Woman Evolve with Sarah Jakes Roberts - Choosing God's Narrative w/ Monique Rodriguez
Episode Date: April 10, 2024Off the grip, SJR wants to know — Can W.E. normalize the act of surrender to be a lifelong process? ‘Cause apparently the people are out here picking up what they’re putting down! This week, lis...teners will get some inside scoop on the secret sauce to success thanks to Founder & CEO of Mielle Organics, Monique Rodriguez. As a triple threat, Sis has found herself booked, busy, and blessed! She and SJR chopped it up about work-life balance, resolving issues in the presence of God, plus the cost and criticism of success. Hear how Monique chooses to silence the noise of the world while relying on the voice of God. And to those of you with stories that live rent FREE in your head…know that the mind is a powerful thing to waste! Become a power player by joining the Power Moves Launch Team + Email podcast@womanevolve.com to ask for advice, share your good news, discuss trending stories, or check on the bestie SJR!This episode carries a trigger warning for sexual assault. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
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Imagine you're a fly on the wall at a dinner between the mafia, the CIA, and the KGB.
That's where my new podcast begins. This is Neil Strauss, host of To Live and Die in LA.
And I wanted to quickly tell you about an intense new series about a dangerous spy
taught to seduce men for their secrets and sometimes their lives. From Tenderfoot TV,
this is To Die For. To Die For is available now. Listen for free on the
iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
My whole life, I've been told this one story about my family, about how my great-great
grandmother was killed by the mafia back in Sicily. I was never sure if it was true, so
I decided to find out. And even though my uncle Jimmy told me I'd only be making the vendetta worse, I'm going
to Sicily anyway.
Come to Italy with me to solve this hundred-year-old murder mystery.
Listen to The Sicilian Inheritance on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
What's up, everybody?
This is Stephen A. Smith, host of The Stephen A. Smith Show podcast. your podcast.
Hi, I'm Martha Stewart and we're back with a new season of my podcast. This season will be even
more revealing and more personal with more entrepreneurs, more live events and more questions
from you. I'm talking to my cosmetic dermatologist, Dr. Dan Belkin, about the secrets behind my
skincare.
Encore Jane about creating a billion dollar startup.
Walter Isaacson about the geniuses who change the world.
Listen and subscribe to the Martha Stewart podcast on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm John O'Brien, host of Money and Wealth on the Black Effect Podcast Network.
I'm an entrepreneur and a businessman.
Now every Thursday, my newest venture is educating you on how to win financially.
Even better, I'm going to teach it in a way that, well, you can understand.
I'm going to meet you where you are and take you where you need to be.
We all might have different starting points and end goals, but as long as we have the
desire to acquire financial freedom, it can be done.
Listen to Money and Wealth with John Hope Bryant every Thursday on the Black Effect
Podcast Network, iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I heard someone say that forgiveness is something
that you often have to remind yourself of.
Surrendering to God's narrative for me right now
is me choosing to seek God's narrative over anyone else's.
I've learned that criticism usually comes
from a small group
of people that just talk very, very loud.
Success is not success if you're not reaching back
and lifting other people up.
What's up, Deli?
What's up, girly?
We back in this thing, week 14.
You feel me?
Listen, okay, so maybe rapping is not my thing.
Let's not be judgy though.
You've tried new things and failed as well.
What's up delegation?
It's back for another week.
The woman evolved podcast.
We back at it like we never left and we are continuing this month's conversation about
surrendering to God's narrative, which I had to surrender to the fact that God doesn't
want me to be a rapper.
Can I explain it?
I wish I could, but I guess he had the need of me in another area.
Have I surrendered to it?
Well, just run this back about 30 seconds and you'll see I'm still laying it down.
What do you need to surrender as it relates to God's narrative for your life?
What are you hanging on to that you need to release?
Locke, I'm not really holding on to me being a rapper,
but when it comes to surrendering to God's narrative
right now in this season of my life,
it's probably the same thing for me over and over again.
Can we normalize surrendering being a lifelong process?
I heard a powerful quote about forgiveness once that I believe just completely encapsulate
what it means to surrender.
Oftentimes we struggle with surrendering because we see it as a one time thing.
When I lay it down, I'm never going to pick it back up again.
It's hard for me to lay it down because I'm afraid that I'm going to pick it back up again.
I heard someone say that forgiveness
is something that you often have to remind yourself of.
Like I am choosing to exercise forgiveness
as it relates to X, Y, Z.
So in those moments where unforgiveness arises,
it doesn't change the fact that like last month
I was doing okay, there is something that has happened
within this season of my life with where I am mentally, emotionally, and spiritually that has made me begin to feel angry and vindictive
about something that has happened in my life.
And so I have to remind myself that I am pursuing forgiveness.
We are pursuing surrender and I am constantly pursuing a surrender of my feelings of inadequacy, but
I do feel like I'm getting better.
Maybe what happens is we lay it down and then when we pick it back up, we're not picking
up the same measure.
Maybe I laid down a ton of inadequacy, but I picked up a few ounces, I put on a few pounds, and so each time I surrender,
I am surrendering less and less of the thing
that I once had a lot of.
I believe that makes sense.
So I'm surrendering feelings of inadequacy.
I'm also, oh, big one, I am having to surrender
to God's narrative
about my grace and my anointing,
as opposed to searching for validation from other people.
So, surrendering to God's narrative for me right now
is me choosing to seek God's narrative
over anyone else's, which is really hard.
I think that as long as I was by myself in the background, nobody was checking for me,
I believe surrendering to God's narrative was so much easier.
I am going to be posting, no, I already preached this message is posted. I don't think
it's on my YouTube page though, but the message that I preached is called, in the message,
I talk about success changing your definition, your definition of success changing. I preached
this about the disciples coming back. I don't remember what the name of the message is and I know sometimes y'all don't be remembering
the name of the message y'all just be remembering what you got out of it.
One of the things that I got out of that message was success, your definition of
success can change. It can be hijacked and so surrendering to God's narrative
in this season of my life is not allowing my definition of
success, effectiveness, fulfillment to be hijacked by metrics.
Because right now with the book coming out, which if this is your first time listening,
I have a book coming out.
It's called Power Moves, Ignite Your Confidence and Become a Force.
I'm super excited about it.
If this is not your first time listening to it, you better not have rolled your eyes when I said it again.
I want you guys to know that this is what's on my heart
right now, this message.
And so I am, you know, there are some nerves about reviews
and it being gout and did this make sense
and did I say it properly?
And already it's like when you say something,
you go back and you're like,
I wish I would have said that differently.
I wish I would have said that better. I'm at this stage right now where I'm like, God, I am praying that the hearts that are
meant to receive this message are open to receive it and that the words that were in
my heart are translated through the pages in a way that makes sense for their need.
And so that's where I am.
Where are you?
Tell me about it.
Hey, I want you all to start emailing me.
Can you start emailing me podcast
at womanevolved.com? Like give me a testimony. Tell me how the podcast is changing you, uplifting
you, telling me stories that you saw in the news. Boost your girl up a little bit. Like
did you do something amazing? Did your girl show off and we need to brag on her? Like
just email me all of the randomness so that I can start reading it on the podcast.
I do enjoy minding your business as well.
So if you have an advice question for me, you can send it to podcast at womanevolve.com.
That is exactly what our girl just did.
Let's get into this week's mind your Business question. This week's Mind Your Business question
is one that I found really interesting.
I get a lot of questions where most people
are trying to navigate what has happened to them,
but this is something that she feels responsible
for doing to someone else.
So let's read it.
Hi, Pastor Sarah, thank you for showing up for you
so you could show up for us.
Thank you.
I love you.
Now let's take a deep breath.
I haven't talked about this at all,
but I felt comfortable when you said,
it's okay if you're the villain.
So I built the courage to finally open up about it.
Okay, so 10 years ago, there was this man,
my mom was dating,
and we were living with him at the time.
One night he touched me inappropriately
and I was afraid to say anything because I knew we wouldn't have anywhere to go. The
entire time she was with him I was uncomfortable. He watched me all day around the house. I
never felt safe and she was never an approachable parent. Fast forward two years later, I began
reaching out to teachers telling my story, but I started over-exaggerating
and lying like he raped me because I was thinking to myself, if I say he did something really
bad he was going to jail.
I messed up and I continued to do these stupid things with different people simply because
I felt heard.
I wanted him out of the house.
I just wanted to feel safe.
I didn't want to sleep with my door locked every night.
I wanted a relationship with my mom. I needed my mom. I needed to want to sleep with my door locked every night. I wanted a relationship
with my mom. I needed my mom. I needed to be protected by my mom. He had this saying,
I've been to jail three times. I ain't going back. So why would I put my hands on a child?
So she didn't care how I felt, nor did she see I needed her. It continued until my mom
fell ill and still nothing changed. Everything I needed kind of took a back burner and I
began caring for her until she passed away.
I finally felt safe at 21
when I was no longer under the roof with him.
I tried to force myself to forget it
because people didn't believe me.
I kind of just lived through it
and didn't really address it, but it's there.
I'm 25 now and here I am trying to serve God
and get closer to him and it's challenging
because that eats away at me.
Oh, friend, I am so, so sorry
that you've gone through all of these experiences.
Before you even had the encounter
with your mom's boyfriend at the time,
you guys were in a situation where you felt like
without him, you all would have nowhere to go.
So the trauma of what happened to you
and then the trauma of the reality of your living situation
is all tangled up in the same experience.
You said you're 25 now and this happened 10 years ago.
That means you were 15 years old, a 15 year old
girl. Then you said two years later when you were 17, that you began exaggerating the story.
I think what's critical in you coming to a place where you are able to really see fully your experience is not just seeing that you lied or exaggerated, but recognizing all of
the variables that played a role in your experience.
So a young girl with unstable housing condition, a mother that you didn't always feel was approachable, and then this devastating experience,
my heart just breaks for you.
The enemy attempted to exploit an opening for your life through a living situation and circumstance
that he desired to ultimately use to alter your life
and your destiny to be in a place where you're 25
and trying to serve God and get closer to God
after all that you've been through
is just a miracle within itself.
And so I want you to recognize that as we're talking
about surrendering to God's narrative,
that when God looks at our story,
God doesn't look at one scene.
God doesn't just turn on the TV.
Have you ever turned on the TV
and it was in the middle of a movie,
you had no idea what was going on
and you started making judgment about certain characters
and then maybe you saw the movie again in full context and you're like, wow, maybe I
was wrong about what I thought about this person the first time because I didn't see
the full movie.
So often when we are looking at our own lives, we're looking at one scene in our life and
we're stuck in that one scene, stuck in the choices we made, the decisions that we made and we can't see beyond that scene.
Part of what happens in our relationship with God and our ability to go to therapy is that
we zoom out of the picture and we look at our lives within full context.
And we see that given our circumstance, given our relationships, given the tools in development or under development
that we possess, that many of the choices that we judge ourselves for are choices that
God understood would be easily accessible to us because we just didn't have the tools
that we have now.
But thank God for Jesus who always causes us to triumph and positions us to leave his
fragrance everywhere
we go.
We have an opportunity to embrace the fullness of who we are.
So yes, you exaggerated.
Yes, you made it seem bigger than it was, but have you thought about this other reality
is that maybe it felt that big to you that no, maybe the rape did not actually occur.
But that violation in your need to feel heard was that large to you, that it really was
an exaggeration of the truth, but not an exaggeration of your experience, if that makes sense.
And while I would in no means suggest that it's okay to lie about something like that,
I want you to understand that your experience with violation, your experience with not being
heard, not being seen, not being valued, made something that other people may brush off
and not seem like it's a big deal.
It had as much gravity to you as someone who maybe had that experience.
And so this is the complexity of what happens when we are trying to figure out the language
that we need to give full expression to our experiences and our need to want to walk it
out with someone.
I'm not sure if there were any implications
about what happened.
I don't think in the letter,
whether or not you expressed that he actually went to prison
or they pressed charges or what accountability looked like.
Another possibility is that though he may have touched you
inappropriately, you know,
you may have not been the first person who was a victim
to that experience.
And sometimes God makes sure that there is restitution and that there is a harvest
reaped in other places.
So I don't know what the implications are of what happened to him.
If there is a way that you can undo and bring truth, I don't know.
I'll need you to write me back in.
I didn't say your name.
Maybe we can figure it out together.
But what I will say is that you have to take seriously
how painful your upbringing was,
how painful that experience was,
and really give yourself some compassion
that allows you to see that the need to exaggerate,
the need to be that desperate for support and for a safe
space made you act in a way that you regret, but also to really embrace why was I in that
position in the first place and forgive yourself for that.
This is such a complex issue and I don't know that I've given you the best advice, but if
there's someone listening right
now and you have some other wisdom, please write us at podcasts at womanybob.com.
I would love to add wisdom in the multitude of counsel.
There is safety.
And so if there's anyone who's listening and you have a similar experience or some wisdom
that you felt that I have left on the table or bypassed, please make sure that you write us
and let us know what it is.
But surrendering to God's narrative requires
that we see the fullness of who we are
and the fullness of our experiences,
even those things that we wish we could undo,
and especially those things that have caused us to do the things we wish we could undo and especially those things that have caused us to do the things we wish
we could undo.
I hope that's helpful for you.
Evolve.
This is Neal Strauss, host of the Tenderfoot TV True Crime Podcast, To Live and Die in
LA.
I'm here to tell you about the new
podcast I've been undercover investigating for the last year and a half. It's called To Die For. Here's a clip.
All these girls were sent out into the world and they were told try to meet important men,
try to attach yourself to important men. The voice you're hearing is a Russian model agent telling me about spies sent out to seduce
men with political power.
The war in Ukraine is also being fought by all these girls that are all over important
cities.
For the first time, a military-trained seduction spy reveals how the Russian government turned
sex and love
into a deadly weapon.
If you want to kill your target, it's easy.
You just seduce him, take him somewhere, start having sex, and then he's very vulnerable
so you can kill him easily.
To Die For is available now.
Listen for free on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. for Join us as we travel thousands of miles on the beautiful and crazy island of Sicily,
as I trace my roots back through a mystery for the ages and untangle clues within my family's origin story,
which is morphed like a game of telephone through the generations.
Was our family matriarch killed in a land deal gone wrong?
Or was it by the Sicilian mafia?
A lover's quarrel?
Or was she, as my father believed,
a witch? Listen to The Sicilian Inheritance on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or
wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm John O'Brien, host of Money and Wealth on the Black Effect Podcast Network.
I'm an entrepreneur and a businessman.
Some would call a thought leader.
Now, every Thursday, my newest venture is educating you on how to win financially.
Even better, I'm going to teach it in a way that, well, you can understand.
No unexplained theories, no mundane lessons, no using 20 words when two will do.
I'm gonna meet you where you are
and take you where you need to be.
I'm giving you straight talk, relatable stories,
and life lessons through my own experiences
and the lens of others.
We're not just talking about
why financial freedom is important.
We're focusing on how you can achieve it too.
We all might have different starting points and in goes, but
as long as we have the desire to acquire financial freedom, it can be done from the streets to
the sweets. Listen to Money and Wealth with John Hope Bryant every Thursday on the Black
Effect Podcast Network, iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Martha Stewart and we're back with a new season of my podcast.
This season will be even more revealing and more personal with more entrepreneurs, more
trailblazers, more live events, more Martha and more questions from you.
I'm talking to my cosmetic dermatologist Dr. Dan Belkin
about the secrets behind my skincare. Walter Isaacson about the geniuses who
change the world. Encore Jane about creating a billion dollar startup. Dr.
Elisa Pressman about the five basic strategies to help parents raise good
humans. Florence Fabricant about the authenticity in the world of food writing.
Be sure to tune in to season two of the Martha Stewart podcast.
Listen and subscribe to the Martha Stewart podcast on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I used to have so many men.
How this beguiling woman in her 50s.
She looked like a million bucks.
With zero qualifications.
She had a Harvard plaque.
Tricks her way past a wall of lawyers and agents.
She's got all of these Maseratis and Bentley's
all in the driveway.
Is it like a mansion?
Yes, it's a mansion.
That this queen of the con uses to scam
some of the biggest names in professional sports
out of untold fortunes.
About six million.
Approximately $11 million.
Nearly $10 million was all gone.
Employing whatever means necessary
to bleed her victims dry. She would probably
have sex with one of her clients. Hide your money in your old Richmond because she is
on the prowl. Listen to Queen of the Con, Season 5, The Athlete Whisperer on the iHeart or wherever you get your podcasts.
Man, life is so complicated, child.
It just be out here doing what only life can do. And then there are moments where it also feels
just like very simple and very straightforward,
which is why it's so mind boggling when it gets hard again.
I don't know who you are on the other side of this podcast or what you're up against,
but I just want you to know you're not the only one going through some tough things.
I preached a message at the International Leadership Summit that we're actually going
to put on my YouTube page soon, and it was called Finish Strong. And in Finish Strong, I talk about how many of us live at intersections and like, I'm
righteous and I'm struggling.
I'm a business person, but I'm also creative.
There are all of these different intersections that we're having to live in.
And I believe that that too is a part of God's narrative. Jesus was 100% divine and 100% human.
And creating space for someone requires that we recognize that they're all living in intersections,
that they're good and bad, that they're mature and underdeveloped.
And I don't know, it's hard because if you're like me, you like to think of things
in black and white, but things are very rarely black and white.
And yet God is so, so good that he holds capacity for all of who we are.
So I'm constantly praying God help me, help me to have capacity for all of who, for all
of who I am and all of who others are as well.
I am excited about this week's podcast.
First of all, let me tell you
how gangster Monique Rodriguez is.
So we've been trying to get on a podcast together
for a little bit of time now.
And we scheduled one, but then I changed the format
or I think I had to have surgery
and so we weren't able to continue it.
She's invited me to a retreat that she does a few times,
and I have said no a few times.
It's no shade at all.
It's just that my kids schedule, if you guys have kids, then,
you know, like the school's not sending out stuff as far in advance
as we would sometimes like.
And it always falls sometime around spring break.
So I've had to say no, because I like to be at home with my little stalkers.
And so I said no a few times.
Finally she reaches out to me and she's like, I just want to make sure we're not beefing
because I've said I've reached out, you know, some things have been canceled.
And I just had so much respect for her because a lot of times we make assumptions about people
when we could just figure out the truth if we were willing to have direct conversations.
If you don't know Monique Rodriguez founded Myel Organics in 2014 after her healthy hair
care regimen for her tailbone length hair became somewhat of a craze among her social
media followers.
It is now 10 years since she started the company and it has
become a force to be reckoned with as it relates to natural hair care products. The company began
on the back of one product, the Advanced Hair Formula, a unique proprietary blend of herbs,
amino acids, and minerals to support healthy hair, skin, nails, and immune system. Since then,
it has expanded to 10 collections under Monique's direction, including products
for skin and children.
Maia has been distributed in more than 87 countries and can be found in more than 100,000
stores across the US.
Let me tell you something.
One thing about the queen of hair, as she calls herself, is that she is going to make
sure that not only does she have a quality product, but that it is accessible as well.
For those of you who have not followed her very inspiring journey, things that you should
know about her, she is a real deal believer.
She loves God.
She seeks to bring him the glory in everything that she does. And she also
is living at an intersection herself as her company has taken off and had quite a bit of success.
She recently sold in and created a little bit of a social media frenzy because at the end of the
day she wanted to scale her company, but she sold it I think for, I don't know, y'all mind her business.
Go mind your business if you want to know how much she sold it for.
But I have to tell you that I think she very much so embodies what it means to live in
an intersection.
She is a mother, she is a wife, she is a business owner, she's holding down all of these different,
she's a nonprofit owner, she's holding down all of these different, she's a nonprofit
owner, she's holding down all of these different corners of her identity, but she's also not
allowing the success of MyEl Organics and even the selling of MyEl Organics to stop
her from dreaming and pursuing what God has next for her.
And so she is successful and hungry.
What an intersection for us all to live in.
She is quite literally living out God's narrative for her life. And she took the time to sit
down and talk to me and just have some good old girl talk that I believe is going to help
you. So let's get into this week's conversation.
How are you? I'm good. How are you doing? I'm doing okay. What's your world been about?
Oh, just busy.
I'm busy with work and traveling and a lot of speaking engagements.
In addition to, I have two kids graduating, one from high school, one from eighth grade.
So I have school trips planned, graduation prom.
So just, you know, trying to prioritize all of that,
you know, making sure that I'm present for my kids
and, you know, but also trying to tell my team like,
look, I need a little break.
Yeah.
Because I'm not a robot.
So I'm like taking this week
and next week is their spring break.
So we're going to Florida.
So I'm just taking like these weeks
to kind of just just redo a reset.
Because I was starting to feel a little burnt out.
I mean, you have been everywhere.
Obviously, I follow you on social media.
And it seems like you have been really doing all of the things.
But I know that that can often come at a cost.
Oh, yeah.
So January is kind of slow for us us because it's after the holidays.
But February, February picks up fast.
March is like super, super fast.
And it's like so busy.
I feel like February and March was just like one month that just,
you know, it was just all came together.
But, you know, I'm not complaining.
I feel like truly blessed, obviously, that, you know, God has blessed me with all these opportunities
and I'm grateful.
I'm grateful to be like wanted, right?
You want to be in demand.
But I just know that when I start to feel like
I'm not giving 100% of myself,
I know that I need to just take a step back,
reset, take a break, so I can go out here
and give 100% for, you% for my work and for my family
as well too. So when I feel a little off balance, I know I need to just do a reset. Have you always
been that sensitive to what you need or did you kind of learn by trial and error? I definitely
learned by trial and error because I would start to feel very anxious
some of the times and feeling very overwhelmed,
but not being able to pinpoint where that source of anxiety
was coming from.
But once I started to really be in tune with my spirit
and my body and knowing that, okay,
I'm not getting a lot of sleep, I'm not eating properly,
I'm not on my normal everyday regimen, things are kinda out of sleep, I'm not eating properly, I'm not, you know, on my normal everyday regimen, like things are kind of like out of place. I know that I need to, I've
noticed that when I take the time to like be still or when I really like get
into my word or if I just take like at least five minutes and just say like
Lord speak to me, give me direction, give me guidance, I notice that I would start
to feel better. So that's how I learned to like, when me direction, give me guidance. I noticed that I would start to feel better.
So that's how I learned to like,
when I started to feel those ways to just pause
and to just like sit in that pause
and just sit still and just reflect.
And even if I'm not praying,
like just allowing the spirit to just speak to me,
I had to learn how to do that.
So once I started to figure out and pinpoint
my source, like where this stuff was coming from, but also know how to like resolve it
by just being in God's presence is how I learned to kind of like cope with, you know, feeling
overworked or feeling burnt out and knowing that, okay, I'm getting to that point because
I've known this, I know this feeling,
I recognize it.
So it's really just recognizing
and really just being self-aware of your body
and being in tune with that.
Okay, so last time we talked,
cause we did like a pajama panel.
I think it was during the middle of the pandemic.
And you know, I think Maya was certainly still like
that girl,
like everybody's favorite.
I think since then it has increased even more.
I am wondering like, what have you learned about success
that has like taken you by surprise?
Ooh, that's a good question.
I would say what I've learned about success that has taken me by surprise, honestly, is
the amount of criticism that comes with success.
Because you know, the saying that goes, well, you're not doing nothing if they're not talking about you,
there's some truth to that because
the level of criticism that I have received
throughout my entire career from not just as of most recent,
but people will tend to criticize
what they don't understand.
People will tend to criticize
what they don't have the courage to do.
People will try to project their insecurities and their fears off on you.
And people are also just very vocalized about making sure that their opinions are known
of whether or not they like you or they dislike you, right?
And the ones that dislike you, you know, try to be a lot louder than the ones that do.
And I've learned that criticism usually comes from a small group of people that just talk
very, very loud.
And you have to learn how to silence the noise. And, you know, it was a scripture,
I was going through a challenging period throughout my career when I was getting a lot of criticism.
And I read this devotional and talked about Nehemiah, how he was building the wall and how
people were criticizing him for building the wall. I'm paraphrasing
But he kept focused on what he was building
He didn't pay attention to like the naysayers and I held on to that devotional when I was in that tough period in my career
That I was being criticized for you know, correcting someone on how they use my products
People came down on me for that but I had to focus on or correcting someone on how they use my products,
people came down on me for that, but I had to focus on still building,
still building that wall, still focus on my character
because I feel that no matter how much people criticize you,
no matter what they say,
your integrity and your character
will always speak for itself
and will always overshadow the naysayers.
And of course I got through that,
and I got through that because the people
that really stood for me,
that understood who I was as a person,
that understood my character and my integrity,
those people will fight on your behalf.
Like you don't need to interject
or you don't need to say anything
because the people that are for you are for you
and those people are going to fight for you
And that's why I say you can't beat having good character and integrity
Because if I didn't have good character and integrity my fan base wouldn't have came to my defense
Right
And they were the ones that
Handled the naysayers and the criticism, right?
So, but I had to learn that success comes with that cost.
Like the bigger you are, the larger your territory,
you're going to be more open to the voices and opinions of people
who have a lot to say about stuff that they probably don't know nothing about.
And I had to learn that it just comes with the territory to not let it affect me,
to not let it get me down, to stay focused on who God has called me to be and the purpose and the
destiny that he has set out for me. So I had to just shift my mindset and focus on whose I am and not focus on what people are saying.
But I did learn that that comes with the cost
of being successful.
Okay, so I'm wondering, we look at your life
and we just dove right into this conversation
that was not the plan, but you just started talking.
And I was just like, let's go for it.
If we were on, we are on the outside looking in
at your life, and it would be easy to, you know,
queen of hair, incredible family, travels the world,
fashionista, like the narrative of your life
that we would come up with on the outside looking in
is very aspirational, it's very inspiring.
I know that you are a woman after God's heart.
I am wondering, what is God's narrative about your life?
And did you have to come into agreement with that?
Or did you always trust God's narrative for your life?
Oh, that's a good question.
And no one's ever asked me that,
what is God's narrative for my life?
I would say that God's narrative for my life,
what people see on the outside,
like you said, is very aspirational.
And thank you for that. Thank you, thank you for even saying that and acknowledging
that.
But I feel that God's narrative is that He was going to use me
in ways that I did not expect.
He was going to use me as a vessel through the marketplace. It wasn't going to be a traditional route of
how the word is relayed to people, but he was going to do it in a non-traditional route
to reach the people that may be afraid, that may be intimidated to step into the four walls
of a church because the gospel is not just told
in the four walls of the church.
So I feel that my purpose and my destiny
is to build the kingdom,
but to do it in a way that is relatable
so people are not afraid and intimidated
because there are people that have church hurt.
There are people that are afraid to go into the church.
There are people that say, you know,
they say all types of things about the church.
And so those people, I feel that when they see me
and they see that I did not grow up in church,
I did not come from a traditional, you know,
church environment where my mom took us to church
every Sunday, we went to church on Easter and that was about it.
And I did not grow up, you know, saved.
I've always believed in Jesus Christ.
I've always believed in God, but I did not have necessarily a relationship with God.
And I felt that God had already chosen me and called me.
But I did have to step in agreement with his calling on my life.
Because I feel like God has called me to be of an influence to my generation and to generations beyond.
But the route that I had to get to that place of influence, I had to go through pain to reach my purpose. And I feel that God used that pain to bring me
closer to Him so I can get to know Him, so I can get to know His Word, get to know His
character and that when people see me and they look at my life, they don't look at my
life as an aspirational fashionista, CEO of a company, they don't look at all of that,
but they see the glory of God and the blessings of where he brought me from and where he has
brought me to and how I still honor him and I still glorify his name, knowing that I came
from that painful place, to show people that you can take your pain and make it into purpose
and that all things will work together for the good,
but you have to come into agreements.
And knowing that you have been called and chosen,
but I'm gonna have to call you away from something
in order to call you to walk into
who you are truly destined to be.
So I had to change my narrative of asking God,
why did I go through the painful loss of my son,
to God, what are you trying to show me from this?
And that took for me to get into agreement
with even being open to trying to understand
why God put me in that situation.
I had to be open because I could have done the opposite
and gotten mad at God.
I could have been down and depressed and said,
there is no God, but I'm not gonna say that.
Because I knew that God brought me through that
for his ultimate glory.
Because in everything that I do,
and people say that is so odd and is so unique because they've never seen a CEO that talks about God the way that I do and people say that is so odd
and is so unique because they've never seen a CEO
that talks about God the way that I do.
But I know where he's brought me from
and I know why he's brought me from that
to give me this influence
and that was to give him honor and glory.
So when people see my life,
I hope they truly see God glorified through me
and not the material things and not the titles
and the accomplishments, but they see
His glory and so I had to come into agreement knowing that he was going to bring me to a place
Ultimately
For people to praise and worship him and for me to spread the gospel
Through the means and the vessel and the platform of hair care
through the means and the vessel and the platform of haircare.
I'm not sure if someone's listening for the first time
and maybe they haven't heard the story
about the loss of your son.
I know you shared that with me before,
but I think one of the things that struck me the most
is that you, I mean, are open about how the grief
and the pain of that certainly shaped you in this season.
And I believe that that's where a lot of people how the grief and the pain of that certainly shaped you in a season.
And I believe that that's where a lot of people
begin to edit God's narrative for their life.
It's like God has a narrative.
Before I formed you in your mother's womb, I knew you.
There was an idea that God had in mind
as it relates to each and every last one of us,
but pain comes along and begins to try and like
edit our story to get us to change our mind
or to change God's narrative about who we are.
And too often that it's successful
that we begin to believe the pain, the shame,
the tricks and the lies of the enemy
as it relates to our lives.
And it's not until to your point, you say,
I am choosing to be open to the possibility
that God's narrative still exists
even in the midst of this pain,
that we begin to experience transformation.
Do you remember the moment where you were like,
you know what, I'm not saying that the grief doesn't hurt,
I'm not saying that the pain isn't real,
I just have to be open to the fact
that there could be more?
Yeah, I would say that moment was,
you know, when I was in the hospital and, you know, my son, he was on life support and I would go to the bedside and I would read scriptures.
And you know, I didn't know where it came from, but I know that God was my source.
I know that I had no one to turn to.
You know, my husband couldn't help me get through
and my mom, you know, it was no one but God
that helped me get through that.
They even gave me the inkling or the mindset
to go into his room and start reading scriptures
or reading the Bible to him.
And then the other pivotal moment was
when my husband and I, we started going
to church together. Like before, you know, what happened with my son, we would go to
church every now and then. Sometimes I'll go by myself and take the kids. You know,
sometimes it wasn't like a consistent, you know, going to church. And when my son was in the hospital, we knew that we
needed to turn to God and pray for a miracle. And we started going to church together. We started
praying and, you know, they do the altar calls and we went up to the altar. And I feel like this lady,
she was just an angel that came to me, spoke to me. I felt like she felt my pain.
She knew something was wrong and she just prayed over us.
And in that moment, I felt the Spirit telling me at that moment, I need to give my life
to Christ.
So that was a moment that we decided that we're going to get baptized together.
We signed up, we started going
and attending all of the classes,
even in the midst of what we were going through
with my son.
We knew that we were gonna eventually take him off
of life support, but we knew that God is gonna carry us
through this.
And once we got saved, that gave us the strength
to endure the pain that we were going through
with my son and gave us the strength to even move in the direction of removing him from
life support and letting him go be with the Lord.
So it was at that moment that we both got saved together that I realized that I can't
do this by myself.
I can't live this life with my own direction.
I need to turn to God.
And that's when things started to shift,
the moment we got saved.
That reminds me of the scripture.
People use it all the time.
They're like, I can do all things through Christ.
And they're using it to kind of choose what they want to do
and be like, I can do it through Christ.
But the reality of that scripture, I feel stands so strong in your story, which at the
end of the day, it's not that I want to do it.
It's not that this is what I love to do.
I don't love this position that I am.
And it's not necessarily what I would have hoped for.
But I can get through this if Christ is on my side and it feels like you are embodying
that. How are you holding on to that mentality?
Here you are.
I think for many people, they would seem like maybe you have arrived, right?
You have this incredible company.
You were able to have a nice exit, but still stay in a lead position to maintain the integrity
of the brand.
This feels like most people's goal.
And yet you're still very young
and I'm sure you have so much more vision
and so many more dreams.
Like how do you balance this tension
of I may be living most people's dreams
but I'm not finished living out God's dream for my life?
What does that look like for you?
Well, I think that, you know, I really focus on,
for me, it's really being intentional of letting God lead me and not necessarily focus on like what
people think about me. And, you know, while I may be living out some people's dreams,
most important for me is like, am I walking in my purpose?
Yeah.
Right, you know, I wanna make sure
that I'm always purposeful and my purpose may very well be
someone else's goals or how people say hashtag goals,
but I'm really big on like,
yes, it's something that you can aspire to do or be,
but make sure that you're in tune with who God
created you to be and what is your purpose. And so I know that even though I've done a
lot in my career, yes, I'm still young, but I know that God is not done with me yet. And
I do feel that He has taken me in places and using my influence to not hold what I learned to myself, but to also give back that knowledge and help the next generation and to also help my community and uplift my community as well.
you know, a part of the partnership that we did with P&G, it was very intentional for us to create
our nonprofit, MyEll Cares,
and which in totality, MyEll, I'm sorry,
Melvin and myself, we donated 10 million,
P&G donated 10 million specifically
to help advance black and brown communities
from the aspect of mental health.
You know, we want to create a positive resilient mindset brown communities from the aspect of mental health.
We want to create a positive, resilient mindset
in our teens and we started in the environment,
the neighborhood that Melvin and I are from.
So to whom much is given, much is required.
And yes, I've done a lot,
but God has so much more for me to now give that back.
All the information and the knowledge that I've learned
over the 10 years that I've built this company,
now I'm to share that information.
I'm to help build up and lift up the youth, right?
I have two girls that look at me
and are aspiring to be entrepreneurs as well.
Like I feel that my purpose is to also help uplift them
and show them the ropes.
And so I'm really committed to the next generation. I'm really big on, you know, mental health,
because I feel that the reason why Melvin and I have gotten to this position of where we're at
today was because of our mindset. You know, if I can contribute, obviously, God is our foundation,
but God has always instilled in us a certain mindset and the vision that we had, you know, before we started this company,
we didn't see this.
We were not exposed to that.
That vision came from God.
But God had to instill a strong mindset and a resilient mindset for us to be able to have
a strong foundation.
Because when you are building a company, it's not easy. You're going to go through the criticism.
You're going to go through the challenges.
You're going to go through the obstacles.
But what throughout everything that we've been through a building our company,
I always resort back to my foundation and knowing that if God brought me
to this point, he's not going to leave me.
He's going to continue to see me through.
And so my whole thing is like, yes, we can give anyone the blueprint,
we can give anyone the roadmap to building a successful brand. But what's most important is
making sure that your mental health is sound, making sure that you have a healthy overall well-being.
So I'm really committed to pouring and enriching back into my community and uplifting them as we
continue to climb. And I know that we're going to continue to do a lot more in the future.
But most important is success is not success
if you're not reaching back and lifting other people up.
Where are you from?
Chicago, Chicago. OK.
And well, I know that you were at least connected to Indiana.
I wasn't sure if you were like, yeah.
So I'm from Chicago, born and raised in Chicago, but we least connected to Indiana. So I wasn't sure if you were like. Yeah, so I'm from Chicago, born and raised in Chicago,
but we moved out to Indiana.
So our warehouse, our office is in Indiana.
So we've been in Indiana for the past 18 years.
And there were also in Florida, so right outside of Miami.
So we're kind of like both by coastal.
So I've got a book coming out and it's called Power Moves.
And the whole premise of the book is not just
how do we show up in our lives in a way that allows us
to make powerful decisions that align with God's vision
and purpose for our life, but quite literally
how power moves even within our existence.
And so I would assume that what makes you powerful
as a CEO who's maybe looking to create quality products
that also are affordable
and help you to maintain the business,
is maybe different from the power that you have to have
to show up as a wife and a partner in your marriage,
and totally different from the power you have to possess
to be a good mother who's raising teen daughters
who are going through, you know,
if it's anything like my teen daughter,
like all of the hormones and changes
and peer pressures and stuff.
Can we talk a little bit about how power
is moving in your life?
I think this is part of the reason why we be burnt out
and don't realize it.
Like, it's not just that I'm burnt out from working.
Like, I am 18 people in one body. Like,
like I'm a therapist. I'm trying to be a good mom. I'm also trying
to not be the mom that I had sometimes because she would have
smacked me like what? Let's talk about gentle parenting. Yes,
just trying to gentle parent with a hard parenting roots and
yeah, yes, yes. Can we talk a little bit about all these different hats
you wear and how you have to like shift mentalities
or even your heart posture and spirit
in order to show up successfully
in all of those different roles?
Yeah, I was actually just talking about this
with my husband, like, you know, in order for me to show up, you know,
a hundred percent in my roles
in the many different hats that I wear,
I want to make sure that I'm whole
because I can't go out to these speaking engagements
and give, you know, a hundred percent transparency
and speak with authority and information
if my brain is so foggy from like, you know,
something that I just dealt with at home.
So I have to make sure that I am, for me,
like I said, taking breaks.
Because I know that when I start to feel like brain fog,
or if I start to feel a little, you know,
overwhelmed or uneasy or anxious,
I know that that's time for me to like take a step back and like reprioritize some things.
And I think that like, you know, people ask the question all the time, like, how do you balance?
I think you just prioritize based off of the different seasons that you're in in life.
And for me, you know, like I'm going into graduation season.
So I've been very intentional.
Like this is, you know, prom season graduation.
I have to be there for my kids.
So I'm intentional about making sure
that my schedule is appropriately managed, is organized.
So are there meetings that can wait
until after this season is over?
Are there tasks that I can do
or decisions that I can make? Can I handle that
now? Because when I go into this mode, you know, I'm going to be head on like in mommy mode. So if
there's anything that I can do, I try to like just put my schedule and like buckets. So like, if I
know that there are decisions that I need to make, or if you guys need me for certain meetings that
I need to be a part of, let's bucket it on this day and let's try to take care of everything that I need so I know that when I'm in this in this mode that I'm
focused and I'm in the present mode of what I need to handle at that time. So now I know that as I'm
going into this season, graduation and prom season, I can fully show up for my kids and my family
because I've taken care of my business endeavors on this side because I've been able to bucket my schedule.
So that's that I find is what really works for me because
when I'm making decisions, I want to have a clear mind.
And I don't want to be trying to make decisions for my kids when I'm thinking
about business decisions that I have to make and then vice versa.
So I've noticed that if I just kind of like stay organized
and put my, and prioritize in the different buckets,
that helps me manage and show up the way that I need
to show up present and be able to have the clarity
to make the decisions that I need to make
because I'm not intertwining both.
So that's kind of like my motto.
That makes so much sense.
I feel like I've had to do that as well.
I think we actually had a conversation.
Let me tell you guys,
one of the reasons why I fell in love with Monique,
besides all of the reason that you guys have on your list,
is that we've been trying to connect
and we were rescheduling and things were shifting and we had a lot of communication
things that just were happening amongst you know our people and our teams trying to align
our schedules and sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn't, I'd have to change my mind or something
come up and she finally called me, well she finally called me, she called me and she was like hey I
just want to make sure we good because these things are moving and sometimes things are moving and then sometimes they're being weird and I just want to make sure we good because these things are moving
and sometimes things are moving
and then sometimes they're being weird.
And I just want to make sure
things are moving and things are not.
I had so much respect for that
because at the end of the day,
when you are balancing and navigating a lot of things,
it can be easy to make an assumption
about like how someone feels
or how someone is moving or think like,
oh, they acting funny.
I don't know what that's about.
I love that you came and spoke directly to me
and I got to unpack with you.
Like my main problem is that it's so hard for me
to say yes to this stuff
because I don't sometimes get my kids schedule
until like a month before.
Now I know we have a presentation, we have a plan.
So most of the time I'm like, I wanna come,
but I don't know if I can come. And then things are always moving. But just having that conversation,
I felt like spoke so much to making sure that things stay clear and leave no rooms for
assumptions. Have you always been, I call that confrontational, but like not in a negative way.
I think it's like good confrontation. Have you always been that way?
negative way. I think it's like good confrontation. Have you always been that way?
No. I have not. I was at one point, and I think it just comes with like growth and maturity. Like I would make assumptions, you know, when am I younger years, but I've learned that a lot of
issues can be resolved. A lot of your assumptions and your thinking, because I also tend to be an over thinker.
A lot of things can be resolved
if you just pick up the phone
and you have a conversation with someone.
And I also tried to make sure,
I'm not perfect by any means,
but I do try to make sure
that I'm also doing things biblically.
And it tells like, if you have an issue,
and not saying that we had an issue,
but the scripture that tells like, if you have an issue, and not saying that we had an issue, but the scripture that tells, like,
if you have an issue with someone,
talk to that person, right?
You know, if you guys can come to a resolution,
then the issue was done.
If you can't come to a resolution,
then you bring a witness.
So, like, every time that I'm, like, questioning myself,
or if I'm doubtful, or if I'm like,
okay, am I thinking about this the right way?
Am I moving in the right direction?
I'll try to find something as scripture to kind of back up my thinking or to
lead me in a different direction if I'm thinking about something the wrong way.
But that came with growth and maturity and getting into my word
and trying to live my life Christ-like, right?
Again, am I perfect? No
So when I was younger, I would make assumptions like okay. Well, you know, is she dodging me?
Maybe she don't like me or maybe we get some unnecessary beef that I don't know about but I'm like no
I don't want to be that person. I just want to have a conversation because my thoughts, everything can go out the window by just saying,
listen, what's going on?
Why we can't never like connect or schedule something.
And then once you answer the question, it's like, okay, yeah.
See the enemy, you're not trying to,
you're not about to get into my mind
and make me think something that's not really what it is
because I'm going to have a conversation with this person.
And that's exactly what I did.
And when you said that, it's like, I completely understand because I do the same thing. I don't
like to commit to things too far in advance because you know things happen and just recently I just
committed to something and then a couple days, no actually yesterday my kids schedule came in and
they have two meetings the same day that I committed to something.
So now I have to go back and, you know,
kind of like renege on my commitment
in which I don't like to do that.
So I get it and I understand.
And again, like I rather not commit to something
than to have to renege on it.
So once we had that conversation, it was like, okay, good.
Like I know it wasn't nothing that I did
because I used to think like, okay, well,
if someone doesn't like me or if they're avoiding me,
maybe it's something that I did.
But that's the enemy trying to get into our minds
and make us feel like we're less than
or to make us feel like we've done something wrong
when nothing ever happened.
And there are people that have this imaginary beef
with people in their minds,
but that's really the enemy that's getting into your minds,
creating this conflict that really doesn't exist.
And everything can be avoided by just communicating.
That is like the number one underestimated tool.
If you don't take anything else away from this conversation,
please hear what Monique is saying.
Do not create narratives in your head
that are unfounded by facts.
It is so easy to do. We live in a generation where making assumptions create headlines
and clickbaits and people have hot takes on social media and we're all just like wondering,
assuming and conspiracy theories. But we have to realize that almost, I will say 85% of what
we see on social media is someone's opinion
or assumption. It is very rarely fact and it is possible to create that on social media
because that's how we live in our everyday lives. Somebody look at this crazy on the
gas station. Oh, they can't have a bad day. They can't have a cockeyed. It's gotta be
like all day racist and they're gonna follow me home. We have to be more
responsible about how we utilize our mind to create narratives about other
people or other situations and to recognize that that is power that we are
dispersing to things that we need to be using to work on our relationship with
God to focus on our healing to give ourselves discipline in the willpower we
need but we are expending our power, trying to figure out what someone
else thinks about us or what happened in this situation when we could just use our mouths
and communicate.
Right. And a lot of it too is just, you know, a lot of us deal with unresolved childhood
traumas that's just spilling over into our adulthood, right? And if you don't recognize it, and I feel like I work really hard
on just realizing where the source
of some thoughts come from.
And a lot of times, some of the sources of my thoughts
come from childhood trauma.
And if you don't know how to recognize it
and stop it in its track,
then those thoughts then create those false narrative
because of how someone may have treated you as a child. Maybe someone did dislike you and talked
about you and made you feel some sort of way. So now when you grow up and people rearrange
their schedules or if you plan something, they cancel because you were used to that as a child
and it hurts you as a child. So now you're thinking that as an adult, when people do that to me,
they have an issue with me. So it's like, if you got to, we have to be able to look within ourselves.
And I feel like, especially in leadership, self-awareness is like a huge thing for me,
because you will be able to really realize and pinpoint
The source of where some of your thinking your negative thoughts those intrusive thoughts come from
You'll be able to pinpoint that but it takes for you to be in tune with yourself
And once you're in tune with yourself, you'll be able to identify. Nope
That's the enemy
That's because you know my dad when he when when he, when he was younger, he would
always tell me he would pick me up and take me somewhere. He never showed up. He never
showed up. And that hurt me as a kid. So now when people do this, nope, I'm not going to
allow that narrative to play in my head. I'm just going to address it. So we are the product
of a lot of childhood issues that probably haven't been addressed.
Okay. I could talk to you for about 30 more minutes. We're over time,
but what I'm taking away from this conversation is trauma has a narrative, pain has a narrative,
our past has a narrative and our hope,
our future has a narrative that could put a lot of pressure on us and even our
success can create a narrative.
But what matters the most is choosing God's narrative
over all of those different options
and really seeking out God's narrative on every situation.
Cause we're living in a day we've never seen before.
And it can be easy to get on autopilot
or to do whatever's on our calendar,
but to take a minute and to say, wait a minute, what is God's narrative surrounding this day, this moment, this conversation,
and how do I align with that?
There was one more thing I wanted to say just in case someone's listening, and they're like,
man, I need a break, but if it's not seven days, I can't, like, it's not going to do
anything.
If it's not a three-week vacation and it's not going to do anything, you would be surprised
what 10 minutes of breathing, aligning with God, acknowledging God's presence can do for you in those moments
where you literally cannot physically get away spiritually and mentally, you can tap
into God's presence and it will add years and wisdom and strength and energy.
So thank you.
No problem.
Thank you. No problem. Thank you.
Okay, now like I'm hoping the kids all of the kid things calm down so that we can do more of this. Yes, more more girl talk
because it's so needed. It is we need each other. Well, I am
wishing you an incredible graduation season and spring
break and lots of love to you and your family and all that you do.
Thank you so much.
And I wish the same for you.
Take care of the kids and tell the hubby hi and hope all is well.
Thank you.
Take care.
All right.
Take care.
I'll talk to you later.
Bye.
Bye bye. This is Neal Strauss, host of the Tenderfoot TV True Crime Podcast, To Live and Die in
LA. I'm here to tell you about the new podcast I've been undercover investigating for the
last year and a half. It's called To Die For. Here's a clip.
All these girls were sent out into the world and they were told, try to meet important
men, try to attach yourself to important men.
The voice you're hearing is a Russian model agent telling me about spies sent out to seduce
men with political power.
The war in Ukraine is also being fought by all these girls that are all over important cities.
For the first time, a military-trained seduction spy
reveals how the Russian government
turned sex and love into a deadly weapon.
If you want to kill your target, it's easy.
You just seduce him, take him somewhere,
start having sex, and then he's very vulnerable,
so you can kill him
easily.
To Die For is available now. Listen for free on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or
wherever you get your podcasts.
I never thought I'd take my three young kids to Sicily to solve a century-old mystery,
but that's what I'm doing in my
new podcast, The Sicilian Inheritance. Join us as we travel thousands of miles on the
beautiful and crazy island of Sicily as I trace my roots back through a mystery for
the ages and untangle clues within my family's origin story, which is morphed like a game
of telephone through the generations. Was our family matriarch killed
in a land deal gone wrong? Or was it by the Sicilian mafia? A lover's quarrel? Or was
she, as my father believed, a witch? Listen to The Sicilian Inheritance on the iHeart or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm John O'Brien, host of Money and Wealth on the Black Effect Podcast Network.
I'm an entrepreneur and a businessman.
Some would call a thought leader.
Now, every Thursday, my newest venture is educating you
on how to win financially.
Even better, I'm going to teach it in a way that,
well, you can understand.
No unexplained theories, no mundane lessons,
no using 20 words when two will do.
I'm gonna meet you where you are
and take you where you need to be.
I'm giving you straight talk, relatable stories,
and life lessons through my own experiences
and the lens of others.
We're not just talking about why financial freedom is important.
We're focusing on how you can achieve it too.
We all might have different starting points and end goals,
but as long as we have the desire
to acquire financial freedom, it can be done.
From the streets to the suites.
Listen to Money and Wealth with John Hope Bryant
every Thursday on the Black Effect Podcast Network,
iHeart Radio app Black Effect Podcast Network, iHeart
Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Martha Stewart, and we're back with a new season of my podcast.
This season will be even more revealing and more personal, with more entrepreneurs, more
trailblazers, more live events, more Martha, and more questions
from you.
I'm talking to my cosmetic dermatologist, Dr. Dan Belkin, about the secrets behind
my skincare.
Walter Isaacson about the geniuses who change the world.
Encore Jane about creating a billion dollar startup. Dr. Elisa Pressman about the five basic strategies to help parents raise good humans.
Florence Fabricant about the authenticity in the world of food writing.
Be sure to tune in to season two of the Martha Stewart podcast.
Listen and subscribe to the Martha Stewart podcast on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
If you've been following the news, you know that from healthcare access to safe schools,
LGBTQ plus rights are under attack.
And it's about time queer and trans youth get the microphone and tell their stories in their own words.
I'm Raquel Willis.
Join me on my new podcast, Queer Chronicles, a show where LGBTQ plus folks tell their own
stories in their own words.
This season, teens will share all about growing up
in political battleground states.
I wish I could feel more comfortable in my own body here,
but that's just not the case.
And follow along as they discover
what queer and trans liberation means to them.
This isn't running away from yourself.
It's running into who you want to grow into.
Listen to Queer Chronicles on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your
most fabulous shows.
Well, it's no secret that we are better when we hear one another's stories, that it allows
us to grow and evolve and become better.
And I am hoping that as a result of hearing Monique's story,
that you feel yourself growing, evolving,
and becoming better.
Listen, I am giving up on Rescue Eve.
You gotta know when Fetch is not happening.
And I'm trying to make Fetch a thing,
and Fetch is not happening.
Shout out to me and girls I haven't seen musical.
But I do want to take a minute though and feel like we should close out the podcast
with just some positive stories that are shaping the news cycle, perhaps some positive news
that you are experiencing.
So like I said, if there's something going on in your world, you want to brag on yourself,
you want to brag on your friend, send it to me at podcastatwomenevalve.com.
I would love to toot your horn. I am going to close out this podcast with tooting the horn of Olivia Munn.
She recently announced on her social media that she has been diagnosed with breast cancer. What's interesting
about her story is that she went and got a genetic test where you check for 90 different cancer genes.
She tested negative for all of them, including the BRCA gene.
And then her sister also tested negative as well.
They high-fived each other and that was it.
Two months later, she was diagnosed with breast cancer.
One of the reasons why I am making this a story that I feel like you need to know is
that at the end of the day, she had her doctor, I was going to say her teacher, her doctor
did an assessment that was her breast cancer risk assessment score.
As a result of doing the breast cancer risk assessment score, they were able to detect
her cancer early enough for her to be able to get treatment.
It quite literally saved her life.
The reason why I'm bringing this up to you is because I did a partnership with the Black
Women's Health Imperative because I recognize that as women in general, it can be very difficult
for us to dedicate the time that we need to take care of our bodies and to check in with
ourselves.
Even more so difficult is it for black women to find spaces where they feel safe enough
to bring up the concerns that they are experiencing
and that they feel like those concerns
will be taken seriously, if you don't believe me.
Do some research on the black maternal health crisis.
It's absolutely insane.
Some of the stories that women of color have had
as it relates to seeking healthcare that they can trust. However, one of the things that the black women have had as it relates to seeking health care that they can trust.
However, one of the things that the Black Women's Health Comparative is constantly saying
and that is that there is a cure for breast cancer.
It's early detection.
And so if you're like me, I know you're so busy, you're balancing all of the balls unless
something is broken, we're not going into the doctor or we're avoided because if something
is happening, there may not be anything I can do about it.
I want you to take seriously your health.
We need you.
We need what's happening in your life.
We need your support.
We need your courage.
We need your joy.
We need you to be the healthiest version of who you are so that you can continue to just
show up as a light in the world and luxuriate in all of the ways
that God has assigned to your name.
Please take this very seriously.
Take the time to check in on yourself.
We do not know the openings that the enemy will use, but we can make sure that we are
checking all of the gates and one of those gates is most certainly our health.
Do some research if you're in a position where funds aren't issued.
The Black Women's Health Imperative have done free tests.
They've given away free cancer treatments as well for those who have found something.
So don't think that just because you may not have what it takes to attack something, if
there's something there that you do not have tools and resources that are just a click
away.
So listen, I hope you all have an amazing week.
I love doing this podcast.
I love connecting with you.
I am, let me see, you guys are getting this on Wednesday,
but I'm actually recording it Friday night.
I am traveling tomorrow.
Oh, I told you guys, I have a busy week coming up
and that was my computer, let me put on mute.
I have a busy week coming up.
I will be in Raleigh, North Carolina on April 13th
for the Women's Empowerment.
I'll be in Dallas for the Legends in Lilly thing
on April 20th, and then I'll be in Chicago on April 27th.
I say all of that to say that the next three Saturdays,
your girl is busy, but blessed.
Do you understand what I'm saying?
So if you're in any of those locations,
make sure you come and see me.
Power Moves is going on the road.
Copy or take it if you haven't had a chance yet.
We've got some exciting news coming
about the Power Moves tour that I think
is gonna tremendously bless you.
Holy Spirit, man.
Lord, I hope that something I said today
has added value to your daughters.
I hope that in some way that it has been what Jesus would hint or something close to what
Jesus would say as it relates to their lives, their lessons, their journeys.
Anything that wasn't from God, anything that wasn't from Him, please
remove it.
If it was my flesh, my spirit, Lord, take it out.
Because at the end of the day, they can only overcome by your words, your spirit, your
strength rising up on the inside of them.
So Heavenly Father, I pray right now that your spirit would touch their brokenness, that your spirit would touch their deficit,
and that there would be an overflow into everything that they touch, everything that they say,
every role that they are responsible for.
God, I thank you for the gift of love, of wisdom, of connection, and I pray that you
would allow us to cherish it when it's healthy,
to recover from it when it's toxic, and to look forward in the future with hope
that you're not finished writing our story so we can't close the book.
Bless my friends, bless their week. In Jesus name I pray, amen.
Imagine you're a fly on the wall at a dinner between the mafia, the CIA, and the KGB. That's
where my new podcast begins. This is Neil Strauss, host of To Live and Die in LA. And
I wanted to quickly tell you about an intense new series about a dangerous spy taught to
Sidhu's men for their secrets and sometimes their lives. From Tenderfoot TV, this is To Die
For. To Die For is available now. Listen for free on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
My whole life, I've been told this one story about my family, about how my great-great
grandmother was killed by the mafia back in Sicily. I was never sure if it was true, so I decided to find out. And even though my uncle Jimmy told me I'd only
be making the vendetta worse, I'm going to Sicily anyway. Come to Italy with me to solve
this hundred-year-old murder mystery. Listen to The Sicilian Inheritance on the iHeart
radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Martha Stewart and we're back with a new season of my podcast. This season will be even more revealing and more personal with more entrepreneurs, more live events, and more questions
from you. I'm talking to my cosmetic dermatologist, Dr. Dan Belkin, about the secrets behind my skin
care. Encore Jane about creating a billion dollar startup.
Walter Isaacson about the geniuses who changed the world.
Listen and subscribe to the Martha Stewart podcast
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
What's up, everybody? This is Stephen A. Smith,
host of the Stephen A. Smith Show podcast.
Tune in every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at the very least as I bring you all new episodes
that feature the biggest headlines in the world of sports, pop culture, business, and
I answer your phone calls and respond to your tweets.
You'll hear my unfiltered opinions and straight shooter interviews with top celebrities and
game changers, all that and more.
So listen to the Stephen A. Smith Show podcast on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast,
or wherever you get your podcast.
Hi, I'm John O'Brien, host of Money and Wealth
on the Black Effect Podcast Network.
I'm an entrepreneur and a businessman.
Now, every Thursday, my newest venture
is educating you on how to win financially.
Even better, I'm going to teach it in a way that, well, you can understand.
I'm going to meet you where you are and take you where you need to be.
We all might have different starting points and end goals, but as long as we have the
desire to acquire financial freedom, it can be done.
Listen to Money and Wealth with John Hope Bryant every Thursday on the Black Effect
Podcast Network, iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.