
Soul-led Creative Women with Sam Horton
Welcome to Soul-Led Creative Women — the podcast for heart-centered, creative women who are ready to reclaim their spark and live with deeper meaning, authenticity, and soul.
I’m Sam Horton — artist, mentor, and spiritual guide — and I’m here to support women like you who feel that creative whisper stirring, even if sometimes life feels too full and complicated to follow it.
This is for you if you’re craving something deeper — a sense of purpose, a creative awakening, a way to turn your struggles into sacred power — you’re in the right place.
Each episode is an invitation to uncover the spiritual power of creativity to heal, nurture, empower, and transform. Through honest stories, soulful conversations, and inspiring tools, we’ll explore how art-making and spiritual practices can help you reconnect to your truth and live more expansively.
Your creativity isn’t a luxury — it’s your way back to yourself. Let’s explore how together.
Soul-led Creative Women with Sam Horton
All Is Love: Exploring the Sacred Mirror Between Creativity and Life (part 1) | Morgan Boszilkov
FOR EPISODE LINKS & MORE INFO VISIT: https://samhorton.co/blog/ep74
What if the very things you fear most, losing yourself, messing up, not being enough, were actually sacred invitations to come home to your soul through creativity?
3 Powerful Reasons to Listen:
- Hear Morgan B’s raw and soul-stirring story of reclaiming her creative identity after burnout, motherhood, and cancer.
- Discover how the creative process mirrors life’s most profound spiritual lessons, including surrender, faith, and self-trust.
- Be reminded that you are never too far gone to return to your truth, your creativity can be your guide.
In Part One of this intimate and inspiring conversation, artist and spiritual coach Morgan Boszilkov shares her deeply personal story of leaving behind an accounting career and rediscovering her soul’s purpose through creativity.
Key Takeaways:
- Why your soul’s whispers matter more than the world’s expectations
- How creativity becomes a sacred conversation with your soul
- The emotional truth behind the “messy middle” of transformation
- Why comparison and productivity culture disconnect us from true creative power
- How honouring your season of life allows your creativity to flow again
- The deep link between spirituality, surrender, and soulful art-making
- A powerful reframe for those who feel they’ve “lost themselves”
FOR EPISODE LINKS & MORE INFO VISIT: https://samhorton.co/blog/ep74
🥰 Download your free Guided Ritual: Activate Your Creative Soul Power
Feel like you need a reset button for your soul? This beautiful 15-minute experience blends gentle reflection with intentional creativity to help you reconnect with your inner wisdom and awaken your soul-led spark.
✨ Grab it now at https://samhorton.co/guided-ritual
🎁 Keep the conversation going! Connect with like-minded souls and access FREE resources + exclusive events + workshops when you join the Soul-led Creative Community for FREE - Visit https://samhorton.co/community
Ep. 74 Morgan Boszilkov
[00:00:00]
In this episode, I'm joined by the Radiant Morgan B, an Atlanta-based artist, spiritual coach, and creative soul who truly embodies what it means to walk the path of beauty, truth, and inner transformation in this first part of our conversation. Morgan shares the raw and real story of how she journeyed from a corporate accounting career to becoming a creative force, designing eco-friendly wedding gowns, paintings stunning murals, and supporting others in rediscovering their own truth through creativity and spiritual work.
Together, we explore what happens when we lose ourselves in motherhood, how our creative practice becomes a conversation with the soul, and why surrendering to the messy middle is often the most profound part of any transformation. If you've ever felt like your soul was calling you to remember who you are underneath all the roles and expectations this episode is for you.
Sam Horton: so today I have Morgan Boszilkov with me. Morgan is an Atlanta based spiritual [00:01:00] coach and artist. She connects people to love and beauty within and all around her work fosters healing, self-discovery, and a deeper appreciation for life's natural beauty. So welcome Morgan.
Morgan B: Thank you so much for having me.
Sam Horton: So first let's just start with your journey. Morgan, tell us about, how you've ended up here.
Morgan B: Sure, thank you. well, I had what a lot of people experience, I think when they're discovering their, uh, path to creativity, where I thought that there was a different recipe, assigned to me in this life where culture, family, society, all of the things said art is a hobby and it's not something to be pursued as a career.
So I went into college, thinking that I wanted to be an art minor, but I had no idea what I wanted to major in. [00:02:00] So I ended up with a business degree in. Uh, accounting, and I worked at one of the big four accounting firms, and I was miserable. I loved math and I loved that part of myself, right? There's a really strong urge to use my, uh, which is that my left brain, right?
Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. But the artist in me has always been consistent and has wanted to come out. So I ended up leaving, being an accountant, and I started designing wedding dresses. Okay? and at this time it was in the early two thousands and there was really this early push to make eco-friendly products more mainstream, right?
Less of like that hippie ideal and more of a, you know, everyone's buying more organic at the grocery store, all the things. And so my business brain was like, how can I turn that into. A business opportunity and be able to use my creativity. [00:03:00] So I started an eco-friendly wedding dress business.
Sam Horton: Mm-hmm.
Morgan B: and it was before I got married and it's before I had kids.
And so I drove pretty hard with that passion mm-hmm. Using accounting and things like that to help me support myself. But my passion was always art and how can I make money from my art. Mm.
then I had kids and it just kind of fell away and I became really busy with being a mom and I lost myself. And so for 14 years, in very many ways, I lost myself.
Mm-hmm. And. I think that's a pretty common thing. Mm-hmm. You know, when we kind of follow that recipe that we think we're supposed to follow, and then we do all of those external things and then we realize, wait, none of this life recipe is actually filling the hole in my soul. I'm still hungry. Mm. And. I mean, it was honestly a [00:04:00] blessing.
I ended up moving and someone saw me for my creative parts and was like, would you like to do a solo art show? And I said, I don't even know what I would do. She goes, no, I trust you. I think it's gonna be a amazing, and so it took someone outside of me to really identify the parts of myself that I had forgotten and had just, maybe I had avoided because it was too authentic.
My, my creativity was so me that to validate it would mean that I would have to look at all of the parts of my life Yeah. That were not validating me at that time. And since I had let go of so many parts of myself, like having someone else see that in me and give me that opportunity was like that crack.
Sam Horton: In the shell
Morgan B: that let me peck out and grow and, [00:05:00] you know, really find myself again. and since then, that was in 2019 and I had just had cancer. and so it was this kind of beginning of a new chapter of my life where I was coming into myself.
Sam Horton: Mm-hmm.
Morgan B: And I ended up making a lot of big changes in my life and validating all of the parts.
And honestly, if I zoom way out, it was a, it was a embodiment of creation in all parts of my life. Okay. It wasn't just art being creative, it was like, who do I wanna be? What do I want my life to be? And how can I Oh mm-hmm. Make that the most authentic expression of myself.
Sam Horton: So really part of a spiritual awakening.
Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. So. interesting news. I also was an accountant. I, but I did it for 20 really 20 years. Yeah. So we're very [00:06:00] similar in that we kind of went down that path. I just stuck at it for a lot longer than I should have. I think so, yeah. Interesting. So, obviously, that's an amazing story.
I love every bit of that. and I know that obviously you are a practicing artist now, but you also do do spiritual work as well. Right. So can you tell us a bit about how your art practice actually supports that spiritual side of you and that spiritual work?
Morgan B: Absolutely. Thank you. And yes, I'm so glad that you've, you've escaped the accounting, not that accounting isn't amazing and fun and useful and all of the things, and some people really get into the flow and Yeah.
But for people that it's, you know, sometimes it's just something we do for a chapter.
Sam Horton: Yeah.
Morgan B: so you get it.
Sam Horton: I do
Morgan B: for, for, for my spirituality, and my journey of helping others as a coach, and how my creativity and art really plays into that. every time I [00:07:00] do a piece of art, I find that I go through all of the phases of, of life's like cycle.
So, I get to see my own ego pop up. The entire time I'm creating art, right? So sometimes if I like look at all the steps, there's self-doubt, there's procrastination, there's a fear of getting started. There's, this irking desire though, to, to bring something forth and to create. So then once I get started and I actually make the time for myself and listen to my intuition, I start, you know, not really knowing what I'm doing and I'm kind of working through it.
And then I get in the flow and I'm like, why didn't I start this earlier? You know, this is, this is so much fun. I forgot how, how meditative and [00:08:00] quieting of the mind this process is. And then I hit a point where I look at what I'm doing and going like, oh my God, I've messed it all up. I don't know if this piece of work, if I should just start over.
Or what have I done? Like, how am I gonna fix these things that seem like mistakes?
Sam Horton: Mm.
Morgan B: And then, you know, that, that part of my ego that says, oh, you've made mistakes. There's, there's no like, way to fix these. Or, how are you gonna get yourself out from this predicament of, uh, interpreting what is as wrong?
And then I have to get courage, right? Mm-hmm. To keep going and to say, no, there are no mistakes. You know, everything that's here, let me, with work with what is, because that's all there ever is, is what's. The current [00:09:00] reality. Mm-hmm. And I have to have faith. Right. So I have to kinda like, dig down deep and have the faith that, in myself and in the divine and whatever I believe in at the moment.
And over the years it's been different things, but right now, like I have this deep faith in my own creativity and in I trust the universe
Sam Horton: mm-hmm.
Morgan B: To bring me through, whether it's an art project or a project in life.
Sam Horton: Yeah.
Morgan B: And then, you know, I have to remind myself that there are no mistakes. Yeah.
Everything is happening for us. and that shift in my own spirituality, moving from victimhood to the alchemizing process of turning that lead to gold and saying, alright, this is what I have. How can I work with it? And then once I get over that hump of the self-doubt and the fear of failure and everything that comes up in the middle of an art project, and I just go, okay, let me quiet my mind [00:10:00] again and trust the process.
Mm-hmm. And trust the universe and trust myself. And then I flow again. And by the time I'm done, I'm like, okay, okay. It all worked out. It's okay. And, and then I'm often surprised by it. Like, I'll look at it and I mm-hmm. You know, I can walk away from it. And then I look back and I'm like, where did that come from?
Like,
Sam Horton: yeah,
Morgan B: that art like came through me. but sometimes it's just a really messy, messy process.
Sam Horton: Yeah.
Morgan B: And that's like life, right? Like, how many times can I look back now and go, wow, that chapter was a real mess. But it, it came out, you know, in such a beautiful way because I can see how it. Brought me to the life that I have now.
Mm-hmm. Which is a beautiful story, right? Mm-hmm. Like universe, one story. We each have our own little universe, our own one story, which is a part of the whole, and it [00:11:00] is the, the expression of creativity of life itself. So I try to remember that both in life and in the creative process, because they mirror each other, just like
Sam Horton: mm-hmm.
Morgan B: To surrender to the process and know everything is happening for me. And to have faith. Yeah. That it's all gonna work out. And no one knows like, what mistakes you made. Oftentimes we have this long list of all the mistakes that we've made in our art or in our life, and everyone else is just caught up in their own.
And people look at the finished product, or you know, what they see, and they just go, wow, that's amazing. Mm-hmm. And they have no idea what, what it took to get there.
Sam Horton: So beautiful. I, I feel like you've just touched on every single question I have to, that I'm about to ask you. So we'll, we'll pop around a bit, but, they don't call it the messy middle for nothing.
Right. Uh, it is really messy in the middle. And I actually call what you just described in terms of the [00:12:00] art practice piece as it's a conversation with your soul, right? That's what it is. That process that you go through from start to finish, is just a really beautiful conversation with your soul. And some of it's uncomfortable and some of it feels, you know, really amazing.
it's all of it. So, so good. I love that conversation
Morgan B: with your soul.
Sam Horton: Yeah. Your, so what do you wish people, more people knew about creativity and art then? What do people miss? We are all
Morgan B: creative. Yeah. I think, I think there's so much, comparison
Sam Horton: mm-hmm. And
Morgan B: competition, in this. Oh. I want, like, there's so many other words that I wanna find, like a really positive one, but the word patriarchy keeps coming into my mind. Okay. You know, there's just a, yeah. There's a, there's a long history of needing to be superior and mm-hmm. You know, there's a, the comparison, and I speak from my own [00:13:00] experience, right?
When we are constantly comparing ourselves in any part of our lives or being competitive, we end up on a ladder, right? Mm-hmm. Like, we're always better than, or worse than someone else. Mm-hmm. And that is not love of self-love, that is not the unconditional love of the universe, that is not the love that we are all like made of down to our molecules and particles and atoms and all the things.
Mm-hmm. Right? Like. I believe that we are all love and anything that creates separateness is, fear-based, and it's the ego. Mm-hmm. So, so often I think when we are afraid of, entering into a creative process, because I hear a lot of people say, I'm not creative. You know, it's, it's like that's because we have in mind something, an expectation and a comparison to someone else.
Like, well, this person's [00:14:00] creative, I'm not that, so therefore I'm not creative. Mm-hmm.
Sam Horton: Mm-hmm.
Morgan B: and so I think letting go of the comparison mindset, Mm. And tapping into the idea that every time we have courage to do something differently in our lives on a day-to-day basis, that is creation, like that is the creative process.
Doing the dishes differently
Sam Horton: in
Morgan B: the dishwasher from one day to the next. That is a creative process. Literally you're like using your brain to think of different options, to think of different ways of, of Tetris-ing the plates. Like it doesn't matter what we do in our lives. Anything that we're doing on a day-to-day basis that has any sort of change or dynamic aspect is creation itself.
And I think we've lost touch with that divine beautiful sense [00:15:00] of, Oneness with all things. Mm. Like, like nature itself, right? Nature is always changing and evolving and Mm. And growing and so and so are we. Yeah. We are all evolving.
Sam Horton: It's a very feminine sort of, way of approaching things and we are, we are trained to be a lot more productive and efficient.
I actually call that what you described. It's like taking the scenic route. So when you've got an opportunity to take the scenic route in anything you're doing in your day, if it feels good to do it, you should do it because that's creativity in, in play and everyday life, right. In the, in the menial tasks.
I love that. Yeah.
Morgan B: Yes, I love that. In fact, I've had this goal recently, I, let me know if I'm going off topic, but I've had this goal recently where I want to tap into my 10 to 13-year-old self.
Sam Horton: Okay.
Morgan B: On summer vacation. So when I'm not, when I wasn't like really competitive at school and trying to perform and [00:16:00] achieve and do, and, you know, be in that, that comparison mindset, because that's definitely where I was as a child.
I was constantly trying to make sure that I was Oh, lovable and performing, acceptable. Yes. And performing. And so, so when I was in the flow, whether it was making a quilt in my bedroom or building a fort outside, or planting a little mini garden with the onions in my yard, I was truly just following my passion in every moment, just trusting myself because I didn't know any better at the time.
Right. Like summer vacation, there was this freedom and sense of play. And so I've been asking myself recently, like. Rather than beating myself up about what I should be doing or how productive I'm supposed to be.
Sam Horton: Mm-hmm.
Morgan B: How can I follow my passion, my sense of play, my intuition, [00:17:00] and just do the thing. So sometimes it means that I end up, like I built an outdoor shower recently.
Sam Horton: Mm-hmm.
Morgan B: Because I didn't wanna go to the art studio. Like some part of me was like, you know what, I'm just not feeling that spark, but I really, really want to work with my hands and get in the dirt and use power tools. So, you know, that was another expression of creativity. Yeah. And, and I don't know how it served my, my art and my business and all those things, but I just have to trust that it was what I needed.
Sam Horton: Hmm. Absolutely. I think it's like, honoring the creative season, right? you know, in terms of like taking the pressure off a bit and recognizing, shining a light or bringing awareness to the season that you're in, because it's not on all the time, right? You can't just sit there all day, every day and paint [00:18:00] these beautiful, stunning paintings that you make.
Right? It it, it's not possible.
Morgan B: Yeah, you're right. You're absolutely right. I love that.
Sam Horton: Seasonally. So we've already touched on this, but it's a big one for me. So I believe that our spiritual and our creative journeys are intrinsically linked. I actually believe that they mirror and feed each other. So how do you think that we can more intentionally, use our spiritual, or our, you know, our, our personal growth, to support our creative journey and vice versa?
Morgan B: I love that. Yes. They're, they're so intertwined. I want to say that for me, it comes back so often to surrendering to the process. you know, and I think maybe it goes full circle back to what we talked about in the very beginning with the journey of validating the artist [00:19:00] that was always present within me. Mm-hmm. That wanted to be, trusted and, and, you know, take flight because, because there's still this self-doubt that says, you know, starving artist is a, is a phrase for a reason.
Right. Or, You know, there's a lot of conversation about manifesting abundance,
Sam Horton: right? Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
Morgan B: And so there are all these expectations that if we trust the universe, that will be taken care of, right? Mm-hmm. That's a lot of messaging out there of like manifesting the money, and it can be really hard to support oneself in, in any profession, but art is one of those like, historically famous things.
And so for me, like there's this lingering fear of what if, what if I can't support myself? Mm-hmm. With that, right? Mm-hmm. Or for example, I do a lot of murals right now, [00:20:00] and it's something that I never would've chosen for myself, I don't think. Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. I was very much so, like it feels safe to put something on a canvas, and if someone likes it, they'll buy it.
It is way more triggering and it's much more of a spiritual journey for me to go into someone's home and paint on their walls and have to translate what they want me to paint and like really listen carefully and then trust my body, trust my mind, trust my heart, trust the universe and be like, I'm about to like irrevocably paint on this person's wall.
Mm-hmm. And, and know that they're trusting me too. and so there's a lot, it feels like there's a lot more risk and yet it keeps just working out. And so I am. Following and trusting this invitation from the universe to keep painting on people's walls when I'm asked. Mm. And that's [00:21:00] how I've been making more money.
Mm-hmm. And channeling more abundance than with any of my other art pursuits yet. It's not something I plan for myself. And so, you know, in what other ways can I bring that, like, into the other parts of my life? You know, all of my whatever conditioning and fears and things that I've had to work through about other, you know, relationships or whatever else in my life.
And then instead of thinking that I know the best way to get where I'm gonna go, you know, thinking, well, this is the job I need, the relationship I need, the, whatever the, the type of art I should be making. what if I just like surrender and just watch what invitations come my way? What if I just say, okay, I'm willing to let go of my fears and my ego around whether or not my art will be acceptable to this person and just say, you [00:22:00] know what, they've hired me.
Yeah. This is meant to be. And if it doesn't work out the way I've planned, there's something I get to learn about myself from this experience, because that's really why we're here. Everything, whether it's the art, whether it is relationships, all of the things, right? It's always just learning more about ourselves and becoming more aware.
And if I can slow down in the moment to truly like, notice my reactions, mm. To the, the fears, the self-doubts, the judgements, and also slowed down enough to enjoy the beauty of being able to. Be paid for painting.
Sam Horton: Mm. Like
Morgan B: all, like, it's all of that slowing down and the noticing and trusting and surrendering and it, it's a lot of words, right?
It's like a long list of all the things, but I think it's, it's com it's all combined [00:23:00] in. Being in the flow of life, just like we get into the flow of art. So with, and you're right, sometimes there's a messy middle.
Sam Horton: Yeah, yeah, absolutely. So with the murals in it, that sounds like it's been a really empowering, you know, thing for you to immerse yourself in.
And it's beautiful that actually the universe is almost presenting those opportunities to you when people are actually asking you. So it's clearly something that you are supposed to be doing. It feel, you know, it's in alignment with, with the grander plan, so to speak. So, as you've kind of gone on that empowering journey, how has that then translated to, stepping into your, your power in other parts of your life?
Is there a direct correlation Yes. That you can feel?
Morgan B: Yeah, I think so. You know, every client that I have is, Offers me an opportunity to look at my fears, to be honest with you. [00:24:00] Like whether it is someone's home that I go into and I'm like, oh, I don't know if this is my style. How can I translate? And then being honest and really like, it's, it's always about integrity, right?
So making sure that I'm honest with the client and with myself and saying, you know, I don't know if this is, I want you to be happy, so I wanna make sure that I can meet and exceed your expectations. So I want to be honest about what I can and can't do that feels like in my wheelhouse. and then, and I think that that helps me move past people pleasing.
Sam Horton: Mm-hmm.
Morgan B: Right? Because as, as a recovering people, pleaser in other parts of my life as well. I have to decide whether or not I am going to choose authenticity or attachment. Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. Like a gabo mate, right? Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. So do I want this [00:25:00] person who found me perhaps through a friend, or maybe they're a neighbor or through another client, there's a fear of saying no to someone who is a possible client because it doesn't fit what I do.
And then having to live with like, whew, I'm choosing to be authentic disappointment because I might be disappointing them. Yeah. But the truth is, is if I didn't like, I know well enough now that if I'm not honest with myself and other people, we're gonna all be disappointed at the
Sam Horton: end
Morgan B: of the job anyway.
Sam Horton: Yeah, absolutely. That's it. That's exactly it. So that's,
Morgan B: yeah, that's just one way. at other times, you know, I, I had, there's only one client that this has happened with, but I had one client who. Was very like, triggered by how quickly I work and was like, you charge too much for your time and this, and I was just like, who?
You know, like remembering. Mm-hmm. Like nothing is ever personal. [00:26:00] Nothing is ever personal. We are all here to trigger each other. We are all here to learn from each other. We're each other's mirrors. And so I got to do some Byron Katie work on myself and I was like, okay, when do I do what she's doing in this situation?
When do I, become fearful or judgmental of people who have done things for me because I feel like it's not fair. Mm-hmm. Whatever, you know, like I get to look at my own ways of showing up in the world as reflected to me by. My clients, but actually just everyone, my children, everyone in the world.
Mm-hmm. But sometimes it feels like there's more at stake in these sorts of situations mm-hmm. Because it is a, a growing livelihood. Yeah. So there's a sense of balance of, I [00:27:00] always want happy customers. Yeah. And how do I not take things personally and move through, not in a defensive way Yeah. If someone is triggered, but just be like, oh, I have so much compassion because I've taken the time to notice when I've reacted in that way.
Mm. And then I can say, Hey, I've been there. And I'm so grateful that you have shared your feelings with me and you know, yes. You know, I see that you've spoken to a bunch of your friends who are also people I know before you came to me, and I've done that too, even though it's very triggering for me. Yeah.
That you've spoken to people before you've come to me. I've done that too. And so as soon as I can recognize in someone else's behavior, the same thing that I've done at some point in my life, there's a sense of oneness and connection. And then I'm less [00:28:00] judgmental and afraid, and I'm more compassionate and empathetic, and I feel more connected and loving for that person so I can hold space for whatever they're going through and realize that whatever is, I mean, I'm telling you that this is only one person that has happened to, but honestly, it was a really big deal.
Yeah. Yeah. 'cause I was like, whew, this, this feels. Uh, it felt, it felt like a lot for me, but I learned so much from the interaction that I'm like, glad it happened at this point, even though it was hard in the middle of the, the conversation.
Sam Horton: Yeah. I can see some people giving up after an event like that, you know, it would've been big.
But what was coming up for me as you were explaining that story was, is not, part of how you. Can recover gracefully from that and, and, still retain your power is not part of that really, being rooted in the transformation that you're offering that person. Because ultimately if they've invited you into that [00:29:00] space to create this beautiful artwork on their wall, there's a transformation that's coming for them as part of that, a transformation in their home, in the way they move through their home and the way that they feel in their home.
And so I feel like, you know, as long as you've got, got a connection to that as well, that is also, helps you to retain your power in a situation like that. Do you agree with me? Yes. Or am I completely off track here? I do.
Morgan B: Yeah. No, I do agree with you. And one of the things I said to her when, when I finished the project and it really came down to me just like adding a few circles on the wall and then it was like, oh, that's enough.
And I'm like, wonderful. And I said, and I just remember being like. I, I, you know, I know what it's like to be afraid of someone's reaction. Mm. And not want to say the thing I wanna say. Yeah. And so I ended up, like, in a coaching session with this person, you know, like this mini session where I was just like, [00:30:00] I, I have been in situations myself where, uh, like I, I, I built my house recently and so, I dealt with a lot of subcontractors and so many times I was afraid, you know, whether it was a painter, a installation guy, and something would go wrong, or something just wasn't right, or the contract wasn't fulfilled.
And I was like, oh my gosh, I'm so afraid. What if they, and then I would go through the list of all the things that could happen if I spoke my truth, if I use that power. And eventually I had so much practice where I was just like. Actually things work out better when I just say the thing I want to say.
Yes.
Sam Horton: Yes.
Morgan B: And I'm honest with myself and the other person, and I just like get past whatever fear of what could happen, and I just trust that I'm supposed to learn the lesson of saying the thing.
Sam Horton: Yeah.
Morgan B: And so after this thing, I was like, I hope that next time you can tell me and you can practice on me [00:31:00] anytime you want.
If you wanna say, and I said it, I was like, if, and I say this to friends too, I'm like, practice on me anytime by saying the hard thing. And I think that's a gift we can give each other in, in relationships where we trust each other too. We can remind our friends and loved ones and even business associates just say like, I will be an open, loving, compassionate space.
If you ever wanna practice saying the thing you're afraid to say.
Sam Horton: Mm-hmm.
Morgan B: Like. If there's something that I've done that's bothered you, if there's something that you, that triggered you or whatever and, and you want to feel that empowerment in a safe space, know that I'm here to receive that and I can handle whatever ways that it might trigger me.
Yeah. yeah. Yeah. Because I, because you know, I'm practicing doing that work.
Sam Horton: Yeah. And it's because you are like, you know, you're connected [00:32:00] to, you know, your authenticity and your truth Right. In that, in with that person because you've done the work. It's only possible because you understand the transformation that you're offering that person by doing that.
Awesome.
I really hope you're loving this beautiful conversation. Please look out for part two of my chat. With Morgan, we dive even deeper into integrity. How to build intuitive self-trust through creativity and why slowing down is one of the most radical forms of soul care we can choose. Trust me, you won't want to miss it.
Take care.