The Elevate Media Podcast

Sculpting Your Destiny Through Radical Accountability

Chris Anderson Episode 457

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Chris sits down with Kayla Logue, bestselling author and founder of Move Into Words, who shares her transformative journey from following society's expectations to creating a purpose-driven life defined on her own terms.

• Walking away from a traditional path during the pandemic with just $900 to start fresh
• Discovering journaling as a transformative daily practice that provides mental clarity
• Implementing radical self-accountability by focusing only on what you can control
• Creating Operation One Million Journals to help others find purpose and clarity
• Building confidence through consistent physical and mental health practices
• Redefining success beyond external validation to focus on personal fulfillment
• Finding freedom through entrepreneurship and controlling your own time
• Avoiding comparison traps that derail your progress and satisfaction
• Celebrating small victories along the journey instead of fixating on big goals
• Developing resilience by doing difficult things when you don't feel like it

Connect with Kayla at KaylaLogue.com for resources, coaching opportunities, and information about her nonprofit work.


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This episode is NOT sponsored. Some product links are affiliate links, meaning we'll receive a small commission if you buy something.

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Speaker 1:

Welcome to the Elevate Media Podcast with your host, chris Anderson. In this show, chris and his guests will share their knowledge and experience on how to go from zero to successful entrepreneur. They have built their businesses from scratch and are now ready to give back to those who are just starting. Let's get ready to learn, grow and elevate our businesses. And now your host, chris Anderson.

Speaker 2:

Welcome back to another recording of the Elevate Media Podcast. I'm your host, chris Anderson, super excited to dive into today's episode talking about how to build and sculpt your own destiny right. Sounds like an Indiana Jones movie start, but no, we're super excited to dive in this topic. We brought on an expert. We're going to get into what really means to take ownership of your life, transform those pains that you have into purpose and define success on your own terms. And we're doing it by having someone on who's done that and walks the talk every day. Kayla Logue is a bestselling author, keynote speaker and founder of Move Into Words. It's been recognized as one of Charlotte's top 30 under 30 future leaders and creator of the National Operation One Million Journals Initiative. She is empowering people to redefine success through radical accountability, faith and purpose. Kayla, welcome to the Elevate Media podcast today.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, thank you so much for having me. I'm happy to be here.

Speaker 2:

Absolutely Super excited to have you guys. This could be a rough one, so we've been having to do multiple takes, had to restart stuff. I'm full of transparency because it's been a rough one for me this morning, not counting Kayla's part on mine, just with tongue twisted. Yeah. So this will be a fun episode, I'm sure, but, yeah, super excited. Talking about building, sculpting your own destiny. I love that Because I think we have so much control in our future with the choices we make. It's not always about our environment. So for you, kayla, I'm going to dive right into it. What was that picture-perfect life that you wanted, that you didn't have, and what sparked your shift into creating that life?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I mean, I think it's interesting because I kind of say that we have blinders on until we actually just choose to take them off. And for me, it started as I was going through the motions, really checking off the boxes of society, as I call it going to college, getting married, having a house, having a job. And then I did all that and then I was like, wait, what am I even doing? Because we live that life and then we die. There's no excitement to it unless you're willing to take the step back and reflect and realize okay, what do I want, why do I want it, what purpose am I working to fulfill? And, ultimately, what does that really mean for me? You know, taking real responsibility for you know what I did truly want and you know there was, I mean, so many things.

Speaker 3:

It's been over four years now and it's crazy, looking back, because I feel like I've lived 1000 lives in between. You know that time when I you know I was married, I had a job and COVID hit and then I completely just left, started over $900. And I had no direction obviously global pandemic, and I was like I don't know what I'm doing with my life. But I'll figure it out so flash forward to present day. In that time, I did a lot of deep work. It wasn't just all these things happening writing a bestselling book and having a lot of experience and a lot of success in real estate development.

Speaker 3:

Now being a multi-unit franchise, owner of a Pilates studio and then also starting a nonprofit None of that happens just out of the blue right. It's a lot of work, but it's also very purposeful work. What's really cool about? From where I was and just going through, checking off those boxes and thinking that it had to be that surface level stuff is now everything that I do every single day. I wake up, I'm working my ass off, but at the same time, those boxes are ones that have been created and defined by myself, and, ultimately, where I find purpose is being the best version of myself, so I can show up and be the best version for others. And everything that I do and the experience that I have is really creating an environment and creating a lifestyle that can allow other people to be the best version for themselves. And that's where I find the deepest purpose is being able to, you know, be the best me, for other people to show up and be the best version themselves too.

Speaker 2:

Yeah. So how did that shift look? Like I obviously went through like COVID, other things, and how did you start building that kind of muscle of like, hey, I've got to take ownership to be the best version of myself for others. How did that kind of process kind of go?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I mean I was really confused. I mean, clearly, you know, when you just start over and you're like I don't know what I'm doing, but I know this isn't it, but I don't really know what it is. And you know, for me physical activity has always been a huge thing. That has been a stress reliever it's. It's definitely been my sanity for years. I mean, I've been an athlete my whole life. I could swim and I could walk and.

Speaker 3:

I played sports all through college, so you know that physical activity is something I really turned to. But I played softball. I never really ran long distance, but in COVID I decided to just become like a marathon runner. I was running miles and miles a day but I realized I was not processing my thoughts. I wasn't really, you know, I was just running on repeat and they were just repeating my mind on these long runs I was doing. So.

Speaker 3:

That's when I picked up the habit of journaling and for me it truly has been life changing. I say you know, where it started was when I was able to start actually truly processing things on the pages and it really kind of became my lifeline for a while Blank page pen. And that's where I started to really define clarity, really be able to set those goals, but not only to set the goals. I've always been good at having those goals, but I became clear on them. I became clear on that deep purpose and I started writing a lot and I was a journalism major, so I always loved writing. I always have been able to write, you know, long papers really well. So kind of the combination of getting really clear with where I wanted to go and through my journey, and really kind of manifesting everything on a piece of paper, through multiple pages of a journal, is what, even kind of like, led me to that initial writing my book phase too.

Speaker 2:

That's awesome. So with journaling, if someone's trying to get into it and they they look at a blank piece of paper to like I have no clue, I'm, I'm in, maybe I can start with the date how do they get into journaling to be able to kind of you know mind, um, get that stuff out of their mind, out of you know, out of their heart what they're feeling, to kind of start processing and guiding through like hey, okay, these are the next steps that I need to be taking daily. That gets me to where I want to be.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I mean there's a lot of different approaches and I think it's different for everybody. I think the most important piece is doing it intentionally. It has to start with that. It's kind of the same thing I use the reference of I can go to the gym and I can just stand there and get nothing out of it. It's the same thing as with journaling. You know, if you're just writing stuff down, to write something down and you're not actually getting anything out of it, you know we're really doing it intentionally, like you're. Yeah, journaling is going to be stupid to you because you're not actually being honest and vulnerable with yourself. So I always say be vulnerable with the pages.

Speaker 3:

For me, I just love brain dumping when I get stressed out or I can feel things boiling up. Sometimes I like to avoid journaling, which is the worst thing to do, and I finally do it. I'm like I feel so much better, there's the clarity. But I say 5 minutes a day can change your life and it can really start with just a minute of brain dump. Write down what you're thinking, put it down, get kind of clear, do kind of more of a gratitude reflection practice of you. Know those grateful thoughts, kind of things like be present, ground yourself and then start, you know, for the final like two minutes, just writing down things that you can do today to be really clear and actionable, of like, okay, where do you want to be? And like, what do you need to do today to get there? Because you know we're really sucked up into this instant gratification life, you know we want all these big things right now and you know the patience.

Speaker 3:

The virtue of patience is very overlooked, but I do really think the journaling practice, when done with intention, does allow you to really ground into the now and I found, you know, over the past four years of doing it, that's you know where I find like a lot of peace, because it does allow you to stop, stop and like, slow down and be like, okay, this is where I'm at, I'm happy to be where I'm at and this is what I can do to get to those big goals back and anxiety of what's to come to like.

Speaker 2:

What is the controllable that I can do right now in my life and you talk a lot about? You know radical self accountability. So in real life, what does that look like as we're you know journaling, writing this stuff down? Hey, you know, this happened because of whatever. You know I could have done this better. How do you, how does that look like in real life? Radical self accountability?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, and I think it really does come. I mean, this is advice and it's so simple. We hear it often, but you know it hits differently when certain people tell you it it's. My dad said control what you can control. And really, I mean again, we've heard it so many times for some reason. One time he said it and I was like controlling what you can control?

Speaker 3:

A lot of our anxiety, a lot of our stress, comes from things that we have absolutely no control over. And when you can actually take a situation when you you know if you're stressed or you're feeling anxious and you're just all over the place, if you can take a step back and think about okay, what do I actually have control over in this situation? A lot of times it's nothing right, all it is is our response and like being there. But when you can do that in almost every situation, it's almost like life becomes less chaotic because you one are only focusing on the things that you again need to do or can do, rather than you know, worrying about all the things that you actually no matter what you do in this world. It's not going to change it and like naturally we do that and it sucks, but it's that really self-awareness, it's being really present in each situation and not letting things spiral out of control, rather than just stepping back and really applying that control-you-can-control mentality to it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's something I've been, even just recently, leaning even more into is like, what can I actually control, just like you're saying, like, and it's like I can control how I react, how I respond and what action I take right now. Everything else, you know, you know it is what, it is right, it's going to, it's going to play out, how it's going to play out. So how do you shift that mindset? I know you talk about mindset shifts in your book, always squeezing lemons, right. So what does that look like a mindset shift? And what is that mindset shift? Look like that you're hoping people can kind of change as they read your book, but also as they're just going out through life, journaling, things like that going out through life, journaling, things like that.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, and I think this is, you know, in one sentence, a really good summary of my book. Obviously the subtitle is taking responsibility to define your own success. But more of that actual like mindset shift would be when you realize you can be the cause, problem and solution for everything in your life. Your world changes and it really is that radical responsibility and that mindset approach where it's like, okay, I can be the cause, I can be the problem, but I can also be the actual solution for everything. And it's so true.

Speaker 3:

And when you do really apply that on a broader and even smaller scale, it does really shift your perspective on almost everything approach from the very beginning of chapter one all the way through chapter 12, and sharing like detailed life experiences and how that approach really evolved over time. And it's I mean, it's very raw, it's very vulnerable, it's something that you know breeders have said. I can pretty much envision myself in your situation through my experiences and apply that takeaway. But you know, the mindset thing is everything it really is. I mean you can go into something and completely just talk yourself out of it. When you have every right to be there, the self doubt, that type of stuff really creeps in. But that that radical responsibility approach is, it creates a lot of confidence too.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, a hundred percent, and that is something kind of with that confidence, like some people define them as, or the box that people put them in or what success looks like. How do you guide people or how can someone begin to redefine that success if they feel like they're stuck in someone else's kind of definition of it, so like maybe their worldview, their environment, their parents like successes, go to college and do this but they see something different. How can they redefine that and start taking action towards that new definition of success?

Speaker 3:

I mean, I do think confidence plays a lot in that role, because you do have to be confident in yourself to start over, to change, and not be reliant on what other people think. I mean, don't get me wrong, when I decided to start over and get a divorce and do all these things, I was judged for it. Of course I still had my support system and everything along those lines. But you have to kind of get to the point where you actually you know people are going to have something to say whether it's good, whether it's bad, and it can't affect your life. You know, because ultimately you know, if you're stuck in that position like, find where you find purpose and move towards that it might not make sense but it's going to feel right.

Speaker 3:

And when you can feel those differences, that's so important. So really being true to yourself but also not allowing what anybody has to say change your mind. I mean, take guidance, take mentorship, but don't allow somebody to talk you out of something that you want and does actually have purpose for you. And I think a lot of people do get stuck in that you know society and pleasing rather than you know really truly living a fulfilling, purposeful life for themselves, and that's so unfortunate. You know everything. Even with my nonprofit, that's kind of a really fundamental piece of it. It's, you know, become the best version of yourself for yourself so you could show up and be the best version of yourself for others.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I love that and it kind of gets into. You know more within your move into words and the how the Operation One Million Journals got started right? Can you tell us a little bit about kind of that piece?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, so I mean really moving towards the entire, you know, actual fundamental piece of our mission is to cultivate a community for young professionals to thrive physically and mentally. So we've done events that really incorporate a workshop for the mind and a workout for the body, so kind of, you know, incorporating move into words, and they've been awesome. You know, right now we're only in the Charlotte area this off season. We've really been able to, you know, nail down ways to scale and, you know, build out and we're having a lot of traction growing. So it's really cool to see where this started. I mean, the idea of this was started in the pages of my journal. Now it's, you know, becoming a movement and my partner through that. It's amazing.

Speaker 3:

But yeah, so Operation 1 Million Journals is kind of like our you know, big, lofty goal, but also our first fundraising initiative where it's you know what a donation of $10 is one journal and at each event we provide journals because you know we have a two hour event and I mean it's a holistic approach, it's everything and it's amazing. You leave there feeling great, but only two hours, right? So the journaling piece is something that we talk about. You know why it's beneficial, how you can do it, how you can apply to your life, and you know, everyone takes away a journal from all of our events. So that's how that kind of all got incorporated. It's really cool, like I said, to see how it's expanding, how it's growing, how, you know, it's impacting people. The last event everyone's been like, oh my gosh, when's the next one? We're like, okay, we're working on it, we're getting it together, but yeah, so it's been cool.

Speaker 2:

That's cool. Yeah, because I was gonna ask you, like what impact have you seen already from this so far?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I mean, you know, since we're only in Charlotte, I mean, fortunately it's been. What's been really cool is every single event we've had. You know, more and more people come, but each event the same people over there show up to the next one.

Speaker 3:

Right so it's almost like 100 percent retention rate, which is really cool.

Speaker 3:

You know, everyone like once through there they're like, wow, we haven't seen this done this way.

Speaker 3:

Wow, this is like something I've been really searching for, something that I've been really craving, and they're sharing with their friends. But they really love the approach of the journaling too, you know, because it's something that we hear about and we talk about and we know about it, but it's not talked about in a way that it is so practical because it really is, and you know it's making it kind of more of a focal point rather than just something kind of random like, oh, journal like, because I used to think it was the stupidest thing until my sister was like you should do this and I was like there's no way, you know, a 25 year old, long, overdue diary like this is going to be like. That's really was my thought and I was so wrong and you know. So I've become like a huge advocate for it just because how life-changing it was for me and even my partner, and move into where it's been very life-changing her. So it's becoming more of that again focal point, something that you know five minutes a day can change your life.

Speaker 2:

So for sure. That's cool, I love to hear that and impacts. You know that people are making through what they're doing. So you know and and having these mindset, mindset shifts, like starting journaling, like it can be a big bold choice for others, like sometimes I mean cause it's a complete change, like you said. And so we've talked a lot about confidence in these bold choices. You've mentioned confidence a couple of times, so where does your confidence come from?

Speaker 3:

So I mean, you know, I think one. For me. What I realized is when I'm doing the things mentally and physically for myself, you know, on the days when I just have a good routine I'm eating well, I'm working out, I'm journaling, I'm at the beach, I do, you know, um, that's when I feel my best and that's when I'm my most confident. It's not necessarily hitting these big goals and these big achievements, but I also find a lot of confidence in being able to help people. From my life experiences, I've had some really big rewards. I've done some really cool things over the past four years, but I found the smaller rewards have meant a lot more to me. So the confidence does come from the things that I'm doing that do light, light me up, and then being able to share that and impact others in a very positive way at the same time.

Speaker 2:

So would you just you direct people like, if you want that same kind of confidence in her kind of fire, just just take action and continue to improve and it'll come.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I mean ultimately, you know, like I mean we could go down a whole spiral of health when it comes down to physical and mental health and really prioritizing that. I'm somebody that I work out almost daily. If I'm not working out working out, I take recovery days. But I'm moving, I eat very healthy, I cold plunge, I do recovery Again, I journal and I spend a lot of money making sure like I'm, you know, in a healthy space and I think that's a it's not overlooked, but it's, you know, the hustle culture like grind till you die type of thing is it's going out of style.

Speaker 3:

So, you know, finding that confidence like you have to feel good, you have to look good, you have to do these things like for yourself, that ultimately like does lead to that confidence. It's not just, you know, oh, let me dabble into it it's consistency, it's discipline, it's, it's showing up even when you don't want to. Um, you know not making false promises to yourself. That, right, there is the number one confidence killer. Um, so, you know, and all that looks a little bit different for everybody, but feeling your best is so important and that does come from the mental and physical side of health.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, absolutely so. Do you kind of on those days? We'll all have days that we don't feel as good or confident, even in these routines. Is there something you turn to or something you do to kind of kind of get you back in there quicker and not stay out of focus or out of sync?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I mean, you know looks a little different. And on those days, some days, it's like okay, maybe I'm not pushing where I need to or I'm kind of like procrastinating things, and then I just take some time and get the deep work and knock the stuff out, right.

Speaker 3:

And then there's other days where I've just been going nonstop and I need to just stop, and I do. You know, I used to not be good at that. So I think it's being very present with yourself and not just doing the easy thing either, because a lot of the times we're like oh, I'm tired, I don't feel like doing this. Well, I can say that every single day.

Speaker 3:

I'm tired a lot of the times, but at the same time, it's finding that balance and being very present with that and a lot of the times, doing the thing in the moment that you don't want to do. That's building that mental resilience. It's doing the things that like, okay, I know this has to get done, rather than pushing it off, just doing it and I'm guilty of that some days, don't get me wrong. I'm just like, okay, that was a little bit of a wash. But at the same time, the mental resilience, the confidence does come from doing those hard things in the moment that you don't want to do so, but also being present with it at the same time.

Speaker 2:

For sure, now, looking back, you know, because, like you said, you've been able to have, you know, get these awards and you have these external successes on either big or small scale. Like looking at those and then looking at where you started, how does that make you feel Just kind of retrospect, looking at all that?

Speaker 3:

You know it's crazy because I feel like it's been a time warp, so it's hard, but at the same time, I've never been great at giving myself credit and it's something that I have to continuously practice because and I think this is very common for a lot of high achievers entrepreneurs when you have big goals you a lot of high achievers entrepreneurs when you have big goals, you a lot of times overlook the small things and then sometimes, when you hit those big achievements, they don't feel the way you expected them to. And so a lot of the times when we do hit those big achievements, we don't realize that they don't feel the way we expected them to. A lot of the times we weren't enjoying the journey and the process to get to the mountaintop, and you know that's through these experiences and things like that I've been able to allow that to help me give myself more credit.

Speaker 3:

But, and, with that being said, to kind of like full circle answer your question. I look back and you know, on days, even when I find myself like, oh my gosh, I'm not accomplishing anything, I'm not doing this, I do take that full circle, look back and be like all right, you're doing great. So I think, regardless, it's super important for anybody and everybody Because, no matter what, if you're working hard, you're doing the things you know you should be doing, you have something to give yourself credit for and you have something to be proud of. And if you can't do that on whether it's a huge basis or a small basis, you're going to stay stuck in this just kind of like lack of fulfillment space, and that's really uncomfortable.

Speaker 2:

So I like that, yeah, cause it's like you know, I'm guilty of it too, entrepreneurs like it's always the next goal, right, and if we, if we get super frustrated why I'm not at that revenue goal or at that, you know, audience goal or whatever, and we don't look back of like, yeah, but you started at zero, and like you get milestones, I don't forget those and don't brush those under the rug. So that's that makes the journey worth it. Enjoying the journey itself too is, you know, try to have some fun on the journey. Right, yeah, get there and it was worth it. I think it's a big thing. Sometimes we overlook.

Speaker 3:

It's also to like to that point, like it's easy nowadays to compare yourself, especially with social media at our fingertips. There's just, you know, getting caught in that cycle and there's no way all of us aren't guilty of it. At some point it's again being present, being self-aware of not getting stuck in that cycle, Right, Like if you catch yourself comparing yourself to somebody else, just delete the app or just get off.

Speaker 1:

You know what I mean.

Speaker 3:

Take a step back, because it's tough. It is tough to to not do that, especially when you do have big goals and it's it's not like you're upset with where you're at. It just becomes a natural thing. You know and I mean again being an athlete my whole life like I'm very competitive so it's kind of like taking that approach out of it while also just staying focused on myself. I'm like, oh my gosh, my mind is going crazy yeah, 100.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's like, huh, you're like you don't know where they're at in the background, like they show you the best stuff, but like you could still be. I mean, doesn't matter if you're doing better than them. It's like just kind of like we said like in the moment, like what's our control, like this is what we can control, uh, and this is where we're at and that's, that is what it is, and just being thankful or grateful with that and kind of moving from that direction. So I'm curious here, as we kind of wrap things down with this kind of quick fire lightning round has there been a book that's changed your life?

Speaker 3:

The Gap in the Gain was really impactful, because that was one that really gave me tangible, practical ways to start giving myself credit oh cool, I like that.

Speaker 2:

Okay, gap in the game now with this one.

Speaker 3:

It's a morning routine of us oh, yeah, yeah, when I miss, yeah, I mean at least for me, and sometimes like I'll give myself a little bit of leeway on it. But my best days are when I wake up early. I do my thing in the morning, I have my mental clarity time, because then I show up better throughout my entire day.

Speaker 2:

So yeah, absolutely it's because it's crazy, like because when I first started, so when I quit my job in 2020 to figure out what I was going to do as a business, like it was all about, you know, you had to get up at 5 am. You have to have this morning routine and I was like, yeah, it makes sense. And so I was doing, it was good. And now I'm hearing people like, oh, you don't need to do that morning routine, just get right to work. And I'm like the shift already in this small time frame is just interesting.

Speaker 3:

I think everyone has their own stuff. You don't have to get getting up and going straight to work is healthy for anybody, because that's you know. I mean, there are some times where I'll sleep in don't get me wrong like I'm not getting up at 5 am every morning I used to, and now like I actually really value my sleep a lot more at this point, um, but no, I I feel like you have to give yourself some sort of mental clarity, because there are mornings where I don't have a routine, I have to run right into something and I don't feel right the whole day.

Speaker 2:

So it's just I think that's super important.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, your, your routine doesn't have to go to um to a T, like you don't have to follow a simple thing, but I think you need to have some sort of thing that gets you started for the day, and whatever that looks like is, you know, up to you.

Speaker 2:

But yeah, I think, starting in a position where you're not just reacting.

Speaker 3:

Yes, that's a great way to put it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you get up and you're putting out fires or you know, like me taking care of the kids, like immediately, like it's like whoa and you're like just throwing right into it and then it just keeps going from there. So I love that having that clarity, that moment in the morning where you can kind of anchor your day to that and have control For sure.

Speaker 3:

And have control for sure over it cool, um, biggest lesson you've learned from failure oh, that it's subjective and we get to frame it how we want and you know, ultimately, you know, failure's the other side of success, it. But the thing is I say it's subjective because it allows the blow to be like a little bit less but at the same time like be able to apply the learning experiences. It's. It's not a true failure unless you just quit and you just stop Right. So being able to apply that and turn that failure into success is super, super key. And that subjectiveness piece of it it's. It gives you the control of what failure really means and you know.

Speaker 2:

And reapplying that, yeah, that's a good point, for sure. Now our last one define freedom in one sentence.

Speaker 3:

Time is freedom. Honestly, money is a tool to buy time freedom and for me, my time has always been something that's super precious and I've never wanted somebody to tell me what I can and can't do on my own time, which is one of the major reasons I'm an entrepreneur because I would not be a great employee and I think any entrepreneur like you, saad, would kind of say the same thing but money is a tool to get you to time freedom and you can do whatever you want, whenever you want, with whoever you want, for however long you want. You're living the dream.

Speaker 2:

I love that. That's awesome, so this has been great. Kayla, thank you again for sharing all this.

Speaker 3:

If someone listening right now feels like they're stuck. What would you say to them right now?

Speaker 2:

Realize that you have complete control over it and find where you find purpose and move towards that. Awesome. And now what can people connect with you if they want to learn more or get your help and check out your journaling?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, so I mean my website, KaylaLoguecom, has literally everything Social media, my nonprofit, my book. Reach out to me, Email me. I have some one-on-one coaching stuff that I'll do for very exclusive people, so it just kind of depends on the case scenario. But feel free, go to my website. Everything that you would need is on there.

Speaker 2:

Awesome, yeah. So make sure you do that. Connect with Kayla, learn from her, see what she's doing, support her. She's doing a lot of fantastic things. So, kayla, again, thank you so much for being on the LV Media Podcast today.

Speaker 3:

Thank you so much for having me. It was super fun.

Speaker 2:

Absolutely. And for those listening, if you haven't yet, make sure you go, follow the show. It helps us get this in front of more people so we can make a bigger impact in the world together. Share this episode with someone specifically who's trying to make a change in their life and take control. But until next time, we appreciate everybody Continue to elevate your life, elevate your business and we'll talk to you again soon.

Speaker 1:

Thank you for listening to the Elevate Media podcast. Don't forget to subscribe and leave a review. See you in the next episode.

People on this episode