Podcast Page Sponsor Ad
Display ad placement on specific high-traffic podcast pages and episode pages
Monthly Rate: $50 - $5000
Exist Ad Preview
The School of Greatness - Kerry Washington Opens Up: Mental Health Struggles, Her Spiritual Connection & The Secret That Changed EVERYTHING
Episode Date: May 7, 2025Leave an Amazon Rating or Review for my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Acclaimed actress Kerry Washington drops her Hollywood facade to reveal the startling truth about growing up wi...th a family secret that shook her identity to its core. She opens up about discovering in her forties that she was conceived through a sperm donor—a revelation her parents had kept hidden her entire life. Through therapy, spiritual practice, and brutal honesty, Kerry transformed this family mystery into her greatest source of strength, allowing her to step fully into her power both on-screen in her new action film "Shadow Force" and in her personal life. This vulnerable conversation exposes how Kerry's journey from feeling "not enough" to embracing her authentic self offers a blueprint for anyone seeking to break free from their own limiting beliefs.Official Trailer for Shadow ForceKerry’s book Thicker than Water: A MemoirIn this episode you will learn:How Kerry transformed her family's shocking DNA revelation from potential destruction to profound healingWhy therapy became Kerry's sanctuary where she learned to separate excellence from feelings of inadequacyThe unexpected way Kerry's eating disorder recovery opened her spiritual pathHow Kerry approaches marriage as a "third entity" requiring conscious investment from both partnersThe critical difference between pursuing greatness from a place of deficiency versus from joy and purposeFor more information go to https://www.lewishowes.com/1768For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Michelle Obama & Craig Robinson – greatness.lnk.to/1767SCEric Thomas – greatness.lnk.to/1696SCSarah Jakes Roberts – greatness.lnk.to/1606SC Get more from Lewis! Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Get The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome back my beautiful friend to the
school of greatness.
Today is a blessed day because we get to
experience another day of life.
We get to have another breath and we get to.
Adventure throughout the world and create the
life that we want today.
And I know there might be some challenges at
universities you're going through.
And I'm so glad that you're here because this
show and specifically this interview is all about healing from childhood trauma,
cultivating a spiritual connection and coming home to yourself. That's what
Kerry Washington opens up about today. And she really shares how this
revelation transformed her family of relationships and allowed her to
finally heal and understand the disconnect she felt growing up.
So if you felt like something's been off in your life,
you're really gonna want to hear the first part of this episode that talks about how she was able to come home to herself
even when she was succeeding at the highest levels. And as she prepares for a new action film, Shadow Force,
for a new action film, Shadow Force.
Carrie explains how stepping fully into her authentic truth has allowed her to embody physical power in a way she never could before.
It's so interesting when we are out of alignment in some areas of our life, we
can still accomplish and succeed and achieve all these things, but something
deep down may feel off.
And Carrie dives in deep about why therapy has been essential to her journey and how
it helps her navigate both her career and personal life, her approach to marriage as
a spiritual partnership, and the importance of couples therapy, even when things are going
well.
So many other inspiring topics in this conversation.
I really hope you enjoy this one.
Make sure to tag Carrie
Washington over on Instagram. Make sure to check out the new movie Shadow Force as well. Make sure
to let me know your thoughts on this and share it with a friend or two. And without further ado,
let's dive into this episode with the one and only Carrie Washington. Welcome back everyone to
the School of Greatness. Very excited about our guest. We have the inspiring, the talented Carrie Washington.
Hi, good to see you.
I'm so excited about this.
Thanks for having me.
Yeah, our mutual friend,
Gabby Bernstein was texting us this morning saying
that we're excited that we're coming on together.
Yeah.
I've been researching more about you lately,
obviously, knowing that you were coming on.
Yeah.
I've seen your talented career as an actor,
as a writer, director, all these different things,
but hearing your spiritual journey
is what really excites me.
And what you were just talking about
before we started rolling,
is that you're very excited about your new movie,
Shadow Force, which is coming out
in a few days after this launches.
And you said the reason you're excited about it
is because after your memoir,
you started to fully open up about your truth
about all the different lessons, the pain,
the tragic moments of your childhood
and the stressful things that you dealt with,
the anxiety, the kind of sexual stuff
that happened when you were younger
that you opened up about with your book,
your father opening up
and sharing this kind of lie that was held onto for a long time. So much that I've researched
about you is fascinating because you now get to step fully into your truths into a character
and embody ultimate power. And so I'm curious, I mean, we'll dive into some of this, after opening up and starting to heal a lot of these things from your past.
How did it feel filming Shadow Force and stepping into fully who you are?
How did that process feel in that character?
You said it perfectly.
Shadow Force is like this big splashy action adventure where I play this badass mercenary.
But at its core, it's really a story about love.
It's about parents, these estranged lovers
played by myself and Omar Sy, and we have this son,
and we are willing to go to the ends of the earth
to protect this son.
So I wrote this memoir about my family,
about my mother, father, and me.
I'm an only child.
And kind of the dynamics that unfolded
when we got to step into our truth.
And my mom said something really beautiful
when we were presenting the memoir to the world.
She said, it's like we're not afraid
to hurt each other anymore
because there's a new strength in our family.
And I felt like in making Shadow Force,
I got to bring making Shadow Force,
I got to bring that new strength,
that new fearlessness into a character.
I got to really embody power and fearlessness
and be in a way that I never had before.
And I've played really strong characters
throughout my career,
but this was a new level of embodiment.
This was like, what does it feel like to train really hard
to, you know, the physical training,
the fight choreography, the weapons training,
all of that was like a very, very physical manifestation
of feelings that I felt like I had been cultivating
over the past few years.
So it was really exciting for me to like get out there
and kick ass and just act as if there was nothing I couldn't do or wouldn't do to protect my family.
Interesting. But you said before you played, you know, obviously a lot of characters and roles before.
And I don't think anyone ever felt like you weren't embodying your most authentic self.
I mean, you were crushing it in all these roles, winning awards and just at the top of your game.
But was there something missing inside
that was different from the past roles?
I think there are lots of different kinds of strength.
And I think, you know, the exciting thing for me
as an actor is I get to explore some of those dynamics
of how we express who we are in our lifetime.
And Olivia Pope, for example,
is a really strong person in her brain.
Like intellectually, she's really strong.
Emotionally, she's strong.
But I have never thought of myself as a fighter,
as a warrior, you know?
And so to get up every morning and train
with these incredible martial artists
and stunt coordinators to like really put my body
in a place where I'm wearing that strength in my cells
was just a crazy journey.
It was so exciting to let the strength
not just exist mentally,
because Kyra, the character I play in Shadow Force,
she's smart and she's emotionally strong,
but she's also got guns, guns and guns.
And so, yeah, to become that person and to,
you know, it's such a wonderful relationship.
The mind body connection is so interesting.
You talk about it a lot on this show.
And so for me to get to, to really, really commit
to trying to be as strong and fearless physically
as I had become emotionally and spiritually,
was very cool.
Yeah, I loved learning about your spiritual journey.
I think there was some interview where you talked about,
or maybe it was in your memoir,
where you talked about in college, being on your knees,
kind of going through anxiety and stress and overwhelm,
where you're starring in the plays and you, you know,
looked like you had it all put together on the outside,
but the inside you were dealing with anxiety.
A total mess.
And a lot of other things that were just happening.
And you're on your knees praying and I think it was you didn't really feel like you had
a spiritual connection at that moment, but that opened up a spiritual channel.
Yeah.
I mean, that's another great example, right?
When you get on your knees in prayer, again, that's a physical embodiment of an emotional dynamic
because there is inherent humility for being on your knees.
So sometimes, like I'm a person who prays all the time.
Like I pray in my car,
I pray when I'm walking down the street,
I pray when I'm cooking dinner,
but I do feel like there are times
when it's really important for me
to take that submissive posture and get on my knees
just to remind myself that I'm not in control,
that I'm not the ultimate power,
that there's something bigger than me,
that I can ask for help that's outside of me.
So again, that for me, that relationship between
how we think, how we feel, and how it lives in the body
is such a huge part of how I work as an actor and how I try to live my life.
When you started praying after that moment, what did you start to hear?
Like you said, I was in college and I was really struggling.
I have throughout my life struggled with an eating disorder and that was like the worst
of it.
It was the turning point where I really was like, I need help.
Like I can't fix this by myself.
Is this like starving or it's just this like...
So you know what, for me, I was, I knew that, that eating disorders existed and I think
I tried to play this game where I didn't want to fit into any easy diagnosis.
So I was always kind of like transforming it
and morphing it.
And it would be like days of binging
and then days of starving and then days of over-exercising
and just kind of like, I felt like if I kept moving it
that I wasn't any simple sick person.
I was just like trying to be my best me
but I was controlled and obsessed
by feeling like I wasn't enough.
Really?
Yeah.
So the prayer for me was really,
I think what I started to hear
was that it was okay to ask for help
and that it was okay for me to seek healing.
Why do you think you didn't feel enough?
I think for me, that journey started really, really,
really early.
And I talk about this a little bit in my memoir, but I was conceived with the help of a sperm
donor and that was something I didn't find out until I was in my 40s.
Oh man, that's crazy to me.
It was pretty wild.
I think my parents would have taken this secret to their graves if they could have.
And luckily they weren't able to, they were kind of forced to
tell me to share this with me. And it wound up being transformative for our family because it was
the thing that they were most terrified to tell me because they thought that it would destroy our
family, that I would, you know, be angry with them, that I would not no longer see my dad as my dad,
that it would fracture this kind of perfect facade,
this image that we were portraying to the world.
It, of course, as with most things in life,
had the opposite impact.
It was so healing for my family to sit in that truth
and to have the courage to be honest with one another
actually made me feel closer to my dad.
It made me so grateful to my parents.
I understood so many of the confusing dynamics
of our household growing up, suddenly I understood.
I often say I entered the world in a lie.
The moment that I got here,
the moment that I emerged from my mom,
they were lying to me about who my parents were.
And so I think there was a disconnect very early on.
And like most kids, I decided like children to make sense
of discomfort and unease, we will, they will blame ourselves.
Like I must be the reason,
because you can't blame your parents
because they're responsible
for your survival and wellbeing.
So you blame yourself.
And so for me, I think I decided,
well, I must not be enough.
Like this weird disconnect that I have
or this way that they hold me at arm's length
or this kind of slight veil
where I feel like I'm not getting 100% of the truth
and I couldn't have articulated any of that as a child,
but it was a feeling, right?
I thought, well, maybe if I'm better,
they'll be closer to me.
If I'm better, I'll have their full presence.
So that's why I think I interpreted it
as I have to be more, I have to do better,
I have to be better in order to get presence
and love and acceptance.
But you had love and acceptance from them, right?
I did, I did.
I mean, my parents did such a beautiful job and even their choice of not to tell me was
a choice that came out of love, right?
They were trying to protect me in a time when, I mean, this was, you know, I'm in my 40s.
So there weren't like sperm banks where you could go through a catalog and carefully pick
your donor.
This was the Wild West.
Right.
People weren't doing this.
Nobody they knew had done this.
And so they thought not telling me was the best way to go.
Oh my gosh.
And I think for my dad, not telling me was really
because he really was in denial.
I mean, he was, he believed the myth of our family.
What was the myth of your family?
That I was his. He believed the myth of our family. What was the myth of your family? That I was his.
Ah.
He believed that.
And so his not telling me, I think, was really...
He was sharing as much of the truth with me as he could.
My mom, I think, had a more awareness of the reality.
And so her not telling me, I think was really protective.
Yeah.
Wow.
I know it's pretty wild.
It's so complicated, but I know it's so funny
as I look back on it because I'm,
I feel like when you're able to look back on your life,
you can see, or for me, I'll speak for myself.
As I look back on my life,
I can see how everything happened for a reason.
And the things that are our greatest challenges,
this sounds so cliche, but they have become my strengths.
This feeling of I have to do better and be better
is what allows me to lean into greatness.
It's what makes me seek excellence.
It's what makes me train for four hours a day
in stunt training and a workout on top of that
and learning the fight choreography.
And, you know, it's like, I want to be great
in the things I do.
The trick for me is, as an adult,
seeking that excellence and greatness
without the attachment that I'm not enough.
Like, waking up and saying, like, I am enough,
and I still have a right to chase greatness.
That's what I was gonna ask you.
Can you achieve greatness and feel enough at I still have a right to chase greatness. That's what I was gonna ask you.
Can you achieve greatness and feel enough at the same time?
I think you can.
I think for me, that's what I'm really trying to do.
It's the walk that I'm trying to walk is like,
can I love myself and also seek more?
Is it okay to like, to want to be excellent,
to be great, to be a champion, to be a master
at my craft and not have that come from a place of deficiency, have that come from a
place of joy and seeking?
When did you start to feel like you were enough?
Was it before the lie was revealed or after the lie was revealed?
I feel like from the moment that I went into therapy
in college, those days of like getting on my knees
and being like, somebody help me.
I feel like I've been on this journey
of trying to feel like enough,
of like picking up tools throughout the decades of like,
I know I should feel like enough.
And so I like, I know that that like,
we're all perfectly imperfect.
We're all children of God.
Like I should wake up in the morning and not hate myself.
Like we all deserve that.
And so I've been trying to cultivate,
like what does that take?
What will that look like?
What do I have to do?
Different healing practices, different modalities,
and yoga, and Pilates, and therapy, and group therapy,
and introspection.
And so, I have been on that walk but I do think and it's gradual, right?
It's not like you wake up one day and you're like, I'm healed now.
But I do think my parents offering me this deeper truth about who I am and where I come
from.
It like gave me permission to relax into who I am and to be like, I'm good.
Yeah.
I'm okay.
Now, do you feel like before that truth was revealed that you were able to fully relax
into your relationship with your parents?
Even though they were loving to you and supported you and encouraged you.
No. You don't feel like you were able to.
No, and again, I've always had a really loving relationship
with my parents.
I have incredible parents and they have given me
so many tools, consciously and unconsciously.
They've been a tremendous part of the story
of me getting to where I am today.
I'm not where I am despite my parents.
I'm mostly where I am because of my parents. And then there is a little
bit of despite those dynamics, I wound up here. So I do, I think I've, I had a really
good relationship with my parents, but I have a great relationship with my parents now because
of the gift of truth that they've offered.
You always felt like something was off.
Yeah, I felt like something was missing.
Intuitively.
Did you ever ask them like, hey guys, what's going on?
Like in your 20s and 30s, like, is there something off?
You guys not sharing with something with me?
What's funny is that there were these kind of smaller revelations throughout my childhood.
Like I talk about in the book how my dad was kind of involved in this investigation. And so when I learned
about that, I was like, oh, this is what it was. Right? Like they're hiding this. Yes,
there were these I think the culture of my family was kind of hide the truth to look
good. And like, we should, we should do whatever it takes to look good in the world.
So as I would learn these smaller truths along the way,
I kept waiting to feel the revelatory feeling
that I had when I got the big truth.
Interesting. Yeah.
Did you have any resentment or anger
once they opened up after four decades of hiding this lie? I did
I did it was like a rollercoaster
I feel like I've had every possible feeling that you could have about this
News that I got any possible feeling you could have I've had I've had gratitude
I've felt elated. I have felt bliss, I have felt anger, I've felt anxiety,
I felt fear. So it was, I mean, I think when they first told me, I felt really compassionate,
because I could see when they told me how afraid they were to tell me. And I remember saying to my
dad, and I don't know where this came from, but I'm so grateful that this dropped into my brain
to say to him, I said to him, you know,
our whole lives, I have told you that I love you
on the pretense of a lie.
Like every time that I have said I love you,
there's been a tiny filter that my dad was thinking like,
oh, she loves me because she thinks I am her father.
And so in this revelation, I actually got to say,
I love you unconditionally.
Like I got to say, I know the full truth of you
and I'm not going anywhere.
I still love you.
And to me, that's a much more powerful love, right?
A love that's rooted in absolute vulnerability and honesty.
When you get to like show all your dirty laundry to somebody
and your greatest fears and admit the things that you're
scared to admit and they don't go anywhere, that is real love.
Right. So that's what we got to give each other when they gave
me the truth. I got to give them that return of unconditional
love and them giving me the truth was a way of loving me
unconditionally because they were saying, we know you might
be mad.
We know you may not want to be in relationship with us.
We know this might change the dynamic of our family forever
but we're gonna give you this truth anyway.
Wow, it must've took a lot of courage for them.
Yeah.
Because maybe they're thinking, ah,
we're never gonna say this but now she's in her 20s.
Yeah.
Oh, it's, you can't do it now.
That's right.
My mom was like, what was I supposed to tell you
when you're in the throes of an eating disorder?
Like, what was I supposed to say when you're're in the throes of an eating disorder?
Like, what was I supposed to tell you when you're totally depressed or then you're in
a broken relationship?
Or she was like, there was never a good time.
Or now your career is taking off and they're bringing you back down.
It's like, let's let her succeed.
There's never an easy time to tell the truth when there are hard truths to tell.
But you also, I mean, you have kids, and so their grandparents as well.
Yeah.
So I wonder what that dynamic was like now that they're lying to generations.
Yeah.
You know, they were lying to generations.
It's like, I wonder how, I mean, your father must have gone through so many emotions himself.
I'm not saying it's okay that they lied.
Yeah. But we're all doing the best we can, right?
And again, especially as parents, I think it is really powerful and important,
I think in our journey that,
they told me at the right time, right?
Because it's when they told me.
So whenever it happened is when it was supposed to happen.
And I do think there's something beautiful
about the fact that when they told me I was myself a parent
because I had a different level of understanding
of how hard it is to parent
and how you can try to do everything perfectly,
but nobody gets it perfect.
It's just, there's no such thing.
And actually the ways that our parents are imperfect,
that's part of the journey of how we become who we are.
That's how we fill in those cracks
and become the adults that we are.
Yeah, and they were trying to protect you
and they loved you and they wanted to keep you guys together.
Yeah.
It was part of their journey.
Yeah.
He must have let go of a huge weight.
Yeah.
Like does he seem lighter and younger,
just like emotionally?
You know, it's so funny when I think about,
it was a very important lesson for me
and also how to metabolize fear
and how to run toward the things
that we think will destroy us.
Because initially, he wouldn't even take a genetic test.
He was like, I don't want to know.
I don't want to know.
I don't want anybody else to know.
He literally said to me, if you do this, it will kill me.
Oh my gosh.
He didn't want me to write a book.
He was like, nobody should know.
Why do we have to talk about this?
Nobody needs to talk about this.
Nobody needs to know.
Then I think about moments in my book tour
where he's like standing in an auditorium
getting a standing ovation.
Where people are celebrating his presence as a dad.
And the fact that despite the fact
that I wasn't genetically his,
that he has been such a force in my life
and has loved me so fiercely.
And he got that in like several cities, standing ovations,
cheering him on and celebrating him.
And on national television, people saying like,
what an amazing thing you did.
And even the fact that my parents made this choice
to use a sperm donor in the seventies
when nobody was doing that, that in itself is a testament
of how much they wanted me.
Oh, man.
Right? so beautiful.
So that journey for my dad,
to see him go from being somebody who he thought
would lose all respect and credibility
and masculinity and identity,
to see him be so celebrated and held up,
it's a really important lesson, right?
It's so powerful.
The thing that we think will destroy us
could be our greatest gift.
100%.
I can relate to that.
I mean, you've heard me talk about
opening up about sexual abuse.
And I held onto the lie or the story for 25 years.
Cause I thought if anyone knows this, shame about me.
No one will love me.
No one will accept me.
People will think I'm less than, whatever it might be.
I won't be enough, right?
Goes back to that feeling.
He probably felt like he would die.
Yeah.
Because everything would be taken away.
Yeah.
Everything emotionally, spiritually, physically.
But you can't take away that he's been my dad.
100%.
It's like he's, you know, he's my dad.
Nothing changes that, you know?
And it's funny because my kids grow up in a world where like,
yeah, you can have two dads and two moms and step parents
and they like, the village is big.
And so that was one of the things I said to him was like,
it's not gonna change anything for your grandkids.
Like even if we know who this other donor is,
that's just another parent.
It doesn't take away from you.
You hold your space, you hold your throne,
you are who you are in this family.
Let's go.
I like that.
It's so funny, because when I first read Shadow Force,
it was one of the things that really drew me to this script
because Omar Sy, who people love from Lupin, he's amazing.
He's like an incredible actor.
And he plays my husband and he's the dad in this film.
And in the script, the dad is the primary parent.
As the mom, we both used to be mercenaries
and we broke the rules and fell in love and I got pregnant.
We have this child and then we have to leave
this highly trained group of mercenaries that we were in
to be on the run.
And I disappear, because I'm like,
everybody's gonna be looking for a mother and a child.
Nobody, because of how we think about parenting and culture,
nobody's going to be looking for a man and a son.
Interesting.
And so he takes on the primary parenting.
And Omar is such an extraordinary dad.
He's got a bunch of kids of his own.
And it's so beautiful to see this man parent
this child in this film.
And the mom kind of on the outskirts being a
Protecting them like taking people down so that they don't get hurt
But not being able to be there to do the David today in the way that the dad is and I really loved that about this
Script because I feel like we need those stories in culture
We need those images and and this couple, you know
They sort of learn to lean into partnering again
in order to parent.
And I think that's also just such an important story
to be telling in culture right now,
that being a part of being a great mom is also,
if you're lucky enough to have a great partner,
leaning into that partnership and allowing that.
And maybe the partner is the dad, maybe the partner is, you know, every kid takes a village,
but like leaning into whoever those partners are
and knowing that you don't have to do it all yourself.
You can be part of the village that raises a child.
Gosh, that's so cool.
Yeah, we're talking about spiritual partnership
is something I've heard you say before.
Yeah.
When you met your man,
how did you know that you guys
were building a spiritual partnership
and connecting from a spiritual space, even though you had this kind of, you know,
you had a great relationship with your parents, but there was something missing still with your
father. How did you learn to trust your intuition in relationship when you had a broken partial
relationship?
Fractured relationship with your dad.
How do you trust your intuition with the man you have now?
So, there are a couple of things.
I mean, one is my parents, the fact that my parents are still together is a real gift
and a miracle and I remember, right?
It's not that common and there were times, I talk about this in the memoir, where I would be like,
you guys should break up. Like what? What? You are not happy. Interesting.
And I remember my mom saying to me, like,
I know that you think you know everything. I was like 16. You know,
she was like you for you, your 16 years are the full picture,
but your 16 years are a fraction of our marriage, right?
Like we were together long before you got here.
So we have had good times and bad times,
we've had ups and downs, like your little window
into this is not the full story.
And that was a really important lesson to me
in what marriage is, that there are highs and lows,
it's a journey, it's a path, and if you're committed,
you have to be committed for the journey.
And that's not to say that I don't agree with divorce,
that I don't think divorce isn't right for some people,
that some relationships are meant to be forever,
some are for a season, like all of that is true.
But I think I had an understanding that marriage
as a commitment,
if you're gonna make the commitment,
it has to be about something deeper than ego.
Like it has, something has to keep you,
if you're going to do it with love and joy and,
I mean, I don't know if I need to say any other word
other than love.
If you're gonna do it with real love,
then having something deeper to commit to
that's bigger than just the two of you is really important.
So I think that's where the spirit comes in.
How did you guys create that commitment then
from something bigger?
What did you talk about?
And when things are tough,
because you know, talking about Shadow Force
where the role, the father in the movie, he's kind of taking on the father role and taking care of the kid with you kind
of running away and escaping or whatever.
You know, I'm not saying this is a parallel to your life, but there are times where you're
really busy.
You're on set all day, 10, 12 hour days for months at a time where I'm assuming you have
to have extra support or your husband's taking the lead in certain areas of parenting.
I'm making assumptions here, but correct me if I'm wrong.
Where he has to step up as well.
How did you guys communicate the alignment
with your guys' careers, separating ego,
because I know he's very successful
in what he's done in the past as well
and what he's doing now.
How do you separate ego and make spirit and love the center
when each one of you are evolving in career as well?
So, I mean, one thing is I'm always careful
to talk too much about like the us
when he's not in the room.
Cause I feel like it's interesting.
It's sort of like with my kids.
I don't post a lot about my kids or talk
a lot about their inner lives or their journeys,
because I feel like their story is theirs,
and they have a right to tell their story in their way.
And I feel that way a little bit about my marriage, too.
If we were both sitting here, we could kind of
agree and co-sign on it.
But I would say the first thing I thought about when you asked
me that question is the importance of therapy because, yeah.
Let's go.
Let's go, right?
Like individual therapy, couples therapy, like being willing to have spaces where you
do the work.
And I remember my dad one day being like, you guys are in couples therapy, like what's
wrong?
And we were like, nothing. Like, nothing's wrong. It's, it is a place where we go to take care of our marriage.
In the way that I go to the gym to take care of my body, or I go to the dentist to take care of
my teeth. Like, I feel like as a couple, we deserve and therefore we cultivate a place where we care
for our relationship. Beautiful.
And it doesn't come out of crisis.
It doesn't come out of things that are bad.
I mean, in fact, like we spend a lot of time in therapy consciously talking about what
we're doing well and acknowledging that for each other.
That's so cool.
Because it's really important to not take for granted that there are good things to
celebrate and acknowledge about each other.
Right? And so that's, I mean, I feel like therapy is a big part of that spiritual commitment.
So one of the things I remember my one of my many therapists saying early on to me was
a healthy relationship is not just about like give and take, like I do for you, you do for
me, that actually it's important to think about the relationship
almost as a third entity that you're both pouring into.
It's like a bank account.
It's like a spiritual or emotional love account
where like I'm not just doing for him and then he owes me.
It's like we're both pouring into this thing
that matters to us, which is the marriage.
That is beautiful.
Right? I'm so glad you said this because I haven't heard a lot of people in your position talk
about therapy and marriage.
Oh my God.
And one of the things that Martha, my wife and I committed to her earlier.
Congrats.
I'm here.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Marriage.
Yeah, it's been a couple months.
Do you like saying wife?
It's so weird.
I have to say it every time. First it was girlfriend, then it was fiance. Yeah, fiance. It's like, okay, I'm getting used to what.
I love, I mean, I just love the word husband. I like add multiple syllables.
Husband.
Husband. I love it. Yeah.
I'm still stepping into it, but it's been a great experience.
But one of the things when we were dating, not exclusively, before we became committed exclusively,
dating, not exclusively, before we became committed exclusively, we were having an amazing time, but there was still some like little fear or anxiety or worry about getting fully
committed because in every previous relationship I was in, it all ended badly in therapy.
Oh, because you went to therapy when things got bad.
Yes.
And I always wanted to get into therapy sooner,
but the partners I chose resisted therapy.
And I was always thinking,
what woman would not want a man to go to therapy with them?
So I was always like, what world am I living in right now?
But I kept repeating this cycle.
But then you learned to choose a partner
who was willing to walk that walk with you.
And I said, I want to start,
if we're going to get committed,
we're having an amazing time,
I want to start in therapy.
Amazing.
And so we started right away within the first few months.
It's so smart.
Not because something was wrong.
So smart, because then when you have something
that you need to unpack,
you're not like, uh-oh, we got to step in the ring
and do and battle it out in therapy.
It's like, no, you know what?
Let's talk about that this week.
Exactly.
And it's been the greatest gift that we've given each other
because in the first year we just went and we got alignment.
We got spiritual alignment.
And a shared language.
Shared language.
We got to talk about past fears and future concerns upfront,
we got to address all the things that we were afraid of and come together and be like,
oh, we're teammates, we're building a team.
That's right.
We're investing in courageous conversations.
Yeah.
We're allowing for imperfections in both of us.
No one needs to be perfect.
Yeah.
And we're stepping into a process of unity and alignment around shared values and a shared
vision together.
It's so funny because I hadn't really thought about this.
I mean, I know it's, sometimes when you're doing press for a movie, you're like, oh my
God, this is why we're doing this.
Should we have known this earlier? But I think, I think a big part of what pulled
me towards Shadow Force was that you get to watch this couple that sort of start out as adversaries,
because they are like, their marriage is fractured, and they actually become a team. Right? And like,
And they actually become a team, right? And like, literally one of the hardest, most exciting,
most fun fight scenes in the film is early on,
Omar and I fighting each other.
It's like a crazy, it's like your worst couples therapy.
Yes, like drop kicks.
Yeah, because we're both like highly trained mercenaries.
So he's this big guy, he's really strong.
He's done lots of stunts in big action movies.
And we trained for a long time together
to be able to do this dance.
And we talked about like how his character fights differently
from my character, our different fight styles
and what that says about our relationship
and how this couple is kind of competitive
and they challenge each other.
And there is like a real friction between them.
You know, he's angry that she's disappeared.
She's angry that she hasn't had access to the child.
And there's heat between them, right?
Who's the dirty fighter? Who's the low blow?
Is that you?
I mean, I have to be more strategic.
He's a big guy. Yeah.
You know, I mean, I got to use what I have.
And as the film progresses,
you get to watch them become a team.
And so then it was fun for us to learn how to train together.
Like, well, what are your strengths?
Like, I'm a better shooter than him,
but he's a stronger fighter, right?
And so like, how do we lean into that in the film
so that we're an unstoppable team?
And I think that is so much what marriage is, right?
Like it's like figuring out, okay,
this is your fighting style, this is my fighting style.
Here are the things I'm upset about.
What are your resentments?
I don't recommend like hand to hand combat for most couples.
It's not okay, not okay.
Exactly.
But to figure out how to lean into the strengths
and how to speak the same language
and how to have a shared,
whether you call it spiritual alignment,
shared goals, shared priorities,
they come together for their son
where they're like, this child means everything to us.
What do we have to do to protect him?
Wow, would you say therapy has helped you
not only in your, I guess, marriage and your
family dynamic relationships, but also in your career and stepping into owning your power and
your worth, even though you're excelling and succeeding so much? Do you still have any doubts
or insecurities? Yes. Really? Absolutely. To Kerry Washington. Yeah. So what?
What type of, for someone watching and listening who maybe is really struggling and they don't
have much going on in their life or they just feel like things are just keep knocking them
down.
Their career isn't working the way they want to.
They don't feel like they're living in love.
They don't feel like they're living their dreams or in the pursuit of their dreams.
They feel like relationships are kind of off and they really lack self-worth.
What advice would you give them for anyone watching or listening who might be in that
space on how to start the process of truly loving and accepting yourself even when you
feel really low. For me, part of why therapy is so important
is because it has taught me to pause.
It has taught me to take a pause
and to not believe every single thought that I'm having,
to not get caught up in the negative self-talk,
to create a little bit of distance
between the stimulus and the response.
There's a saying that I love that PAUSE stands for
Postbone Action Until Serenity Emerges.
Right, like just take a beat.
And for me, in the way that life moves so quickly,
sometimes therapy is that beat,
where I get to go like, hold on.
The story I'm telling myself is that my job is terrible.
The story I'm telling myself is that the world is on fire.
The story I'm telling myself is that
I'll never be in the body I wanna be in.
The story I'm telling myself is that
I'll never find the person I wanna find.
But like, maybe I can just pause that for a moment
and unpack it and figure out how to walk toward healing.
So for me, therapy is a place to like pause,
to pause and be reflective,
take responsibility for the thoughts,
be honest with myself,
and then try to cultivate some tools.
Cause some of it could be that I'm not sleeping enough.
Right? Like sometimes what I realized in therapy is like,
I don't think I'm getting enough sleep
or I don't think I'm eating right.
Or my hormones are off, I need to support myself better.
Or this relationship isn't working out.
Or I don't know if I'm happy on this job.
Or the job is good, but I think maybe I need a hobby.
Like it just gives me, and so maybe for some people
it's therapy, for some people it could be like
meditative walking or journaling, but it's like,
what are the practices that allow me to pause
and get in the present moment
and be more honest with myself?
Yeah.
When you're stepping into a role
like you are in the new movie,
is there any moment you're feeling insecure at this season?
Every single time.
Really?
Every single time.
Because here's the crazy thing.
At this season of your career? Yes, time. Because here's the crazy thing.
Yes. Yes.
It's excitement, though, right?
Like it's that fear that that also I have to remember
that the physiological experience of fear
is the same physiological experience of excitement.
So that fear is like, holy I've never done.
Because every time I play a new character,
I'm doing something I've never done, because every time I play a new character, I'm doing something I've never done before.
Like I do have a toolbox of like,
I know how to memorize the lines and I know,
but I'm becoming a new human being
every time I start a new project.
A new person with new desires and new fears
and she walks a different way
and she wears her hair a different way and she has different ways of speaking and breathing and eating.
And so I'm starting from scratch every time I start a new role.
So I'm always terrified and I'm always like, oh God, will I be able to figure this one
out?
Will I be able to unlock her?
Will I be able to be her in the way that the project needs me to be her?
So it's super exciting.
I mean, you've played all these personalities and characters and roles. How do you not get lost
in characters and roles and stay true to who your real character is in life? And I've heard you also
talk about how the best character you've ever played is mother and wife.
So how do you not allow all the films and TV characters
you played to seep into your true essence,
your true personality, your true role that you are?
So I think early in my life, you know,
when I was in my twenties or even like as a teenager,
I actually, I was really hungry 20s or even like as a teenager, I actually,
I was really hungry for a strong sense of self and I didn't have one. So the characters allowed me to
explore different personalities and kind of take on different people's journeys. And that was really
helpful to me to, to kind of experience life through somebody else's eyes
and get a sense of what resonates and what doesn't
because I really didn't feel like I had a strong center.
Yeah.
Until when?
How old were you when you felt like,
oh, I'm good with me?
I think when I started treatment for my eating disorder
and started therapy,
I started to have a deeper understanding of self.
And again, I think it's grown and evolved through the years,
because also we're always changing, right?
Of course.
So our sense of self is always changing.
But I think now I've really learned to see these characters
as kind of extensions of myself.
When I play a new character, I kind of have two jobs.
There's an outside in approach, and there's
an inside out approach.
And the inside out approach is I ask myself,
what do I, Carrie, know about this character?
What about her experience can I relate to deeply?
Personally.
Yes.
From your experience.
Personally.
And then do I have the courage to reveal that part of myself
publicly and let the other stuff kind of fall away and let that part of me be my full essence
in this character? Can you give me an example with the new movie and Shadow Force? Sure. How you
sure thought about that? So like, you know, people say before you have kids, people will say to you
like, oh, I would kill for my child. And you're like, oh, that's such a cute expression, right?
Before you have kids.
Yes.
And then you have children and you're like,
oh, I get it.
Like I can't imagine something I wouldn't do
to protect my children.
Wow.
Like I love them so fiercely.
So then I read this script where this woman is literally taking people out to protect her child.
I'm like, okay, well, I've never killed anybody in real life. I'm not a trained assassin, but I understand that love.
I understand that fierce motherhood, that mother instinct that like I would do anything for you.
And I understand making tough choices for your family that don't always feel good, but are the right thing to do.
So I say, okay, I'm not a mercenary, I'm not a killer,
I'm not a bi, but I do know a mother's love.
So the inside out is like, do I have the courage
to reveal that kind of deep vulnerability
that when you have a child, you become powerless. It's like that thing I've heard Obama say
of like your heart is suddenly on the outside of you
walking around in the world.
Like, can I let people into that and be that?
And then the outside in is like, okay,
but now I have to learn like fight training
and weapons training and how she walks
and how does she dress and, you know,
how does she live in the world
as somebody who's trained to kill people
and what kind of person becomes somebody
who kills people for a living.
And so there are like all these,
and I know a little something about that too,
like the desperation part of me,
of feeling like you don't have options.
Okay, so can I let people into that?
So it's all, it's like parts of me that do relate,
bringing those forward and then parts of me
that don't relate, learning how to add those on.
Interesting.
Yeah.
Because I feel like all of us have some type
of darkness in us.
Yeah.
And so do you feel like you have to tap into that sometimes?
Sometimes, yeah, absolutely.
And sometimes it's really hard to shake at the end.
Right, at night you're like,
you're feeling the adrenaline because you become that energy.
Yes, you do.
And I think before I got married and had kids, I was much more of like a method actor, meaning
like I stayed in the characters all the time.
For months.
Yes.
And it was miserable, quite honestly.
It was a lot.
You know, it's like really hard and really wrecked havoc on my nervous system.
When I got married and had kids, I was like, I need to figure out how to put this down.
Like, I don't want to bring this home.
I want to be able to have a healthy life outside of work.
What's the tools or process for letting go of the character
when you get home?
Yes, some of it is ritual.
Some at the end, like sometimes I try to,
I really try to look at like the hair and makeup process
and the costume process as very ritualistic.
And so when I'm taking the clothes off at the end of the day, makeup process and the costume process as very ritualistic.
And so when I'm taking the clothes off at the end of the day, I'm taking the character
off at the end of the day.
Like I just did a movie where I was playing, it's a movie directed by Ben Affleck and he
and I are husband and wife.
And so, you know, every day at work, I have to take off my wedding ring and I pin it to
myself.
I never not have it with me. so I always pin it to myself somewhere.
When you're shooting, when you're filming.
Yes.
And then I have to take this other wedding ring that belongs to the movie and I have
to put on this other wedding ring and now I'm in this marriage.
So at the end of the day, it's really important to me to take off that wedding ring, take
off that marriage, that's not my life, and put my own ring back on
and step into my life, right?
It's like a psychological process
of becoming a different person.
But I think it works in life too, right?
Like when we give ourselves those rituals,
like there's something, if you,
when you have a meditation practice,
like again, I can pray and meditate anywhere,
but there is something different about when I sit
on that pillow in that corner of my bedroom
and light that candle,
there's a different kind of drop in, right?
Like we have these cues that really allow us
to signal to our body different realities
and different ways of being present.
I feel like you've really had to train your nervous system
to always come back home to safety.
Because you're playing these characters
and obviously it's make believe or character
or it's movie making.
But the body doesn't know the difference.
Your adrenaline is heightened.
It's in fear, it's in aggression, it's in shooting
or whatever it's in or it's in make believe love
or whatever it is.
And so your nervous system in your body,
you have to psychologically like remove it somehow
and get back to the spiritual alignment
of your character in life.
Yeah, and a lot of it is like being an athlete.
You know, you have to really take care.
You have to make sure,
because it wrecks havoc on your nervous system,
the sleeping and the eating and the exercising,
those practices are really, really important
to maintain sanity.
I remember after the second season of Scandal,
I was like so depleted, so exhausted.
And I went to my doctor and we did some blood work
and he was like, your adrenals are shot.
Like what is going on?
And I was like, what's going on?
I played this woman who like every single episode, somebody walks into my office on
the worst day of their life, and I have to fix it.
So my adrenals are shot, you know?
Or when we were doing a scene, some, you know, some crazy scene on Scandal where somebody
was lying on the floor of the office covered in blood, and we're all, like, screaming and
holding them, and I was pregnant at the time.
Oh, my gosh.
And so after every take, the other girls in the cast and myself, we would all like screaming and holding them and I was pregnant at the time. Oh my gosh. And so after every take,
the other girls in the cast and myself,
we would all put our hands on my belly
and we would say, it's just pretend.
It's just pretend.
Wow.
Cause you just have to remember
and like that little baby doesn't know the difference.
That little baby is like, her heart is beating fast.
Her adrenals are her cortisol, right?
So I had to keep like going back and saying like,
we're okay, just pretend. So I try to that taught me that if I can do that for my baby,
I have to do that for myself too. Right? Like I have to on the way home go like, you're okay.
That was pretend. Nobody's dying. Nobody's kidnapped. Nobody's we're okay.
Man, do you feel like you've had a new relationship
with little Carrie?
Yeah.
With the girl inside of you that was growing up
kind of going through this,
everything looks good on the outside or, you know.
Yeah.
I'm taken care of, but emotionally,
I don't feel taken care of.
Yeah.
Like physically you were taken care of.
That's right, it's a beautiful way to put it.
But emotionally or maybe psychologically,
there was a fracture.
Yeah.
And so you didn't feel safe fully.
Yeah.
How have you repaired that relationship with little Carrie and allowing her to feel safe
the way you were by putting your hands on your belly with your baby when she was going
through the emotional uncertainty?
So our mutual friend, Gabby Bernstein, who talks a lot about IFS work,
that work has been transformational for me. And I just, I mean, I was familiar with IFS work and
I'd done kind of inner child work with other therapists, but this year I really decided to
make a pivot and do to work with an IFS therapist and it has been life-changing.
Which for those that don't know,
it's internal family systems.
And so what has been the breakthrough
or the self-awareness you've created
in the process of internal family systems work
for yourself?
It's so funny because in many ways,
I speak internal family systems language as an actor, right?
Because I am always dealing with these different parts
of myself and bringing them forward.
So interesting.
So it's a really exciting way for me
to understand the different parts of myself that still
feel not enough on certain days, angry or resentful or afraid or I
f s has really helped me to not identify wholly with those stories when they come up right
like there's the story who's the part that's telling that story how do I take care of that
part and then move on? Right?
But like, I don't have to give my entire existence over to that part and that message and that
story.
I can kind of have some distance, which is very, you know, sort of Buddhist and but like
to have some distance from the thought and to say like, I see you, I understand where
that belief system is coming from, but it doesn't have to be the truth.
It's like, I remember when I was just starting therapy
and I had this therapist who would say,
like, how do you feel?
And I was like, oh, I just feel really fat.
And she was like, fat is not a feeling.
I was like, it's not?
Because also I had grown up in a house
where people would, where my mom,
I heard my mom say, like, I feel fat.
And I, it was like, she was like,
what's underneath the feeling fat?
Is it anger? Is it sadness?
It's different.
I think for me, feeling fat was often like just a,
it was like a crutch that I went to
that would prevent me from getting
to that next feeling underneath,
I would make it about the body and not being enough as opposed to diving deeper into like,
what is the feeling that needs to be addressed here?
What was it in that moment for you?
What was your soul feeling where you say, I'm feeling fat, but really, was it the not
enoughness, was it fear, was it the not enoughness?
Was it fear?
Was it anxiousness?
Usually the feeling fat is feeling unlovable.
So therefore not enough.
Really?
Yeah.
Yeah.
You feel unlovable at times?
It happens.
Yeah.
I don't live there.
I mean, that's the great thing is that I don't, I don't live there,
but I don't want to pretend that the thought doesn't come up. Sure. Cause I'm really proud
to have tools to have tools and support systems that have helped me figure out what to do with
the thought when it comes up or how to, how to embrace it. Yeah, how to navigate it. Yeah, navigate it.
When you feel unlovable or not enough,
is it not feeling lovable or enough
with people on the outside of you
or not feeling lovable within you?
I think it all goes back to spirit.
I think it all goes back to like, am I loved by source?
Right, like am I I loved by source, right?
Like, am I lovable by God?
Because when we don't feel lovable in ourselves
in a spiritual way, then we need it externally
from other people, whether that's in a relationship
or from fans or from an employer or an employee
or like whatever that looks like. But seeking that approval and love and acceptance
and belonging externally is usually because I don't feel
like I'm in alignment with the fact that I am loved,
that like I am loved and okay just as I am.
That I like, because I think that's where the idea
that I have to be somebody other than who I am, forgetting
that who I am as I am is enough.
I'm good.
I am.
But when we forget that, we're like, oh, I have to be something else.
I have to be better.
I have to be stronger.
I have to be more successful.
I have to be thinner, prettier, smarter, whatever it is, as opposed to like, I am good.
I am blessed. I am loved. and I'm on a journey of excellence.
So I'm willing to be bigger, better, smarter,
more successful, but I don't have to be
to earn anybody's love.
That's beautiful.
That's on a good day.
Yeah.
Right?
I've got a couple of final minutes with you, Carrie.
This has been really powerful.
Two final questions for you.
Before I ask those final questions, your new movie is out very soon once this is released.
May 9th, Mother's Day weekend.
Mother's Day weekend, let's go.
So celebrate all your bad moms and uplift all your bad dads.
Let's go.
Power of parenting.
Take your family out.
Yes.
Watch Shadow Force and make sure afterwards you reveal all your dirty secrets within your
family and you open yourselves up so you can be emotionally free as well.
Yes, yes, you can be emotionally free.
Physically and emotionally.
Absolutely.
I'm excited for people to go watch it, Shadow Force.
Two final questions for you.
This is a hypothetical question I ask everyone.
I've been doing the show for 12 years.
Congratulations. Every week for 12 years. Wow. And this is a question I ask everyone. I've been doing the show for 12 years. Congratulations.
Every week for 12 years.
Wow.
This is a question I ask people at the end.
It's called the three truths.
Imagine a hypothetical scenario.
You get to live as long as you want to live, but it's your last day on earth.
You get to accomplish and create all of life's magic.
For whatever reason, everything you've created has to go with you.
Your movies, your TV, this interview, books,
anything you create is gone.
So we don't have your information or your content anymore.
But on the last day,
you get to leave behind three lessons to the world.
Three truths that you would share
from your experiences of what you've learned.
What would those three lessons or truths be for you?
No matter who you are, you are enough. The truth is easier, even though it feels harder
at times. And that there is true, true strength in vulnerability. There is no way to get strong
without being willing to be vulnerable.
I love those.
If you could go 10 years in the future and give yourself one piece of advice today and
carry 10 years in the future as looking at you and saying...
I love this because normally people ask you to give advice to your younger self, but this
is really great to project forward.
Yeah. your younger self. But this is really great to project forward. Yeah, if you could imagine, you know, where you'll be in 10 years, imagine where your
family will be, your career will be, and all the things, the challenges, the ups and downs
you're going to face in the next decade. What do you think your future self would tell you
to set you up for success emotionally, spiritually, physically, financially in the next decade?
I think she would tell me to cherish every moment
with the people I love most.
You know, like to really, when you're with people
that you love and or doing things that you love, be fully present.
Cause you're not gonna get that back.
And I think about like, oh my God, in 10 years,
my kids, like when I think about how old they'll be
in 10 years, you're like, oh, I need to be in this moment.
And like, what things will I be complaining about in my body in 10 years? Like be in this body, And like what things will I be complaining about
in my body in 10 years?
Like be in this body, enjoy, right?
Like just like really appreciate.
It reminds me of,
I went to this incredible film festival
at San Quentin Prison.
We have my company, Simpson Street,
we had a documentary called Daughters on Netflix.
That's really powerful documentary about dads who are incarcerated and how they learn to
be, obviously this is a recurring theme for me, right?
Like dads and parenting.
And so it's about these amazing dads who they do a father daughter dance in prison where
they get to take off their jumpsuits.
And it's really, really powerful documentary.
Say it, Quentin did their first annual film festival
in the prison where people brought outside content
into the prison, but also prisoners made films
that were shown at the festival.
It was really powerful.
And it was a spectacular day.
That warden is really progressive.
It's a really special place.
But as I was leaving, there's like this big line on the ground.
I don't remember whether it was yellow or white.
It was kind of faded, you know, worn down.
But as you're saying bye, you're saying bye to the prisoners
and thank you, and they were giving you tours
and showing you their artwork and just like so much love.
And then I crossed over that line.
And they can't, right? Like, they can't crossed over that line and and they can't right like they can't
cross over that line and everybody's in like a good spirit and there's so much
love good vibes it's a film festival but one of them accidentally gets close to
the line and one of the guards is like hey hey hey hey hey and on the way home
I was thinking you know when I woke this morning, I wasn't grateful for the places I can go.
I wasn't thinking about hugging my husband
first thing in the morning.
I wasn't thinking about my freedom and my liberty.
But when you're faced with the possibility of not having it,
the value skyrockets, right?
Like I stepped over that line with this huge increased
gratitude for my liberty, for my freedom,
for my ability to go home and hug my husband,
for my ability to listen to whatever music I want
and wear whatever I want.
Like suddenly you get reminded of what to be grateful for.
So I feel like that question is an invitation
into that kind of gratitude, right?
It's like, who knows where we'll be 10 years from now,
but today there's some really good stuff happening.
So don't let it slip by you.
Yeah, don't miss the moment.
That's beautiful.
That's some good advice from future Carrie.
I gotta get you out of here.
Final question before I ask you Carrie,
I wanna acknowledge you for a moment
for your healing journey.
Oh, thank you.
For the journey of allowing yourself to feel safe again,
for allowing yourself to heal,
for allowing yourself to have a beautiful relationship
with your family, your extended family,
your current family, and to allow yourself
to really be a star in your life
and create the career you want,
but also create the privacy, the safety
and the love you want personally.
So I acknowledge you for all of it.
It's really cool to connect and get to meet you.
And hopefully we'll get you back on in the future
with the next big movie and stuff.
But this is an amazing starting conversation.
I'm so glad you were open and shared
and this is gonna help heal a lot of people. So I appreciate you. I'm so glad you were open and shared. And this is going to help heal a lot of people. So I appreciate you. I'm so grateful. And I just, I want to say
what, one of the things we say at Simpson Street is, you know, we believe that every
single person is the lead character in the story of their lives. And so I love that you,
with this work, I feel like you really encourage people to live that way. You encourage people
to place themselves at the center of their journey
and be the star of their own story.
So thank you for that.
Of course, yeah.
My final question, what's your definition of greatness?
Offering up the best of what you have moment to moment.
Yeah.
It's like, if it's the best,
if you're giving the best of what you have,
then that's what today's greatness
looks like.
Terry Washington, thank you so much.
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
Powerful.
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 rundown of today's episode
with all the important links.
And if you want weekly exclusive bonus episodes with me personally, as well as
ad free listening, then make sure to subscribe to our greatness plus channel
exclusively on Apple podcasts, share this with a friend on social media and leave
us a review on Apple podcasts as well.
Let me know what you enjoyed about this episode in that review.
I really love hearing feedback from you and it helps us figure
out how we can support and serve you moving forward. And I want to remind you if no one has
told you lately that you are loved, you are worthy, and you matter. And now it's time to go out there
and do something great.