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Between Besties: Vitamin D, Vision Boards & the Workout Goal I’m Actually Keeping | Ep 212

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I’m writing this fresh off a flight from Hawaii, Easter basket shipped, Costco run done, and recording microphone in front of me. This is not exactly how I like to operate — you know I am a batch-everything, get-it-done-early kind of person — but here we are, and honestly? I wouldn’t change a single thing about this month.

This is our monthly Between Besties episode, which means no frameworks, no formal teaching, no agenda. Just me telling you what I’ve been doing, reading, testing, and thinking about. Grab something to drink. Let’s catch up.

We Went to Hawaii — And My Son Made It Everything

My husband and I originally planned a quick trip to Hawaii back in February. Just the two of us, long weekend, escape the cold. But the closer we got to the trip, the more I realized I didn’t want to go without our son.

He’s a senior in high school. He’s our last one home. And something in me just kept saying — I don’t want to go anywhere he isn’t.

So we rescheduled. Changed the whole trip to his spring break. And I am so grateful we did.

Here’s what you might not know — we used to live in Hawaii. Two of my kids were actually born there, and we haven’t been back with our son since we left in 2008. So this trip was a full circle moment. We drove all over that island, showed him our favorite beaches, the places that hold so many memories for us.

We even pulled over in front of the hospital where he was born and my husband held him like a baby in front of the birth center sign. We were fully reenacting leaving the hospital. It was ridiculous and perfect and I will never forget it.

I’m so glad I spoke up about wanting him there. I’m so glad we changed the plans. The memories we made having all three of us together — there’s nothing like it.

I Got Glasses and Had a Full Giddy Moment on the Freeway

Okay, this one is both embarrassing and wonderful.

I’ve been noticing for a while that I’m not seeing as well as I used to, especially at night. The moment it really hit me was last month in Park City — I had a rental car and kept missing my turns because I couldn’t read the signs until I was basically on top of them.

So I finally scheduled the eye appointment. Sure enough, I needed glasses for distance. And last night, driving home from the airport after landing from Hawaii, I tried them for the first time at night.

I was giddy. Fully, unabashedly giddy. I kept saying out loud — “you guys, I can read that sign! I can read THAT one!” My family was very patient with me.

I know, I know. This is what getting older looks like. Pretty soon the highlight of my week is going to be a really good hair appointment. I’m not there yet. But I see it coming.

The Morning Routine That’s Actually Working Right Now

I’ve been really intentional about rebuilding my morning routine this month, and I want to share what’s been making the biggest difference — because it’s not what you’d expect.

It’s not a two-hour miracle morning. It’s not a journaling practice or a cold plunge or anything dramatic. It’s fifteen minutes of Jim Rohn in my AirPods while I’m putting on my makeup.

That’s it. That’s the shift.

Here’s what my morning actually looks like right now: I put on a motivational audio — Brian Tracy, Zig Ziglar, Jim Rohn — for about fifteen to twenty minutes first thing. Then I spend three to five minutes on my vision board, which I keep as a secret Pinterest board saved right in my browser bar so I can pull it up in one click. Then I identify the one thing — the single most important task that’s going to move the needle today — and I do that first. Then scriptures and prayer.

The result? I feel more excited to sit down at my desk. More motivated. More joy-filled, which is honestly the word I keep coming back to. Joy-filled.

If your mornings feel heavy or chaotic, I’m not telling you to overhaul everything. I’m telling you to try fifteen minutes of someone incredible in your ear. See what it does to the rest of your day.

What I Read This Month

I went through five books this month, so let me give you the quick rundown.

The Psychology of Selling by Brian Tracy — A classic. So good. If you haven’t read it, add it.

The Anatomy of Anxiety — I got about eighty percent through and felt like I’d gotten everything I needed from it. Really solid frameworks for understanding anxiety, especially if you love someone who struggles with it. Highly recommend for that reason alone.

Six Sales Skills Everyone Should Know by Stefanie Boyer — Short, practical, good for anyone newer to sales. She teaches a university sales course and it shows — it’s foundational and clear.

In the Hands of the Lord: The Life of Dallin H. Oaks by Richard E. Turley Jr. — This was my favorite of the month by a wide margin. Absolutely inspiring. So testimony-building. I wrote down so many quotes, but the one I keep coming back to is this: “Desires dictate our priorities. Priorities shape our choices, and choices determine our actions.” Read it slowly. Let it sit.

Evie Drake Starts Over by Linda Holmes — This one was fine. I’d actually started a different novel for Hawaii and couldn’t connect with it — it had the whole “good girl decides to try on being bad” trope that I just can’t get behind. So I switched to this one. Also okay, but not a “laughing out loud and rooting for her” kind of read. If you have a novel recommendation where the main character is confident, powerful, and figures that out about herself — please send it my way. I need it.

The Business Thing That Has Me More Excited Than I’ve Been in Years

I need to tell you about the Business Brain File.

It’s a custom GPT I built — trained on all of my coaching — that walks you through the entire foundation of your business. Your expert bio. Your ideal customer profile. What problem you solve and how to talk about it. Your full offer suite. Your one-liner for Instagram. The way you introduce yourself on a podcast so the person listening thinks, I need to learn from her.

All of it. In one file. In about ninety minutes.

Here’s why that matters: inside Mom Business Academy, this foundational work used to take days. You’d sit down to figure out your ideal client and spiral. You’d try to write your bio and second-guess every word. You’d stare at your offer suite and wonder if it made sense or if you were missing something.

Now it’s in a GPT. One session. Ninety minutes. Done — and done well.

But here’s my favorite part: once you have the file, every time you go into any AI tool, you drop it in. Now that AI knows your business. It knows your voice, your offers, your client, your positioning. Every prompt you run from that point on is working from a foundation that actually reflects who you are and what you do.

“I have not felt this excited in my business in years. I can’t even explain how good it feels.”

– Leah Remillét

I am building these GPTs for every area of Mom Business Academy — more time, more money, more sales, more influence. The goal is simple: get it built well, get it implemented, and keep moving. Stop spinning. Start doing.

I haven’t felt this excited about what I’m building in years. And that feeling? It’s everything.

The Fitness Goal That’s Almost Too Simple (That’s Exactly Why It Works)

Here’s a pattern I keep repeating and I’m finally naming it out loud so maybe I’ll actually stop.

I start working out. I feel good. A voice in my head tells me I need to push harder, lift more, do more — that it doesn’t count unless I’m maxing out. So I push. And then I throw out my back. And then I can’t work out for three weeks.

Every time.

So my fitness goal for April is embarrassingly simple: just don’t stop.
That’s it. That is the whole goal.

I’m not increasing weights. I’m keeping everything light, doing full-body lifts two days a week, bringing back my rucking — which is just walking around the neighborhood with a weighted backpack, and yes, I probably look like a weirdo, and I genuinely don’t care — and adding one day of mobility yoga.

Simple. Sustainable. Boring on purpose.

Because an imperfect workout you actually show up for beats a perfect one that puts you out for a month. Every single time.

Your April Challenge

At the end of every Between Besties, I want to leave you with something simple to actually do.

This month, I want you to write down two or three things that would bring you joy in April. Not goals. Not metrics. Joy. Schedule a lunch with someone you love. Start a book that makes you happy. Try a new workout that sounds fun. Make a reservation somewhere you’ve been meaning to go.

Write it down. Put it somewhere you’ll see it. Make it happen.

And if you want to do something that would genuinely make my month — it’s almost my birthday, and what I’d really love is a five-star review on the podcast. Just one sentence about why you listen. There are no reviews yet for 2026, and even one new one would mean so much.

Thanks for being here, friend. Talk soon.

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