Simran Attili realized that she was living a very surface-level life and running on empty fuel for a while, and that something had to really change. She let go of all the societal pressure and family obligations and started my self-discovery journey. This is her story, and she is RESILIENT A.F.
Buy the book: https://theglobalresilienceproject.com/books/
Be featured in RESILIENT A.F.: Skin Deep Stories: https://blairkaplan.kartra.com/page/tattoo
Be featured in RESILIENT A.F.: Stories of Resilience Vol. 3: https://blairkaplan.kartra.com/page/RAF26
About the Guest:
Simran Attili is a Podcast Host of the Enrich Podcast, where her mission is to inspire millions to become resilient, empowered and authentically themselves. Simran is passionate about personal growth and mental wellness, and dives deep into conversations on overcoming mental health challenges, building resilience and creating fulfilling lives. Through expert insights and practical advice on topics like wellness, confidence and self discovery, Simran guides her listeners to break through limiting beliefs, embrace their strengths and step into a life of purpose.
Links:
https://www.instagram.com/simranattili.co/
https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/enrich-podcast-by-simran-attili/id1537657138
https://open.spotify.com/show/0jFVkuIO7zbwg3wv9XxWEX
⚠️ Content Note: Some episodes may contain themes that could be distressing. Please take care of yourself while listening, and don’t hesitate to seek support from a mental health professional if needed.
About the Hosts:
Blair Kaplan Venables is a British Columbia-based grief and resilience expert and coach, motivational speaker and the Founder of The Global Resilience Project. Her expertise has been featured on media platforms like Forbes, TEDx, CBC Radio, Entrepreneur, and Thrive Global. She is named the Top Grief and Resilience Expert of the Year 2024 by IAOTP. USA Today listed Blair as one of the top 10 conscious female leaders to watch and she empowers others to be resilient from stages around the world. 'MyStory,’ which is a television show available on Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV+ and Google Play, showcases Blair's life story. She is the host of the Radical Resilience podcast and specializes in helping people strengthen their resilience muscle using scientifically proven methods and guides grieving high performers with her Navigating Grief Framework. The Global Resilience Project’s award-winning book series are international bestsellers, and her fourth book, RESILIENT A.F.: Stories of Resilience Vol 2, will be published in January 2025. In her free time, you can find Blair writing, in nature, travelling the world and helping people to strengthen their resilience muscles.
Links:
https://theglobalresilienceproject.com
https://www.linkedin.com/in/blairdkaplan
https://www.facebook.com/blair.kaplan
https://www.facebook.com/BlairKaplanCommunications
https://www.instagram.com/globalresiliencecommunity
https://www.instagram.com/blairfromblairland/
https://www.facebook.com/globalresiliencecommunity
https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-global-resilience-project
Alana Kaplan is a compassionate mental health professional based in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. She works in the mental health field, and is a co-host of the Resilient A.F. podcast. Fueled by advocacy, Alana is known for standing up and speaking out for others. Passionate about de-stigmatizing and normalizing mental health, Alana brings her experience to The Global Resilience Project’s team, navigating the role one’s mental health plays in telling their story.
Engaging in self-care and growth keeps her going, and her love for reading, travel, and personal relationships helps foster that. When she’s not working, Alana can often be found on walks, working on a crossword puzzle, or playing with any animal she sees.
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Transcript
Were few relationships. I was not able to set clear
Speaker:expectations because, a, you might have x amount of years of friendship,
Speaker:and you're pouring into each other. There's so much energy, time, love
Speaker:invested into each other. But then you also know sometimes people not be
Speaker:in alignment with your life, and that's okay. You know, just kind of
Speaker:realizing that, that was also an moment. And I remember reading that book that
Speaker:year and applying those things, applying those concepts.
Speaker:And when I when I did become very serious about,
Speaker:you know, setting boundaries, I did lose some relationships, and it was
Speaker:really sad because doesn't matter what
Speaker:you do. Sometimes you, like you said, let them be. Right?
Speaker:It's okay for people to see you for what they wanna see you, but not
Speaker:for who you are, and that's okay. You know? It's totally
Speaker:okay to choose yourself, to say, no.
Speaker:This does not serve me, and we can meet here. But if it doesn't work
Speaker:out, it's fine. We're all adults. Welcome
Speaker:back to another episode of Resilient AF with Blair and
Speaker:Alana. But today, Alana is not here. But I am here for
Speaker:the both of us, and I am here with Simran. I,
Speaker:it's funny. We just had this conversation. I wasn't recording. And I I was like,
Speaker:how do you say your last name? And I guess, and it wasn't she's like,
Speaker:you can call me that, but it's actually this. And I literally just this we
Speaker:did this twice in a row, and I was like, just now, I'm like, okay.
Speaker:In my head, Adelie. Right? Correct. Yes. And you
Speaker:can also say Adelie. We're human, so we get it. Simra and
Speaker:Attili. She's amazing. I was actually a guest on our podcast,
Speaker:and she's the host of the Enrich podcast where her mission is to
Speaker:inspire millions to become resilient, empowered, and authentically
Speaker:themselves. And guess what? We are huge fans of that here
Speaker:in the community. She is a passionate human.
Speaker:She's very passionate about personal growth, mental wellness, and
Speaker:dives deep into conversations and overcoming mental health challenges,
Speaker:building resilience, creating fulfilling lives.
Speaker:Through expert insights and practical advice on topics like wellness,
Speaker:confidence, and self discovery, she guides her listeners to
Speaker:break through limiting beliefs, embrace their strengths, and step into life's
Speaker:purpose. And she know this all too well because she went
Speaker:on a journey of her own. So before we dive in, I just wanna welcome
Speaker:Simran. Hi. Hi, Blair. Thank you for having me here.
Speaker:It's an honor. I love it. She's a fellow Canadian. We
Speaker:both live on the Left Coast, West Coast. So it's
Speaker:it's, and I actually recorded your episode in person. So I've actually
Speaker:met you, which is Yes. Very exciting because I don't
Speaker:actually, like, I sometimes I know guests. I know them ahead of time and
Speaker:invite them on, but you and I had a really different path. And the fact
Speaker:that we're, you know, with there's so much overlap in the work that we do.
Speaker:I think it's really beautiful that we've, you know, been able to cocreate and
Speaker:collaborate and having your story in resilient AF
Speaker:stories of resilience volume two is huge, putting you up on a billboard celebrating
Speaker:you and celebrating your journey of letting
Speaker:go of the pressures of society and family obligations to
Speaker:begin your journey of self discovery. And I'd I'd love for you to share your
Speaker:story. Yeah. Thank you. First of all, I really wanna thank you
Speaker:for creating this platform for people like myself and sharing your
Speaker:stories. And what you're doing in the world, it's it's amazing.
Speaker:So I'm always rooting for you. So thank you so much, Blair.
Speaker:And your story is inspiring. We've actually met twice now in person. The first time
Speaker:was at the Pursuit three sixty five event. Right. We've met twice in person. I
Speaker:forgot. And my first time inspired. Yeah. That's a
Speaker:you know what? And so Shelley Shelley, Lynn
Speaker:Hughes, who is, like, the publisher of a book, pursuit pursuit three sixty five,
Speaker:she put on this launch event last year Right. March
Speaker:when right when, my last book came out, and that's where I was speaking and
Speaker:I met you. And it's interest it's it's fun because we were all in New
Speaker:York together. Yeah. That is amazing. No. It's cool. It's
Speaker:cool. I love it. That is. Yeah. Thank you
Speaker:for asking me, and thank you for bringing me on here.
Speaker:My journey really began in:Speaker:my journey began in:Speaker:I was asleep before that. It was a spiritual awakening that happened. It's
Speaker:like my eyes opened up. And the way I was really going with
Speaker:life, I knew this was not it. I
Speaker:was feeling anxiety all the time. I was having
Speaker:breakdowns at work, which was not normal, and,
Speaker:there was just a lot of overwhelm in my life. And I
Speaker:is pivotal moment. That's why:Speaker:pivotal year of my life because I could
Speaker:feel some uneasiness in my body, but I just
Speaker:didn't know how to verbalize it or really
Speaker:speak about it yet. And I don't remember. I've
Speaker:always found comfort and
Speaker:friendship with my books because I feel like I really connect with books. Like, I
Speaker:felt very different when I would try to be vulnerable, and maybe people were not
Speaker:mentally there yet, and that's okay. That's their own path and journey. But I felt
Speaker:like I wanted to open up, but I wasn't really finding a safe place.
Speaker:So I would put on my mask and be the happy simmering that everyone
Speaker:expected me to be and just showing up at places. I couldn't say
Speaker:no because a lot of people expected me to always be there, whether it's
Speaker:friendships, work, family stuff, and a lot of things
Speaker:were going on in my household. I would say,
Speaker:like, my my parents' relationship is very,
Speaker:I would say, different. It's it's it's
Speaker:something it's, I'm trying to understand it. Like, my dad has
Speaker:been away almost my whole life working. Work has been a priority for him,
Speaker:but he's all always been such a great person, a mentor to
Speaker:me. And so a lot of stuff that my mom was going through through
Speaker:emotionally and then my dad separately and then my siblings,
Speaker:it was really weighing down on me, and I didn't have a place to go
Speaker:to and express myself. So I was always wearing a mask, and I
Speaker:was always like, I'll be the strong person. So I
Speaker:remember this one, and this happened to me a lot few times in
Speaker:2018 where, I was not okay, but
Speaker:I pretended to be okay. But then, you know, when universe
Speaker:is nudging you, you're not listening, it just forces
Speaker:you to just take your mask off, and that's what happened. It's like someone just
Speaker:turned the tap on, and I was just bawling. I remember I was having a
Speaker:panic attack this one night, and I was about to leave for, my friend's
Speaker:birthday party. And I still went. This is a crazy part. I just pretended like
Speaker:it's okay. Half an hour or forty
Speaker:minutes before, I had full on makeup, and I was
Speaker:already dressed up. And, I remember,
Speaker:just I was just on my bathroom floor
Speaker:crying because I just didn't know what was wrong with me. I was breathing
Speaker:very loudly. I just didn't know what was happening. I couldn't express.
Speaker:And, and then I also got into an argument with one of my family
Speaker:members. It was just a lot happening. And I remember it was cold. It was,
Speaker:I think, late November, early December, and I walked out of my house
Speaker:with no jacket on. That's how hot I felt. That's how
Speaker:overwhelmed I was. And I remember calling my boyfriend, now my husband,
Speaker:and he's been super supportive. And I was in I told him what was happening,
Speaker:and he's asking me, are you sure you wanna go? And I'm like, yeah. Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah. I'm totally fine. I just need twenty minutes to myself. Just be there
Speaker:with me. He's been very emotionally supportive, so I find very a lot of
Speaker:safe place with him. So long story
Speaker:short, I show up to this birthday party,
Speaker:and I am greeting everyone. I'm, like, giggling. I just
Speaker:forgot about what happened. At night, I
Speaker:felt so inauthentic. And there was, like,
Speaker:this voice back on my head that kept coming up. Who are you? What are
Speaker:you doing? Why are you living like this? And
Speaker:and and it also reminded me of a point of my life
Speaker:earlier that year where I did not wanna be here. I
Speaker:felt like I wanted to run away. I had so much grief. There was
Speaker:so much going on. I didn't have a safe place yet to vent
Speaker:to. So, I know I share about this part in the
Speaker:Brazilian AF book, but, I just I I
Speaker:remember walking down my town townhouse. Me and my mom were living together at that
Speaker:time, and I just looked around and I was just like you can
Speaker:call it dramatic now, but it felt like, you know, this is gonna be my
Speaker:last time. Like, it's okay. I'm just gonna see how it is. I don't know
Speaker:how I'm gonna do this. Like, I'm this this is very heavy for
Speaker:me. My shoulders are very like, it would get tense. I felt like I was
Speaker:carrying the weight of the world and my family. And,
Speaker:especially if you're masking, you know, how heavy you can get. So,
Speaker:and then I looked at my mom, and my mom wasn't
Speaker:doing well. And, sorry, it makes me emotional, but
Speaker:and I just had this voice in my head, the how can I do
Speaker:this to my mom, you know, when she needs me?
Speaker:I apologize. But
Speaker:that was a pivotal moment in my life where, again,
Speaker:I had to think about someone else. But that voice
Speaker:came in my head, and I started asking a lot of questions. Who's gonna be
Speaker:there for her? Who's gonna take care of her? And and then those
Speaker:questions came back to me, and this was, like, my conversation
Speaker:happening with the universe, god, source, you wanna call it. Just like
Speaker:laying in bed that night and having a conversation with myself
Speaker:about but are you taking care of yourself?
Speaker:You have to be that person who's also pouring into yourself, and that's
Speaker:why it's getting heavy for you. And that is where my journey
Speaker:really began of just letting be, and I'm still work in
Speaker:progress. I'm still working through it. But my intention has
Speaker:been just to allow people be to themselves and be
Speaker:vulnerable and creating that safe space. So that's where really
Speaker:my journey really began. Thank you for sharing.
Speaker:Thank you. It's it's it's hard when you have this,
Speaker:like, unraveling, undoing of the, you know,
Speaker:the the what we think we need to do and be because we're
Speaker:told and, you know, the shattering.
Speaker:Mhmm. And the rebuilding is the rest of our lives.
Speaker:Right? And thank you for sharing all of that. And I
Speaker:think how beautiful that you had that experience about wondering who's gonna take care of
Speaker:your mom or what's gonna happen to your mom and then actually having that self
Speaker:compassion for you. Because if we can't take care of
Speaker:ourselves, we can't take care of others.
Speaker:Yes. Yes. And there is actually I actually wanna share this because I
Speaker:found this analogy recently, and it fits so perfectly what we're
Speaker:talking about here. And this is something to do with relationships, like maybe your
Speaker:romantic partner, but this can be applied within our life as well about
Speaker:you know, let's say there you're you're you're living in a house,
Speaker:and you have all your cabinets empty.
Speaker:Mhmm. Right? And then all your doors are empty. And
Speaker:someone and you're hungry. You're starving. And someone shows up at your
Speaker:doorstep. It's a it's a guy, and another
Speaker:person shows up at your doorstep with pea box of pizza. And you open the
Speaker:door and you're like, oh my god. Thank you so much. And the person goes,
Speaker:well, I'm only gonna let you have this box of pizza if you let me
Speaker:in your house, this stranger. And now because you're desperate,
Speaker:you're you're you're empty, you're you might think, yeah. Sure. I'll take
Speaker:anything. But then look at the other side. If, let's say, your
Speaker:cabinets are full of food, it's fully stocked, your drawers are
Speaker:fully stocked, and someone shows up at your doorstep with a box
Speaker:of pizza, and they ask you, hey. Would you like some pizza? You might be
Speaker:like, yeah. I'm okay with that. But then they tell you, hey. This is the
Speaker:one of the ways you can have this box of pizza is, like, if you
Speaker:let me in. But because you're full in that in
Speaker:that moment, you might say, no. I'm okay. Thank you. So I
Speaker:think this can be applied in your everyday life as well. If
Speaker:you're pouring into yourself, you know, you're not gonna allow
Speaker:any disrespect or things that are not in alignment with you in
Speaker:your life. So it just fits so perfectly, and I I'm really
Speaker:trying to remember every time I feel like I shouldn't choose myself or society
Speaker:tells me I shouldn't do this. It's like, what do I really want? And
Speaker:that is something that I found that has been working great for me, and
Speaker:I'm okay with sometimes being, you know, disappointing others
Speaker:and checking in with with myself. Am I giving my all?
Speaker:Yes. I am. Are are these expectations realistic? Or
Speaker:are these ex expectations unrealistic? So, like, those
Speaker:conversations, like, it has been so clear in my head and my self
Speaker:talk. So yeah. Absolutely. Thank you for bringing that
Speaker:up. Have you read Mel Robbins' new book, Let
Speaker:Them? The Let Them Theory? But I've been hearing about it. I love Mel Robbins.
Speaker:This is this is totally the jam. It's all about, like, let them Really? Let
Speaker:me and that, like, you are in control of you and nothing else.
Speaker:Right. It's kind of one of those things, like I mean, I've been working on
Speaker:this with my healing, but, like, my boundaries
Speaker:are very clear to me where before they weren't. Mhmm. And
Speaker:I say yes or no to things that will serve me. And
Speaker:if it upsets or disappoints others,
Speaker:let them. Yes. Right? And,
Speaker:like, it's so interesting because I think probably your life before
Speaker:/:Speaker:only a completely different person, but probably the the people in your
Speaker:life like, obviously, family's different, but, like, people in your life have changed.
Speaker:So true. I I was actually really struggling with
Speaker:setting boundaries until a few years ago. And when I got
Speaker:really real with setting boundaries, there's actually a book that I read, and
Speaker:I was also part of this book club called, this
Speaker:book called set boundaries, be free, something like
Speaker:that by Nedra. I'm forgetting her last name. But it's such an amazing
Speaker:book. And I remember reading it came to me at the perfect
Speaker:time of my life that I needed it to be because I was still struggling
Speaker:because I knew something was off, and there were a few relationships I was not
Speaker:able to set clear expectations because, a, you
Speaker:might have x amount of years of friendship and you're pouring into each
Speaker:other. There's so much energy, time, love invested into each other. But
Speaker:then you also know sometimes people not be in alignment with your life, and that's
Speaker:okay. You know, just kind of realizing that that was also an
Speaker:moment. And I remember reading that book that year and applying those
Speaker:things, applying those concepts. And when I when
Speaker:I did become very serious about, you know, setting boundaries, I
Speaker:did lose some relationships, and it was really sad because
Speaker:doesn't matter what you do. Sometimes you like you said,
Speaker:let them be. Right? It's okay for people to see you
Speaker:for what they wanna see you, but not for who you are, and that's okay.
Speaker:You know? It's totally okay to choose yourself,
Speaker:to say, no. This does not serve me, and we can meet here. But
Speaker:if it doesn't work out, it's fine. We're all adults. And
Speaker:relationships change. Right? Like, Mel Robbins
Speaker:actually talks about this in her book. I'm like, I'm I'm listening to it because
Speaker:it's nice because it's like she's talking to me. Yeah. Yeah. And I'm a faster
Speaker:reader, and I retain more when I hear books than I read books. But she
Speaker:talks about relationships in it. And, you know, you think about your best friends when
Speaker:you're a kid in school. Right? You're all in the same classes. You're together all
Speaker:the time, same birthday parties, maybe extracurriculars. Yeah. So as an
Speaker:adult, it's completely different because everyone's going through different things.
Speaker:And so Mhmm. Like, for example, I
Speaker:I'm sober now. Right? So I'm six years not now. Well, I mean,
Speaker:I now. But, like, six for six years, I'm sober. And so
Speaker:when that happened, things changed.
Speaker:The way my friends certain friends interacted with me changed.
Speaker:My relationship with certain people changed because I was no
Speaker:longer the way I once was. And so
Speaker:some relationships I realized, hey. I actually got together with them to
Speaker:drink and go out. And I stopped
Speaker:getting invited. Or some friends of mine, like, if I
Speaker:were to stay with them, like, they would stay up they would their life was
Speaker:different. They'd they'd stay up later and, you know, I'm like, I like to
Speaker:go to bed early. And so I would instead of staying with them, I'd stay
Speaker:somewhere else or I'd get a hotel or whatever. And, you know, just having people
Speaker:who've known me forever in my mid thirties readjust to how I show
Speaker:up. And it doesn't mean that I don't love them or they don't love me,
Speaker:but our relationship has changed. And, like, even
Speaker:recently, like, I've had a situation where, like, I've had a
Speaker:few good friends go through things. Mhmm. And I try
Speaker:to show up as much as I can for them. And maybe they're not as
Speaker:responsive because they have responsibilities like children and moving and things are
Speaker:changing and, you know, the home dynamic. Mhmm. I'm at a place
Speaker:where it's not, you know, like, I'm not
Speaker:upset because I know they're I understand that
Speaker:they're in a different season than me. Right.
Speaker:Married to. And even though I might be following up with this person, maybe it's
Speaker:text messages every few days or calling them, and
Speaker:that's maybe what they need Mhmm. To to be
Speaker:reminded of that. Right? And so it's really, really
Speaker:interesting, and I I'm not really too sure your age. You're very mature.
Speaker:And, just in case you all think I'm in my twenties, I'm not. I'm almost
Speaker:40. But, like, as I've gotten older, like, it's interesting.
Speaker:So I was talking to my husband about how I really miss my friends because
Speaker:I'm in Kamloops. Yeah. And we moved here to be close to my mother-in-law. This
Speaker:is where he grew up. So I'm in I'm on the stomping grounds, and I've
Speaker:made friends. But they're not my best friends I've had since grade 10 or
Speaker:kindergarten that I still have, that I'm still close with. And I'm
Speaker:close with their kids, but they're not in Kamloops. And I was trying to explain
Speaker:how much I miss being with them. Yeah. And he's like, you can make new
Speaker:friends. I'm like, yes. I can, and I have friends. That's not the point.
Speaker:Like, there's so many different types of friends, and some of my friends are
Speaker:chosen family. Yes. Yes. Absolutely.
Speaker:Yeah. And I said, and I don't need to have thousands
Speaker:and I know lots of people, people, but I don't need to have thousands of
Speaker:friends. I want Absolutely. My friends, and I want quality
Speaker:deep relationships. Yes. Yes. Right?
Speaker:And so it's so interesting because as we get older and, like,
Speaker:in my life, I've lost parents. And, like, my family is shrinking.
Speaker:So those friends, those chosen family, like, they the relationships become even
Speaker:more valuable to me. Mhmm. I so agree
Speaker:with you. And I'm 30 years old,
Speaker:and things have been changing for me. And you
Speaker:are still so young. 40 is still so young.
Speaker:Like, I am getting excited to get older, by the way. Like, I listen. I'm
Speaker:ready. I'm ready. Hello, forties. I'm August. I love it.
Speaker:Yeah. I absolutely love it. I remember when I turned 25, I
Speaker:was like, oh my god. What's happening? You're getting old. But, no, I love it.
Speaker:I love being a 30 year old woman. I love it.
Speaker:Absolutely. I feel like, everything that you're saying, I
Speaker:can so resonate with you on everything. There's so many changes happening
Speaker:in my life in the back end with relationships, with how I wanna live,
Speaker:with how I wanna show up. And even what you said about, you
Speaker:know, being distanced shouldn't change anything when your
Speaker:relationships are so close knit. And I found that. I found that
Speaker:some relationships in my life required me to be there all the
Speaker:time twenty four seven when I don't think like that because
Speaker:for me, checking in is very important. Yes. But it
Speaker:can be done over text, a phone call. You know, we understand. We
Speaker:all have life. Life is always life ing. Right? Yeah. And I think just
Speaker:kinda communicating that, hey. I absolutely
Speaker:would love to see you and making time. And I think people in in my
Speaker:group at least or in my circle or even in my age group, I
Speaker:found that it was very hard for them to think that, oh, you have to
Speaker:schedule to meet now. You know, You know, the mindset didn't really change, and
Speaker:I found that. Yes. It was like, hey. You know what?
Speaker:I have this going on, and we're all busy. I'm not the only busy person.
Speaker:We're all busy. But if you wanna make up time for your friends, for your
Speaker:family, for your partner, for your work, for all these amazing
Speaker:projects that we're doing, we have to find a system that works for all of
Speaker:us and meet in the middle, which is using your calendar. It's very simple.
Speaker:And I think some people have a hard time accepting that. But another thing I
Speaker:found, I actually reconnected with one of my friends seven years seven,
Speaker:eight years later, and we were really good friends years
Speaker:ago. And and we are still now, and we barely see each other, but the
Speaker:love is still the same. And I I think that is what healthy
Speaker:relationship is about. Yeah. And we forget that. So
Speaker:I love that you brought that up because that's so close to my heart.
Speaker:Some relationships, have changed, but I'm okay with it
Speaker:because these relationships now I have in my life, they are
Speaker:aligned with the values and the things I wanna do in the world
Speaker:and how we wanna show up for each other. So it's very much in alignment.
Speaker:And they changed because you changed the relationship with
Speaker:yourself because it starts with yourself. Yes. And,
Speaker:you know, it's about you taking accountability Mhmm. For your
Speaker:life. Yes. Like, what a
Speaker:gift. What a gift. You're only 30. Like, people
Speaker:sometimes don't realize this till their fifties or ever. Like, I
Speaker:you know, like, I have people well, like, my mom, for example. Like,
Speaker:imagine if she took, like, if she took certain things into the matters of her
Speaker:own hands, things some things, like, you know, like, stuff I'm not gonna bring up
Speaker:could have been different. And, like, I just think about, like, our parents'
Speaker:generation. Mhmm. Like Mhmm. What
Speaker:if? You know, you're so right. I feel
Speaker:like and, you know, this is how I came in terms and start accepting
Speaker:the reality for what this is because this used to really bug me in my
Speaker:early twenties, and I used to kinda, like, have, like, these arguments with my mom.
Speaker:I was like, why can't you stand up for yourself? Why can't you speak up
Speaker:for yourself? And all that stuff. And and then I really
Speaker:when I started to really work on my relationship with my parents, and it's still
Speaker:work in progress, or with anyone around me, and I
Speaker:just realized maybe they didn't have the capacity. They didn't have the
Speaker:time. They were so much in survival. They didn't have the tools. They don't have
Speaker:the tool. Yeah. Yeah. Our pair like like, yes.
Speaker:It's it's it's a I think it's a generation thing. Like, we are
Speaker:gifted with access technology, the conversation around
Speaker:mental health being there. You know, I look at my parents'
Speaker:generation. Like, my dad lived with addiction and, like Mhmm. I was the first
Speaker:one who took him to a meeting. And Wow. What we know now
Speaker:about addiction is is not what we knew about in the eighties and the nineties.
Speaker:Right? And divorce and all this stuff in this the and mental
Speaker:health support and, like, medication. Like, I'm pro
Speaker:medication. Like, I'm very medicated. SSRIs, ADHD,
Speaker:progesterone, all the things. But, like, I'm balanced out where, like,
Speaker:before I was very low. Like and I look at my
Speaker:mom, for example. My mom had so much trauma. Her husband
Speaker:left her with two young kids, and she it was it was very traumatic, and
Speaker:there was lots of trauma associated with it.
Speaker:And she didn't get the mental health support that she needed because it wasn't, like,
Speaker:a part of the conversation. Right. Very
Speaker:true. And it just comes down to you're the you're breaking the
Speaker:cycle. Right? You're breaking the cycle. We are breaking the cycle. Yes. I love
Speaker:that. I can't wait to see, like, my friends' kids.
Speaker:Like, you know, some of them are, like, I think, like, 10.
Speaker:Get they're getting older, but I can't wait to see, like, this next generation of
Speaker:kids Yes. Grow up in a in a in a society where
Speaker:it's just as normal to talk about the weather as it as it is your
Speaker:mental health. Mhmm. It's normal to ask for apple juice as it is for, like,
Speaker:appointment for the psychologist. Right? And, like Yeah. What a what a
Speaker:gift. Yeah. And they can absolutely say no
Speaker:without hesitation. And I feel like I'm in the middle where I'm, like, I'm still,
Speaker:like, considering the feelings, and I'm trying to really figure out where I'm, like, I'm
Speaker:not being mean by saying no. Right? But I'm still getting there. But, oh, I
Speaker:love the next generation thinking, like, nope. This doesn't serve me. I don't want that.
Speaker:And I'm like, I love this. Yeah. It's amazing. Okay. So
Speaker:as we wrap up Mhmm. I love that you're entering a new
Speaker:decade too. Like, you you got a long you got a long road
Speaker:of happiness ahead of you. Like, I'm just so like, I love when I see
Speaker:people like, when I was in my thirties
Speaker:Mhmm. I was just having a time. Like, the trauma
Speaker:was being pushed down. Like, there was no, like, there was no self
Speaker:awareness. Right? And, like, it's such a gift that you have this. It's like you
Speaker:get the gift of time. And,
Speaker:our listeners, they range from all different ages and backgrounds
Speaker:and places. But from what you know now in your
Speaker:journey, what advice do you have for someone who's
Speaker:maybe going through an awakening or a self discovery or realizing they're not
Speaker:living the life that they want to be living? Mhmm.
Speaker:That's a great question. I just want every
Speaker:single person to know it's never too late to start
Speaker:the healing and work on yourself, accept your relationship,
Speaker:and it's okay to take small, consistent steps.
Speaker:I'm still work in progress. I'm always gonna be working on myself, so it's
Speaker:never too late. And I I just
Speaker:want every single person to know that there is a community out there. There's a
Speaker:community that Blair is building. We have a community. We're collectively
Speaker:working on this. We wanna make sure that we are
Speaker:creating a safe space for everyone. So there's a person out there who's
Speaker:willing to listen. There's so many tools out there. So it's just a matter of
Speaker:changing the perception of, yes, there is help available
Speaker:everywhere. You just have to look in the right direction. And once
Speaker:you keep that as your intention, you will find it.
Speaker:You'll find your community. You'll find your people. You and it's you just have to
Speaker:take your mask off slowly, step by step. So
Speaker:that would be something I wanna leave with today. And if this conversation
Speaker:is, like, piquing your curiosity, listen to her
Speaker:podcast. The link is in the show notes. Thank you, Blair.
Speaker:I love it. That. That was amazing advice. So take your mask
Speaker:off. You can peel it off slowly or rip it off like a Band
Speaker:Aid. Yes. Whatever. Do what you feel like
Speaker:doing. Yeah. I love that. Ugh. You're so you're
Speaker:so special and amazing, and I'm so lucky to have you in my life. And,
Speaker:thank you for doing the work that you're doing and for being a guest on
Speaker:our podcast. Thank you, Blair. Likewise. Thank
Speaker:you. Very grateful for being presented with this opportunity, and I
Speaker:can't wait to see you in New York next week. I'm so excited. So good.
Speaker:And to everyone out there listening, thank
Speaker:you. Thank you for spending some time with us, letting us
Speaker:empower you, help you strengthen your resilience muscle. You know, it's
Speaker:okay to not be okay. Like, you will get through it. Just keep putting
Speaker:one foot in front of the other. Know that you're not alone.
Speaker:We are here with you. We are that lighthouse in the storm.
Speaker:And a little reminder that you are
Speaker:resilient AF.