The School of Greatness - 719 LeAnn Rimes on Music, Meditation, and Mindfulness
Episode Date: November 14, 2018TRUE SELF-LOVE IS THE KEY TO LIFE. Are you insecure and in resistance to yourself? It’s such an exhausting way to live. Instead of feelings of self-hatred, start to view everything you don’t like ...about yourself as a gift. Why? Because once you start to love yourself, you can begin to love others. It sounds like a cliche. But it’s the truth. Self-love is a truly powerful practice. When we start to work on our inside, the outside starts to fix itself. On today’s episode of The School of Greatness, I talk with someone who has dealt with stardom from a young age and is learning to love herself fully: LeAnn Rimes. LeAnn Rimes is a Grammy award-winning singer, songwriter, actress and author. Rimes rose to stardom at age 13 following the release of her version of the Bill Mack song “Blue.” Her hit song “How Do I Live” was ranked as the most successful song of the 1990s by Billboard magazine. LeAnn has gone through a very public divorce and has opened up about her struggle with psoriasis and dental problems. She talks about all the trauma she experienced and how she started to work through it using chanting, meditation, and breathwork. So get ready to learn about LeAnn’s journey to focus less on pleasing those around her and find her own voice on Episode 719. Some Questions I Ask: What was your biggest challenge? (7:50) When did you start to go through your trauma? (13:31) What were the stories that your mind told you that supported your journey and what made you suffer? (20:25) What is the greatest lesson you’ve learned from your failed marriage? (42:05) Have you been able to heal your experience with your parents? (47:15) How do you overcome the pressure of staying relevant? (49:40) In This Episode You Will Learn: How to use self-awareness as a tool to grow (18:42) Why your greatest competition is yourself (23:48) LeAnn’s struggle with Psoriasis (24:29) The daily practice you can do to love your body (27:57) How working with a breathwork teacher changed Leann’s life (32:39) Why gratitude is the key (34:37) How loving yourself can help you love others (48:36) How LeAnn stays in touch with her creativity (54:26)
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This is episode number 719 with the incredible Leanne Rimes.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message
to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
Oprah Winfrey said, turn your wounds into wisdom. I hope you're having an amazing day today. And no
matter what challenge, adversity, or difficulty you've been through, you always have an opportunity
to heal and overcome it. And you have an opportunity to share your story with others.
And today we're going to dive into that. But if you guys don't know who our guest is,
she is amazing. Leanne Rimes is a powerful singer, songwriter, actress, and author. She rose to stardom at age 13 following the release
of her version of the Bill Mack song, Blue, becoming the youngest country music star since
1972. She has won so many awards, including two Grammys, three ACMs, a CMA, 12 Billboard Music Awards, and one American Music Award. She's sold over 37 million records
worldwide with about 20 plus million album sales in the United States. And Billboard ranked her
the 17th artist of the 1990 to 2000 decade. And she's also written a number of books.
And her hit song, How Do I Live, was ranked as the most successful song of the 1990s by Billboard Magazine.
That's right.
You can try to resist, try to hide from my kiss, but you know, but you know that you can't fight the moonlight deep.
All right.
I will stop singing for the moment.
But, man, she is an incredible talent,
and I'm so excited that she's on here. We dive into a lot of things in this episode that goes
pretty deep, but also I think shares a lot and reveals a lot about how to overcome these different
adversities. And when you're faced with something at such a young age, like Leanne was faced with,
how she came out on the other side in such a powerful age, like Leanne was faced with, how she came
out on the other side in such a powerful way.
We talk about how she was able to have a successful career from the very beginning all the way
to this part of her life.
Also, how to keep your ego from getting the best of you.
We talk about the power of self-awareness to reach your goals and how important it is
to surround yourself with the right people. And we learned some of these incredible routines that Leanne practices
to love herself and her body through meditation. And she shares a mantra that she'll actually sing
with us and for us at one point. So be aware of that because it's a very powerful moment.
And she's never done it publicly. So you got to give her some good feedback on that.
Very excited about this, guys.
Make sure to share it with your friends, lewishouse.com slash 719.
Make sure to tag Leanne Rimes on Instagram.
She's over there a lot, so tag her while you're listening
and let her know what you enjoyed most about this.
Again, a big thank you to our sponsors.
And I'm so excited about
our guest today. Again, she's someone that I've been connecting with over the last couple of years
and finally had a chance to interview after a few times of meeting and really just diving into
the greatest life lessons that she's learned. And I wanted to bring you those life lessons today.
So again, share this with your friends, tag at Leanne Rimes over on Instagram and let your friends know all about this. So without further ado,
let me introduce to you the one, the only Leanne Rimes.
Welcome everyone back to the School of Greatest Podcast. We have the lovely Leanne Rimes in the
house. Good to see you. I'm so pumped you're here. I'm so happy I'm here. I'm so Podcast. We have the lovely Leanne Rimes in the house. Good to see you. Nice to see you too.
I'm so pumped you're here.
I'm so happy I'm here.
I'm so grateful.
We've been working on this for like almost two years.
I know.
It has been crazy.
First off,
I was like,
who is this dude?
And then I've totally
fell in love with you
when you do.
Thank you.
And then we met for lunch
which was so great
and it's just good
to get to know you.
Yeah, it's been great.
You're good people.
Thank you.
I appreciate it.
Anything you need,
I got your back.
Thank you.
You're constantly traveling and touring and you're in Vancouver, you're in LA,
you're doing movies, you're doing music, all that stuff. So you're a busy individual and you've had
a busy life. I've had a busy life. And you were 12, 13, you kind of came on the scene and became
like a superstar in the country music world, Billboard top charts,
you know, all these different awards in your teens.
Yeah.
I think I read over 30 something, 37 million records worldwide sold.
Something like that.
And I kept up with it.
Billboard ranked top 17 artists of the decade from 1990 to 2000.
I mean, you've just done, did you read that one?
Didn't know that.
It's pretty cool, huh?
Yeah. So many things that you've created, but we were just talking about this before,
is that there's also been a lot of struggles you've faced in the last 20 plus years of your
shiny career.
Right, yeah.
What would you say has been the biggest challenge you've had to overcome in the last
20 years while everyone is praising you and all this
success and millions of records and top artists in the world but what's been the biggest challenge
well the first thing that comes to mind since I mean I can be really honest here I'm my ego and
because I started so young I mean an ego first off is we all have to have it to to live and be human
but there's a healthy way of
Being in that and also a very unhealthy way and I guess when I talk about it
it's I started so young that and
I'm in a business where I have to care how much what people think and
You know how many people are buying my albums and how many come to the shows and the whole deal so it's a
very people-pleasing kind of way of
Being and especially when you start that young,
that's all I knew. So having to, and I still do this daily, it's like having to disengage
with trying to please everyone and be everything to everyone and make everybody happy. It's like,
what ultimately do I want? What do I feel? And I started so young that I
naturally had that. I naturally knew what I wanted. And my first song that I recorded, I was 11.
That actually ended up coming out when I was 13. But at 11, you're still so creative and there's
no boundaries and you're just creating from your heart. And I had this just magic about me at that age. And then you start to lose that when so many people get in your ear. And then you're just creating from your heart. And I had that, this just magic about me at that age. And
then you start to lose that when so many people get in your ear and then you're trying to keep
up with the success that you've had. And there's so many levels to it. So I guess when I talk about
ego, it's really from that space of having to allow like the Leanne Rimes that was created to
kind of fall away to figure out who who the real Leanne Rimes is
to continue to move forward.
Wow.
Do you feel like you had to kind of destroy yourself
at one point?
Totally.
To then say, okay, everyone's built this up,
this image of you.
Yeah, and you do it.
I did it so, like, I was so unconscious
of the fact that I was doing it.
That you were destroying yourself?
That I was destroying it.
I needed to.
Like, I really needed to figure out who I was doing it. That you were destroying yourself? That I was destroying it. I needed to. I really needed to figure out who I was without all the hoopla around me and people's expectations.
And it was a—I did it just enough.
I did it just enough.
So I still—I mean, I've always had a great career, and I've had so many fantastic fans.
I've been in this business for so long.
People still care. It's kind of crazy. kind of crazy. Most people don't have that. And, but I did it enough so I could,
I don't know, so I could find, well, I found my humanity again. Like there was just this piece
of me that never got to be human. You know, there was somebody, you put you up on a pedestal from
the time you're a kid and it's like, don't fall. You can't do anything wrong.
Right, don't fall.
So I guess, I mean, in a way, it was kind of inevitable that something like that was going to happen. Did you feel like you were unconsciously sabotaging things in your early 20s, or you just started sabotaging a lot of things?
I just started doing it out of sheer rebellion in a way, but it wasn't a bad thing, I don't think, necessarily.
Like, I needed to find all of these pieces of me that I felt had been fragmented and kind of pushed to the side to be Leigh-Anne Rimes, you know?
So the journey of it all was really inevitable.
And I honestly, I think my greatest accomplishment is that I'm still alive and I'm still standing.
Really?
Yeah.
Do you feel like at one point you almost were going to die or something?
Well, I don't know.
I started so young.
I never felt like I'd live past 21 for some reason.
No way.
Yeah, it was like a weird thing.
And then I didn't think I'd live past 30.
It was like always, now I feel like I'm going to live for a really long time.
Okay.
I'm all good.
No, but I don't know.
I think starting so young, you just like had this, I just had this weird feeling about me that I, with all the craziness around me and I never really had anonymity.
It was always like everyone was always in my face.
In your business.
Constantly.
And knew everything about you.
Yeah.
Relationships.
Everything.
Yeah.
I mean, there was like nothing that could be hidden.
This was pre-social media.
This was pre-social media, This was pre-social media,
which is crazy to think about. I think about people in my position that started so young,
and most of them are not here anymore. And I think that's probably one of the biggest things
that I feel like is an accomplishment, is I've actually worked through some really dark days.
And I pretty much, there's a rare day where I feel like I don't have myself, but that's very few and far between anymore,
where I know that it can get really, really dark and I'm going to be okay.
So you know, like, okay, I'm going through a lot of stuff right now,
but I'm going to get out on the other side.
Yeah, there is another side.
But there was a time where you thought there's no way out.
Yeah, there was a lot of pain.
I mean, I went through a divorce publicly with my mom and dad.
They were 14 when I divorced.
We were right in the middle of like—
When they divorced or you?
When they divorced.
Yeah.
And, yeah, sorry, when they got a divorce.
And then I went through a lawsuit with my dad publicly, and then I went through a lawsuit with my record label.
Like, all of these things.
Eventually, like, what I've learned about the body and the nervous system and the whole deal is my nervous system was just on stun all the time.
I was constantly in fight or flight.
So much adrenaline constantly.
So much.
That's not healthy.
No.
Only over the past three years have I really been able to understand that.
And calm down.
Yeah.
Really?
And calm down, yeah.
The anxiety and the things that were stored in my body and the pain.
The trauma.
The trauma.
It's all trauma.
And to know that I think I was afraid to go into it.
They always say like the only way out is through.
So I knew I had to go through it, but I was so afraid because I'd been avoiding it for like for so long.
When did you start to go through it?
The trauma, the pain, the suffering?
How old were you then?
When did you start to go through it, the trauma, the pain, the suffering?
How old were you then?
Well, I know I was, I mean, I was in my early teens, my mid-teens,
when I started to feel the pain of it all.
But I would push it away in every way that I possibly could and work.
I would work.
Did you ever do drugs or drinking?
I had my moments of here and there, different things, but it wasn't like was one of those kids thank god there was no social media around I was one of those kids that
like I would bring the party to me would be in the house it would be super safe you know yeah
but it was safe in my 16 year old mind like whoo um but yeah I wasn't I wasn't ever one to get so dark into that. It was more of emotionally just kind of disengaging.
I closed myself off big time.
From the world or from friends, from parents?
From everything.
From what age, what ages?
I started definitely around 17.
Gosh.
Yeah.
It was just a protection mechanism.
Was it just because everyone was trying to get
something from you or they were manipulating you or they were taking advantage or what was the
feeling? It was always like a, I think it was a constant like grabbing, like needing something,
feeding off of, you know, who I was at the time. And you just, I think back then and I just,
there was just a lot of pain this kid was going through.
Like, I see it such a different place now.
You can really witness it from a different side.
And this kid was in a lot of pain.
And so there was definitely a moment where I'm like, if I go into that, like, I'm really afraid I'm not coming out of it.
When you dive into it.
Like, if I allow that, yeah, to feel that, I'm just, I'm afraid it's going to, to like overtake me and I won't be able to come out of it. And you were like 17 when that started?
17, 18. Yeah. I mean, it really kind of culminated like when I was 30, I just decided I had actually
gone through a lot of, it's a long story, but long story short, I'd gone through a lot of dental
surgeries and I had been put under many times and I wasn't I was just not it was not fun it's not
fun and it starts to mess with all of you and I hadn't really dealt with the whole nervous system
thing and I hadn't dealt with the trauma in my body and it just like everything just kind of went
and finally I I want to check myself in somewhere like no one needs to and I was terrified to do it
I'd never been alone before.
There's always someone around me.
And after my 30th birthday, I think it was the day after, actually, or two days after,
I literally checked myself in somewhere for 28 days.
Wow.
I went to deal with trauma and anxiety and depression and all of those things that people are like,
oh, she must have gone in for, like, something.
Like, eating disorder, drugs, whatever it was.
I'm like, no, you don't understand.
This is just as serious.
Anxiety and depression are things that a lot of people deal with.
We don't talk about enough.
And it is enough at some point to ask.
To kill you.
Yes, to kill you.
It is.
To harm you, to cause a heart attack, a stroke, or whatever.
So you checked yourself into a facility somewhere here in L.A.
or near here.
Did someone inspire you to do this, like a friend of yours
who had gone through something that came out on the other side
and you saw a transformation?
No.
My husband and my friends at the time, they were just super worried about me
because I was on a lot of medication at the time,
and I was going through, just like I said, being put under a lot of medication at the time and I was going through just like I said being put under a
lot and they were like look you need can we help you get some to help you find some sanity in all
of this and I was more than willing to so it was just a simple conversation that was had and I was
terrified when I went in I'm like I've I've never been alone. What's going to happen? Without your phone, without this. Something, yeah.
And, you know, I just had such great support.
And I think that that's when I finally had the right support system in place in my life,
it allowed me to kind of just like surrender into feeling these things.
People aren't going to take advantage of you or whatever.
Yeah.
Wow.
So what was the greatest lesson you learned?
So you were 30 when you went in.
What was the greatest lesson you learned from that 28-day experience?
Oh, wow.
I thought I was pretty messed up when I went in.
And I realized after I started sifting through everything, I'm like, you know, this is not so abnormal.
I was around other people that were going through similar situations, if not worse than I was at the time.
And I was like, this is not, I don't feel so alone anymore.
And then you realize outside of like the six or seven people that were with you,
then you start talking about it publicly.
And then you realize how alone you really aren't.
Because everyone starts reaching out to you and saying, I feel this way.
Oh, yeah.
I've been through it.
And that was the beginning of realizing that I could connect through humanity
and not just like through this voice of this, like, child
that everybody looked up to.
There became a different voice that I found.
Do you feel like that was the moment you were able to kind of
process all this stuff from childhood and actually start to grow up?
Yeah.
Really?
Yeah, totally.
Totally.
And I still go through my days when I...
There's a real line for me where I feel like a woman and where I can tell I'm slipping back into like a child space.
Awareness is an amazing thing. Self-awareness is an incredible, incredible tool that a lot of us just want to run from. I mean, I did for so long.
It's not fun sometimes.
for so long. It's not fun sometimes. It's not fun. I've actually made it fun. I've actually,
I've started to like finding out these like strange, quirky, like odd things about myself. I'm like, oh, so that's what's running me in this situation. Because then it becomes,
for me now, it's become like this, I've become obsessed with like the, how do I not override it
and not get rid of it? It's more like, how do I heal it? I mean, because when we
start- What's it? The conversation you have or- It can be anything. It can be, yeah, it can be
the story that I'm telling myself. It can be the, all of a sudden that something that's completely
in my subconscious becomes conscious. And I'm like, oh, that's what that is. Like, that's why
I'm sabotaging myself in this area or that area. And it becomes, it's interesting to me now. Like, that's why I'm sabotaging myself in this area or that area. And it becomes,
it's interesting to me now. Like, I find it all fascinating that we actually can change that.
That's what's so amazing is we actually have the choice to do that. And I know people talk
about that all the time and it sounds so simple and it is and it isn't, but.
It takes work.
It takes work, but it also is as simple as choosing.
Deciding.
Deciding.
That's it.
Yeah.
What was the, I feel like you have a fascinating mind.
Thanks.
I feel like you've been through so much.
Again, as someone at like 12, 13, 18, having that type of acknowledgement and awareness and hype and, you know, all for good reason.
But like having that at such a young age, I can only imagine what conversations you might
be having, both positive and negative.
What's in your mind?
And I'm curious, what were the stories or the things that your mind told you that supported
your journey?
And what were the conversations that made you suffer?
What were both of those?
Because both of them, you know, because the positive stuff continued your rise and continued to be successful in your career.
But the negative stuff probably held you back in certain ways as well.
Oh, yeah.
I'm curious.
What are both those conversations that your mind had, whether you were conscious or unconscious about it?
Oh, my God.
We could talk about this for hours.
So I remember, I'll give you bits and pieces that are popping up in my head.
So I remember my dad constantly telling me, like, I could do anything I wanted to do.
That's nice.
Yeah, it was.
He was always, you know, you're the best.
And I was.
I was different than most kids my age.
You know, you heard kids sing that were my age, and I was I was I was different than most kids my age you know you
heard kids sing that were my age and it was very very different it was very amateur young it was
very different and so I believed that this one side of myself was like the best and it clearly
paid off I mean with that belief but it was also a belief that was kind of bred into me by my dad it wasn't my own
self-belief is what I realized it was outside belief interesting and so when my dad and I went
through all of our stuff it was almost like I felt like I couldn't do it without him wow because he
was the one instilling the belief in you totally so you'd kind of divorce your dad it sounded like
yeah I know in a way, yes.
I mean, and I didn't have him around in my life like that telling me constantly, like, you can do
this. Like, it was, it was an outside, you know, voice. So did you not have that belief anymore?
No, I take that back. I did have that belief, but it was, it came from an unhealthy place, I think. It wasn't like I believed deep down in myself.
I loved myself.
And I could make a mistake and still have that belief.
I would go through, I've always been super hard on myself.
My dad was, I mean, I have to say, my dad instilled some amazing things in me.
And also, there was a work ethic that I think there's always a fine line.
Yeah, there's always a fine line yeah there's always a
fine line to to all of those things but I where did it come from the the outside belief if it
wasn't from your dad was it like a relationship on the media or oh outside everything it was people
if it wasn't my dad it was like how many people were interested in what I was doing and my music
and the whole deal how many records did it sell right exactly it was my music and the whole deal. How many records did it sell? Right. Exactly.
It was always numbers and the whole thing.
And I'm still on the journey of literally finding the inner voice that is kind, that
allows me to be human, that makes mistakes, that I think I'm approaching things.
I used to approach my performances from a very perfectionistic kind
of place of like every note had to be right and I've gone through a journey of knowing that that's
there but now it's like how do I express and how do I like how do I show up in love and like how
do I show up with my heart open and when you start for me now that I've started coming from a
different place that perfectionistic side of things, like kind of, it gets softer.
I'm showing up for different reasons.
I'm not showing up to prove myself in any way,
which I think as a kid, like you're constantly competing.
You know, you're competing with the outside world.
You're competing with the last number of records you sold.
And for me now, it's like, I mean,
we always say how you're competing with yourself,
but it's true.
Like when that finally clicks and you actually embody that it's the outside you start here first and the outside starts to come into play instead
of looking at the outside to validate the inside what age were you when you started to believe in
yourself on the inside and realize like oh i don't need my dad or numbers three years ago
no joke like three or four years ago? No joke. Like three or
four years ago, I would start to say that I've, I started to realize like. So all your twenties,
you still didn't believe in yourself. I believed, but like there was always. You needed other people.
Yeah. They needed the outside validation. And there was always like, I grew up with psoriasis
really bad all over my body from the time I was super young. And so that being into play also played into my self-esteem.
Insecurities.
And then having my face out in front of everyone in the world
and knowing that I was always hiding this piece of me.
Was it on your face?
It wasn't on my face.
It was on your back and your stomach.
It was everywhere.
Like, yeah.
I dated someone many years ago who had, she was beautiful and so kind,
but she had it all over her chest and her stomach
and her back and it would come and go like every couple of weeks when she would have anxiety and
stress yeah right and i just there's nothing i could do to support her besides be there for her
but it's hard i can only imagine how hard it is like having this on your body and and still loving
yourself and still feeling right well that didn and I'm this. That didn't happen.
And then you just beat yourself up and you cause more stress and create more psoriasis.
Totally.
Right?
It's just such a cyclical thing.
But yeah, there was also that that played into it.
So I had this one thing that I put so much.
That was the one thing that could validate me as a human.
Your voice.
Yeah.
It was your identity it was
everything and what happens if you don't have that anymore so I've gone through moments in my life
where I've lost my voice or had to cancel shows or whatever because of because I've lost my voice
you know and didn't have one and it was it is the most terrifying thing now it's a little different
when I do lose my voice I still go through the stress of it, but I'm like, okay, I'm going to chill.
It's telling me something.
Like I need to go basically sit down, shut up, go chill out.
Like I've noticed that my voice, when I lose it,
it has nothing to do really with like overusing it.
It has to do with probably underusing it.
It has to do with me not actually,
like there's something that's not coming out emotionally.
Wow, really?
Yeah.
When you lose it.
Yeah, it's definitely an emotional thing.
It's like you're holding on to something.
You're not saying what you need to say.
You're afraid to say something.
Totally.
Wow.
Well, and you grew up growing up in this business.
Like, you know, I would be told, don't have an opinion about certain things.
You don't want to, don't state your views politically.
Don't state your views this way because people won't buy your records.
And so from early on, I was like, oh, I have to hide all of these things,
whether it be my skin, my opinion.
I mean, there's a lot of layers to that too of how that affects you,
especially starting out so young.
So I've kind of had to peel away all of these layers of…
Decades of trauma.
Decades of trauma and decades of programming from outside programming.
So now I'm reprogramming myself most of the time.
And so this has been the last three year journey.
Yeah, three, four years.
Three, four years.
Since you did this 28 day therapy, you know, time that you had for yourself.
Yes.
You've been reprogramming.
What are the things that you're saying to yourself through this reprogramming?
Is there certain things you say like in the morning or throughout the day or in a moment of doubt?
Do you flip it and say something else to yourself?
How does that work?
Well, I've come to learn that we really operate out of two places and that is love and fear.
And the fear is a lie and so every time something like
this comes up it's just I really recognize it as old programming it's like oh that's just that
piece that's old I don't have to believe that anymore yeah and I also like I spend time with
myself I know this sounds crazy but I literally like spend time with myself sometimes like
touching every part of my body and telling it I love it.
Wow.
I don't think that's crazy.
I think that's beautiful.
And feeling it.
Like actually feeling it.
I think that's the one piece that I've learned listening to Joe Dispenza
and all these different people who are fantastic.
The one piece that we leave out is the actual body,
this somatic experience of the feeling of what we're going through in our mind,
whether it be affirmations or whatever, we're doing meditation.
When we can feel that and actually feel the love that we have for ourselves,
it changes everything.
I can't always call on it.
It's not like we were talking earlier.
It's not like I figured it all out.
Right.
I have a long way to go.
You haven't arrived yet? Come on. I have a long way to go.
You haven't arrived yet?
Come on.
I have a long way to go.
I don't think that ever happened.
That's been the new piece for me is to really wake up every morning.
I wake up and I read somewhere people who wake up and literally stretch with their arms out into the world.
It starts their day in a completely different way.
So I started doing that.
And I have a meditation practice I usually do for an hour a day.
An hour?
Hour to an hour and a half, yeah.
Wow.
I try to get it in.
Yeah.
That's impressive.
I love it.
I've fallen in love with it.
It's just my, it becomes my time.
I think when I've, my time has always been given away.
So it's like taking a piece of it back.
So you have feeling time where you feel your body and you embrace and love every inch of your body.
I think it's a beautiful practice for especially people that are insecure.
Yeah.
Or the people that don't think they're pretty who are like the most beautiful human beings alive.
Totally.
And it's amazing how we all see ourselves.
So opposite of like what everyone else of how everyone else sees us.
So I was on this biologic drug for my psoriasis for 12 years.
Like a steroid type of drug?
Not a steroid. No, it's an injection that would block certain things from developing, certain antibodies. But it would lower my immune system.
And I accidentally stumbled off of it.
I would stretch out for however many weeks I could before I saw something,
and then I'd take it.
So I realized I was like four months off of it.
I'm like, well, nothing.
I'm like, let's just see.
I was actually in a great mental space. And now usually I would freak out. I'm like, I can't get off I was actually in a great mental space.
And, you know, now I was, usually I would freak out.
I'm like, I can't get off of this.
I can't do it.
And I was just in a place where I'm like, you know what?
Let's just see.
And so I've been off of it for about a year.
And now it's good.
And I'll have places that come up and I'll use like topical stuff. But the one thing that I've learned is if I, whatever
arises, whatever it's an emotion or it's psoriasis or it's a few pounds, whatever it is, if I can
just sit with it and be like, okay, I see you. You're there. And allow it to be for a moment.
And then literally I will sit with my psoriasis and put my hands on it and be like, I love you. It's cool. You can hang out for a while if you want. And once you really start
meaning that, it changes everything. Anxiety, when I get anxiety, I'll literally go, okay,
you're here again. How's it going? And just allow it to be for a moment. And it literally within minutes starts to completely
shift. I mean, I'll wake up the next morning after I've done that with my psoriasis and it'll be gone.
Yeah. As opposed to resisting it, it's allowing and acknowledging it.
It's trying to tell you something. It's your voice.
Let me be mindful of like, why am I stressed out? Why am I anxious? Let me sit with it and then let
it go. You can
come and go and breathe through it, right? Totally. When did you start to learn about
accepting challenges that you're facing emotionally or physically and falling in love with them as
opposed to rejecting them? Yeah. And the falling in love with them, once you start shifting that
perception, yeah, you start becoming whole. You start feeling whole,
which is so beautiful. You accept yourself, all of you. All of you. And you realize that those
are actually, and I know it's so hard to do this when it's popping up in your life, that those are
gifts. Like those are true gifts that are leading you down one way or the other, like leading you
away from something or leading you towards something. And sometimes our deepest fears and pain and trauma is really, we've experienced it to share. We've experienced
it to help people. I mean, we talk about a life of service and it's, what better way to be of
service than to share the darkest moments that you've been through? Because you're so not the
only one that's done it. So I actually about about i guess it was probably about four years ago i
started working with um a breathwork teacher named ashley niece who is incredible here in la
she's in la well she's actually um in oakland now but she lived here in la at the time and um
this is before the uh the 28th day no this was. So I'm 36 now. So I went through a couple years with like still kind of like trying to figure out what the hell is going on.
You didn't really have a practice.
No, I didn't.
And I was on Instagram and was looking on Cameron Diaz's The Body Book thing.
And I found Ashley.
And then she started popping up randomly.
Thank God for like the Instagram.
Retargeting.
Yeah, exactly.
The algorithm.
It threw up in my face all the time.
And it was about five months into it.
And I was like, you know what?
I know this is crazy.
I've never contacted anyone on Instagram, but I'm going to.
And something just told me to call her.
And my assistant set up a time with her.
And I go, I have no idea what I'm going to be doing.
And she literally, from the moment I sat down with her, she started teaching me breath work.
And she's, I swear, like my therapist at the same time.
But there was such a spiritual aspect to it.
I'd gone through so much therapy that I was sick of talking about everything.
And I wasn't shifting anything.
You were still like in the same conversation. Yeah. I just didn't want to have that anymore.
And so she helped me shift out of that and to really work through the trauma in my body. She
did a lot of somatic work and I was always here and never here constantly. I mean, obviously there
were so many reasons why I constantly wanted to run away from my body. So my practice has been
literally coming back into myself. Wow. Chopping into your heart. Totally run away from my body. So my practice has been literally coming
back into myself. Wow. Dropping into your heart. Totally. Dropping into your body. Yeah. Dropping
into every piece of me. Because fear, this is where fear lives. The anxiety, stress,
overwhelm, worry. It's like up in your head. It's like the story. And then when we drop into our
hearts, we get back to love. Completely. We get grounded. grounded yes and that's such a huge piece and
gratitude i know people talk about like oh make your gratitude list she was one that really finally
got me into that it is so it is the key it's you can't be grateful and angry at the same time
we're stressed and why can't we why is it the simplest of things they can we not get into our
heads because people i think we all want to think it's super complicated.
No.
And breath,
like deep breaths.
Deep breaths
and gratitude
are like the two,
the things I keep coming back to
are love.
It comes back to the heart
and gratitude for everything
going back to gratitude
for even the quote unquote, we label negative pieces showing
up. How can I be grateful for the totality of it all? Yeah. I'll get, I'll get away from my practice
every once in a while. And the first thing that I constantly like my intuition just brings me back
to like, where's your heart and where's the love and where And how can I wake up and get into that space every morning?
Because once you get in that space, the whole world changes.
If you wake up in reaction mode and anxiety mode, it's hard to get out of that for the rest of the day.
You kind of stay in that.
Unless you break the system and take an hour break and breathe and meditate or do a gratitude practice.
But that's why I think it's important to do it first thing. do it first thing and then last thing at night oh nice my girlfriend and I
will talk about what we're grateful for from the day oh I love that it just allows me to like just
sleep and I'm just like uh you know it's like you live in gratitude at night it's like okay I feel
at peace as opposed to I used to always be anxious at night it would take me hours to fall asleep
so I was always living anxiety and fear and insecurity.
Yes.
And I said, well, here's what I'm grateful for.
Even the smallest things, it brought me a lot more peace.
But that's powerful.
So you do about an hour of breathing meditation in the morning.
Yeah, I do.
Some stretching, some opening ups.
I do.
I am one of those people that still reaches for my phone, I have to say.
It's tough.
It's so hard.
Who doesn't?
Unless you're a monk.
I know, right?
I try not to.
But I'll go down and have coffee with my husband in the morning.
And then I'll go in my little meditation room that I have at the house.
And I've been doing Joe's.
Dispensary.
Yeah.
Did you guys connect?
We did connect.
I love him.
He's super sweet.
We did get on the phone.
We're going to, I want to dig into some further stuff.
He's amazing, isn't he?
He is amazing.
And I have a zillion questions.
That episode we did with him, it's just been like blowing up.
And so many people have read his book and are using the meditations.
Really is.
So I've been actually doing his meditation.
They're powerful.
Yeah, for like 30, 45 minutes in the morning.
And then I've been chanting, actually.
So I was doing some chanting for a while, and I kind of got away from it.
I was doing some kundalini yoga and just stepped away from it.
And a friend of mine the other day was talking to me about the power of my voice.
And she was saying that you don't use your sound current for yourself.
Right, you share.
Right, you use it, and it's always projected out,
but she's like, you know, moving energy,
that's one of your greatest tools to move energy
is through your voice.
And a lot of the time when I sing,
it's very, it's always structured.
You know, I don't allow myself,
this is one of the new loving things
that I do for myself.
You're allowing yourself to do allowing myself
yes I mean it's it's taking that voice of you have to be perfect and you have to oh you can't
wait through the crap to like get to the pretty piece like I need to be able to sit in stuff that
doesn't sound good or whatever it is to get to to get to underneath. I mean, that's such a life lesson.
But for me, playing around with it with my voice of just allowing sound to come out.
And sometimes I'll keep my phone by me because sometimes something really good will come out.
I'm like, wait, that was really good.
I'm going to write a song off of that. So what is this chanting like?
You're just making stuff up?
No.
Can you demonstrate a little five seconds of what a chant is?
Yes. So what chants am I doing right up? No. Can you demonstrate a little five seconds of what a chant is? Yes.
So what chants am I doing right now?
Yes.
So I do this one chant.
It's for protection and projection.
It's a kundalini meditation.
But it's, oh, you're putting me on the spot.
Excited.
I know.
My husband said the other day, my husband's like, I want you to chant with me.
And he's like, no, I just want to hear you chant.
I'll chant with you if you want. So he, but it was really sweet because he was like, really, I just love to hear you chant. So he sat with me. It was
the first time I ever chanted in front of someone. That was like two days ago. Wow. Okay. So you got
practice now. Yes. So usually I would do this and it might, my arms move with everything, so it's...
There you go.
Wow.
And so...
Yeah.
All right. I don't know if you're supposed to clap after a chant, but I'll take it. Yes. And so. Yeah. All right.
I don't know if you're supposed to clap like a champ, but I'll take it.
No, but I do.
Wow, that's beautiful though.
Thanks.
And I do, like that's a very, like I said, for protection and projection.
And it's an open heart kind of thing.
So I try to get into my heart as much as possible.
So I do that in the morning.
And yeah, it's a new thing.
Imagine knowing your voice for as long as I have.
And I'm like, oh, wait, there's this other piece.
There's this other level to the gift.
That you can access.
Yeah.
You should do, like, a weekly chant session for people at your house or a studio.
I know the meditation studio owner, Susie, over here.
If you want to, like, do it, I'm sure.
Oh, my God, I would love to. They to, like, do it, I'm sure.
Oh, my God, I would love to.
They have, like, the bowls.
They have the room.
They have the whole setup, like.
So this is my new thing.
It would be amazing.
I want to learn, like, the whole shindig.
Oh, my gosh.
Can you imagine, like, chanting with Leanne Rimes?
It would be, like, incredible.
So good.
I'd be there.
That's the thing, too, is, like, I love my sweet husband.
He's like, I want to hear you.
And that's wonderful.
But I want people to find that sound current in them
because when I'm doing this,
like when I come back to my heart, it's vibrating.
Like we can feel it when you're speaking,
but when you're singing.
No, it's electric.
It is.
It's powerful.
It's powerful.
It's healing.
Everybody has that in them.
And that's what I, we're so focused on
what everything sounds like or what things look like.
And I think part of my journey right now is like stripping away all of those shoulds for myself.
But also, hopefully, as I do for myself, somehow along the way, helping others to strip away those pieces too.
You have to promise me in the next four months, I know you're going to be on tour soon.
We'll do it.
We'll do it.
I'll set it up for you if you want.
Okay, let's do it.
You can invite your. You're chanting with me then. I'll chant with you. Okay, bro. I'll you're going to be on tour soon. We'll do it. We'll do it. I'll set it up for you if you want. Okay, let's do it. You can invite your-
You're chanting with me then.
I'll chant with you.
Okay, bro.
I'll be in the back row.
But I'll be-
Oh, no.
I'll be there.
I'll be there.
No, seriously.
I think it'll be powerful.
Even just to do it once to see and just create your own little one hour chanting session.
I love the universe.
This is the universe.
I think you've got to do it.
Two days ago was the first time I ever chanted in front of someone.
And now look at what I'm doing.
Let's do this.
Chanting with Leon Rimes.
It's going to be a whole Spotify playlist. Totally. You can create
meditations for people. This could be your level of service to give value. I literally in the last
48 hours have gone through this. It came to me in meditation today and what I wanted to create.
I see it. We're here for a reason. You're on the same wavelength. I see it. I'm going to support.
Thank you. What is the, now you went through like a public, this is your second marriage, right?
You went through, you were married for about a decade, is that what it was?
Seven years.
Seven years.
And now you've been remarried for a while now.
What's the greatest lesson you learned in the relationship or the marriage that didn't work out?
And what's the greatest lesson that you've learned in this current marriage?
I think I've learned as a whole that people were all here to teach each other something.
My first husband, I'm incredibly grateful for everything we both taught each other. And
we were fantastic friends and super uber close as friends.
Today?
No, not today.
You were.
Unfortunately not.
You were then.
Yeah.
I mean, who knows what the future holds, but we were then.
And I think with everything that happened, obviously there had to be a lot of separation
there for people to heal.
But I realized what we were for each other and how we, what we taught each
other. And I'm very, very grateful for that. So I don't, I think the easiest thing to do is look
back and blame and say, oh my God, I wish that never happened and all of those things. And I
think for me, I totally see why. I'm very aware of it all. And the biggest lesson for me in the learning how to handle
relationship first off, like, I mean, I just, I, you never know how love is going to come at you,
where it's going to hit you, how you're going to react to it. And I really, I've learned to speak truth, I think, more into my relationships.
To know that I can be okay alone.
All of those sorts of things.
I think those are really powerful to have as, I mean, like I was saying earlier, I was always around someone.
I was like someone always around me.
You were never alone.
No, never alone.
I was never like out of a relationship in that way of living alone and that kind of thing. So I now know those are things I'm fully capable together. We've had, you know, to blend a family.
You know, I have two step-sons that are 11 and 15.
He's taught me a lot.
They've all taught me a lot.
And that's one of those things.
Who's taught you more, your husband or your step-kids?
Oh, wow.
Both in completely different ways.
And I'll actually have to say my husband's ex-wife has taught me a lot too.
Really?
You know, it's one of those things where you all want to hate each other at the beginning. And then,
like I said, there's these gifts that I've realized that are right in front of me that
don't look like gifts, but are, which is this whole situation of so much, so many things I've
learned from the ego falling away to people that still love you, hate you, and you're like, first off, you're just gut-wrenched of, you know,
when you're depending on that kind of outside love.
And then you realize it's the best gift that could have ever happened to you.
And then you realize, like, having to make amends with people
and having to blend personalities that are not gelling
and having to extend love in places
where you never thought you'd have to extend love.
Like where?
Like just to people, you know,
when you've all hurt each other like so much
and then you all continue to just like hurt each other,
having to get past all of that and finally extend love.
Like that's been the most,
the hugest just weight off my back i think is to know
to come into this uh realization that we all are gifts to one another yeah you know even my parents
where i wanted to blame them in the past like realizing that was a gift also like all these
things are true gifts and like they when you start to really love who you are and you realize like oh
these are all the things that created me.
Like, you know, you really do have to, you can't look at it any other way.
So, yeah, we've all taught each other.
I know we're all in each other's lives for a reason.
And it's still a challenge.
But it's one that I'm definitely, I have such a different perception on than when I first stepped into this.
And my husband's amazing.
He really is. He's loved me through a lot of pain. And I've always felt that
people run away from it. You know, I've always thought there was something wrong with me. Like,
I have all this trauma and I'm in so much pain that I, the people, I can't show the side of me
to people because they run away. And I've always- You can't show the pain. I can't show the pain of me to people because they run away.
And I've always- You can't show the pain.
I can't show the pain.
People can't take it.
So you would hide it or you would-
I would hide it.
And he was just always been someone that I could, he's been there through it all.
He's never turned away from me.
And it's such a, he's such a blessing.
I mean, I still can't believe it.
I still test him at times still.
Throw something at him every now and then.
And I'm like, wait, but you still stayed again?
No, I mean, I think it's just when I felt so abandoned at times in my life so early on that there's been that wound.
And so I didn't believe that he existed.
I was still, I'm like, wait, you really do exist.
Like, he's been in it with me.
Wow.
He is a true, true blessing.
Sounds like a special guy. He is a good, true blessing. Sounds like a special guy.
He is a good dude.
He really is.
That's amazing.
Have you been able to heal your experience with your parents?
Once again, we talk about layers.
Yes, I have.
A certain level.
Yes, to a certain level, absolutely.
And, you know, the hardest thing is I think on this journey for me has been getting to a certain point in anybody in your life, whether it's your parents or you want to bring them along with you and you want to, like, help them.
And, you know, you can't do that unless people want to change.
They're willing to, yeah.
Yeah.
And sometimes we just don't see eye to eye. And that's been, I think we've healed a lot of the past and it's the present that I am so desiring for them to be happy and have joy in their life.
And all of these things that I've now been able to feel and overcome the places that they've been in.
And so sometimes I think that's now the hard part for me.
To surrender to that. Yeah, that's the hard part for me. To surrender to that.
Yeah, that's the next level for me.
Oh, man.
Wow.
And just loving.
I mean, that's a thing with everyone in your life.
And that's something my husband has taught me is loving people in the place that they're at
and not expecting them to change.
And he's done that for me.
It's hard.
It is. It's hard because And he's done that for me. And I think it is.
It's hard because I don't do it for myself.
You know, I'm constantly, it's very difficult for me to love myself sometimes
in the places that I don't want to show or that I don't like.
And I'm finding that when I start to really become tender with those places,
then I become a lot more tender with everyone else around me.
Wow.
You're like, wait, where are we?
There's so much I want to talk about with you.
And we only have a limited time left.
So I want to make sure we cover a few other things because I think there's so many layers
I'd love to dive into about that.
But maybe we'll get you back on next year.
When I figure some more stuff out next year, I'll come back.
I'm curious about this side of things because there's a lot of musicians and actors and dancers who listen to the show.
Those who are trying to make it in their art and their craft.
And I think a lot of them struggle with, one, making it.
And then the second thing is, once they make it, how do I stay relevant?
How do I keep making it?
How do I not be like a hit for a few years and then fade away?
How have you dealt with this because you had success for so long
and you still have a lot of success,
but do you struggle with trying to stay relevant
where there's always a new artist and people, new sounds,
and do you feel like you have that pressure?
Or how do you overcome the pressure of being relevant constantly?
Yes and no.
I mean, of course, there's always that pressure in a career.
I guess I don't look at it as more as relevant as I do as how can I keep creating and still being interesting.
Interesting to other people?
Both.
I know what you're about to say. Both.
And I think when you start to focus on what's interesting to me, look, when you start to pull yourself out of what everyone else thinks is relevant and how to play the game,
you're going to get some pushback and you're going to maybe have things that aren't as successful commercially.
But then what did you get from it?
That's where I had to shift things.
How did it make me feel?
Did I really enjoy this process this time around?
Did I not cut songs to please other people and really
did things that I love to do? Where am I singing from? Is this coming from my heart? Is it coming
from the need to be relevant? Like, I think these are questions that I constantly am asking myself.
To make a hit, to sell records or whatever.
And when you start focusing on that, like, it's just a race that's just never going to win.
Yeah. You never are.
And so I keep coming back to this place of what feels good to me now.
I mean, granted, I'm in a position where I can do that.
Yeah.
Because you still get a lot of opportunities no matter what you're doing, right?
Yeah.
But I still, when I was younger um so I started
on country music and then my record label released my first pop hit which was how do I live and uh
to pop radio and at the time no one's coyote ugly time no that was after this this is how do I live
was the first one huge hit yeah I can't find the slow the slow slowest one. Yeah, it was the first one. It was a huge hit. Mega. Yeah.
I, at the time, like no one really crossed over.
It was.
From country to pop. Yeah, like that was a no-no because it was like.
Now people are doing it.
Yeah, people do it all the time.
Back then it was like people were kind of abandoning the format.
I was 14, keep in mind.
I'm like.
You're like, I'm just trying to.
I'm just like, I'm just trying to enjoy music.
Like I didn't, you know, there was no real didn't have no idea that anything like that would happen.
It was a bad thing.
Yeah, it was a bad thing.
So I think ever since that happened, I just loved music.
And for me, it was like, wait, why is someone trying to put me in a box?
And so I've really rebelled against that my whole life of constantly pushing on the walls of every box that anyone could put me in.
And maybe that was the reason why I stayed relevant maybe it was the reason why people were
constantly wanting to hear what I was doing because it was different a little bit different
every time and but I think the one thing that people always connected with me was that I
connected with my heart and my heart came through my music and I think that that's really what
people connected with I'm finding that more now than ever.
Of like, oh wait, the voice is just like the avenue
of the other gift that's like underneath it.
And so when I talk about pulling back the layers
of like unwrapping this gift that I've had,
it's like I'm really now just discovering
like the voice is just kind of the surface
of what else is underneath it.
And I think really connecting.
We live in a world where we all try to fit in.
It's like the worst thing we can possibly do for ourselves.
You know, I remember a time in my life when I was in my mid-teens where I just wanted to be normal so bad.
You wanted to fit in.
I wanted to fit in.
I wanted to be normal so bad.
It's like the worst
thing I could have asked for. Don't do that. Because you do, you lose these unique pieces
of yourself. And we all are so unique. And I can easily get into thinking this. I started a blog
called Soul of Everly. Soul of Everly. Soul of Everly, yeah, E-V-E-R-L-E. And when I started
the blog, I was like, why am I starting? Everyone says, everyone's got a blog, like the whole deal.
And it's so easy to get into thinking like, oh, everyone's doing this kind of music.
Or there's so many people doing that or making that product.
But the thing is, we all have such a unique way of seeing things.
And a unique way of being and creating.
And we can't think that way.
Like, that's just so not true.
We, there's, there are people out there that need your truth in the way that you present it and,
and your creations. And so I think that's been a big lesson for me is to just continue to create
without expectation and for the joy of it. I think that's one thing i lost for a while because
i was you start focusing on the business side of it and you lose the joy it's really really
connect really connecting with yourself i think your intuition man my intuition tells me to do
something sometimes where i'm like really like you want me to create that i should do that now
i mean i'm going through that right now.
I'm actually starting to work on a new record.
And I've been sitting with it for about a year now
because it's like one piece of me will pull me one way.
The other piece of me will pull me that way.
My intuition will pull me that way.
And I'm like, wait, which one am I?
Which one?
I had to start discerning like which one really is the intuition.
Right.
And rolling with it.
Because it's.
It's risky.
It's scary.
It is risky.
And it's also fun.
Like, I'm now realizing, like, I'm having fun doing that.
And that's probably where I should be going, you know, instead of.
More into that, yeah.
Yeah.
I think your greatest hits are ahead of you still.
I think it's, you know, in all areas of your life.
Enchanting. Greatest hits are ahead of you still. I think it's, you know, in all areas of your life.
Enchanting and music and relationships and, you know, the message you have for the world.
I think your level of service is just beginning.
And I'm really excited to see what you're going to create.
Whatever your intuition tells you to do.
Yeah, it's going to be fun.
I'm excited.
Gosh, I want to have you come back on another time, but I want to respect your time.
This is a question I ask at the end. It's called the three truths. I'm going to ask you in I'm excited. Gosh, I want to have you come back on another time. But I want to respect your time. This is a question I ask at the end.
It's called the three truths.
I'm going to ask you in a different way.
Oh, OK.
So imagine you've sung every song you wanted to sing.
You've created every piece of music.
It's all been out there.
All your weird, intuitive ways that you've gone into,
you've made the music you wanted.
Right.
For whatever reason, you've got to take all your music with you.
And this is your last day. Many years from now, and you've got to take all your music with you and this is
your last day many years from now and you choose the last day for your life but you've done it all
all the crazy dreams is all happened okay you've impacted the world you want to the way you want
to you've loved deeply all that stuff but your music's got to go with you so no one has access
to it anymore you can't listen to it anymore.
But you've got a microphone connected to you right now.
And the whole world puts headphones on.
Everyone in the world gets to listen to you one last time.
And you get to share three truths or three lessons that you would share with the world
that they would have to remember you by and to have access to?
What would you say with your voice while everyone is listening?
Dude, this is like intense.
It's called the school of greatness.
This is so good.
So again, everyone's putting on headphones right now, seven plus billion people.
And you got to share three things you know to be true about your life's
experience that you would share these lessons with the world we're putting on the headphones
we're about to listen Leanne Rimes comes on the mic what would you say wow I would definitely um
the most painful thing you'll ever experience in your life is the closing of your heart.
And you will know when you've closed it.
You will know when you've opened it because it will feel like you just started breathing again.
And you're going to make me cry.
This is so true, though. Wow.
Because I oscillate between the two all the time.
I think we all do.
But when you've really closed it and it opens,
like it's just so powerful.
Yeah.
So that would be the first thing is to,
as much as you can in this lifetime,
try to keep your heart open.
Yeah.
Number one.
That's number one.
Number two,
we are,
there's so much power in us that we have barely touched on.
We have the power to change anything about ourselves. And I think for me, what I've learned
is that it is, it comes in the form of creativity. I think we don't give ourselves enough
credit for the creative beings that we are. We look too much
to the outside and don't connect enough with the inside. And in that connection, what I found
going to intuition is that usually the first thing that comes to mind, like I'm sitting here
thinking about like a zillion things I could say, but I'm like, okay, heart, intuition, like go to
these things. The first thing that comes is like, okay, I need to speak on that.
The first thing that comes, go with it.
You might not know where you're going, but go with it.
Because there's such a plan so much bigger than us
than we could ever, ever fathom.
So even the smallest of choices, every little thing we do
falls into that plan.
I truly believe that.
So yes, intuition is different.
Two?
Yes.
And number three?
The world is listening.
Number three.
There is a God, which I do believe.
This energy that creates us is just an amazing thing.
But let me see.
I don't know if that would be number three.
But yes, that is definitely there. Number three. I know we talk about self-love a lot. It's become like this kind of like buzzword or this buzz phrase, but true self-love is the key to life, in my opinion.
to life, in my opinion.
Because what is that saying?
You can only meet someone as far as you can meet yourself.
And so the deeper I find, the tenderer I get with myself,
the more that I can sit with all the facets of me and truly be with those things,
the more I can serve the world in that way.
So I think, for me, self-love is key.
Yeah. Wow. Those are powerful.
Thanks. That's a difficult, that's probably one of the most difficult things I've ever done
because there's so much.
So much.
There really is so much.
I'm curious. I've got a couple of final ones. This just popped up for me.
What was the hardest year of your teenage years? What year was like the worst year for you?
They all ran into each other at one point.
They seemed like one long year.
Probably 17.
17.
Yeah.
If your 17-year-old self was right in front of you right now,
going through that,
and you had something you could say to her,
what would you say?
The first thing that came to mind was fall apart.
Like, you don't have to hold up the world for everybody else.
It's okay.
Wow.
Yeah, everybody else can take care of themselves.
Wow, I like that.
Yeah.
You've got a movie coming out right now.
What's the movie?
The movie's called It's Christmas Eve.
It's Christmas Eve.
It's on Hallmark Channel.
I just did a Christmas movie.
For them, I wrote three original songs for the
film, which there's a soundtrack that's out
right now also. I executive produced
the film. Wow. From the ground
up. Had so much fun doing this movie.
There's a lot of heart in it. Of course, it's Hallmark.
There's a beautiful love story. It's always good
Christmas movies out there. It is. You know, there's always good
stuff. I'm excited to watch it. It is.
So it's on the Hallmark Channel.
November 10th. November 10th. Through the Christmas season. They'll be playing it every few days, I'm excited to watch it. It is. So yeah. So it's on the Hallmark channel. Yes. November 10th. November 10th through the Christmas season. They'll be playing it every few days I'm assuming.
Yeah. But you can search on your DVR or whatever to find out when it's happening.
Watch it. Take a screenshot. Post on Instagram. Yes. Share with your friends. Let us know you're
watching it. What's the title of it again? It's Christmas comma comma, Eve. It's Christmas, Eve.
We were fancy.
It's Christmas,
Eve. Watch it, share it,
tag Leanne as well. The music is out. Where can they get the music?
Spotify, iTunes.
Everywhere, yes. Absolutely. You can stream
it everywhere. Hallmark.com,
leannereimschristmas.com.
Actually, I have a Christmas website.
leannereimschristmas.com. And you, I have a Christmas website. Isn't that just... Wow, leannrhymeschristmas.com.
And you're going on tour
this...
Yes.
For how long?
We're on tour
for like three weeks,
basically.
This is our sixth holiday tour
and it's really fun.
I want to hear you sing
O Holy Night.
Okay.
Do you do it
at your tour or no?
I don't.
Silent Night?
I don't do either of those
but if you come to a show...
Maybe you'll do
Silent Night.
I'll for sure do
one or the other.
Yes.
You got it.
Yes.
Okay.
But we're playing the West Coast this year.
We pick kind of a place in the United States to play every year, and we're doing the West Coast again.
We did that a few years ago.
Okay.
West Coast.
West Coast.
Go to leannrhymes.com to see the tour dates, I'm assuming.
leannrhymesworld.com.
leannrhymesworld.com.
Or on Instagram, I'm sure.
Yeah, it's everywhere.
leannrhymes on there.
You can't miss us
what else
we got the movie
It's Christmas
comma Eve
the music
the tour
yes
social media
you hang out on Instagram
a lot
Twitter
I do yeah
yeah definitely on Instagram
and then
soulofeverly.com
soulofeverly.com
dot com
is the website
we'll have it all linked up
yes
how often are you blogging
or sharing?
I usually blog like once or twice a week.
And then I do a little thing called Chalk Talk,
which I put up either a quote that I've written or some of my favorite ones
and kind of expand on it.
Yeah, it's very soulful, obviously Soul of Everly,
very soulful little place for me to play around.
So it's just kind of an extension of my music,
but in a completely different way. Check out all this stuff. I want to acknowledge you, Leanne, for being a
more than just a beautiful voice, but a beautiful soul, because you've gone through so much in your
life and your career and relationships publicly. And I can only imagine the amount of stress and
anxiety and overwhelm that could cause someone.
And for you to continue to show up with a beautiful voice and a beautiful soul and give to the world the way you do is just, it's a breath of fresh air.
So I really acknowledge you for your kindness, your generosity.
Thank you.
Our friendship.
I know.
Thanks for having me.
And the greatest hits that are still coming.
Thank you.
So I acknowledge you for all that.
And thank you for being so,
you're just so kind and open and just, it's so wonderful to be on here.
Of course, of course.
I appreciate it.
The final question is,
what's your definition of greatness?
What's my definition of greatness?
I would think I would go with this.
For me, it's someone who is willing to take risks.
It's someone who's willing to fail.
It's someone who realizes that failing is not the end of the world,
that it's only a stepping stone to success.
It's someone who keeps persevering and learning from every bump in the road
only to come out of that with more wisdom and knowledge of clear vision of where they want to go.
So it's someone who doesn't give up.
Leanne Rimes.
Yes.
Thank you. Appreciate it. Amazing. Amazing.
There you have it, my friends. I loved this interview. And if you enjoyed this episode as
much as I did, then please share it with two or three friends. You can text them right now. Just text them the link lewishouse.com slash 719, or you can grab the link from your iTunes app or the podcast app that
you're listening to over on Spotify, and you can share this with your friends right there.
Take a screenshot of this and tag myself at Lewis Howes and at Leanne Rimes over on Instagram
so she can see what part you enjoyed the most about this. So again, go ahead and tag both of us. Take a screenshot while you're listening
and post it over on Instagram. Send her some love and check out all of her new stuff, her music,
her movie. Check it all out and we'll have it linked up at the show notes at lewishowes.com
slash 719. You can watch the full video interview over there as well, or on our YouTube channel, youtube.com slash Lewis house, where we've got hundreds of incredible
interviews and videos that will inspire you, educate you and help you unlock your greatness.
That's what this is all about. Unlocking it. And Oprah said that we've got to turn your wounds into wisdom. So whatever it is that you
might be going through today, realize that that's an opportunity for you to inspire someone else
through your story, through your wounds, through your adversity. So make sure you continue to
lean into your wounds and then heal them. Be aware of them and start to heal.
Start to forgive, start to let go,
and start to move forward.
And use those wounds as a story looking back
to inspire the people around you
and inspire yourself for how far you've grown,
how much you have overcome.
That's what this is all about.
We're always
reaching new levels of opportunities and obstacles at the same time. Because once we graduate one
level, guess what? New challenges are going to come our way no matter what. So have an open mind,
have an open heart, and lean into those obstacles with positivity and with a presence and peace of mind knowing that you will overcome them one day.
As always, I love you guys so very much.
I'm so inspired by the people that I get to interview.
Leanna Rimes is an incredible human being.
Love her mission.
Make sure to go check her out.
Check her music out.
Check her out on tour.
Watch her movie. All the out on tour watch her movie
all the good things
follow her on social media
and as always
you guys know what time it is
it's time to go out there
and do something great Outro Music Thank you.