Financial Feminist - 72. The Loneliness Epidemic: Building Meaningful Communities with Natalie Franke
Episode Date: February 21, 2023Isolation and loneliness are on the rise worldwide, and the rise in women feeling more disconnected than ever is an alarming trend. But how can you intentionally grow your community when you’re alre...ady burnt out and overwhelmed? We asked the creator of the Rising Tide Society and #communityovercompetition movement, Natalie Franke, to join us for this episode on building intentional communities, re-evaluating our relationship with social media as a tool for connection, and how to be better advocates for other women in our lives. To learn more about Natalie, read transcripts, or access financial resources, check out our show notes page: www.financialfeministpodcast.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, financial feminists. Welcome back to the show. We record these episodes way in advance.
So right now I am probably enjoying my last few days of my month off. I'm potentially in Tucson,
Arizona. I'm trying to remember my schedule. That sounds about right. And hopefully again,
I am in a pool with a cocktail doing nothing and that I've forgotten my cell phone even exists.
It sounds blissful, doesn't it? We'll see if that actually happens. We have an incredible
episode for you today with a guest that I have long admired.
But first, some general housekeeping. If you love the show, subscribe, follow, share, review. You
know the drill. You know the drill. We love connecting with you beyond just audio too. So
make sure to follow us on Instagram, both at Financial Feminist Podcast and at Her First 100k
and of course, Her First 100k on TikTok. Also, we have a voicemail inbox. So if
you want to chat with us, if you want to ask us a question, we're doing like these Q&A type episodes
now every once in a while. So you can find that linked in our show notes or on our website.
Okay, let's talk about Natalie. If you spend any time in the photography world,
you'll know her immediately. We're thrilled to welcome Natalie Frank to the podcast.
Natalie Frank is the chief evangelist at HoneyBook and author of Built to Belong. She is also the co-founder of The Rising Tide, an organization I've followed for
many, many years. It's a community of 75,000 independent business owners who gather in
hundreds of local chapters around the world. Put simply, Natalie is a mama bear for small business.
She is a fierce advocate and enthusiastic champion of anyone declaring their independence from the
traditional workforce. I would also like to highlight very quickly after this conversation, this is the first time Natalie
and I have met in person. She literally texted me and she's like, how can I support you? And this
was like right before we were launching the book. And I was like, honestly, I'm just thinking about
book promo. And she goes, I will buy with HoneyBook. I will buy multiple copies. We'll
buy copies for our team. Let me know where to buy them. And like, what a fucking testament to not just walking the walk, but talking the talk of the support.
In this episode, we dive into how Natalie started her viral hashtag community over competition
movement, which later became the Rising Tide Society. But we also dive into the importance
of creating that community of people around you to support you regardless of if you're a business
owner or not. We also talk about accepting how different your life is now from the vision you had for yourself as a kid, how to see
failure as a stepping stone rather than a pitfall, and what it means to truly have a supportive
partner. Post-pandemic, I think many of us are feeling lonelier than ever, and this episode is
a really good reminder of why we need community and each other and the focus on viewing that
community as a group of people supporting each
other rather than your competition. So let's get into it. But first, a word from our sponsors.
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Kraken's registration details at kraken.com slash legal slash ca dash pru dash disclaimer. I have to gush for a second because I hope you know, I truly do.
I hope you know what an impact
you have made on so many young women, myself included. So I was late to the game on TikTok,
like very late. I mean, I'm not great at TikTok, but I like consuming.
No one is. TikTok is a mystery. It is a mystery.
It is a mystery. It is. First heard about the work that you're doing on TikTok and you kept coming up on my FYP. And when I tell you that it made me realize how many limiting beliefs
and narratives that even I, even though I have built companies, sold companies,
I work with business owners every day. I am out here fighting for independent businesses. That is
my everyday life. I still was holding on to so many limiting beliefs about money, so many limiting beliefs about how to think about wealth and the impact of generating wealth.
The power that gives you to do good in the world, not to be afraid of it, but to actually think
about it as a tool for change. It's so needed. It is so needed. And it's so much in line too with
just, I think, why when, and I know we're
talking more about community today, but the work I do with independent business and small business,
it's so in line with my values around that as well, where I see this future of work being
democratized entrepreneurship, where anyone can make a living using their talents and their skills
and what they love. And it's no longer gatekept. It's no longer, what do you look like? Who were
your parents? How much money did you come from? What business school did you go to? Is there something you're passionate about that you
are willing to work for and learn more about than anybody else? Is there a quirky part of
your personality that you're willing to be vulnerable about and share with the world?
It is no longer gate kept and hidden. We are living in a moment where anyone can start a
business and change the world. And it is so much in line with the democratization of wealth and the lessons you're teaching. And it just, I needed it. I desperately needed it.
So I just wanted you to know, and I hope you do, what an impact the content that you create and
that you share with the world has on so many women, myself included. It's not a small thing,
Tori. It's not an insignificant thing. So I'm fangirls.
You're starting there? Just end the podcast here.
We're good.
Thank you.
Wow.
Okay.
Put it in the folder for like when you have a day where there's a hater, you know, where a man jumps into the comments section.
Oh, every, all day, every day.
You know.
They're always named like Larry or Steve or, you know, user 5789.
I'm like, why?
Why are you doing that?
Thank you.
That's so kind.
And I have been following the Rising Tide Society for a very long time.
So it's so kind to hear you say that.
We're so excited to have you.
We just launched right in.
Wow.
What a hell of an entrance.
I'm so excited to have you and so excited to chat with you.
You went to school for neuroscience and then pivoted into wedding photography.
Talk to me about that. I feel a little called out for being a nerd. I mean, you didn't say it
overtly, but yes, I studied. I went to school for theater and now we're doing finance. So it was a
weird pivot too. So you went the other, you kind of went the creative brain to like qual to quant, right? You did a little bit of a left brain,
right brain switch, just like I did a little bit of the same. But I know I did. I studied
visual studies at Penn. So my focus was on the science of seeing. And so that did involve things
like visual neuroscience and psychology, and even a little bit of philosophy.
It's basically how we see the world and the realization that we don't see with our eyes,
but with our mind. And part of that is we bring with us our lived experiences. We bring with us
our own unique psychology when we view our external environment. And so that is what I
studied in college. Now, the photography came in
because I was raised by a single mom and I've been working since I was able to get that worker's
permit. And my mom, I think, recognized in a moment when I was really struggling with my mental
health in high school, an opportunity to put that camera in my hands. And I recognized for the first
time in my life, after having lots of little jobs,
that this camera gave me the ability to build my own, right? To create my own job for myself.
So while I was going to Penn, I was taking the train back home every single weekend to photograph
weddings in my hometown of Annapolis in Baltimore in DC. And I did that all throughout school in
order to pay my way through college and pay off my student loan shortly thereafter.
But that is how photography came into play.
So I was going to school.
I was photographing events, building that small business on the side and getting my nerd on just as much as I could.
One of the things you said up top, which I thought is so kind, is this attempt at the democratization of entrepreneurship or that,
I mean, you just said, right, like putting a camera in your hands and making your own money
meant you had choices. And I've said this so many times in my work, when you have money,
you have choices. Was that the first time for you that you thought this might be the reality for me,
or I can see the opportunities open up because I have this thing?
Yes, without a doubt. And I would go even a step further to say, not only did I realize
I could make money with this camera and with my talent and by honing this craft,
but I also recognized that I could do work on my own terms, that I was able to reclaim a little
bit of autonomy and freedom, both financial and creative, right? And that autonomy and that freedom is
something that the majority of people don't have in the work that they do, or it's very limited,
historically has been very, very limited. And so part of, I think, too, what makes me so passionate
about supporting independent businesses is acknowledging that when you do step outside
of this traditional W-2 model of like, you know, tell young people they have to follow
this exact path, A to B to C, to climb a corporate ladder. And you just tell someone, you know,
what if you built your own? What if you explored the possibility? Even if they don't leap full
time, even if it's a side hustle that brings in extra revenue, even if they just pursue a passion
and discover it to be something that gives them life, like it's opening up our minds to the
possibilities of that autonomy that could exist beyond this very tread path, this very traditional model of
movement. Because I did think growing up, I thought, I'm going to be the good girl.
That's what I went in going, I'm going to do everything right. Spoiler alerts, not how life
works. But I thought, I'm going to go to college. I'm going to go to the best college I can. I'm
going to study really hard. I'm going to get a great job. It's going to pay
well. I'm going to climb a corporate ladder. I'm going to get a desk in a building in New York.
Like I had, that's what I thought success looked like in the minute. I had the same thing. It's
so funny you say that. My, yeah, my manifestation was like VP of marketing by 30. I'm wearing pencil
skirts. I'm holding a briefcase, which is how, you know, it's a fantasy. Cause I don't wear
pencil skirts and I, what are briefcases anymore? And I don't drink coffee, but I had a Starbucks in my hand and like
stomping the streets of the city, city, like hashtag girl boss, right? Like that was my,
that was the expectation of what my life was going to be. And then of course,
had that, you know, that mirage taken from me very early when I realized, oh, this is fucking hell.
This is awful.
Oh, yeah.
No, absolutely.
I think for me, it was like, I want to work with people I want to work with.
I wanted the ability to say no.
Like, I want to turn down work.
I want that.
And I know that sounds like a weird measure of success.
But for me, that became a measure of success.
I want to be at a place where I can say, I don't want to work on that.
Or there isn't a value alignment.
Or, you know, and actually have the ability. You can't meet my rate. So it's just not, it's not going to work on that or there isn't a value alignment or, you know, and, and actually
have the ability to meet my rate. So it's just not, it's not going to work. Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah. Yeah. So it all kind of came together, but it did for a while. I think I had to choose.
I felt like I was on two separate paths, one of maybe a more traditional route,
although still studying things I love and I'm passionate about. And the other,
which felt like a huge risk, you know, to, Hey, got this Ivy league degree, but I'm passionate about and the other, which felt like a huge risk to,
hey, got this Ivy League degree, but I'm going to go be a wedding photographer.
And that is the absolute best decision I ever made. Putting down the degree, I always say I
folded it up and stuck it in the visor of my car and then drove home to shoot a wedding. And
I don't regret it. It led me to where I am today.
And it truly is one of the most extraordinary careers of my multiple careers that I've ever had.
I absolutely loved being a photographer.
Well, let's talk more about that because it's something that is recurring.
It ends up being a recurring theme on the show.
The thing you're comfortable in versus the thing that is the right thing for you. And what happens, whether that's a
relationship, a job, a path in your life, is that you get in it and it's comfortable. And I don't
mean like comfortable in a good way. I mean, it's so comfortable where you're like, I can't,
but it's this thing.
And your, whatever you want to call it, your soul, your intuition is calling you somewhere else.
But you're like, no, but I already have this much invested in this.
Or it would be really weird to come home to an empty house.
So I'm not going to leave this person.
And what ends up happening, of course, is it's the voice that comes up right before you go
to bed at night that is like, yeah, but this isn't right for you. And you're like, no, but I know it
is. It's fine. This is what I should want or what my parents have told me I should want. And this
is the person I should date. And then there's this other part of you that is going to require
so much temporary discomfort, but you're going to be
so much happier or fulfilled or richer or whatever that looks like. I don't think enough people,
especially enough women, get past that point of discomfort or even engage in that discomfort
because we've been told, one, play small, but two, that this is what you should want.
small, but two, that this is what you should want. That word should. Right. That word. I hate that word. I hate the word should. Probably shouldn't hate. I hear my mom in my head going like,
you don't hate anything. No, I do. I hate the word should. Should is the expectations that
weigh us down and keep us struggling and fighting the wrong battles. Should, right, is the word that
keeps us from being the best version of
ourselves. Look, I've never met anyone at the end of their life who said, you know, this one time
in my comfort zone, when? Never, never in history. Like any good moment in someone's life,
it's outside of the comfort zone. And it often is born out of a season of pain or hardship or
struggle or just betting on themselves for the first time.
Like truly, I can't tell you how many stories I've heard within our community where someone's
like, I spent my whole life being told I was never going to amount to something or that
going and building a small business was a hobby.
It wasn't something like my creative passion was a hobby.
It wasn't validated or justified by people that I really respected.
But I decided that I'd rather bet on me than bet
on their limiting beliefs of who they think I am. And the moment that happens for somebody,
right? And the moment they have that realization of betting on themselves or overcoming
that hurdle that's kept them clinging to safety, kept them believing that's all that is meant for
them, that's where the world opens up. That's where we start to explore. And it doesn't always
mean success. Oftentimes it means failure. Oftentimes it means you leap
and you fail. But nonetheless, you very rarely look back and say, I wish I didn't leave the
realm of my comfort zone, even when it doesn't work out in your favor. Even when on the other
side of that, you are left maybe with another difficult decision or you realize that it didn't work out.
Like I, I failed at so many things and I look back and I'm like, you know, it was a stepping
stone to success. It wasn't, if I hadn't done that, I wouldn't have learned X, you know,
if I had gotten my way, if it had been my timeline, you know, both personal and professional,
the things I've struggled with, if it had been the timeline I wanted, I would have, I got married really young.
I married my high school sweetheart.
He's an incredible partner.
And that was, by the way, side note, remember that visionized cast of the ivory tower in
the sky and the New York apartment?
A partner was not in that vision or equation.
So I was not the one that thought I'm going to marry someone really young.
I was never getting married.
Never going to happen.
Don't need anybody.
But I met a partner who wanted to fight for my success as much as I did. And so we got married young. And when we
got married, I thought, oh, you have kids. I don't mean to interrupt you. Can I, can I,
who wanted to fight for my success as much as I did? Maybe more. I'm like a little teary.
Who wanted to fight for my success as much as I did.
Maybe more.
Isn't that the definition of partnership?
And,
and again,
like if you are listening to that and you don't have that one,
you deserve it.
And to get rid of it.
If it isn't that like controversial opinion,
but if it is not that it's not controversial.
Yeah,
sure.
It's I'm calling people out potentially, but like if, if your partnership is not that it's not controversial yeah sure it's i'm calling people out potentially but
like if if your partnership is not that wow that it ain't it keep going but i just had to pause you
because she's buddy i mean it's look it's the truth and i think that just like you talked about
sometimes we we dream too small i think we also sometimes, because we are afraid,
we settle for what we don't deserve or we run from beautiful things. Again, I think even I look at my relationship, there was a part of me at that age. I was very, I mean, look, 15 is when we started
dating. 22 is when we got married. We've been together for 17 years. Y'all can do the math.
It's been a long time. But I do remember when we were looking at schools, I'm like,
Y'all can do the math.
It's been a long time.
But I do remember when we were looking at schools, you know, I'm like,
am I, you know, what choice do I make?
And there was a part of me that wanted to run from a really good thing,
which is a whole nother bit of psychology and therapy that y'all know I'm going to be talking through for the rest of my life.
But nonetheless, finding a partner, you know, who wants to fight for your success as much as you do
and who sees joy in sacrificing for your success as much as you do and who sees joy in sacrificing for your
success. Because so often I think women are the ones sacrificing for the success of their partner,
especially in certain types of relationships. Again, all relationships being different and
unique. But in my case, and gosh, it really does baffle some folks. And I do get... These are where
I get some of my critical DMs in the behind the scenes when,
you know, I travel a lot for work. I speak on large stages. I wrote a book. I'm out there
doing my thing. And people will say to me like, well, who has your kids? Like who's watching your
children? They gasp as if like, this is shocking. And I'm like, my partner, my husband, like
he's with my kids. And it's hard for people to wrap their heads around this idea that,
you know, there's a season right now in our marriage where it isn't 50, 50, frankly,
he's 70% and I'm 30% and not just in parenting. He has stepped up in so many aspects of our
marriage because he's like, this is a moment where I like, I, he's fighting for my success.
And my hope is that one day that ratio gets to flip, you know, and lately he's been
having so much success in the things that he does. He's the CMO of a tech company. Like he's killing
it in his own right. And yet that's what partnership should be. I don't think it's always
50, 50 whole nother combo for another day, but I, it's sometimes it's 70, 30. Sometimes if you're
really struggling, that person shows up 90% to carry you because you're only at 10 and vice
versa. Right? Like? And everyone deserves that.
Oh my gosh, how long do we have? I'm so excited. Okay.
One of the things that I want to talk to you about and I want to spend some time on,
and this is a bit of me being vulnerable, but also I know from your psychological standpoint too,
you're going to have something to say about it. One of the things that you were so incredible
in founding was this movement of community over competition. I believe that to my very core,
truly community over competition. Especially in the finance community, I was just talking on another podcast episode,
like we're sharing numbers with each other.
Like we are, you know, somebody gets asked to speak and it's a text to say like, hey,
I got asked to speak this year.
What did you get paid?
Oh, no, I get paid 20% more.
You need to ask for that.
Like there is so much community.
to ask for that. There is so much community. I know, however, whether it's ego, whether it's just my own ambition, that I can see somebody else kill it and have that moment where I go,
I'm so happy for them, but why wasn't that me? Or why didn't I get that thing? Or I'm worthy of
that thing. Why didn't they call me?
I don't know if I have a question.
I don't know.
But like delve into that for me, because I, again, truly believe in supporting other entrepreneurs.
I'm you know me, you know, this podcast like that's that's the epitome of what this is. Yet sometimes there's a small little voice who goes, bummed I didn't get that though.
Bummed I didn't get that though.
And look, I have to first validate you because what you are describing and this emotion that
you are feeling is as human as it gets.
Totally.
And in the same way, it's so human.
In the same way that I don't love advice that says things like, don't worry about what other
people think of you.
Stop comparing yourself.
Because the reality is we are human beings.
It's actually impossible, right?
Our brains are wired that way for a reason.
And in social media, especially, really impossible.
Yeah.
Oh, without a doubt.
But we're social animals, right?
And so being a social creature, it means that we are constantly gauging where we fit within our social surroundings.
Now, it used to be that we were in much smaller groups.
So we felt perhaps like we maybe only compared ourselves to a handful of people.
Actually, I think about my grandmother's generation a lot.
And I'm like, she probably had five women in her life.
Truly, five women that she compared herself to.
They played bridge.
That was her thing.
It was probably the bridge players that she compared herself to and how they lived their life and
all of that. We compare ourselves to five people within the first one second of waking up.
Right? From the moment we pick up that phone and we scroll even but one stroke of our finger,
we're consuming so much digital content and so much media around other
people's lives. And as we know, it doesn't need to be said, but people aren't sharing the worst
parts of their lives, right? They're sharing the best parts. They're sharing curated versions of
reality that we consume and believe to be truth. And so I just want to validate that what you're
feeling is very human. And that is the, what I like to call it, that is sort of the reaction,
right?
Like that is what, that's the immediate feeling that you have, or even that maybe arises when
you least expect it.
Cause you can go like, yeah, like I'm cheering for them, but then there's that inkling underneath
that I can't control.
It's not my choice.
So we often can't control that feeling.
We can't control sort of that spike of jealousy.
And I often talk about like, when we feel that it's really important for us to go inward
first to kind of reflect within and go, okay, why? Why am I feeling
that? Where is the root of that coming from? Because oftentimes it isn't actually about her
success at all. Oftentimes when we feel that inkling of jealousy, it is more indicative of
something that we ourselves are navigating or struggling through or struggled through in a past
tense. We're told in a past tense, a limiting belief we believed even maybe that we've worked
through in our current evolved self that just keeps rearing its ugly head because it was something
that we struggled with, whether it was like, I'll be a little vulnerable myself in saying that as a
kid, I struggled with the belief that I was only worthy and I was only enough if I
was perfect. That if I wasn't achieving and I wasn't the best, I wasn't anything or anyone.
I think that's a default state for any woman, unfortunately. That is our default state.
It's perfection, which unobtainable, or nothing. And even as I say unobtainable,
my brain goes, but it is though. Like it is. It's like when you, like, I can say to you,
like, you're having a really hard day. Like take, take some time for yourself,
do whatever you need to do, but I need to keep going. Like, it's like, you can,
I will give you grace, but I can't give myself grace. Right. Like that's no, no, no, no.
So even as I say that, right.
Like my brain actively goes, yeah, but you're different and you have to be perfect.
Like you can perfection with, you know, that's fine for somebody else.
That's they can have that.
Right.
But no, for me, it's, it is exactly how we are wired.
It is exactly how it works.
And, you know, it's, but that's sort of like that.
That's how it is.
So what, what do we do? Like? What do we do when we feel that
way? Because like you said, my values say, because what I'm hearing from you is, look, Natalie,
my values are in alignment with community over competition. You understand that if we choose
to tear other women down, even in our minds, if we discount their accomplishments, if we judge
them for their successes, if we make it harder for them to succeed, then we all lose.
You know that, right? You understand that failure is shared by the collective just as success. And
this is the part I try to cling to when I'm feeling some of those feelings. Success is also
shared by the collective. So when we choose to cheer her on, when we make a conscious effort,
even when those feelings bubble up of saying, I am going to celebrate her,
even if there's a part of my heart that wishes it was me, I'm going to choose to celebrate her.
I'm going to raise her voice. I'm going to fan the flames of her success. I'm going to amplify the work that she's doing. It acknowledges that when she wins, we all win, right? When she shatters
a glass ceiling or she overcomes something that no one else had overcome before, or she hits a
revenue marker in your industry that you never could have imagined, or she gets number one on the New
York Times bestseller list. And like in my case, I didn't even get on it, which by the way,
I'm hoping you do because I pre-ordered that book and I cannot wait.
Hey, thank you. I will be crushed if I don't, but that's a different conversation.
We're going to get you there. We're going to get you there. The point being though,
right? When you do that-
The point being rising tides lift all ships.
Yeah.
When you win, I win.
When she wins, you still win.
And I think the more that we embrace that,
the more we also stop fighting the wrong things.
Because as long as we are fighting one another,
we're distracted from the real issues.
Yep.
I've mentioned it before too.
I know that part of that is the patriarchy right
and the fact that that is unconscious misogyny when society has told us there is one seat at
the table for you and so you claw everybody else for that one seat and then the patriarchy doesn't
have to do anything because they let you fight it out amongst yourselves, right? Versus how can I build
my own table, which is roundabout to entrepreneurship as well, which we'll get to. And I think the other
thing that came up when you were talking, which is something I have to remind myself of, somebody
told me two years ago that you cannot control your thoughts. Like truly, you can control your actions,
right? But like your brain's going to say and or think some crazy things like all the time.
And you're going to look at your thoughts sometimes and be like, that's not what I actually
believe.
But your brain, right?
Intrusive thoughts is all the time.
It's me driving down the road and my brain goes, what if we just got like, what if we
just tilt the wheel a little bit and just like slam into a semi truck?
And I'm like, I don't want to do that.
But my brain is like, yeah, but what if?
And I think it's one of those things too,
where it's so easy to feel like, oh, this person got there first. This person got the seat at the
table. So there's nothing left for me. And of course, that isn't true. Of course, that isn't
true. Yeah, absolutely. We can't control that initial thought, but we have the power to
cognitively reframe. We have the power to kind of rewrite the narrative that we're telling
ourselves. So while we don't have as much power over that initial intuition, like we have that
moment where we're like, she is so much more successful than I am, right? Her business is
booming. I can't even get mine off the ground or she got this amazing opportunity and I didn't.
That's the first thought, but we do have that power to then say, no, no, no, hold up.
Is that true? I'm going to call myself into this conversation a little
bit. I'm going to challenge that narrative I just told myself. And instead, I'm going to say, wow,
she's on fire, right? Seeing her achieve that, it is evidence that I can do that in my own life or
that that's possible. And if that's possible, what else could be possible? Have I been dreaming too
small, right? That was a benchmark that I thought if I checked it, I will be successful. But I just watched
another woman check it. What's next for her? What could be next for me? So there is power in doing
a little bit of cognitive reframing when we catch ourselves having some of those like immediate
thoughts that pop up because you're right. We cannot control it. Like it's buried down there
deep. It pops up when it wants to, but we have the ability to
kind of like grab it, rein it back in and say, okay, how am I going to adapt this to serve not
only me well, but my community well, right? The women that I care about, the people that I'm here
to serve. I think one of the things that ends up happening, and this is segueing into the other
big thing I wanted to discuss, is when you are comparing yourself and when you are watching
other people's businesses, or when you are going through things as an entrepreneur that you don't
know how to navigate or that feel really difficult, you feel so alone. And especially in the early
days of my business where I either didn't have a team or I had a team, but I didn't have anybody
at the exact level, or I just didn't feel like I had other entrepreneurs who were understanding where I was at.
It was such a lonely, isolating experience. And I'm coming to talking to you literally a couple,
like we had a couple of days of an exec retreat this week that ended yesterday.
And I used to do that alone. I used to check myself into a hotel and do my executive retreat
and I would look at, okay, where are we going? Where have we been? What did we love that we did
this year? What do we wish we can improve? Mapping out the next year. And I literally turned to my
team who are now, there's two execs on our team and I turned to them and I hugged them. I was
crying. I was like, I'm so glad I don't have to do this alone anymore. So can we talk about that feeling of loneliness or isolation? What factors do you feel like
increase this feeling of loneliness? And what can we do to combat it?
Well, first, I just want to acknowledge that loneliness is an epidemic. Loneliness is a real
problem. It's not something that is hypothetical and an intellectual conversation
being thrown around between, I feel like, columnists or journalists about the future
and where we are. No, no, no. Loneliness is the dark and the hard and the thing no one wants to
talk about. But the reality is the number of close friends that people have has swiftly declined.
Recent stats that have come out about it are abysmal and terrifying. I think it was last year, there was a stat that came out that said,
one in 10 people don't have a single friend, a single friend. And yet human beings belong to
one another. On that hierarchy of needs, belonging and community and being a part of a group,
needs, belonging and community and being a part of a group, it's not a nice to have.
We need community in the same way that we need oxygen. We need one another. So to acknowledge that we are in a moment where if you are struggling with loneliness, you are not alone.
So many of us are going through it. And if you are living a life or in a career where you are
actually physically alone, in addition to maybe struggling with the same levels of loneliness that a lot of us feel, people say we've lost our third place, right?
So it's home, it's work, and then what?
And for a lot of human history, it was things like, you know, a faith community or, you know, a physical activity or a library.
Yeah.
you know a physical activity or a library yeah or i'm thinking about like what was it the um oh gosh why can't i think of it all the old guys together talking about science why can't i think
of it masons the masons the masons i mean all these third places right and if if you don't
know why that popped up for me but i mean that's a great're a Mason. I mean, that's a great one. The Masons. The Masons. I know. I think about my grandmother playing bridge. Whatever it was to somebody,
they had this third place that wasn't home, that wasn't work, that was a sense of community,
and we've lost it. We're living in a moment where more people live alone than ever before,
which is amazing, actually, that people have that financial ability to do so. But also,
it comes with unintended consequences if we're not intentional. And that third place is sort of eroded. We've
lost it. And it's going to be interesting. And I have a lot of hope as an entrepreneur that
third places will have a revival. And I'm thinking like independent coffee shops. I'm thinking
movements and community organized care for one another and how we're rallying together in the coming years. So I have hope. I don't come to this hopeless, but I come to say,
if you are struggling with it, you're not alone. And there are a lot of factors beyond
even those that you can control that are contributing to it, but there are things you
can do. So if you're struggling with loneliness, especially in the professional context,
the first thing that I say is be very aware of what you're consuming. Be very aware of
who is in your circle and who you're allowing to speak into your life. And so number one, content,
social media, all of these things, people love to villainize it and say, and actually,
when I wrote my book, one of the interesting things that I looked at was, you know,
psychology of social media. If you look that up in any context, 90% of the articles
are going to be, it's terrible for your mental health. It increases rates of depression, anxiety.
I mean, you can go on and on and it's been studied in a lot of different capacities.
But I found one really interesting study that said, instead of just looking at social media
as one thing, as if everyone uses it the same way, and as if all content is created equal,
what if instead we looked at how you used social media and not,
you know, the construct itself. And what was really interesting is that people who consume
content have more negative psychological effects than those who use social media as a means of
connection or creation. So if you're getting on a platform and you're only consuming,
you will not have the same experience as someone that is
truly leveraging social media to connect, to engage, to have a conversation, to create and
share their opinions and their ideas with the world. They're very different actions and they're
leveraging the exact same space to do it. And I say that as to say, be mindful. One, are you consuming
or are you connecting? When you open that app, what are you doing
before you recognize consciously that you're doing it?
If it's simply to scroll with no reason
other than to consume and distract
and you're feeling lonely,
think of that as an opportunity to flip that time
into something that perhaps could pour back
into your mental health cup, right?
Rather than drain out of it.
And so it could be picking five people
that when you think about feeling your best,
a moment when you felt your best,
when you felt empowered, you felt inspired,
you felt encouraged, you felt capable,
whatever those things are for you,
who contributed to that?
Who do you associate with that?
Who, when you leave the room,
do you feel better about yourself
just by having spent time with them?
Write their names down, put it on a post-it note, stick it behind your computer if that's where you work for the day.
Put it on the backside of your phone so that if you pick it up and you go to scroll and consume
content, instead you just pause for that moment and say, I'm going to first, I can still consume.
I'm going to watch Tori's TikToks all day long. But before I do that, I'm going to connect with
these five people. These are five relationships in my life I want to invest in because these are the types
of people I need to surround myself with.
And we all know the quote that says, if you are a combination of the people you spend
the most time with, I think that might have been Stephen Covey, how to win friends and
influence people, I believe.
But the same can be said for the content you're consuming.
You become what you consume.
And so being mindful of that,
being mindful of how you're engaging, I think one of the first ways to combat it is to be intentional about incorporating connection back into your life in ways that are accessible to you,
which is why I don't hate on social media, because it is one of the most accessible tools
for people to connect. It breaks down geographic barriers. It gives access to those who are chronically ill and disabled.
Like communities, like, and actually I'll quote someone on my team.
She's an incredible chronic illness warrior.
She is a fierce advocate and champion for independence and for entrepreneurs.
Kate Masters, who said, you know, online community and connection is not an imitation of real life.
It's not a forgery.
It's an innovation on connection. It's giving a new place for us to
connect because so quickly during the pandemic- If you do it intentionally.
If you do it intentionally, because there have been communities, especially within the chronic
illness space, the disability space, that have thrived online and have done it long before
the pandemic when most of us were forced to socially distance. This has been the normal for my sister-in-law with cystic fibrosis. This has been the normal
for so many communities for so long. They do it exceptionally well long before other folks took
the credit for coming up with the idea of online community as it normally happens. And so important
to point that out. Yeah. And as you're saying that too, something else I have learned about those people that
you surround yourself with in your life, you start to understand who you need to go to
for certain things.
I love my parents very deeply.
They are not who I go to to gas me up.
They're not good at that.
I'll call them and be like, hey, we're on the New York Times. And they go, cool at that i'll call them and be like hey we're on the new york times and they go
cool that's great and that's a like period end to sentence like they're excited but like that's
the extent of it i know that there's other people in my life who i will call and be like oh my god
that's incredible and they'll gas me up for five minutes right that's not who i go to and i would
often sometimes you know i would go to. And I would often sometimes, you know, I would go
to them and ask for validation, basically, and for encouragement, and I wouldn't get that. And
then I would feel disappointed. And then finally, I got to the point where I was like, okay, that's
not who I go to. I go to them for other things, but I don't go to them for that thing. It just
leaves me feeling worse. So figuring out who is the person that you go to when you need somebody
to gas you up. Who is the person you go to that you know will just sit there and listen? Who is
the person you go to who you know is going to call you on your bullshit? And that is so needed.
So needed. But you begin to realize that not everybody's purpose in your life is the same.
And it's so much better to go to the people who you
know are going to deliver what you need in that moment versus potentially making you feel worse.
Okay, community over competition, right? This has been your mantra forever.
When we're thinking about building a business that also supports our community, supports
ourselves, but supports other people, how do we balance the support of other people and, again,
rising tide with understanding that we also need to run our business. Because I think one of the things that happens with women, especially in entrepreneurship,
is this feeling that you have to be giving all of yourself to everybody else before you take
care of your own thing, right? You put everybody else's oxygen mask on before you put your own
mask on. How do we balance those two things? How do we balance that
generosity and altruism with also knowing that we have to pay our bills and take care of ourselves?
Oh, this is one of the best questions to ask. Because I think when looking at it through the
lens of, you know, being a woman and being the one who is told from the time, whether overtly or,
you know, covertly, that you are to sacrifice, whether overtly or covertly, that you are to
sacrifice, that you are to serve others, that you are to care for others, that is part of what gives
you value in this world, there can be a tendency to sacrifice yourself to the point of harming
either your business trajectory or your own mental health, more so perhaps in the opposite.
So if that is something that for you in particular resonates and you're hearing this and you're like,
okay, that's me. I'm the one who does everything for everyone all the time. And I always put myself
last. Then first and foremost, I want to say when it comes to community over competition,
it is not community without competition. It is not sacrifice myself so that I don't have a business, but other people do.
No, no, no.
It is when I win, I can raise the tide with me.
When I have success in my business and I prioritize my needs and the needs of my clients
or customers, when I invest in my professional development and my personal development, I
take time to care about me.
Thereby, with my success, I can help other people to rise, right? It's not saying I refuse to compete. I have to give it all away all the time. I can't uphold my prices. I have to give
discounts when asked because it's none of that, right? No, no, no, no, no. It is. We put people
first. We don't step on others in order to succeed.
We have a set of moral code. This is all the definition of healthy competition. What is
healthy competition? Having set rules or a moral code that you operate by, not stepping on other
people to succeed, right? Seeing people, not just profit. The quote is not a tide lifts all ships.
It is a rising tide lifts all ships. You got it. Yeah. You got it. In order for that tide to rise,
It is a rising tide lifts all ships.
You got it.
Yeah.
You got it.
In order for that tide to rise, you're like 100%. You have to be willing to fight for yourself too.
And so I think if that's something that someone's struggling with or they resonate very much with kind of the intro into this question, that would be what I would say to them.
Community over competition, it's about you finding success, yes, and helping to lift others up with you when you go,
it doesn't mean that you're not entitled to go after what you want in life or that you have to
be the one that sacrifices yourself constantly for others to the point at which you no longer
put yourself first. You don't put your oxygen mask on first. If anything, I think it requires you to hold yourself accountable to the greatness
within you because without your contributions to this world, there could be someone out there
who never has the opportunity to go after what they want in life. I'll give you a specific example.
With the work that you do, Tori, and the lessons that you're sharing, if instead of taking the risk
of putting your heart and soul into that book,
that I watched you cry when you signed your book deal,
when you shared it,
I could see the vulnerability
that was just going to pour out onto the page.
So I have no doubt it's there.
If you instead had decided,
you know, I can't, I can't.
I, you know, I'm not qualified enough, which by the way, women never think they are.
They want to apply for the job unless they check every single box,
whatever it is. Insert fear here and you hadn't gone after it. I guarantee you 10 years from now,
somebody who is going to either A, break a cycle, a financial cycle in her family
and start generating wealth
that's gonna transform her family,
never would have done it.
There's gonna be a woman out there
who never in a million years
would have stepped into a content creation role,
never would have seen someone like themselves
reflected in the finance space where you are dominating.
So they never would have thought it was possible for them.
But now five to 10 years from now, she will and she'll kill it. in the finance space where you are dominating. So they never would have thought it was possible for them.
But now, five to 10 years from now, she will.
And she'll kill it.
And she might even surpass you.
But the point being, that's a good thing.
That's the rising tide, right?
That's the you won so she can also win.
Not, you know, you sacrificed yourself on a sword because there wasn't a place for you, right?
It's about rising
to the occasion because that very greatness that you can accomplish can fuel someone else's success
down the line. We have to be willing to step up to that call. So I've discovered now that Natalie
is the person I call to gas me up. That is what I've realized. Thank you. Well, and yes, I can't
wait. I'm sending you a copy of the book and I can't
wait for you to read it because literally the book starts and ends with the same quote, which is
very similar to Rising Tide Lips All Ships. When you have all you need, build a longer table,
not a higher fence. And this idea, and again, I also talk about this in terms of personal finances, because we feel, again, as women, we have had altruism ingrained in us at every single moment of our lives.
And then when we have the audacity to want wealth or stability for ourselves, society weaponizes that altruism and says, why aren't you donating more?
Oh, you don't care.
You'd give this away for free, right?
You cannot put on someone else's
oxygen mask if you're gasping for air. If you are dead on the floor of the airplane because you were
focused on somebody else, you can't help anybody. So you have to put your oxygen mask on first.
And in this grappling that I've had to do with capitalism in general of how do you pursue wealth under capitalism to your point of like, I don't want to exploit anybody.
I don't want to win at capitalism because it means I've stepped on somebody.
But if I lose capitalism, that means deep suffering to myself and to other people.
So it's the idea of how do we better our own lives while doing the least amount of harm so that once we're
taken care of, we get to change the systems that exist. That's a mic drop right there.
But that's what I've had to grapple with because that same thing of like, when I was writing the
book, I was like, if you're an honest to God, living paycheck to paycheck kind of person,
right? It's not like you have your Netflix and you haven't canceled that. But like, literally, if you're living paycheck to paycheck, there's
nothing I can say that will actually help with that. And that's the systemic change that has
to happen and policy change and all of those things. But what I can do, and that's in my power
is take care of myself, get myself good, so that I can use my resources and money and power and voice to hopefully impact
everybody else. But it's hard. But it's hard. Because then you feel guilt. And society also
makes you feel guilty. If you are a woman succeeding, one, you're called a bitch, right?
You're very unlikable. And two we we weaponize your altruism
we tell you nope you should be you you shouldn't be doing that well why aren't yeah again why
aren't you doing anymore what's it's all of the play small be controllable because we've realized
we can't control you and it's the should word i hate to just keep saying but it's the should word. I hate to just keep saying, but it's like what you should be, right? And I think I had a realization last summer when I was postpartum with my daughter
and I was starting to travel again for work and I had returned from maternity leave fully and
was back on board and stepped into a new role at HoneyBook as chief evangelist. And
I felt very much like I was doing well.
I felt like, okay, I think I'm doing okay. Like I'm holding it all together.
But there was so much pressure from the outside of what I should be doing or what my definition
of motherhood should look like, or as a professional working woman, what I shouldn't
be doing, like pumping and breastfeeding, right? Or whatever, because who has time for that? Like, how dare she take 20 minutes to pump and feed another human? Like
those sorts of things, which by the way, I'm very, very grateful that I work at a company that
I have, I had the privilege of having an extraordinarily long maternity leave
paid, you know, and have every, every single need met that I've had both from a maternity
perspective. And I had a brain tumor
removed. So I went on short-term disability. I have had a long recovery with that. And I'm grateful
that I work at a very exceptional place that I've supported. So I want to clarify that.
But from the outside looking in, I felt like women can't win. You can't win if you're living
by the world's definition of success, because there is no definition of success for a woman.
Think about it.
Truly think about it.
Because if you don't go out and get a job, insert every negative thing you've ever heard.
If you stay home with kids, insert every negative thing you've ever heard.
Because we are fighting the wrong battle.
We are being pit against one another, chasing a definition of success that we should not even have to chase.
I think about that all of the time, specifically with the having kids versus not having kids,
right? It's like, oh, you have kids. And especially if you're a compensated mom,
well, then suddenly why aren't you a terrible mother? Why aren't you home? Versus, right?
Okay. You're a stay-at-home mom or a non-compensated working mom as we're starting to call them at her first yeah that
was from a previous podcast guest non-compensated working mom well then suddenly it's like don't you
care about your career right if you don't have kids well then it's like you must be a terrible
terrible person because you're meant to nurture you're meant to be someone who has men don't get
asked these questions they never get asked these men don't get asked these questions.
They never get asked these questions.
They never get asked these questions.
No, they don't. And I don't, yeah, I don't know who needs to hear this either, but I spent seven years.
So I had my benign brain tumor.
I spent seven years going through infertility and never did I realize how much pressure
I subconsciously had to equate my worth
and value to procreation. I never realized how much I had been taught that if I wasn't having
children, something's wrong. And that's just not the case. Your worth and value is not equated to
what you can do for other people. It's not equated to what you can produce either by your labor or by your body. Your physical actual labor. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Absolutely. But
yeah, that's what we're told. And so again, I think part of this power and community and coming
together and belonging and acknowledging that we do belong to each other. We have a responsibility
to look out for one another and we have a responsibility to fight for, not against one another, especially as women and especially in
these spaces where with varying degrees of privilege, we have a responsibility to fight
and to fight for one another, to all have access. We talk about equity.
I think that it comes down to being willing to have these conversations in spaces where we can be brave and
curious and safe, to listen to others' lived experiences, and to not allow the narratives
that either we have allowed to hold ourselves back or we see being used to pit us against one
another to win. We can't allow it to win. Ask yourself, who benefits from it? If I believe X, who's
benefiting from it? And if it's not us, if it's not the community, if it's not me, then who?
It'll illuminate a lot. It'll illuminate a lot. And you've said before this idea that women feel
the need to be everything to everyone, right? All the time.
I would probably equate it, and correct me if I'm wrong, to this feeling of you have to have it all,
right? How to have it all, right?
How to have it all as a woman.
A lot of us immediately resonate with the feeling of I have to be everything to everybody.
Does it make it harder then when women pursue entrepreneurship?
Is this an exacerbated feeling then when you have a woman who is pursuing running a business?
Yes.
I mean, I think that it is definitely a psychological factor.
It is something that you come up against where you feel as though, especially in a role of
leadership, like we said, you can't win.
It's very hard.
But what I will say is that there is liberation as well in going through entrepreneurship
and acknowledging things like you're not always going to make everyone happy.
You can't.
It's impossible.
People are not going to like you.
That's okay.
Their opinion of you, again, does not equate to your worth and value.
These are things as a business owner you have to start to figure out.
Not every problem is yours to solve.
If you try to solve all the problems, you're not going to solve any of the problems.
These are like business lessons that I've learned on my own journey.
But then when I start to learn them, I start to realize why did I feel the need in the
first place to solve every problem for every person all the time in my life?
Where did that come from?
Because that's not going to lead to success, neither in a personal context or a professional
one.
Why did I feel
that if everyone in the room didn't like me, that I was a failure? Where does that come from?
Starting to sort of tear down those beliefs as you move through building that business, because
you're forced to, you don't have a choice, but also you start, if you're able to get into
communities with other women who are building these businesses, who are going through it and
who say my favorite words in the entire English language, which are, me too. Me too.
I've dealt with it too. I've felt it too. You're not alone in this, right? And starting to
acknowledge these places where maybe we carry through these double standards, the double-edged
sword of feeling like you need to be everything to everyone all the time, needing to be perfect
all the time, whether that's in business or in life, always having to be twice as good, twice as polished.
Don't make a mistake, especially not a public one. There's no coming back from that if you
screw up in business and a client doesn't like you or a customer doesn't get their order on time.
Taking that as a personal failing. As an entrepreneur, as you start to move through
that and you start to release that, you start to release the shame and the guilt and the
expectations you've brought into it that have been conditioned, right? With like kind of placed upon you. It is very, very much a liberating thing. And that's a dangerous thing, right? Someone that doesn't live within the confines of those beliefs is someone that can make tremendous impact in the world. And that's a dangerous, but beautiful and powerful thing. And so I'm a big proponent of wanting to see more folks, women, non-binary folks stepping in
and succeeding and thriving in entrepreneurship as much as possible because it changes our culture
in a really powerful way. It changes our world in a really powerful way.
So how can we do a better job of cultivating the kind of communities we want to
see, but also making sure that we're not denying our own needs or pushing them to the side in order
to build that line of connection? Yeah. Look, you have to define what freedom and success look like
for you. That's the first thing. So start by defining what is the freedom
that you are seeking in your life and in your business?
What does that look like?
Especially for business owners.
If you run a business,
what is that freedom that you're chasing?
Is it that you want flexibility,
you want creative freedom to choose what you work on?
What is the freedom?
Because sometimes we just focus on success,
but choosing a destination
as a point of success in our lives
doesn't necessarily mean we're going to feel the way we want on the other side of it, right?
Putting a benchmark and saying, my definition of success is I want to be a New York Times
bestselling author. Well, you can get there and still be miserable and unhappy. But if you ask
yourself the question, when I envision my life at the end of it, and I feel free. I feel truly free. Not the best, but my best,
whatever that looks like. What does that feel like? What does that look like?
And then what leads to that? What are those success milestones that I believe don't just
lead to checking the boxes and pleasing the world, but leading towards that vision of freedom?
You start there. You start there and acknowledging what you want your life to look like, both from the emotional and then
backtracking into what does it potentially look like to get there? That's the first thing.
The second thing, though, I think we talked about surrounding yourself with strong people
and where you mentioned and incorporated in knowing who to go to for what. This is also where I think having
both self-awareness and accountability partners does come into play. So as you're growing in your
professional life, as you're developing as a human being, having people, yes, that pump you up,
but also that hold you accountable. In my life, it often looks like my partner,
looks like my best friend, Jess, who will say things to me like, you know, giving me the look like, are you sure you should say
yes to that?
Because I remember you telling me two nights ago that you were on the verge of burnout.
Holding me accountable in the places where the self-awareness, you know, is a little
bit less visible for me, isn't quite as clear as it should be.
So having those points of contact with people that will hold you accountable,
that will keep you on track to not sacrificing yourself too much, to not giving away great
opportunities because you don't feel worthy of them or because maybe you think somebody else
would do it better. You question your ability, right? Because you've been taught to question
your ability. You question your qualifications Because you've been taught to question your ability. You
question your qualifications because you've been taught to question your qualifications.
I'll give another example. The pandemic was really interesting because for the first time,
my husband and I were both working from home and he would hear me on calls, on meetings.
I'm in our bedroom, obviously, and he's on the other side of that door that y'all can't see.
He would listen to me in meetings and he would start after a couple of weeks
coming into my office after meetings and say,
hey, are you open to some feedback?
And I'm like, yeah, give it, hit me.
Like I love good critical feedback,
especially from someone again that wants me to succeed,
that wants to see me win.
He's like, you know, in that meeting,
you really discounted your own contributions.
Does that make sense? Stop saying that. contributions. You all, does that make sense?
Stop saying that.
Why are you saying, does that make sense?
You made perfect sense when you articulated your response.
You don't need to insert doubt.
And then there was another meeting where he goes, I heard that call.
You put the idea out first.
Somebody else hopped on and took credit.
Why did you allow that to happen?
Are you going to follow up with that person and just affirm for them that like, he called me out, you know, he gave me that feedback.
Why is that so important? Because sometimes we feel afraid or we feel uncertain. And so we go
back to the spaces that feel safe. And I catch myself doing it when I am like, oh, does that
make sense? I, you know, I just wanted to say, I thought I might add, I throw in this
passive language out of fear of being bold and direct and decisive to have the accountability
partner, in this case being a man, my white male husband, who comes in and goes, why did you do
that? Because I wouldn't have said it like that. And challenges me to acknowledge
the places where I'm still allowing those systems to win. Because that's what it's about. It's about,
am I going to let that conditioning win? No, I'm not. I'm going to challenge it and I'm going to
see places where I can improve how I'm navigating the space that I'm in and allow folks that want
to see you win to give you that feedback if you're
open to it again, if they're coming from that place of like, I know you. Why? Why? Come on.
It's so critical and it's so important. And that's the thing too that I wanted to call out.
People must earn the right to give you feedback. Because the amount of people who give you and I feedback
on a daily basis, we get a lot of feedback about who we should be, what kind of businesses we
should run, what we should or shouldn't say. People who want to see you succeed deserve to
give you feedback, right? Because that's the feedback that's actually helpful. Where they're
like, hey, you said that. I don't think you meant that but here's how it sounded it doesn't look good but i want you to be better great thank
you helpful feedback right versus feedback that wants to tear you down and doesn't want you to
get better because of this feedback do not take feedback from people who have not earned the right
to give you feedback.
I love that.
I like, I think that's something I had to learn.
I want it on a mug.
Can you put it in the merch shop?
Like, can I get it on a mug?
Can I get it on a shirt?
Because how often do we do it? How often do we allow people to give us advice or feedback or critique us, right?
That we, we shouldn't, we shouldn't, you know, especially when it comes to
critical feedback or comes to criticism. And if I wouldn't go to that person for advice,
why am I allowing them to speak those negative words of feedback to me? It has to go both ways.
And I'll also say too, though, like, I think we can often, and I don't know how, if you've always
been good at receiving feedback, I was not always great at receiving feedback. It was something for a while that I actually
struggled with, like separating myself from the feedback and the growth. But one thing I'll say
too, is when you do start to identify those people for you that you're like, I really value and
respect this person's opinion. If you're able and you feel safe enough, especially in that
relationship, be direct in saying,
hey, you are someone I really respect and admire.
You are someone who I know is going to tell me the truth.
You have a different viewpoint from me on this.
I just want you to know you have a blanket statement of permission to give me feedback.
I want you to know that you are one of very few people that I invite.
I want you to always feel
comfortable being honest with me, giving me that feedback.
Because on the flip side, just as well, some of us struggle with receiving the feedback.
There are folks that would never give you the feedback or are hesitant to until they
are given permission, which is frankly pretty respectful.
So to open and invite that I think is also really critical and important to be able to
say, hey, I want you.
I want you to hold me accountable to going after the things that I think is also really critical and important to be able to say, hey, I want you.
I want you to hold me accountable to going after the things that I want in life. I want you to call me out when I'm playing it safe and I shouldn't be. I want you to check in with me if
I'm working too hard and burning myself out and I'm not taking care of my own needs, but I'm taking
care of everybody else in the business or everybody else in my family or everybody else in my friend
group. I want you to call me out and I need you to call me out and speaking what you need because,
speaking what you need, saying what you need. I know that's hard. I know that can feel very
uncomfortable if it's not something you normally do, but oftentimes it's the first step, I think,
towards getting to a place where you're surrounded
by exactly what you need.
Like you're never going to get it if you don't ask for it.
So until you ask for it, right?
It's so wise.
Talk to me about HoneyBook.
Talk to me about what you're doing with them because it's such an interesting and cool
transition, right?
Because entrepreneur to like still autonomy, but not really running it for yourself.
So talk to me about the work you're
doing with them. Yeah. Look, I'm so passionate about the work I do every day. So I'm Chief
Evangelist at HoneyBook. And my role is to help service-based businesses to build a remarkable
client flow that gives them their life back. My job is to literally help entrepreneurs succeed
every day. And I love it. And in the case of HoneyBook, we use technology to do it. We help people automate, build systems and workflows that
fuel their business so that they can make money while they sleep. And in a service-based business
where people are truly trading their talent and their time for money, the ability to leverage
technology is so critical in the long-term success of a business in getting better mental health,
more time doing what you love, more time with the people you care about, all of that.
Because again, like we talked about those pressures, we feel to be everything to everyone
all the time. It still applies when you run a business. And so you can easily feel like you
have to do everything for everyone all the time, be on 24 seven, respond to everything
manually. And it just doesn't have to be that way. So we help business owners to build that client flow so that it runs seamlessly.
And it allows them to both deliver a really amazing experience,
to make more money doing what they love, work less hours doing what they love, and get back to,
for so many of them, that inspired place for why they started their business in the first place,
what their greater purpose is for why they took that giant leap of faith, that huge risk and
sailed out into the unknown. And it's cool too, because with my role, I get to do advocacy and
championing the community. And I say I'm a little bit of a mama bear for small business. And
there's a lot that we're going to have to be fighting for in the weeks and months
to come for this community in particular. And so I'm excited to be able to do that. I'm really
honored to be able to do that. I love that. My last question for you, I could talk to you for
hours, but we have to wrap it up at some point. Looking back, starting Rising Tide was seemingly this huge shift for you.
What are you most proud of that came out of that movement?
What I am most proud of with Rising Tide is that I know it saved people's life.
Running your business, we've talked about it.
It is lonely. It is hard.
It is isolating at times. And the amount of pressure and responsibility that so many people
feel on their shoulders, because again, we're not talking about hobbies. We're talking about
livelihoods. We're talking about how people put food on the table. We're talking about a community
that had to stop working in 2020 for the safety of others and did it proudly. We're talking about a community that
is facing economic turmoil and a recession. And this isn't the first time for many of them that
they're facing an uncertain road ahead. I'm talking about a community that is the underdog
in all things and is fighting an uphill battle every single day. The system was not built for
them, right? In any way. The system was not built for them, right? In any way,
the system was not built for them when it comes to healthcare, affordable childcare, when it comes to
how they file their taxes without going to jail, because it is so confusing. The system was not
built for them. And yet they still chose to go after something they were passionate about.
So we're talking about a group of people who have courage, they are resilient, they have grit,
and yet they still feel like they're carrying the weight of the world on their shoulders. I cannot tell you how many
times I have had people say to me, going to one of these meetups that was free, because that was
the whole, from the very first day, free and accessible was always the key to Rising Tide.
Rising Tide has not generated a dollar. It's run even today with volunteer leadership
on the grassroots level. I was able to go to a meeting. It was free. And for the first time,
I felt seen. I was really struggling. I didn't know that I could keep doing it anymore.
I had been alone for four days in my apartment by myself behind my computer,
and I hadn't talked to another human being. I almost didn't go. I sat in my car,
but then I decided what the hell I'm just going to walk in. I met one person and that one person
saved my life. I met one person in that one conversation made me feel less alone. I met
one person in that conversation made me believe that I was capable of going after the thing that
I had always dreamt of the thing that my partner said I couldn't do, or my mother said was not
possible. Or, you know, my friends doubted and made fun of me for this person saw me.
That's what I'm most proud of, is helping people to feel seen, loved, heard, valued,
respected, and not even by my hand, but by creating a framework where other leaders could
rise up to do it.
Because Rising Tide is not a success because of me, and it's not a success because of HoneyBook support, and it's not a success even because
of our incredible tiny corporate team that works on it. Although they do deserve 100% of the credit
when it comes to where we've gotten today. It's a success because other business owners in
hometowns all across this world, especially in the US and Canada, raised their hands and said,
I want it to be different,, I want it to be different
and I want it to be better. And I want a space where we fight for one another and not against
one another. And they stepped up and they made a change in their local community. That is, I think,
what I am most proud of when it comes to rising tide. Thank you. Thank you for being here. Thank
you for your work. Natalie, where can people find you? I am all over the internet. So you can find me,
I mean, truly, you can find me on Instagram at Natalie Frank on TikTok at small biz Natalie.
Honeybook is just honeybook.com. Come find us. If you are building a business and you need support,
this is not an empty invitation. I'm not someone that's like, come over for dinner. And I don't
actually plan to ever invite you over. Okay. This is, if you are building a business and you don't
want to do it alone, let me be your small business, big sister. You need a mama bear. I'm
in. Send me a DM. I will always respond. It's me, not somebody else. And let me know how either
HoneyBook or I can support you. You don't have to do this alone and you deserve to build a life of
passion and purpose. Tori, thank you so much for having me. You made me cry. This was
such a good conversation. I'm so grateful. You did. Thank you. You did. Thank you so much for
being here. Thank you to Natalie for joining us and thank her for her incredible work. You can
learn more about Natalie, Rising Tide Society, HoneyBook at financialfeministpodcast.com.
We're so grateful as always for you joining us and we can't wait to see you next week.
Catch you later, financial feminists.
Thank you for listening to Financial Feminist,
a Her First 100K podcast.
Financial Feminist is hosted by me, Tori Dunlap,
produced by Kristen Fields,
marketing and administration by Karina Patel,
Sharice Wade, Alina Helzer, Paulina Isaac,
Sophia Cohen, Valerie Oresko, Jack Koning, Khalil Dumas,
Elizabeth McCumber, Beth Bowen, and Amanda LeFue. Research by Arielle Johnson, audio engineering by
Austin Fields, promotional graphics by Mary Stratton, photography by Sarah Wolf, and theme
music by Jonah Cohen Sound. A huge thanks to the entire Her First 100K team and community for
supporting the show. For more information about Financial Feminist, Her First 100K, our guests, and episode show
notes, visit financialfeministpodcast.com or follow us on Instagram at financialfeministpodcast.