit House into the ground.
No shoes.
No shoes.
Live next to me.
We will do all the homemade things together.
I like, you know, I'm super down to be the boss bitch too.
I love working and I love that kind of thing.
But like, not if it's taking away from my time with my kids.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, there's a giant movement right now of coming back to
sort of traditional values.
I think women everywhere are like on Instagram, and we're seeing the sourdoughs with the
pansies on top of them.
And we're seeing the little apothecaries in the kitchen.
And we're kind of like coming back full circle to this.
But they're exhausted.
That is the problem.
They're exhausted.
Like I don't have time to make a pumpkin sourdough cake.
Here's the thing.
Like, not all of them are exhausted.
I'm through hard.
Some people have figured it out.
Yeah.
I love cooking.
I would love to cook.
But do you know what else has to happen to?
cleaning all the shit that we're buying with all the money that we're making and having too much abundance.
That's a freaking job.
So how do we, so how do people start bringing this in their lives?
Like I've watched, for instance, I don't know you as well, but I've watched like Gabby, for instance,
another girlfriend of ours does an incredible job of like Shabbat every Friday, everybody's invited over.
Yeah.
She does an incredible job of saying like, no, no, just come stay with us and like bring some food and like, you know,
whatever and we just we hang out there for like an entire weekend and I think especially because
the generation right below us they are like they don't want to call they want to text one another
they've kind of gotten they've gotten away from being close because technology is inserted itself
and I think it's like if young people if you could like be the person who's the center doesn't
even mean you have to have the house but just invite other people over bring them into the mix more
frequently and try to offload some of the work.
Yes.
Because otherwise it is exhausting because you're lonely and you're doing everything.
Yeah, this is what everybody calls and tells me.
I'm telling like, and and God bless the Gabby's because I do the same thing.
Yeah.
Come over.
Come spend the weekend.
Come spend the week.
Just come over.
My favorite thing is when all our cabin rooms are taken.
Now, not everybody can do that.
Yeah.
You know, I see Elon's book.
here or this book about Elon and and I'll say one fun fact about Elon.
My friend Bree, her daughter sleeps in the same room with her son and Elon takes over
their room when he's in Silicon Valley.
Yeah, he's very commutable.
He, he, last I talked to him, he was sleeping at a friend's house.
It's like we can have all the things that doesn't mean we need to have them all by ourselves.
That's such a good point.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, I mean, Kim and I, a good friend,
Kim, we do sleepovers whenever our husband are out of town.
And I'm like a 38-year-old woman doing a sleepover.
But why not?
But it's actually one of our favorite moments.
Yes.
When my-
When my husband leaves, I invite friends to come over.
And it's like, it's like when the cats away, the mice will play.
They're just like flowers and wine and like, yeah.
Or yeah, or I have all my kids in my room with me.
And do we do that?
And I think this like merging to more of a village life is a really beautiful ideal.
But it's not everybody is supported in being able to just do this, right?
So if you see somebody in your life that's not supported in being able to do this, invite them in.
Yeah, bring them over.
Bring them on over.
And if they want, you know, it's like I'm not here to change other people or decide how they live.
but I'll live the way that I want to live the best that I can.
And if that inspires somebody, then it does.
If it doesn't, then it doesn't.
Like, I'm just, that's where I'm at this point in life.
Yeah, it's a better way to be.
I want to end talking a little bit about school.
Okay.
So you homeschool your kids, right?
Not anymore.
Mixure.
A hundred percent of not.
What's going on?
Yeah, yeah.
So in L.A., I started a school at my house.
And then when I got pregnant with my fifth child, I was like, this is not happening in here anymore.
And it was eight kids.
People took their first day of school photos at my door.
And I loved it.
And the kids were learning Korean and Spanish and singing.
And it was a lot of fun.
My kids don't have all good memories of it because they didn't want structure in their own house.
So there's things with that as well.
and then they went to another school that was similar at somebody else's house after that.
It was a beautiful experience for them.
And we've also done homeschooling.
And I say that lightly.
There's a whole sort of movement to unschool as well.
Right.
Which is like, let's create that culture where we live together and kids sort of let their curiosities guide the way.
I think it works for some, but not all.
Then during COVID, I had my kids in some sort of schooling program that wasn't working,
and then I had them home.
And what I found was, and here's how there's like a little bit of a surrender to live with the world,
not just new earth or against the ways we all have to weave together, right?
And some of my kids were wanting us.
a school experience.
Yeah.
And so, you know, it's like part of the parenting thing is I know what I want for you.
I'm going to give that to you.
And when you get curious about something else, it's not dangerous, I'm going to honor that.
So my oldest started public school this year.
And for me, that is huge.
I did public school.
I hated it.
I felt like I was forced to learn for eight hours a day, things I was very uninterested in.
And the whole reason somebody gets passionate about alternative educations for their children is probably because they didn't have an experience that felt nurturing to them.
Yeah, true.
Right?
So I provide everything I can so that my kids can have a different experience.
And then I got a text, one of the best texts ever from my daughter.
is she has a phone, which I think delay that phone as long as we can.
But I get a text from her because I'm going to go pick her up.
And she was like, Mom, I just want to say thank you.
I'm having the time of my life at public school.
And I really appreciate you having the conversations with me and honoring my exploration of what I want to do.
It was the most mature test.
text ever. And I was like, oh, that's my child that I had in the hospital that taught me to
surrender a little bit to whatever the system that wanted to work through was. And guess what?
It's working out for her. That's great. I think there's so many people that are like,
they think of me and they think crunchy, girdle alternative. And that's all true. But the one
thing that is the most important to me is to also like meet my children where they're at and honor
them. And yeah, I'm having to play some catch up for some of the kids that are seeing how
awesome a time Olivia is having in school and now they're wanting the same thing. Maybe she's loving
it so much because she didn't have it. So, you know, it's like it's just a different experience
for her football games, studying. She loves it. I'm like, oh, regurgitating information.
for a test, are you conceptually understanding it?
No?
You're still having fun?
Okay.
Like, let's still make sure we're conceptually understanding things as well.
She's almost 14.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's a tough age in general too.
Yeah.
I think for me, the biggest thing in supporting my kids is they're wanting to branch out
and experience, you know, the system.
Yeah.
Is that I just keep them curious.
thinkers. Yep. And critical thinkers. So you heard something. How does it sit with you? Is the
truth tuning for going off? Does it feel sticky? Like, what's the energetics behind it? I mean,
we've been learning false history for so long, right? So, you know, question. Get curious.
Interesting. Is there a process that you guys have? Like, for instance, I sit, my husband and I
each night we do like two things. We love to have a glass of wine together or some sort of drink,
but we're never allowed to have the same cheers. So each night, it's like, let's cheers to something
and you don't have to be ridiculous over the top about it, but like let's have a little intentional
moment of something that could be very habitual and sort of habit forming that you don't think
about much. And then he also does a really great thing each day where instead of just like,
how's your day, honey, which always sort of annoyed me. Yeah. But instead, we really, usually at the end of
they talk about one thing we learned. Tell me like, what did you learn today? What's interesting?
What are you bringing back? Because I didn't get to see you all day. So tell me, is that? Is there
something you do like that with your kids or with your family? I feel like those conversations are
just birthed organically because there are some days where with my six kids I'm like, I just want to be
able to like, every day. Answer your one question over there or the one of you that wants like a
snuggle in private time. And the world is not supporting that moment right now. So when I can
get them, I'm really savoring them.
Yeah.
But I think the biggest thing for me is to be curious.
You know, it sounds like your husband and you and your husband have curiosity about
each other.
And so for me, it's like, where are we at with boys or girls or like, are we crushing?
What's the conversation?
What's like, what's feeling hard for you?
What's, you know, like just having an open conversation.
conversation with them and not judging responses is going to be so big for keeping that open
communication.
But you can like intuit who's needing more from you and create a space for it.
So I like it's just not a just a husband.
It doesn't get to be a one size.
Is it?
Yeah.
It's not.
It's like, oh, that one needs extra.
Something's going on.
Come here.
You know, it's like having the octopus tentacles out.
and like feeling you come here.
And we have like a Sunday thing that we just enacted where I realize they're all getting
older and they want to know what's going on in the week and they were not receiving that
sort of structure from me.
I need some of you.
I need some of the structure queen to be moving through me.
So like, okay.
So Sunday dinners, our family dinners, everybody's home.
We're going to go over the schedule for the week.
Does anybody have, and we do these little family things, for example, like around the table, what's important for you this ball?
Like, is there something that you really want to see, really want to happen?
My son is always like, he wants the fall decor.
He wants the false smells.
He wants the, he'll even describe the experience he wants with the way the light fills the room onto the table.
Wow.
He gets very detailed with the smells and the thing.
Like the future actor creative there.
Oh, all of them.
All of them?
All of them want in on the industry, by the way, as of now.
We'll let that, yeah, see what happened.
And then, and then Olivia will be like, oh, I want to go to the football games and, you know.
But it's like, what's important to you?
And let's see how we can honor this experience and, you know, so.
I love that.
I can't even, do you want to have more kids?
Are we done that six?
James had surgery.
Do you like, after, yeah, that seems like sufficient.
You've done your job.
You've helped Elon out.
repopulated there.
You know, I know that's an end to him.
We've gotten past that.
I guess where I kind of want to close it out is, you know, if there is somebody listening
about having a hard time maybe getting pregnant, maybe having a hard time tapping into a lot
of the feminine abundance you've had in that way, what would you tell them?
Where would you steer them?
What books should they be reading?
Who should they be listening to?
I think the first thing they need to know.
is my life looks great.
And I've had a very gift of blessed life.
I fuck up all the time.
I have had really hard days.
I have snapped.
I have felt like shit, you know?
And I feel so incredible and amazing and beautiful.
And so the first thing I just want to do is acknowledge a woman where she's at and know that she's not alone.
I think that is the first thing.
because if we all understand that we all have struggles,
because we're not living as a village anymore,
we're not intimate with each other's struggles.
That's one of the things that we're missing.
You're having a bad fucking day.
Let's get into it.
Like, I can see it because I see you every day.
We can't do that.
We're hiding behind these lives on social media.
And the reality is if my kids are having a bad day
or I'm struggling,
it may not be appropriate for my whole family
for me to share that on social,
media either. So no fault to anybody. It's like, okay, we've had a hard year. There's been a really
difficult struggle we've been moving through. And it's not at my capacity to talk about it right now.
You know? So the first thing is you're not alone. The second thing is in a book. The second
thing is be with yourself. Be with yourself. Have you allowed yourself time in bed to sit with how
fucking depressed do you feel? Have you said, okay, light body, I want you to come through me right now
and I want you to hold all the pain so that the pain doesn't feel like it has to drive anymore.
I want you to sit on the bench with me and let me move through the tears and breathe and I need you to
guide me. Guide me. Bring the right books. Bring the right people. Bring the process.
of moving through the emotional blockages.
Bring the light activation in my body.
And from there, I think Spear Babies by Walter Macky Chen is an amazing book.
I just love it.
And it's not everybody's flavor.
So if it's not your flavor, invite your flavor in.
You know, that's my flavor.
I love that shit.
I love it.
And, yeah, but that's the one thing is, like, are you spending time with yourself?
Are you giving your emotions the pain that you've experienced in life?
Breathing room with a light driver.
So where it's like, okay, this doesn't control me, but I let it, like, I know how to hold it.
And just let that happen.
And also make a phone call.
If you haven't made a phone call, find the three people that you're going to feel really, really safe, sharing everything with the hard stuff and get on.
on a text thread. I need a Zoom call. I need tea. I need a wound massage. I need to cry. What do you
need? But first, you have to know what you need. You have to be with yourself. This episode is
brought to you by Tell Us Online Security. Oh, tax season is the worst. You mean hack season?
Sorry, what? Yeah, cybercriminals love tax forms, but I've got Tellus Online Security. It helps protect
against identity theft and financial fraud
so I can stress less during tax season
or any season.
Plans start at just $12 a month.
Learn more at talus.com slash online security.
No one can prevent all cybercrime
or identity theft. Conditions apply.
Visit BetMGM casino
and check out the newest exclusive.
The price is right fortune pick.
BetMDM and GameSense
remind you to play responsibly.
19 plus to wager.
Ontario only.
Please play responsibly.
If you have questions or concerns
about your gambling or someone close to you,
Peace contact connects Ontario at 1-866-531-2,600 to speak to an advisor, free of charge.
BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with Eye Gaming, Ontario.
Yeah, that's such a good point.
Because half the time in business, too, that's why it doesn't work.
It's because you don't actually know what you want.
Yeah, if your first thing is a book, you are already in somebody else's complete energetic field of what they think you need.
Oh, it's very true.
It's just not.
You.
Yeah.
You know?
You got to ask yourself the tough questions before you from.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's a really good reminder.
I always go back to the Oracle of Delphi, too.
Know thyself.
And I think that is the most beautiful thing you could give any human is try to figure out who you are.
Try to figure out who you are.
This was so good.
I'm sorry.
I'll be seeing it.
Now, where do you like everybody to go find you?
I know.
Oh, boy.
Instagram.
Your podcast.
Instagram is great.
right now, my Instagram handle is Vander Kimberley. I've actually not been doing my podcast recently. I found
it was so incredible. It's been so amazing. And I am actually creating a newborn course because I have,
we need that. Yes. I have so much. You create a pregnancy course too? Like how to get pregnant? I definitely
should. I started a new company that's going to hold all of this. I need a team like you have down there. I got to let that out. I know. We should
started with this.
Well, you know, but I think they are gone when you have it.
Yes, I'll come back on when I have it because I do believe that it is those newborn days
that set the seed for how you show up as a mom for yourself, for your baby, how you're putting
boundaries and expectations on the people in your life and getting very clear on your needs
and what's needed and how to start listening to that truth-tuning fork with you.
your own body, how to gather information, and then let your intuition come through, fold that
in. These are all things I'm including in the newborn course, as well as little things that
if I would have known on the first or second baby and didn't learn it on my fifth or sixth
baby, it would have changed my life. Like I had, there was one tip that I'm sharing, I'm going to
share, that this woman wrote me, I have a daycare and you changed my life with this. And
that one tip is this.
There are many cultures that don't burp a newborn.
And there are some pressure points where if you just like touch little spots,
it helps the newborn just naturally burp up gas.
So like just reimagining everything we've ever learned of like,
that's okay.
Sometimes I feel like I need that right here or my kids need that.
but when I shared this other way of just like rubbing the back gently like this or holding your hand,
you can like feel the energy of the burp moving up and through.
It's so interesting.
This woman was like all my babies with acid reflex stopped projectile vomiting across the room all the time.
The amount of moms that wrote me on that little thing, I'm like, that took me five kids.
Five kids.
What's even like the face massage on?
babies. I've been reading about that. I don't know why I'm reading about that. First of all,
it looks amazing. Every time I see that baby getting rubbed on next. Yes. But there are so
many things. It's overwhelming. I mean, I'll be hollering at you once I get lucky, hopefully,
enough to have that happen. But you're right. It's overwhelming. It's overwhelming. So again,
how do we bring it back to self? If that baby picked you. And then also, if somebody is hearing
this and they already have children, I fucked everything up with my first child. Okay?
I she she did not sleep at night she was very colicky I didn't know what to do about that three hours a night she was crying when she woke up in the morning I put her in a swing in front of yo gabba gaba that is the opposite of what I would do right now and that child is so resilient and so loving and so tender and so present and so self-aware that like there's this whole thing that we have to get it all perfect as well and we also have to throw that away because the reality is
We are all such divine, perfect creatures.
We're here for the earth experience.
We are here to mess up.
We are here to learn from it.
We are here for this like exploration of life.
And I think we just have to remember that because this like perfection mentality to have it all right or to even have it all natural and have it all homeschooled and blah.
It's just all pressure that we don't need.
Yep.
You know?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Sometimes I think you need a glass of whiskey, even though I try not to break too much.
Or mescal.
Yes.
I agree.
I'm really into mescal lately.
I love it.
Yeah.
I don't really drink anymore, but little sake or mescal on the rare occasion is perfect.
I love that.
Also, I didn't realize this is the dumbest thing, but the tequila can be 51% tequila and 49% whatever else.
Did you know that?
The food.
Don't give me start.
We can.
Okay.
That would be a whole stuff.
The mystery.
Well, the mepsych is clean.
It has to be 100% mescal.
Yeah.
So my friend has, though, a mescal.
company kemosabi it's great okay i'll have to try it right vander kimberley yeah is that right
on all the socials it is yeah thank you for coming thank you
