Tag: Personal Growth
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H&W|Gentle Signs the Body May Be Near the End of Life
Sometimes the hardest part isn’t letting go — it’s not understanding what’s happening. When a loved one is in their 80s or 90s and pain increases, bodies change, and comfort becomes the priority, knowledge can ease fear. This is a gentle look at the signs that a body may be slowing down, why pain can…
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H&W| Letting Go
Sometimes healing isn’t about holding on tighter — it’s about knowing when to release. Letting go isn’t giving up; it’s choosing peace, presence, and your well-being over what’s been weighing you down. Midweek reminder: you don’t have to carry everything forward.
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RealTalk|The Hiring Process
Hiring isn’t just about filling a seat — it’s about understanding how someone thinks, learns, and shows up. When we ask better questions, we build stronger teams and set people up to succeed instead of struggle.
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ASipOfFlava|When The Flow Is Off
Sometimes clarity doesn’t come from doing more — it comes from finally seeing what’s been there all along. ☕🌻
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RealTalk/H&W|What Surgery Fixes — and What Healing Still Needs
Surgery can fix what’s broken — but healing doesn’t stop there. Through lived experience, patient conversations, and listening to my own body, I’ve learned how breath, warmth, gentle movement, and a calm nervous system play a powerful role in recovery. This isn’t about choosing one over the other. It’s about honoring both. Because when we…
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H&W|Learning More About My Tie To My Japanese Heritage
The older I get, the more I realize my body remembered things I didn’t yet have language for. From warmth and gentle movement to creating space and softening tension, this week’s Health & Wellness reflection honors Japanese wisdom, heritage, and the quiet ways we learn to care for ourselves—one intentional moment at a time. Sometimes…
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Daily Intention |Sunday
Sunday Intention Nourish. Grow. Inspire. Self-destruction is not an option. I choose care over chaos. Growth over fear. Purpose over distraction. What I believe, I will achieve. My energy is mine — and I spend it where it matters. I remember: I can do hard things that are necessary.

