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I have a question for you.

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Do you nap on the weekend?

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I do.

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But also I nap every single day.

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Napping.

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I mean, you might go, what's this

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got to do with business, Emma?

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Trust me.

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It's got a whole lot to do with business.

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I had a client and on her

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onboarding call, I said to her,

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We do our monthly sessions and

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then you can get me via this app.

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The only times you might struggle

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to get me, but I'll get back to you

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is between 12 and two on a weekday.

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And she's like, why is that?

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And I'm like, I nap between

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12 and two on a weekday.

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And she's like.

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What?

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I'm like, I have a nap between

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12 and two on a weekday.

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Now this opened up a whole

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conversation about why I nap.

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What is the benefit to napping?

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What does that actually look like for me?

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and I'll tell you what happened to her.

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So here's the story.

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I got COVID like most of us and it turned

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into long COVID and I was feeling cruddy.

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I was about to run a four day

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retreat for, I don't know, 15 women.

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And I had to enact my

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plan B I zoomed in from.

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my house while I had COVID for

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certain segments of the retreat.

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Obviously when you have

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COVID, you need to rest.

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And that was February.

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And by May, I just was not feeling right.

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I knew there was something else going on.

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So I took myself off to the doctor

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and I said, what's going on?

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Do I have long COVID?

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What does it look like now?

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They didn't know a lot back then.

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So he was like, yes,

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you've got long COVID.

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And I said, what do you

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recommend that I do?

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He said, I recommend you do nothing.

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I'm like, what do you mean by nothing?

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And he's like, I recommend that you rest

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all you can, and basically do nothing.

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And I said, I've got three

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kids and a business to run.

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And how might I do that?

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Anyway, he was unhelpful.

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I then found a naturopath because I

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was like a dog with a bone with this.

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I'm like, I should not feel this tired.

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And ladies, here's the thing.

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We know our bodies the best, right?

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We have to advocate for our bodies.

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And so if you know, something's not

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quite right, you need to look into that.

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So I went to a naturopath.

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Her name is Susan Hunter.

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She's amazing.

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You can look her up on Instagram.

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And I said to Susan, I

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think I've got long COVID.

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I probably need a little bit of help.

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and she said to me.

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Emma, I've seen this before.

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I think you might have glandular fever.

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I'm like, wow, just from a

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conversation about how I was feeling.

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She's like, but let's get

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some blood tests and let's see

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what is actually happening.

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So we've got the blood tests and lo and

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behold, it was confirmed glandular fever.

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the glandular fever.

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Was triggered by COVID and

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I was just feeling a mess.

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So Susan got me on some supplements and

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she also did the whole, you need to rest.

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And I'm like, okay, can we talk

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about what that actually looks like?

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Because three kids, business,

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busy life, la la la la.

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And she's like, can you nap?

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I'm like, yeah, I could nap.

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And so for that year.

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Serena, who is my business

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manager, we whittled my diary down.

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So the only thing that I was doing was

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delivery, no business development, no

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extra tasks, and she popped a nap in

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my diary, a couple of hours between 12

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and two in my diary every single day

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for me to nap, and it was glorious.

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And I did this every single day.

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every single day One of

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my strengths is discipline.

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So if you give me a process,

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I'm very disciplined.

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I will just follow through on that.

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So I napped every single day.

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I took my supplements.

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I did all the things that

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Susan had asked me to do.

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I didn't do any exercise.

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I didn't go walking.

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I just allowed my body time.

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To heal fast forward, nine or

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so months and I was feeling

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so much better for the rest.

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And I thought to myself,

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why would I stop napping?

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I actually really love getting

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in bed and having a nap.

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And so, I decided to keep napping.

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So now it's been a couple of years

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and I still nap every single day.

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I still nap every single day.

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There are so many benefits to napping.

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And I think the trick that I had

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to get over was giving myself

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permission to nap during the week

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and not feel like I was slacking off.

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and so there are a few things I

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put in place to allow, my routine

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to do this and my body and my

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head to be okay with it, right?

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So first of all, where you

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put my nap in the diary.

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Somewhere between 12 and 2 every day.

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12 and 2 because I didn't want to

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ruin my, uh, evening sleep and I've

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always been a really good sleeper.

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it's like you have lunch, you

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can have a nap, you can have a

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little lay down, whatever it is.

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and there's so much neuroscience, so

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much neuroscience that backs up napping.

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Uh, I read an article.

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Awesome book called rest, which

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is not necessarily about napping.

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It's about doing more of

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the things that you love.

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but rest is so important.

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And what I discovered was I was much

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more clear in my head when I woke up,

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when I'd had heavy coaching days, because

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I do one on one coaching, people have

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different things that they bring to me.

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So after a couple of those, I needed

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a way To allow my brain to process

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what had happened during the day.

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And a nap was the best way to do that.

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It allowed my brain to stop

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thinking and it allowed me

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just to have a little sleep.

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And it allowed me to wake

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up and feel refreshed and

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productive for the afternoon.

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someone said to me, but what

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happens if you can't nap?

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Don't worry.

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Don't put pressure on yourself to nap.

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I use, a app called Tide,

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which is rain music.

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And I just put that on and I set

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my timer and I just lay down.

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And what goes through my brain

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at that point is, am I tired?

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I might nap.

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Or.

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If I'm not tired, I'll just rest.

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I'm just letting my

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body and my brain rest.

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And that has been the best

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thing that I could have done.

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Took me a while to get there.

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Obviously, it was triggered

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by me not feeling very well.

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and I have kept, up the naps and the rest

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because I think it's really important.

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So much more productive.

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Back to my client.

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What do you think she does now?

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We've been working together

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for almost three years.

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And she said to me, Emma, you

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gave me permission to nap.

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I'm like, did I?

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It's like, you were

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just role modeling it.

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You didn't even know what you were doing.

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And then I thought to myself,

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well, if she can do it and have a

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successful business, why can't I?

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And I thought to myself, oh my

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goodness, you influence people by how

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you turn up and what you do, and a nap

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is just part of my non negotiables.

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Sometimes when I'm feeling good, I will

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lay down for 10 minutes instead, and

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then I'll go for a walk in the sunshine

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because that's really important as well.

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But my question for you is, do you

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give yourself permission to nap?

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A lot of people give themselves

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permission to nap on the weekends,

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and I still nap on the weekends, but a

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lot of people don't have time to nap.

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But then my question for you is how

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productive are you during the day?

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My days are pretty full.

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So my mornings are pretty full and

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that's when I make my best decisions.

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That's when my willpower is strong.

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That's when I know I'm showing

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up as the best version of me.

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If I didn't have a rest or didn't allow

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my brain to have a little break during

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the day, actually, I don't think I'd

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be the best coach human being possible.

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So there's enormous benefits to napping.

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And I would encourage you all to

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give it a crack, even just like do

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it for a week, just do 10 minutes,

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10 minutes, lay down, Put on some

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meditative, sound and try and have a nap.

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And if you cannot nap,

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just rest 10 minutes.

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That's all it takes.

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Let me know how you go.

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I'm so keen to hear.

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Should we start a nap movement?

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Naps are okay.