
Bourbon and Breakthroughs
Chris Goodman is a leading life coach for executives and business owners. His clients include startup founders, real estate experts, influencers, world-class coaches, CEOs, and small business owners across dozens of industries. He brings 15,000+ hours of coaching and training to every conversation and has a reputation for asking tough, transformative questions in an approachable way. After years of coaching inspiring leaders in life and business, Chris brings their profound wisdom, advice, personal growth tips, and heartfelt lessons to your ears so you can grow relentlessly to become your best. Book your own coaching consultation at www.goodmancoachinginc.com
Bourbon and Breakthroughs
EP 016: Live Coaching Lindsey Mango: Be Vulnerable to Be a Better Leader
Today on Bourbon and Breakthroughs, we’re doing something a little bit different! Joining us for a live coaching session is life and business coach, host of the Life Coach Hotline Podcast, and Chris’ beautiful wife, Lindsey Mango. In this thought-provoking episode, Lindsey speaks candidly about the trepidation she feels when it comes to expanding her family, shares her mission to create deeper and more intimate friendships in 2024, and reflects on the gap between how she shows up in her business now versus how she shows up in her personal life. Our conversation reveals the importance of vulnerability for business owners, C-suite executives, and others in leadership positions, but it also demonstrates Lindsey’s inspiring openness and her willingness to change her mind, which is an essential part of being “coachable” and making the changes we want to make in our lives. As you’ll discover, this episode was actually recorded for Lindsey’s podcast, but it was too good not to share! If you’re looking to learn and grow as a leader but feel like you’re hitting a wall, this live coaching session might just open you up to a new perspective, so be sure to tune in today.
Key Points From This Episode:
- Reasons that coaches need coaches too!
- Three areas in her life that Lindsey is seeking coaching for.
- What Lindsey means when she talks about making expansion optional.
- The important role of compassion when addressing the parts of you that are afraid to grow.
- What Lindsey would say if a million people were listening.
- The distinctive lens she brings to her coaching work and that makes her so hungry for growth.
- Distinguishing between experience and performance.
- An unexpected shift or transformation that took place for Lindsey during this session.
- Why we shouldn’t hold ourselves back when we have something to share.
- Next steps for Lindsey, including paying attention to her unique perspective.
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
Get to know Chris -
- Connect on Instagram
- Coach with Chris
- Learn more about Goodman Coaching
Thank you.
SPEAKER_00:Welcome to the Bourbon and Breakthroughs podcast, where entrepreneurs reveal their biggest breakthroughs, both in life and in business. I'm your host, Chris Goodman, and I'm a life and business coach on a mission to help people change their lives and grow their businesses. On this show, you'll get to distill your own life-changing lessons from my friends, clients, and the best entrepreneurs around the world. During our conversation, we feature and taste a new or notable bourbon or something like it and raise a So whether you're a seasoned entrepreneur or just starting out, join us for this episode of Bourbon and Breakthroughs. Cheers.
UNKNOWN:Cheers.
SPEAKER_00:Hey, what's up everyone? This is Chris and you're listening to Bourbon and Breakthroughs. And today we're going to do something a little bit different. I sat down to record an episode, a podcast with my darling wife, Lindsay. And if you don't know Lindsay, you must be brand new to the show or brand new to me because we've been together since 2017. We're both life and business coaches. We both breathe personal growth nonstop, want to be the best we can and help as many people be at their best as well. And we sat down to record a show for her podcast called Anything But Average. I take that back. It used to be called Anything But Average. I'm used to saying that. It is now called The Life Coach Hotline. So what you're about to hear is actually going to air on her show as well. It's so good in my opinion, though, that I wanted to feature it on my show too. Here's why. You're going to hear Lindsay get coaching in real time. This isn't about Chris and Lindsay. This is about someone who wants help with something and is hitting a wall with it and how coaching opens them up to a new perspective. That's really what is at the heart of this. So as you listen, pay attention to how coachable Lindsay is. She is immediately willing to change her mind about something. She is not you know, defending her positions. She's not complaining about something over and over. She's very much in a posture of openness and willingness. So if you are in the coaching space, if you are in any capacity learning and growing, especially as a leader, take note of how quickly she's able to shift things in her mind and make a few key decisions. And therefore she'll shift things in her life and her business as quickly as well. So I decided I wanted to share this on my podcast because it's also reflective of how we all need to be vulnerable. And I think people in leadership positions really resist this. People who own businesses or who are in an executive level position in a business or an organization of some kind, it's almost like we get this badge of honor by never being rattled, by never being real and always having this sort of professional veneer, which in other words would be an armor on. And I think you'll hear Lindsay, you know, just dismantle this pretty quickly. So I hope you enjoy this show. If you do, please share it on social media because someone out there will find value in it if you did as well. You can always go and scroll through the show notes and find the Life Coach Hotline and Lindsay's social media handles as well and follow her. She puts this out, I think it's just about every week now that I say that out loud. You'd think I know that given that she's my wife and we record these podcasts in our own home. Like I said, nobody's perfect and we all need to be vulnerable sometimes. So enjoy the show. Like I said, share it if it hits you in the heart. And as always, thank you for listening. I trust you'll get some kind of breakthrough from this episode with Lindsay Mango, otherwise known as Lindsay Goodman.
SPEAKER_01:Hey guys, welcome back to the Life Coach Hotline. This is the final episode of the Coach the Experts series. On today's episode, apparently I see myself as an expert because...
SPEAKER_00:It's good to have a great self-concept.
SPEAKER_01:Because my husband, Chris, who is a life and business coach, is here to coach me. I mean, I shared this at the beginning of the episode. I think we put that intro in front of every episode about my intention for this podcast, which is that you see that the people that you admire, the people you learn from, the mentors and leaders that you follow have the exact same brain as you do. And I will say that one of my most popular episodes from my last version of this podcast was the one where I was coached. And I think it's because people Just saw my humanness and I think it's so funny to me because I'm like, of course I'm a human. Of course I have the exact same thoughts that all of you guys have. The difference maker or I think what matters is how you handle them, which was really my intention for this podcast and my intention for this series is so that you can see how people like that handle their thought processes and work through them so that they can go create the things that they want in the world. So today... Chris is going to be coaching me.
SPEAKER_00:Hey, Chris. Maybe, maybe. I haven't decided yet. The jury's still out. No, I do want to add one thing. It's kind of like when people are surprised when they find out we both have coaches or we both seek coaching. Like, well, wait, why would the coach need a coach?
SPEAKER_01:I've never had that.
SPEAKER_00:You haven't had that? I get that all the time. Like, why would you need a coach? I can't believe you have a coach. I thought you were... To that point, we're all... We all experience fear. We all have to up level in some kind of way when it comes to our life or business. And we need great leaders around us too. So I think it's excellent that you've brought on the experts before you so that everybody can see, you know, the different perspectives in addition to your own.
SPEAKER_01:Well, thank you for being here. I'm not really like you had a choice. I brought three things and I'm going to let you pick which one you want to coach me on. I think I kind of have a preference, but...
SPEAKER_00:Oh, well then let's go with the one you have a preference. Well, I
SPEAKER_01:wanted to share because I think they're all important for people to hear.
SPEAKER_00:Okay.
SPEAKER_01:The first one was as we family plan to have two kids. I think I have just some fear and discomfort thinking about... what that transition is going to feel like and be like and just managing that and a business and a life and all sorts of things. But I think the main thing with that is like the thought I have is like, of course, and it's just uncomfortable. And I also have the thought I'm, can handle anything and I will expand that life. So it doesn't feel like anything I feel really stuck on. I think it's just human. The second thing I had was one thing I'm working on this year is creating more friendships and intimacy in all of my relationships. And I can see I've been working on that, coaching myself, getting coaching, but I can just see there's lots of excuses in my head which point to something bigger, which is like, it's hard, it's not worth my time. There's not that many that people live close to me in the Midwest. All of the things that people tell themselves about dating, whatever, I find my brain making excuses for. But I don't feel like I've let that stop me. And I think I'm leaning in to creating that. So that was the second thing. I'm open to coaching on that. But the third one was something I work on a lot with my clients is and students is, I mean, this is more business related, but it's all related to creating things we want in our life. I've been coaching a lot of my clients on this. The idea of your job is to show up like you have a million people, a million raving fans right now, even if you have... five, even if you have the amount that I have. And I can see that there's some growth and expansion there because I don't think I share the same way I would if that was the result I had. So I can see that there's a gap between how I show up now versus how I would show up in that scenario. And so... That was the third thing. So anything in particular you want to take a stab at?
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, take a breath. I think you ran yourself out of breath there. I think the first thing is that the last thing is all of them because how you show up in business is how you show up in life. How you show up in life is how you show up in business. You said I have some fear around when we expand our family to two kids, how that's going to change things, how you'll be able to show up. And I'll just– You said, I'll know I can handle anything and I'll just expand. That thought didn't show up in the last one for some reason. And same for the middle one about growing your friendship circle. If you carry that same thought, I can handle anything. I'll just expand and continue to show up. That would resolve that one too. So my thought is let's see if we can go with the last one.
SPEAKER_01:I think when it comes to expanding our family, there's a couple of things. I think one, there's a level of commitment that's there. It's just like, My thought is there's no other choice. There's no other option. So it's like even though I know it could feel so hard sometimes, like the most difficult thing we've ever done, I trust myself that it'll be hard, and that's totally okay, and it'll be uncomfortable, and that's totally okay, and it will also be beautiful and magical and all of those things. But I think there's just this level of like, yeah, and I'm so committed to– the outcome. I'm so committed to the vision that we have for our family that none of that matters. Like it does, there's space for my humanness, but none of that matters when it comes to choosing to not take that step because we're going to. That's that. So I can decide how I'm going to handle the process. And I just don't think it's a problem. And I think the flip side is there must be part of myself that's making my expansion in my business and the people that I serve Okay.
SPEAKER_00:Tell me more about that last part.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah. I'm going to share my innermost thoughts sometimes that maybe I skip over, I delay sharing, or I think like that was too much for today or whatever. I don't think I'm like, oh, and I'm going to do it anyway. And that's going to be uncomfortable. And that's not a problem because I'm so committed to, and as I'm saying this, I can already feel the transformation happening, but I'm so committed to serving these people. and changing their lives that I don't care if I look dumb or weird or I'm outcasted from the crowd because that is how important this mission is and me evolving and growing it. I think my growth is that important, but I think I sometimes miss that connection.
SPEAKER_00:You mentioned I can feel the transformation. What did you mean there?
SPEAKER_01:I essentially was selling myself on why I'm willing to do that. I think my fear... is like people aren't going to relate or connect or it's really interesting. I mean, I think it's very human. I think we all want to be liked. We all want to be accepted for our truest selves. I think there's a part of me that fears people are going to think I'm weird or people are going to not relate or connect with my perspective. Or this is kind of sounds funny, but I tend to be an optimist. And I think people are going to think like, It's not real or unrealistic or whatever. So I think with that, I'm fearful of those things happening. But when I'm selling myself on why I'm willing to do that, like the commitment to it, none of that matters.
SPEAKER_00:Well, aren't people allowed to have an opinion?
SPEAKER_01:Absolutely.
SPEAKER_00:But you don't want them to have a bad opinion.
SPEAKER_01:Not helpful part of myself is like, yeah, they could all love me. That'd be great.
SPEAKER_00:So in that moment, who's that really about? Them or you?
SPEAKER_01:It's about me, for sure.
SPEAKER_00:What do you mean?
SPEAKER_01:I'm making my comfort more important than my mission and then their growth and my growth
SPEAKER_00:and my evolution. So let's back up. You said I'm making my comfort more important than their growth. Which part of you is doing that?
SPEAKER_01:The scared part, the little girl that wants to be liked.
SPEAKER_00:All right. So let's go to the moment where that starts to happen. When that happens, if that happens, what will be your protocol to stop the scared part of you from driving us?
SPEAKER_01:I think it's the thing that I do so often in my membership. And I think so often we want to jump to offer myself this new thought or connect back to the mission, which I think is a part of it. But I think the biggest thing is honestly just compassion.
SPEAKER_00:For who?
SPEAKER_01:For that part of me and offering myself, which would look like, of course you're scared. Of course, you don't want to be exiled from the community. Of course, you want to be liked. That is human. And just giving that part of myself love and like honoring it, not making it a problem. If Eva said that, I would never be like, you shouldn't feel like that or connect back to the mission. I would give her a big hug and I would be like, oh, honey, like, of course you feel that way. That's so human of you. And just offering myself that I think loosens it in my body.
SPEAKER_00:All right. So close your eyes.
SPEAKER_01:Take
SPEAKER_00:a breath. What words do you need to hear in that moment?
SPEAKER_01:I think what I said, which is, of course you feel this way. It's only human. Of course you want to be liked and loved and accepted. And accepted by others. Of course you're afraid to be big. And then I think this is where part of the shift comes in, which is, and this is important. You have something to say and share. This is on your heart for a reason. And then the biggest thought for me is like, even if it changes one person's life, it's worth it. And I feel in my body like I can guarantee that that will happen. And then there's a knowing that that's what will actually change millions of lives.
SPEAKER_00:Great job. Thanks. Now what?
SPEAKER_01:I think I just have to practice it. I think the biggest thing is having the awareness of when it's stopping me. Practice leaning in. I do think there's an intention piece. I think in the day-to-day life, it's really easy to miss that. My thought is I need to spend some time with that. Each morning, reflecting on what would I say or what would I share today if a million people were listening, if a million people were hanging on my every word and wanting to hear what I had to say.
SPEAKER_00:Well, let's just answer that right now. What would you say? I
SPEAKER_01:mean, I have a specific things that thing that comes to mind, but I think the biggest thing that pops up is just like all of my thoughts, like about life, about, I think the other day when I posted that thing about Eva, my perspective about on Instagram, about being in the store and realizing that this woman's kids were grown and all of that, that is a, that is how my brain works often. Like I'll be in an emotion or I'll have a thought and then I'll have a shift in real time. And, but I won't always share it. I won't always like, cause my brain is like, Oh, well how do we say that? How do we post that? Whatever. And I did that and it felt really meaningful to me when I had to share and it really landed, which is great. You know, that's the goal. And it's also not the goal. I got my message out, but I think I would share those things often. Like, That inner monologue, that in real time and their transformations, but I like to think of them as like little miracle moments. That's what Gabby Bernstein calls them. And just sharing them and not being caught up in how they need to look or how they're supposed to look or whatever. Just share them in a way that I want to. So I think that's part of it. I think it's the message that I do share, but in like a bigger way that I think there's two things. It just really came to me. I think one of them is, of course, the message of like, we really can have it all. It sounds so cliche, but the only limits that we put on ourselves are the ones that we will create. And so we can create, have, do, be whatever we want. And I think it really, the biggest thing is the third piece. I think sometimes, I'm reading this book called Bittersweet, and I think it's actually one of my assets is that I think I... I don't know if the word's philosophize, but if that's even a word, but I think I think about life a lot. I think about the end of my life. I think about the end of chapters. I think about There's things about, it's going to make me cry, but there's things about, like when I get online and I read something about someone passing away or at a young age or whatever, it's like I can't help but get sucked into it. It really is that bittersweet feeling because I think I feel so connected to the fact that Like that morning, I always say this, but I'm like that morning they had no idea that they were going to have their last cup of coffee or like that they were going to leave the house and that was going to be the last time they saw their family. Sorry. And I think about that stuff a lot and I think it's part of why I value life and other people's lives so much because I recognize how important they are and how temporary they can be. And I think that's why I really care about the work I do and I care about the growth in my life. And I think sometimes I'm afraid to talk about it because I don't know how to say it. I don't know how to, and I'm sure I'm just saying it right now, but my brain is like, I don't want to become, I don't want to be morbid. I don't want to be that person that shows up online and is like, you're going to die. Which I know I wouldn't say it that way, but I really think that is one of my unique lenses of And I think that is what makes me so hungry for growth and change and why I care so much about other people and their potential. Because I can't imagine the feeling of looking in the mirror one day and knowing you're at the end of your life and knowing that you could have given more. I think sometimes I tuck away because it feels really big. But I think it's a message that has to be shared because I think people ignore that. And I think that's what keeps them settling.
SPEAKER_00:So
SPEAKER_01:that's probably what I need to say. So what I'm going to do is I'm just going to take that clip and I'm going to go record it and put it over a bunch of videos.
UNKNOWN:All right. All right.
SPEAKER_00:Can I drive for a moment?
SPEAKER_01:Of course.
SPEAKER_00:There's an important distinction in between what you're saying that I want to make clear. There is a distinction between you and the experience you're having of you and the performance of you that what you're getting tripped up on over and over and over is the performance. You said how to say it.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah, which is fear.
SPEAKER_00:Well, let's not dismiss it because in that moment, you're not seeing that distinction, right? Because I know if Eva came up to you one day and said, I have this music in my heart and I'm afraid to go write it. I'm afraid to share it. I'm afraid to sing it. Or
SPEAKER_01:really, I don't know how to
SPEAKER_00:give it out. Yeah. Even the music she would create is different than the heart of Eva and who Eva really is. It's just something she's doing. Is this making sense?
SPEAKER_01:Oh, I see. You're trying to draw a distinction between disconnecting that from my identity.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah. So, in other words, how people receive you It's not who you are, right? It's like somebody saying, I need to become more. I'm not enough. Well, you're plenty. But maybe you can be more effective or you can communicate it more clearly. Is this landing?
SPEAKER_01:Yeah, but I think you just offered me a transformation that maybe you didn't like. Wasn't your intention, which I think is magic of this. Well, I was just thinking about the music example with Eva. We're watching this show called Loudermilk. Okay. They were talking about music or one guy was using something or writing and he was saying like, yeah, you just put it out and it's bad. And then you put it out again and it's bad.
SPEAKER_00:He didn't say it's bad. He said it's shit.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah.
SPEAKER_00:I couldn't remember that.
SPEAKER_01:And then you work on this thing over here and then you come back again and you do it again and it's still shit until it becomes less shittier. And I was just thinking about that with Eva that I'd be like, yeah, you just got to put the words on paper. You got to try. You got to make noise. You got to whatever. And that is the creative process. And I think I was like, oh, when I stop myself before I even do it, I'm not allowing it to be shit first. And then I'm not allowing it to... I'm imagining a sculptor.
SPEAKER_00:And in fairness, you're not allowing it to be brilliant. It could be brilliant on the first iteration.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah, absolutely. I believe that's possible too. But I think we're talking about the fear here. Yeah. And I think that just helps me be like, my job is to say it shitty the first time. And... Or like not be afraid of how it sounds. And then know that that is the beginning of the sculpting. And that is how I'm going to chisel away at it over and over and over again until it continues to become something beautiful. And really what matters at the end of the day to me is that it's impactful.
SPEAKER_00:Okay. Now what?
SPEAKER_01:I feel that shift.
SPEAKER_00:Good. What's it feel like? It
SPEAKER_01:feels light. It feels like clarity. It feels... certain direction. It feels like the how is irrelevant. I mean, again, as a coach, I know when you ask how, it's never really about that. I wasn't catching that I was doing that.
SPEAKER_00:That fear was doing
SPEAKER_01:that. Yeah, that that was just fear. That we only ask how when we're stuck in fear. Something's blocking us from trying or figuring it out. And I also feel this resolute certainty that around what I need to do.
SPEAKER_00:Which is?
SPEAKER_01:Which is I just need to share that part of myself more often. I think I do sometimes, but I think I need to share, not force it. I mean, I don't have those thoughts every single day, but I often do. And I think I need to share it. Sometimes it feels like it's literally coming out of me like poetry, like the words. And I think I just need to allow those to be put out in the world.
SPEAKER_00:John Maxwell has this great line that we should endeavor to be rivers, not reservoirs. That if we have something to share, we should let it flow without regard to whether it goes far downstream or whether it goes wherever it goes, that we shouldn't hold it like a reservoir. It's just our job to let it flow. So what if it wasn't so much about how and fear and dah, dah, dah, dah, dah. It was more about just being authentically you. And that when you felt that calling to acknowledge there's something flowing and I don't need to know where it came from or who it's going to land with or how it just has to flow.
SPEAKER_01:And that just reminded me of one of my past, or actually she's a student in my membership, but she also coached me, Whitney. Yeah. Euland, we were talking about the creative process one day, and she was, it's a funny example, but it's so perfect. And I go back to it so many times that that like creativity can be constipated. And sometimes it's not about the first idea, like maybe that idea is shit. But it's about getting it out. Because that's what keeps the flow going versus when you like stranglehold an idea and try to perfect it. It's like you literally block all the other ideas from coming and all the other ways of saying it. And so it's just a real reminder that same kind of thing we've been saying here, but like my job is to let it flow. And again, maybe the first time won't be great, but maybe that leads to the next great idea or the next way that I want to say it, which is even better than the first time.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah. So for you, what's the next step?
SPEAKER_01:Well, I think one is just sharing this episode, like saying everything I want to say. And I don't, I don't even feel vulnerable about that. It's interesting. Like I guess my podcast feels a little bit safer. I think I also have to ask myself some powerful questions and answer them. I think part of what made this easy was I just spoke from my heart. And I think sometimes I need to ask myself questions to create authentic answers of what I want to say or what I want to share about. But really, I think it's just paying attention, paying attention to myself when I have those moments, when I have those miracle moments, when I have that perspective about life. writing them down and putting them out in the world without regard for how they look or how perfect they are, how people will receive that. Yeah. And I have to trust myself. I have to trust myself that I am, I'm going to say what I feel and that's what matters. I don't ever have the thought you're going to die one. Like, I mean, maybe, but like, I just have to trust myself that it's going to come out however it needs to. And that's what matters that I don't have to fear. it being sounding a certain way.
SPEAKER_00:Carl Jung said that which is most human is most universal. I think you see that on the content that hits a nerve with people is that when you share your humanity, your vulnerabilities, I mean, look at Brene Brown and her work. It's not about the most curated person hitting a nerve, right? Yeah. It's about the humanity that you're sharing because we all can relate to that.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah. And I think that it all circles back so perfectly. I think that all of that realization, like my grandma passed away, a girl I played volleyball with that was like 23 years old, was killed in a really terrible accident and not even accident. And that's what pushed me to change my life, made me come face to face with reality. That my life could end at any moment. And I think maybe that's what people do need to hear in order to be inspired to change.
SPEAKER_00:Let me do something. Close your eyes. Take a deep breath through your nose. We're good. We have a few minutes. Yeah. Reset there. We'll just bridge this between where we have been and where we're going. But take another deep breath through your nose. Fill your lungs all the way up. And then take another little breath in through your nose. Breathe out. And while you keep doing that, breathing into your nose, filling your lungs. Not breathing. I know you can follow instructions. You're an athlete. So while you do that, I want you to imagine a quick scene where you're sitting on the back deck. It's perfect outside. You have a hot cup of coffee. Eva's inside playing. Everybody's good. You don't have to worry about anything. You're in your comfortable, beautiful pajamas. And you hear this buzzing behind your head. And when you turn around, you see briefly a hummingbird fly away. And that's the last you ever see of it. You never see that hummingbird again. Because it flew back into the woods and it said, I don't know if Lindsay's going to like how I look. I don't know if she's going to appreciate the color of my throat. I think she's going to think it's weird how I can fly backwards. I think she doesn't understand how long my tongue is and that I got to get really close to that feeder that she's got right next to her and it freaks me out. I don't like that. It makes me feel vulnerable. So I'm just going to go back and hide in the woods. What do you think about that?
SPEAKER_01:No, it feels sad.
SPEAKER_00:Why?
SPEAKER_01:Because I look at the hummingbird like it's magical no matter like all of those things. And that I've hid itself and I wouldn't get to appreciate its magic. Which is the point about this.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah. The mango magic.
SPEAKER_01:I suppose I guess this is why you love me too. And if I hid it from you, then that would probably be hard to love me. Harder.
SPEAKER_00:You've tried.
SPEAKER_01:I have. I have tried. Given a valiant effort, but... I'll go in the woods and find you. You're formidable. Thank you, babe. You're welcome. That was really great.
SPEAKER_00:You did great. I love you.
SPEAKER_01:I love you too.
SPEAKER_00:Anything else for them?
SPEAKER_01:No. I'm just excited to share this message and all the messages that are going to come. I just appreciate you guys. And if you got value out of this, share it with somebody who you think needs to hear it. Yeah. I also think the last thing is whoever you are, whether you have a business or not or you're on social media, I think this is so– what we're talking about here is so human. We just joked that it can show up in relationships or anything. I think all of my listeners do that, but apply this to wherever it applies in your life and wherever you're hiding yourself, your truest self from the world. Anyway, thank you, guys. We'll be returning back to our– Well, I mean, we're essentially doing the same thing on all the episodes. We're just more– people aren't known when they call in. So you guys can still book and call in for coaching. You can use an anonymous name if you would like to and we'll just be back. We're going to be talking about some New Year's goals. I think it's the perfect time actually. Originally, I was going to have those episodes go out in January. But now they're going to be going out the end of January and into February and we're talking about money. We have an episode on money. That has a huge breakthrough. We have an episode on wanting more, but knowing that they keep kind of like not being committed to it. All sorts of things that are going to really be impactful because I think at this point, the newness of the new year is starting to wear off. And so I think these shifts are going to be really vital and transformative. So stay tuned. We will see you next week on Wednesday. And thank you so much for your amazing coaching. You're welcome. Love you guys. See you soon. Bye.
UNKNOWN:Bye.
SPEAKER_00:Thanks for listening to the Bourbon and Breakthroughs podcast. If you enjoyed this episode, please do me a quick favor. It would mean the world to me and it would help us book better and better guests every week. Take just a second. Make sure you're subscribed to the podcast and leave us a quick review of the show. Thanks again and cheers to your own breakthroughs.