She Shines with Karen "Coach KG" Gilliam

Krecia Leddy: Grit, Growth and the Power

Karen "Coach KG" Gilliam Season 1 Episode 29

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Summary

In this episode of She Shines, host Karen "Coach KG"  Gilliam interviews Krecia Leddy, a resilient woman from South Dakota with a rich agricultural background. Krecia shares her journey of personal growth, leadership, and overcoming challenges, including her experience as a breast cancer survivor. The conversation emphasizes the importance of hard work, vision, and the power of stepping outside one's comfort zone. Krecia discusses how her upbringing shaped her work ethic and leadership style, the significance of competition and faith in her life, and the necessity of self-care and continuous learning. The episode concludes with Krecia's inspiring words of wisdom for women to stay resilient and pursue their dreams without fear of failure.

Takeaways

*Krecia's upbringing instilled a strong work ethic and resilience.
*Writing down goals can help manifest one's future.
*Stepping outside of comfort zones leads to personal growth.
*Rejection can serve as a protective measure from negative paths.
*Mental wellness is crucial for overall strength and clarity.
*Faith and competition can coexist and drive success.
*Self-care routines are essential for maintaining mental health.
*Coaching can be transformative and help individuals discover their strengths.
*Resilience is built through overcoming adversity and challenges.
*Women should not live with regret and must pursue their desires.

Leave a comment here or join our Facebook group at https://www.facebook.com/groups/sheshines2025 and leave a comment, then stay tuned for a "shout out" on a future episode! 




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RISE. RECLAIM. RADIATE.

SPEAKER_00

Welcome back to She Shines. I'm your host, Karen Coach KG Gilliam, and this is the place where women step into clarity, confidence, and strength. Today's guest is Crisha Letty, and you're going to hear all about her grit, her growth, and the power to keep going. Let me give you a little background on Crisha. She's a South Dakota ranched-raised woman with deep agricultural roots. And she also has a powerful leadership presence. She brings grit, discipline, and curiosity into everything she does. She's a wife, a mom, a career professional, and a lifelong learner. Krisha has navigated male-dominated industries. She's studied abroad. But you know me. I only give you a little bit of it. Her message is clear. Don't quit. Keep moving and keep unlocking what life is teaching you. Please join me in welcoming to our studio Crisha Letty. Hey, well, welcome, Crisha. So glad to have you. And I can't wait for us to dive in. So we are going to do that. But please tell our audience who Crisha Letty is.

SPEAKER_01

Well, that's a really good question. And sometimes I ask myself that. After a lifetime of experiences, you kind of get that way. But at my core, I am a South Dakota ranch-raised girl. And I learned early on the value of hard work, responsibility, and independence. I was the oldest of four children, and I kind of like to think of myself as a trailblazer. I grew up in a small community. Um, and my just to give you an idea of reference, my high school graduating class was 17. So and if if I could share a story, we I had an English teacher, and this story kind of shapes my vision for who I thought at a young, impressionable age during high school, what I would become. And so our English teacher challenged us to write a vision of our lives 10 years into the future. And it really wasn't for a grade on paper, but more so for us to visualize or imagine who we might become. And like I mentioned, I grew up very rural, so um not a lot of you know big-time experiences. So I remember writing that I wanted to go to college, get a degree, have a professional career, be married, have three children, and live on a farm because that was really important to me. Keep connected to agriculture. And my hometown was maybe 600 people. Well, I thought a little bigger would be good, you know. So maybe a community of five to 10,000 would be, you know, big time metro for me. So um fast forward, some 35 years later, as I look back on what I wrote, I'm pretty much living that exact vision. Um, I'm married, live on a farm, I've had a career, professional career in agriculture. And um my kids actually went to uh school in a town that was about 3,700 people. Wow. So, you know, when you that little exercise kind of taught me that if you write down and dream big, you can manifest your future. It's really, really important to do that.

SPEAKER_00

Oh my goodness, yes, it is. And um, I've done uh something uh similar with my clients. So um it is writing the vision and making it plain. Absolutely is absolutely yes, yes. So, Caresha, how did you and I meet?

SPEAKER_01

Well, that that's an interesting uh story. So let's see, six years ago, I went to a professional development seminar in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, and it just so happened you were the trainer. And you you left an impression on me because I wrote down your name and took notes, copious notes, and fast forward, and I um recently had an opportunity to take an early retirement from my professional career, and I thought, you know, I think what that gal was doing really intrigued me. So what did I do? I ended up stalking you, and you so I went to Facebook, and sure enough, thank goodness, your name is kind of unique, your last name. And I found you, and I just on a whim sent you a message. Hey, you probably don't remember me, but I'd love to connect with you. And so that's kind of how it started. We we connected, we hit it off, and you were no more doing that line of work, but you're you you said, hey, I'm coaching now on my own. And um, you know, coaching way back when coaching was kind of you know, it was exclusive. Yeah, it the only coaches there were were like sports coaches. And so I thought, you know, I I would love to work with you. So that's kind of how our connection started. And um we we we've established this relationship. You took me through strength finding, you know, really getting down to the core of who I am. Yes, and uh that was just a really, really great process.

SPEAKER_00

Um yes, and it is one when I tell you in working with Krisha that she brings it out of me. She does. I mean, thoughts and ideas, and then stories I hadn't told. She's heard stories from me about um me having a coach and what my coach taught me. So I am so glad we reconnected, and I'm so honored to have you on She Shines because I know you have a message to share. So let's dive in and learn more about Krisha Letty and this grit and growth. Um, you you were raised in South Dakota, as you mentioned, with strong agricultural roots. So, how did that upbringing shape how you work, how you lead today?

SPEAKER_01

Well, I I must say I've got an incredible work ethic, and and that definitely is attributed to growing up on the farm. And it's just given me a sense of resilience. You know, there will be times that are hard, but if you keep at it and don't give up, you will come out. You know, and I like to look at it as living without regrets, you know, just like reaching out to you, you know. I'm like, well, what have I got to lose? I'm gonna, I'm gonna message her. And and if she doesn't, you know, uh get in touch with me, no big deal. At least I tried. You know, you gotta just put one foot in front of the other.

SPEAKER_03

Absolutely.

SPEAKER_01

It's it's kind of built in me. And then as we progressed in our coaching, you know, um, we went through the strength finder, which I don't know if your listeners know is is a is a little bit of a test, sort of, you know, it's a self-assessment. I guess it's not really a test. Right. Because there's no right or wrong answers. But but I gotta say, I had done the strength finder probably four or five years ago, and and um you said, well, we can do it again. I said, you know what? Let's just wait. Let me let me dig it out, find it. I'm gonna review what my strengths are, and then we'll see if I, you know, need to redo it. Well, I took one look at them and I'm like, oh no, oh no. I truly believe that those are my five core strengths. And um I gotta say, growing up, you know, and that was the biggest epiphany I had was, you know, these strengths that you have, each person is unique. Are those kind of created by environment, or are they you just naturally born with them? You know, and and that was a revelation for me because you had said, no, I true I've been doing this for a number of years, and I truly believe that those are your God-given talents.

SPEAKER_03

Yes. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

And I I have to agree with you because after I've, you know, um, for one, my my core strength is competition. So I'm just gonna give a little bit about that. Um, growing up, you know, I was the oldest of four. Um I from a young age, I truly believe I was very competitive. There were some things that helped create that. I was in sports, um, I was a product of the 4-H and FFA system. And but but I I think truly I was kind of born that way. Just that's my innate self essence, you know, of me. Yeah. So you brought those to light as my coach, but I really have to believe that um, you know, kind of growing up the environment, they just enhance them.

SPEAKER_00

So you already you already had those strengths. You know what's funny? Krisha and I share um one of the strengths, and that's maximizing. But guess what else we share, Krisha? What's that? I was in 4-H.

unknown

I didn't know that.

SPEAKER_00

I was in 4-H, and I'm the oldest of four. No way. Really?

SPEAKER_01

Yes, and so yeah, it was divine intervention that we found each other. Absolutely.

SPEAKER_00

You stayed with agriculture. I didn't.

SPEAKER_01

Well, that's all right. You eat every day, so that's agriculture. So you're still with it, Karen.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, okay, all right. So, okay, so one of your defining moments, and I always love to get in to the defining moments with our guest, and one of your defining moments was becoming an international student in Australia. Oh my goodness. What did that season teach you about yourself?

SPEAKER_01

Oh, yeah. So as I was finishing up my university four-year degree, I it was always a dream of mine to travel. And there was a program, it was the International 4-H Youth Exchange program. And I decided I was going to apply for that, and I only had one goal. You could put down what country you wanted to go to, and I wanted to go to Australia. And it was it was a competitive process. They only selected two from the whole United States, and so I worked, I put my heart and soul. That was my desire. I only wanted to go to Australia. I don't even know what the other countries were because I was fixated. Yep, I had my focus. That's my second strength. Yeah. That's where I was going. So I, you know, did the application, submitted it, and I'll never forget the call I got when they said you have been selected. And I was elated, elated. Yeah. So it was a six-month exchange. It was an agricultural exchange. And that really um, I was 22 at the time, and we I lived over there for six months. It was pretty rigorous. I moved every week to a different family, so it gave me an opportunity to see agriculture, um, live with people, um, different people. And, you know, I was an ambassador for the United States, teaching them about our agriculture, and it was such an immense experience. It really taught me to um be resilient. Some weeks were a little tougher than others. I wouldn't, I would say about halfway through, I did get homesick, but I kept at it and uh finished my program. And then I also want to say that there was a desire. I wanted to see New Zealand. So about halfway through, I had a little bit of a break, free time, and I coordinated a trip over to New Zealand. So it it taught me that if you want to do something and you put your mind to it, yes, you can accomplish it.

SPEAKER_00

You got that right. You got that right.

SPEAKER_01

Absolutely.

SPEAKER_00

I would definitely say, Krisha, that you know about stepping out of your comfort zone. And because I mean that you definitely coming from South Dakota, and now you're going to Australia, you stepped out of a comfort comfort zone. So, what did stepping outside of that comfort comfort zone do to expand your leadership mindset?

SPEAKER_01

Well, it it left me to believe that we opportunities are out there. Yes, you just need to grab them. Yes, um, focus, know what you want. That's really, really big. Know what you want and go after it. And I can't say I've I've gotten every opportunity I've I've gone after, but I've learned that if something doesn't work out, that rejection is really God's protection.

SPEAKER_00

I love that.

SPEAKER_01

There is he didn't want you to go down that path, and wow, and and it's just a teachable moment. Yes. Or you know, um, in in my career, I was in a male-dominated field. Yes, and I just kept plugging away, and you you just gotta set yourself apart from people. And the thing that set me apart was my work ethic, my drive. Um, never giving up, just keep going.

SPEAKER_00

Wow. Yeah, you now you did you just mention about being in that male-dominant dominated agricultural industry. What did that environment require of you? Practically and mentally.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. So I I had a career working for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and um I predominantly worked with farmers and ranchers um doing conservation work. And I have to say that my experience growing up on a farm, you know, gave me the tools that I needed to speak the language, feel comfortable with the clientele, and really that's where my heart was, you know, helping helping ag producers make benefits to their operation. And some, you know, it sometimes people kind of questioned if if you had the if you knew about agriculture being a woman in the field. But but if you're there to help them, most people just want help. If you're there to help them, yes, and and really be interested in what they're doing, you can make a difference for them and be accepted.

SPEAKER_00

Wow. Well, you know, I know you have that competition strength, superpower. And how did competition play a role in helping you? Because on She Shines, we talk about women rising, reclaiming, and radiating. So how did competition play a role in helping you rise instead of retreat?

SPEAKER_01

Well, competition is one of my superpowers, as you mentioned, but I also have another super power of being a maximizer. So I I I'm hard on myself or always pushing myself, but I I like to um help those around me, you know, provide opportunities for. Them. And three of those people, right off the bat, would be my children. So I I um pushed them to excel. And sometimes it got them out of their comfort zone. But in the end, they all have benefited greatly from that gentle nudging. Sometimes it was a little bit more of a push, but in the end, you know, um, we can't see for ourselves what others can see for us. So I was trying to expand their opportunities and always trying to help them be the best that they could be. And that's what I've I've done for others around me is provide them opportunities and stretch them, you know, to be their best. Absolutely.

SPEAKER_00

Uh I and since I share that superpower, uh, I like the part where you say you stretch. And I think our listeners have probably heard me say that, you know, if you take a rubber band and you stretch it and you keep stretching it, at some point that rubber band is never going to go back to the original shape. Right. Yeah. It won't. That means you won't go back to that original version of you. So as a matter of fact, I don't know if Chris, I did it in the session that you attended, but I gave out rubber bands. And I do remember that. Yes, and and I told them to wear it and then just remind if they looked at it to pull it and just let it snap back. And it was gonna hurt. Yeah. But the pain didn't last. The pain doesn't last, but you're going to grow. And I had one person one time, Grisha, tell me, what happens if you break the rubber band? I said, You don't need it anymore. It's you're not broken, but you don't need the reminder anymore.

SPEAKER_01

So or maybe they broke the barrier there.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, you know. I like that. I like that. Well, let's get into your resilience. And you are a breast cancer survivor.

SPEAKER_03

Yes.

SPEAKER_00

And you went through a double massectomy. Yeah. And you said it's important to remove emotion, look at what is, and move forward.

SPEAKER_01

Yes.

SPEAKER_00

So unpack that for us, Krisha.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. So I was um diagnosed with breast cancer at the age of 41, just before my 42nd birthday, which was really a shock to me. Um, and I gotta give a shout out. Women, do your preventative screenings. That was the only way it was detected. Because I I do have a history of breast cancer in my family, so I probably started doing my mammograms at 38 just to beat that baseline at 40. You know, they all say start at 40.

SPEAKER_00

Right.

SPEAKER_01

So that's really what saved me was getting that early diagnosis.

SPEAKER_00

Yes.

SPEAKER_01

And it was just, I was dumbfounded. I I couldn't believe it because I was very healthy and ended up having the double massectomy. I did a reevaluation of my life, you know, like I didn't really feel it was not genetic, by the way. They I did the genetic test, it was not a genetic type breast cancer. So so then I really started looking at my life, like, what is going on? And I was in a very um stressful work environment. I I had a supervisor and just it ended up being a uh bullying type experience. So I um I realized I you know I need to do something different. So it ended up being that um that supervisor, we had a realignment of our management areas, and and um I ended up going to a different area, went through the treatment, all of that with my cancer, and was over it. And then about five years later, the management areas got realigned. So this person ended up coming back into my work environment, and I just decided I cannot let anything affect my health. I am not going through that, and if I allow it, yeah. So I really had to dig deep, um, took the courage and took things into my own hands where I ended up getting the situation resolved that that that person was removed. So um it was not an easy experience, but I was like, this is life or death for me. I really cannot allow that to happen. So I stood up for myself and ended up there were a lot of other people that were affected um negatively by that situation, which which um it changed for the better.

SPEAKER_00

So I love that.

SPEAKER_01

You know, I love that when when something is not right, abusive relationships, um do not let that continue. You need to take control. Um, it's paralyzing, I realize, because I was in that situation. It was a a supervisor of mine, and I just felt helpless. Like, what can I do? But being removed, being in a situation where that person wasn't around me for a while, it was like I had clarity.

SPEAKER_03

Yes.

SPEAKER_01

That yeah, that behavior is not normal, you know. So I I know when people are in those type of relationships and they just can't get out of them, it is hard, but seek help. Yes, there's people out there, and you'll come out better on the other side for it. I mean, the experience was negative, but it did teach me a lot, you know.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Um, there was a reason I went through it, right? And that was to gain more resiliency, you know. Absolutely. Those tough times actually create such uh an experience that you benefit and you never ever allow it to happen again.

SPEAKER_00

Oh words of wisdom. I hope you are taking notes because Krisha has words of wisdom, and you know, she's talking about strength here. And so I just want to ask you, Krisha, what does strength look like when you strip away the drama and stay focused on the next step? What does what does it look like?

SPEAKER_01

Yes, so that removing the emotion from it. Emotion can be crippling. And when you just look at the facts, don't get the emotion, you know, what would someone think if I did that? You know, no, just look at it on a piece of paper, black and white, yes, and and remove the drama, remove the emotion, yes, and really look at it for what it is. And I, you know, I want to go a little bit into strength. You said, what does strength look like? Well, strength looks like that, but I also am a huge advocate for mental health, mental wellness, yes, strength, and to get that, I really believe that you need to be well, and what that looks like is for me exercising. Exercising and having a routine just provides so much clarity. And when you are so, for instance, every morning I do stretching, and I've been doing what's called classical stretch for about five years, and it is the secret to longevity. Stretching is truly um, so you just have to be well, and by that you're gonna be strong, you're gonna have strength.

SPEAKER_00

Did you hear that, ladies? Be well, be well, and that's where your strength is going to come from, is because you're taking care of your physical and your mental mind. So definitely, if you you you talk about how can I be strong, take a look at yourself and what is it that you need to do. Krisha shared with me uh the stretching, and I am in the process of doing that along with um Tai Chi Walking, and which is recommended for women my age. Um, but yeah, I I want that strength.

SPEAKER_01

So and Coach KG, I gotta share one other one. So one of my other strengths is faith. I believe to be strong, you need to have a solid faith.

SPEAKER_00

Yes.

SPEAKER_01

And one one thing, when things get a little chaotic for me, I always come back to Psalms 46, 10. Be still and know that I am God, and that just has such a profound calming effect on me, a grounding effect. And it just kind of goes along with remove the emotions, just sit and be still, yes, and you will have an immense clarity on where to go and what to do, as long as you have a strong faith and everything will all work out.

SPEAKER_00

Grisha and I are always on the same page. She just totally transitioned into what I was gonna ask her about next, because not only with her faith, and she has the competition, they are central to who she is. So, how do those two work together in your life? Faith and competition.

SPEAKER_01

Well, so they are a unique, unique pairing, that is for sure.

SPEAKER_03

Yes.

SPEAKER_01

I I think that competition gets you going. Um, you know, competition is the driver, and faith is or belief is the reason you're doing it. And you can't always do it by yourself. Competition is more about the eye. Yes, you know, and faith, belief is in a higher power. Yes, and you really need both. Absolutely. They they pair very well, and that's that's all I'm just gonna leave it at that. You need both.

SPEAKER_00

I like it, and and you know, my my coach told me that work as if it all depends on you, but trust God as if it all depends on him, because it does. Yes, yes, all right. Now let's talk about practical leadership, self-discipline. You are, you're very disciplined about filling your cup, and you listen to podcasts, you read, you listen to audiobooks, you are about wellness. Why is that non-negotiable for you?

SPEAKER_01

It just is. I've I've uh navigated this path, and I'll tell you what, when I realized how much physical activity does for my mental well-being, it was a no-brainer. So I'm very structured in that. You know, like I said, the first thing I do when I get up is 22 minutes. That's it, stretching. And then towards the end of my day, my work day, I like to just unwind, go for a walk, and that's when I get my books in. So I I I'm very good about intentional about I listen to the Libby app. It's a free app. Um, it's through your local public library, and you can you can read so many books. Right now, I'm actually reading Think and Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill. Good one. Good one. It's all about faith, yeah, it's all about desire, it's about subconscious intent.

SPEAKER_00

That's right.

SPEAKER_01

And it's it's an oldie, but man, is it a goody? It hits the mark.

SPEAKER_00

Yes, yes. I have read that several times.

SPEAKER_01

Absolutely. So you you if you're if you're down in the dumps, I'll tell you what, just add a little physical activity to your your day, and you're gonna feel alive because you're gonna you're gonna hurt, you're gonna ache a little bit if you haven't stretched or walked or did any of that for a while. And we all want to live long, healthy lives. So to me, it it gets rid of all the extra fillers that people might be trying to do. But if you just get to the core, you're gonna take care of yourself.

SPEAKER_00

Yes, absolutely. Well, Crisha, we we told you how we met and um how we reconnected and how Chrisha um discovered or rediscovered her strengths, and she went through a three-month one-on-one transformational coaching program designed for her, and that's something that I do, it's not cookie cutter. And so, what shifted for you during your experience with me?

SPEAKER_01

Well, like I want to say, coaching was was thought of as a luxury, but it's not anymore. And um, coaching is just like the icing on the cake, it is transformative. Coach KG does an amazing job of making you dig deep. And for me, it reinforced those strengths. Uh, you know, I I took the self-assessment, but didn't really hone into what that meant for me. You know, I looked at him like, oh, okay. We we did a deep dive. And what it did was it just built the confidence that this is who I am, own it. And she shines, you know. It's it's it's incredible. Once you can realize what your innate gifts are, it helps you to define what purpose you are on this planet for. Absolutely, and I think so many people struggle with that.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, yes, yes, they do.

SPEAKER_01

That that you just bring it to light and can just step into the person that you're meant to be without question.

SPEAKER_00

Absolutely, being in alignment with your assignment. That's that's what I like to do. And remember, I said nothing changes until you change your mind. That's why it's transformative because um you have to change the way you think. Um and one of the things I also say is we have to get rid of the stinking thinking. So, but all right, now later, Krisha is going to give you something to take away from her time with me today. But you know what time it is. Oh, yeah. You know what time it is. It's time for the She Shines fire round, and this is where every guest, excuse me, every guest gets to have a fire round that I name specifically for him or her. And so Chrisha's is grit, clarity, go, because that is what she's about. And so these are quick answers, Crisha. No overthinking. You know, you know how I feel about analyzing. Sometimes we analyze and then we paralyze. So just real quick answers. And so if you are ready, I'm ready, clarity, go. One word that defines how you live. All out, a strength you rely on most under pressure. Competition. A habit that keeps you sharp.

SPEAKER_01

Reading, listening, audio.

SPEAKER_00

A podcast, book, or resource you return to often.

SPEAKER_01

She shines. Easy.

SPEAKER_00

I did not pay her to say that. One thing you refuse to give up on.

SPEAKER_01

My exercise.

SPEAKER_00

All right. Now, competition fuels you because strive to get.

SPEAKER_01

Better.

SPEAKER_00

Love it. Faith to you means God. And one sentence every woman needs to hear right now.

SPEAKER_01

Don't give up.

SPEAKER_00

I love it. Ah. Round of applause for Crisha. That is tough, but it is, you really get to just sort of let go and share and share what you are all about. So I would like for you now, Crisha. And if you could leave our listeners with one truth, something they can carry into tomorrow and the next day, what would it be?

SPEAKER_01

What I'd love to leave people with is this. Stay resilient, stay curious about what you truly desire, and trust that we are created with purpose. Don't live with regret because you are afraid to move. And growth happens when we keep taking the next step, even when it feels uncomfortable. So just do it.

SPEAKER_00

Oh my goodness. That is awesome. I hope you took notes on that. Not rewind it and get that again. And when Krisha and I did our sort of our pre-interview for the podcast, and she she said it and she said it again. Don't give up. But I love that she said life is a mystery. Keep unlocking it. Look at what is and move forward. So that is so very true. Well, I have how people can get in contact with you, Crisha. So I'm gonna put that up on the screen. That's how you can reach out to Crisha. And if you have questions, if if you could, if something that she shared with you resonated and you want to get more information, that is her email. So reach out to her, and I know that she will get back to you. So I want to thank you, Krisha. Thank you for your clarity, thank you for your strength, and thank you for your grounded leadership. Your story is a reminder that resilience doesn't require drama, it requires discipline, belief, and the decision to keep going. So thank you again. I know I speak for all of those who are listening, and you know I gotta give a few shout-outs. So I know that there is Ashley, and Ashley is listening. I know Mary is listening. Um, Mary lives in Oklahoma. I know um Kendra. Oh, I know Kendra. Kendra is listening. So I want to thank you. And you know what? If you like me to shout out your name during one of my episodes, then just send me a text. Give me your feedback, let me know what you are thinking. Also, you can join us in the Facebook group. She Shines 2025, and it's 2025 because that's when we started. And so join that. Like and subscribe to uh our uh podcast. Again, I am so excited about what is going on, and one more thing. I'll be going live more often during 2026. You know, my mantra this year is fix, get it fixed in 2026. I'm working on Krisha started with Strength Finder, but I also realize that there are many people, and she even said it, that do not know who they are. So before they can discover what their strengths are, they have to know who they are. So it's called Essence Excellence. And just stay tuned because you'll be able to take that assessment very short, very quick, about five minutes, and then from there we can have a conversation. So remember it's time to rise, it's time to reclaim, and it's time to radiate and never ever let anyone dim your shine. This is Karen Coach KG Gilliam. Thank you again, Krisha. Yep, thank you. Loved it. This is She Shines, and so do you. We love you. I'm trying. I'm working on it. I love you. Take care. Thank you.

SPEAKER_02

Will you do your light or let your spirit break free? You got power inside you, more than you can see. Time to realize what's going to be