The School of Greatness - How to Find Success by Embracing Change, Accepting Grief & Investing in Yourself w/ Jenna Kutcher EP 1271
Episode Date: May 25, 2022Jenna Kutcher is a born-and-raised Minnesota wife, mother, and entrepreneur who aims for two things daily: helping others wake up to life and staying in comfy pants. Creator and host of the top-rated ...Goal Digger Podcast, she’s helped thousands redefine success and chase bold dreams through her decade-long work as a leading online personality and educator. Check out Jenna's new book "How are you, really?". In this episode you will learn:Why you should always invest in yourself.What success should feel like.Why you shouldn’t be afraid of changing.How to move with your grief. For more, go to lewishowes.com/1271Lisa Bilyeu on Overcoming Failure: EP 1265Tamera Mowry on Reinventing Yourself: EP 1189Evy Poumpouras on Mastering Relationships: EP 1270
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Sometimes I think that people get really lost because they're like, well, yeah, if I knew what my passion was, I could go figure out a way to make money, but I don't even know what my passion is, right?
And sometimes I think knowing what you don't want is just as important as knowing what you do want.
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.
You were a full-time wedding photographer still, I think.
And then you were just kind of getting into, you know, teaching a little bit and coaching and things like that.
And I think maybe you created one course or something at the time.
And now it's been an amazing evolution of six years of building a massive podcast, courses.
You did events for a while.
But just being a nomad entrepreneur.
You travel the world, you live in different locations,
you're a mom, and you're able to build a business
that is designed around a lifestyle,
which is what I've always talked about
and tried to live by my life, is like,
how do I live my life and then build a business around that,
not where I'm trapped by it?
And that's something you've like stood by since day one.
Truly.
So it's really inspiring.
And I remember, yeah, when you were in the mastermind,
I was just like, Jenna gets this.
I was like, you got it.
And you were just like, okay, yes,
I'm going to do this and execute
and then just get results.
That's been your journey.
You know, it's crazy getting ready this morning
because I was just like,
I really am awake
to life in that like, this is a pinch me moment. And I don't, I don't miss that. I don't miss that
in even the mundane everyday life with my kids. Like I just am awake to like, wow. And it was
crazy because I was just thinking about my journey with you. And I remember your email coming through
announcing the mastermind.
I remember jumping on it.
I mean, I filled out that form faster
than you can imagine.
But I also feel like, you know,
there's times in your life where there's like this line
in the sand where there is a very clear before and after,
right, like where you see a massive transformation.
And joining your mastermind was the first time
I really invested in myself in a big way.
It was so scary.
I remember writing the check
and I couldn't even tell Drew, my husband,
the amount because when you bet on yourself,
it's like, I better prove myself right, right?
Like you're like, I better make this a worthy investment
and holy cow, but it is so cool to be with you here
in this setting, think of like how far we've come
and like even just our relationship too over the time,
it's like, we've done a lot of life together,
which is pretty cool.
A lot of trips and masterminds and ups and downs
and everything in between.
And it's so fun to watch your journey
because I remember just thinking like,
oh, if you just keep being consistent,
great things are going to happen.
And they've been happening.
You've got a book out now.
How are you really?
Your podcast, again, all your courses, everything
is just all very inspiring.
I'm curious, what was the kind of a pivotal moment
after the mastermind where you realized things can take off financially and in business and you don't have to
overextend yourself? Because there's probably times where you maybe overextended for a while.
Oh, yeah.
But when did you realize you could do both?
Yeah. Okay. So there's actually a story in the book about your mastermind, which we'll talk about.
But it was kind of crazy because being in the mastermind for me, as someone from the Midwest who lives in small town Minnesota,
I had literally never been in a room with people who could say, like, I desire wealth or I desire freedom or I desire flexibility. Like it was so crazy for me to be around people who were unapologetic about their pursuit,
whatever their pursuit looked like, whether it's financial or lifestyle or flexibility.
And it was the first time that I was like around people where they were just like,
here's what I'm going after.
And I was like, whoa, like even to speak those types of things,
especially in the Midwest, you know, It's like people think you are crazy.
You didn't talk about money or how much you wanted to make or how much you were making.
Yes.
So it really opened my eyes to like this new world because I feel like before joining your Mastermind, I was so lonely in the pursuit.
And I also felt like, am I greedy or why do I want these things or
you know am I hitting my own ceiling like my own glass ceiling and when I was
in your mastermind I was in the heart of a really big pivot because I was a
wedding photographer I had experienced my first loss of pregnancy so I remember
at the first mastermind you had is get up front and just say who you are and one thing you were working on. And I remember I like got up and I'm not a nervous person like I can speak wherever. And like something overcame me where I decided to share about that loss.
and and I was just like you know I'm really like I really want to be a mom and like this isn't happening right now and you had everyone in the mastermind
right on a slip of paper like if they could help you with whatever that goal
was write your name and phone number down and pass like how they can help or
somewhere yeah and dr. Lauren Noel was in the mastermind and she had written on
a piece of paper and it said I I will help you with your fertility.
She was a fertility expert.
Yes. And I remember getting that piece of paper and thinking, I don't need help.
My loss was a fluke. That's really, really sweet, but whatever.
But for some reason, I held on to that paper.
And in the course of the following year, we ended up experiencing our second loss.
And I found that slip of paper,
literally days after our second loss,
that said, I will help you with your fertility
with a phone number.
And there's a story in the book about like
how I joined a mastermind thinking like,
this is gonna explode my business and all of these things.
And really it exploded my life. So to get back to your question of, you know, when have there been seasons where you've overextended yourself or gone in the opposite direction? I think
a lot of us achievers are prone to do that. It's like the cycle. But I've recognized time and time
again that like success shouldn't look a certain way.
It should feel a certain way.
And when I stay in alignment with how it should feel,
I am so much more at peace and not like in the pursuit of like this crazy pace.
What should it feel like?
For me, it feels like peace and it feels like no urgency.
Like when you say no stress, you mean it.
You know what I mean sure uh my team and
i we we have this thing where it's like we literally start every message with like this
isn't urgent but here's what we need because it's like this reminder i can get it done well but it's
like really it's like like don't worry but like if you're in your life be in your life but like
when you come back on this is what i'm waiting for but it's like we don't need this right now
Don't stop your whatever you're doing. Yeah, but get back when you're back in the work. Yeah interesting. That's cool. Yeah
Yeah, it's been interesting but it's you know, it's just crazy to think about
We often say like in the business world too
It's like sell people what they think they want but serve them what they need
in the business world too, it's like sell people what they think they want, but serve them what they need. And when I look at like my experience and, and specifically my experience with you,
it was like, you know, I joined the mastermind for this one thing, but I ended up like,
then ended up working with Dr. Noel. She helped me. And I really, truly attribute a lot of my
ability to like carry a successful pregnancy to my work with her. And I beautiful. Which is kind of crazy. And I met her through you.
That's beautiful, yeah.
I'm sure you would have met someone eventually like that, but I'm glad that it brought you.
No, no, you take credit.
You are like the godfather of this.
I'm the reason you have a child.
Yeah, no.
No, I think, you know, people, you attract the things you need.
You're looking for things you need and people will find their way to you.
Yeah.
That's really beautiful.
You also said back then that you would never do a book. Yes. You were like, I'm never doing a book.
So why did you decide you wanted to do a book? Yeah. And what's the messaging and intention
behind it? Yeah. So I remember because you were launching your second book, The Mask of Masculinity,
and it was coming out and it was basically kind of launched right around your event, right?
Yes.
Yeah, we got our first copy then.
It was like right afterwards, yeah.
Yep.
And I remember we each got one question to ask.
And I remember looking at you and being like, why would anyone do a book?
So I remember being, I don't understand it.
And I said for many years, I will never do this. I'll never write a
book. And we were in a season with our family. So we now had our first daughter, Coco. I was
going to get pregnant with my second child, hopefully. And I, it's a long story and it's
a part of my book in the epilogue, but it was in the
middle of the pandemic and it was when things were like slightly creeping open again.
And it was mine and Drew's 10 year anniversary.
And I was like, we can't really like go to a fancy dinner or whatever, but I booked us
massages and it was in Northern Minnesota, a town of 1200 people.
There's this place called Lutzen and And I booked us massages and I go
in for my massage. And the woman there, her name is Thea. And she's like, I'm a medical medium.
And I was like, interesting. I don't know what that means, but cool. Let's go get the rub down.
So I go down, get my massage, have my mask on my face. And after the massage, she goes, can I tell
you what came up for you today?
And here I'm just booking like a 60 minute massage.
I'm like, sure.
I'm very open-minded.
What came up?
And she goes, there's something you need to do
and you know you need to do it, but you're avoiding it.
You're turning your hips away from it.
And when you were laying on the table,
I just wanted to hold your hips down and say,
follow the path. You know what you need to do. She didn't say like, you need to write a book,
but you know what? I knew right away. Really? I, with utter clarity, I, she goes, do you know what
I'm talking about? And I go, and I come home from that massage and I have like the ring of the table
on my eyes. And Drew's like, how was your was your massage and i was like i'm writing a book and it's really wild because people have described the process to
me at times and they're like once you know like you it just pours out of you and i'm like that
is bogus like writing a book is a lot of work and what's crazy is is that exact night because you
know i execute really well i open up up a Google Doc and I start.
You probably wrote the first half of the book in a night.
It was crazy.
Yeah.
And it was funny.
So I intentionally did everything in the book process backwards on purpose.
So for me, the times in my life where I've grown or evolved
have been when I've allowed myself to be really creative.
And whenever money or a paycheck or a
deadline gets involved, my creativity is stripped. And so I was like, if I'm going to do this,
I'm going to do it my way. So I wrote the book without telling a soul, without a book deal,
without an agent, with no commitment or deadline or paycheck. So I was like, if I'm going to do
this, I want to make sure that I'm doing it for the right reason. And I want it to matter to me first, because
have you ever had someone, has this happened to you where I've been approached by people and
they're like, this is what your book is about. And I'm like, no, or like, I can't wait to read
a book about this from you. And it's like, that's not what I want to write about. Uh,
so I wrote the entire book. I gave
myself a deadline, December 31st. So I started it at the end of August, December 31st, finished it
December 31st. And then I went through the process after that. And it was really cool because I did
what I wanted to do without any feedback, without announcing it to the world.
Nobody knew about it, not even my family.
Like, I just really kept it close to my heart because for so long I said, I'm not going to do it.
So then I was like, if I start telling people, then I'm going to feel commitment that I have to do it.
And maybe it's not the right time or the right thing.
But it turns out it was.
And what does it end up being about then?
Yeah.
does it end up being about them yeah so what's crazy and a good lesson for all of us is i wrote a business book at first now my book how are you really is not a business book
but i thought you know i run the gold digger podcast i'm the marketing person i love all that
stuff but i do business and marketing so that I can live life in a way that other
people can and in the marketing business book that I wrote there were a lot of
stories that were way deeper than just strategies and so when I finally got my
book agent and she read through the whole thing and she pulled out chapters
for my proposal she had the entire manuscript. The proposal was not a business book.
So when I did all my editor's calls and stuff, they were like, you know, this is great.
But like, we're not talking about branding.
We're not like you like this is a book that we need and we're in nine to fives.
And so it really expanded it.
And for me, too, it was like, where do I want to see it on the shelves at Barnes and Noble?
Like, where do I envision it? and it wasn't in the business category so it was beautiful because like as a
former photographer it almost felt like I was like widening the lens like I was zoomed in and I needed
to like back off but it also meant a lot more work exactly you know so we scrapped a good chunk of
what I wrote and maybe someday I'll write a business book.
But I'm so proud of what it is.
So naming a book is really hard.
You and I were actually just talking about that.
And I hate naming things.
Like my first course was the Jenna Kutcher course because I literally couldn't think of a name.
And so we had all these different working titles throughout the process.
And it was 10 days before I gave birth to my second child
and we were like we need a name and I kept voice texting people asking advice and in the voice
messages I would say you know those conversations where you're like how are you oh good great busy
fine and then you feel safe enough and invited to like lean in and be like, but how are you really?
And someone was like, why don't you just call it that?
And I was like, really?
And it became that.
There you go.
That wild.
It's beautiful.
The whole process is beautiful, I think,
of coming up with an idea, launching it, making the name.
But a lot of people are afraid of putting something
out there. Were you
afraid to create it? Or were you afraid beforehand that you just never wanted to do the work of it?
Or why do you think a lot of people are afraid to put something out there?
Yeah. I was never afraid of the work, but to me, it never made sense in my life because I remember telling you this and being like, why would you spend two years on a project that doesn't necessarily provide a really bountiful paycheck when you could spend like two months building a course, launching it, getting it out into the world and like reaping the rewards?
And I really genuinely feel like there is a tipping point in our lives where there are seasons where it's like you will hustle and trade your time for money.
And then there becomes this time where all of a sudden time is more valuable like you will trade money to claim back your time you've talked about that a lot and so it became
this thing where it was like it has nothing to do with the money I mean I wrote the whole thing
without a penny promised and so I was never afraid of the work, but it's fascinating because I really kept it
close to my heart.
Like I didn't let people read it.
I didn't want opinions.
And so even my own husband texted me the other night
because he has a copy and he's reading it
and it feels so vulnerable.
Because you don't know what they're thinking or feeling.
Yes.
What are they gonna say?
Yes.
And like, or what's going to impact them?
Or like, you know,
I was talking to somebody the other day
and it's like, you and I have lived
many shared experiences together.
But like we could be in the same hour segment
sitting side by side
and our takeaways could be totally different.
And when you're putting out these stories
and like being vulnerable
and like sharing different things,
it's like, whew,
like it feels like a piece of your heart. And one of the biggest lessons I've learned in this process
is my book is a piece of my life's work,
but it's not the only thing.
It's just a piece of it.
And so it's a very important piece to me,
but there's a lot more beyond it what do you feel like it's
been the biggest challenge for you in the last couple years then ah the face yeah so I feel like
when people ask me like how are you really it's like I'm experiencing the fullness of life and I
mean that in a way of like I want it all And I've had to define what it all looks like.
And I want to be a present hands-on mom.
And I also want to have a great career.
And like the dichotomy of like chasing both of those things simultaneously,
coupled with things like mom guilt and all of that.
It's like you're constantly questioning like, am I in the right place?
You mean if you're being present with your...
If I'm working, I'm thinking about my kids.
If I'm with my kids, I'm thinking about work.
Really?
Always.
How do you shift to just being present to one or the other?
I have to literally, like, ground myself.
Like, I have started this practice, and I do it all the time now,
but, like, when I enter the threshold of a room I have to consciously be like I am all here right now
because it's easy like here's a story so I read a lot of books to my three-year-old I mean she is
she loves reading there will be times when I'm literally reading a book, but I'm like thinking about like,
I need to do this for work. I need to do this. And one day we were reading a Dr. Seuss book
and there's a line where it's like the curtain in the Jordan, like, you know, they have weird rhymes
and Coco goes, what's a Jordan? And I was like, what? And she's like, what's a Jordan?
Jordan. And I was like, what? And she's like, what's a Jordan? And I had read this book hundreds of times to her. And yet I wasn't like there. Like, do you know what I mean? Like she's in my
lap. I'm reading the pages. And yet I'm just in autopilot because I'm thinking about other things.
It was like this massive wake up call of like, you want it all, but like you could miss it all
so easily if you're not where you are.
And so it was really funny because she was like, what's a Jordan?
And I was like, oh my God, I am reading this book and I've read it so many times
and I don't even remember this page because I haven't been fully there.
So I've really had to work really hard because my brain is such a,
I mean our brains are so powerful, but they're always spinning, right?
Right.
And it really takes me just as much focus to because my brain is such a, I mean, our brains are so powerful, but they're always spinning. Right. And it really takes me just as much focus to like calm my brain as it does for
me to like speed it up. Where do you feel like in your life you need the most support? Yeah. I mean,
asking for help is the worst, right? I have a chapter in the book about like, like I had prides at our chokehold of like, I want to do it all and be it all and all these things.
And, you know, my husband desire, deeply desire to be a stay at home dad.
And in our struggle to grow our family, I felt like such a failure because he had this vision of like being a stay at home dad.
And like here I can't carry a pregnancy all the way through.
stay at home dad and like here I can't carry a pregnancy all the way through and it felt like I was like dropping the baton because he had supported my entrepreneurial dreams and now I'm
like the one that's like not allowing him to live his dream and it's crazy because like him and I
like we just have to be a team uh and so asking for help in that way is like massive and keeping really open communication because like I am so driven, but I'm also so grounded.
And in trying to like live into both of those things requires someone keeping you in check.
Right. Sure. Sure. Like, hey, set the phone down. Close the laptop.
know um but asking for help too in the chapter in my book it was talking about how for years as an entrepreneur i wanted to just do everything and i thought no one can possibly love this the way i
do no one can possibly do anything the way i do and uh how many of us have felt that way yeah and
uh in that chapter this girl named caitlin had reached out to me two different times.
And she supported wedding photographers.
And she had reached out and was like, I live in your area.
I love your work.
I'd love to support you.
And basically I said thanks but no thanks both times.
And she reached out a third time.
And it was on the day, the exact day, that we had lost our second pregnancy.
And it said, just checking in.
I know you said you're good.
And she had no idea
what was going on behind the scenes. And finally, for like the first time in my life, I like
literally said like, I need help. Wow. Because I was like in the fetal position and I had built a
business that literally required me to show up or I didn't get paid. And it was like this huge
realization of like, yeah, I built a successful business,
but if I am not upright and showing up, I'm not, it's not a business. And so the chapter in the
book is like how, when we accept help and when we like learn how to ask for it, we are so enriched.
And there's so many people in our lives that like, they love just being the helper.
And when I say just being the helper, I mean like being the helper is transforming lives.
And it's really interesting because I feel like I've discovered that in business, and this goes for you as well, is like, there are very few things that only Lewis can do. You have to be
the face and the voice and the vision, right? right you are the visionary but your team are like the
missionaries like they are the ground workers the copywriters the people helping spread the mission
and so for me it felt like i was white knuckling things and when i finally released it like opened
my hands to what's possible what was possible building a massive business
and having support and creating systems and inviting people in to do work that they're
passionate about that i don't want to do it's like the whole thing it's like yes i could create
the graphic write the caption like but should i be doing that right and those shoulds have gotten
real small over the years because you are so talented i mean you were and are so talented at doing so many of the creative and writing and marketing
and social and everything else the strategy that you could do it all essentially yeah to a high
level you know and so letting go of something that you do really well that you know you love and like
and comes out the way you like it it without having to tell anyone how to do
it or teaching people, it's hard to let go of. It's almost like when you're really good at a lot
of things, it's harder for you. It's like a platter. It's like when you go to an old country
buffet and all the food's spread out and you're like, how do I decide what I want? It feels like
that sometimes. Yeah. But when you start out, you have to learn everything if you don't have the
resources. So it's kind of like a good thing, but then you have to learn how to let it all go quickly.
Absolutely. Absolutely.
Speaking of letting go, this is an interesting topic.
I think a lot of women would love to learn the answer to or the solution to.
Yeah.
You and your husband, Drew, who's like one of the nicest guys.
I love hanging out with this guy.
He's awesome.
And your husband, Drew, was like one of the nicest guys.
I love hanging out with this guy.
He's awesome.
You decided you wanted to be building the business and he's going to be a stay-at-home dad, essentially, right? And support you in other ways of the business as well, but mostly stay-at-home dad.
How can women learn to navigate that if they want to be the driven entrepreneur?
Yeah.
Can you be a driven entrepreneur woman yep find a husband who's also driven
entrepreneur or does one of you need to have some less drive on their career and business to be able
to support if you're trying to have kids what what's worked for you what doesn't work yeah
what would you do differently if you started this over again? Yeah. I honestly wouldn't do anything differently.
And I think what is fascinating about this is, especially in the Midwest, it is still very traditional.
Yes.
I cannot tell you the amount of times.
Probably the coast also, but yeah.
Yeah, but no, I cannot tell you the amount of times that we'll mention something about our lifestyle,
and the person will look at Drew and say, what do you do?
And then he'll say, oh, I stay home with my daughters.
And then they'll look over at me and be like,
well, what do you do?
And we always have this joke because it's just like,
still it's so inbred in our society of like,
clearly the man must have a really successful career.
And I get it.
I mean, I've made assumptions as well what's really fascinating to me is that we've been married 11 years we've been
together since 2008 and we are very different people than we were when we got married very
different I mean you wouldn't recognize that version of me
and it's beautiful because I think we are so resistant to change and we are so
afraid to contradict ourselves because you probably never thought you'd have a
business or be an entrepreneur right never thought I would back in 2008 any
of these things like I wanted a corporate office and power suit and high
heels I the visions I held had corporate office and a power suit and high heels.
The visions I held had zero chance of entrepreneurship in them.
And what did he want to do?
What was his vision?
Drew has done so many things.
He could sell ice to an Eskimo.
He did cell phone sales, billboard sales, insurance sales.
I mean, he's sold pretty much.
You name it, he's sold it.
But he never felt fulfilled.
It was like always on this quest of fulfillment. And I always just like encouraged it because I wanted him to be happy. And his final job before he retired to be a stay-at-home dad was in wine
sales. But really, he was just like a glorified stockist. And in my book, I tell a story about like how when I
lost that second pregnancy, like not only did I feel the grief of the loss, but I felt like I was
holding him back from this vision, this dream that he had. And he could have groveled and grumbled
his way through and he just went out and stocked that wine in that season. And I think a lot of
times people are sitting in these waiting seasons and they're just wasting them. They're angry. They're mad at like things aren't happening for them. And I like
look at him with such admiration of like he had this bigger vision for his life, but it wasn't
happening. It took three years for him to actually be a stay at home dad. And he still he worked so
hard and like he never complained. So I'm like, great, great reminder for people.
I mean, it's the great resignation right now.
One in three people are looking for a new job or quitting their job.
That's massive.
But like, while I admire that, I'm also like, are we giving up too soon?
Or are we just angry because things aren't happening?
Like, can we still do the thing while we figure out the next idea?
I don't know.
I just challenge people on that.
But back to your question about, like, the relationship and stuff, something about Drew that used to drive me crazy that I now very much admire is his contentedness.
Like, he is so content.
I am driven and ambitious, and I sometimes want more, and, you know, I want to go after these things.
and I sometimes want more and I, you know, I want to go after these things. And he has this beautiful, like this guy would just be so happy to get in a workout, mow the lawn and give the
kids a bath. Like, like he truly is just like grounded in that contentedness. And to me,
that looked like complacency before. So that's why it drove you crazy. Drove me nuts. Cause I was
like, don't you want more? So how long did it drive you crazy for?
I mean, when I say it drove me crazy, I just didn't understand it.
Like, I was just like.
Yeah, you're not screaming or anything.
Yeah, but yeah, it's like, what do you want for your life?
And like, he was just so happy.
And to me, I feared of like, oh, like, are you just not driven?
Or like, what is this?
And now I'm like, well, what a valuable balance for someone like me to be reminded of like,
oh, this is enough.
What if he was extremely driven and he was like.
I think we'd be battling each other for that.
If he was driven and he was like, I'm building this thing and I don't have the time to be
at my home as much.
I'm going to be gone more.
I'm going to be back after seven every night.
So hard for us.
How would you navigate that?
And what advice would you give to women who are driven, who have married into a driven partner?
Yeah.
Who doesn't want to be a stay-at-home dad.
Yeah.
How would you navigate that as a mom?
Yeah.
I mean, so something crazy about us is like, our oldest is three and a half,
and like, we've never had help with our children.
We've just really, it's just been a personal choice
of like, we're all in on parenthood.
Grandparents though, or?
I mean, my mom is the only person
that has really like watched her, and it's not consistent.
So it's like, we're just in it.
Right, right.
We've just decided that.
So like, not consistent, is it like once a week,
once every few weeks? Yeah, yeah, if we're lucky. A half a day, or a few hours, catch decided that is it what like once a week once every few
weeks yeah if we're lucky a half a day or a few hours catch yeah it's like going on a date night
but we made that choice really like specifically for us because our values are just really like
to cherish this time this window of time where they're little is so small and these years are
so important and so if if he if he was, you know,
driven or have this brilliant idea or had these things, you know, honestly, I would feel a
responsibility to pass the baton to him because he has supported me in exceptional ways over the
years, but I think I'd be reluctant to hand it over. Right. I think it would be really hard.
to hand it over, right? I think it would be really hard. I really think that his role is often overlooked. And so for your listeners that are the stay-at-home parents or the people who are,
you know, giving this season of life to be at home with their children or to help raise their children it is the most
overlooked and underappreciated job on planet earth and it's crazy to me because
what i do and and what you've watched me do over the last few years is literally only possible
because of him and his support yeah i mean he cooks support. Yeah. I mean, he cooks, he cleans, he does it all.
With a smile.
With a smile and his six-pack abs, baby.
He's just a happy guy.
Yeah, he really is.
And so, yeah, if both people are driven,
I think that there has to be a season where there are handoffs.
Like, I always just picture it as like a relay race
where it's like, I'm sprinting
and you're waiting and then you're sprinting and I'm waiting. And there has to be conversations.
And I think a lot of women have this deep desire for change or growth or evolution or trying
something new, but they don't even know how to express it. They don't even know how to say the
words like, like imagine you and I are together which whatever but like lewis
i know that i've been this way for you i know i've supported you in this way for so long
but like i have to change there's i'm gonna change and i'm inviting you to enter this change with me
right it might be uncomfortable we might have to figure it out but like here's what i really want
to do and i mean if you're with a partner that loves you, I would sincerely hope that they support you.
But it's crazy.
I do think that a lot of relationships benefit when it's like one person's driven and the other one kind of brings them back home to earth.
And I think there are seasons of tradeoff with that.
That's interesting.
So when did the thing that drove you crazy about him
switch to being like, okay, it doesn't drive me as crazy
and now I'm actually really grateful and appreciative
that you're in that energetic space.
Yeah, I mean, even today, he's home with two kids
sending me updates of them going on walks with the wagon
and things like that.
And him just saying like, we're good and you're doing great and I love you like that's massive to me
because I already put enough pressure on myself so if I was worried like I'm gonna go home to
like a grumbling husband and my house is tore apart my kids need a bath like that would be hard. It doesn't drive me nuts anymore because it's brought
me like back to earth in a way of this season that I'm in is busy, but it's not crazy. And it's a
very thoughtfully busy, like anything I'm doing in my life right now is by choice, not necessity.
And I have learned and really like embrace this
idea of like, I can pump the brakes on certain things that I know I could soar at, that I know
I could crush it in. And I say that with just confidence. I think more women need to be
confident, but I'm saying no to so many things because I trust that I can hit the brake and know
where the gas pedal is.
The gas pedal is not going anywhere.
And so for the next few years, things are just going to look a little different for us
because I really want to be with my kids.
Yeah.
And so a lot of people, I think, are lacking this belief in themselves
of like what's gotten me this far will carry me forward,
but I don't need to believe the lie of like momentum and have that keep me on the hamster wheel.
You know what I mean?
Sure.
It's interesting because obviously I don't know what it's like to be a woman or in your position, but there's been obviously a movement for decades for women to be more driven and really go after what they want.
Yeah.
Career, business, goals, dreams, aspirations.
Yeah.
And at the same time, there's probably judgment for going after those things.
Absolutely.
When you have kids and not being there for the kids.
So there's this push for women to go be more than what you were told maybe as a child you shouldn't be doing or something, right?
Yeah. be more than what you were told maybe as a child you shouldn't be doing or something, right? Like, be more, do what you want, chase your dreams,
live a career, life, have kids later in life,
all these different things, wait to get married,
whatever it might be.
But then doing it, there's probably judgment around it also
of like, well, now you have two kids
and now you have a responsibility
and now you should be at home more.
And how are you raising them?
And you're letting him raise them.
And why aren't you?
You know, there's probably this judgment.
So how do you navigate the guilt, shame, judgment
from others, maybe internally,
for living this type of lifestyle?
Yeah, you know, it's crazy,
because oftentimes, and I say this with respect,
I ask myself, would my male counterpoint CEOs
have to worry about this or think about this or do this?
And I had a massive moment.
So I'm here with you.
And this is the first time I've been gone
from my family in nine months.
So it's not like I'm on the road all the time.
I'm actually never on the road.
And I had this moment two nights ago
when my three-year-old woke up in the middle of the night screaming for me.
And I had her monitor on my nightstand in the hotel room.
And for an entire hour, I sat on my phone and helped her breathe.
And I just said, smell the flowers, blow out the candles.
Smell the flowers, blow out the candles.
And I got her back to sleep while i'm here in california i'm
sitting here and i'm like pumping because i'm nursing my kid back home talking to my three-year-old
and i have to wake up and do multiple things the next day and i was like would any of my male ceos
be expected to have a baby monitor on and do well you you know what I mean? And I say that out of a,
there's so much expectation around women. And it's like, we're supposed to work like we're
not mothers and mother, like we don't have careers. And like, that's a problem. And
it's fascinating because I don't necessarily feel guilt. I want my daughters to like,
see me doing my work. And actually when i first had coco and it was
like this three year long journey and i just like freaking prayed for like this miracle and here she
comes i never wanted her to see me working i had a weird thing about it where i was like i want her
to never see me like on my phone or my computer i just want, I just wanted her to never feel like second fiddle, even though she was
a baby, but like, I just wanted her to see like mommy's present. I, I feel like there's this huge
pressure for presence where it's like, don't blink. You're going to miss it. You know? And it's like,
I literally remember like feeding her and like looking at her and like counting her eyelashes
and being like, am I going to remember this moment? Cause it was just like, I know how fleeting this all is. And as she's gotten older, I want her to see me working and
I want her to understand my work and I want it to be something that she's proud of. And I want it
to paint possibility because the lifestyle she's living is possible because of my work. And so when I was writing my book,
in the dedication, it says like,
to Coco, like, thanks for being my biggest muse
and like my greatest inspiration.
Also, thank you for sitting next to me
and making me play Baby Shark
in the corner of my computer screen
while I was writing my book so that we could sit together
because she would literally be by me while I was working.
I watched Baby Shark a lot of times. And, you know,
it's fascinating because as she's starting to like understand more and stuff, obviously her
scope of what's normal in terms of a career as a woman is very like enlightened for seeing what
I've done and what I continue to do. But it is so much pressure because it's like you know no dad is asked like oh you left your baby at home to go
do a work trip like that it's just a different thing and even on the way here to your studio
I had a uber driver we were in a minivan and we're like talking about family and and I was like yeah
you know I have a little one at home and he was like oh how did you leave and I was like you don't
think it was hard enough like right you know and it was like I'm like there have been 10 times on this trip where I've just
been like book me a flight I'm going home but I I truly believe I'm still working at a pace that is
super sustainable yeah and in a way that it's like no I'm home and when I'm away you better
believe I'm getting stuff done. Right.
And you're gone for a limited time and then you go back.
Yeah.
I'm curious about money dynamics.
Oh, yeah. Let's talk about it.
I don't think this is talked about enough.
Yeah.
Well, I also don't think there's a lot of models out there maybe that I've seen where, you know, the female partner in a male-female dynamic is the breadwinner, is the one earning all the money, majority of the money, 90%, whatever it is, and responsible for most of the money.
Two questions here.
One, how did you learn to believe you were able to earn more when you kind of had a set amount you were making for so many years?
able to earn more when you kind of had a set amount you were making for so many years? Obviously,
it was increasing, but to really exponentially grow to abundance financially, that's number one.
How did you believe that you could earn more? And what was the deciding factor for unlocking more for you? And then number two, how do you manage the money dynamic in the relationship?
And how does that work? How does that communicate? And how do people believe in their worths
at different stages?
Yeah.
So the first part of the question
is actually going to be very different
than I think what you're expecting.
So I remember the day that I hit six figures.
And for me, that was a massive goal.
Like get six figures in one year,
you brought it in.
What year was this?
This would have been my third year
as a wedding photographer.
So 2014.
Okay.
So I'd built a six figure photography business
in three years flat.
It's big.
It's big.
In the Midwest.
In the Midwest, it was like basically condensed
to six months of shooting.
I shot every weekend.
I had no time off.
I missed weddings. I shot every weekend. I had no time off. I missed weddings.
I missed time with my family.
And I remember the day that I hit six figures felt like crap.
Really?
I was empty.
I was burnt out.
I remember like standing in the shower and being like, why aren't the angels singing?
Where is the confetti?
Because I thought this would feel different.
And what's interesting is, is I was just so tired like I was like the bone deep kind of tired and I had built
this business and hit this goal and it felt terrible and Drew came home from work uh the next
day and I said I thought this this is going to feel different.
I'm not even enjoying the money I'm making because I have no time.
And I said, I'm going to propose something that's a little crazy, but I just want to see what you think.
And I made this color coded spreadsheet and he sat down and I said, I was a lot happier when I made $50,000 a year.
So I can't do this again this isn't
sustainable I I'm ready to chuck my camera out the window and I said would you support me if I said
I want to go back to making $50,000 a year but I want more time and it was really weird because I
like expected him to kind of be like you know was? Was he making a lot of money then? Or was he making some money? No, like 50.
I mean, we were just both the Midwest average.
And I thought he was going to be kind of like, and he looked so relieved.
Wow.
Like it was just like, yeah, let's do it.
We know we can.
Right.
We know we have.
Like if we go back to eating ramen noodles, great.
So I like made a super super clear boundary and at the time I had been shooting 30 weddings and I was like I am only
going to book 15 next year I'm going to say no to everything beyond that line is in the sand I'm not
going to cross it because I was a yes girl I was like taught to be a good girl say yes don't
disappoint people.
And so the next year I cut it in half and something insane happened when I did that, which was not at all what I expected. But when I got my time back again, when I got margin back,
it was when I was creative again and curious again, started listening to podcasts,
started taking online courses courses started learning other things
i would have never my eyes would have never been open to any of this world if i would have stayed
on the hamster wheel and just kept working more and more and more and it was crazy because
literally i went i was like i don't care about money give me back time and when i freed up my
time i ended up figuring out ways to unlock how to make more money.
Yeah.
And there's also a story in the book inspired by you because there's a chapter called,
What is your enough point?
And you actually probably don't even know this.
But when we were in Puerto Rico on one of our trips, you had brought along a photographer.
And we were up on the rooftop.
Taking photos. I still have a selfie photo from that. photographer and we were up on the rooftop taking photos i still have a selfie photo from that yes we're up on the rooftop and he comes over to me and he was
like did he ask you this question taylor yeah yeah and he goes you used to do this didn't you
and i said yep yeah and he said how did you get out of it how did you become the person that's
not behind the lens but the person drinking the champagne on the rooftop watching sunset?
Right.
And I said, oh, I bet you want me to like give you like a step A to Z.
And I said, you need your time back.
And I said, you have to establish what is your enough point?
Like what do you need to feel safety and security?
And you need to draw a line in the sand and not book a single shoot or session beyond it. And I told him, I was like, it's not sexy, but like,
you need your time to figure out what's next. You don't even have the bandwidth or the energy to
think of anything. And I remember, I feel like he was like disappointed in that answer because it
was like, no, no, no, there's no magic thing. But like so many of us are just like we keep filling up our plates at the buffet and we're so full.
It's like we can't even think of the next meal. It's like we're we're working so hard right now that like how could we have an idea or a vision or do research or curiosity when we're so overwhelmed with what's already in front of us. Yes. And so, you know, it's wild to me because it's like I only unlocked the potential
because time was more important than money.
And every single time I've done that where I've claimed back time,
whether it was, you know, after having my daughter,
I blacked out my calendar for a year and said I'm saying no to everything.
I'm not speaking anywhere.
I'm not doing anything. And then I unlocked these other ideas and it's like you know it's like
every time I've like valued time I've done that to answer the second part of the question about
like what is the dynamic and things like it's really interesting because I just see his teamwork and like so to me it's like
it's ours of course this business is mine I've built it you know I have
thoughts around like when people get divorced and someone takes half I'm like
okay but they didn't necessarily build the thing and things like that but like
I worked at Target when we got married. So like he literally has been behind this thing since day one.
But it's fascinating because there's the business's money and then there's our money.
I pay myself from the business.
So I still live off of a pretty meager salary because I want to invest in my wealth in different ways.
And I'm a huge saver and things like that.
I want to invest in my wealth in different ways and I'm a huge saver and things like that.
So we don't really argue and stuff about money
because we grew up in families where,
at the grocery store we would buy like the off-brand Cheerios
because they were cheaper.
Just kind of coupon codes.
Swab was the shampoo and you know.
And so the fact that we can live a life now,
the part that feels most exciting to me is like when
we go to a restaurant and you don't look at the prices yeah that's nice yeah or you can just buy
a meal for anyone yeah like that to me is the exciting part of this isn't that crazy like it's
crazy i remember nothing big and like earth shattering i was remembering i mean even this
morning i never forget like the things that i went through but i remember even this morning, I never forget the things that I went through.
But I remember this morning, I don't know what triggered it, but I was walking out of my building that I'm in here in L.A.
And I was just like, man, 12 years ago, this would have been not even possible.
To be able to be in a building like this.
Not even a vision, probably.
To be able to be in a building like this, in a city like this, paying the amount of rent that I'm paying.
I was like, it's crazy what is possible if that's something you want.
I'm not saying no one needs that.
But I just remember thinking that.
And also not being able to pay for, like going to meals with friends and being like, looking
at the check and be like, okay, I only bought this much and here's all I can give.
Where now it's not even just, you don't have to look at the check, you know, at a certain
point.
That's like financial freedom to me.
I'm at a place in my life where like financial freedom is being debt free by choice because my parents really struggled with being in debt.
And I was very aware of it growing up.
And if money can fix something, it's not a problem in my life.
And so the tire blows, whatever.
We buy a new tire.
But if we haven't learned anything these last few years around how valuable our health is,
how valuable our happiness is, how life is meant to feel good and not just look good,
then we really missed an opportunity.
So, yeah, it is wild, though.
Because, I mean, we grew up in a family where like Red Lobster was a real big deal.
And you get no beverages, no dessert,
and you split a meal.
Like-
No, you get the beverage,
but it's gotta be a refill beverage.
And then you just, you keep filling it up
to get as much out of that restaurant you could.
It's just like Dr. Pepper land.
You just keep filling it up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Free refills was where I went.
Yeah, so it's exciting to like live in a life
where it's like, yeah, I can buy the $10 green juice.
To me, that feels like success more than any other thing.
Yeah, that's interesting.
And so how does the money,
the psychology of the money then influence the relationship
in a certain way?
Now that you have been the one,
you both kind of are at the similar level
and now it's like, okay,
your business has been earning
an abundance of wealth for the family
and you're the one who's been creating
and generating that, not him.
How does that dynamic work?
Yeah, I mean, he has access to everything.
He has passwords to everything.
It's just this level of trust
and we have a lot of conversations around it, but they're not, like, heated, where it's just, like, here's where we're at.
He's on all the investment calls.
He's a big part of, like, figuring out our will.
So, I mean, it's really not a thing.
It's not an issue.
There's nothing.
No.
No.
And it's really, and I think too, because we live in a place of like abundance, like where, and not in like a woo-woo way, but like in a way of like, we have more than we
ever dreamed possible and we're awake to that.
It's just like, I, there's never pressure on me to perform more or earn more.
It's like this beautiful, like, wow.
And he's not driven to need more.
So he's happy with.
We're so content. He's chill. So it's not like he's like, wow. And he's not driven to need more. So he's happy with. We're so content.
He's chill.
So it's not like he's driven for more.
And he's happy to be making this or less.
It's not a big deal.
We're very much just like at peace in our lives.
And I think to the Midwest keeps us really grounded.
I'm really thankful we still live there.
Which, you know, so for so many years, so many of my friends would be like, what are you doing?
Like, come to L.A., come would be like, what are you doing? Come to LA.
Come to New York.
What are you doing?
And it's fascinating when I'm in places like this
because they really drain my energy, just the city energy.
I'm hearing sirens.
I'm like, traffic takes you 45 minutes to get three miles.
It's a different way of living.
It's not a wrong way of living.
It's just not for me.
Like I prefer being in the woods overlooking a lake and like working wherever my laptop is.
The idea of that is like this fantasy that maybe one day I would like that.
But also going somewhere and having no activity.
After three days, I'd be like, I'm bored.
You know, that's what I would feel this season of life.
But maybe one day I'd be like, that's all I want.
You know what I think is interesting though about that?
Is like, you know a lot of people,
like they'd be like, if I had a million dollars,
I'd like retire and go to an island.
And you know, it's like, we know ourselves,
like we like to make an impact.
We like to work.
We like to create. and I think a lot
of times too the thought of like being in a cabin in the woods freaks people out because they're
afraid to be quiet with themselves it's really easy to drown out your worries sure your traumas
when it's just busy busy busy and i think what's really fascinating and like
part of why i wrote my book is that during the pandemic a lot of us had to live up to what we
said we would do when time slowed down i mean how many times have we said you know i'll work out
more i'll eat better i'll write the book i'll write the book. I'll read the book.
When life slows down, and literally life never slowed down for any of us until the pandemic.
And I think a lot of us had to look ourselves in the mirror and be like, am I who I said I'd be? Because now I've been given, and if you were fortunate, you were given the gift of time.
If you weren't fortunate, you were out there on the workforce still or scrambling to survive and so i want to you know respect that
there was different ends of the pandemic and it looked very different but there is a vast majority
of people who were now not commuting had more time in the day saving their time from that yeah
who were they during that time and could they be still with themselves to face it?
Sure.
And so it's kind of that difference between how are you and how are you really in that
it's like you're inviting in that breath of like, who am I really?
Sure, sure.
Maybe one day.
But I've been looking at houses like a little bit outside of LA, not that far, like 30 minutes.
Yeah.
With like a yard, know yeah you kind of
like i mean that's what's so wild to me here it's just like like we want like space and privacy and
woods and quiet and like you let the dog out the back door and the kids run around and play in the
streams and stuff and i think too it's like that's like my childhood you know that was my childhood
that's what i was going to say it's a big backyard and the big tree that you're climbing.
Building a dam in the stream over hours.
Picking up crawfish in the stream.
Yeah, of course.
Crawdaddy life.
Yep.
Oh, yeah.
We would go under the bridge like down the road.
That was life.
Yeah.
It was life.
But I guess that could be life again.
One day.
One day.
I'll get you.
Yeah.
No, I'm sure.
I have a fantasy of like wanting to go back to Ohio sometime and getting a place there.
But then I go visit in the winter and I'm like, I don't miss the winter.
Then just don't go.
Right.
But then in the summer, there's mosquitoes and humidity and I don't miss sweating all day.
Yeah, if you're off of Lake Superior, we don't get that as bad.
There's tons of mosquitoes up there though, right?
Not, we haven't had them bad.
Really?
Because we're right off of the lake. Minnesota, there's tons of mosquitoes up there though, right? Not, we haven't had them bad. Really? Because we're right off of the lake.
Minnesota, there's tons of them though.
Yeah, in general.
Exactly.
But anyways, I'm really excited about this book
and excited about everything you're up to.
I think if people are,
and really the podcast,
which you've been doing for many years now,
has been about marketing business
and building this business around your lifestyle,
which I think is really inspiring.
I'm curious for people that aren't entrepreneurs
or that haven't done entrepreneurial things,
because you and I weren't entrepreneurs.
Right.
We kind of became one.
Yep.
For me, I felt like it was out of necessity
of the season of my life,
even though I didn't feel like I wanted to become one.
Yep. It was never like a desire, really. Yep. For me, I felt like it was out of necessity at the season of my life, even though I didn't feel like I wanted to become one.
It was never like a desire, really.
But it felt like I just was kind of forced into it or there was a necessity to it.
For those that maybe feel like they might have something they want to put out there and build, but they're scared.
Should they just go for it?
Should they test something first and try to get a few sales on something? What do you think is the best approach now in today's time?
so I
talk a lot about how I
Sometimes don't necessarily know what I want, but I know what I don't want
Which is what like when I was in corporate America
I sat down at a table just like this.
And my boss said, here's your five-year plan.
They never once asked me, what do you want?
What's your next move?
Where do you want to go?
And I wanted to go to corporate.
Like I wanted to move back to Minnesota, be in Minneapolis. But here I was in a store, a glorified HR person that had to bring the garbage to the dumpster at the end of the night,
wearing red and khaki, which, by end of the night wearing red and khaki which by the way i hate red and khaki um and i sometimes i think that people get
really lost because they're like well yeah if i knew what my passion was i could go figure out a
way to make money but i don't even know what my passion is right and sometimes i think knowing
what you don't want is just as important as knowing what you do want.
And sometimes it's an easier place to start with.
Like, I don't want 10 vacation days a year.
I don't want to work weekends and nights.
Like, you know, and so it's like trying to figure those things out.
But the other piece of that is that we have to like start to be open in saying I've changed.
Right.
I'm evolving.
Maybe I wanted this thing for a while,
but now I want something different.
Yeah.
It's like we get so attached to our identities that the thought of like saying,
oh, I'm different.
Or I know I said I wanted this,
but it doesn't feel the way I thought it would.
And so I want to pursue something different.
It's like this, there's this notion,
Dr. Maya Shanker was on my podcast
and she talks about identity foreclosure.
And it's like
the reason why you hold on to genes that don't fit you anymore, because you remember how you
invested in them or the reason why you get the degree, even though three years into it, you know
that you don't want to do the profession. It's this idea of like, so I got to make it worth
something, but instead then we're wasting our future. and so you call it identity closure identity foreclosure
like as in i'm foreclosing this piece of me i am shutting it down because i am no longer who i was
and it's fascinating because even being here with you today having a book coming out you're seeing
a changed mind yeah you didn't want to do this. At all. I mean,
you are the one person who truly witnessed how much I said I wouldn't do this. Yeah. You're like,
just go launch a course and make a bunch more money and have less stress. Yeah. I mean, totally.
Yeah. And so it's like, we are so afraid of changing and not just changing, which is scary
and uncertain. We're afraid of people seeing us change.
We're afraid of being like, I know I said this one thing, but I don't believe it anymore.
And I think that change is like growth and evolution.
And like we're in this thing called life school, school of greatness, life school, where we are learning.
And if we're not learning and evolving, like what are we doing?
We're missing this opportunity.
But I would say for those people who are like, maybe I have this idea or whatever, do it as an experiment. Don't
attach money to it. Don't attach deadlines. Look at how I wrote the book. Do it in a way that proves
to yourself that one, you're capable of taking action, but in a way that doesn't necessarily
paint things as like black and white success and failure, look at everything as an experiment.
I'm going to try this thing.
All it's going to do is yield a result.
And that result is going to guide my next step.
Yes.
And I feel like nowadays it's like we have to like define is this a success or is it a failure?
No, no, no, no, no.
I've done many things and failed.
I've tried many different things and been like, oh, that was not.
Like I did senior portraits one year. So I was like, I can make bank shooting seniors. I hated it.
Yeah. Did it for one summer. I was like, never again. Was it a failure? No way. It was just a
point on the path that was guiding me forward. And so I feel like getting really open to like
trying things. And the other part of that is that every single time I've tried something
different, it's always been a side hustle. I've not abandoned the nine to five to jump all in
on something. I've used the nine to five to fuel the other something. Then when I did courses,
I use the courses to fuel the podcast. And when I did the podcast, I, you know, it's like they all
pour into each other. And it's like, we're so quick to neglect something because it wasn't the perfect fit when it's like that can
propel you forward if you lean on it. And it'll give you this ability to not feel the desperation
that makes us say yes to the wrong things or do things that were never meant for us.
Right. Absolutely. What was the biggest identity foreclosure you've had in the last few years?
Getting rid of my Abercrombie jeans from when I was 18.
Truly, I remember how expensive those suckers were and how I saved every pretty penny. And I
told myself someday they'll fit again. And guess what? They don't. And they're not even in style
anymore. But I literally, no, I mean, that was part part of it but I think for me um moving back
home which is something so Drew and I met in college in Wisconsin lived in Wisconsin for over
a decade and and moved back home uh to Duluth Minnesota and you know one I never thought I'd
move home I did there's just something about it where it was like,
the people that are there are still doing the same things.
Right.
Still the same people.
Different mindset, stuck in a ways or whatever, yeah.
And I had noticed, too, a trend, and I'm curious,
like when you go back to Ohio, if you, like, stay where you grew up,
like do you kind of revert to your old self?
A little bit, yeah.
I really love it, though, because, yeah, I do,
because I'll hang out at the restaurants
and I'll just talk to the people,
just like I'm there.
You know, like I'm from there.
Yeah, it was funny though,
because whenever I would go home,
like in college,
I'd find myself sleeping on the couch again
and watching MTV and eating ramen noodles
and things that were not a part of who I was,
but there was just this comfort of this is what I do. I never thought I'd move back home. And I had this vision. After our second loss, I like hired
someone to like help me unpack the grief because I was, I skipped like denial and went straight to
anger after our second loss. So I just was like, what is wrong with me? Why is this happening?
You know, I was very public about our first loss and felt just was like what is wrong with me why is this happening um you know
I was very public about our first loss and felt like there was purpose there yes the second one
you were like this is frustration and anger yeah and I was like I got the lesson already I don't
need this again right and I was like praying to God like where is your redemption song because
I want to like prove how great you are and now you've let me down again and like I don't even
know where to go from here and I hired this person to like help me unpack my grief because I was like
I'm angry I hate my body I don't know what to do and she like led me through this exercise and we
were like sitting together and we would get on the phone once a week and every time I wanted to like
hit ignore you know like I was just like didn't want to do the call deal with it Yeah, cuz I was just like, you know, this is gonna suck and
We're like on the phone and just like okay
We're gonna do a little exercise and I want for you to close your eyes and like breathe and her name is Erin
Treloar and she runs a really cool Instagram called raw beauty talks and it's all about like coming back to your body and
So she's like having me breathe and she's like I want for back to your body and uh so she's like having me breathe
and she's like i want for you to envision like the most vibrant version of yourself like you are
happy and energized and alive and and it didn't just stop at like the vision she's like you know
like put your fingers in your finger slots like step into your feet like i want for you to be
there and like feel what it feels to like be fully alive and to enjoy your life and she said this line and it was
like like a dial on a stereo I want for you to turn your intuition up and turn
the noise of the world down and I was like envisioning all this and in the
vision I saw this little girl and pancakes and a Persian rug.
And I was wearing jeans and a white linen shirt.
And I opened my eyes after the vision.
I was like bawling.
And I said to her, she goes, you know, what came up for you?
And I was like, I think we have to move.
And she was like, what do you mean?
And I was like, I love the house we're
in but there's this bedroom and it was always going to be our baby's bedroom I get so emotional
but then I'm like every time I walk by it I just think about what hasn't happened yeah and I was
like I just this vision of like this long table and like this rug and this baby and like I see it and I was like I
think we've got to move and that day because I'm a quick action taker you're like looking at houses
you're like literally finding an agent I get on Zillow and I type in Duluth Minnesota and Drew
and I had never talked about moving home like it was like maybe we'll move to Minneapolis someday
like you know kind of stay in the city.
Where were you living at this time?
We were in a really small town in Wisconsin
called Fort Atkinson.
And we had great friends and stuff,
but we didn't have the support of a family.
And I found this house on Zillow
and I text my family text thread as a joke
and say, maybe this will be the Kutcher Craftsman.
Like it was this beautiful home in Minnesota.
We had never talked about it.
Drew is out on a run and his phone starts blowing up because my family's like, move
home, move home, come home.
Oh my God.
He's like, what?
We never talked about this.
Yeah.
He gets home.
He's like, what is going on in your family text thread?
Like, it's going crazy.
And I was like, did you see the listing?
He's like, what listing?
And I was like, I saw this house in Minnesota and I thought he would be like, you know, maybe three years from now. And he was like, oh, we can do that. And I was like, what? And, you know, it's crazy because I didn't necessarily move because of the vision, but it was like the first thing where I was like, you know, where we are is not working for me.
The craziest part is this, Lewis.
We didn't move for like seven, eight months.
The day after we moved in, I took a positive pregnancy test.
Wow.
It was literally, I always say,
I'm like, it's like I had to move home
and be grounded at home.
It just felt like this crazy moment where it was like
I'm home and I'm ready and like this is it and that next day you moved in that's crazy it's
crazy when was this April 1st of 2017 oh my gosh for 2018 yeah so it was like it's like right after
the mastermind that yeah it was yeah that next year it was like, and here's the thing that's so wild about my journey,
because, you know, one in four women experiences pregnancy loss,
is that when you're in it, I mean, it is dark.
I can imagine.
And I often think about, it's like if you were like walking through like a warehouse
and it's just like pitch black and you're literally just like inching step by step like you don't know where you're going.
And it's like you just you have a flashlight so you can only see like directly in front of you.
And once you get through it, it's like somebody turned the lights on and you see where you were and why you were there.
And I hate the line like everything happens for a reason because when you are in it there is
yeah there's no reason why that happened but our like three-year waiting season I can see now
with hindsight was required for me to build a life that supported what I was waiting for really
when I first was pregnant with my first pregnancy,
I was shooting 25 weddings a year.
I remember we were in Hawaii and I looked up the due date
and I was like, I can't be due then.
I have like four more weddings.
I'm going to like have to cancel on these.
Like I literally was like.
It's like you were sabotaging your body.
It was like, I didn't know how I would do it.
You know what I mean?
Your body's like, we're not going to let you do it you know what i mean like your body's like we're
not gonna let you do it then yeah like it's crazy and then the second time around was a huge wake-up
call because i found out that i had lost the baby but my body was still pregnant and i had to show
up and shoot a wedding the next day oh oh my gosh and so i had to pretend like I was the happy wedding photographer.
And so when I look at those losses, they were massive teachers in my life.
But by the time I was pregnant for the third time, I had built a life where I was able to move and I wasn't tied to anything.
And I had no clients to answer to.
And I had built that. And so there's this quote that I heard from a preacher and it's like, sometimes
the season of waiting is just as important as what it is that we're waiting for.
I think a lot of people find themselves in seasons of waiting and it's really easy to want to like
twiddle your thumbs and just sit there, right? Like just wait and wait and wait. But I think
we waste it. And it's's like i worked while i waited
and i don't mean like i hustled i worked towards the life i wanted for when the time came and it
was so evident when it happened that's inspiring it's a crazy story and it's one that i don't
tell often and there's a line in my book that says like, okay, I know this story is
wild, but like, you don't have to move zip codes to start living more into yourself. One of the
things I realized after that vision was my vision was jeans and a white linen shirt. And I looked
down and I was wearing sweatpants and like a college t-shirt. And I was like, you know what?
Maybe I just start putting
on the jeans. Maybe I don't have the baby and the pancakes and the Persian rug, but maybe I can just
start dressing the way that I would dress if I was vibrant and alive and healthy. Maybe I just take a
tiny step of becoming, I can't control the outcome of having a baby, but I can control showing up as
a more vibrant version of myself right now.
Absolutely. You said during the season, the dark season, that it's hard to think about
this is all happening for a reason, right? What do you think we can think about during a dark
season? If someone deals with anything dark in their life, how should they be processing or
thinking about it as opposed to, oh, well, maybe this is happening for a reason.
I don't think that, yeah, I agree. I don't think that language is helpful when you're in it, right?
Right.
Because there are so many tragedies and things that shouldn't happen or that you shouldn't
have to experience. There's this line in my book that talks about grief because we talk about it. And
it says that a lot of times people want to move on from grief. You're waiting for life to feel
normal again. You're waiting to feel like yourself. And I say grief isn't something that we're meant
to move on from. It's something we're meant to move with. We're meant to pick it up and carry it with us even if we're inching forward
like we're getting stronger because of the things we've been through you're not meant to come out on
the other side of grief the same person you were when you went into it right like that what a wasted
opportunity for tragedy and in my life loss has probably been my greatest teacher right like I look at those
like lost pregnancies and I'm like they were like somehow like looking out for me and it doesn't
mean that it wasn't hard or that I I literally think about those babies every single day but if
I wasted that and like didn't use it, that would be a real loss.
That's the tragedy.
That's the tragedy.
And I think oftentimes it's like we sit in the loss and we waste that time
when we need to just slowly start moving with it and carrying it with us as a changed person.
I don't know a single person who has been through anything
tragic in their life. I mean, you lost your dad, like you are a different person than even a few
months ago. Absolutely. And so I, I believe that we've got to like change the notion of like,
oh, you're going to be back to normal in a month or like this expectation. And it's like,
we've got to invite people to like evolve and move forward at their own pace. And I always liken grief,
like for me, and it might be different for you, but for me, I always think about like Lake Superior.
We have a place on Lake Superior and there are some days where I can stand on the shore and watch
like how mighty and powerful it is and just stand there in awe.
And there are some days where it feels like,
grief makes me feel like I'm literally getting sucked under
in the current and I can't even stay afloat.
And there's a huge difference between like the days
where you can be like, yeah, that was hard.
And I'm observing, you know,
I can see the power of that and stuff.
And there are days where you're like triggered or something and it's like you are sucked under and we don't give ourselves enough space to like
have those different types of days and you don't know when they're gonna land yeah you know there
will be like i still think about like the due dates of my first pregnancies or i celebrate a
kid's birthday and i'm like my kid should be that old so it's like if we don't
give ourselves a grace of like some days I'm getting sucked in I need a life raft and some
days I'm like just standing there being like wow that was powerful I mean it's all a part of the
process of grief you know I hear you it's been coming to waves for me for the last two months, too.
Yeah.
I mean, since my dad passed, it's like some days I feel okay, and then other days it's like I hear a song and it triggers me.
Yes.
And I just feel really sad or vulnerable or grieving.
Yes.
You know, it's a process.
It's a journey.
A lifelong process, I think.
Oh, man, I'm really excited for this.
Your book, How Are You Really?
I want people to check it out at jennacutcher.com or follow you everywhere on social media at jennacutcher.
Your podcast as well, The Goal Digger Podcast.
If you're thinking of entrepreneurship and business and branding and marketing, go listen to that.
It's a powerful, powerful podcast.
You've got tons of courses and programs and things for people to help who are creators, entrepreneurs online as well. So they can get it all at
jennacutcher.com. Is there anywhere specifically we should go for the book? Yeah, you can go to
howareyoureallybook.com. And we've got a landing page and all the spots you can grab it. And
you know, as someone who said i would never do this
i've never worked harder on something in my life and i've never wanted it to be in the hands of
more people and so i really am excited book is a lot it can be a lot i mean no one does a book and
just like kind of yeah haphazardly puts it out there you know it's like it's so much effort and
energy and something we really care about,
you know,
when we launch a book.
It's interesting.
It's probably why
a lot of people
are resistant of doing it.
Absolutely.
I mean,
you know what's interesting
is like as content creators
and digital creators,
the fact that you work
on something for two years
without revealing it.
Crazy.
Crazy.
Crazy.
But you know what?
It's been such a great lesson for me
of like sitting on something, waiting on it, revising it, editing, editing, editing, like
where it's like, you know, done is better than perfect in a lot of ways. And in a lot of times,
it's good to take that imperfect action. And when you do something like this, you're really taught
patience in the process. And it's been a really good teacher for me. And when you do something like this, you're really taught patience in the process.
And it's been a really good teacher for me.
And you could also get caught up in never being done.
Yeah, so someone said to me the other day.
You also need a deadline too.
Yeah, they're like,
there's a reason why it's called a book release.
And it's like, you're releasing it out into the world
because you could literally nitpick.
Go for years.
For years.
I think a lot of people do that.
And they never put it out. That's right.
I mean, there's so many things I could change
in my previous books still today. I'm like,
I could have added this or taken this out.
Could always do that. You always could do it.
So it's a yes and. It's like,
okay, how can I give it the patience,
the time, the energy, the revisions, and also
release it.
There's going to be something that could be changed.
I'm very excited for you.
HowAreYouReallyBook.com.
Make sure you guys go check it out.
Get a few copies for your friends, all the bonuses and all that stuff.
JennaKutcher.com.
This is a question I ask everyone at the end called the three truths.
So imagine it's your last day on earth many years away from now.
You live as long as you want to live.
You get to do all the things you want to do.
For whatever reason, everything you've created has to go to another place. many years away from now. You live as long as you want to live. You get to do all the things you want to do. Yeah.
But for whatever reason,
everything you've created has to go to another place.
The book, podcast, social media, content,
everything's gone.
No one has access to your information anymore.
Okay.
But you get to leave behind three lessons with the world that you've learned.
Three truths.
Yep.
What would be those truths for you?
Time is your currency.
Everything is temporary.
And you'll never regret the time you spend with the people you love.
Yeah.
Amen to that.
I want to acknowledge you, Jenna.
It's been a beautiful journey since I've known you.
2017, since I first met you.
Yeah.
Isn't that wild?
25 years, almost six years now.
And the way you show up for yourself, the way you show up for your family, for your kids, for your dreams, for your health, everything.
You make decisions that aren't popular sometimes.
You do things that are against the norm.
But you do them your way.
And you do them in a way that works for you, that makes you feel peace and healthy and loved. And so I think that's really beautiful
that you're giving and creating and serving people
and also reminding yourself
to make sure you serve yourself in that process
and not lose yourself in that process.
So I really acknowledge you.
Very proud of you.
Thank you.
Very grateful for you and your friendship and everything.
Thank you for having me on this show.
And it really is a full
circle moment of like, Drew and I often talk about how being a part of your mastermind changed my
life in so many ways. And so thank you for being that leader, but thank you for being my friend.
Of course. Yeah. I'm happy. I'm always wanting to facilitate, you know, facilitate experiences
for people. Uh, my final question is what's your definition of greatness?
Doing what you love, being with the people you love, but doing it in a way that feels good and
doesn't just look good. Jenna Kutcher. Appreciate you. Thank you. You're the best. Thank you so much
for listening. I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards
greatness. Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a full rund you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a full rundown of today's show
with all the important links. And also make sure to share this with a friend and subscribe over
on Apple Podcasts as well. I really love hearing feedback from you guys. So share a review over on
Apple and let me know what part of this episode resonated with you the most. And if no one's told you lately, I want to remind you that you are loved, you are worthy, and you matter.
And now it's time to go out there and do something great.