Mindful & Millionaire

#7 Yasmin Elzomor: Shadow work is the mirror to your soul

Steffy Roos du Maine Episode 7

In this episode, we’re joined by Yasmin Elzomor, a transformational coach who talks about relationships, sex, spirituality, mental health, and everything that makes us human. After experiencing a spontaneous spiritual awakening at the age of 21, she knew that it’s time for her to switch gears and change her mindset. Realizing that her sole purpose was to help others turn their pain into power. 

Now, Yasmin hosts the Humanity Feels Podcast, a show where she gives practical advice and invites coaches, leaders, and truth seekers to share their spiritual journey and success. Let’s listen as Yasmin walks us through her mission to empower the human mind with authenticity, love, and integrity.

Key Takeaways:

  • Yasmin’s journey to finding abundance and inner peace
  • Yasmin’s tips and tricks for gaining more confidence and motivation 
  • What is dark feminine energy, and how can one use it in life and business?
  • Yasmin’s life mission is to help others transform by allowing herself to transform
  • Having a support system and having the right people around us helps us and reminds us that it’s okay to feel things. 
  • “Just remember to be authentically you.”

Links & Profiles:

Photo credit: Starky Morillo.
Photo credit: Stancy Photography.

Steffy Roos du Maine: Welcome to the Mindful & Millionaire podcast. I'm Steffy Roos du Maine and I'll be interviewing the most inspiring guest on the culmination of spiritual growth and business success.


Yasmin Elzomor is a relationship, plus sex and transformational coach, speaker, writer, spiritual mentor, and podcast host. But above all, she is a multi-passionate trailblazer, truth-seeker, alchemist, and creative visionary trying to pave her own path and to make a difference in the world by leading with integrity and shining her authentic light. She is a beautiful human hosting the Humanity Feels Podcast, and I can't wait to talk to her.


So, welcome. Love to have you on my show.


Yasmin Elzomor: Hi Steffy.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Hi. I always like to ask the first question, what does being rich mean to you?


Yasmin Elzomor: I love that question. It's so good. It's so good. Thank you for asking that, Steffy. To me, being rich means achieving inner peace. I think I've come a long way in learning what it means to be truly abundant. It's not only just about money and the physical assets or material possessions that we acquire. But it's more about the love and the compassion that we can have for humanity, for each other, and the support that we can share with other humans, other people on the journey with us. That, to me, is the definition of being rich and being in abundance.


Steffy Roos du Maine: That's beautiful.


Yasmin Elzomor: They need that.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Also, it makes sense because you’re a relationship and sex coach, transformational coach. So, can you tell us about that? Why is it so important?


Yasmin Elzomor: Yeah, I mean, honestly, everyone can use some help in that area of relationship. I think we all need it. I need help. Everyone needs help. I started to get into that work because I realized that I kept attracting the same type of partners, and relationships, and people in my life with similar patterns. I realized I was the common denominator. Of all those situations that I was in, I was always the common denominator. So, that, to me, made me feel like I have to do something about this. I have to change the way I think. I have to change my dynamics with the people in my life. I have to first work on myself.


After realizing that, I noticed how much once I started to work on myself, I noticed how much I changed with my partners and with the people in my life. I realized this is really important work. We don't realize how important it is to work on ourselves for other people, because we're constantly in relationship with other humans. That's what life is about.


People are mirrors to us. So, when we can use that to our advantage—to step into our power more, to learn new things, to allow ourselves to surrender to whatever our loved ones are trying to teach us—it's hard for sure. It's a challenge, but it's so worth it in the end. Once I started to do that, I realized how important it is to start sharing this knowledge with other people and the world, and to make this mainstream, to normalize it a bit more. Because we can all use the support.


Steffy Roos du Maine: True. Yeah, and I really think relationships are such a good tool to do the inner work, to do the shadow work, and to see who you are. Like you said, it's such a mirror and not always a good one. But I really—


Yasmin Elzomor: Yes, it's not always fun. But at least, for me, it's always been challenging to look at my own wounds and my own fears and insecurities. But once you get into the habit of working on yourself and doing the shadow work, it starts becoming more like a game, like you start to up level in life.


I'm sure you realize this with your own path and the success that you've gained as well, Steffy. When you start to work on yourself, you start to let go of people and things that are holding us back from achieving success and being powerful. You start to climb up that mountain that we always want to get to. We want to get to that top. So, that's really the only way through. It's to actually work.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Yeah. For you, what does the top mean to you?


Yasmin Elzomor: Oh my gosh. The top, to me, means achieving service, achieving inner peace in service. Obviously, the inner peace to me comes with the service that you give to others. So, the reason why I wanted to get into this work with relationship coaching was to help other people become their best selves. Nothing brings me more joy than seeing people in their power, than seeing people succeed, and seeing people feeling happier and lighter, and to see people thriving. You know what I mean? Not just surviving, not just getting along life and on this hamster wheel of the matrix system, the nine to five that we're all programmed to be in. It's nice to break free from that and to help other people see that there's other ways of achieving success.


Success looks different to everyone. Of course, it has different meanings for everyone. But for me, true success and reaching the top is being supportive and being of service to the world and giving to others.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Yeah, that's beautiful. When did you think of that? When where you're like, "Oh my god, this is a business. This is what I want to do. This is going to be my career"?


Yasmin Elzomor: I had a spontaneous spiritual awakening when I was 21. I think that was really the start of it. I didn't know back then, but now it all makes sense. That was really the start of everything. I was working three jobs. I was working three 9 to 5 jobs. I was making a lot of money at the time, but I was very unhappy, very unfulfilled. It wasn't bringing me joy. I was around the wrong people. I didn't have a very supportive network of friends and community. I was in a relationship that was not good for me. It was very unhealthy. So, everything in my life was going wrong at the time.


Of course, as we all are, we like to be comfortable. Humans like their comfort zone, and we prefer to stay in the same place than to go somewhere different. Because that different place is very unknown and very scary. So, I stayed. I was like, "Whatever. I'll figure it out. This is what life is." I didn't know anything outside of that box of comfort. Then I had a dark night of the soul that spiraled me into learning about myself and doing that inner work.


As I started to grow and do this work, my relationship started to suffer. Because I started to realize that we weren't actually compatible. We weren't growing together. We were growing apart rather than together. There was a lot of trauma, a lot of stuff that was unfolding in the relationship. I decided to part ways with my partner at the time. That was when I had that lightbulb moment of, "I want to help other people in this area of life, specifically with transformation and relationships." I want to mix the two together and see how that goes. I realized I can turn this into a business. Of course, my work, my energy, and my time is worth money, as well. We do have to make money. We live on this planet. We make money to survive regardless.


Steffy Roos du Maine: We need it.


Yasmin Elzomor: Exactly. We need it. As much as we say, "Oh, money doesn't buy happiness," but it buys us freedom. Through that freedom, we can choose the path of happiness or unhappiness. Really, we have freewill. It's really up to us what we do with that money or what we do with that financial freedom. But that was my point. That was my breaking point of realizing I need to do more with this. This is what I want to do. It's my purpose. It's my passion. I love it, and I love that I can get paid by doing this as well and supporting other people. It's the best of both worlds. So, that was really that moment.


Since then, it's been growing and evolving in so many ways. I've been growing with my business and my brand, of course, as we all do, right?


Steffy Roos du Maine: Yeah.


Yasmin Elzomor: It's been really such a journey. It's such a journey.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Nice. What do you think? Because I really think the spiritual path and the business path, they both let you grow in similar ways. But what have you learned business-wise, so far? How do you grow in that area?


Yasmin Elzomor: Business-wise, I've learned a lot. Like you said, they both intertwine—the spiritual aspect and the business aspect. But I learned that business is really about psychology. A lot of it is linked to psychology—how you present yourself, learning how to be more confident when you're selling yourself, when you're trying to sell your products, your services, when you're coaching other people.


Also, with integrity, bringing in the theme of integrity, people won't listen to you or buy your products or give you money if they can't trust you. So, that has to be. Trust is so important. It’s like if you see a leader that is saying to do one thing, but that leader is doing the opposite of what they're telling you to do, you're not going to take them seriously. You're not going to trust them, so you're probably not going to pay them.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Yeah, absolutely.


Yasmin Elzomor: They're not going to feel safe. It's that safety component that I've learned through my business. When you market yourself, you want to make people feel safe in your presence. You want them to feel like this is a safe space, and you're going to be taken care of in the best way possible.


Obviously, it's two sides. That person also needs to put in their part. You're not the savior. You're not the hero. You're not here to do everything for the person, but you are here to guide them and to help them and to support them on that journey. So, it's been really interesting to learn that, and to also hold myself accountable for how I show up in order to bring in the clients. Because if I'm not motivating myself, then I'm not making money.


Steffy Roos du Maine: You are your business.


Yasmin Elzomor: Exactly. I'm sure you get that, too, Steffy. It's like we are our business, and we have to be able to show up every day and do all the things that we need to do. Because if we stay there, no one's going to tell us what to do or how to do it. It's all on us. So, stay self-motivated. It's to give yourself pep talks to move through fears and blocks and insecurities and all these things that inevitably come up because we're human. But it's been such a journey learning that and putting both worlds together.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Do you have any go-to tricks when you're feeling unmotivated or maybe not so confident? Do you have any tricks or tips you can share with us to get more confidence, more motivation?


Yasmin Elzomor: Yeah. For me, movement—exercise, dance—is one of the best things to get myself in the mood. Putting on some music that you love, that you enjoy, that gets you in the mood, that really helps me step more into my feminine essence, which is also that receptive part of our soul wanting to attract people, or clients, or opportunities.


Usually, dance does that for me, and some sort of movement—whatever it is that you’re feeling that morning—as well as surrounding myself with loved ones and people that are motivating, inspiring people, a network of people, a community of people that see you for who you are. They can actually support you when you're feeling down, when you don't feel very confident, which is going to happen no matter how confident you are. People we all feel—I still feel days where I'm like, "I'm not good enough. What am I doing? Impossible."


Steffy Roos du Maine: We all have that, yeah.


Yasmin Elzomor: It's very normal to feel that way. Allowing ourselves to be okay, with feeling that way, too, like having days where, "Yeah, I feel kind of low today. It's not my day. But I can try again tomorrow. I could feel better tomorrow and have more confidence the next day." So, it's that. It's surrounding yourself with the right people.


Another thing I like to do is also learning new things, having more confidence in that way, intellectual confidence. When you can have a conversation with someone, you'll know what you're talking about. You'll feel comfortable enough to have a conversation. These are things that I usually do, and it helps me build a lot of that confidence.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Thank you. That's very useful. Thank you so much. I also heard you say and talk about 'dark feminine energy.' Can you explain it a bit more? Because it sounds—yeah, I want to hear more about it. What is it? How can you use it in life and maybe also in your business?


Yasmin Elzomor: Yes, absolutely. We have the light feminine and the dark feminine, right? So, the light feminine is the nurturing, compassionate, sweet, loving aspect of our nature—especially as women, which is beautiful as well. Then we have the dark feminine, which is the more competent. It's the more alluring. It's the more seductive part of us. that sexual part of us that, unfortunately, we felt like we need to close that off and cut that off because it's wrong, because it's taboo. There's a lot of things around a woman's sexuality that makes others uncomfortable.


We've all been programmed in this way. At least, I know I have been programmed in that way, that being a woman with sexual desires or having your sexuality out in the open is wrong. It's not good, all these things. To me, there's a tasteful way of allowing yourself to be in your sexuality as a woman.


It's not extremes. It can be somewhere. It's a gray area. It can be somewhere in the middle. You could still be a very nurturing, beautiful, compassionate, kind, loving woman but also be strong, powerful, outspoken, and have a more masculine essence in you, which the dark feminine is a little bit more masculine.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Yeah, it's stronger.


Yasmin Elzomor: It's stronger, yeah. Exactly. Usually, I find that women who are CEOs, entrepreneurs, have their own businesses, we are a little bit more in our dark feminine, because we have more masculine qualities in terms of work and how we show up. We have to. Because we have to lead ourselves and our businesses and stuff, and with money and finances and all that.


Again, there's absolutely nothing wrong with that. But it's really about the balance that you have between the two, between the light feminine and the dark feminine, and even between the feminine as a whole and the masculine as a whole. So, I've learned to really balance that out. I think being in my dark feminine has allowed me to be more receptive to things. It allowed me to attract and manifest and receive more, and has allowed me to feel more confident in my own skin as a woman. So, there's a lot of good things that come with stepping into that and learning about that as well.


Steffy Roos du Maine: How do you get that side more out in the open? How do you recognize that side? How do you get there? I heard you say the light feminine side is what we all learned or what we see. It's the good girl.


Yasmin Elzomor: Yes, it's the good girl archetype. Exactly. With this one, with stepping into your dark feminine, one of the biggest things, of course, is shadow work. It's like looking at your own stuff, looking at your own wounds, looking at where you hold a lot of shame. I think that's the goal. It's to look at where is that shame in my body, or what am I holding onto that I feel so shameful about, and breaking that down. Allowing yourself to feel into the shame, to feel that yeah, this is programmed. This is something that I've dealt with for many years. But I don't have to deal with this any longer. I can let go of this. It's not serving me. It's not serving this next level of my life. Ultimately, it's not going to get me to where I want to be. So, shadow work is number one, one of the best things.


Also, back to movement and dancing, I love belly dancing, pole dancing, seductive dancing, anything that helps you release trauma. We have a lot of trauma that gets stored in our hip area as women, especially, and also our sacral area. All of that, if you move that energy, you can allow yourself to feel more in tune, more in tune with your sexual desires, more in tune with who you are as a woman. Doing any kind of dance that allows you to move that energy is also really great, and allows you to feel more sexual. So, that's always a pro. It's always great.


Steffy Roos du Maine: It is. It's something that's so frowned upon sometimes. But I feel it's really important to have that energy, to keep that flowing, to create—


Yasmin Elzomor: Totally.


Steffy Roos du Maine: To feel confident.


Yasmin Elzomor: Also, I want to add. If you're in a relationship or if you're dating someone, it helps for your partner to also be in their dark masculine to allow you the safe space, to express yourself in that way. Because I feel like men also have a lot of shame around their sexuality as well. Allowing themselves to share their desires with a woman, with the woman that they're with, they feel weird about it.


Just sex, as a whole, is frowned upon. It's looked as dirty and all that. It's really about how we approach it. It's not sex itself. It's the approach to how we do it. That's what makes it either good or bad, or whatever the label is. But it really comes down to allowing ourselves to feel into it and to know that it's not something shameful. It's like this is part of human nature. It's what we're here to do.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Yeah.


Yasmin Elzomor: We are sexual beings.


Steffy Roos du Maine: That's really beautiful and, I think, really necessary.


Yasmin Elzomor: Yeah, for sure.


Steffy Roos du Maine: What would you say is your—we're talking about a lot of things. So, what would you say is your life mission?


Yasmin Elzomor: My life mission? Oh, my gosh. I think my life mission is to help others transform by allowing myself to transform. So, when I go through these transformations and these dark nights of the soul and stuff like that, I noticed that every time I get to that point, I'm able to hold more light, and I'm able to get to where I need to be. But then, I also noticed that other people, I start inspiring more people when I allow myself to go through these transformations.


So, even though it's hard and it's painful, and probably don't really want to go through these things sometimes, but it's necessary sometimes to get to that next level and to succeed and to feel like we can get to where we need to be. So, I think that's probably my biggest mission in life. It's to go with the flow of life and allow myself to change and transform and be someone new and not be afraid of having these identity shifts. I'm allowing myself to be like, "Yeah, I'm not who I was five years ago. I'm someone else. I'm becoming someone new. I'm becoming reborn, reborn, and there's nothing wrong with that."


Steffy Roos du Maine: Yeah, true. That whole identity shift, it's what you said earlier. It was so hard, because you want to stay in your comfort zone, a safe space you know, and your ego wants to hold on to that.


Yasmin Elzomor: Yeah, absolutely.


Steffy Roos du Maine: How do you say we can deal with the ego to let the transformation happen?


Yasmin Elzomor: Yeah, the ego is the trickiest part. If it wasn't for the ego, I think we'd be fine.


Steffy Roos du Maine: No one will need coaches when we don't have an ego, I think.


Yasmin Elzomor: 1,000% yeah, we'd be okay because our soul is the one leading the way. But the ego fights back and has its own way of seeing things. It likes the comfort zone. It doesn't want to get out of that. So, I think one of the biggest things I've learned on the journey is to surrender to what my ego is telling me.


I always like to say the egos are like a little puppy dog. You need to learn how to train it. But it's your pet dog. What are you going to do? You're not going to throw it out. You're not going to abandon it. Of course not. You're going to love it. You're going to take care of it. Yeah, you might fight with it sometimes until it just stops growling and stops barking.


But at the end of the day, it's part of you. It's you. It's who you are. It's your identity. It's how you trust yourself. Without ego, we wouldn't have desires. We wouldn't have creativity. We wouldn't have discernments either. All these things help us make sense of the world that we live in. Allowing ourselves to be in that space and to be like, "Yeah, my ego is telling me that I'm not worthy, or that I shouldn't be doing this, or that I should stay in my comfort zone, keeping me in the state of fear rather than the state of abundance and joy." But working with it, working alongside with it, not going against it. It's a challenge, and it's a work in progress. It isn't something that you could just one day to the next be like, yeah, my ego is listening to me now.


Steffy Roos du Maine: It's a trained puppy.


Yasmin Elzomor: It's trained fully. No, it's going to have its moments. You're going to have your moments, and that's called being human. It's what we came here to do. But having a support system and having the right people around us helps us make sense of it better, and can help us move through these moments and can help remind us that it's okay to feel that way sometimes. It's okay to have these moments and these downfalls as well.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Yeah, true. Do you maybe have an example in your work, in your business, that your ego was playing up and you're like, okay, this is what I did to train the puppy?


Yasmin Elzomor: So much. I noticed any time I get—it's so funny. Oh, my God. How many, Steffy? Which one? We'll have a book full of them. I think the biggest one, really, is, well, anytime I noticed this pattern, anytime I get a big opportunity, or I succeed in some way—whether I get paid a big amount of money, or I get an opportunity to show up somewhere to speak at an event, or I get featured somewhere—I noticed that my ego gets really, really low, which is interesting. Because you would think that it would feel like, "Yeah, I'm the most powerful." Mine doesn't feel that way. Mine's like, "I'm not worthy. I don't deserve this. How did I even get this?" It's the imposter syndrome, right?


Steffy Roos du Maine: Yeah, absolutely.


Yasmin Elzomor: I feel like, "Why do I even deserve this? I got lucky." I always tell myself that. It's like, no, you worked hard to get here. Well, yes, you might have gotten lucky in some ways, because you talked to the right people. You have the right connections. You got found somehow, and people just were able to connect with you and find you.


But the other side of that is you have done a lot of the work to become magnetic, to become that person that people will reach out to. That's part of the inner work. So, I always remind myself. Anytime I get a big opportunity, or I get somewhere far, it's just I'm worthy of that. I've worked hard. It's okay to feel happy and to feel joy. It's almost like we allow ourselves to feel excited or joyful. It's the next step. Whatever I got. I don't know if I deserve this. But whatever.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Totally, yeah. Always. Why do we do that to ourselves? It's so true.


Yasmin Elzomor: It's easy, right? We do it to ourselves. We are our biggest enemies sometimes. It's like we think other people are against us. Sometimes we're the ones that are against us. We're just assuming that other people are against us or don't want us to succeed. I'm like, well, I think our egos sometimes don't want us to succeed.


Steffy Roos du Maine: That is so true.


Yasmin Elzomor: Exactly.


Steffy Roos du Maine: You were talking about the inner work and the shadow work. How do you do the shadow work? What is your go-to method?


Yasmin Elzomor: My go-to method is social media. People always say like, "Oh, my God. That's crazy. How does that work?" Personally, for me, my biggest shadows have come up when I'm scrolling on Instagram. When I see someone else that has more money, when I see someone else that is probably more attractive, when I see someone else that has more opportunity—these are the moments that I take note of when I'm scrolling. I'm like, "Why is this person triggering me? Why am I so jealous, or envious, or bothered by what this person has? How can I transmute it? Rather than sending them hate or dislike or bad energy, how can I bring that back and be happy for them and excited for them, but also excited because they're showing me what's possible for me?


They're showing me that I, too, can have that if I put in the work in my own way. I don't have to do what that person is doing to get there. But I can do it in my own way. So, how can I do that, and how do I transmute that energy? It's as simple as that. That's basically what the shadow work is. It's not like this big crazy process. It's more about self-awareness and realizing you need to change something and then shifting it, and putting it into practice. Actually, putting it into practice, which is the hardest part.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Yes, it's such a good way to use social media, instead of just scrolling, and noticing your thoughts and making that lesson you're learning.


Yasmin Elzomor: Definitely. That's one of my favorite ways, along with journaling, as well. Journaling in motion every night. What I do is I try to do this every night. I journal out how my day went or what I felt today, if I felt sadness at any point, if I felt anxiety in it at any point. I tried to pinpoint where this is coming from. Why am I feeling this way? It's like doing therapy on myself in doing that.


Sometimes I even do little vlogs or voice notes where I record how I'm feeling or what's been going on in my life. Then I listen back to it weeks later. I'm like, interesting that I was feeling that way at that point and then feeling it again. So, where's the pattern? So, it's really about pattern recognition, picking up on the patterns that has come up.


Steffy Roos du Maine: It's also a very good tip here. I like the writing, just to record it. You can listen to it afterwards again.


Yasmin Elzomor: Yeah, definitely. I do both. It depends on the mood, but I do both.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Sometimes you just don't feel like writing. But then this is perfect.


Yasmin Elzomor: Yes, exactly.


Steffy Roos du Maine: You also have your own podcast. So, I was wondering how is that. What is your biggest insight? Because you interview other people, but you also do your own podcast. What has it taught you?


Yasmin Elzomor: Oh, my gosh. So much, Steffy. It's taught me—


Steffy Roos du Maine: I love the title, Humanity Feels. It's so beautiful.


Yasmin Elzomor: Oh, thank you. I appreciate that. Yes, I remember I got the idea for the name—it was in 2020 when everything was happening in the world. So, that was really the intention of creating the podcast. It's to support other people emotionally. Because we need that safe space to be able to support one another, and to come up with solutions together. That's what life is about—getting everyone in and having this big community where other people could share their knowledge and their stories.


To me, storytelling has always been very medicinal. I've always learned so much about myself when I hear other people's story. I allow myself to step into their shoes, too, and to be more compassionate like, "Oh, look. Other people also have it rough. You're not the only one, or it's like other people have gone through similar things that you've gone through. It's like you're not alone on this journey." It reminds you that there's more going on in the world than just your little world that you're stuck in.


To me, the biggest thing that I've gotten out of my podcast is learning how healing storytelling truly is, and how we can learn and grow and transform through that, through that experience in that process.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Yeah, that's beautiful. I think having a podcast is also for yourself, your development and your journey. It's so nice to speak to other people like you. I love talking to you and hearing so much.


Yasmin Elzomor: You're so sweet. I feel the same way about you. I need to get you on mine, for sure.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Sure, yes.


Yasmin Elzomor: It's just beautiful because it's therapeutic to have a podcast. I am sure you feel this way, too, with yours.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Absolutely, yeah.


Yasmin Elzomor: It's very therapeutic to talk to people, connect, and also to share your own stuff, and to eventually go back and listen to your old podcast and see how much you've grown. It records your growth. So, that's really cool.


Steffy Roos du Maine: That's also sometimes a bit painful to listen back, and be like, oh, was I like that? Then like, okay, I've grown. That's good.


Yasmin Elzomor: Yeah, sometimes I'm like, Oh, my God. Who let me say that? Who let me do that? When did I learn to do that?


Steffy Roos du Maine: It's a beautiful way of a journey. Okay. Last question. What is the last piece, the best piece of advice you'd like to give to the listener? It can be anything.


Yasmin Elzomor: Anything? Oh, my gosh. I think my biggest piece of advice is to just remember to be authentically you. I know that's very cliche and everybody says that. But I feel like right now, more than ever, it's so important to shine your light and to be who you came here to be. Stop worrying about what other people are doing or not doing. It's like do your thing. Stay in your lane. Learn new things, obviously. Learn new perspectives. Listen to different people. Allow yourself to step into other people's shoes. But ultimately, always come back to your own lane and come back to what you came here to do and who you came here to be.


So, through that, you inspire people and you encourage others to do their thing and be themselves. So, I think that's probably my biggest and most powerful piece of advice that I can give to others and myself.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Yeah, it's a reminder we have to hear every day, I think.


Yasmin Elzomor: Yes, for sure.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Thank you so much. I love having you on the show. Lovely, your wisdom and your learnings. Thank you so much.


Yasmin Elzomor: You're so sweet. Thank you. Thank you so much for your questions. They were so good. I love that. You're an amazing host.


Steffy Roos du Maine: Thank you so much. Thank you so much for listening to this episode of the Mindful & Millionaire podcast. I hope you enjoyed and got inspired. You'll find all the interesting links and information in the show notes. Let's keep in touch on Instagram, steffyroosdumaine, and I'll be super grateful when you will rate, review or share this podcast.


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