I remember that "Manifest More" class with the roosters! It was so dreamy and exotic, so I'm dying laughing to know that it was filmed in a bathroom. Kudos to your eye for good design and using what works.
I'm interested in this: "I needed to change my relationship to online visibility." I feel like I need to be more visible to promote my services, and I want to be authentically me. But I'm wary of how hostile the online world can be. How have you managed?
I adore that we have been journeying alongside one another long enough for you to remember this — it’s been a decade!
As for online visibility… I have no perfect answers here. There is one part of me that appreciates the community and connections (like ours) made possible through the online world, and there is another part of me that fears how much being online disconnects us from our humanness.
I don’t think the online world is particularly hostile. My personal experience has been very warm and kind, however, in the past few years, especially with the emergence of call-out culture random strangers seem to think it’s ok to comment on my personal life, and so now I share far less of my personal life online.
My online business affords me with an incredible lifestyle. And I also yearn for hands and feet in the ground kind of manual labour with real-life people. Idk if it’s possible but I’m trying to find a way to have both.
I remember that "Manifest More" class with the roosters! It was so dreamy and exotic, so I'm dying laughing to know that it was filmed in a bathroom. Kudos to your eye for good design and using what works.
I'm interested in this: "I needed to change my relationship to online visibility." I feel like I need to be more visible to promote my services, and I want to be authentically me. But I'm wary of how hostile the online world can be. How have you managed?
I adore that we have been journeying alongside one another long enough for you to remember this — it’s been a decade!
As for online visibility… I have no perfect answers here. There is one part of me that appreciates the community and connections (like ours) made possible through the online world, and there is another part of me that fears how much being online disconnects us from our humanness.
I don’t think the online world is particularly hostile. My personal experience has been very warm and kind, however, in the past few years, especially with the emergence of call-out culture random strangers seem to think it’s ok to comment on my personal life, and so now I share far less of my personal life online.
My online business affords me with an incredible lifestyle. And I also yearn for hands and feet in the ground kind of manual labour with real-life people. Idk if it’s possible but I’m trying to find a way to have both.