The Skinny Confidential Him & Her Podcast - #44: Co-Host Interview Part 2: Lauryn Evarts
Episode Date: January 3, 2017To kick off 2017 Lauryn is now in the hot seat, as Michael asks her the questions you want to hear! Lauryn highlights how she decided to start blogging, the importance of a positive internal monologue..., how her insecurities fuel her, and the two share their thoughts on new years resolutions. To connect with Lauryn click HERE To connect with Michael click HERE This episode is brought to you by The Skinny Confidential Bombshell Body Guide and Meal plan. tired of combating inflammation & bloat? Want to feel lighter and sexier? Check out lauryn’s latest 7 day meal plan. In this simple & super effective plan you’ll find: + tsc grocery list with every ingredient you need for the 7 days. + what the f*ck to do when you love carbs guide. + quick and delicious recipes: breakfast, snacks, lunch, dinner and dessert. You will also find 28 weeks worth of fat burning, muscle toning, 27 minute long, effective workouts you can do at home with no equipment. USE PROMO CODE: HIMANDHER at Checkout for 20% Off
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The following program is a podcast one.com presentation.
She's a lifestyle blogger extraordinaire.
Fantastic.
And he's a serial entrepreneur.
A very smart cookie.
And now Lauren Everts and Michael Bostic are bringing you along for the ride.
Get ready for some major realness.
Welcome to the skinny confidential, him and her.
I forgot to order anything.
Oh, good thing we're sitting in such close quarters.
I really would forget it.
Hopefully I can get through the show without passing out.
I'm trying a vanilla kind tomorrow, so hopefully tomorrow will be better.
But for now, we're back again, and I'm not wearing deodorant again.
New year, new you.
No.
Not, nope.
New smells.
New year, new smells. Same smells. New year, new you. No. Nope. New smells. New year, new smells.
Same smells.
New year, same smells.
Hi guys, I'm Lauren Everett, creator of the blog and brand The Skinny Confidential.
And I am Michael Bostic, here in 2017, coming at you live.
Happy New Year, guys.
Happy New Year, guys. Happy New Year. There's so much going on right now on social
media about New Year and 2016 and the kind of year it was and 2017 and goals and resolutions.
It's almost overwhelming. Don't you feel like that? Yeah, I'm not a big resolution guy. Why?
Because I feel like if you would have, I mean, just because the calendar flips,
like, now you're going to turn into a whole new person.
Like, I feel like resolutions are just, like, they're not realistic.
I think to each its own.
I think you should do what works for you.
If a resolution works for you and you're actually going to work the resolution, you should do it.
But I do find interesting when people make a list of 600 resolutions.
I feel like it's more efficient to just focus on one it goes back to the thing we talked about a long time
ago why i favor systems instead of goals so like a system you can set up to like to be productive
and to be you know to hit basically a system you can set up so that you actually hit goals without
setting them does that make sense? Yeah.
Because when people set goals and they miss them, then you get disappointed.
And I think that's the problem with resolutions.
Like, you know, people say, I'm going to get in shape for the New Year's.
Okay.
Well, what system have you set up so that you can enable yourself to get in shape?
Does that, is the system set up so that you can get to the gym easier?
One of our friends makes charts.
Yeah.
One of the things that I do every morning when I get up is I put my gym clothes on.
And I don't put my going to work clothes or my day clothes.
I put gym clothes on.
So that kind of puts me in the... It's a system I've created to force me to go to the gym.
Okay, do you want to know how psycho I am?
Sometimes I'll sleep in my gym clothes.
Like, sometimes I'll sleep in a sports bra.
So I just, like, can wake up and it's just, like, already there.
And sometimes you'll go to the gym and sleep in those same clothes and then no i won't michael only when i really want
to piss you off and i'm not wearing any deodorant so we're here it's a new year we made it thank you
guys for subscribing thank you guys for subscribing thank you for listening look forward to a lot of
guests in 2017 lots of exciting different guests from kind of all over
the place. We have to. This episode, we are going to pick up where we left off with last week when
you interviewed me. I'm going to turn the tables and interview you. Yeah, you guys liked when I
interviewed him. We thought that was like a fun thing to do before we bring other guests on. And
so today Michael is going to interview me and I have no idea what the questions are.
Well, but before we start, I want to address something
and talk about something that you and I have been talking about
for the last couple of days.
We've kind of been bitching about it.
Yeah, which kind of goes against what I want to talk about right now.
But there's been so many negative posts
and so many people saying 2016 was the worst year ever.
Oh my God, 2016 was terrible.
This happened, that happened.
I don't know what I'm going to do.
Hopefully 2017 is better.
And I think that this attitude is so self-defeating.
I don't think it helps anyone.
I think all it does is spread negativity.
And so if for a second we could switch gears and spread some positivity, that's what I want to do.
Yeah, I think I'm going to do a post about that.
I think to sum up a whole entire year as negative is short-sighted.
That's 365 days that you're calling negative.
There was definitely things that happened in 2016 that maybe were negative,
but there was also a ton of things that happened that were positive.
And I think if you just completely categorize a
year as negative, it's, it's just not a good way to kind of leave it. Well, let's put it this way.
You could be dead. You could be dead. You could be sick. You could be sick. You could get maimed.
There's so many maims. It's like, you could have a limb torn off. You could have, you know,
there's, there's people that really struggle and live in terrible places.
If you're listening to this, that means you're obviously doing something right.
You have an audio device that can, I don't want to say right, but you're lucky to have an audio device that you can actually listen to a podcast.
Not just ours, but anything.
You can listen to music, listen to phone.
There's plenty of people in the world that just don't have this luxury. And so when I see people complaining all the time, it really just gets me down because
I just think that it doesn't help yourself and it doesn't help anyone else. All it does is create
more negativity in the world. Don't hop on the 2016 negativity bandwagon. I would get off that
wagon. I would look forward. I would start fresh. If things did happen that were
negative in 2016, maybe look at the things that were positive. I actually just made a list the
other day of all the positive things that happened in 2016. I feel like that's the way to start the
year off with a bang and to completely again, categorize an entire year as negative. I just,
I just feel like that's such a waste of fucking time. Well, let me ask you this question, and everybody out there that's listening, the same question.
When has complaining and bitching and moaning and crying ever gotten you anywhere good?
No one cares.
No, nobody gives a shit.
When you complain, literally nobody gives a shit.
In fact, it's a turnoff.
No, it's a turnoff.
When someone complains on my Facebook feed, I literally press
unfollow. I don't want that negativity.
I've actually gone through my Facebook feed
and cleaned out anyone that has negative,
negative, negative. There's a
quote that my dad always used to say
to me. Another one?
Yeah, it's another one. It's like, and it goes
like this. I don't know if I'm getting it exactly right, but
it's close. It says, smile
and the world smiles with you. Cry and you cry alone. Yeah. So smile into 2017. There's actually a study
that was done to when you, when you complain and you bitch and you moan and you, and you cry and
you know, even, even if, even if shit is bad, right. But when you, when you constantly complain
and whine and bitch and cry about it, you actually become a source of anxiety and a source of negativity for those around you. And they actually don't want to be
around you. They don't want to spend time with you. But then what happens is you have a rough
time pulling yourself out of the negative cycle because the people that would come around you and
uplift you and pull you out and make you and bring happiness to your life actually don't want to help
you do that because you're bringing them down with you. So what I do each morning and what I think Lauren does too is I have a journal and it's
like, I'm not one of those like diary guys, but I'll go in and I'll actually, even if
shit's hitting the fan and something terrible is going on, I will sit down and write things
I'm grateful for.
And it could be the simplest thing ever.
It could be like, give an example.
Cause you've let me read it sometimes.
It's like super sweet.
Just like something so simple it could be something as simple as i woke up today and i woke up in a bed
in a comfortable home okay or what else could it be or it could be something as like i got to feed
the dogs today okay or it could be something as like i got you know i went to dinner with a friend
and had a good experience it could be basically basically, it could be like, Hey, the weather was great today.
It could be literally anything.
And what I find is like, if you write down like four or five, six, seven things that
are positive in your life, you'll start to just feel really good.
And so, and then at the end of the year, when everyone's saying what a horrible year it
is, you can go back on your gratitude journal and reflect on how many good things happen
to you.
Yeah.
And they could be really basic or they could be really good things. Like maybe you
have a business milestone or maybe you have a, something in your relationship went well,
or maybe something in your family happened that was good. But I try to just find things that are
really, really simple. And I, and I don't, and I don't ever write anything negative.
And if there is something negative, I try to put a positive spin on it.
Whenever I've had something really, really negative in my life happen, I don't associate it with a year.
So like the worst thing that's ever happened to me, I can think of right now. And I don't
actually even know what year it was because I don't give that year power. So my advice is start
2017 off and just give it positivity. Yeah. And listen, everyone has their own issues and their own problems.
So keeping that in mind, when you finally get to get around somebody and have an experience
with them, go to dinner, go to lunch, work in an office setting with them, whatever the
hell you're doing with them, why do you then want to pile your issues onto them?
So I just think when you bitch and complain,
literally nobody gives a shit.
Well, they say energy attracts energy.
So when you take inventory of your life,
and I've had to do this before
when I felt like there was maybe toxic people in my life,
I evaluate myself as opposed to evaluating them.
How am I bringing in this energy?
And why am I allowing this toxicity into my life?
Because maybe i was going
through something toxic at the time i think it's really important to kind of take inventory of
who's around you and how you're allowing it in i got really i got this weird i got sick one time
uh i don't i don't know what it was but like the worst rash ever yeah i got i ate at this
restaurant in san diego and i'm not going to name the restaurant because literally nobody will ever go there again.
Wait, you're still blaming the restaurant for this?
I am 100%.
It's not the restaurant.
No, because I went...
Okay, so long story short,
I got this crazy rash.
I looked like the guy that lives in the attic in Braveheart,
you know, the leper guy?
Robert the Bruce?
I've never seen that movie.
Okay, well, basically there's like this leper
that lives in these old ratty sheets,
and he lives in the attic, and he's just like his like face is falling off and like
so anyways i got this crazy rash from something that i ate and i was like that guy and at the
time i lived in a high rise and i was so depressed and i would like walk around in the dark and look
down over the city and just be like i was like i'm the leper in braveheart i'm never coming like
quasimodo i remember this you he was so sick you guys he had a rash all over head to toe his entire body completely covered
yeah and when i say head to toe i would say two weeks we mean head to toe everything yeah and
you know what's funny is i always try to explain this to our friends and like be like oh i got
this rash like okay it couldn't have been that bad every time i show the pictures to people
they're like oh no fear it's screenshotted on his desktop, guys. Yeah, I got it.
Well, I need to really show how severe this thing was.
But anyways, during that time... Can you post it on Instagram so people can see?
No, I don't want to ruin people's day, but maybe someday.
During that time, it was really humbling because all of my looks were just...
I looked like a leper.
I couldn't go out in public.
I was itchy.
I was freaking out.
I couldn't work.
I couldn't touch Lauren.
I couldn't do anything.
And I couldn't figure out what it was, so I was really freaked out. And I also didn't know how
long it was going to last. But during that time, I started reading and I started like really like
realizing how much I took health for granted and how important it is to, to be grateful when you're
in good health. And when you can do little things like going out or eating certain, certain foods,
or just, you know, feeling healthy, I ended up having to go to the hospital and was hospitalized for like three days.
That was miserable.
And so you just really start to be grateful.
And I learned a lot.
So I look at that experience as a positive experience because it taught me so much.
And I think you can apply this to anything.
Like maybe you're doing a business and you're about to go broke, right?
Okay, what have you learned from that experience?
You're going to pick yourself up and go again.
I just think that with every bad situation,
there's something to be learned.
There's some positive light to find.
And that's what I try to do now with everything.
Good advice, honey.
So stop bitching about 2016.
Yeah.
And let's look at it with a good, positive intention.
There's so much to do in 2017.
Let's take each day as it comes
as opposed to making it a whole year.
There was a
quote that i saw that i really liked it said 2016 best year ever 2017 best year ever i think that's
a good attitude that is a good attitude so make it the best year ever all right all right so you're
ready you're in the hot seat yeah i'm ready these are questions you guys that michael went through you guys have written in so
many questions about asking us about you know your job or what we did here or what we what we do every
morning or just different types of questions and we've compiled well michael's compiled because i
don't know what the questions are five questions out of your questions if that makes sense i did
a snapchat the other day on my Snapchat, at Michael Bostic.
Oh my god, he loves to plug his Snapchat.
I love to plug it. And I just ask people
which questions to ask you, so I kind of took
those and then put some of my own
spin on it, and so I have questions for you.
Okay. Are you ready? I'm ready.
Are you nervous? I'm not nervous.
Okay, question
one. Tell me the story
of how and why you came up with the idea of doing a blog. lazy lazy lazy because I was so bored I was not excited to get up and go to work or school and
so I was like okay I'm just a lazy person and then I started to see around campus all these girls
were eating all this junk food and I would go and modify all these foods when I was eating it and I
was like how can I share these tips and tricks with all these sorority girls in like a quick
fast efficient way and not only that like I wanted to share all the tips and tricks with all these sorority girls in like a quick, fast, efficient way. And not only that, like I wanted to share all the tips and tricks with like everyone. And when I say everyone,
I meant like I wanted to talk to people in Turkey. And so the idea of a blog came, but before doing
the blog, I wanted to make the blog like a foundation, meaning I wanted to make it a
foundation for a brand. So I didn't just want to launch a blog. So the whole time that I was
planning on launching this, I was thinking long term. And so I guess it came out of cunning to just want to launch a
community for women. Okay. So to follow that up, do the things or feelings that drove you to start,
then do they still drive you now? Yes. The same goal is to build that community. And it's like
laying bricks. You build it every day, very slow,
until you get to a bigger picture.
And you have to keep building and laying those bricks every day.
It's a very slow thing.
It's not something that's going to happen overnight.
But I still have the same feelings that I had
when I was starting out to now.
And that is the bigger picture.
So, yeah.
So, at what point is that bigger picture...
When is the bigger picture done? Or do you just keep going and going and going i don't really have like a finale in my
head i think of it as like the way my brain thinks is it's like one circle and off these circle
there's like all these little lines and then off those little lines there's more little lines so
it's kind of just trying to make everything work into kind of like a puzzle. And I feel like I have not even started with what I want to do.
So every day, again, I'm just building towards that bigger puzzle.
Okay.
So obviously this started as a passion project and it started as a creative outlet.
I would say it didn't start as a passion project.
The second that I started getting into
blogging, I knew that this is what my calling was. I never had felt like this about anything else.
And that's why, you know, I think that when you're doing what you love, it doesn't feel like work.
And that's so cliche, but it really is true. Like I said, I didn't want to go show up and work for
someone else. And I didn't want to go to school and sit and listen to a teacher in the front. That wasn't for me. But the second
that I started doing this was the second where I thrived and I flourished. Okay. So obviously
those are all great answers, but you have to make a living at some point, right? So my next question
is, tell me when you realized this could become
your profession and your career. You have to make a living at some point, but when people tell me,
oh, you have to make a living at some point, you can make a living and still do what you love and
chip away and lay the bricks while making money. It's very possible. I did it. I did it for years.
So if you really, really want to do what you love, it takes sacrifice.
Yeah.
So when was the moment that you realized this could be a profession for you?
Because you were working.
The moment I realized that it could be a profession for me is the moment I gained momentum in it.
So I would say like a couple months of gaining momentum.
I knew that this, there was no doubt in my mind that this is what I was doing.
Like there was never like hesitation.
People were very, very weird to me when I first started blogging.
I mean, I told customers that I worked with or that I was waiting on that I wanted to
start a blog and they looked at me like I was an alien.
And you have to keep in mind that I was working at a bar where there were a lot of rich, rich,
powerful, wealthy men.
So when a wealthy man who seems like he knows everything comes in and sits down and you
tell him your idea and they look at you like you're an idiot, there was never anything that
was deterring me from the goal. And that's a big part of the reason why I connected so much with
Steve, who's been on our podcast. I'm not sure what episode, but scroll down and look for his
podcast. It's a good one. Steve was one of the first people that like got the vision. I've always had a very clear road. Okay. But I want to give some people
that are listening, like at what point did you realize, okay, I can quit my day job and go all
in on this because that's a leap. You know, a lot of people are sitting there, they're doing this as
a side hustle. They're thinking about really going to the next level.
But at the same time, they have bills and they have, you know, obligations that they need to meet.
And so when is it time for them to make the leap? You will know when it's time because because of your bank account.
I feel like I feel like the bank account does have to dictate when you quit your other job.
That's just logical sense.
But I knew well before I was making enough money that I would
be able to quit in this certain amount of time because I think I kind of worked backwards on it.
I worked backwards where I knew where I would lay every day out, every week out, every month out.
So when I got to a certain point, I would be able to leave. So and maybe that doesn't always work
out like it does work out. You'll know. I mean, when you, when you could look in your bank account and it's enough for you can leave.
And I think that anyone that has hesitation about that, you're not completely committed to the goal
or what you're doing. So you have to look at yourself and get real with yourself and think,
am I really doing what I'm supposed to be doing or what you want to be doing or what I want to
be doing. And I'll just add another thing. And this doesn't just go for blogs. It goes for anything. If you have a job now,
you can always go back to your job. Maybe not that one, but a similar job or another job. I mean,
you got that job at one point, you can get another job. So, you know, I always find it funny when
people are scared to take the leap into something else because you can always go back. It's harder to move forward. It's easy to go back. I would rather put all my eggs in one basket than go back to
working a job and doing what I was doing. It wasn't for me. It wasn't making me happy. And I
think I'm a big believer in you defining your own happiness and you're kind of the, the, the captain in your happiness. And
like right now I would rather like sleep on someone's couch than go back to doing what I was
doing. You know, I don't think everybody needs to be an entrepreneur and do their own thing.
Me personally, I know myself so well that I know I would be so miserable at working for somebody
else. And I know that because of that, I would do a terrible job.
So for me, I would literally rather sleep on a couch and eat Doritos every night than
work for somebody else.
And it's not because there's anything wrong with that.
I just know that my happiness is dictated by being able to do my own thing.
And I'm completely self-aware in that regard.
And so, like I said, there's nothing wrong with working for somebody else if you're happy with that.
There's a lot of number twos, threes, fours that do really, really well and thrive in company atmospheres and structures like that.
I just know myself and I know that I wouldn't.
So I don't want everyone to think that you have to be this like solopreneur, entrepreneur that goes off and does your own thing.
You just have to really be happy with what you are doing.
Yeah, I think that what gets me off is being the best version of myself. And I know that I'm not
the best version of myself when I was working for someone else. I almost became lazy and unhappy and
I was combative and I wasn't happy and I wasn't flourishing and I wasn't reaching my full
potential. And I really did get real with myself and recognize that. And I made plans to extract myself from that environment.
Yeah. All right. We're going to take a little break. I got to go put on deodorant. But before
I go, I want to tell you guys. So I'm making a new meal plan right now. It's going to be out
at the end of January. And this one is going to be having to do a lot with the detoxing and helping
with inflammation. You guys know I had jaw surgery, which was a fucking nightmare. So it's going to
talk about debloating. In the meantime, though, you guys got to go to members.theskinnyconfidential.com
and use code HIMANDHER at checkout for 20% off to all listeners. You can find my full-blown meal plan there that I
used for my wedding. As you know, I wrote down everything I ate and drank for seven days and
kind of put it in this little book that you can print out. It's super cute. The workouts in there
are easy. They're quick. They're 27 minutes. You got some intervals. And there's a community of
women that are connecting on the platform. Everyone's trying to tone up.
It's a new year, so I feel like it's perfect.
Go to members.theskinnyconfidential.com
and use code CHECKOUT for him and her for 20% off.
Okay, it's a brand new year,
and Podcast One's got a whole bunch of brand new coming your way.
We're talking about new shows from Laila Ali,
The Forbes Network,
NASCAR's Larry McGrentles,
Real Housewife Kim Zolchak, amazing scripted series like Murder Made Me Famous,
Tori Spelling and Dean McDermott, Richard Marks, Norman Lear, and many, many more.
So get on board for 2017 and download the Podcast One app now.
That way you can take us with you all year long.
Happy New Year from PodcastOne.com.
This is the Skinny Confidential, him and her.
Okay, back from the break.
Got some deodorant on.
Not really.
I can breathe again.
Rude.
Putting you back in the hot seat.
Okay, we're going to get a little bit more personal now with the questions.
Turn them up on you.
You ready?
I'm ready.
Okay, third question.
Do you have any insecurities?
And if so, do you believe they have helped or hurt you
throughout your career as a blogger and influencer? Okay. So of course I have insecurities. Everyone
has insecurities. I am a huge believer and I've wrote about this a lot on the skinny confidential
of having your insecurities fuel you. So one of my insecurities is kind of chasing perfection,
meaning like whenever I do something like it has
to be perfect and that sounds like oh that's a stupid insecurity but it's actually can be really
stifling because at some point or another it kind of holds you back well let me contribute the idea
of perfection is different in everyone else's mind which is why the perfect does not exist because
my idea of perfect your idea of perfect are completely
different things. So perfection is not real. And I think when you say it holds you back,
that's why it holds you back because you're chasing something that isn't there.
Yeah, I would totally agree with you. And, um, when I say perfect, it's not just,
it's not about the way I look, right? It's, that's not like the main thing. That's obviously one of the things, but it's also about, it could be as weird as my house
and workspace has to be perfect before I can start working. And that sounds so weird, but it has
gotten in the way a lot of me being able to kind of focus. You see, when I get in like a bad mood,
I'll like start cleaning the house in the most aggressive way well
it's insane there's I can't even find half of my stuff because it just gets put away yeah everything
like has to be organized I'm like so type a like everything has to be color-coded in the closet
like it's obnoxious it's not it's if anyone's out there thinking oh that's a stupid insecurity well
let me tell you it's not it gets in the way of a lot of different things. What I've tried to do with it is rein it in and use it to create, but sometimes I just have to
be like, okay, this is good and walk away. I think another insecurity that I have really
kind of conquered this year, it's still a work in progress, is knowing that not everyone's going to like everything that I do. So if I write
a controversial post, which I love to do, it's one of my favorite things to do. It's where I thrive,
I think with the skinny confidential, not everyone's going to like it. And, you know,
when I first started blogging six years ago, mean comments would really hurt my feelings. It would
get me down. I would get hard on myself. Again, that whole idea of chasing perfection. And now I try to hear the criticism.
And if it's something that deserves a response, I'll respond to it. And if it's just nasty,
I ignore it. And I really just do get on with my day.
I was reading Tools of the Titans by Tim Ferriss recently, which we've talked about.
And he was saying that he kind
of dealt with that same kind of thing in the beginning when he started writing and he was
saying that he read that 10 of people that read or see your comment will end up taking it personally
and that there's another percentage that will dislike it and be like actually like personally
offended by it what do you mean your comment or you mean like a post yeah like you could write a post and there's somebody out there that will take that post personally and personally offended by it. What do you mean your comment? Or you mean like a post? Yeah. Like you could write a post and there's somebody out there that will take that post personally
and be offended by it.
Right.
10% that he says, and it just comes with the territory and you just kind of have to be
okay with that.
You're right.
It does come with the territory.
And instead of giving it energy, I've tried to use it to fuel my energy.
Um, I think another thing that I can be insecure about is I've, you know, there's been many times where I've gotten sucked into Instagram, the comparison game. Now I like don't even look
at my Instagram feed. I find it just to be really, it can be negative. It can be a negative place.
And I feel like time spent comparing myself to other people is wasted time when I could be
spending it on building my own brand. I think it's impossible in this social media day and age to not compare yourself to people. I mean, it's kind of just the
nature of social media. The best thing, again, is just to really focus on your own shit, stay in
your own lane. And I'm constantly reminding myself of that. It's a thing where I wake up every
morning and I kind of coach myself every morning. Well, I think it's different. I think there's just an attitude shift and a decision shift.
Right. It is absolutely a decision where the, for me, the decision is, and this has been
throughout, I think actually my whole life, I've kind of been like this. I look at other
successful people and other people that are doing things well, or people that are dressing well,
even, and people that are traveling or people that are, you know, having success in relationships or whatever.
I look at it as a source of inspiration.
I think if you're looking at other people and you're getting down on yourself, that's the issue.
So what I try to do and what works for me is I try to look at other people and get inspired by it.
And if I see somebody doing something that I really like,
I look at it as something to help fuel and drive me.
Yeah.
Once you feel yourself getting sucked down that rabbit hole,
take yourself out.
That's what I do.
I just literally remove myself.
I focus my energy on something else.
No, listen, there's always somebody better.
There's always somebody more successful.
Yeah.
There's always going to be someone,
or I call it skinnier,
prettier, richer, whatever. Who cares? Focus on your own stuff. Looking at other people is going
to do nothing but in my opinion, distract you. I was on a trip one time. I like to tell this story
too. And it was we were out on a boat. A friend of ours had a boat and it was in an exotic place. And you just,
we just really felt great that we were on this boat in this exotic place. And you just think
you're the man. And all of a sudden I looked over and we were pulling up to not a boat,
but literally a ship with like a water slide coming off it and jet skis going around and
like a helicopter landing pad. And my friend looked at me and said, see, just when you think
you made it, you realize you're a fucking pissant. And I've always thought about that because
instead of being like discouraged by that, I got really pumped up about it. I said, okay. And not,
and not that you, that I'm looking to go and get a boat or a yacht or something like that. I'm just
saying that there's, there's always some, there's always something to, um, aspire to.
I also think what helps me with any insecurity, and believe me,
I have a lot, is the narrative in my head. And I think if I can give a tip to anyone that's
listening, the narrative that you're having with yourself is with you 24 hours a day.
So if your narrative is constantly negative and constantly telling you how much you suck,
or how you're this, or how you're this or how you're
that or you're not enough or whatever it is, then you have the power to adjust that narrative. And
like, it doesn't need to be a new year. You know, you don't need to have a resolution. You can just
decide right now that you're going to change the narrative. Steve taught me that actually. And
Steve, he does life coaching for huge CEOs. And he just basically said, like, what is your narrative?
And when you really examine your narrative, I feel like you can get to know yourself more.
And something else that's really helped me, and I've talked about this before, has been yoga.
Because you have to sit with yourself for an hour.
And it's very slow.
And I feel like you're working out your mind as opposed to your body.
Okay.
And Steve was on a couple episodes back. Yeah. So if
you check it out. Steve's amazing. We're going to have him on again. Steve Houck. He was on a,
I can't remember which episode, but a few back. Okay. Fourth question. This one's very important
question to me. Oh my God. What are the things you love about working with me? I love working
with you because you're extremely pragmatic. So when I fly off the
handle and one of my creative psycho throw my hands in the air moments, you bring me back down.
Sometimes I feel like I can be kind of a starving artist. I, if I feel complacent or like I'm not
evolving or like I said, the kind of content I'm creating is 100% what I want it to
be. I can get very frustrated and I feel like you bring me down. And you're really good at it.
You're actually better than anyone I know at bringing me down. And Michael is extremely
logical. I don't think I'm the most emotional woman in the world. I think I'm pretty logical,
but I do think that there is a side of me that's extremely emotional, and you can, like, kind of come in and fill the gap when it comes to business.
Well, I think, you know, it's the...
I think you do the same for me, but it's the same thing with, you know,
when you could basically look at someone else's life and give them the best advice in the world,
but taking your own advice is the hardest thing to do.
Yeah, I would say I love how you give me perspective.
Okay. Okay.
Wow.
What are the qualities of mine that you would change?
Oh, God, here comes your scroll.
Wait, hold on, you guys.
Let me pull out my diary.
No, I'm just kidding.
What are the qualities of yours that I wish you would change?
That you would change?
In the workplace?
Or just in general?
It could be both.
I think in the workplace, sometimes your brain thinks so quickly and it takes a while for me to wrap my head around things.
And you think quicker than I do.
And sometimes I think that's a strength, but sometimes it's a weakness.
On my part or your part?
On both.
Separately.
And when it doesn't come together and there's not synergy happening,
that is kind of difficult.
So like if we're not having synergy
with you're thinking too fast,
I need to wrap my head around something,
you want an answer right away,
I can't give you an answer right away,
it's hard to have synergy.
Yeah, sometimes I get in trouble
because I don't want to say
I think faster than other people
because that makes me sound like a weirdo.
It's not that I'm thinking faster.
It's that I process things in a way where, and this comes from the book Managing Oneself
that I learned this.
There's different types of learners in the world.
There's listening learners.
There's speaking learners.
There's reading learners.
There's visual learners.
Yeah.
That's kind of reading's visual learners yeah that's kind of
reading visual same thing what i've realized about myself is i'm kind of a hybrid between
a speaking and reading learner sometimes i will just do a you know a meeting with you and i'll
it's you think i'm cutting you off but i'm speaking because that's actually how i'm processing what
you're saying and that's actually how I'm processing what you're saying.
And that's actually how I'm...
It's like you're communicating for me.
Yes, but it's just because I learn in a way where when I say it out loud and hear myself say it, that I kind of process information.
So sometimes we have a disconnect there, but I can understand why you would think...
It's not that I'm thinking so fast, it's that I'm processing.
My form of communication, obviously, is writing.
That's how I communicate. It's like of communication obviously is writing. That's, that's how I
communicate. It's like the most efficient way to communicate for me. Yours, I would say, um,
is more speaking. So sometimes there's like a, a kind of a disconnect there. Okay. What is the
hardest part of working with me? Isn't this the same question? No, because I think you, you've
talked about the qualities, but what is the actual challenge of working with me?
The biggest challenge that I've had is being able,
and this is kind of cliche,
but to being able to separate business
like outside the bedroom.
Like sometimes we'll come home
and it's like 11 o'clock at night
and we're both exhausted
and I want to just make dinner and listen to a podcast
and Michael wants to talk about business.
And that's been the biggest challenge
definitely so we still got to work on i need to learn how to turn it off yeah you got to turn it
off i mean one time i remember we were laying in bed it was like 11 45 and you started talking i
mean i'm trying to watch my show like sons of anarchy was on i need i am like very much the
type of person that needs to disconnect so I can reconnect.
Meaning like I need to turn my off switch off or I am not recharged. And when I don't feel
recharged, I'm not a hundred percent the best person that I can be. So like when I come home
and I'm like doing my thing and my flow with my like like, music and my oils and, like, my show,
and I have, like, my hummus platter.
Like, I need to just, like, take it down a notch.
And Michael is more hyped up.
Go, go, go, go, go.
And you're like that when we travel, too, if you really want to know.
Duly noted.
Good.
Tattoo it on your ass.
Final question.
When we have kids, and I when because we we need to have
kids at some point you know you're looking at me all crazy here but yes when we have kids
what qualities of mine do you hope they get and what qualities of yours do you hope they get okay
these questions are your questions yeah i want to these are these are questions that i'd like to
know we have to do another like ask us thing without your questions yeah I'd like to know. We have to do another ask us thing without your questions.
Yeah, I'd like to.
These are questions mostly selfishly for me.
Okay.
But this question was actually submitted by a listener.
Really?
Yes.
I'd love to know their name and their social security number.
I actually have it screenshotted.
Okay.
But I don't want to put anyone on blast.
Why?
I'm sure they'll love it.
When we have kids, I hope that they get my sense of humor.
Why? Mine's better.
No. No, no, no.
That was learned.
I hope they get my sense of humor, but I hope that they get your absolute love for reading.
You're constantly wanting to learn new things.
When you travel, you want to go to museums.
You want to just kind of immerse yourself in history. I that about you i hope they can get that from you i also hope
that they get your ass because you have the best ass i've ever seen okay
um i hope that if we have a boy they get your head of hair okay i hope if we have a girl they get my charming flawless witty personality
i'm just kidding i'm just kidding i hope that they get my love of writing and i hope that they
get a lot of qualities from my grandma and our parents which qualities from our parents because
that's a whole that's a whole episode that's a whole thing a lot of
qualities i hope that mutually they get our love for dogs michael and i love dogs like i don't
think there's anything we love more than dogs which qualities of mine do you not want them to get
your impatience the way you travel i can't deal i can't deal with two kids running around
running through the airport impatience in what in what context? There's so much.
There's so much.
That's a whole podcast episode.
I'm pretty patient.
You are not patient.
Lauren, I have been with you now for this long.
And let me tell everybody listening, it takes the most patient man in the world to be with you.
Why haven't you figured out, though, that you have to tell me a half an hour before the time?
Okay.
You still haven't figured it out.
Which qualities of yours do you not want them to get? though that you have to tell me a half an hour before the time okay you still which qualities
of yours do you not want them to get i probably would not want them to get that whole chasing
perfection thing i would want them to just thrive and like just be enough with what they are
i also would probably not want them to get the whole year that i was 21 yeah let's remove that year from i will remove
the years from 15 to 23 for me yeah i think that so eight years of my life this is this is kind of
a weird one from them i wouldn't i don't like how i stay up late i like i can't stand that about myself i wish i
could go to bed earlier and be like a super early riser then go to bed earlier no michael this oh
michael's gonna give me like a life coach session right now no it's very hard for me to go to bed
we've talked about jocko willink on this podcast before and if you haven't heard his podcast it's
called jocko podcast he's a really, really interesting guy.
Ex-Navy SEAL.
Retired now.
Really big badass.
And he says that there was a question that was asked of him that says,
what do you need to do to be more mentally tougher?
And his answer was, be tougher.
Okay.
So, all right.
Make the decision.
I'm going to go to bed early tonight with your beef stew that you made me.
I did make beef stew.
He made beef stew.
I think another thing that I just want to say is that,
and this kind of, like, sums up the whole podcast, too,
is that I have really bad anxiety.
I think that you've kind of understood it
a little more this year.
I have, like, crippling anxiety sometimes.
So if we have a kid, I wouldn't wish anxiety on anyone.
Anxiety is caused by the fear of the future, right? And for multiple things. And I think
everybody has anxiety. I actually don't agree with you on that because it could be also from,
from fear of the past. Yeah, it could be from both. And so there was a quote that I read by one of the Stoic philosophers, Seneca, today.
And I can't, I'm trying to remember off the top of my head.
Give me a second to remember it.
It was, what is it?
Better be a good one.
Okay, it was two elements, but must therefore be rooted out once and for all.
The fear of future suffering and the recollection of past suffering, since the latter no longer
concerns me and the former concerns me not yet.
So that's saying to just be present.
Yes.
Okay.
The Dalai Lama says either you can do something about it, in which case there's nothing to
worry about, or you can't do something about it, in which case there's nothing to worry about,
or you can't do something about it,
in which case there's also nothing to worry about.
So I can't do anything about my BO and my deodorant.
There's nothing I can do.
So I guess I'm just going to suffer.
Yeah. Don't have anxiety about it.
Okay, everyone knows that the world shops online now.
And if you don't, you're weird.
People only go to malls to drop the kids off or buy a super pretzel, maybe see a movie. And of course, as you know, Amazon is the biggest online
mall in the universe. But did you know that every time you use Amazon, you could be helping us keep
this podcast going? That's right. If you use our Amazon banner, when you shop, a small amount of
the purchase goes directly to help support this podcast at no extra cost to you.
Okay, so here's how you do it.
Go to podcastone.com and click on the Killer Deals link.
Click on our show logo and you'll see Amazon and all of our sponsors.
Then when you click the link, bookmark it so it's super easy to use the next time.
It's a cool way you can help us keep doing this show every week.
All right, you guys.
Before we want to go, we just want to take a minute to thank you and all the great sponsors.
You guys are amazing.
You always support our podcast.
The comments that I've been getting on Instagram from the Snapchat giveaway are insane.
You guys are really what keeps the show growing, and you guys get us so excited to podcast every week.
And we will continue to do that on a weekly basis for free, bringing you lots of entertainment and a couple of cool guests coming up.
So thank you for downloading, subscribing, and supporting the show.
Remember to send in your questions to Twitter or Instagram using the hashtag AskKimAndHer.
Send us a question on our snaps, Lauren Everts and, of course, Michael Bostic.
You love that one, don't you?
Yep.
Or email us at podcast at the skinny confidential.com. And if you have any deodorant recommendations that are actually legit and all natural,
please tweet them to me at Lauren Everett's. I would really, really appreciate it.
All right.
We're going to be doing more call-ins soon.
So make sure you go to the podcast page on the skinny confidential and just fill out
the little box there.
We'd love to have you guys on the show.
And with that, we are off to eat Michael's famous beef stew.
I made an amazing beef stew.
I don't know about this.
It's been in the crock pot all day simmering.
I thought you were going to say it's been in the family for decades.
Well, it kind of has been, actually.
Your dad's called ten times to check on the beef stew recipe.
All right, you guys.
With that, we are out.
Thanks for listening to The Skinny Confidential, Him and Her, with Lauren Everts and Michael Bostick.
Download new episodes every Tuesday at PodcastOne.com or subscribe now on the Podcast One app.