The 3 Pretti Truths of Entrepreneurship Your Professors Forgot to Mention
I don't know about you but my Intro to Business professor lied to me. He told me I would have to work countless hours to earn the freedom my businesses afford me. He told me that it was rare that people could/would align their passions with their pockets- let alone make a sustainable living from it.
I'm here to tell you all of that is BS. With a little hardwork and consistency I've been able to build a career I love (coaching Pretti Beast like you) and spend plenty of time with my children. Were there missteps along the way? Definitely. But when I stopped replaying the narrative given to me, and embraced all of the divine feminine energy flowing through me and my clients I discovered these three truths about being an entrepreneur:
1- Stand 10 Toes Down In Your Standards
From the vendors you work with to the clients you take on to the people you decide hang out with and most definitely the people you decide to sleep with DO NOT LOWER YOUR STANDARDS! Do you know how hard it is to sustain passion when you're surrounded by energies that don't match your goal? Rejecting the mainstream ideas of what beauty is, what's cool, and hoe you quantify success opens a door for you to stay in your lane and manifest the life you want! So stop dimming your light. Stop charging less than you're worth. Claim what you want and whatever you do DON'T BACK DOWN!
2- It Is Totally Okay to Stand Out and Take Up Space!
It took me 30 years and 351 long ass days to overcome my fear of being seen. I always knew I wanted an epic life, but stepping into the light leading others and sharing my gifts and talent with others scared me sh×tless. Know the feeling? Let the thought of taking up space in a world designed to diminish your accomplishments fuel you. Be driven by changing the world for your daughter and her daughter and all of the women in your bloodline.
3- Sharing Your Authentic Voice and Baring Your Soul Work!
Women entrepreneurs (myself included) spend so much time conforming to other people's expectations. When I talk about my worst year in business I tend to bring up the men who tried to edit my voice, but chile, the women did it too: " don't say it like that because you want a long-lasting career" or "you're friends with that person?" Had me questioning myself and the job the universe put me here to do. When I finally accepted that my authentic voice and soul were the ultimate gifts I could give my clients. Things shifted in my business big time. My voice became the catalyst for the change I wanted to see and it made accepting the other three truths easier to embrace.
What truths have changed how you've embraced entrepreneurship? I want to know! Comment below or send me and email at prettipri@gmail.com.
Comments
Post a Comment