Chief Change Officer - #375 Athena Brownson: Lyme Disease, Real Estate, and Radical Resilience — Part One
Episode Date: May 17, 2025At 25, Athena Brownson was a rising star in real estate with a pro skiing past and unstoppable energy. Then came Lyme disease—a diagnosis that would upend her health, identity, and entire way of lif...e.In Part One, Athena shares the unfiltered truth of what it means to live with a chronic, invisible illness for nearly a decade. From neck surgery to plasma transfusions, she walks us through the daily battles, emotional toll, and quiet strength it takes to show up—even when she doesn’t want to. This episode is a reminder that resilience isn’t loud or pretty—it’s built moment by moment, one breath at a time.Key Highlights of Our Interview:From Pro Skier to Top Agent: The Unexpected Pivot“I never thought I’d end up in real estate. But once I did, it clicked—relationships, homes, design. It all came together.”At the Peak—and Then Everything Changed“Three years in, I was at the top of my game. Then came the diagnosis: Lyme disease. My body started falling apart.”What Lyme Disease Actually Does (And Why It’s Hard to Diagnose)“Lyme attacks your body where you’re genetically weakest. For me, that meant chronic nerve pain and multiple autoimmune issues.”From Athlete to Patient: Learning to Survive in a New Body“I don’t remember what it’s like to feel okay. Every day, I wake up in pain. That’s been my life for almost eight years.”Plasma Transfusions and Mental Fog: A Day in the Life“I get plasma removed and replaced four days a month. My life revolves around staying alive and staying upright.”Invisible Illness, Visible Impact“People don’t see it—but that doesn’t mean it’s not real. Lyme is the fastest-growing epidemic in the U.S.”Toolkit Mentality: How Music, Coffee, and Podcasts Keep Her Going“I don’t always want to get up. But music, good coffee, a favorite podcast—those little rituals make it possible.”Why You Must Be Your Own Advocate“With Lyme, you have to fight for your care. You have to find the right doctors, the right support, the right rhythm.”Grit Over Glamour: Lessons from the Ski Slopes“Skiing taught me everything—discipline, failure, grit. That training saved me when life got really hard.”The Power of Mental Focus When the Body Fails“It’s not just physical. The mental part—the decision to keep going—is what gets me through every single day.”______________________Connect with us:Host: Vince Chan | Guest: Athena Brownson --Chief Change Officer--Change Ambitiously. Outgrow Yourself.Open a World of Expansive Human Intelligencefor Transformation Gurus, Black Sheep,Unsung Visionaries & Bold Hearts.EdTech Leadership Awards 2025 Finalist.17 Million+ All-Time Downloads.80+ Countries Reached Daily.Global Top 1.5% Podcast.Top 10 US Business.Top 1 US Careers.>>>160,000+ are outgrowing. Act Today.<<<
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Hi, everyone.
Welcome to our show, Chief Change Officer.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. Oshul is a modernist community for change progressives
in organizational and human transformation from around the world.
Today, I'm talking to Athena Bronson,
a real estate agent from Denver, Colorado.
Nope, we are not talking about real estate.
Instead, we dive into her extraordinary journey of resilience, at the peak of her real estate career, feeling invincible and unstoppable, Athena's life
took unexpected turn.
Strange health issues appeared, and she was eventually diagnosed with Lyme disease,
a condition that would change everything.
For the past seven years,
Asina has lived in chronic pain,
relying on plasma transfusions four days each month, just to keep going.
Her life has revolved around battling this disease, something she never imagined facing.
As she says, if life didn't give us adversity and challenges,
this story is too powerful and real for just one episode.
Today, in part 1, Asina shares her experience with Lyme disease, a condition that remains poorly understood
but has profoundly impacted her health.
She'll talk about how she caught it, what she's endured, and the fight to survive.
Tomorrow in Part 2, Asina will share how she not only survived,
but found ways to thrive, rebuild her support system,
and grow her career once again.
Athena, welcome to our show. Welcome to Chief Change Officer. I know you're in Denver. Good afternoon to you.
Good afternoon, or good morning to you, I should say.
Thank you so much for having me.
It is a cold, snowy night.
So a sinner.
Let's start with your story.
As you mentioned, I am in Denver, Colorado.
I was born and raised here in Colorado.
I was actually raised in a small mountain town
called Breckenridge.
For those of you who are skiers or snowboarders,
you've probably heard of Breckenridge at some point,
but knowing this piece of information,
it will set you up for how really my life unfolded
because I learned could walk.
So I believe I was two years old.
My dad was a professional skier.
And I like to say I didn't even have a chance.
He had me on skis from the time I could walk.
And at age 15, I ended up going professional at skiing.
So I had a very young age.
I was basically traveling the world,
skiing about 300 days a year with some of the top coaches I also had a very young age. I was basically traveling the world,
skiing about 300 days a year
with some of the top coaches in the entire world.
And I always say that
skiing is the best business school
that I ever could have asked for or could have gone to
because skiing truly set the stage
for my success in business, which I'll get into
a little bit later. And after becoming a professional skier, after I think nine knee surgeries,
I decided it was time for me to hang up the skis and go into another field. And I ended up going into the field
that I never in a million years thought I would end up in
and that is real estate.
Now I say I never thought I would end up in real estate
because A, I don't think anyone grows up saying,
oh, I'm gonna be a real estate agent when I grow up.
That's just not something you hear very often.
But more in the small town that I was raised in,
Brackenridge, there were more real estate offices
than t-shirt shops.
I grew up thinking real estate was,
I had the preconceived notion that it was a little bit corny
and there were the kind of used car salesman mentality,
even though my dad is a home builder.
So I grew up on job sites.
I followed him.
I have very fond but funny memories of going to job sites with him in the freezing cold,
watching his projects unfold and develop and watching the impact that he had on this town.
And it was pretty incredible, but it was something that my dad did.
Because of that, as a young person, I wanted to make my own path.
I went into interior design after graduating from college.
And I was working in the interior design industry, both in Denver and Breckenridge,
designing hotels, high-end residences.
But I didn't feel that I was being fulfilled.
To me, it was a 9-to-5 job that I was counting down the hours to get through.
I had a dear girlfriend at the time, still one of my best friends, and she is one of the most successful real estate agents in the country.
She is top 1%. Thank you, Charlotte.
And I was having dinner with her one evening and she said, Athena, you love people. You love homes. You love design.
Why are you not a real estate agent? And I scratched my head. And to be honest, I had never even thought about it.
This was 10 years ago that this conversation happened.
And she said, just meet with the owner of my company.
I really think that you two would hit it off.
You have very similar, like how you do business
and how you view people.
You're very relational.
I really think that you two would hit it off.
So I met with the owner of her company actually two days later.
And this was a small real estate brokerage in Denver.
And I was so impressed with his approach to business being
relationship-based business and not transactional.
I was so blown away with this,
he's like sunshine in human form,
still a dear mentor, a friend of mine,
that I quit my job the next day,
signed up for real estate school,
and got my real estate license about two months later.
And that was 10 years ago, and here we are.
The path since I got
my real estate license has been one that I never in a million years could have
predicted. I say that as you will learn more of my story throughout this episode
I think we go into life in all things with an idea of what life is going to look like for us.
And for me, the beginning of my real estate career, I was studying under one of the most amazing agents.
He was my mentor. I had an amazing coach.
I had really incredible people around me and I was succeeding pretty early on.
And in real estate, you generally say it takes a year to really get going and
three years to really start being successful.
After a year, I found myself having great success, really building amazing relationships.
By year three, I like to say I thought I was at the top of the world.
I had grand visions of what my real estate future
was gonna look like.
Life never goes to plan.
And I learned that the hard way,
and I think we all learned that the hard way.
I was diagnosed with Lyme disease,
which I will also explain more of about
Seven and a half years ago. So in my three and a half years into real estate
I was like at the top of my game thought I was invincible all of a sudden I started getting
very
Strange illnesses for a young healthy person and I was diagnosed with Lyme disease and
Lyme disease unfortunately for me took out my immune system and caused multiple
autoimmune diseases. So the last seven years of my life have been first of all
I don't even remember what it's like to feel okay. I live in constant chronic pain.
I get plasma transfusions for days every month.
My world pretty much revolves around trying to stay alive
and trying to fight this really horrific disease
that never in a million years I thought I would get.
And I like to say that if life did not give us
adversity and challenges,
we would never have the opportunity for growth.
But man, I would not wish this way of growing on anyone.
But that's where I am.
I run a successful team at Compass here in Denver.
I still love real estate as much as I did on day one,
if not more.
Love the people I work with.
And through this journey,
I have learned so many incredible things
that I'm excited to share with you.
But it has come through adversity
and through fighting every single
day to keep going because there are most days I don't want to.
And to be able to have a career for me, real estate, that is something I'm so passionate
about and is my why.
I work with people that I love that I build lifelong
relationships with and helping them to really buy and sell a home is the biggest
transaction you do in your life and to be a part of people's lives in that way
and a part of each chapter through home that's my why and it keeps me getting out of bed even when
I don't want to. So it's really been an evolution of understanding what my why
is and get building my toolkit for continuing forward even when I don't
want to. That's so much we can dive into here. Athena, can you share with us how old were you when you were first diagnosed?
So, I was 25 years old and that's when I was diagnosed with Lyme disease. I am not actually sure when I was bit.
So the way you get Lyme disease is a tick bite.
I personally have never even seen a tick.
We don't have a ton of ticks in Colorado,
but as a professional skier, I was traveling globally
and I was in heavily wooded areas.
So at some point I was bit by a tick.
That tick was carrying Lyme disease along with two other co-infections,
but I am also fighting.
And Lyme is interesting as it lays dormant in your system until something weakens your immune system and
it can come out and take over. For me, I ended up having neck surgery. I broke my neck skiing
and my immune system took a hit from having neck surgery. It was weakened and that's when
all of my symptoms started to act up with Lyme disease.
And I was really fortunate that a doctor knew a lot about Lyme disease.
It's something that is a little bit new in the medical field.
There's not a ton of doctors that are very Lyme literate, I like to say.
And I was very fortunate to be diagnosed immediately.
It's been seven and a half years,
almost eight now of fighting Lyme disease.
You mentioned that this disease is rare
and you were fortunate to find a doctor who understood it well.
But for most of my listeners in the U.S. as well as internationally, this condition isn't
widely known, meaning there's a lack of awareness, which could be risky.
Could you enlighten us a bit more?
What exactly is this disease and what should people know about it?
I would love nothing more.
And I was in the same boat.
I had no idea what Lyme disease was before I was diagnosed with
it. In fact, when my doctor suggested that we do testing for it, I laugh because I was so unaware of
Lyme disease. And I also was very naive to how significant it is. So Lyme disease is interesting because it affects everyone
differently. So depending on what you're genetically predisposed to, whatever your
genetic weaknesses are, Lyme attacks that. So for some people that can be myalgia or rheumatoid arthritis, a multitude of autoimmune diseases like I have.
I have an autoimmune disease where my body attacks my nerves.
So that's why I'm in pain all the time because my own body is attacking my nerves.
It can look like psychiatric issues for some people. It can range from such a variety of symptoms that it's, that's what
makes it difficult to diagnose.
However, Lyme is the fastest growing epidemic in the United States right now.
So the number of people that are contracting Lyme from a tick, like I said, you get it
from being bit by a tick.
And if you are aware that you're bit by a tick immediately, you should go to the doctor.
You'll usually see a red ring around the bite if it is carrying a disease.
But I would say if you get bit by a tick,
just go to the doctor because they can give you
a short cycle of antibiotics
and you'll never deal with it again.
It's cases like mine where you don't know that you were bit,
so it lays dormant in your system.
And then when you least expect it,
no one ever expects all of a sudden to start having the horrific symptoms.
My life has made complete 180 from being a professional athlete
to trying to get myself through each day.
It's a nightmare I wouldn't wish on anyone.
Now it's taught me more in life than I think anything ever could.
But people should be very aware that if you're in a heavily wooded area and there are ticks
present, you should be aware of protecting yourself with long sleeves.
They make tick repellent sprays.
And if you do get bit, to go to the doctor because chronic Lyme disease, which is what
stays for a long time, is a very difficult disease to navigate.
So if you know that you got bit and you can take a couple of weeks of antibiotics, then
you'll never deal with it again.
But unfortunately, that's usually not
the case. Most people, I believe 70% of people with Lyme disease have no idea when or where they were
bit. So you were diagnosed around seven to eight years ago, it is covered through surgery rather than injury.
You've also said dealing with chronic pain and range of challenges. How has
this disease affected your day-to-day life and work, I can only imagine how difficult it must be.
To the extent that you are comfortable sharing,
I love to hear about how you've managed and navigated
these challenges.
Challenge is the perfect word, because it
is the most challenging thing that I have ever
been through.
And it is something that when you break a bone or have a surgery, you can talk to the
doctor and they say, if you do A, B, C, and D, you'll get better.
With chronic Lyme disease, unfortunately, there's no, if you do A, B, C, and D, you'll get better.
Different for everyone,
it's something that is just starting to be really
understood and studied on a global scale.
Because it's different for everyone,
it there really is,
you almost feel like a lab rat with trying different therapies.
But when I was diagnosed, I truly was naive because like I said, I was at the
top of my real estate game. I felt a little bit invincible before that,
having come from a professional skiing career, which I actually believe is what taught
me the grit to get through each day and to get through this adversity and to keep pushing
forward because I believe that when we're hit with life with difficulties and challenges and horrific incidents that unfortunately all of us
have different adversity that we do face in life.
And it's really difficult at that time to a moment
and understand that although these are the most challenging
times of my life,
and it's been seven and a half years,
where I don't remember what it is like
to not be in constant pain.
I have waking up in the morning,
is it feels like the most difficult task I've ever done.
Every little thing that I do is so taxing on my body and exhausting on my body
and painful. I spend a huge amount of time in hospitals, like I said. I get all of my plasma
taken out once a month, which is a huge transfusion. It's really hard not to get stuck in the mud
when you're dealing with something
that is so challenging and so constant.
And chronic pain and chronic fatigue
and all of the symptoms that come with Lyme disease
are enough to make anyone wanna stay in bed
and not do anything.
And I truly, a lot of people do and there's no right or wrong way of approaching life
and its challenges and that includes disease. Everyone has their own way to get through things
but what I personally have learned and what I hope to share with others is we
have to really dig deep and understand that when you look back in life, nothing,
you don't learn your greatest lessons.
You don't grow when everything's going to plan.
We make the biggest strides, we have the biggest periods of growth
when we're going through difficulties,
and we figure out how we're gonna get through them,
and we don't allow ourselves to get stuck in the mud,
so to speak.
And I believe that there is a time and a place
for mourning or being very upset and
depressed and sad and angry that your life has really been completely changed
by a disease that is not something that every once in a while you
don't feel good. It's 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
And you can't escape it.
So within that, how do we pivot our mentality?
How do we create our toolkit of things that we know are going to get us through every day, even when we don't want to.
There's never a day that I want to get out of bed.
I feel horrible, absolutely horrible.
But I know that if I put on some of my favorite music
or podcast and just blast it and grab one of my,
make myself a great cup of coffee,
that those are things that are just gonna
get my day started.
And every little, I want to, I always try and find little hacks for how I can
get through each part of my day.
I really do believe that having something that you're passionate about, that can
take your mind off of what you're going through a little bit.
And keep your eyes motivated, looking forward.
That's the key because it's so easy to just get stuck in the mud, give up.
And I believe that when your mentality is in that place of wanting to give up and just stay in bed or maybe start
stop looking for different solutions, different doctors, different treatments.
There are such a wide variety of treatments all over the world that you
have to be your own biggest advocate. I believe that a huge component of that is mental.
So understanding how you can pivot your mentality from this disease is taking over, ruining
my life, to how can I use this to become a better, stronger, grittier version of myself.
How can I use this to be the best version of me?
And how am I going to do that?
And it's usually by the people that you're surrounding yourself with and the coaches that are in your life or your family members
or whoever it may be, but you have to find those anchors that keep
you grounded to really push forward and not give up because you have to be your own biggest
advocate. And I think that's the case with any adversity or challenge in life is nothing ever
goes to plan, but you're your own biggest advocate. You are the one that can take the reins and say, even when things are not going right,
I'm going to figure out a way to make the best out of it and to be the best version
of myself.
A really resonate with what you said about being our biggest advocate, especially in
tough times.
We hear a lot about IQ and EQ, emotional quotient, emotional intelligence.
But that's not a measure.
Aversity, quotient, or IQ, which seems less taught about, yet so crucial. I think we are all starting to see how important it really is.
Your experience is a powerful example of this. Physical pain is intense, and medications might help here and there.
Maybe make sleep easier.
But that's only part of it.
It's the mental resilience that really keeps us going.
Especially in those moments when you are alone, in pain, facing it all.
What stands out from what you've just shared is how you found ways to mentally change your
focus even on the small things to help you stay grounded.
It seems like that's been your best defense and maybe even your offense.
Does that feel accurate?
You couldn't say it better.
I think that is a beautiful way of putting it.
I completely agree.
I believe that the mental aspect of it is at least 50% of the challenge.
Just now, Asina shared with us about how she caught Lyme disease,
what she has endured, and her fight to survive.
Tomorrow in part two, Asina will share more about how she not only survived, but found ways to thrive actively to rebuild her support system and grow her career once again.
Thank you so much for joining us today.
If you like what you heard, don't forget to subscribe to our show, leave us top-rated
reviews, check out our website, and follow me on social media.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host.
Until next time, take care.