I’ve always been drawn to spirituality. In high school, while my friends leaned toward fine arts and sciences, I gravitated toward religion and philosophy, always searching for meaning, purpose, and a deeper understanding of life.But somewhere along the way, as I shaped my values, I had absorbed some seriously flawed beliefs.
I saw the pursuit of money as a necessary evil and equated financial ambition with greed. Business, in my mind, belonged to those chasing wealth, and that didn’t feel like me at all.I couldn’t have been more wrong.Looking back, I cringe at how little I had understood about the creativity, connection, and self-actualization that are at the heart of entrepreneurship.
And like all of life’s best lessons, I didn’t learn this through theory. I learned it by diving in headfirst, stumbling through challenges, and experiencing it firsthand.Years ago, when I pivoted to running a business offering embodiment work, I quickly realized something uncomfortable: I couldn’t just be of service, I had to understand business, too.
No matter how much I resisted, the truth was clear. If I wanted to keep doing this work, I had to learn how to sustain it.Cue a storm of internal struggles.