Chief Change Officer - Athena Brownson: Rebuilding Life and Mindset After an 8-Year Lyme Disease Journey — Part Two
Episode Date: December 17, 2024Part Two. At the height of her real estate career, Athena Brownson’s life was derailed by Lyme disease. For eight years, she’s faced chronic pain and intensive treatments, reshaping every part of ...her world. As Athena puts it, “If life didn’t give us adversity and challenges…” Yesterday, she recounted the early days of her diagnosis, the fight to survive, and the harsh realities of living with this poorly understood condition. Today, in Part 2, Athena will reveal how she turned survival into thriving and rebuilt her career on her own terms. Key Highlights of Our Interview: Retraining the Brain “Pain puts the brain in fight-or-flight mode, and it can get stuck there. So it’s on us to train our minds to tell our bodies we’re okay, to push through and find relief.” The Power of a Routine “For me, routines are huge. My toolkit includes morning and evening rituals – breathwork, meditation, journaling, writing affirmations. I remind myself every day: I am healthy. I am healing. My body can get through this.” The Art of Delegation “Delegation isn’t just about getting things off your plate; it’s about giving others a chance to shine. My illness showed me I can’t do everything, nor should I. Letting go allows others to thrive, and it’s empowering to see them do what they love.” Building My Tribe “Finding the right people was a decade-long journey, but now I have a team around me who would do anything for me. They’re not just coworkers; they’re my support system, my tribe. I know they’re here for me, health and all, and I wouldn’t be where I am without them.” The Power of Pen and Paper “Writing by hand does something special. Seeing the words you put down lets them sink in, letting you visualize and internalize them in a unique way.” Connect with us: Host: Vince Chan | Guest: Athena Brownson ______________________ Chief Change Officer: Make Change Ambitiously. Experiential Human Intelligence for Growth Progressives Global Top 3% Podcast on Listen Notes World's #1 Career Podcast on Apple Top 1: US, CA, MX, IE, HU, AT, CH, FI, JP 2.5+ Millions Downloads 80+ Countries
Transcript
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Hi everyone, welcome to our show, Chief Change Officer.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. I'll show it 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 7 years, Athena has lived in chronic pain, relying on plasma transfusions
4 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.
In part one, 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. Today 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. I 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. Diversity Quotient, or AQ, 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.
That's our brains are wired that in a way
that if we continue to think a certain thought,
whether that's I'm in pain or I don't want to do this,
I don't feel good, I don't want to do this. I don't feel good.
I don't want to, I don't want to get out of bed.
When we're continually reinforcing those thoughts, we will have those thoughts
because when you're in pain, you're in pain and your brain notices that.
And unfortunately that's an unavoidable truth.
And that's an unavoidable truth. But when we pair that with, how am I creating new neural pathways?
Like, how am I creating positive affirmations in my life?
How am I surrounding myself with positivity?
What am I ingesting when it comes to what I'm listening to? What information I'm taking in?
The people that I'm spending time with.
For me, having routines is huge.
So I talk about having your toolkit to get through challenging times.
Something for me that is really critical for my mental health,
and thus my physical health,
because they do go so hand in hand, is having my morning and evening routines.
And that involves doing breath work and meditation.
That involves having time to journal and write out my affirmations and write out my goals.
I'm constantly writing out like, I am healthy,
I am healing, my body feels great
because I want to tell my brain that I am doing okay.
I wanna convince myself that my body can get through this
because when I can convince my mind and nervous system
that I'm gonna be okay and that there's an end goal
and I keep my eyes on really looking forward
instead of downwards into the current state that I'm in,
that is where we're able to keep,
I really believe that you're able to create more healing
in the body physically when you're mentally working on
strengthening your mentality.
And I have many doctors, like my pain doctor, for instance,
last week we did a class on breath work
and there's been a huge number of studies done that show that when you're in pain and your nervous system is activated and it's been finer flight mode so frequently due to illness or pain, whenever you're going through, it's easy for your brain to get stuck in that pattern.
So it's up to us to make sure that we're doing the work to teach our brains and our
nervous system that we're okay.
We're and we're going to get through this.
And it's a challenge.
And like I said, there will be good days, there will be bad days.
But I believe that having routines
and being able to stay goal-oriented in any aspect of your life is absolutely critical
for overcoming adversity.
You've talked about how you help yourself normalize the situation so that life and work could go on.
You kept earning, kept things moving, especially with those high medical costs, even with insurance,
it still adds up.
But beyond that, you mentioned the importance of building a support system with mentors,
coaches and others, which I think is crucial.
Can you share more about how you started building that from scratch?
And how you went about finding the right people, those who really became the perfect fit for your journey.
Eventually, it seems like it grew into a really strong support system,
one that not only provided you the help you needed, but also gave you a true sense of community.
I love this, yes.
So I firmly believe that I would not
be where I am today in business, in life, in anything
without the people that I am surrounded by.
And as an only child and a professional skier,
I was a one man sport, a one person activity all the time.
Being an only child, I didn't have siblings to delegate
or really understand how delegation works.
So for me, building out the right team was something that I continued to work on, was
a huge challenge for me because I was an athlete that believed that I could get everything
done myself, that it was my job to make sure that I did everything perfectly.
The truth of the matter is there is absolutely no way
of getting through anything in life by yourself,
let alone a real estate career,
which is extremely taxing.
I would say you could work 24 hours a day
and still have a 24 hour to-do list easily.
And then taken me a lot of coaching, a lot of surrounding myself with people
that have taught me really the art of delegation and the art of understanding that we are not
going to always be the best at everything. We need to know what our strengths are and what our weaknesses are,
because we all have strengths and we should be focusing on those. Our strengths might be
someone else's weaknesses or their strengths are weaknesses. So by assessing really who we are,
what we're good at, what we're not good at.
And for me, coaching has always been really important because as an athlete, I learned
that a discipline and accountability, but having someone that can look over your business
or your life, whatever it is that you're doing, and help you see
where your blind spots are.
Help you understand and build the path that you want to be on and understand what your
strengths are that you should be focusing on.
You have to understand that about yourself before you can attract or bring in the right people around you.
So for me, coaching was absolutely paramount and it continues to be.
And I continue to learn how to delegate because I still have a tendency to want to get everything done by myself. But illness has taught me that I don't have the physical stamina to do everything.
And nor should I, because there are people around me that are much better at
certain activities than I am.
So for me to be trying to do those activities is actually robbing them of the
opportunity to really
thrive at something that they love.
So it's taken me a good decade, I would say, to build a team of people that I look around
me and I know that the people on my team would absolutely do anything for me.
They want nothing more than for me to get my health back
and they support me unconditionally through my treatments
and they take amazing care of our clients.
Honestly, my executive assistant, I like to call her my boss
because her skill set is so vast and incredible and the complete opposite of mine.
I wouldn't be able to get any of this, anything done without her, honestly.
So understanding that we're not meant to do life alone.
We're meant to do life in community, whatever that may be, whether it's at work or outside of work.
For me, my business has become my family.
It is a very demanding business.
Real estate is to perform at a high level.
We work very hard.
But the most important thing that I've learned, and I had to learn and continue to learn the
hard way through not having the physical ability to do everything is understanding that we're
not supposed to be able to do it all ourselves.
And when we can find like-minded individuals that have similar visions in terms of why they're doing business and
what motivates them and really find the people, I like to call them like your tribe. Who are the people
that have your back unconditionally, that care just as much as you do about the business or
that you care just as much as you do about the business or about your clients or whatever it may be as you do. And it's taken me years and years to find those people.
But now that I have, it's truly the only reason that I'm able to continue forward with having a really successful business is because I have people around
me that not only care about me and my health and making sure that I'm able to
take care of myself. If I'm not able to get out of bed one day, I know that these
people have my back and that they're gonna take just as good of care of our
clients. They want to build relationships.
They put heart into everything that they do.
And I honestly don't know what I would do without my amazing team, but it's
taken years and years of coaching and therapy and mentors to help me understand
that I can't do it all by myself.
And I need to, delegation is actually giving someone
the opportunity to be their best and to empower them and I will continue to learn how to do it
but I believe in teamwork more than anything. You shared so much today about building a support system, rewiring your mindset, and finding ways to move forward.
It's incredibly helpful for those out there
who might be in the middle of a life transition,
just like you were.
They don't have a support system yet.
They're still feeling stuck.
And they're struggling with that rewiring process.
What would you say to them?
What advice or encouragement would you offer to help them take that next step towards doing
better especially after listening to this episode.
Yeah.
And that's what I would love nothing more is to be able to give people hope in
whatever challenge or adversity that you're going through.
I would first say it's okay.
It's okay to acknowledge when you're struggling.
first say it's okay it's okay to acknowledge when you're struggling. When you're going through hardship there is somewhat of a toxic positivity that
people can say oh just don't think about it like you'll be fine. No it's
acknowledge that you're going through a significant challenge, but don't allow yourself to get stuck there.
And oftentimes, I believe that we have a thought,
a vision that we have to make all of these changes
at one time, that all of a sudden,
we're supposed to have a completely new mindset,
and we're supposed to be able to have the ability
to rewire our brains, and we're not to be able to have the ability to rewire our brains and
we're not supposed to hurt and everything seems like it's supposed to
all happen at once but what I've learned is the key is to take baby steps. Every
single day we can focus. One of my favorite books, Atomic Habit, talks about if we focus on being
1% better every day, then imagine how much that will accumulate over a year.
If you're looking to get healthier, start by walking five minutes outside and then try six and then try ten and
then break everything into smaller steps. If you're looking to, you know, create
routines in your life, for example a morning routine, start with two things
that you're gonna consistently do every day and commit to them. And for me, I have to keep myself accountable
by actually printing out my must-dos
and checking them off every day.
Because if I don't do that,
I won't hold myself accountable to doing the things
that I have to do to stay in a positive mindset or in a healthier place.
So find what small items in your life, activities that you can implement and that you can commit
to implementing that are going to be small at first, but over time those small changes that you
hold yourself accountable to are going to add up to being completely life-changing
changes. And before you know it, the amount of growth and change
and development that you can create by having these small routines and being 1% better than
you were the day before.
These are going to add up to monumental changes in your life and I promise that it's going
to help you get through whatever challenge it is because you have something positive
to focus on.
And when you have something positive to focus on, you can get through any challenge that
life throws your way.
And I truly believe that.
One thing I add to that is, when you are practicing this mindset shift and making those small changes or steps forward,
make it visible.
Grab an actual notebook,
not on a computer,
but a real paper notebook and pen,
or even a board you can put up on the wall, write down each small
win, check it off and create a visual reminder that says, I did it. That simple
action of writing, seeing those check marks, and having a visual cue of your progress can
really inform that sense of accomplishment. I think it's a powerful
way to feel and see your growth over time. I completely agree I write
everything down by hand in the notebook. I believe that if you see yourself writing it, it gets into your brain and you're able to visualize it and internalize it in a completely different way.
Thank you for adding that because I have a journal that I bring with me everywhere to write my positive affirmations that are my goals. It makes a huge difference.
And I really believe in the power of using just a pen and paper, which is something everyone can
do. But these are tools that we have at our fingertips to hold ourselves accountable to
being the best that we can be, no matter the situation that we're in.
The power of pen and paper, there's something to it.
Put your smartphone aside, really engage with the old school pen and paper.
Writing things down this way makes it feel more real, more lasting. 100%, you just gave me the biggest smile
because I am a huge supporter of writing.
It needs to be hand, paper, put your phone away and go.
Just make it simple.
Jodie Foster once said,
all you need to make a movie is pen, paper, and confidence.
Despite her success as an actor, she didn't step into directing until later in her career,
initially thinking she needed to master every technical detail.
But as she shared in her master class, she realized that those three essentials—pen,
paper, and confidence—were all she needed to start.
In such a powerful reminder, how simplicity and self-belief can be the true foundation
for creating something meaningful and sustainable.
That is beautiful.
Of course, I know all the scripts were crafted by a copywriter, But it felt so authentic. I believe she was speaking directly from her heart
and her experience. It's so powerful. So I'll leave you with that and share it with my listeners too.
Pen, paper, that's power in them.
A journal as well, by the way.
And of course, a bit of confidence.
Thank you so much, Asina.
Thank you for your time and sharing.
Thank you, I appreciate your time
and I hope you have a wonderful rest of your day
and I hope this inspires anyone out there.
Please feel free to contact me if you need support.
anyone out there, please feel free to contact me if you need support.
Thank you so much for joining us today. If you like what you heard, don't forget, 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.