Hey, there and welcome to On Your Terms.
Speaker:I'm your host, Sam Vander Wielen.
Speaker:I'm an attorney turned entrepreneur who helps online coaches and service providers
Speaker:legally protect and grow their online businesses.
Speaker:So, I am so excited this week to talk with you about some practical tips in reducing
Speaker:your risk of business burnout because nobody wants to be burnt out.
Speaker:I notice that we tend to be so hot and cold, black and white, with things in online
Speaker:business where you go so hard, you try posting all the time, you try showing up all
Speaker:the time. And then all of a sudden, you feel like you can't show up at all.
Speaker:And it's so one or the other.
Speaker:Or maybe you're like me and you really feel like, sure, you have this extroverted side,
Speaker:you can be outward, you can be friendly, and you also want to be like quiet and chill and
Speaker:inward sometimes, right?
Speaker:Is that possible in online business?
Speaker:How do you balance these things?
Speaker:How do you find this balance without getting burnt out?
Speaker:That's what I talk about in today's episode.
Speaker:So, before we hop into the episode, I just want to read you the review of the week from
Speaker:CHF777 who said, "How is this information free?
Speaker:Sam is a natural teacher and a brilliant role model for heart-centered entrepreneurs
Speaker:looking to up their game.
Speaker:I'm going to have to stop listening while cooking so I can take notes." I love it.
Speaker:Thank you so much for that review of my show On Your Terms.
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Speaker:of my show, and you'll be entered to win a $20 Starbucks gift card.
Speaker:All you have to do is just leave a review on Apple.
Speaker:I pick a new winner every single month.
Speaker:If you listen on Spotify, please do me a favor and just give me a quick rating.
Speaker:You might even get a shout out on a future episode.
Speaker:All right. With that, let's hop in to this week's episode.
Speaker:So, I'm so excited to chat with you about this today because I feel like so often
Speaker:people make assumptions about people in online business, especially when people get
Speaker:like a larger audience or they get further along and they're like, "Oh, they must be
Speaker:able to be on video all the time because they love it, or they must be able to be on
Speaker:all the time because they're an extrovert.
Speaker:But I'm an introvert and so like I am so different than them."
Speaker:thought when I was building my business and I was like, is it just me?
Speaker:Am I the only person that can't be like on all the time?
Speaker:Am I the only person who doesn't want to be attached to my phone?
Speaker:Or am I the only person that sometimes after like going to a big event, needs like a lone
Speaker:time or even frankly, just hanging out with one or two other people?
Speaker:I just have this balance within me that's both extroverted and introverted.
Speaker:And I used to make the assumption, like I see other people make the assumption now about
Speaker:me, that if somebody is really like extra in their business and they're out there and
Speaker:they're hustling, that they're like super extroverted and that they can only do it
Speaker:because of that.
Speaker:When maybe they are, maybe that's true, but maybe also they're not, right.
Speaker:They're more like me and they have both of these sides.
Speaker:And maybe you are, too.
Speaker:And this episode was actually inspired by me talking about this one day on Instagram
Speaker:stories. And then a bunch of people reached out and were like, "That's how I feel too."
Speaker:Like, I feel like, yeah, sure, I'm friendly and I like talking to people and I can slide
Speaker:right into, throw me into any dinner party or any gathering, I'm super comfortable.
Speaker:And then after I leave there, I need downtime, alone time, quiet time, or just to
Speaker:unplug. I need both, right.
Speaker:And so maybe you're like that too.
Speaker:I'd be so curious if you let me know after you're listening to this episode.
Speaker:But it's not just about the assumptions that we make and what effect that has on our
Speaker:mindset in terms of assuming that other people can achieve things because they're
Speaker:different than us or something like that.
Speaker:But it also is really important.
Speaker:And the reason I want to have this conversation today is that if you don't
Speaker:balance this introvert and extrovert part of yourself, you'll get seriously burnt out.
Speaker:Because if your natural tendency, if your equilibrium is both this outward, like sure,
Speaker:I can hang and also, I need to be by myself and you only do one or the other, then you're
Speaker:going to be out of balance, right?
Speaker:And I feel like I learned this along the way.
Speaker:I'm learning this now and I've put things in place in my own business and just like kind
Speaker:of figured out how to navigate this, being both an introvert and extrovert.
Speaker:So, I want to just have a little coffee talk today and talk about this.
Speaker:So apparently this is officially called being an ambivert, which I did not know.
Speaker:I just always said I'm introvert and extrovert, but it's called being an ambivert.
Speaker:And one of the things that I think is really important is just to identify this in
Speaker:yourself and say, yeah, like I do enjoy being around other people and I enjoy being
Speaker:alone and there's nothing wrong with either.
Speaker:There's also nothing wrong if you're mostly one or the other, right.
Speaker:There's nothing wrong with it.
Speaker:where I was like, yeah, after I go to conferences, I need to have a week of what I
Speaker:call it cave writing.
Speaker:I'll do more copywriting and internal stuff.
Speaker:I don't want a ton of meetings on my calendar.
Speaker:I don't want to do a lot of live stuff or whatever.
Speaker:It's like I've learned now, okay, I have these parts of myself, so I know ahead of
Speaker:time that I've got to balance it.
Speaker:I think especially with when this episode is going to air, we're going to be talking a lot
Speaker:about planning for the year and looking forward and seeing what you're doing for next
Speaker:year, but also reflecting back on what you did this year.
Speaker:I think that this introvert extrovert thing is part of the conversation because as part
Speaker:of that, you have to do a little bit of an energy assessment.
Speaker:So, I think it's important, just like it's important to kind of accept and identify that
Speaker:you have both of these parts, and both of these parts are completely valid and need
Speaker:nourishment. It's also really important to say maybe what fills you up, for example, and
Speaker:what gives you energy is not the same thing as what gives me energy and vice versa.
Speaker:Maybe what takes energy away from you is not the same thing as for me, and that's
Speaker:completely okay as well.
Speaker:But what's really important is that you get clear and do a little bit of an energy
Speaker:assessment when you look at different areas of your business, tasks of your business, the
Speaker:kind of have to's, the things that you have to do as a business owner.
Speaker:What are those things that are just draining the life out of you?
Speaker:What are those things that make you feel like you're filling yourself back up, right?
Speaker:So, like for me, for example, doing these podcasts and recording these episodes, I feel
Speaker:so excited to do them.
Speaker:They fill me up, they fill me with energy, they make me feel really good.
Speaker:At the very least, they don't feel like a drain.
Speaker:You know that stuff does not feel like a drain.
Speaker:I'm trying to think actually of what does feel like a drain for me on the business.
Speaker:I mean, probably for me, the mental load of like kind of, as a business owner, we walk
Speaker:around, we think about our businesses all the time and my business is like my baby.
Speaker:And so, it is the thing that's always in the back of my mind, like, did it eat, did it
Speaker:sleep? Does it need to be fed?
Speaker:Does it need to go potty?
Speaker:Like that's always in the back of my mind for my business.
Speaker:So that's probably what "drains" me the most.
Speaker:It was like that mental load or that worry, that constant thinking about it, not being
Speaker:able to shut it off.
Speaker:And that was something when I was doing my energy assessment that not only when I got to
Speaker:the point that I could swing hiring people and especially hiring full-time employees,
Speaker:that was really important to me.
Speaker:But once you actually get employees in the door, you don't just say like best of luck,
Speaker:let me know how things are going.
Speaker:There's going to be a lot of interaction with them.
Speaker:There are a lot of training and working, collaboration together, right?
Speaker:And I've noticed, like for me, I have to be really clear with them and I have to
Speaker:communicate with them that, "Hey, these things are what it's like stressing me out.
Speaker:It would be so helpful to me if somebody could take this." Or if there's one task or
Speaker:something that I am responsible for but there's one little nugget in there that is
Speaker:getting kind of in my way, and that's making that task a little more difficult, I can
Speaker:communicate to the team, say, "Hey, is there any way that we could have somebody on the
Speaker:team take care of this so that when I go to record podcast episodes, this stuff is all
Speaker:ready?" Or something like that, something that does make it easier.
Speaker:Now, of course, that's what I do now, right, when I have people.
Speaker:When I didn't have people, it was more like having a plan as to where things were headed.
Speaker:So, a couple of years ago this would have looked more like, okay, these tasks drain
Speaker:me. I know I don't want to do them forever.
Speaker:How can I start to delegate them and offload them to someone else, whether that's now, six
Speaker:months from now, a year from now, right.
Speaker:So, you can at least start to put it into place.
Speaker:I think even just identifying that those are things that drain you is half of the battle.
Speaker:And then we can work on starting to offload those when that becomes available to you.
Speaker:I also like to see what doesn't even feel like work to you.
Speaker:What do you look forward to doing?
Speaker:Like I always tell Lindsey, my operations manager, I get so excited when she tells me
Speaker:that it's a week of recording podcast episodes.
Speaker:I really look forward to it.
Speaker:I get really excited when I have time to just write, when I'm going to rewriting you,
Speaker:all the emails that I write you twice a week, when I'm writing like captions or
Speaker:something, when I'm working on my book proposal, any kind of writing that just I
Speaker:look forward to it.
Speaker:And again, then I know, okay, I'm going to schedule those things into my calendar when
Speaker:I'm going to go through something that I know is also a little bit more energy
Speaker:draining, right?
Speaker:So it would be interesting for you after you do this energy assessment to look at your
Speaker:calendar, especially as you're planning out 2023, hopefully.
Speaker:Does your calendar reflect the kind of energy assessment that you've now identified
Speaker:for yourself?
Speaker:Or when you look at your calendar, for example, is it full of a whole bunch of stuff
Speaker:that just drains your energy?
Speaker:Now, there's this like whole other part of me as we have this conversation that always
Speaker:feels silly having this conversation without contextualizing it, without mentioning things
Speaker:like privilege, right? Because I'm like, boy, what a privileged life and what a
Speaker:privilege business to be able to sit here and be like that drains my energy and like, I
Speaker:don't want to do it, right.
Speaker:So, at the same time as I'm saying this, it also feels very unrealistic to me.
Speaker:And I'm just being honest about that kind of like that kind of internal struggle that I
Speaker:have when it comes to this.
Speaker:I also am a big believer in not like or at least I feel like right now I'm really
Speaker:working on finding the curves and the edges and things, not being so harsh, black and
Speaker:white on everything, right?
Speaker:And so maybe it's not a matter of like a privileged position versus the super woo
Speaker:position of manifest your dream day and your dream calendar.
Speaker:Maybe there's something in the middle, like stuff has to get done.
Speaker:Trust me, I have a lot to get done.
Speaker:There's a lot of "have to do" in terms of running my business.
Speaker:And then, yes, there are also places where I have some input and some flexibility, and I
Speaker:can play with it.
Speaker:whenever I hear these conversations, I'm a little like not everybody gets toto do this,
Speaker:right. And I also am very honest about the fact that when I was building my business in
Speaker:the beginning, well, first of all, I didn't know what the heck I was doing.
Speaker:I was just like everyday hustling and trying to build the business.
Speaker:And I didn't have a whole lot of intention.
Speaker:So please, like, release that from you that you're supposed to have this all perfectly
Speaker:worked out right now.
Speaker:But in the beginning, for the first several years of the business, it was much more
Speaker:imbalanced in terms of probably I was doing many, many more tasks that "drained" me
Speaker:because you have to do everything in the beginning for probably a while.
Speaker:I just think it's nice to start identifying this and move in that direction eventually.
Speaker:And that's kind of the goal hopefully with the business.
Speaker:That's really how you're going to be able to accelerate or how you're going to be able to
Speaker:scale if you want to scale.
Speaker:So, I would also encourage you to think about whether or not you're being intentional about
Speaker:truly closing out of everything during downtimes.
Speaker:So, one of the things that I see often in business burnout with people is that they
Speaker:will take time off, but then during the time off, they're still on essentially.
Speaker:And the kinds of businesses that we have, that's just so easy.
Speaker:Like you think you're on social media, you think you're just posting stuff for fun, then
Speaker:you see a DM from something, then that leads you to your email, which leads you to your
Speaker:Facebook group. Like it's just a very slippery slope.
Speaker:And the line between being like a personal brand and a business brand are very, very
Speaker:blurry. And I just think it's very easy.
Speaker:So, like I've noticed a lot, especially over the past year and especially when my dad was
Speaker:sick and after my dad passed away this summer, during my couch time, when I would be
Speaker:at night or go to take a break or something and I would just be kind of vegging out or
Speaker:thinking I was vegging out, I was sitting there on my phone like doomscrolling.
Speaker:And maybe my intention was originally to watch like food videos and stuff like that,
Speaker:what I would typically want to watch on Instagram.
Speaker:But while I'm doing that, I automatically come across competitor stuff or people
Speaker:copying me or people DMing me to tell me that people are copying me or people DMing me
Speaker:legal questions or whatever.
Speaker:And it's just one thing would lead to another.
Speaker:And there I go down some spiral thinking like, I'm never going to be anything, my
Speaker:business doesn't matter, and all that kind of stuff.
Speaker:Like, no wonder I didn't feel recharged, right.
Speaker:I wasn't actually being intentional about closing out during my downtime.
Speaker:I wasn't going down during downtime.
Speaker:The other thing that you can do is you're going into 2023 especially, is that you can
Speaker:plan for rest periods before, during, and after times of push.
Speaker:So, I talk a lot about like push times, like go, go, go times.
Speaker:And I don't believe in making these high peaks and valleys in your business.
Speaker:I kind of like them more as like hills and valleys.
Speaker:And so, I'm not saying when I say rest, I'm not saying like you're off.
Speaker:Unless if you can do that, that's awesome.
Speaker:But if you're like me and you still need to do something in your business and you need an
Speaker:income, then what I at least do is like before a promo and like after a promo, I
Speaker:usually give myself a little bit of buffer where I'm not doing some of those tasks that
Speaker:are the more draining ones that I was talking about for me.
Speaker:So maybe I'm not doing tons of interviews, tons of reels, tons of outward stuff.
Speaker:Maybe I'm just writing in my little cave and I'm doing that kind of stuff.
Speaker:Or maybe I batch enough ahead of time so that I give myself some downtime.
Speaker:You have to give yourself grace that every season is not going to be a go, go, go one.
Speaker:And so, if you go into every corner, every promo, every whatever is thinking like you're
Speaker:going to operate at the same level.
Speaker:I just don't think that's realistic and you're kind of setting yourself up for
Speaker:failure. I feel like that would be like going to the gym seven days straight and
Speaker:expecting your performance to be at peak or even get better for every single day.
Speaker:Like you need downtime, you need rest, you need to do other workouts, you've got to mix
Speaker:it up, you got to unplug, you've got to rehabilitate, you've got to ice, heat, all
Speaker:the things.
Speaker:We can't be go, go, go at our peak.
Speaker:So, that's why instead of you pushing really hard for four months and then burning
Speaker:yourself out so badly that you have to take six months off, why don't we just not make
Speaker:the highs as high and the lows as low?
Speaker:I think this every single time that I see somebody announce their break from social
Speaker:media. I see this all the time on Instagram.
Speaker:People are like announcement, I am leaving Instagram for good or for six months or they
Speaker:come up with something, right?
Speaker:Totally fine, if that's what you want to do.
Speaker:But you know what I see as a pattern very often, people announce these big break ups
Speaker:with social media and then they come back usually very quickly or at the very least,
Speaker:much sooner than what they said, that the amount of time, if they gave one.
Speaker:I always think to myself that, well, first of all, like the power of the addiction of
Speaker:social media is real.
Speaker:I'm addicted to social media.
Speaker:I'm not casting any judgment because I'm right there.
Speaker:I'm so addicted to it that I can't leave, right?
Speaker:I mean I can, but I'm choosing not to.
Speaker:And what I always think, though, is that it's like always serves as a reminder to me that I
Speaker:don't want to spend so much time there.
Speaker:It gets so burnt out there that I have to leave for six months or that I have to
Speaker:announce that I'm taking a month off or something like that.
Speaker:So, if I don't go as high, then my lows don't have to be as low, right?
Speaker:It's a little bit more of like this balanced in between.
Speaker:I don't need to be there constantly.
Speaker:I don't need to share everything.
Speaker:I don't need to teach everything that I know, as I talked about in a previous
Speaker:episode, I'll link that down below.
Speaker:But I think just working on this balance and this is part of this like introvert extrovert
Speaker:thing because like social media, for example, is very extroverted.
Speaker:It's a lot.
Speaker:It takes energy from you in a different way.
Speaker:And then to get like that amount of feedback and everything takes energy from you in a
Speaker:very unique way.
Speaker:So, I think this is a very good place where that that kind of balance is super important.
Speaker:We can't always lean in to rest, I understand that.
Speaker:And we wouldn't have a very good business if we always lean into rest.
Speaker:So, I understand we have to balance it but that's also why I believe in not going so
Speaker:hard, then you have to take off for so long.
Speaker:I also think that one way that you can kind of manage your energy in this department is
Speaker:to hold on to pieces of your life, hobbies, maybe your family, I don't know, some part of
Speaker:your life, some part of your day to day, just for yourself, right?
Speaker:Maybe it's something that your Instagram followers, your whoever followers wouldn't
Speaker:even know that that's something you're into because you don't really talk about it.
Speaker:I do think it's helpful from a personal standpoint to share one or two of those
Speaker:things, maybe one hobby.
Speaker:Like this summer I started playing tennis and started from scratch and I kind of shared
Speaker:that along the way. Did I share every single moment?
Speaker:No. I took two lessons a week.
Speaker:I probably shared once a week.
Speaker:I was playing multiple other times a week.
Speaker:I think I would work it into stories like once a week or something like that.
Speaker:But there are also things I do in my day-to -day life that I just don't share at all.
Speaker:I also think it's kind of cool.
Speaker:Like somebody encouraged me one time to like, go get a hobby and not to share it.
Speaker:Like, go and don't take a picture of it.
Speaker:Don't take a video of it.
Speaker:Don't even have your phone.
Speaker:Go take a pottery class, don't share it.
Speaker:Go to dinner, don't take a picture of it.
Speaker:So, holding on to these pieces of our life, first of all, can start to build in some of
Speaker:this balance to our day-to-day.
Speaker:It also gets us out of the habit of sharing every single thing that we do every single
Speaker:day, which we don't need to do to be successful.
Speaker:And it can just allow us to start getting comfortable and a little bit more used to
Speaker:just leaving the devices behind and whatever.
Speaker:Like I, for example, whenever I walk, I don't bring my phone.
Speaker:And so, just like I look forward to this time every day that I know I just can't be
Speaker:reached, and I like it.
Speaker:Obviously, I know that that's not available to everyone.
Speaker:When my dad was sick, I couldn't go without my phone.
Speaker:I understand if you have little ones.
Speaker:There are many different scenarios in which you can't always do that but just take that
Speaker:advice and you can apply it to somewhere else in your life.
Speaker:Maybe it's just putting your phone on airplane mode for a little while, while you
Speaker:do some work or something like that.
Speaker:Now, this year, I at the beginning of 2022, I declared my health a big priority and I was
Speaker:like, this is the year of wellness.
Speaker:And I came up with this whole vision of what that meant to me.
Speaker:And it wasn't weight loss, but it wasn't this and it wasn't that, but it was this and
Speaker:it was that. And I started treating myself more like an athlete.
Speaker:I have an athlete background.
Speaker:I played volleyball. That was like my entire life up until law school.
Speaker:And so I'm very used to that concept that being an athlete is 24/7.
Speaker:It's not just the time that you spend on the court.
Speaker:It was everything that I did outside of that led to it, too.
Speaker:And as you can imagine, I took volleyball very, very seriously and I took my body and
Speaker:everything around it very seriously.
Speaker:And so, I'm used to it.
Speaker:And now I'm a little older, a little wiser to know I don't have to go so, so crazy.
Speaker:But this year, I mean, I started with the basics.
Speaker:I started properly hydrating.
Speaker:I started eating enough because, like, I wasn't eating regularly.
Speaker:I'm not hungry when I first wake up.
Speaker:So, a lot of times I would just like skip breakfast and then I'd be ravenously hungry,
Speaker:but like 11, 12.
Speaker:So I started doing that.
Speaker:I started balancing my meals more.
Speaker:I'm not going to get into specifics because I don't even want to open that can of worms.
Speaker:But don't worry, I worked with professionals.
Speaker:I followed all these things, but I wanted to have more balanced meals.
Speaker:I even, like, tracked my blood sugar for a while.
Speaker:I wore a CGM that was pretty cool.
Speaker:So, I did all this stuff to treat myself more like an athlete this year.
Speaker:I've been in therapy for a long time because my dad was sick for a long time.
Speaker:But I also committed to weekly therapy to process business issues, instead of
Speaker:processing them in real time on social media or even with friends in the industry.
Speaker:So, I think there can be this tendency when we start an online business, hopefully you
Speaker:meet a few people who have businesses that are similar to yours and sometimes we can
Speaker:just get in the habit of sharing with them.
Speaker:And I have a handful of very close friends who I'll still do this with.
Speaker:But before, it was just a little too -- it was like townhall.
Speaker:It was too much.
Speaker:Now, if something happens in the business, if I'm like really pissed this person keeps
Speaker:copying me or this person keeps mimicking me like everything I do, or I have some fear
Speaker:coming up or some scarcity thing, I talk to my therapist about it.
Speaker:I think having your therapist to not only work through childhood issues and childhood
Speaker:trauma and anything else that's coming up day-to-day, but I think talking to them about
Speaker:business issues has been really helpful for me because this person's removed from the
Speaker:online business space.
Speaker:So, they kind of like they're not you know, they don't have like the shiny syndrome of
Speaker:like, oh, you can grow this business to be the 8 billion figures and all these things.
Speaker:They're much more down to earth about it.
Speaker:I also talked to Jen, my mindset coach, Jen Diaz, who I've had on the podcast before.
Speaker:I'll link her episode below.
Speaker:Jen's amazing.
Speaker:And Jen is a mindset and success expert.
Speaker:She's incredible and I talk through stuff with her all the time.
Speaker:So, having a sounding board that's outside of, I think like a friend or family member,
Speaker:if that's available to you, that's very helpful.
Speaker:I also think that something that's been very helpful to me this year has been protecting
Speaker:my morning. So, for me, mornings are important.
Speaker:Maybe for you, it's nighttime or some other time.
Speaker:And maybe given your life circumstances, mornings don't work for you.
Speaker:I don't believe in the six-hour morning routine.
Speaker:I don't think it's realistic for most people.
Speaker:So, I think kind of like a workout thing.
Speaker:It's like then people don't stick to it because they think that it has to be like a
Speaker:12-step morning routine.
Speaker:But I know that for me, at least, like I even when I was by myself and I didn't have anyone
Speaker:working for me, I protected my mornings.
Speaker:Like I didn't schedule meetings before 10:00 AM and then unless I really had to.
Speaker:But I try to protect my mornings because I knew like I had to protect my own energy.
Speaker:I had to do what I needed to do.
Speaker:And that helped me to not build resentment in my own business.
Speaker:I didn't resent the people I had meetings with or anything like that.
Speaker:And you want to have a failsafe plan, right?
Speaker:So, if you feel yourself drifting too far one way or the other.
Speaker:So, if you feel yourself drifting too far to like I'm heading towards burnout because I'm
Speaker:doing all this extroverted stuff, I don't have enough introverted stuff built into my
Speaker:schedule. I'm not protecting my time or my energy.
Speaker:I'm doing too many draining tasks and all that kind of stuff.
Speaker:What is a shortlist of some things that you can do or have on deck to self-correct?
Speaker:So, one thing that I will do is like I will usually look through my calendar and I will
Speaker:prune, so I will cut things that I really can't do right now.
Speaker:And if there are things that I can just reschedule for a little bit later or I can
Speaker:spread them out more, it's something that I can also just get better at as I'm scheduling
Speaker:things. I don't schedule like multiple outward events on one day, I just started to
Speaker:get better with pacing myself and spreading things out.
Speaker:So, I'd encourage you to have a little bit of a failsafe plan, a list of things that you
Speaker:can do if you realize you're drifting too far one way or the other.
Speaker:How can you self-correct?
Speaker:How can you come back to your balance, whatever your equilibrium is?
Speaker:And I would say like continuing to work on whatever is coming up for you.
Speaker:If you feel like you've got to be on social all the time, you've got to be present all
Speaker:the time, is it people pleasing that's coming up for you?
Speaker:Is it a scarcity thing?
Speaker:Is it like some abandonment thing?
Speaker:It need to be liked.
Speaker:I need to be helpful.
Speaker:That's like one that's really big for me.
Speaker:I constantly feel like I have to be helpful .
Speaker:And if I'm not being helpful, then I'm not valuable.
Speaker:If I'm not valuable, then people will leave, right?
Speaker:And so, I think it's really important to kind of get to the root of why do you feel like
Speaker:you always need to be on or why do you feel like you always have to be on social?
Speaker:If that's the thing that's kind of getting in your way and keeping you drained, keeping
Speaker:you feel like you're going towards burnout, right?
Speaker:So, I would encourage you to work with whoever you can or to continue to learn and
Speaker:expand in this area about what's coming up for you.
Speaker:Well, this has been fun to talk through with you.
Speaker:I hope that you liked it.
Speaker:If you did like this episode, please send me a DM on Instagram, @SamVanderWielen.
Speaker:I hope that you've already left a review for the show.
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Speaker:It is so helpful to us in keeping this podcast free and available to online
Speaker:entrepreneurs. I so appreciate you being here, and I can't wait to chat with you next
Speaker:week. See you then.
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Speaker:podcast. You can also check out all of our podcast episodes, show notes, links and more
Speaker:at Samvanderwielen.com/podcast.
Speaker:You can learn more about legally protecting your business and take my free legal
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