Creating Confidence with Heather Monahan - #60: Ally Love, Founder & CEO of Love Squad, Peloton Instructor, and Host of Brooklyn Nets : The Power To Decide
Episode Date: June 23, 2020What if you were faced with a life-threatening accident at the age of nine and was presented by your own mother the opportunity to choose and decide for yourself: fight for your young life or give up ...the painful struggle…the choice was yours. That pivotal moment Ally Love learned the power and necessity of what it means to decide and that even when you choose not to decide, that in itself is a choice with consequences. About The Guest: Ally Love is the Founder & CEO of Love Squad, Peloton Instructor, and Host of Brooklyn Nets. Ally Love is a multifaceted woman, pioneering the slash generation. She is the CEO/Founder of Love Squad, the in-arena Host of the Brooklyn Nets, a Peloton Instructor, an adidas Global Ambassador, and a Model. Ally uses her influence/platforms to create a space to celebrate and champion diversity in race and culture through conversation and sweat. Known as a Boss of Business, Ally Love’s platform reaches millions, which is why it has been important for her to create Love Squad as a space where real conversations and real change can occur through moderated panels and open discussions around women's empowerment. Finding Ally Love: Visit her website: https://www.allylove.com Join the LOVE SQUAD Twitter & Instagram:@allymisslove Facebook: @allyloveofficial Pinterest: @allymisslove To inquire about my new coaching program opportunity visit https://mentorship.heathermonahan.com/pages/virtual-seminar-information Review this podcast on Apple Podcast using this LINK and when you DM me the screen shot, I buy you my $299 video course as a thank you! My book Confidence Creator is available now! get it right HERE If you are looking for more tips you can download my free E-book at my website and thank you! https://heathermonahan.com *If you'd like to ask a question and be featured during the wrap up segment of Creating Confidence, contact Heather Monahan directly through her website and don’t forget to subscribe to the mailing list so you don’t skip a beat to all things Confidence Creating! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
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I'm on this journey with me.
Each week when you join me, we are going to chase down our goals.
We'll overcome adversity and set you up for a better tomorrow.
I'm ready for my close up.
Hi, and welcome back.
I so appreciate you being here with me today.
Oh my gosh.
So much to tell you.
So first I have to tell you about my episode today and my guest and what happened off
air because it was, this is actually the second time I've cried in the last year since I've had a
podcast. I'm not a big crier. Early on in business, when I was early on in my corporate
America career and I was in sales leadership, I would see people make mistakes, right? I would
see them cry and get frustrated and wear their emotions on their sleep. I started to observe those
people would only reach a certain level. They wouldn't go beyond that level because their emotions
had the better of them. They didn't have control of their emotions. So I used to say to myself,
I played baseball as a kid, softball as I got older, and I've always loved baseball. And I just used to
always say there is no crying in baseball. So no matter how upset I would get in corporate America,
which was very freaking upset, you have no idea the jackballs I worked with, I would get really,
really upset. And stress was piling on. And I would go into the ladies room and breathe,
or I'd walk outside, or I'd go for a ride of my car, anything to you.
get myself out of the situation, control and calm myself, and then re-engage when I was in control of my
emotions. So saying that I cried twice, the first time was when I recorded Flip Flipin, who I
absolutely freaking love. And if you haven't heard that episode, go back and listen to it. It's all
about your third story, the story that you're telling yourself and how you can change it because
it's a lie. I love that freaking story. I love that episode. I love that man. He's awesome. So anyhow,
that was the first time I cried. Okay, so fast forward to now. I found out about Ali Love a little over a year
ago. I was at my friend Christina's house in Atlanta. She had a Peloton. We didn't have anyone to watch
the kids so we couldn't go exercise out of the house. And she said, oh, just go upstairs and do a
peloton ride, which I did. And she said, take an Allie love class. Allie has this real warmth
and positive energy and inclusive message. She's a black woman. She's young. She's gorgeous.
But there's something about her that people trust and are drawn to.
And I was, right?
So I didn't have a Peloton at the time.
But when the pandemic hit, I ordered a Peloton on the ones and twos and got that thing in here so fast and had a huge blow up with my building because I didn't have a reservation for the elevator and that's policy.
And the woman downstairs was trying to forbid the Peloton people to bring the bike in.
I lost my mind.
Occasionally I do that.
And I called the head of the building and said, it is a pandemic.
And this is life and death situations.
And I need some type of exercise while I am quarantined in my small condo.
And they let it up.
Okay.
So that was the good news.
Got the Peloton in for the win.
And truly, during quarantine, for a couple months, we weren't able to leave the house at all.
That was the only exercise I got.
And it was a saving grace for me because it transported me out of here to a different place where I wasn't alone.
I had my son here with me, but I wasn't the only adult and, you know, seeing someone else, their face right on my screen talking to me.
Oh my gosh, I love that.
It was a game changer lifesaver for me.
So I always knew I wanted to have my favorite instructors on the show, but hadn't, I had reached out a few times and hadn't heard back like anything.
You know, when I hear crickets, I might wait a little bit, but I'm going to pivot and come back after you.
So I came back after Ali Love.
She connected me to the Peloton team.
They scheduled her, and today we have her on the show.
Now, that is not why I cried.
So I had researched Allie a lot outside of Peloton.
The same way I would anyone that I interview, I read their books.
I listen to their TED Talks.
Whatever their thing is, I'm all over it for hours and hours to prep and make sure I'm
prepared for the interview.
So I just consumed so much of Ali's content.
Her TED Talks awesome.
some it's really short seven minutes. It's really good. And she, she killed it. I, you know, I went through
so many different interviews that she's done and was just so blown away by her story. Also, I didn't
know she's going to share something really powerful with us today. And she only just recently
started talking about it. And it's something that happened to her when she was nine years old.
So, you know, she's being very vulnerable. And I know how scary that can be. Well, being a white woman
that's interviewing a black woman right now in the current situation in the world, I felt
vulnerable. I also felt it was my job and duty to show up and ask her what her thoughts are,
how she's leading, how she's leading as a Peloton instructor, as a black woman in this
environment we're in. I didn't know how to word it. And I really hadn't been thinking about that
because the more I would think about it, I got scared, right? Scared because here's the thing.
People are judging other people. People are hating on other people. I've gotten some really nasty messages. If you don't post something fast enough, you're wrong. If you post something too fast and didn't do it right, you're wrong. If you didn't use the right hashtag, you're wrong. If you weren't vocal enough, you're wrong. And those are the kinds of things that I'm getting. And I know some really large influencers that have deleted Instagram pages, paused posting, because the amount of attack they're getting is massive.
I'm not here to weigh in on if it's warranted with some of these people.
Listen, some of these people, if anyone's racist, then I get it.
You know, I do not tolerate racism.
However, it's just there's a lot of hatred out there right now.
There's a lot of attack right now.
And there's a lot of judging.
And frankly, there's a lot of ignorance, too.
And that's what my fear was, was that I would be ignorant.
I didn't want to be ignorant.
And that's what I kept thinking about is that if I say it the wrong way, I'm ignorant.
If I was afraid, I didn't want to do it wrong.
And I didn't know the right way to do it because for me, I have.
haven't done it before. Up until this point, I've just posted things online. And every time I post
something, I either get someone hating what I posted or telling they could have done it better.
You know, it's not right. And so I know that I'm in a judgment zone. And that's, you know,
a little uncomfortable, right? It's a little scary. And this is different because it's live and
there's no editing and there's just conversation and two people. And while I follow Allie and know a lot
about her and feel like I know it's not like we've ever hung out and, you know, gone on a trip together.
So my vibe is that I really feel she's so inclusive.
So I thought, you know what, if I'm going to do this is a really good person to do it with because
she comes from a place of love.
And I feel like if you come from a place of love, there can't be hate.
So I hadn't thought about it a lot because that's sort of my strategy.
I'll share this with you when I have a super busy day, which I did today.
And I'm back to back all day long.
And I have my son here.
And, you know, he's stuck inside all day. And I have to cook for him and I have to do all these meetings or I get to. I should reframe that. I get to. I'm so blessed to have my son and so grateful for that. However, in the olden days, he'd be at camp. And I take him there at nine and he gets picked up at five and he plays sports all day and all as well. And I get my job done. But it's different now. So everything's different now, right? So anyhow, what I do is I try not to get too focused on the thing ahead of me. I just focus on the situation I'm in.
otherwise I'd get overwhelmed. So that's kind of my strategy. And I wasn't thinking about the complexity
of what my concerns were and that I didn't want to be ignorant and that I didn't want to say the
wrong thing and that my intent is good. And I know my intent is good. But sometimes it doesn't
matter right in the world. Sometimes words get twisted or people hear something different or you didn't
say something right and mistakes get made. And so I was scared. So we get on the call and I said to Alley,
It's the same thing I usually say to most people.
I said, is there anything you don't want to talk about today?
Is anything off limits?
And she said, no, I trust you.
And so that made me feel really happy, right?
So I said, okay, all right, great.
So we do the whole interview, which you're going to hear in a minute.
And if I'd ever stop talking, right?
And so at the end, I asked her about the, what I said, I believe I said, racial unrest.
I think that's the words I use.
I don't know.
I didn't write anything down. I didn't, you know, script something out. I'd never script anything out,
by the way, for the show. I do my work, but I don't believe in scripts. So I think I said racial unrest.
Now, I was nervous. I wonder if you'll hear my voice. I'm super interested to hear if you do. But I also
really trust Allie and feel she's inclusive and feel she comes from a place of love. So I was willing to take that risk.
And I felt it was the right thing to do. How could I talk to her and not address this? That, to me, is sheepish.
there's no place for that. I would rather have an imperfect conversation where I mess up some words
and maybe I don't do things right, but my intent is right and my heart is good and I'm mean for good.
And if people know me and are in a conversation with me, then that's felt. That's how I led in this
uncertain conversation. So I did not say it correctly and I knew it once it came out of my mouth. However,
I will say this woman handled herself with extreme poise.
and explained in a really beautiful way how I could say it moving forward.
And she said, you know, it's not racial unrest.
It's Black Lives Matter.
And you'll hear Allie explain it.
But it wasn't attacking.
I wasn't offended.
She taught me something, you know, something really powerful so that I don't have to feel ignorant
or uncertain moving forward that I have verbiage and words that I can use that are better, right?
That's the only way we get better sometimes is making mistakes.
And I was so grateful she didn't attack me.
And I was grateful she understood I was coming from a place of good.
And I was grateful she included me.
And she talked a lot about you're not alone.
You're not alone.
And that, oh, it touched my heart so much I could cry again right now.
So we finish the interview, which you're going to hear in a minute, if I ever stopped talking.
And I pressed stop recording.
And I thanked her.
I said, listen, I am so grateful that you just explain that to me.
And I know my words were wrong.
And thank you for not attacking me.
And thank you for explaining it beautifully.
And thank you for being that kind and loving and inclusive you because I didn't do it, right.
Oh, gosh, this is so hard for me.
And she just, she was amazing.
She didn't have her camera on, you know, which I get.
Sometimes you don't want to get ready for every show or whatever and you have other things going on.
That's fine.
But she turned her camera on right away because I started crying.
And she said, listen to me, I am so glad and grateful you did have the conversation.
And she said the conversation needs to be had.
This is all about having the conversation.
It doesn't have to be the perfect one.
It just has to be had.
That's a start.
That's somewhere to begin.
And I just, oh, I lost it.
I was bawling.
It was very emotional.
I even feel emotional right now explaining it to you because I was scared and I'm in uncharted water and I, just like all of us are, right? It's not just me. It was scary and I didn't want to be, I didn't want to be ignorant. That was my big thing. I didn't want to hurt anyone. I didn't want to be ignorant and I didn't want to say the wrong things when I wanted to say the right things. And you know what? I didn't say the right things and I still feel really proud that I did it. And that's because she comforted me. She, you know, here she is.
She's the one saying it's okay. And you know what? And she's a true leader. And she's so freaking
young. I'm just so I'm impressed. I'm so inspired by her. She's a total boss. And I just felt so
grateful because ironically, one of my mentees had sent me an email while I was doing the interview.
I get off and I go to my email to respond back to people. And I see an email from one of my
mentees. And it said something to the effect of Heather. I've got a team meeting tomorrow with all
my employees, you know, he's got a sizable company. And he said, we haven't had a team meeting
in over a month. And I don't know what to do. Do I bring up the racial situation in the U.S.
right now? Or is it best just not to say anything? No one's brought it up to me. You know,
kind of like sort of how I was sitting there myself before I interviewed Allie, like, listen, this is
on the table. I've got to address it. But I don't know the words to say. He didn't know the
words to say. And I was so grateful I just had that conversation because I responded to him,
you absolutely have to bring it up. And there aren't right or perfect words and you're going to make
mistakes, but it's about leading with courage that you have the right intent. And I explained to him
what Ali said to me. I didn't use the right words, but she was so grateful that I used words.
So an imperfect conversation will always be better than none. And I feel so good sharing that
feedback from her. And I felt really good encouraging him to have the conversation tomorrow, which he is
going to. And I can't wait to hear how imperfectly perfect it goes. But I'm proud of him for coming from a
place of good and not having the answers and doing it anyway. So now turning it over to this interview,
which I think is amazing. And I think you're going to as well.
Hi, and welcome back. I'm so excited for you to meet the interview.
my guest today. She's a model. She's a host. She's a speaker. She's a TEDx speaker, which you know I'm so
passionate about. She's a Peloton instructor, a social media influencer, a brand ambassador. And she's
CEO and founder of the Love Squad. Allie Love. Thank you so much for being here today.
Thank you so much for having me, Heather. I'm so excited to chat with you. I'm excited to chat with you, too.
There's so much about you, Ali, that to me, it's so important to amplify your voice and your message right now.
And really, at the core of that is your inclusivity, which I feel every class that I take, whenever I see your social media posts, and I know that you've created this community, that people feel accepted, empowered, and motivated with the message that you have around positivity and including others.
And first of all, I want to thank you for that.
it's so important right now that everybody hears it. Oh, thank you. I tend to get that question.
Interesting enough, is like, how are you the most positive person? And a short answer, I'm not.
I'm just like everyone else. And that level of inclusivity is all encompassing and understanding that
we are all maybe different in regards, but all uniquely the same. We all want to be better and be
better versions of ourselves. And so I think for me, it's as much as possible,
even the playing fields and knowing and letting everyone know that you're always invited and you always
have a seat at the table I'm sitting at.
Well, that's nice to hear because these days it doesn't always feel that way.
So thank you for putting that out there.
One of the things that I wanted to start with today is when people see you,
people create a story in their mind, right?
You know, oh, this woman's so beautiful and she's so fit and she can do things.
Of course she can be positive.
I mean, her life is so perfect.
She's on Good Morning America.
She's doing this and that.
And as I've researched you and learned so much of.
about you, I know, and I want everyone to know your life has been faced with incredible
challenges beginning as early as nine. And I was hoping you could share with us that adversity
and what you did to overcome it. Absolutely. I will preempt this by saying social media
is a really tiny aperture to what real life looks like, right? It's a curated space. So is anything
that's usually on TV. You have makeup on, you have your best outfit. All of these things are
curated opportunities and not to say that they're not important because they are. We use these
platforms to share stories to share information, but sometimes what ends up happening is that the story
gets dismissed a bit and it's more of the optics. And so I just wanted to preempt what my story I'm
about to share with that because I think it's really important again, this concept of being
approachable and relatable is really true to who I am. At nine years old, I got hit by a car. I was
at a family gathering and, you know, as a family, we usually on the weekends do family barbecues
and celebrate and just enjoy each other's time. And so I was at a family gathering. I went to the
ice cream truck to get some ice cream like any fun, ready to eat ice cream nine-year-old is. And then I was
walking across the street in a car which was parked on the side, drove around and hit me. I ended up
flying up in the air, landing on the hood of the car, rolling to the side. I broke my left femur.
I cracked a lot of my front teeth and I skinned my body up. I had to
I was in the hospital for seven days.
Five of those seven days, I had a weight tied to my ankle to keep the bone, my femur bones
separated because at the age of nine, there was no plate for my hip because your femur is basically
your hip.
It's the largest bone in your body.
And most times, people who break their hips, they're a little older.
So it was very rare that a nine-year-old would come into the hospital in an emergency with a broken
hip.
And so that was the case.
And I had to wait for five days until they created it.
a plate and then shipped it from China so that I could have surgery. And now during this time,
I can tell you it wasn't easy and I could not imagine what my family was going through because
as an adult now, while I don't have kids, I do have nieces and nephews, I can only imagine
how challenging, how heart-wrenching, and how emotional that could be for any parent. What
ended up happening was that experience, however traumatic it was, was a turning point in my life,
even at nine years old. And I will be transparent, Heather, and say, I have a lot. I
I haven't actually shared this story quite a bit.
I only recently started talking about it since we've been in this pandemic.
So for the past two and a half months.
And it's been coming up because while you are in your home and you're thinking about life or death
because we're hit with COVID-19, a lot of self-awareness started to really play a role in the work
that I was doing for myself.
And so this story started to really manifest.
And I've talked about it with my mom quite a bit.
But it was this moment where she was standing next to me and she had just finished talking to
the doctor.
and she said, you know, she was honest.
She said, it's not looking good.
And you have a decision to make.
Now, the question that she asked me at that time,
I don't know if I'd have the courage to ask a nine-year-old,
let alone a nine-year-old, that was my daughter.
But she asked me, she said, you have a choice,
and you can either choose to live.
And if you choose to live, you have to fight.
You have to fight, relentlessly, you have to fight hard.
Or you can choose to die.
And if you choose to die, we support you.
We know that it's not easy.
And she was like, if you choose life,
you have to pray to God.
and you have to fight. You make that decision and you let us know. And it was one of those things,
again, that was odd as I think about it in the past. She gave me some time in the hospital.
She went down, took a walk, came back, and we kind of picked up on the conversation. And after me
praying, I grew up very religious, my family's religious. After praying, I let her know. I was
like, you know what? I want to live. I want to fight. And it was that opportunity that my mom afforded
me the responsibility to decide about my own life that was a turning point for me. And I started
fighting and I keep saying this often. It's like in that moment of choosing to fight for my life, I've
never stopped. And it's not like a woe is me story, but it was that turning point that said,
you know what I understand what close to death feels like. I know what it feels like to be in a
hospital room for a very long time, not sure and when you would get out in a sense, because we
weren't sure when the plate was going to be finished. And I know what it feels like to make a
decision about yourself. And so ever since that moment, I sincerely have always decided to decide.
I've never just idly said, you know, I'm not going to make a decision because not making a decision
is making a decision. And so I've been decisive in where I go, knowing that there are consequences
on both sides, but that has played a big role in what my life has ended, the path into which I
taken over the years. Wow. I am a mother with a 13-year-old, and I just, I have so much empathy
for all of you, your entire family going through that, I can't imagine and so proud of you and
of your mom. When you got back home, so you were not lobalable, you're laying in a bed and the rest of
the world went back to regular life, but you didn't get to, right? Not at all. I mean, at that point,
I had a cast that covered my entire stomach all the way down to my foot. So it was a half of a body cast,
and I had a hospital bed in my living room,
so we had to read, you know,
with any child that's injured,
you usually have to make some adjustments to how you're living.
And so we had to make some major adjustments.
I was homeschooled.
I had physical therapy.
Once the cast,
the cast had to come off in parts.
That's how big it was.
So, you know, it was like having this part,
the entire cast on for six weeks,
and then having a quarter of the, you know,
of it moved around the ankle,
and then at the knee, and then at the waist.
And so it was one of those things where I probably had a cast for
about five months on, but it was removed in parts. And during that time, I can say that it definitely
tested my relationship with my mom because I was going through a lot of pain and she was there with
me while I was homeschooled and going to physical therapy. But it was one of those times where
it really was, again, not only a turning point in me deciding around my life, but it was a
turning point in solid foundation between my mother and I. And it's not easy, as you say,
you have a 13-year-old. When you get to pre-teens, it gets even harder emotionally.
and then teens. And so I think we went through all of the preteen teen emotions when I was nine
years old because I was in the house with her. She would take me outside to get some son. We lived
in Miami, so we'd go in our backyard. And it was awful because she'd have me laying out there.
And my cast was sweating. And I would be annoyed by her. And so we had a lot of the tough
conversations early on. And it really put us in a great place to become close friends. Obviously,
she's my mom and her family. But it's put us in a position even until this day to become the closest
as friends. You know, I was watching an interview that that you did recently and hearing you
describe looking out the window and watching other kids go to school, watching them come home
from school, watching them live their lives while you were stuck in the house with your mother
not having the most enjoyable time. And, you know, listening to you talk about that really
related to me around the pandemic, around quarantine, and how many of the, you know,
us feel looking out a window. I happen to live in a building. So going out of the building often has
not been part of the program while we're in the quarantine because, you know, you run into people
in the halls and in your building. And I just, I really related to that feeling that you would have
looking outside the window and reevaluating when this is over, what different changes will I make?
Was that part of the way that you were thinking is how can I reengage when this is over?
It was almost as if you're acknowledging, you're witnessing everyone move about and you're static and you feel like you're not doing enough.
Even as a young kid, you're not playing enough.
You're not going to school.
You know, you're just not doing enough.
And it put me in a position where I started feeling like, yeah, I had a FOMO, a fear of missing out.
I was missing out on so much.
But it did help put in perspective, don't take things for granted.
And the same thing with quarantine.
often enough, and interesting that you bring this up, we had a big, in our four-year, we had a big window that looked out, yes, into our front yard.
And in our front yard, it was as far away was like a sidewalk.
And so I'd see everyone going to school in the morning, and I'd stand there in that window.
And it just reminded me never to take anything for granted.
And that was one of the reasons why I end up becoming a dancer, because the doctor after physical therapy, let my mom know, you know, manager expectations.
She may walk with a limp.
She probably will have arthritis when she's in high school.
and she'll probably never become a runner or be very athletic.
So manage your expectations.
And so knowing this information and actually going through this everyday white sin in front of this window
and see life happening before me, I decided I wasn't going to take anything for granted.
And I didn't want anyone to decide who and what I could do but me, but me and God.
And so I decided, yeah, I'm going to start running.
I'm going to start walking.
I'm going to start dancing.
So I started doing these things and really learning how to do them.
And eventually I became a dancer.
That's why I moved to New York City is to pursue dance.
And when I came to New York City, I got a scholarship to go to Fordham University
and get a bachelor's in fine arts through the Alvin Ailey program and minor in theology.
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And still during that time in college,
we used to have Florida ceiling windows.
I would stand in my dorm room and look outside and watch how busy New York was.
And it would be a moment of necessarily.
nostalgia and of course like a moment of being grateful and pretty cathartic in a way of acknowledging
that I wouldn't take this for granted. I wouldn't take the fact that I was able to move away from
home, go to school, use my body at that point to really convey messages in a big city that I always
loved. As I'm talking to you right now, exactly what I we're talking about is what I'm doing.
I literally sit in front of the windows of my apartment while we have been in pandemic and I
have calls, I have meetings and I look out of the window at everything.
that's going on. It's just a great reminder, again, not to take things for granted.
It really, it truly is, and it is a challenge sometimes not to have that fomo that what is going
on out there, but to refocus it to, we have so much to be grateful for regardless of wherever
we are right now. So I appreciate that perspective. From deciding to become a dancer and
overcoming all of these odds, how does your trajectory change and evolved? It's such a non-traditional
path. And that interests me because it isn't simplistic or it doesn't seem like it would be
simplistic to go from all the challenges you had to a dancer, to a host in the NBA, to a
Peloton instructor, to a business owner, to someone teaching others how to build businesses.
How does all of that unfold? Did you ever know it was unfolding?
Short answer, no. But longer answer, it end up unfolding in one specific way. I always say that you
find your career one of two ways.
Either you've known since you were a kid that you were going to do this and nothing has deterred you from that path, or you lean into people telling you what you're good at.
And so I knew that I could do a lot more than dance.
And the reality, to be completely candid with everyone who's listening, many of us know what it means to either graduate high school or college or just venture out into adulthood.
And you have to make a decision.
You have to either follow a love, a pursue, a passion, or you've got to make money to survive.
And what I was at the point of my senior year is I started working with companies.
I have got forwarded the opportunity to go to San Francisco and Canada and work with these
professional companies.
What I realize is that I wouldn't be able to sustain or afford living in New York once I graduated.
And I didn't want to, quote unquote, become a starving artist.
And the reason is because honestly, my family wouldn't be able to bail me out or help me.
So I didn't have any cushion.
And so what ended up happening was around my senior year, I decided to go in to become a model.
I was like, what are my other assets that I could use? And for lack of a better word, exploit in a way to make sure that I am using every talent God has given me. I remember my mom telling me this story and I'm going to butcher it in the Bible of just like, you know, this man was given one talent. He buried it. This man was given two talents. He used it. It multiplies. This man was given, you know, whatever talents. And it's like the moral of that story of being given talents is that if you hide your talents, then they die. They fall away. But if you utilize them, they grow. They multiply. And so I knew that that.
was a possibility if I could defy almost dying and coming out to be a dancer and move to the best
city in, I would say this is a personal opinion, the best city in the world, one of the best cities
in the world, New York, and pursue that passion. I knew that I could use and leverage other skill sets.
There was more that I could offer. And so I started modeling, which put me in a position financially
to be able to afford a house of an apartment with one roommate instead of three. And then from modeling,
I knew I saw that there were girls that were a little older than me, but similar hosting. There
were doing New York One and the taxicabs and all of these things. And I was like, wait a minute,
how did she get there? And I started doing research. And I have always been curious around how did
someone get to the place that they are, not to say I should have everything, but also to identify
what are my strong points. And at a young age, I knew in college what my strengths were. I knew
that I was a good dancer. I knew that was great performer. And most importantly, one of the things
that I knew it was great at, most importantly, and that I loved doing, was talking to people.
I could talk all day to everybody. I loved it. And New York, you have,
Everyone has so many interesting stories.
And so that's when I started taking classes.
I leaned into even with anything,
I always say lean into resources to figure out what you don't know.
So that's what I did.
I started taking hosting classes.
And I started going on,
I started, you know,
Googling New York hosting auditions,
anything until I got an agent and I was signed with Wilhelmina
modeling and then I started doing hosting.
And so I really, really, for the lack of a better word,
or maybe more, not a lack of a better word,
but for the word we're commonly hearing these days,
I hustled hard, right?
I was, it was my, and in my own words, I bossed up.
It was me just, again, leveraging those skill sets and those passions to put me in a
position where I could afford living in New York.
I was safe.
I was in a position where I wanted more, and I could figure out how to do that.
And I think that that's what my family wanted as well.
My mom was like, you can say there, but we got to make sure you're okay.
And so that was the agreement that we had and ended up working out.
So it's such a non-traditional, non-conventional, non-converbal.
path that you follow. Where does that motivation and that boss up come from? So many people
would have stopped with, okay, I've become a dancer, I've become a model, I've become a speaker
and a host. So many people would plateau there and be just fine with that. How and why did you
add a TED talk to it, become a Peloton instructor, start working with brands. Where does that
push come from? So it's actually the story of Love Squad. It's,
It's of all of this, and I know those of you that are listening, this sounds so, it might sound so good to you, but it comes with a lot of nose. It came with a lot of nose. And it definitely came with a lot of heartache and quote unquote failure, right? These things, these lessons. But it was one of the reasons why I boss up or hustle hard or any tagline or any quotable message you want to put in front of that is because it was basically out of frustration and a lack of resources. As a young,
woman, as a young mixed woman, as a young black woman in New York City, it's not easy. It's not easy
wanting to make more of yourself, especially when you don't have a clear path. I think I look at my
life, kind of like how Cheryl Sandberg talks about moving around in a company in her book Lean In. It's a
jungle gym. It's not just vertical. It's a jungle gym that you're moving. And that's kind of how I look at
my career of being a part of this slash generation. People are dynamic. Women are dynamic. We are
dynamic and we're multi-dimensional, multifaceted. And it's one of those things to say you have more
than one passion most times. You have more than one skill set you can offer. And so I wanted to make
sure that I was going down the right path and the only way to do that was to pursue these areas
that I was curious about. And so in those moments of hard times, in this concept of an unconventional
career path, this frustration and lack of resources didn't always afford me the opportunity to be in
rooms where decisions were being made or to be in places where I could network and find my fairy
god mentor mother or whatever like I wasn't able to do those things and so what I decided to do once
I got a little older past 21 was offer the information back I know and I come back to what I said
to you Heather when we first started talking is there's no difference between me and anyone that's
listening no matter how old you are how young you are where you live in terms of what we
desire for ourselves and for our family we are all unique
I do identify that. I would be remissive. We didn't say that, but we are all uniquely
the same in wanting to be a better versions of ourselves or be our best selves or continue to help
be a citizen of our community and continue to do things fairly and just and equally. And those are
all of our desires for the most part. And so knowing that I didn't want any, if I got to, you know,
from point A to point B and it took me three hours and I can offer insight to someone who is either
curious to get from point A to point B, I can offer them insight that will shorten that time and
they get there in 90 minutes. Why wouldn't I do that? And so that's when I created Love Squad. I was like,
you know, all the information that I, it may not be much, but everything that I know right now or
have learned, I'd love to share with someone so they don't have to get frustrated or they don't
have to pay for it. Knowledge is very expensive. Information is expensive. And so I created Love Squad
out of, again, a shared frustration and lack of resources to say,
hey, everyone come out. It started out as a website. Adidas found the website. It was really
crappy website to be completely transparent. Adidas found it asked if I would create some content
for their site. I was definitely emailed back like, I think you got the wrong person because this
is not good stuff. And they were like, no, we want you to create some content. And from there,
I decided to continue pursuing this quote unquote blog that I had. And it was about the time I was
talking to a friend and she's like, you need to invite people out. And at this time, I only had about
3,000 followers on my Instagram, and I had, and not to say that wasn't a lot. I mean,
that's still a lot of people following you. So I was very grateful, but I'm not sure all
those people were interested in meeting me. At this point, I think I was hosting for the Brooklyn
Nets, and I decided to do a little event, partner with a space in New York City, and invite
anyone who wanted to come out. It was going to be a free event, 50 spots, because you know
New York, we don't have that much space, 50 spots. And what ended up happening, which was the
AHA moment around Love Squad is what ended up happening was I opened the Evite and within 15
seconds, 50 spots were taken and 75 people were on the wait list. And now this event was going to
encompass a workout and then a panel discussion between me and one of my friends. I invited my friend.
I was like, girl, can you work for me for free? And she said, yes, she's great. And so it was basically
the conversation part that people started sticking around for. I just shared information on how I
build a website, how I started building a brand where Love Squad came from, how I auditioned,
just offering some simple tricks and tips to help the community. And from there, I just decided
to continue to pursue that. So I guess, again, long answer to your question is unconventional,
absolutely, but frustration and lack of resources really were my driving point to say, I think I'm
worth it and I think I can do it and I want to do this for my family. And so that's what I'm doing.
It's amazing. And I love the analogy of the jungle gym because for
myself being in corporate America for 20 plus years, I always thought careers were so linear and it was
just supposed to be that way. I don't even know if anyone ever verbalized that to me or that's just
what I saw or understood. But this idea that you had to be in one lane and there was a goal at the
end of the lane. And I just love this idea of busting up the lanes and taking your talents wherever
they go. Have you ever felt through any of these journeys as you moved to a different role or added
or leverage your talents for a new opportunity, oh, this one's just not a right fit for me.
Ooh, I'm not good at this one. I'm going to pivot and dump that one and step away from it.
I think that what ended up happening is like you kind of make those tough decisions that you do have
to leave. So I remember being a Nick City dancer and I'd been a Nick City dancer for three seasons.
And I had a conversation with my boyfriend, Andrew, who's still my boyfriend now.
And we were talking about should I stay a fourth season.
So if I say being a Nick City dancer was affording me that visibility.
I love being a part of the team. This was my entry point to the NBA because right after this,
I started hosting for the Nets. And so we talked about progress. Identifying what progress looks like
to you as an individual is really what drives this decision of leaving or moving on or making a
change. And so he asked me what progress looked like. And I told him and he said, do you think that
that can happen where you are in terms of being on the team? And I said it was highly unlikely.
And so he said, well, that drives your decision. It seems like you should leave. And it was very
uncomfortable because I was like, okay, this makes sense, but it just doesn't feel good. Like,
no one wants to leave. And at that time, I didn't have anything lined up, right? Like, I was like,
oh, okay, I'm just going to leave this job. And so I end up really trusting him and in terms of, like,
his feedback. And I left. And what ended up happening was it actually shaped my adult career
in a sense. I spent three months at home quite a bit. And instead of, I realized there was a
difference between being busy and being productive in this three months. Being busy is like, yeah,
my Instagram stories lit, but I haven't done anything to add value to my long-term goal or even
to figure out what that long-term goal was or even short-term goal. And so I had a lot of, again,
that self-awareness, that self-discovery started to happen. And I ended up started hosting.
That's when I started taking hosting classes. That was the time. I said, you know what? Let me
explore this. I started by doing on-camera work. I was like, let me just go take a class to see how to
get better on camera because I'm going on castings with my modeling agency that, that, that,
were for commercials and I had no clue. And again, all this may sound glamorous, but when you're getting a
no every time you go to a commercial casting, you're like, yeah, well, maybe this is telling me I don't
got it. I don't have it. But the reality was, it's not that I wasn't good enough. It's just I wasn't
prepared. I wasn't at that point. And so using those three months, I started taking classes,
really going in for it. And honestly, what ended up happening, I sent an email out to all the people
that were in my Gmail account at that time. And I said, I am a host. I called myself a host. No one did,
I did after taking like, you know, three months of classes.
And I will host your kids' baby party, your baby shower, your charity event.
I will host for free for experience.
And it was literally at this point, Heather, that one of my friends who worked for the Brooklyn Nets,
they just moved to Brooklyn.
She was like, hey, you've been a part of the NBA.
Maybe you could be our host.
And I came in for an interview, and I was super honest.
I was like, hey, no skills here.
I do know how the NBA works.
And I know what the court, I know the game, I know basketball,
and end up happening where they offered me the job.
And if I hadn't had that conversation with my boyfriend, Andrew, at the time of making the decision,
it wasn't me just on a whim saying, I'm done with this, or it doesn't make me feel good.
No, it was literally like, what does progress, identify what progress looks like for you?
Is that allowed in the space that you're in, at the company that you're in?
Is it an opportunity?
If it's not, then that kind of answers your question.
And it makes you make those tough decisions.
So that was a story that highlights.
I had to make that decision.
It was uncomfortable.
I probably felt like I wasn't ready, but I did it, and it led me to, now I've been a host of the
Brooklynettes for seven seasons. It's one of the best jobs that I have ever had. It's an organization
that I love. I've grown there. I mean, I have learned things that I don't think I could ever
learn because in hosting, you got to do it in real time. You're so good at it, too. You're real
and everything I looked at it. It's really very impressive. And I appreciate that you invested in yourself
and took the classes. You put the time and you offered your services for free at first. I think a lot of
people want to leapfrog that window and not do it. And that's where the hard work and experience
comes from. I also love that you called yourself a host before anyone else called you one.
That resonates with me so much. I remember when I got fired and left corporate America,
I would say, oh, I got fired. I got fired. I don't know what I'm going to do. When I was already
writing a book, I was already knew I was going to work for myself, but to make that leap and start
saying to people, oh, I work for myself. I'm an entrepreneur.
I'm an author, to actually put it out to the world was super, super scary.
So I'm so proud of you that you did that before anyone called you host.
You called yourself one.
I seriously applaud that because I believe when you do put things out to the universe,
you will start connecting dots and opportunities will start lining up for you.
So that was brilliant that you did that.
So from there, and you brought this up when you were just sharing that story,
you were talking about the importance of these bigger picture goals.
What does that look like for you right now?
What are those grandiose goals for you?
I actually never put too much pressure on myself to figure that out or have that answer right
away.
Like many of us, we're in a position where if we try to map out what the next 10 years looks like,
we'd probably fail because we never know we'd be here.
What we had mapped out for 2020 did not look like this.
That is probably a unanimous quote for everyone where you're just like,
I didn't expect it to look like this.
So for me, what I end up doing is a short-term goal.
I know that I continue, I want to continue on the paths that I'm in.
I love, I think a Peloton instructor.
I love our community.
I love being able.
And that also, too, didn't come.
That wasn't something that I thought I'd be either.
I never wanted to be an instructor because I didn't think that I was going to ever be good at that
or that I had anything to offer in that area.
So that's what I mean is that even becoming a Peloton instructor,
if I had put myself in a position when I became the host of the Brooklynettes to look at five years, set a five-year goal and a 10-year goal, I would have sold myself short because one of the best things that it ever happened to me was becoming a Peloton instructor.
So for me right now, I stay true to that. I think I do want to stay in the lane of live on camera, scripted, unscripted TV.
I love motivational, positivity. I love how-toes because, again, if I can get you from point A to point B, it took me three hours, but it only takes you 90 minutes.
able to offer that, or at least connect the dots to someone who can get you that information.
So be a conduit through the conversation for that. I know that, again, these are the things that I'd
love to do. What they will look like in the next five years, 10 years, I don't know because technology
is moving faster than my mind. And so I want to be as I always say, don't be flexible, be fluid,
because flexibility has a breaking point. I want to be as fluid and my abilities to think beyond what
is right now, but also I want to be pretty diligent in what I have going on. So I'm dedicated to
Love Squad, to hosting for the Brooklyn Nets, Ditas Global Ambassador, being a Peloton instructor. As I
continue to pursue those fields because I can identify progress in all of those areas, I just know it'll
lead me to that point of, okay, if there is a next move that I need to make in the next couple
years, it will come through my curiosity and diligence for working really hard in those areas,
because they have great, again, great exposure, great platforms, and I can identify progress.
So you bring a Peloton, and that's actually how I found you a little over a year ago.
I didn't have a Peloton at the time, and I was at a girlfriend's house, staying at our house with her family in Atlanta,
and we wanted to work out, and there wasn't anyone to watch the kids, and she said, just go upstairs and ride the Peloton.
And I said, well, who do I take for a class? She said, well, Allie, love.
And, yeah, she's a huge fan, and still is.
And so that was my first experience with Peloton.
What was interesting is fast forward months.
I always took classes in a location.
I love being around people and I love the energy of leaving my home and working out somewhere.
This is pre-pandemic, obviously.
When I was seeing the news the first week of March and seeing that there was a potential
that we were going to be hit with this pandemic, I got online and I bought my Peloton
with a rushed delivery and it literally came four days before we.
were put on quarantine, that bike, I have to tell you, that bike, you, Alex, Cody, I mean,
you guys saved me. It is unbelievable how that bike and the community, the high fives, the music,
the messaging that you give and share in your rides, how uplifting that was. I wonder for you
being on the other end, being responsible and in the leadership role, no.
showing so many people are tuning into you as a lifeline stuck at home.
What was that experience like for you?
Well, first I want to say thank you so much to your friend for suggesting me.
I appreciate it.
It never gets old.
And thank you.
I mean, on behalf of my colleagues, we have definitely the best instructors in the world.
And I always say it's because of their level of humanity that just sets them apart
of love, love, love my fellow instructors.
But in terms of now being at home, what ended up happening was with the pandemic,
and everything happening with COVID,
we end up teaching from home.
Many of us, Peloton, I will say our production texts
have some magic in their fingertips,
where, as to quote Jen Sherman,
I like open my door and there was a production studio
right out in front of my door.
They packaged everything up, sent it to some of our homes
who had the space, and we were able to set up a studio
and be able to stream content live from home.
And I think one of our members made a really good statement.
They're like, are you really socially distancing?
and if so, how are you doing it because you usually have 25,000 people live in your living room?
And I thought that was so funny, and I thought it was a clear, clear kind of like a picture of what's going on.
But Pelotaur is uniquely positioned in the intersectionality of media, of technology, of fitness.
And the real, I say, engine for us is our community, is our humanity, is the fact that we understand that while we didn't know, I mean, I didn't know exactly what a pandemic felt like,
This is the first of my lifetime.
I didn't know what to expect.
I didn't know what to do and do it correctly.
But I did the best that I could.
And with that being said,
is like to continue to stay connected on social, on Facebook,
taking rides, swarming, being able to,
I also, just like you, Heather,
I end up getting a bike right at the top of pandemic
so that I could engage with our community
so I can hop on in my living room and take a ride.
And many of you are like, Allie,
why didn't you have a bike already?
Aren't you an instructor?
Let me put it this way.
I was very close. I am very close to the studio. So if I wanted to ride, I can do that. I'm also not always like, once I bring work home, I'm on it all the time, which was my fear. But it's a reality now, which I love because I'm not in the studio as much. So no, I didn't have a bike because there were bikes at our studio in our locker rooms that we could, you know, we could utilize. So I got my riding in. But becoming a home rider at the top of the pandemic, I was able to swarm. I still ride at 6 a.m. with my 6 a.m. hit us on a tabata ride. We picked.
a ride. I posted on my stories. I get about 200 people that will swarm in the mornings
Tuesday at 6 a.m. even though there's nothing on the schedule, I will take the same ride
from five months ago. And so I will say like it has been a life changer for me, not only just
as an instructor, but recently as a home rider, being able to transition and offer new content
to our members because they are handling life just as much as we are. You know how it feels
to hop on that bike and say, all right, I kind of, you know, I'm frustrated today. I'm confused.
views, there's a level up to uncertainty. I'm anxious. And while Peloton is not a cure by any means,
it has definitely been an outlet for me and many of my family to handle what's going on,
to get on and brighten up your day, if you get on a Cody ride or an Alex ride or you get
one of my feel-good rides or any instructor, really, it's a way to just not only get your workout
in, but to add some levity to maybe what you're going through, give you an extra boost.
And so I'm always shocked when I tell the story of how there is a production studio in my living room.
And it magically streams to people globally.
Like across the world, people will be in my living room Sunday at 1 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.
And I'm like, this is incredible.
That is just to tell the incredible people that we work with at Peloton.
Like it's not just one instructor.
It's not just six instructors.
It's not all 33.
It's our organization.
It's our company.
It's real.
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that connection, I think, solidifies community and intimacy at a time when people are feeling
alone. One of the things that I've got to ask you about, and it's interesting, because I do take
out Cody and your rides, those are my three instructors that I follow. And you've each handled
this differently. And I'm curious from a leadership standpoint, because I see each one of you as
leaders for your communities, as the racial unrest has accelerated, become,
the protesting, the rioting, there's so much angst fear unknown right now throughout our entire world,
not just our country as we're seeing this unfold. How is it that you decided to approach this
or not approach this to talk about it or not talk about it? How has that process been for you?
Because just being on the outside, I assume that it must be challenging or, you know,
the messages that you get from people. What is that, what has that process been like for you?
This is a turning point for Black Lives Matter in terms of it's been around for seven years.
And this is not the first time this situation has happened.
But when you talk about this racial unrest that's accelerated, I think it's just more of it being, again, I kind of always use the word a turning point.
It's been recognized largely.
And I can't speak in terms of for my other instructors or fellow instructors.
But what I can say is that for me, I talk about bringing your whole self to the bike.
I talk about bringing your whole self to work.
It's something that our company has really encouraged.
You know, it is one of the best companies, if not the best company that I've ever worked for.
And in any place that we talk about it in Love Squad, at any place you go, you want to feel like you belong there.
And you want to feel like you can bring your whole self there and that you can be your authentic self.
And so I don't think that the expectation was set that anything otherwise was going to happen at any point no matter what's going on when we get on the bike or on the mat.
And so in terms of how I handled it, I know for me it was, it still is an emotional process. But most importantly, it is a learning experience in the sense of leaning into resources, really leaning into listening and learning, even as a black woman of what is going on. What's the history? How do we speak about this? What are people going through? And again, the upside of our community is that we are in contact. People will hop on when I'm on Instagram live and ask questions or,
slide in my DMs. And now with that being said, not every question is going to feel good. And that is
okay. That's what creates dialogue. And not to say I engage with every single DM or every single
question, but I'm aware my ears to the street because my community is a part of me. And in order to
cultivate and really truly be a part of a community, we have to listen to each other. We have to know,
we have to at least have a pulse of what's going on. And so again, I took the opportunity to
download audible books and I started doing it. I do endurance training on the bike. So on my
Saturdays when I'm riding for two hours doing endurance training, I put on my audible book and I listen.
I listen to those that are experts in anti-racism, understanding what key words means when we're
talking about racism in general. How is it different from discrimination and prejudice? Being able
to articulate how I feel because as much as I've gone through personal circumstances, there are many
times I didn't have the right words to express what happened to me or how I felt about those things.
And so, again, I had leaned into resources. I continue to do so right now reading audible books,
podcasts, and then open up dialogue with my family, with my fellow instructors, with my friends.
They're my friends as well. And I think that that was the way that it has helped me and continues
to help me to understand what is my message when I get on that bike. Because I don't want to ever
go anywhere and speak and not be aware or intentionally pretend I'm unaware what the emotions of the
people around me are going through. And so when I do my Sundays with love, when we talk about a
virtue of courage, or we talk about temperance, or we talk about friendship, I don't talk about
all the positive things because we can identify the positive things. The things that we're going
through are the not so positive things. The things that we have this unrest with are the not so
positive things. And it's the things that we want to learn how to work through. And we want to
learn that we're not alone. And we want to learn that we aren't in the dark. And so it's this
concept of even right now as we're in this turning point, and I get on a bike, and whether it's a
pop ride or intervals and arms ride, or Sundays with love or feel good ride, it's me recognizing
and highlighting that while we may feel a certain high level of uncertainty, why we may feel
anxious, why we may feel overwhelmed, well, we may feel that we don't know what to say or that we don't
want to say the wrong things, but we don't want to be silent. I always talk about leaning into
the resources and the voices that are in the know, but also this concept of if you feel like you're
in the dark because of those things. All I want you to imagine is that if you turned on the light
in this dark room that you're in, the reality of the situation is that there will be people
standing shoulder to shoulder with you because you're not alone in this discomfort. You're not
alone in your uncertainty. You're not alone in this turmoil that you're going through.
in this emotional space that you're in.
And while our emotions and our stories may be different and uniquely ours,
you are not alone in the fact that you still have to confront those things and deal with those things.
And so to get all that wrapped up in a nice bow is that at any time you get me on the bike,
the point is for me to be a real person.
I'm going to give you a great workout and I'm going to motivate you,
but I'm also a real person.
And not that I say I'm going to be the most preachy person all the time and give you a sermon on the bike,
but it's just understanding, like bringing my whole self to that bike and to the mat is really important.
And I want to be my true self. I want to be, I want to be me in any space. And so that was the
decision that I made for many years is that what makes me feel good is when I'm myself and I'm my most
kind self and my most, you know, honest self, transparent self. And that's what I remind myself about
before I get on that bike and clip in. That was so beautifully said. So I thank you.
Thank you for explaining that because you made the point that we're not alone.
And I've always felt that through your rides, through your messaging.
And it's just more important now than ever.
So if people are not following yet, Allie, where can they find you?
Oh, thank you.
If you would like to follow me, I'm Ali Miss Love on Instagram,
alleyloved.com on my website.
And then I would encourage any of you that are looking for what we've been doing.
We've been a conduit for resources around Black Lives Matter, around COVID, around business.
well-being of women, but Love Squad. Love Squad on Instagram is at Love Squad, and then sign up for the
newsletter. Those are always really educational and informative and leading you to resources that can
potentially be catalyst for change for you. But that's Love Squad.com. Thank you so much for your time today.
Thank you for including us in your community and thank you for your message and for teachings.
I am already following you. Everybody, I'm encouraging you to follow Allie too. She's got the best,
most positive message out there. Thank you, Allie, for being here.
Thank you, Heather. This was incredible. Thank you,
everyone who took the time to listen to the end, I'm sending you all love and light. Thank you again, Heather.
Full tight. We'll be right back. I ask you to try to find your passion. I hope you love meeting
Ali love as much as I love meeting her and spending time with her. She dropped some major wisdom.
Again, such a young, powerful woman, which makes me so excited for the future. Inclusive and love is
where it's at and I'm all in. So, okay, a few things. One, I wanted to respond to.
a question that was sentenced me. So here we go. Hey, Heather, heard you on podcast moms moving on.
I'm currently married with a 10-month-old little girl. My husband and I have been fighting. P.S.,
by the way, everyone in the world is fighting during quarantine. The pressure on everyone is excessive.
About a month or maybe a little over a month ago, I had James Sexton on, who's a famous New York
divorce attorney, and he called this out that there would be more divorces than we've ever seen
in the history of our country once quarantine.
and it's just everyone's routine was upset. Everyone's, there was uncertainty everywhere. There's
financial uncertainty. There's unrest with children and responsibility. There's so much going on for
everyone. So I just hope everyone cuts themselves a break. And so, you know, today my son sat in
from all day long and I felt terrible about it, but I have to cut myself a break too. I know I have a
job to do as well. And, you know, it's easy in these moments to get down on things. And we've just got to
be kind to ourselves. Okay, so I feel he doesn't listen to me and I feel we're headed for divorce. At
times, I find myself having thoughts like, would I divorce him if I knew I could get full custody?
I'm curious how you knew it was time to get a divorce or if you have any advice. So here's the thing.
Oh my gosh, I was crystal clear when it was time to get a divorce. I remember thinking I could kill
that man. I was so angry at him. It was I thought I could throw a chair at him. I literally thought
I might throw something on him. That's how angry, a level of anger I didn't even know existed
inside me. That's how mad I was when I finally, that was my final straw. I'll never forget.
Oh my gosh, I was livid. So you hit a breaking point, I think, I mean, listen, everybody's
different, right? But for me, it was clear. I just, the one question I asked myself was,
would you rather be with him unhappily married or be willing to be single with a small
child, which one? And I really thought it through, you know, because some people leave to be with
someone else. That's, in my opinion, not the right answer. That's a recipe for disaster. But if you can do it and
just be on your own, would you be happier? And when I played it out my mind, I was, yeah, I would. I wouldn't be
let down all the time. I wouldn't be arguing all the time. I'd have energy back. I wouldn't have this
negative pull on me that I wasn't happy with something and I was just letting it linger.
So I kind of liken that back to firing your villains to create confidence. And I'm not saying,
saying that he was a villain, I'm saying in that situation, for me, it was like this pulling
negative gnaw on me. And when you get rid of that, you set yourself up for further success,
because you put positive energy back into your life. You eliminate negative energy. You
eliminate fighting all these negative emotions and feelings that really begin to consume you. So
for me, it was crystal clear. And I'd ask yourself that question. Listen, we might have other people
in our ear. We might have, your mother might be saying, don't get a divorce, don't get a divorce.
You really got to tune out other people and listen to yourself.
Listen to your instinct.
Listen to your intuition.
Journal.
That's another great way to start to hear your inner voice.
You have the answer inside you.
You already know what the answer is.
And frankly, if you're reaching out to me, I'm pretty clear what the answer is.
It's funny.
People reach out to me when they want the aggressive kick in the pants.
I know that.
It happens all the time.
I get people message to me, should I leave my job if A, B, C, and D?
Well, let me tell you something.
If you are reaching out to me, you probably are looking for that push, so why don't you go ahead and do it?
Right?
So that's the indicator to me, the fact that she reached out to me probably says that she should do it, but she needs to answer that question for herself.
I cannot tell her what to do and no one else can.
She will know the right thing to do.
She will listen to herself and answer this question for herself.
I remember when I was younger, a therapist would say that to me and I'd get so mad.
I'd be like, no, you just tell me.
Tell me what to do.
It's so much easier.
But you have to take responsibility when it's your own.
decisions, right? That's why it is harder. But the more you do that, the more you step into
owning your voice, the more you step into listening to your own voice and acting in your intuition,
the happier your life will become. It's the things we don't want to look at, that we don't want
to see, that we don't want to deal, that we want to ignore, that really start to weigh us down.
So shed those things, just like we shed the virus and move on. Okay. The other thing I really wanted
to get into is one of my mentees had an interesting challenge that I want to share with everyone.
Back when I was in corporate America, I was in beyond so many BS meetings that were ridiculous.
And oftentimes you'd be dealing with peers and they'd be responsible for work and they're not hitting
their deadlines and it affects you and you can't get your job done when everybody else isn't.
And the leader at the table isn't leading, right?
They're not holding anyone accountable and you're getting frustrated, but you have to be peace.
see and you have to smile and you can't call the leader at the table what you want to call them.
Useless, right?
So there's this whole facade and dance that goes on in corporate America, which frankly,
I do not miss.
But so many of us are in it, right?
So one of my mentees is knee deep in it.
Senior level executive, major company, but she's with a lot of peers and a leader who's not
leading.
And they have these meetings where they get clear on the outcome, but it's not clear what
the deadlines are, what the workflow process is, who's responsible for what, and there's no follow-up
email. So when she explains to me the challenge she was facing, and she doesn't want to appear a bitch,
right? You know, she doesn't want to be nagging everyone. So I had a couple of ideas for her. One is to ask
for help, because I think that's a really kind way to approach a situation, and most people want to
help one another. So you can always reach back out to the quote, unquote, pretend leader and say,
I need your help. We left the meeting, and I'm crystal clear on the outcome. Thank you so much
that direction. However, I'm not clear on this. Can you tell me who's responsible for ABC and when
that deadline is? So approaching in a more gentle asking for help way is a safe way to BPC yet
accomplish your goal. Another way that I like to do it is she was saying, you know, I need to get
this information and report from my peer where equals. I can't tell him what to do. I can't tell him
a deadline and the leader's not doing it. I would reach out. I said with the headline or beginning of
your email saying, I'm confused. I'm confused. I'm not able to get my work done if I can't get
access to your reports. Do you have any direction around when your team's pulling those reports
together or when you can get them done? I just want you and I to both look great going into this meeting.
How can we both come out on top? Can you give me some feedback? So I love leading with I'm confused because
it's not like you're blaming someone, but you need some insight into what's going on.
And then the other thing is aligning yourself with them, right?
I want us both to look great in the meeting.
And in order for, you know, you and I are in this together.
And as you know, we need to rely on one another's information and reports so that we can both do our part.
I can promise to get this to you by X, what date works for you.
You know, to be more collaborative is another way that you can achieve your goal without
pissing people off and still, you know, be perfect.
So those are some of the approaches that I shared this week, then hopefully you find them helpful.
You know, I have to tell you, if you are struggling with communicating right now during these
uncertain times, during this pandemic, during, you know, all the challenges in the world, and so
many people are, I want you to know that I partnered with Harvard professor John Westman.
I'm so excited.
I taught his class for him, a sales and marketing class for him.
Well, actually twice I've done it in the past year.
We've become friends.
and he's taking the Harvard curriculum with me to you.
We're doing a live one-to-one group coaching call.
I'm so excited.
We're going to go through all of the data, all of the research on how to connect with people
in a non-offensive way, how to sell during really stressful times,
and how to do it in a way that activates dopamine in your customer's mind
so they actually walk away feeling good about the interaction,
feeling good about the conversation, and feeling good about you.
When your customer's feeling good about you, they're probably going to buy for me.
So you've got to join me for this.
There are limited seats available.
I am going to include a link to the event.
It's Thursday, so we don't have a lot of time.
So definitely click the link, check it out.
See if you can still grab a seat.
And if you want, you can use the code S-E-L-L for $100 off your ticket.
This is one event.
You cannot afford to miss.
We are live.
We are answering your questions.
we are doing role playing. We are giving you strategies. We are giving you narratives. We are giving it all to you. You will have everything you need to approach your clients and to communicate with others during this really stressful time. I guarantee it's worth it. It's a money back guarantee. You've got my word on it. You don't like it. You get your money back. But you're going to love it and you're going to get the value because John's been doing this at Harvard for the past couple of months. And the testimonials are amazing. So definitely make the time, show up, click the link. And I can't wait to see you.
I can't wait to work with you.
And as always, thank you for being here.
And until next week, keep creating your confidence.
