The Femme Cast | Unapologetic Visibility & Impact Soul-Led Women

Stepping Out Of Your Comfort Zone and Following a Non Linear Path With Lia Daniels

Maria Rei

What happens when the career you worked so hard to build quietly stops feeling like yours?

In this powerful episode of The Femme Cast with Lia Daniels, certified coach and owner of Reimagine Possibilities Coaching & Consulting shares how a seemingly “successful” career in non-profit, and at one of the big four consulting firms, slowly dimmed her voice, creativity, and visibility. When every idea required 20 approvals, her impact shrank, even as her resume grew.

Everything changed with a one-in-a-million TGCT tumor that led to surgeries, chemo, and seven years of uncertainty. Non-life-threatening, but arm-threatening. The experience forced a reckoning with time, desire, and the cost of living misaligned.

What followed was an unexpected awakening: creating Noofah, a travel-ready washcloth designed on nights and weekends. Messy prototypes turned into a real product, and proof she could trust her intuition, claim visibility, and build without waiting for permission. From there came coaching certification, values-led decisions, and a complete reinvention of her path.

This episode takes the pain of misalignment, reframes it as initiation, and reveals the infinite potential that emerges when soul-led women choose themselves.

Inside, we cover:

🎤 Nonlinear careers & why they’re actually soul-aligned
🎤 Visibility wounds & losing your voice in approvals culture
🎤 Creating Noofah as proof of self-trust
🎤 Rare TGCT diagnosis & how it redefined risk
🎤 Somatic signals of burnout & what they’re trying to say
🎤 Imposter syndrome & practical antidotes
🎤 Values-based decisions, runways & leaving misaligned roles
🎤 Purpose exercises to expand possibility

If you’ve felt invisible in a life that “should” feel good, this conversation will remind you: your misalignment isn’t a mistake, it’s an initiation. Your soul is asking for more visibility, more honesty, more impact.

If you feel the pull…trust it.
Your next chapter is already calling your name.

Want to connect with Lia?
Check out her website at Reimagine Possibilities Coaching & Consulting

Thinking of making a change in your job or career?
Take Lia’s 2026 Career Bootcamp

Curious about the travel ready washcloth?
Check out Noofah Body Care to learn more and follow Noofah on Instagram

Want to finally show up online without overthinking every post?
Join the 21‑Day Visibility Challenge — a heart-led, step-by-step challenge for ambitious, soul-led women ready to post unapologetically. Boost your visibility, deepen audience connection, and attract the right people who convert.
https://thefemmecast.kit.com/challenge

Ready to break free from what’s been holding you back?
Book your 90-Minute Breakthrough Session — a deep-dive experience for ambitious, soul-led women to clear emotional blocks, heal old patterns, and step fully into power, purpose, and unapologetic impact.
https://www.thefemmecast.com/breakthrough

SPEAKER_00:

Hey you guys, what is up, and welcome back to the show. I am so excited and grateful to have you guys here. I have an amazing guest with me today, and I promise you, she has an incredible story to share. She's been one of my mentors. I've worked with her when I went through transitions with career in my business, and she has been an absolute godsend in my life. So with me today is Leah Daniel. She's a certified coach and owner of Reimagine Possibilities Coaching and Consulting. And she helps women or professionals move through and reimagine possibilities in their life and in their career. Leah, thank you so much for joining me today. How are you?

SPEAKER_01:

Thank you, Ria. I'm doing great. Thank you so much for having me.

SPEAKER_00:

I'm excited to have you today. And I'm excited for so many reasons. Number one, because you you are so good at what you do, and I've worked with you and I've got to experience it firsthand, which is something that that I is is always an intention that I that I hold with, you know, some of the guests that I have on the podcast. But also you have this amazing story of like unlinear career shifts and you know doing things completely out of the box. And just this amazing story of, you know, how one of your your most challenging seasons in your life really catapulted you into what it is that you're doing today. So why don't you set the stage for the listener and tell us a little bit about um how that journey kind of unfolded for you and how it began?

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, sure. Thank you. Um so yeah, I I've had this very like nonlinear career path. I, you know, I wasn't sure what I wanted to do um growing up. And um when I was in college, I was like, well, maybe I'll do like marketing. Um, and then I was like, you know, I really want to work in a museum. And so I got this um master's in museum and nonprofit management. And while I was there, um during that time, I was doing um, I actually was able to do an internship at the Venice Guggenheim, um, which was amazing international experience. Um, and then that the funny thing is, like that was the only museum that I've ever worked in. Um and and I worked at a nonprofit um for like three years, like starting out my career. And I was I was helping breast cancer survivors and their families, and it was very fulfilling work, and it was like, you know, kind of in the nonprofit management um path that I had studied for my master's. Um but I really wanted more for myself, and um, it was very small, and I always wanted to work in New York, and I was able to get a job in corporate. So I made this like leap from nonprofit to corporate. There were there were people who kind of like doubted, like really you could like go from nonprofit to corporate, and I I was able to get this job doing marketing and events and sponsorships related to the arts. Like, like we were sponsoring the global, we we were the global sponsors, like the New York Philharmonic, we were uh sponsoring museums, doing events with artists, and because of my background and knowledge and love and passion for the arts, like I was a good like candidate for that job, um, even if I didn't have like a finance degree. And um, I I got to travel, I lived in New York City, like, you know, was doing great, but it still didn't really feel quite right. I wasn't really crazy about like doing um events, I like marketing. Um then I was like, you know what, I really would prefer more like content marketing. And so then I went to one of the big four consulting firms, and then that's what what I did, and I was there for several years, but again, like it still didn't feel quite right. Like I loved my team, I it was more of the type of marketing I wanted to do, but like the subject matter just didn't always like appeal to me, and I just felt like a little like lost.

SPEAKER_00:

Yep. Oh, and hot take, you guys, for those of you listening. We actually worked for competing consulting firms. Both doing jobs that we hated. Continue.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, it's a very relatable story. Yeah. Um, and so I was like, um, and also, you know, we're like, as you know, like Maria, like working in that kind of highly regulated environment, there's just like no room for like creativity, no room for like like just growth, like things like you had like like doing marketing, like you had you needed like 20 people to sign off on like a social media post. Like it was that restrictive. And I just was like, what? Like, how how will I know that I could ever like own something? Like I just started to feel very dependent on like approvals and like could I and like I felt like I couldn't do anything, like it was a weird, like infantilizing kind of environment. And so that leads into like actually this side business that I started um while I was at that job. And um, I worked on it like nights and weekends. I mean, there was no room, it was such a demanding job. There was no room to do this stuff during the day. Um, but I had had for years this idea of a travel like washcloth loofah because I like I am the type of person who just like I always need something to scrub myself with. Otherwise, I just don't feel clean. And so when I would go to like to the shower at the gym, or you know, you go to an Airbnb or a hotel, like they don't always give you um a washcloth, and I couldn't find anything on the market that was like that wouldn't be like sopping wet in my bag. And so I was like, I can't believe there's nothing out there like this. Um and that's actually so true. Yeah, yeah. And and so I started experimenting with like different fabrics, and my mom helped me like sew them, and I know a little bit how to sew, but she's she's much better at it, and it was like really hard. But I created this this product, like invented, like it is still like a patent pending product, um, called the Nufa, which is the new loofah. And I launched that like while I was still working full-time, like I and it, and it just helped me like prove to myself that wow, I can create something that's like unique and my own, and I can like make good decisions, I can make bad decisions, but it was all mine, like there was no one telling me yes or no. It just all depended on like do people like it and will they buy it? Okay, great. Like, yeah, if they do, and you know, you can always like tweak things along the way, but it made me like launch with this like minimum viable product, and the way that they're sewn now is like even better than how they were sewn when they were when it was first launched. Um so anyway, so that that kind of like made gave me the confidence to be like, you know what, maybe there is more for me. Um, so then I I I and actually at the time I started working with a coach and she um I was just like, yeah, I think I just need another job. But every time I went to look for another job, like there was something in my gut that was like stopping me that like every time I read, I'm always feeling so well. And I'm sure people listening can relate where it's just like you read these job descriptions, it's like, oh, like fast-paced environment. And like you have like, you know, like every you, you know, you can fit like 15 different like um, you know, qualifications, and like you're the you're a rock star and all this stuff. And I was just like, oh my god, I don't think I can do this anymore. Like after like after like 17 years of working and work, especially working in corporate most of that time, I was just like, this doesn't feel right to just jump into something else that's like I don't know.

SPEAKER_00:

And maybe that's why you got me so well.

SPEAKER_01:

That's probably why. Yeah, I I I think so. Like we really like all of our coaching sessions, like you, you know, with your because you were talking, we were talking about marketing a lot, like up, yeah. It just everything just like really jived and um so so yeah, so I I knew what you were trying to do. I got your papers. So I so anyway, I told my coach one day, I was like, you know what? I think I really like I'd really like to do what you do because I've always wanted to work with people. I was like love helping people. I was like, I love working people with one-on-one. I'm more of an introvert, um, but I love listening, I love people, I love stories, and I I just want to like be of service to other people. And she was very supportive of that. I was kind of afraid to like even tell her that because I kept dancing around, like, oh maybe I'll do this career and that and and she was like, Yeah, okay, cool. And um and so then I was like, okay, how do I do this? And yeah, and then and that just from there, like getting a coaching certification and then setting myself up to leave corporate, like it it it I don't know, it it was there was a lot involved in that. It was kind of a drawn out process, but yeah.

SPEAKER_00:

As much as you hate that, and I used to always joke, like we used to have this like joke in the office when I was working for said sister firm, or not sister competing firm. Um we used to have this joke, it's like this is literally where like never mind soul sucking, but this is like this like the soul graveyard, like this is where your soul comes to slowly die. Because any passion or interest or anything that you bring to the to the role, like you said, it's like there's so much red tape, there's so much politics, there's so much like it's like, but even if if you bring a little bit of that essence into your work, like by the time it's gone through the approval cues and it's out there and it's it and it's making the impact you want it to make, it's like it's it's been so diluted and and and and like it's not the the original intent, the original passion, the original whatever it was that you were trying to create, it's like it's gone because it's like it's passed through so many channels and opinions and edits and reiterations and that. It's just you know, it's one of and and you're right, like it's it's there's so much. There's so much of it that is just, you know, you're constantly having to fight for that approval, you're constantly having to fight for that recognition, you're constantly just you know, jumping through hoops and trying to become this version of yourself that you know meets the expectations, and you get farther and farther from who you truly are, and I think that's the real difficult part in that process. So, and I'm I'm just gonna say this out there. I think I can remember so many times going to the gym with a loofah because I cannot not have a loofah when I shower. And like the hoops that I used to jump through to get my loofah from the shower back into my gym bag without creating a hot mess in my like bringing the plastic bag, wrapping it up, putting it in the side pocket, then forgetting about it, remembering about it two days later when it's already starting to get that funky odor to it because you've had this wet thing sitting in a plastic bag in your gym bag for so long. Like it's we need the nufa, we just need it. We need to have something where we can kind of scrub ourselves off and not have to worry about traveling. But which is I I think, you know, what I take from all of that is that you know, your path was anything but linear. And I think sometimes we get caught in our heads because we've started in a certain place that we need to end in this natural sequence of events, but it doesn't have to be that way. And so, you know, like I was a fashion major. I was a fashion major who went into finance, who then, you know, went into retail, who like I, you know, like there my path was anything but linear, exactly like you. And I think that when we can look at our journey like that, and we can say, you know, each part of our experience served a purpose. Like your experience in branding and marketing helped you launch your business. You know, your experience in corporate, like all of it somehow serves and it all plays a part in a bigger picture. And we have to like, I guess, let go of where we think the path should line up, and just like you said, trust. Um, trust where you're being pulled or guided to, trust that stuff that you're having, you know, resistance towards or doesn't feel right or doesn't feel aligned, like when you were talking to your coach and applying for those jobs, and really just just trust what's in your heart to take that next step towards. And I think that's the most powerful permission that we can give ourselves, especially when we're going through one of these journeys. Now, you went through an experience that really opened up, I think, your perspective in all these transitions that you made. And, you know, it's a powerful story, and it's a testament to, you know, it it it it it it not a testament, but it it it it made you become the woman that you used to support, right? In your role when you were working in nonprofit, you had to you got to see the other side of the coin to to a certain degree. Why don't you tell us about that and the impact that had on your life and how you see life and your journey through a different lens now that might help listen listeners kind of take away something from that?

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, yeah. And and thanks, Maria, for bringing that up because it is a really important part of my story. It's it's something that like a lot of people they don't know about me unless they were very close to me or working on my team at that time. Um, but after being in corporate just for a few years, I was diagnosed with a very rare disease. Um, this tumor is a diffuse tumor called tenosynovial giant cell tumor, TGCT. And and and it's like seriously, it's so rare. It's like one in a million people get this. So I was like misdiagnosed, and then when I finally was diagnosed, they were just like, well, there's like no cure for this. Um, but we have a clinical trial that you can join. And there was like me and that, I'm telling you like 15 other people like with my disease on this, and it was in my elbow, and it was it is non-life threatening, thank goodness. However, for me, it was like arm-threatening because it was like you could there are people who like get amputated if the if they can't control it, and so for like seven years, I was like on and off of chemo, um getting surgeries to clean out my joint, to uh also having to do like physical therapy, and it just really took a toll on me. Um, where especially like chemo, like you feel tired, you you feel um like I was having a lot of memory loss, and um and it's just the whole thing was just like very like anxiety-producing, like I was afraid, like what if this doesn't work? And I was just like, I felt really like locked in um to my circumstance, and I was like, there's no way I could like get another job right now, and I can't even remember if I like sent that email this morning, you know. So um, so that that was difficult. Um so that really influenced like so after like seven years of that, like it finally was like dormant and and it was just like you know, waiting, like getting checked like every year, like is this thing growing or not? And then finally, like now, eight, like it's eight years later, like it's still dormant, thank goodness. Um and so, so leaving corporate was very scary. Um but this like having something like that and also working with breast cancer survivors early in my career, who are people who maybe got diagnosed in their 50s or 60s. Um and it was just like wow, like we don't know what's gonna happen tomorrow. Um, we don't know what's gonna prevent us maybe from following that dream or scratching that itch that we've had for years, you know? And at the time when I was really deciding to leave in corporate, it just took me a while to like finally like make the leap. But part of it was like, hey, you know, if I when I I would have given anything at the time when I was dealing with this tumor, like to just do something completely different. And I was like, so why not now? Like why I'm healthy now. I don't like it, I'm it's showing like it's this tumor is like calming down. It's um it's like allowing me to to make that leap and thinking back to people that I were helped at that um you know, breast cancer center, like that like they probably would have like encouraged me too, like just follow your dreams because we don't know what's gonna like happen.

SPEAKER_00:

It's true. It's true. We don't know what's gonna happen and how things are gonna unfold, and there's never a guarantee. And I think um, you know, I think one of the things that we get stuck into believing is that I think if we we think if it's practical, if it's traditional, then it's a guarantee, but it's not. We've seen this happen a thousand times with um reorganizations, with um, you know, organizations um shrinking their their their um number of employees, their their you know, outsourcing, like things change every single day. Um and I think that when we lean into possibilities that are out of the ordinary, sometimes our mind can tell us that it's not safe, um, it's it's not secure, it's not familiar, it's it's out of the ordinary, we can talk ourselves out of doing some pretty amazing things. And I know when we first chatted, I know one of the fears that came up for you was not only the fear that, um, like you said, that you know, you know, fearing leaving the the security and the comforts of corporate, which let me tell you, I mean, these jobs are very cushy, like it makes it very scary to leave when you're walking away because you literally have everything that the world told you you'd need in order to be provided for and supported and you're walking away from it. And that in itself is a massive fear to overcome. But I think the other fear also that I think almost stopped me dead in my tracks, and I've heard you mention is that fear of what everyone else is gonna think, or that fear of like the imposter syndrome kind of creeping in of who am I to do this work? Why don't you tell us a little bit about what that looked like?

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, yeah. I was had all those ideas, those thoughts going through my head of um, you know, fear of failure, of what will people think? People judging me. Like, you're gonna, oh, you think you're so great, you're gonna leave Corfit. Um, the rest of us are gonna like you know, stay here and have a nice like retirement, whatever. And you think you're so special, you're gonna like have this like successful career in in coaching and maybe your washcloth business. And like I yeah, and also like so. I was afraid of what people would think. Like, are you crazy? And I even talked to um some um students from my alma mater the other night, actually. And the same conversation came up like like what like what made you leave? Like, like you had like you had everything that we that we want, you know, and they're like 15, 15 years old, and I and I get it because at that time I probably would have said the same thing, like what what's wrong with you? Yeah, um, but to me, the pain of staying this, like staying the same, doing the same thing, not growing in a way that I felt was aligned with my soul was just too much. Like it just put at that for me personally, it put me, I was like, all right, I'm ready to like jump off that cliff.

SPEAKER_00:

Like, yeah, it does get hard.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, it is it's hard. And and I'm you know, I'm still like growing the business, I don't have everything figured out, and and that was a big and it was it took me a long time to just like it wasn't like oh, I got up one day, I'm like, you know, I'm just gonna quit. It took me like a few years to gather that courage, and I'm a very practical person, I value security, practicality, and so I was like, okay, I said to myself, what do I need to make myself feel secure? Um, and that was like, okay, I'm just gonna like work on like saving, saving money until I reach like X amount of money or like X deadline or whatever. I'm gonna get certification. So I so that imposter syndrome is not saying like, but who do you think you are? And it's like, oh, well, actually, I'm a trained coach, um, and I can coach people. Um so I really tried to like do all the things to like set me, set myself up for you know, success.

SPEAKER_00:

You mentioned, um, just I'm gonna backtrack just a little bit because you know, you talked about that how it got so uncomfortable and so hard to stick with the corporate job. And I think that's so important because I think that goes beyond what normal people because people will think, well, everyone's job is hard. No one would have to get paid to work if it wasn't like everybody has to do hard shit, like get over yourself, go to work, do the thing, right? But it's like it's a different kind of hard. Yes, we can all be challenged, we can do hard things, and but there there was an I I'm gonna actually before I even like give my perspective, can you describe because I have a clear picture of it. I I can feel it in my body right now when I think back to those moments of of how it felt trying to do the job that I knew I knew in every cell in my body I was not supposed to be doing, and I know exactly how it felt and I can describe it to a T, but I want to hear it from you before I like interject my how I per how I perceive it or how I remember it. What did that feel like for you? If you can put yourself back into one of those moments, what did it feel like in your heart and your mind and your body? What was going on? Oh, that's a great question.

SPEAKER_01:

I um would you know be at my computer and I'd feel the I'd suddenly just like get up like unconsciously just get up and just be like, oh my god, what am I doing? Like I feel like I need to run away.

SPEAKER_00:

Did you ever run to the bathroom to cry or like have a like a little patio or meltdown? Because I've done that.

SPEAKER_01:

I did. Yeah, or yeah, or yeah, like so I would, yeah, actually there were days that I was crying. Like I was just like, this is so hard. Like things are just so complicated in this organization. Like they're more complicated than they need to be here. There's like a lot of, I'm sorry to say this, but there are a lot of like narcissists in these big organizations and people just yelling at you. Like there was even a time at well, one of my last jobs where someone like got was like drunk at this event and like threw things at me. And like, I mean, it like it's a really um I so anyway, so in my body, like I just would like, yeah, I would just unconsciously just like get up and I'd be like, wait, what am I doing? I need to like get back to work. Um, and so it was this it was a sign of like burnout, like where you're just like, ah, I can't do this anymore, like you're crying, you're um, you know, just I didn't want to wake up in the morning, or I didn't want to, I shouldn't say I didn't want to wake up. I didn't want to get out of bed in the morning. I didn't feel like there was really much to look forward to except more of just like the same, the more like stupid problems and challenges that I didn't want to keep tackling. Yeah. Um, yeah, I just felt like, oh my god, like locked, like locked up. Like I felt like I had nowhere to go, but I wanted to flee.

SPEAKER_00:

Oh my god, I can feel that in my body right now. I know it's like I remember those warnings. I remember those warnings very, very well. My goodness. It was just like there's gotta be more. And I remember having those moments like there's gotta be more to life than this. Like it can't, this can't be it. This cannot be it. And I think that's partly like our soul knowing that we're meant to do bigger things, and and sometimes it just takes some time for that to really sink in. Um, and to to kind of, you know, especially when we're in an environment like that, it's so hard to get those creative ideas, those inspirations, those things, those hints that that lead us down the path that we're meant to go. So kudos to you for being able to um to move through that and actually find your way out of that and into something that you're more passionate about. And that actually makes the difference that you want to make in the world, which I think oftentimes is the thing that's missing for soul-led women and entrepreneurs is that we want our work to create an impact. And you said that you want to make a difference in people's lives. And sometimes when you're in a corporate world, that is a very hard, tangible result to achieve, you know, in your day-to-day. And I think that's for many of us the part I think that's missing. We are getting to the end of this interview, and it's been amazing. And I'm definitely gonna have you back because I think we can talk for hours around these things. But if you had the opportunity right now to speak to somebody who is sitting in her cubicle, she is hating her life, she's hating her job, she wants to get up and walk or run or cry in the bathroom, but she doesn't see what's out there for her. Like she doesn't see those reimagined possibilities, right? What do you have to say to her right now that's gonna make her move forward?

SPEAKER_01:

Well, I would just ask her to go back to what does she value? Like, what's really important to her? Um and what does she think that her purpose is in life? And just start from there. Like think back to when you were a kid and you had none of these burdens. Like, what what appealed to your soul? What did you like to do? And just start getting creative. And it's a whole process. Like, no, you know, no one's gonna like, yeah, like no one's gonna figure out like what their next career or job is gonna look like by just making like two journal entries, you know. Like, like, and and think about like what is it that you really need in your life, like, you know, financially, physically, but also emotionally. Um, you know, what like just what like what do you want? And don't, and and don't um like I feel like we're all trained to think very small, because that's a lot of times what we see, right? Like, like you know, like my parents, for example, like stayed in the same jobs like forever and had like good health insurance and like pensions and all of that, why would they ever give that up? And so if we keep following those patterns of thinking, um, we're gonna make the same choices. And if you could just kind of turn it on its head and just say, like, well, if I could have anything, like, what would that be? Yeah. Um and just just just let yourself just meditate, like journal, like just let just without any barriers. Don't give yourself um, don't talk yourself out of even just putting it on paper, what you want to do.

SPEAKER_00:

And it's not a commitment that you have to make to it. You just have to open up to the possibility, like you said, of reimagining your life with different in different circumstances, regardless, like, and knowing that you're gonna be okay no matter what, and just allowing yourself to kind of dabble in that and knowing that you know, nothing you put down, it's just between you and the paper. No one's gonna see it, no one's gonna judge you, right? It's just it's it's a it's an it's it's an exercise. In exploring, and nothing that comes out on that page is not anything that you need to commit to. It's just an exploration. And I think I can remember feeling so resistant to that exercise because, like, oh my God, if I put it down on paper, like, do I have to do it? No, you don't. Like, it's just, it's just a way to kind of get to know yourself and and and and what it is that you want to do. And and always remembering, too, that, and this is what I've always found with this work is the purpose unfolds. It's not, it's a remembering because it's always, I think, been in our heart and in our soul to do, but it's also a very gentle unfolding over time. Like you never get your purpose is dot, dot, dot, and you go with it and it never changes and it doesn't go through iterations and modifications and adjustments. Like, you know, it's one of those things where I think, you know, women listening to this episode, you know, don't just do this exercise once, do it multiple times. Like check in regularly because I think our purpose evolves over time. I really do. And I think the more we can step out of what we think is possible or normal or expected, or I think that's when we really open up to possibilities that we may not have even thought were on the radar.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah. And and I think like another thing that helped me was like before I left corporate, I just started putting myself in more positive spaces with people that I resonated with, like joining some groups, um, you know, even just doing this whole like certification thing, like being around people who just wanted to um like help others. And like once you start putting yourself in more positive spaces, you see what the possibilities are.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, because you're right, because oftentimes corporate is not those kinds of environments that that feed your mindset. If anything, they're depleting because, like you said, there's a lot of narcissists out there, and there's a lot of people throwing shit, having tantrums, saying stuff they're not supposed to be saying, and people are just you know, like it's just it just it's swept under the rug and and it becomes the normal part of the day-to-day. And it just, you know, putting yourself, like you said, in those spaces where you can, you know, cultivate that healthy mindset, find the support, find the possibility, like give yourself a space container where you can start to reimagine some of these possibilities that maybe your day-to-day doesn't give you permission to do. And I think that's really important. Um, lastly, we'll just tie it up at if people love you and I love you and I adore you, which is why I have you on the show. So, where can people find you? How do you want people to connect with you? Where do you hang out?

SPEAKER_01:

Sure. Um, well, my website is reimaginecoach.com. Um, so if you go there, you can see, you know, uh more about me, about what I what I offer. I'm gonna be offering some classes like in the new year that are about like, hey, visualizing your future and um and making a practical plan and into how to do that. Um so yeah, just find me on on my website and um I have to set up some more social media channels. Oh, but you could also go, you could also go on nufa no f a h dot com if you're interested in finding out more about my product and my social channels or listed.

SPEAKER_00:

I'm definitely heading up that website. Let me tell you. I'll leave all the I'll leave all the links in the show notes below. And definitely, definitely, Leah, as you like evolve and as you grow and as you start to to share some of these programs, do like, you know, connect, keep us, keep us connected. Um, we'll definitely have you back when you're ready to launch some of these programs. Because I think so many people need programs like that to really check in with themselves and reevaluate, well, what is it that I'm doing and what am I supposed to be doing? Because I do think that our fulfillment, you know, it goes so much deeper than how much we're paid at the end of the day. And it really becomes to come down to, you know, the work that we're doing and the impact that it makes. Like if I had to, I've I've said this a thousand times. If if I was driven by money, I would have stopped what I was doing a long time ago because it wasn't always easy, you know, there were some hard choices that needed to be made. And it's because there was something deeper driving, driving those decisions that went far greater than, you know, income, even though income potential is a thing, absolutely. Um, but like you said, it has to speak to what you value and what's important to you. So, Leah, thank you so much for being here today. I cannot wait to have you back. Um, for those of you listening, if you love this episode, please like, share, leave a review on iTunes or Apple, Spotify or wherever you're seeing this. Until next time, you guys, massive love.