Cut The Tie | Own Your Success

“What If You Fly?”—Why Danielle Turner Bet on Herself Through Side Hustles and Purpose

Thomas Helfrich

What happens when your side hustle becomes more than just a hobby? In this episode of Cut The Tie, Thomas Helfrich sits down with Danielle Turner, a travel agent specializing in Disney experiences, fitness apparel founder, and full-time professional who’s proving that betting on yourself doesn’t require an MBA—it just requires passion and persistence.

After being laid off from her dream corporate job, Danielle turned some of the hardest moments of her life into opportunities to create businesses that reflect her true passions. From rebranding a t-shirt venture into a fitness apparel company to building a Disney-focused travel agency, Danielle shares how she cut ties with self-doubt and limiting beliefs to pursue a more purpose-driven path.

About Danielle Turner

Danielle Turner is the owner of Firebird Travel Agency, specializing in Disney vacations, and the founder of a newly rebranded fitness apparel company. What started as side hustles during personal and professional setbacks has grown into two purpose-driven businesses that align with her passions.

 Through her work, Danielle helps people rediscover joy—whether through magical travel experiences or apparel that reflects personality and fitness. She also runs the YouTube channel Disney by Danny, where she shares insider tips, hidden Disney gems, and local Atlanta travel insights.

In this episode, Thomas and Danielle discuss:

  • Defining success on your own terms
    Danielle explains why success isn’t just about the paycheck—it’s about doing something you love so much that it doesn’t feel like work.
  • Turning setbacks into stepping stones
    After being laid off from her dream corporate job, Danielle didn’t fold—she created. Both her t-shirt company and travel agency were born out of some of the toughest periods of her life, proving that hardship can spark entrepreneurship.
  • From side hustles to purpose-driven work
    What began as a t-shirt side hustle evolved into a fitness apparel brand, while her love for Disney turned into a thriving travel agency. Danielle discusses why building businesses around her passions gave her a sense of fulfillment no corporate paycheck ever did.

Key Takeaways

  • Don’t let habits hold you hostage
    Doing what you’ve always done will only get you what you’ve always had.
  • Purpose over paycheck
    Danielle learned that chasing money without meaning only leads to emptiness. By building businesses rooted in purpose, she’s found fulfillment—even when the income isn’t yet at full-time level.
  • Failure isn’t final—it’s feedback
    Danielle emphasizes that you might fail, but “what if you fly?” Every setback became a lesson that pushed her closer to alignment, purpose, and ultimately, success on her terms.

Connect with Danielle Turner

📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/p/Firebird-Travel-Agency-61558412199065/

Connect with Thomas Helfrich

🐦 Twitter: https://twitter.com/thelfirch
📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/cutthetie
📎 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thomashelfich
🌐 Website: https://www.cutthetie.com
📧 Email: t@instantlyrelevant.com
🚀 Instantly Relevant: https://instantlyrelevant.com

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Speaker 1:

Welcome to the Cut the Tie podcast. Hi, I'm your host, thomas Helfer, and I'm on a mission to help you cut the tie to whatever it is holding you back from success, and the success that you've defined for yourself, not success that someone else has defined for you. And I'm joined today by Danielle Turner. Ms Turner, how are you?

Speaker 2:

Hello, I'm doing well. How are you?

Speaker 1:

I'm good. I really like your broadcast network here in Atlanta and all the things you've built through the years. No, not Zed Turner. Take a moment just to introduce yourself and what it is you do.

Speaker 2:

So my name is Danielle. I actually I own two businesses. I have a travel agency and I have a newly rebranded fitness apparel company Plus. I work a nine to five. So I'm a newly rebranded fitness apparel company, plus I work a nine to five. So I'm a busy girl. My travel agency I tell people all the time I am a travel agent that specializes in Disney. I am not a Disney travel agent, but because I love all things related to the mouse, it just made sense to specialize in Disney. And then I own a fitness apparel company. It started out as just a basic t-shirt company and it just slowly took a new form into a fitness apparel company. So busy, busy, busy, busy.

Speaker 1:

Do you find yourself in the entrepreneur or entrepreneur? You feel like everything you're doing is turning to shit or you're like I'm just side hustling stuff until it gets taken off more.

Speaker 2:

This is the side hustles until they take it out Like I'm. This is my, my passive income that's going to ride me into retirement. So that's where I'm at.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to come out of order. Why not just make it what you do now?

Speaker 2:

You know, if it gets to that point one day, I will gladly take it. I mean, yeah, I'd gladly like stop doing the hustle and bustle of the nine to five and work on my businesses all the time. But as of right now, I still got to eat, so I still got to do the nine to five. You know, still need a roof over my head.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we'll talk about that in your journey a little bit. But you know, as entrepreneurs who are listening and watching here, you know it's great to start a side hustle. I mean if you don't hate your job, and it's okay, it's enjoyable, it pays well, whatever else, you know it's a security and it's and it is secure. That's a great way to be because the extra money you make it's fun, it's it's like you, it actually keeps the. The nine to five sometimes at least I found was enjoyable because you're like your mind is actually working on something.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, no, you're still working somewhere yeah, and the thing is you, you meet people on your nine to five who, when you tell them about your side, hustle they. They're like oh, I'm into that. And then you find new customers where you're not even really trying.

Speaker 1:

That's great, I love it. It works. Before we get into your side hustles and your journey a little bit, I want you to define success on your terms.

Speaker 2:

Um, success on my terms is actually doing something you love and that you're having a good time doing it, to the point where it doesn't feel like work. Um, I think that's the best way I can define it, because I think we've all been to that job where you wake up angry because you got to go to work, you sit in the parking lot with the attitude because you got to go in the building and then you sit there grumpy all day long because you got to be there and you clock watch all day long. And then the finalist when you walk out of the building. But you know you got to get up in the morning and do it again the next day. To me, success is when this does not feel like a job and you lose track of time because you're enjoying what you're doing.

Speaker 1:

I like where you're at with that. I can see where your goal is going. You want to just not work but make money. There's a difference. That is a great definition. Your success definition will absolutely change once you get to that. It's going to immediately flip. As soon as you get to that, you're like new one. I like that. That's a solid definition because it's in the moment, it's real, it's now, but it's also it sounds like a giant motivator for you to get there. Like I said, oftentimes other things are secure when you can have that dream Like I'm just trying to get financially secure, I want more time with my family. You're like no, I want this, this is for me and I want to do that. And I want to do that because you got one life. I like yeah yeah.

Speaker 1:

Fantastic. Um, tell me about your journey a little bit and, given that you define success, you know the way you have what's been the biggest kind of tie to start working towards that, or the biggest tie you've had to cut, or what the restrictions are to help you get to that Cause. You're not quite there yet, but it sounds like that's a success definition.

Speaker 2:

What are you gonna do about it? Tell me about your journey. So the way I actually got here. So I started my t-shirt company. First, both of my businesses actually were born literally out of the worst times of my life. I had been working. I've been working since I was 15 years old and never been fired, never been laid off, never, literally, would go from when I decided to change a job, go from one job, maybe have a couple of weeks off, and into the next one, Never really had any time off. And then I got my dream corporate job and then I got laid off from it and you would have thought the world was about to cave in the way.

Speaker 2:

I was like, oh my God, I've never been unemployed in my life. And so sitting there just kind of thinking like, well, what am I going to do while I'm in the process of looking for a job? At the time my daughter had just went off to college and I'm like, well, you know what, let me, let me figure out something creative, cause I've always been kind of creative. So I'm like, let me figure out something creative to do. So that's how the t-shirt company was born, with the intention of pass this off to her Once I get a job which I eventually got a job like six months I got a job I'm going to pass this off to her. It'll be a passive stream of income for her. She can take it and run with it and it's hers. And then she was like I want to do that, you can keep that. So I was like, oh okay, um, and so then I literally just kind of put it on hold for a little while because it was not, it wasn't a passion for me, it was a. It was a. It was like a means to an end for me at that point, um and then moved to Atlanta, um from Milwaukee and trying to figure out what to do. Um, um from Milwaukee and trying to figure out what to do, um, uh, a friend and a good mentor of mine who, um, actually is a real estate agent, sold me and sold me my house and then sold it. When I sold it, Um, she's like hey, uh, I got this travel agency business. What do you think? And I'm like she's like you love to travel. I know you love, love Disney. I think this might be a good fit for you. Just think about it, check it out. So I took a couple months, thought about it, check. I was like you know what, yeah, this, this could be fun, this could probably be fun.

Speaker 2:

Atlanta was a rough transition for me, so I was just, oh gosh, it was rough. Coming from the Midwest to a totally different culture, totally different I mean side of the country, it was just raw for me. And so I'm like, well, yeah, I just I need something to do. So sure, I'll try it. And fell in love with it, totally immersed myself in it, figured out, oh, I can do this with this and I can do this with this, and just and and just kind of went like on this tangent on both sides of I can do both of them and I can do this, and started having a ball with both of them. Um, I totally rebranded the t-shirt company into a fitness apparel company because I'm like, if I'm going to do this, I need to do something that I enjoy and that I love. I don't really care about t-shirts, but I do care about fitness. So let's turn this into a fitness apparel company and we'll do kind of a little bit of everything.

Speaker 2:

So I think the but the tie that I really had to cut was the mindset of that. I needed some type of special skillset to build my businesses or to be successful in my businesses. I'm not, like, a marketing expert, I'm not a finance expert, but I've always had a head for business, like I can see a good idea and I know how to build on that idea and grow that idea. And I've had several business. I've always been, like, kind of had that entrepreneurial mindset. I've had more businesses fail than I've had succeed, because I did things that I was good at but I didn't necessarily care about or that I didn't, where I really didn't love. So this time I kind of decided let me flip the script and let me find something I love and then get really good at it. And that's where where I'm at right now.

Speaker 1:

I like that. You're a, but what was the biggest time of what part of the mindset that you could do it?

Speaker 2:

It was actually I had to. It was the mindset that I had to have like a business degree or like I have to know how to run a business from end to end and all that stuff. Because I don't. I'm winging it and figuring it out as I go and if sometimes I do stuff and I'm like that was a terrible idea, I mean sometimes I think that was a great idea.

Speaker 1:

So that's and listen, I think what you find is a lot of uh. This is where coaching really helps, if you can make the investment. Uh, because you know I would have benefited myself five years ago. Not the autobiography, but just you. You know, I moved from the west two down here to atlanta. I'm not pretty easy because it's warmer, it's nicer and you know, whatever. But all right, that part's easy and you know anyway we won't go down that. But but the, the.

Speaker 1:

The point being is, uh, five years ago, you just fake it till you make it kind of like I'll figure this out, you know, you just kind of, you do the best you can based on the training you've had in life, right, and uh, and then you figure out that other people are kind of just guessing and you just and you and then, but then you get all over the place and I will say that in anyone listening it's you would have saved a lot of money in time If you had a coach. That would just 90 days get you, just get you pointed in the right direction. I say that prominently. I do this coaching and not the. You know anyway, the point being is, when I see people do this, they're so much more, they have more clarity than ever, because they're like, okay, I was going to try, like, don't try that, but here's why that's going to. It's going to move you thin, stay narrow, anyway. So it's perfect.

Speaker 1:

And you discovered something that happens a lot often with with an entrepreneur, right Is that it's the three P's, because I call it so you have your, your passion, your, uh, your potential, which are your skills, and then your, the problem you solve. And if you don't have all three of those of solid size, meaning like you have no passion, the little Venn diagrams too small for you to focus, and if you have no potential, you can't do it. And if there's no problem, you're actually solving that people, you just can't do it. So you, you solve that by like, oh, I gotta get the passion bubble up because I don't care about this, so let's get something we care about. I love that wonderful, um, okay, so do you remember the moment, do you remember the moment when you knew, oh, my gosh, I had to change my mindset?

Speaker 2:

um, um, yes. So two businesses, two different moments. The first moment with the t-shirt company was with the moment of I built this business up. Like, I mean, I did all the work. I got my LLC, I own my trademark, I put a lot of work into starting this business up, business up. And then, when my daughter said I don't really want to do this, I'm like, well, okay, and it sat dormant for a few years.

Speaker 2:

Um, and I'm like you put all this money and all this work and you, you've got a closet full of inventory that you're not even trying to sell because you just don't care that much about it. Um, I think that was the aha moment of what do you care about? Because you built this up too far to let it go? Um, of what do you care about because you built this up too far to let it go? Um, so what do you care about? And then I realized I'm like, well, I like to work out, I like fitness and I like I like the. I think that a lot of people, you see that you go to the gym, you see people and they've got the. You know, they got the muscle shirts on and they got their racer racks on and they, you know, whatever, but it doesn't everybody looks the same. So I'm like I racks on and they, you know whatever, but it doesn't everybody looks the same. So I'm like I want something that's going to. You know you're going to get your workout in, but you showcase your personality. So I'm like take your love of the quirky saying on a t-shirt and take your love of fitness and put them together and there you go. So I think that was the the the aha moment with that one. That was the aha moment with that one With the travel agency.

Speaker 2:

It was the moment of remembering why or how I got into it. Like, how did you get to this point? Versus, just okay, I love to travel. I can send people on trips. Anybody can go on any search engine and book themselves a trip. Why use me? Like, what makes me special?

Speaker 2:

The way I fell in love with travel was when I had gotten laid off from my job. I was so down and so low and I'm like I just needed to find something that would just make me smile a little bit. And at that point it was literally watching YouTube videos of Disney rides and Disney POVs and and vloggers, like walking around the parks and telling you about the new food and telling you about this and telling you about that, and that was like the only thing that kind of kept me up and positive during that time period in my life. And so I spent years, like years, sitting every night like it was my job, sitting there every night watching those videos, and when my mentor was like you know more about Disney than anybody I know, why are you not working, like to do something with this? And I'm like, yeah, the moment for that.

Speaker 2:

A couple of years ago I took my me and my brother did a sibling's trip to Disney. He had been to Disney before but he had always been with, like his kids and his grandkids and he went to like the like Magic Kingdom, like the like the kid parks. My favorite part is Epcot and so I took him. I'm like we're going to go to Epcot and so we're in Epcot and I'm telling him about this and like all this history I mean just random Disney facts that nobody but a Disney nerd would know and he is looking at me and he was like what you could work for Disney. He was like I would never have.

Speaker 2:

I'm like you know, yeah, this wall here. They have to block this wall off because you know, people would drink around the World Pavilion and they get drunk and they try to climb the Mexico wall and that's why they put this, this big wall here. And he was like, why do you know this stuff? And so I thought about it and I'm like what agent, what that doesn't specialize in Disney would know this stuff to tell somebody who wants to book a trip? This stuff, what agent would be able to tell somebody, hey, if you go to this park at this time of day, on this day in the sun shines on this site you'll see a hidden mini Mickey silhouette that only shows up one day of the year it happens to be on Mickey and Minnie's anniversary and they're like, who would know that, besides somebody like me? And so that's when I was like, take that and turn that into something.

Speaker 1:

Did you take some of that information to make your own YouTube videos off of that?

Speaker 2:

I also have a YouTube channel, that's a boy.

Speaker 1:

It's usually a compliment and from a marketing standpoint, uh, verify you as, hey, I really know disney and watch my channel. I'll give you some insight. You'll never. You know you people, and you're just you know, you, just you know, take it yep, so I I do have a a youtube you got a shape of the plugger right now.

Speaker 2:

This is okay, it's called. It's called this by daddy dis dis um short for disney's called. It's called Diz by Danny Diz D-I-S short for Disney. It's it's. So.

Speaker 2:

It's not all Disney content. It's because I live in Atlanta. I can't go to the parks all the time. I just did a Disney series and I'm like uploading those videos right now. I was just in Disney two weeks ago. So what it is?

Speaker 2:

It supports my travel agency because what I do is I go around Atlanta also and I have this series called Tourist in your Own Town, and so I go around different parts of Atlanta and showcase like, hey, if you ever come to Atlanta to visit, we've got this, we've got that, here's some history, here's something fun to do. You know that type of stuff. And then I also get to the parks as often as I can and then I upload those videos and do POV of Disney and I think my niche. That I say is because my kids are grown and so is to. You can still be a Disney adult, you can still go to Disney and not look like a weirdo because you're an adult by yourself with no children, and have a blast, which I absolutely did. I wore myself out, but I had a good time.

Speaker 1:

I think you need to move to Florida and just get the pass.

Speaker 2:

That's probably going to be the next move.

Speaker 1:

Or be like, but like, if you can be like, hey, listen, I'll, I'll, I'll. Uh, you know you can be a guided tour of Disney, like when you go there and I don't know who knows, he might shut you down with that one, that's, I mean that's. So I hear the passion and and and and you know your drive behind that. What's, what's holding you back from doing it full time?

Speaker 2:

It is the fact that I, you know, I I still have to work a nine to five because right now my brand is not I'm building my brand. Still I've got a small enough following that it, you know, gives me like a little bit of like, you know it's a little bit of residual income, but it's definitely not enough to sustain me. And so right now I'm in that phase of trying to market myself, trying to get myself out there for people to really recognize that hey, she's got a nice different type of apparel line and she's got a good travel agency. And when I build that following up big enough where I could, you know, walk away from that nine to five, I absolutely I will be on the first thing smoking away from there to do it full time. So I think it's just a, it's a process, it's just it's going to take time.

Speaker 2:

Unfortunately, I am a team of one, so I do this all by myself. All the time I eat, drink, sleep, breathe, my businesses. Sometimes, even when I'm on the clock at my regular job, I'm thinking about something with my businesses. But I think, at the end of the day, even if I didn't make a dime doing any of these things, at the end of the day, even if I didn't make a dime doing any of these things I do my side jobs. I actually feel fulfilled with those because at the end of the day, with those I bet on myself, I found my purpose and I feel like I can take that to the bank all day.

Speaker 1:

I love that and listen, you're going to get there.

Speaker 1:

And we have entrepreneurs that are on here from all different stages, uh, and, and they often start like this yeah, yeah, you know, the thing that tends to work for people is to find that one niche, that one persona that you help over and over and over and, uh, you know, if you can make money from just doing your love of just, hey, I go to, I go to disney for the latest thing and I get the new one, I, you know, whatever awesome, fantastic, I it, and if you make your videos for that niche, you may not ever need to go book anything. You might just make money from people watching you go. So I love it, since, kind of firing up your businesses and they sound like they're growing and you know, or at least have some kind of growth or they add value beyond just, just beyond the thing you love to do it, what's what's kind of been the impact for your life? Or for even I think let's focus on you what's been the impact on your life for having this kind of other channel, if you will?

Speaker 2:

Um, it really honestly, it gave me a purpose because I felt like, you know, I spent the first 20 years of my career, you know, chasing a bag and it's like that's nice, you've got the money, you've got the nice things, but you still kind of feel like, is this, it Is this how I'm supposed to be doing? Is this, is this like making me happy? And ultimately, like this, this yeah, I got this Gucci bag, I got this Louis purse, you know whatever, but it didn't really feel purposeful for me. Um, so I felt like it gave me a purpose, cause I stopped chasing a bag and started chasing the purpose. Um, it also opened up my world to meet like-minded individuals.

Speaker 2:

I mean, I didn't know there was such a big community of Disney adults.

Speaker 2:

I didn't know there was such a big community of people who like to look good when they go to the gym and just don't throw on some just old funky shirt and just like, hey, I'm going to the gym, you know, I'm just like, hey, I'm going to the gym, you know. So it created a sense of community, especially for me who came from someplace to someplace new, where I did not have a sense of community, didn't have a lot of people that I knew. I like literally all my friends here initially were people who I knew from where I came from. It's like that doesn't really open you up to new people, so it created a sense of community that I never really really had. The other thing it also and I know some people say this might seem negative, but to me it's not a negative it showed me who was on my team and who was really rooting for me to succeed, and it showed me who just wanted a front seat to see if I was going to fail.

Speaker 1:

I like that. I mean. The next question is always like you know, what are you most grateful for?

Speaker 2:

no-transcript.

Speaker 1:

So, as you, as you've progressed, I mean, what is some of the best business advice you've received?

Speaker 2:

The best, oh wow, Um, best is advice. I actually heard this recently. Somebody told me don't let your habits hold you hostage, Because if you keep doing what you've always done, you're going to get what you've always got, and if that's not what you want, you're just going to run around in that hamster wheel for forever. And so you have to grow and learn and realize when some whether it's a tactic, whether it's a practice, whether it's a thought process when something doesn't serve you anymore, you got to let it go and find something new.

Speaker 1:

That's great and that's I mean, that's the whole principle behind cut the tie is challenge, whatever you believe to do, or you know or accepted or made an excuse for, and if it holds you back from the thing you just defined as success, you let it go of it. Yeah, you cut it away. Sometimes you can let go, sometimes you got to cut it and so this, it doesn't matter, it's one of the same. In in the waiting of the action of doing that versus the benefit of it is usually what's at the. There's usually a tipping point. You're like, yep, that's easy, and so off it goes, absolutely. Is there a book that you've read that's been really inspirational and one you'd recommend to others?

Speaker 2:

Yes, it's called she Thinks Like a Boss. It's by Gemma Rodell. I actually started reading that in my corporate life, but it actually has been worth it in my entrepreneurial life as well, because she talks really about how to be a leader even when you feel like you were in a room that you don't belong in, even when you feel like you know you like, that you have that imposter syndrome of like I'm at a table and nobody knows I have no idea what I'm doing or what I'm talking about. And it talks about how to still display those leadership qualities when you might have an introverted personality or you might be shy, or you might just be quiet. Because that's me Like.

Speaker 2:

I am a very I'm not really shy, but I am very introverted and I'm a pretty quiet person until you get to know me. Then it's like, oh my God, shut up. But I am pretty reserved until I'm comfortable. And in this world you have to walk into rooms and be comfortable, like automatically, or you will get drowned out by the people who do have that extroverted personality and who are out there and promoting their brand and are loud about it. So that has really helped me because I have put myself out there. You know I go to business expos all the time. Actually, I will be in an expo as a vendor for the first time at the end of this year but I would go to these expos and just kind of watch and see, like what does this, what happens here? Like how loud do you need to be here? Like what do you need to be successful here? And so that has been really helpful for somebody who, like me, who is, who is not very, who struggles with promoting themselves, to walk in and with all the confidence.

Speaker 1:

Confidence even if you don't feel it to fake it till you make it you know, well, I, I say you know, I meet a lot of, uh, individuals that are like yourself, that's like oh, how do I just let your work speak for you? And you know, and you can't.

Speaker 1:

You can't wear someone else's suit, you can't be something you're not yeah and the half that will identify with the extrovert loud, if you will, uh, will. The other half will be like, ah, I kind of like that quiet person who's just humbly there and I like their product. So there, there's a, there's a half of both and there's. You know, if you're like in a corner, like I don't even want to put my stuff up, that's a different issue. But yeah, uh, maybe. Last question if there's a question, maybe I should have asked you and did not. What would that question have been?

Speaker 2:

I would say the question is maybe my personal philosophy, um, which would be and I think I alluded to it a little bit earlier was to find something you love and get good at it. Don't necessarily be good at something and then try to love it. I think there are so many people who are out here and they're living through life and they're working their businesses and whatever it may be, but they're doing it without a purpose or they're helping somebody else build their brand and build their business, that you have to find your dream, you have to bank on yourself. I think there are so many and I think what stops a lot of people is that there are so many people who don't do, they don't try and pursue their dreams and they don't try to live their. Those, you know, go towards those goals because they're scared they're going to fail.

Speaker 2:

But my thought, my personal philosophy, is like, yeah, you might fail towards those goals because they're scared they're going to fail. But my thought, my personal philosophy, is like, yeah, you might fail, but what if you fly? And you'll never know unless you try. And so that's just basically how I try to go through life. Is I definitely have those three o'clock in the morning I wake up in a full blown sweat because I'm like, oh my God, I put all my money into this and what's going to happen. But I'm like, but what if you fly? Just keep going.

Speaker 1:

I love it. I'm going to challenge you.

Speaker 2:

Okay.

Speaker 1:

When you no longer have a safety net is when your real entrepreneur hatching begins, and what I mean by that is some point you'll exit your business and it'll be wherever it is. I think we'll do it tomorrow, so don't take that. But when you do it, you're going to be like you know, we all make these. It's like, oh shit, no more excuses, I don't have nine hours a day to travel and go. Do you know, work, I have to do nine hours for me.

Speaker 1:

Now, all that you'll it'll, it'll transform you when that happens, because you, you're um, you just it opens something you can never find unless it's gone. But anyway, so I will, I will challenge you to come back on the show when you're like, well, I got laid off and now I'm doing a full time, um, you'll have that feeling take a breath, maybe go don't go to disney, because you're gonna need your money but like, yeah, just relax, because you're about to go, really, really get into it. And I think, uh, I, I look forward to that moment for you because it's coming thank you so much.

Speaker 2:

I'm I'm excited, I'm absolutely excited. I appreciate you can't go to disney. I have a series coming out of my youtube channel. I just my last trip I did Disney under $500.

Speaker 1:

That should be a video that takes off. It's a per person perfume. I'll watch that one because every time I say the word Disney, I just somebody took $500 from me. Yeah, I just did it. They get almost out of me a year just in the DisneyChannelcom.

Speaker 2:

I know right All right?

Speaker 1:

Shameless plug time. Who should get? This is a good. I want you to pick one of your businesses. Okay, who should get a hold of you? And how do they do that for one of your businesses?

Speaker 2:

Anybody who loves the magic of Disney and wants to remember what it feels like to be a kid when you don't have all the responsibility to be an adult and just the stress of being an adult and you want to go escape and remember that magic.

Speaker 2:

Call me. How do they do that? Um, so I have a YouTube. Um, I have a. Oh gosh, I have a uh YouTube. This is by Danny. Um, uh, I'm on Facebook under Firebird Travel Agency. My email is Firebird Travel Agency. I don't email myself, so I got to look it up. I think it's Firebird Travel Agency 3 at gmailcom. And then I also have a website, but the website is listed on the Facebook page. So because I don't look at my website either, so I don't really remember those off the top of my head.

Speaker 1:

We're going to help you get marketed so you can get out of your job full time. I can feel it. Thank you for joining me today. I really appreciate you.

Speaker 2:

Thank you so much, thomas, I appreciate it.

Speaker 1:

And listen anybody who got to this point in the show. Thank you so much for listening, watching. If you've been here before, thanks for coming back, and if this is your first time, I hope it's the first of many. I hope you all start cutting ties of whatever's holding you back and the success that I hope you've defined for yourself. Get out there, go cut a tie and unleash the best version of yourself.

People on this episode