
The Peaceful Mompreneur
Encouraging and equipping Christian Mompreneurs to have peace in their lives and business while staying grounded in Jesus Christ.
The Peaceful Mompreneur
Your Identity Beyond Motherhood
Feeling lost in the endless demands of motherhood? You're not alone. When your dreams and identity take a backseat to diapers and dishes, something vital gets buried—but it doesn't have to stay that way.
Kingdom Life Coach Megan Nielsen shares a transformative truth: stepping into your God-given purpose isn't selfish or secondary to motherhood—it actually makes you a better parent. "When I am in my creative flow, doing what God created me to do in addition to motherhood, I'm just a happier and more peaceful mom," Megan reveals. This fulfillment flows directly to your children, showing them what living with purpose and joy looks like.
For mothers with young children, Megan offers practical wisdom about getting honest with yourself and creative with solutions. Taking inventory of your emotional and spiritual reserves, having candid conversations with your spouse, and finding appropriate help aren't luxuries—they're necessities for sustainable motherhood. She challenges the guilt-inducing mindset of "I should be able to do this myself," asking pointedly: "Why should it be just you?"
The discussion delves into distinguishing unhealthy guilt from godly conviction, uncovering your unique calling through journaling and conversation, and recognizing the seasons of motherhood. Megan's framework of negotiables versus non-negotiables provides a clear path for honoring both family commitments and personal calling without comparison to others.
As a bonus, Megan introduces her book "Untangled Faith" and her "beautiful exchange journaling" method that helps women hear God's voice clearly in their decisions. She closes with powerful encouragement from Galatians: "Don't get weary in doing good, because you will reap a harvest at the proper time."
Ready to rediscover yourself beyond motherhood? Grab Megan's free "Busy Mom's Toolkit" and unlock the guilt-free path to pursuing your purpose while raising a thriving family.
Connect with Megan --> https://megan-b-nilsen.kit.com/85e50c328d
Grab the Healthy Sustainable Weekly Rhythm Guide for Busy Moms ► ► https://aliesehalcomb.com/weeklyrhythms
Hey friends, welcome to the Peaceful Mompaneur. This episode is an interview I did with Megan Nielsen. We interviewed her. I interviewed her for the Christian Mompaneur Summit. That just happened back in March and it was so great that I needed to share it with you. So I hope you guys enjoy. Here we go.
Speaker 1:We have all done it, lost ourselves in motherhood. Your dreams, passions and even your identity has taken a backseat to diapers, dishes and daily routines. I know you love being a mom, but deep down you know God has called you for even more. Truth is thriving moms raise thriving families. When you step into your God-given purpose, whether in business, ministry or creative passion, you're not taking away from your family. You're showing your children what it looks like to live with faith, purpose and joy.
Speaker 1:Hi, I'm Elise Halcom, host of the Christian Mompreneur Summit, and I'm excited to introduce you to Megan Nielsen. She is a dynamic and transformational Kingdom Life Coach podcast host and mentor dedicated to helping Christian moms and women entrepreneurs anchor their identity in Christ, hear God's voice clearly and take bold, faith-filled action toward their God-given purpose. A former school counselor turned visionary entrepreneur, she now runs a fulfilling coaching business and hosts the Kingdom Life Coaching Podcast, where she delivers practical, life-changing insights to inspire listeners to align their lives with God's plan and step into freedom and fulfillment. Hey, megan, thank you so much for joining us. You are so welcome. I'm excited to be here. Yes, it's going to be good, so let's just jump right in. Okay, we're going to be chatting about mompreneurs stepping into their full identity in Christ. Beyond just a mom, you say that it's not only okay for moms to pursue a calling outside of motherhood, but it's actually good for their children and themselves and their families. Can you tell us how it actually benefits everyone?
Speaker 2:Listen, if mama ain't happy, nobody's happy, right? So it's kind of a joke and maybe a stereotype. But I know for me that when I am really in my creative flow, when I'm doing the things that God's created me to do, I always say in addition to motherhood I hate saying outside of motherhood because once you're a mom you're always a mom until the day you take your last breath. So that's our number one priority. But I know that when I am not really paying attention to investing and really planting the seeds of gifts that God's given me, like taking those talents that he's given me and you know we read in the gospels that that Jesus says invest your talents in the kingdom, multiply them when I'm not doing that in things that you know outside of motherhood, I personally I get pretty frustrated.
Speaker 2:I know that I start getting more angry at my kids quicker. I start to kind of snap more quickly because I am depleted, I am not full, I'm not full of the Holy Spirit, I'm not full of the things that bring me joy and unfortunately my kids often get the brunt of that. So I feel like I experience it every day when I'm fulfilled and at least investing in the way I can in that season with my talents. I'm just a happier and more peaceful mom. That's a period.
Speaker 1:Yeah, absolutely. I love that. Could you give some advice to a mom who is in young kids, right, so that life is a little bit different, right, and they take up a lot of your time? So she feels like she wants to start something or she already has a business, but she's got these tiny people that need her to keep them alive.
Speaker 2:They do and they grab at her and they never let her go and they scream her name and they need her to do all the things. I remember those days. Yes, I am a little ahead of you, that is true. My youngest is 18 now, so I feel like I'm taking your breath and entering a whole new season of motherhood. But I do remember those days very, very clearly and I mean the honest truth is it's hard. It's just plain hard, because there are not a lot of margins in your life to be doing other things, but there are margins.
Speaker 2:So I think it's easy at the young parenting stage to look at women that are ahead of you on the journey and be like, oh well, I mean, if my kids were driving themselves to school and if my kids were off at college, I mean I would have all the time in the world to do what I need to do, but now I can't. In some ways, that's kind of true. You do have more time, but I think what I would say to the young mama with young kids maybe you're not young, maybe you started a little later, but you have young kids, so it kind of doesn't matter is that you have to just get more creative and you have to get really focused. So I think that the creativity piece comes when you take a very honest inventory of your days and an honest inventory of your emotional gas tank. Spiritual gas tank, like you, can only serve from an overflowing cup really. So if you are depleted and your gas tank is empty physically, spiritually, emotionally you will have a hard time building that business and doing those other things because you're running on fumes. And so I think the first thing to do is take a very honest look at like whoa, okay, where am I, where am I feeling really empty. And getting that straight. First, um and I. I have a feeling that in order to do that, it will require, um, an honest look and then some honest conversations with the people around you. Most likely that would be your spouse, so if you are married, then that that hopefully your husband is kind of your number one covenant partner and how can you share with him what you're feeling, what you're experiencing, where the depletion is coming from, um, and then the answer to that you know, like, what you're feeling, what you're experiencing, where the depletion is coming from, and then the answer to that you know, like, what's the remedy for that is going to be one of two things Either you need to let some things go so that you can kind of do the tasks that are in front of you with motherhood, depending on how your family is arranged and who can help you, or you say you know what?
Speaker 2:How can we get creative and bring some other people in to help? So for me it was having someone that could cook for me for a while. There was a season in there when I had someone coming to help me clean my house, because I had four young kids, two of whom were internationally adopted and really had a lot of trauma and emotional needs, and I was just like I can't keep the house clean, I can't figure out what to cook for dinner, so there was no way I was going to be building a business alongside of that. Like what? So I really had to be honest and be like you know what?
Speaker 2:I know that this that seems self-indulgent.
Speaker 2:It's interesting as I say this because I actually have a coaching client right now who is she's a teacher, she has three young kids and she's trying to figure out how to kind of renew her spirit and one of the things is just like can someone come in and clean my house and the biggest mindset challenge that we have kind of worked through is like.
Speaker 2:Mindset challenge that we have have kind of worked through is like is this indulgent? I mean, is this do I really need someone to come help me do this? I should be able to do this, and I think the honest truth is like well, I know, but you can't, it's okay, what is this? I should be able to. So you have to get creative with what. What it could look like to bring other people in to help you with some of those things that are really taking a lot of time and energy, and then having honest conversations with like okay, what could that look like for us in this season? So I know I've said a lot of things, so jump in. How can I clarify or help even more?
Speaker 1:Yeah, no, that sounds really good. It's like knowing exactly where you are, who can help you and what you can do. So you said you mentioned some mindset shifts. Let's dive into that, Okay. So what mindset shifts do you think that? Um, you know, this mom needs.
Speaker 2:Oh man, okay. So I think one of the big lies that is typical for us moms is I should be able if I were a good mom, I should be able to do all of this myself, like I should be able to keep my household afloat and build this business. And the question I would say is why? Why should it be just you? You know what I mean. So I think you have to come to terms with, like, what are the expectations that you have over yourself? Are those expectations reasonable? Are those expectations in line with what God has told you, what he has, how he has created you? If they are, then go for it. But if there are some expectations of I should be able to and I can't, that are really kind of depressing you a little bit and making you feel less than or or incapable, I would say that would be a mindset shift to tackle and kind of ask yourself why do you think that? And then the secondary expectation list is like the perceived expectations of other people. So say it's not you and you don't think I should the the net. The next quickest connection is my husband thinks I should. My mom thinks I should my neighbor. The net. The next quickest connection is my husband thinks I should, my mom thinks I should, my neighbor, my sister, these people think my kids think I should, so that I feel like the next gap is what are you think other people are expecting of you? And the only way to find out if that's true is is to ask, cause we make a lot of stories Like.
Speaker 2:One of my favorite quotes is from Brene Brown, and she's you know. One of the things that I learned from her long ago was this idea of the story I'm telling myself is. So when you have this narrative in your mind that's like well, I should be doing this, or my husband thinks I should be doing that, then quickly, you need to ask is that true? Is that actually what he expects? Nine times out of 10, he's going to say what? I never expected that from you, why do you think that? And you're like, oh gosh, I don't know. I just made up this story, so that's how.
Speaker 2:That's how I used to start or I still start hard conversations with people. Instead of saying, instead of making it about a blame like how you know, um, I, I'm frustrated because you expect this of me. I would say okay, the story I'm telling myself is that you expect me to have the house clean and the dinner on the table. I'm making some stereotypical 1950s scenario, right, but like I'm I, the story I'm telling myself is that you expect this from me. Is that true? Like am I off base here? And then you have a real honest conversation to find out what's actually true and what's kind of a vein or perceived imagination that just needs to go because that person has just released you from that thing. So that was one thing that I find really, really helpful in that mindset piece is getting like what's true, what's not true? Let's make that real clear, first and foremost.
Speaker 1:Yeah, that's perfect. Early on in my marriage, my husband told me if there's more than one way to take something in, one way is rude. It's not that, and so that has been super helpful for me in my whole life.
Speaker 2:Well, it sure sounded kind of rude, right Not?
Speaker 1:Yeah, he's direct. He's a direct man.
Speaker 2:And I appreciate that. Yeah, okay.
Speaker 1:So a lot of moms. They would have this guilt about wanting something beyond raising their children. What would you say to her?
Speaker 2:Oh man, I'd be like girl, get it together. No, okay, okay. So one of my other favorite quotes is this idea of self-care. And we don't necessarily need to be I'm not necessarily talking about self-care, but, I think, wanting something in addition to motherhood. Some people would call that like self-care or taking care of yourself.
Speaker 2:And there's this woman I think her name is Katie Reed, but anyway she says self-care is actually giving people the best of you instead of what's left of you. So instead of, I feel like the mindset shift here is, instead of feeling guilty like you're sneaking away and you're taking away from the people when you go invest in yourself, I would flip that right on its head and say, actually, when you invest in yourself, whatever that looks like, then you are getting filled up and you're actually going to enter back into those relationships and into that house more fulfilled and giving your kids, your husband, the best of you because you're actually full. And so I think that's going to be kind of different for everybody. And I feel like, as Christian women, this narrative runs really deep from you know decades of what it's supposed to be, what you're supposed to be as a Christian mom and what, how you're supposed to raise your kids and all this kind of thing. So this may be a very nuanced conversation, depending on what kind of religious context you're coming out of and what narrative you has been modeled to you or kind of ingrained in your mind, like it could get real deep, like deconstructing some of those things. So guilt, um.
Speaker 2:The other thing I would say is I really, in my own journey as a mom, I have found it very helpful to concentrate on the fruit of the spirit and um, and those passages in scripture where Paul is saying, like whatever is true and noble and good, like think on those things, whatever bears the fruit of the spirit kindness, peace, patience, gentleness, self-control like do those things.
Speaker 2:And guilt is not on the list. You know, shame is not on the list. In fact, in Galatians 5, when Paul's talking about the fruit of the spirit, he's basically like this is the good fruit that we're looking for, and then he has a whole list of all the things that are not kingdom fruit, that's not from the Lord, and I would say that guilt is that way. That's not from the Lord and I would say that guilt is is that way, like if you need to apologize to someone and you feel kind of a conviction that that's not guilt. That's that's conviction of like I need to make things right. But if you're holding onto something that that makes you feel guilty, I would question the source of of where that's coming from.
Speaker 1:Could you do you have any practical advice on how to tell if something is guilt or a conviction?
Speaker 2:Gosh, that's good You're making me work for it today. I think conviction would be in line with scripture. I think conviction would be in line with scripture. So when Jesus says, love your neighbor things, if what you're doing believing is actually in direct opposition to the teachings of Jesus, then I would say that's conviction, like, whew, okay, I'm not really abiding in the vine, I'm not connected to Jesus right now, I'm not modeling his life. That's conviction. There's grace for that, always grace for that. You can, you, can you know, say you're sorry and repent and just say man, that's I, yeah, okay, I blew it. That's conviction.
Speaker 2:Guilt is something that is, um, that is more. It's like a heavy, it's shame, it's something that you're carrying. That Jesus is like I died and rose again, so you don't have guilt anymore. We don't need to feel guilty for this, unless you need, I would say the only way to really know is to ask yourself do I need to offer grace and forgiveness here, either to yourself or someone else? If the answer is yes, then I would go that way. If it's like, do I need to offer grace and forgiveness? No, I'm just holding on to guilt, I'm walking by the flesh. That's something different. So I feel like I'm, I feel like you're making me sweat even answering that question, cause I'm like it's nuanced, don't you think it's hard?
Speaker 1:It's a hard thing, it's a hard one to answer and, as I like where you went, though, like if, if you get to the root cause, like the cause that's causing the feeling, there's a feeling, can feel similar, with a lot of feels, but you know what I mean. Conviction and guilt can feel similar, like in your gut, in your throat, in your head, but knowing where it's coming from really will tell you if you are being convicted or if you're allowing yourself or outside sources create guilt in your life. Um, I like that and and and putting it up against the scripture, like are you living in accordance to Christ?
Speaker 2:And that's perfect. Yeah, and here's the other thing that just dawned on me as we were talking. So I feel like guilt will stunt you, stop you. It there will. We're talking, so I feel like guilt will stunt you, stop you. There will be inertia there. It will stop you from living out the way God wants you to live. Conviction can and should propel you forward, like, ooh, this is conviction, we're going to work through it, we're going to say the thing that needs to be said, we're going to apologize. If we need to apologize and move forward to bear more fruit versus guilt will stop you and actually stunt the fruit, stunt any kingdom activity. So I feel like there's a delineation there too.
Speaker 1:Yeah, that's good. I love that. Okay, all right, so we're going to shift back into where we were. How can a mom who starts discovering her God-given purpose if she feels lost in motherhood?
Speaker 2:I mean the first thing to do is just find somebody to talk to. I know that sounds super simple, but I think it's really common for moms to self-isolate and start kind of internalizing and holding onto a lot of thoughts and feelings. I mean, if your mind is anything like mine, there's like thousands of words happening in here in my head that never come out of my mouth. Sometimes it's a good thing, it's like a Holy Spirit filter, it's like you don't need to be saying that, but more often than not, I think I'm holding on to just so much angst. So the first thing I would say is who can you talk to and share? Like you know, Jesus said, you will know the truth and the truth will set you free. So when you can share the truth and bring it to the light of day, Okay, Start in a journal. If you don't have someone that you're like, hey, I'm going to go talk to my husband, my best friend, my mentor, my counselor. Start in a journal.
Speaker 2:But you have to figure out how to get it out of your heart and your mind first, and then, once you get that out, you can start to say okay, God, will you shed the light on what's true here? What, um, what I need to be aware of and what is a lie? What am I believing? That is not true. And you know a lot, of a lot of women in general I don't care if you've got little kids or not like we just really need clarity. And the way to get clarity is to start saying these things, writing these things down, saying them out loud and seeing huh, how does it feel to say that Is it true, Is it not true? And then go from there. So I am a big proponent of writing or speaking things out loud or in a journal, so that you can get perspective. That's the first place to start, for sure.
Speaker 1:That's perfect. That's very practical.
Speaker 2:To just find a friend, tell her all your ideas, tell your husband write it down, do something, tell something, do something, yes, and then you'll know the next step from there, cause that friend might be like, oh Whoa, that is locked Girl, I have no response, and you're like, huh, maybe I need to go to somebody a little more professional that like has some, some, some mentoring, some guidance in this area? Sometimes we do need to go to that next level and and find a mentor or, or pay for, invest in a counselor, coach, something like that to help you get real clear?
Speaker 1:Yep, absolutely so. Can you share a personal story or an example of a mom who has stepped into her calling and saw it bless her family?
Speaker 2:Yes, I love these. I love these things. And the cool thing is now there's just so many creative ways to step into your calling, like with technology and all the resources that we have. It's very, very cool. Let me think. Let me think Honestly.
Speaker 2:The mom that comes to mind first is the one who was a teacher and she actually left teaching to go and stay home with her kids and has now started her own, her own business as a music teacher. She was a music teacher in the public school system and felt like in that way, in that avenue, in that medium, through the public schools, she was gone from her kids all the time and was feeling very disconnected. But when she stepped away from the traditional school system and decided to go back home and be more present at home raising her kids, she was able to find creative ways to step back into music but kind of start her own thing and really sit in the same calling Like music. Music. It was the same thing, it was just a different way of doing it and she needed that creativity and that autonomy to feel like she could thrive at home and in her calling.
Speaker 1:That's beautiful, yeah, and she followed after the Lord and did what he said and opened some doors. That's super good. It's a yeah. So before we start wrapping up and stuff, do you have any last words of wisdom or advice for the Christian when you're listening right now, Hmm, I would say, pay attention to, to the times and the seasons.
Speaker 2:Um, you know, it's definitely clear in Ecclesiastes that says there's a season for everything. And sometimes when you are, uh, a very passionate I use driven in the best way Like you've got ideas, you've got things you want to build and do and put out into the world. Don't give up on that, but ask God to help you get really clear about the time and the season in your life. And one way that I like to coach people when they come to me is it helps to get really clear about the negotiables and the non-negotiables. So you are in the, when the word mompreneur, it basically implies you are obviously a mom and the preneur part means like there's some kind of creative endeavor, there's some kind of business you're building.
Speaker 2:So, as a mompreneur, I would say, okay, what are the non-negotiables in your life? The rocks, as they say, if you know that analogy. But the big rocks in the, in the, you know the glass first and then all the other ones. So, like what's not negotiable If you're married, I would say you know and you value and you want to do your best to stay married. That's a non-negotiable. Like parenting your children. That's a non-negotiable. That doesn't mean other people can't come help, you can't have babysitters or a nanny or like. So don't hear me, it doesn't mean it's all you. It just means like, okay, this is a primary responsible role, this is a primary responsible role. These non-negotiables, I don't want them to change. Then you think, okay, what's another non-negotiable? Well, we can't move, we live in this house, whatever. Whatever the non-negotiables are, just be really clear about that and let those settle into your heart.
Speaker 2:Then what are the negotiables?
Speaker 2:Oh, the way I spend my time and what I do in the morning and what's my morning routine and my nighttime routine.
Speaker 2:Like, there's a lot of negotiable things that you can fiddle with and get creative with to, to help, um, help you be a present and, um, just joyful mom and build your business. But those negotiable things are going to have to. You're going to have to get like I'm going back to the top of this, this conversation creative and honest, and then start to lay the foundation in a way that blesses you and your family where you are and what God is calling your family to, because I think a lot of us will look around and be like, oh, she does it that way and she does it that way and I'm doing it this way, like why am I such a mess? And I would say you can't. I would caution you like, put those Holy Spirit blinders on like a horse would, so that you're not comparing yourself to other people, because God has you in your time, your place, your season, and the only way you're going to truly thrive is to actually stay there and do the thing in that place.
Speaker 1:All right, that's perfect. Thank you so much. Okay, so I hear you have a book, tangent Words.
Speaker 2:Untangled Faith. Can you tell us?
Speaker 1:about it, please.
Speaker 2:Yes, oh, my goodness, thank you for asking. Okay. So a few years back I was learning about journaling with the Lord. So I talked earlier about how important it is to journal or say something out loud, and I was learning from a pastor about two-way journaling. He was calling it two-way journaling and it was like, hey, I pour out my heart and soul on the paper. I kind of go, hey, god, these are the things that I'm tangled up about, these are the questions that I have, and then stop and take a breath and just ask Jesus like imagine Jesus and say, okay, lord, what do you want, what? What's your kingdom perspective? What's the truth that you want me to know? What's the Holy Spirit revelation you want me to know about, about these things? Here's what I'm feeling in the natural sense Please superimpose, like your supernatural kingdom wisdom over this to help me get through it, to help me get wisdom and truth. So I was practicing that was really transformative for me, and I was implementing that with some of the women that I was coaching and they're like, oh my gosh, it's amazing to listen for the Lord. And then one morning I woke up and I felt like the Lord had downloaded in my spirit, like a framework that's deeper than okay. So I journal my thoughts to God, listen for his voice of love and wisdom. I write that down. But then what? What do you do with that? So kind of the strategic life coach piece of me had this extra framework of like, oh, he's asking me to find the truth, what, what else could I? You know? Like, what do I need to do? What? What is he inviting me to have a conversation to wait to pray? What? What's the thing, what's the activation to have a conversation to wait to pray? What's the thing, what's the activation?
Speaker 2:So I was asked to speak at an event and lead women through this type of journaling. I call it beautiful exchange journaling where you're really asking for Holy Spirit, wisdom to help you kind of move forward in life. And I remember sitting down at my computer and getting ready. I was like, oh, wouldn't it be cool if I was at this event and I had a journal to sell? Right, any mompreneurs like, ooh, what product can I bring that actually somebody could buy and it could help them in their life. So I'm like I will create this journal. So I sat down on my computer and immediately when I sat down to kind of think through how would I organize the journal and explain it and walk you through the. You know the steps.
Speaker 2:I felt like the Holy spirit was like you have to write a book. Like you could. You could publish a journal that helps people journal with me, which is that's good. That's good, of course, but if you really want to ground the whole practice in scripture and biblical understanding, you have to write a book.
Speaker 2:And so untangled faith is kind of the precursor book that helps you know how to hear the voice of God, Because so many people are like, okay, that's great that you tell me to listen for God's voice, but how do I know if it's his voice or my voice? And so I kind of go through some of the challenges of hearing God's voice Does he speak to his people? If he does speak to his people, what does it sound like? And then really walk you through the steps of this journaling practice so that when you pick up the journal for yourself you understand theologically and biblically and spiritually what's happening and how Jesus is present through the whole practice. So, in a nutshell, that's it. It's for tangled up people who want to get the Holy Spirit, wisdom, and the practical tool is a journaling that will will guide you through it. You don't have to sit there and think what, what should I write?
Speaker 1:I got it. That sounds amazing. What a shift, though. Right, you thought you were making a journal and now you were a book. Like, isn't that like God? He's like. Surprise, that's a lot more work.
Speaker 2:I was like no, no, no, the journal's like I just put some lines and I just make a little introduction.
Speaker 1:He's like nope, nope, nope. I don't think so. Yeah, okay, all right. So tell everybody what free gift you're offering to everyone who's watching.
Speaker 2:Okay, so I have a free gift for you called the busy mom's toolkit. So, um, it's really five simple practices that you can use for for rest and renewal, and I created it for you specifically, cause I know those margins are real tight and so there's some practical, helpful tools for you to kind of grab that Holy Spirit moment, kind of reset your heart and soul. So please have that. And then do you want me to talk about the course as well? Yeah, Okay. So there is a course that I'm offering normally I charge for, but I'm offering it to you for free, and it's called what Not who. So if you go to what not who coursecom, actually use the link that Elise is going to give you, because that's going to make it free. Use her link. But that what not who is helps you unlock your heart message.
Speaker 2:So, as I've been building my business, coaching and writing and things like that, I was so tangled up about my avatar. So anybody who's a mompreneur, you know these words who's your ideal client and what's your avatar and who are you speaking to? And it was like you need to know her name and you need to know her eye color and what she eats for lunch and what she ordered on Amazon. I was like I don't know exactly. I just know what I'm supposed to tell her.
Speaker 2:And I had this conversation with a woman who said do you feel like you're supposed to do it a God given message, or speak to a specific person? And I felt like uncovering the message first was very, very helpful for me to get grounded and clear and then activate me into okay, now who am I speaking to? So this is kind of a clarifying, foundational course that will help you really unlock that message that God's put inside of you. If you are a you know a course creator or a coach or a content creator or anything like that that you're speaking out a message, a podcaster, and then it'll help you activate. Okay, Well, how how are we going to do that? So there you go.
Speaker 1:That's perfect. No, yeah, and so I'll have all the links to all of these things that Megan just talked about her book and the offers in the description of this. So, megan, thank you so much for being here with us. You're welcome. It's my honor and pleasure.
Speaker 2:I love you, mama, so just don't give up. I, that's the that's the last thing I'll say is in Galatians what is it? Uh, nine six. Okay, You're gonna have to check the address, but it's basically like don't get weary in doing good, because you will reap a harvest at the proper time. So raising young, young kids is very hard and don't don't let yourself get tired, because the work is important. Figure out who can come alongside you to help kind of garden garden with you. Um, because the, the harvest will come. It will come.
Speaker 1:Amen, that's beautiful. Okay, all right. Well, thank you guys for tuning in with us at the Christian mom. When you're summit. I am your host, elise, how come? And don't forget to grab your VIP pass, halcom. Don't forget to grab your VIP pass access words. Don't forget to grab your VIP all access pass. Before the summit