LIGHT YOUR STAGE
I didn't come from much, but
I always knew I was meant for more.
I grew up in a trailer.
My mom worked three jobs. My dad worked all day and came home to unwind with a drink before doing it all again. Money was tight. Life was simple. But you know what we had in abundance?
Play.
I was constantly sent outside to use my imagination — and I did. I LOVED it. Pretending. Creating. Living in worlds I made up entirely in my mind.
I didn't know it then, but that little girl playing outside was already learning one of life's greatest truths: your inner world creates your outer world.
I found my person young. We separated, came back together the way soul connections do, and built a life — marriage, a home, babies, daily routines, and all the beautiful ordinary moments in between.
And I was grateful. Truly.
But when I turned 30, after my third baby, something whispered:
This isn't all there is.
I wasn't depressed. I wasn't ungrateful. I was just... dim. Like a light that had been slowly turned down without anyone noticing — including me.
I had put myself so far on the back burner that I'd almost forgotten I was on the stove at all.


So I made a choice.
I invested in myself for the first time — really invested. I got a mentor. I joined communities of women with the same values. I did the inner work: deep self care, meditation, manifestation, and the quiet daily practice of choosing myself.
Everything shifted.
And I mean everything — my skin, my home, my energy, my relationships, the way I walk into a room.
I'm not here because I had it all figured out.
I'm here because I didn't — and I found the way anyway.
I want you to know that it is possible. To shift your inner world AND your outer world in the exact way you desire. There doesn't have to be suffering or fear on the path.
Life can be really, really good.
There will be rough patches — that's where we grow the most. But it's your perspective, and what you choose to learn from each experience, that makes all the difference.
You don't have to dim your light to make others comfortable.
You just have to remember it was always there.