Ep. 41 Thriving Health with Spiritual Nutritionist Amy Pamensky. Mindset. Happiness. Self Love

Listen Here:

In this episode, we discuss:

I’m interviewing the Spiritual Nutritionist, Amy Pamensky. She is a holistic nutritionist and eating psychology coach who specializes in helping women to stop the battle with food and love their bodies.

In her signature Fully Nourished coaching program, Amy uses science-based nutrition and mindfulness practices to achieve weight loss goals, reduce stress, and create long-term healthy eating habits.

As a speaker and a coach, Amy has inspired hundreds of women to overcome emotional eating, increase self-love, and get out of the yo-yo dieting cycle.

Amy also supports healers, coaches, and entrepreneurial women to be in their optimal state of health so that they can show up for their clients and patients in full capacity.

Additional Resources:

PRODUCT: Let’s Get Checked

LetsGetChecked is all about personal health testing, making healthcare and health screening open and patient-led, empowering people to use technology in a simple but powerful way and giving greater control of their personal health. Use code EMPATH for 20% off.

BOOK: 21 Days of Healing

21 Days of Healing was created out of my own desire to go beyond food and heal on a deeper emotional and spiritual level. I curated the most loved content based on hundreds of live students experience in the course, and created this self guided workbook to help you navigate chronic illness, release emotional inflammation, and find the medicine woman within.

PRODUCT: Zoom Video Conferencing

Curious how I connect to all my AMAZING clients and make them feel like we’re in the same room?! I use Zoom video to host 1:1 client calls, group programs, record podcasts, and more! Try it out for FREE!

Episode Transcript:

Amy: At my rock bottom, where I was sitting in a gastroenterologist’s office, went to the most specific person that I could go to, and being told that there was nothing wrong and that I should just take acid suppressors Zantac or whatever it was, and it just wasn’t the answer for me.

Sarah: Welcome to the Healing Uncensored podcast. My name is Sarah Small, and I’m a health and mindset coach for women with autoimmune disease, just like you. I absolutely love helping you tap into your self-healing power, uncover the energetic side of healing and release limiting beliefs around your body and your life. Think of this podcast is everything you wouldn’t hear at your doctor’s office. It’s a place for empowered souls to move beyond food and heal themselves on a soul level. I hope you enjoy today’s episode. Now let’s begin.

Welcome to today’s episode. I’m super excited to have Spiritual Nutritionist, Amy Pamensky on the show today. Amy helps busy women experience thriving health and happiness. She’s also a holistic nutritionist and eating psychology coach, who specializes in helping women to stop the battle of food and love their bodies. In today’s episode, you’ll hear Amy and I discuss self-love, the importance of mindset, Amy’s personal healing story and how important it is to have self-care as an entrepreneur. I know you guys are going to love this conversation, so let’s get started.

Welcome to the show, Amy. I would love for the audience to get to know you better so can you share a little bit about yourself and how you were inspired to become a holistic nutritionist and eating psychology coach?

Amy: Sure. Thanks so much for having me. So, my inspiration to be where I’m at today with my career and the work that I do in the world really comes from my own experience. A lot of times, you know, I really feel that our purpose can come from many different places and one of those can be from our pain and the experiences that we go through personally. So, the reason why I do what I do is because many of the things that I teach are things that I’ve experienced myself and then been really inspired to go and learn deeper so that I can support others on their journey. My journey into nutrition started due to my own digestive issues. I had a lot of food sensitivities. I had skin issues like eczema, and really found myself struggling with not finding the answers in Western medicine and feeling frustrated about what direction to go. At my rock bottom, where I was sitting in a gastroenterologist’s office, went to the most specific person that I could go to, and being told that there was nothing wrong and that I should just take acid suppressors, Zantac or whatever it was, and it just wasn’t the answer for me. And at that point I was curled up in the afternoons like in a ball because my stomach hurts so bad after I ate. And it was starting to affect my social life and a lot of things in my life too. So, I decided to take things into my own hands and went kind of the alternative route. I sought out a nutritionist who really supported me in understanding that what’s healthy for one person isn’t always healthy for another person and how customized we can get with nutrition. And once I started really getting that food can be medicine, it can be really nourishing and having the tools to be able to do that was really powerful.

I set off, I started studying, I became a natural chef, was the first place I started, which was really amazing. Getting to know, understand the properties of foods and really getting into flavours and understanding how food affects the body. And I got a lot better. I got significantly better. I did a lot of alternative medicine practices and I became a nutritionist, a clinical nutritionist and I started working with women who struggled with similar things – low energy, digestive issues, difficulty losing weight, hormone imbalances, auto-immunity, all the things. And what I found was that even though I had my own business, even though I had a lot of things on paper that looked great, I still found there was a piece of me that was still unhappy and found that even though my digestion had gotten better, significantly better, there was still something missing.

So, I would notice that when I would go out of town on vacation, I would have no digestive symptoms. My blood sugar would be better. I didn’t respond to foods as much, but then when I’d come back, a lot of the symptoms would return. And I sort of realized there’s a huge mind/body component in my stress levels and noticed that my clients, even when they were losing weight or feeling better, there was still something missing. And that’s when I really started to dive into what I’m most passionate about now is mindset and how our thoughts influence our physical body and our health.

Sarah: Absolutely. And I saw on your website that with your clients, you work 80% on the mindset and 20% on nutrition, so can you go into a little bit about why you take that approach and even some of your own personal mindset struggles and then shifts, like what have you overcome? What has changed that allowed you to truly heal your mind?

Amy: I would love to dive into that. I teach 80% mindset, 20% nutrition because all of our behaviours in life that we have are influenced by our thoughts, which are influenced by our beliefs. And even if we have the perfect information to make the dietary changes, it doesn’t mean that we’re going to stick with them, and also it doesn’t actually change the root of why we’re making those choices in the first place. So especially when you start to get really restrictive for health reasons, or because you want to lose weight or because you have to be on a restrictive diet, it can often backfire and it makes us want those foods more, or we feel depressed or deprived and whatever it is, and we can’t follow the guidelines that are given to us.

So our mindset really influences every action that we take. It influences us physiologically on a stress level, and that influences our immune system, our digestion, and pretty much everything, our hormones, et cetera. So our mind is really, really powerful. I started to understand mindset because I was pretty much living a life that was going through the motions, kind of just going with the flow on autopilot. And while on the outside, my life looked great – I was married. I owned a house. I was making good money. I had my own business. I had a freedom lifestyle in a lot of ways – and inside, I was really unhappy. My soul was really struggling. I was feeling really depressed. I was really questioning why am I not happy? I have everything that I should want or that I think I should want and I’m just not happy. I started going to seminars. I started to do meditation; started to really understand that the thoughts that I was having on a daily basis, limiting beliefs, things that were holding me back – self-doubt, low self-love, conversations about people-pleasing, wanting everyone else to be happy with me – were really keeping me stuck in a place of living a life that didn’t bring me joy. It wasn’t aligned with my authentic self.

So, I started to do some meditation practices, started to connect with what was actually coming up for me. What did I really, really want? What type of life do I want to create for myself and realize that the life that I was living was not aligned with that? And I made a huge leap. I struggled with it for a long time and eventually got to a space where it was so clear on the understanding that I was the only person who could make myself happy like that. No one else could do it for me. And understanding that that was possible, that we could reprogram our mind, and I ended up leaving my marriage. I created a whole… I left a lot behind and really created a life that is much more aligned with my truth, with my purpose and surround myself with people who are also in that space, who are positive and supportive and inspiring and very forward-thinking.

Sarah:                Yeah. Thank you so much for sharing that with us. I just think that you have a very powerful story and one that I think many women will be able to relate to. So when people do come to work with you, either one-on-one or in your group programs or in person, do you see any common themes, like any sort of common limiting beliefs that they’re experiencing? Each person obviously is totally unique and individual, but any common themes you see there?

The “not good enough story”

Amy: Yeah. There are a couple of really big ones. The first one is the “not good enough” story.

Sarah: Raising my hand over here.

Amy: Yeah. That was a huge story in my world. Not good enough, not feeling worthy, and these beliefs come a lot and are really supported by our environment. We’re in a very competitive environment. We grow up feeling very separate, feeling like we have to live up to certain standards. That’s the way that we are in the Western world. You know, it’s all about our accomplishments and what we do and how much money we make and what type of relationship we’re in or not in. And we’re really based on results and not the journey of what did I learn here, or focusing on the small wins. All those things are really so important, and when we don’t feel good enough, there’s a lot of self-beat up and there’s a lot of comparison. The comparison is a huge one that creates the “not good enough” feeling. The truth is that the not good enough marker is so not tangible. It’s like we all have unique gifts. We all have something to offer and we’re all doing the best that we can, given the knowledge that we have, given the awareness that we have. And we get to really celebrate ourselves and love ourselves for that, and stop comparing ourselves to how we think we should be or how other people are.

Sarah: Yeah. I definitely relate to that. Just not feeling good enough, and then you get into the spiral of comparison as well – comparisonitis – and this constant desire of more than what you are or what you have. And really, I’ve found takes a lot of mind and body awareness to get out of that really destructive cycle and realize that I’m enough as I am. I’m a perfectly imperfect human fricking being.

Victim mentality

Amy: Yeah. The other story that I see a lot of people in is what we call a victim mentality and it’s kind of a powerful, strong word. It’s very powerful, and what victim mentality means is that we feel that we don’t actually have control over our circumstances, so it’s a very fear-based mentality about that. You know, we blame other people. We blame our body. We blame food. We blame people who are doing well. We blame other people for all our problems or the world, and we don’t take ownership for our own reality. And the opposite of victim mentality is taking 100% full responsibility. So full responsibility for our emotions, so no one can make us angry. No one can piss us off. No one can hurt us unless we allow it to, and really getting into a hundred percent ownership. If you’re not happy, there’s a few different options you can choose to … you know, if it’s a relationship or it’s a job or it’s with the way that you’re eating, either you can choose to stay where you are and feel frustrated about it and blame everyone else, or you can choose to stay and change your perspective on it. See, what can I learn from this? What are the things that are going well, or you can choose to leave? But sitting in the first option is victim mentality is I don’t have control. And we cause ourselves a lot of pain around that. So, it comes down to awareness and it comes down to a choice of knowing that we create our own reality.

Sarah: Absolutely. I see that as a common theme within the chronic illness community and one that I can personally relate to as well, which is that all of a sudden you leave the doctor’s office one day and you leave with a new label and it’s this disease, and it’s a chronic disease. It’s not one necessarily that can be cured or you may feel the effects of it for the rest of your life. And I think many of us can leave that doctor’s office going, wow, I feel like a victim. I feel like this diagnosis is a death sentence, and really, really get inside of our heads about it and start to lose some hope around it as well. I know that in my own personal experience of healing chronic illness and emphasis on the word healing like that. A lot of healing has happened. I still experience symptoms sometimes, but if I had left that doctor’s office every time I was diagnosed with an autoimmune disease, because I have multiple and let myself be the victim to that, then I would never be where I am today. I wouldn’t have sought out the solutions and empowered myself with those tools to heal. So while it’s a common theme, I think it’s also something that if we choose not to fall into that victim hood, that we can really, really heal on a deep soul level, specifically with chronic illness. But again, at the same time, it’s so easy to fall into that trap because you do leave that office with a label and that can feel really heavy and really scary for people as well.

Amy: Yeah. And it’s so real. And when we talk about this, it’s okay to feel frustrated or to feel upset or to feel angry. That doesn’t mean that you’re in victim mentality. Victim mentality is the thought like why is this happening to me? There’s nothing I can do about this. I have no control over this, and we can’t heal from that space because it’s not an empowered space to heal from. So when we come from a space as why is this happening for me, is it asking me to slow down? In a lot of cases in autoimmunity, it’s letting us know that we’re not managing stress well. It’s letting us know that we’re really disconnected from our soul and our soul purpose. It’s letting us know that, Hey, I get to speak nicely to myself. I get to be nicer to myself. I’m not sure how much you’ve talked about this on your podcast, but when we’re talking about mind and body for auto-immunity, a lot of auto-immunity is about self-attack. It’s about self-criticism, it’s about the thoughts that we have against ourselves so the body is attacking itself. The immune system is attacking the body, whatever part it is, whether it’s the thyroid or the joints and the food triggers it, of course. It contributes to that, but a lot of times the stressor, the mental stressor can come from being really hard on ourselves, not being nice to herself, constantly telling ourselves we’re not enough. We’re attacking ourselves who we are.

Sarah: Yeah, there’s deeper emotional roots to why we’re experiencing these physical symptoms. I am 150% on board of that, and I think the part of the conversation that gets left out most is just this mind-body connection like you said. In the beginning, you were saying that you really derive purpose from your pain, and I think that that is kind of the opposite of the victimhood for those who are listening who do struggle with chronic illness is instead of falling victim to this and letting it label you, how can you learn from it? Let it be your teacher, turn that pain into purpose to inspire your life, or help other women like both of us have found these careers because of our own pains. There’s so much you can recycle that pain into to be this beautiful flower.

I know you also speak a little bit about self-love and I think this is really related to is that’s the opposite of self-attack like you said. Some of the emotional roots of chronic illness or autoimmune disease, the immune system attacking healthy cells in the body is this self-criticism and judgment. So, the opposite of that is this deep sense of self-love and acceptance. I think everyone answers this question a little differently, but what does self-love mean to you?

Unconditional and self-love

Amy: Yeah. Self-love means to me unconditional loves. Loving ourselves even for the parts, our light and our dark. So not just loving ourselves for the things that we do well or that we’re proud of ourselves for, also really embracing the side of us maybe the things that we don’t love the most about ourselves, whether we’re judgmental or whether we are reactive or whatever it is, our ego, our shadow side, and knowing that we’re human and that as humans, we have both and that our inner child, when we’re critical of these things that we don’t like about ourselves, we are harming that inner child, that inner being. And when we can have compassion for ourselves, which doesn’t mean that we’re saying it’s okay, I’m not going to change it. But when we have compassion for ourselves in that space of the things that we don’t love about ourselves, it allows us to change it or to work on it.

But if we are constantly being frustrated with ourselves, I used to be very reactive and very judgmental and it would make me feel really bad. And then I’d be hard on myself for being that way. And that was even more toxic than being hard on myself for being that way. So for me, self-love is unconditional love, and self-love, to me is not just about saying nice things to yourself. That’s really maybe the top. It’s a great place to start and noticing when you’re saying something negative and changing into a positive mantra. But self-love is really … maybe it’s writing yourself a love letter. Maybe it’s taking yourself out on a date. Maybe it’s spending time with yourself and recognizing what are the things that I do love about myself. It’s nourishing your body with foods that really are going to support you in your health and happiness. There’s so many – it’s such a deep practice – and I think that that’s the reprogramming that gets to happen in order to get out of the not good enough or to get out of the self-criticism like you mentioned.

Sarah: Yeah. I love that you speak that it’s more than one thing, and also that it’s the light part of us that’s easy to love and also that shadow side as well. Integrating that shadow into our lightness to love every aspect of our being. Now, a lot of the women listening are also coaches or aspiring coaches as well, and I know for me, but I’m assuming probably for you too, this relationship to not only self-love but self-care as well, almost it was like it had to change when I started my own business. Did it change for you when you started your business as well?

Amy: Yeah, this is awesome because I’m smiling really big right now, because this is actually the direction the program that I’m creating for the new year is really providing entrepreneurs, healers, and coaches the platform to be supported with their own health, with their own self-care. Because as givers, as guides, as healers, as women who are putting out work in the world, we often tend to focus on everyone else before ourselves, or we get into certain patterns and habits and get into a comfort zone, and then don’t make time to have lunch, or don’t make time to move our bodies and we’re sitting for, I don’t know, eight hours a day, or not getting outside. So really having that and tribe, a lot of women feel alone when they’re running their own business, and I certainly experienced that. I experienced feeling alone in my business, so I totally experienced that. I’m sure I’d love to hear from you how that shifted as you started your own business and what that looks like, but it’s part of taking care of myself first so that I can give more.

Sarah: As a woman who also has multiple autoimmune diseases, chronic illness, I think that there was a lot of nerves around it in the beginning of can I do this? Is this possible? Am I going to be able to keep up with everything despite having a chronic illness, even though chronic illness was also the thing that was inspiring me at the same time to do what I do? So it was like this inspiration, and in the beginning, it felt like a little bit like this curse. And I know now that it’s certainly not a curse but instead it’s like that little voice inside your head that reminds you that you’re allowed to slow down, that you’re allowed to take breaks. And so my health two years ago when I started Autoimmune Tribe was a lot worse actually. I’ve made some really big strides and improvements in the past year with some of the root causes of why I was feeling so ill. So in the beginning, that self-care was everything because I wanted to show up energized and vibrant and inspired to speak my truth and share my story. So that meant also laying on the couch for 20 minutes if I needed to, or making myself an amazing smoothie when I needed to, or just going outside and taking a couple deep breaths of fresh air, walking my dog and not feeling guilty about it. And so now that my health is a lot better, I don’t have to do so much of that, but I still absolutely honour those moments of just pause in between client calls. I try not to jump from one to the other and I let myself just ground and cleanse.

Do you use essential oils? I use my essential oils for my self-care like crazy. So before this podcast, I put some Intune on and then before client calls, I’ll put Elevation on to help raise my vibration. So constantly just these little, little mini rituals that become this beautiful, sacred practice throughout my entire day. That has become so important to me as an entrepreneur, but also on chronic illness. How do you use your oils mostly?

Amy: I use them really intuitively. I put on Serenity before this call because I was really feeling like I wanted to just slow down and be present. Serenity is a really nice blend that has lavender. I use them really intuitively. Wild orange, when I want to have more energy; Elevation is also really beautiful. For those of you who aren’t familiar, these are blends specifically from doTERRA that I love, and it sounds like you use doTERRA as well. and Balance to feel really grounded, so I use them all the time. My clients, I have a custom blend that I love for them that I use. And it’s a really beautiful way to tune in to the emotional body with something so simple. It’s so simple. I really wanted to comment on the way that we do business as women and the way that we work as women. And there’s a huge shift happening, at least for me.

When I was growing up, I saw my dad working so hard and working, working, working, and he was successful and I equated being successful with having to work really hard. And there’s a shift that’s happening especially when we look at … women’s’ hormones are a lot more sensitive to men and women’s stress hormone specifically is more sensitive to men, which is why we get into burnout and adrenal fatigue a lot easier, which is why we get into estrogen dominance and have more PCOS, and a lot of different hormone imbalances. So we got to really honor our bodies and where we’re at. And I would say this even for men, is that there is a really false belief that in order to be successful, it’s almost like this measure that we feel if we’re busy and we’re constantly doing something that we’re effective, or we’re only successful and we’re only moving forward if we’re killing ourselves over it. Really for me, stepping more into an intuitive space, into a feminine space with business honoring my body, this isn’t … I don’t know if you’re familiar with Rebecca Campbell?

Sarah: Love her!

Amy: Amazing. If any of you haven’t heard of her, her books are amazing, but I went to go see her speak when I was in London and she pulled the card for me that said a life’s work, not a season. I believe that’s the card. So, if we’re going to wear ourselves out and not take care of ourselves, then it’s going to be a really short-term run before you get sick and then have to take time off. So there’s a feminine way to do business, the intuitive way. And for me, when I feel good, I have more creative ideas. I’m able to focus more. I can be more present. It comes from an inspired space and I can really offer my gifts.

Sarah: Yeah. That’s beautiful. And it sounds like you relate to being an empath or just an intuitive, spiritual, human being. I’m curious, how do you feel intuition in your body? How does it come through to you?

How to feel intuition in your body

Amy: I think there’s no surprise that because I used to have digestive issues that my gut is my barometer. It’s an inner knowing. It’s this feeling of a definite yes, like a lightness and excitement or resistance. Feeling I’m not sure about that. I don’t know, and it takes tuning in. The more meditation that I do, the more frequent I am with meditation – I meditate daily. That’s my recharge for my intuition – I’m much more in touch with what feels good for me and what doesn’t feel good for me when I take that time to connect. So for me, intuition is that. I also get intuition – this may sound strange – but for me, it’s through books and through people. So I’ll be reading the right thing at the right time and it sits like a deep, inner knowing. It’s almost a reminder of something I already knew before. Or someone will say something and I had just been thinking about that or asking Source or universe for guidance on that. And it’ll come into my awareness. So intuition speaks in many ways for me, but physically, I would say for me, it’s an inner knowing and a gut feeling.

Sarah: I think you were so spot on too with – no surprise – I had digestive issues. That might be that sensitive barometer, that sensitive part of your body that then is extra sensitive to intuitive downloads and hits and nudges. And yeah, I think it’s Rebecca Campbell’s deck actually. There’s a card that says trust the niggle. I love that card. It’s just trusting that little … however that niggle shows up in your body and your mind and your energy, but trusting that and allowing your body to follow through and take action on that as well. So being an intuitive being, how do you also then protect energy, especially what is it … November 23rd today? We’re approaching the holiday season. We’re in the holiday season now because Thanksgiving was yesterday. So how do you protect your energy?

How to protect your energy

Amy: For me, it comes back to self-care. It comes back to making sure when I’m tired and when I’m not in alignment, I’m far more affected and thrown off by other people’s energy. And when I take that time for self-care, it’s really helpful. I’ve done a lot of different things, cord-cutting meditations. There’s also really beautiful meditation that I guide, and I love is a golden bubble and creating an energetic field around you where you’re not allowing other people’s energy to penetrate that. So setting the intention of staying present, staying grounded. My breath is a huge way. Noticing when I’m off. I would say for me, even as an empath, one of my strengths or something that comes really naturally to me is staying calm, even when there’s a lot going on, or even when something … I’m not very reactive, and I would attribute that a lot to meditation.

Sarah: I’d love to hear a little bit more about the work you do too. We talked a little bit about it being 80% mindset, but when people come to seek your guidance, your support, your help, what do you typically do? Do you have any kind of key ways that you help people then overcome that?

Amy: I have a process called Fully Nourished and we cover three different areas in the process. It’s Nourish your mind, nourish your body and follow your heart. I teach this style either one-on-one or in group settings, and I’ve found the groups to be really, really powerful. I think a lot of women are searching for community, are feeling alone on their journey and the wisdom that we learned from each other is far more than I can teach only on my own. I teach this process and in each area,, we nourish your mind, really digging into what is the self-talk that’s happening on a daily basis. What are those limiting beliefs? Where did they come from? Really getting to the root of that. Having women really understand where their stressors are rooted, and then giving specific tools to be able to navigate those stressors and to also be in an emotional intelligent space where you could have the same thing happened to you a month ago, but because you have new tools, it’s not going to have as big of an effect.

I have a client who is a teacher, and I worked with her last year, and this year she went back to teaching and she sent me a message saying, you know, usually at this time of year, I’m emotional eating. I am not taking care of myself. I’m super stressed out. I feel overwhelmed. And because of the tools that I gained from our work together, I feel super grounded. I feel like I’m actually the one keeping it all together. I feel like I’m able to still take care of myself and nourish my body. And that’s the power of having the tools. So, in the nourish your mind section, we are really working on meditation, mind-body connection, and then in nourish your body going through what does it look like to truly nourish your body? What are the foods that are going to support you with your specific health needs? What are the foods, the foundations without me getting into dieting or labels or counting, it’s what does your body need and how can we make that realistic for you to implement that?

Sarah: Beautiful. So originally you mentioned the collective energy of a group being even more intense too, and we connected through our mutual friend, Tori Washington, who’s also been on the podcast twice actually, and someone that you listeners resonate and just love her energy because she’s an amazing human being. I know you guys have this sisterhood that you guys have created. So if anyone’s listening and wondering or feeling like they’re missing that aspect of healing, this community, this sisterhood, this tribe, this community. Where do they go? Where do they start? How do they find that?

Sisterhood and community

Amy: Yeah, for me, it really started with the work for myself is actually creating a vision for what I wanted, being really clear on what types of people I wanted to surround myself by, really calling in sisterhood, having an intention of connecting with like-minded women who are supportive and inspiring and beautiful inside and outside really making a difference in the world. And it started with my own self-love, because this was not always the case for me. Sisterhood was not something that came naturally to me when I was younger. I was in a very self-judgment place and I would have friends, but I never had that group of women that I knew I was super connected with. And it really wasn’t until I made this shift within myself, where I opened up to receive and give love where it became really natural and women wanted to be around me and I opened up space for that.

So, it starts with a personal journey. It starts with creating a vision for yourself of what you’re wanting to create, and then doing things that you like to do, trying new things, whether it’s going to workshops, or whether it’s reaching out to other women online who are going through similar challenges, and you can create the space. That’s what I’ve done. So the mastermind that I’m in with Tori, I reached out to a few women who are solopreneurs in the health and wellness and spiritual space who are doing amazing things who are inspiring to me, and I suggested, Hey, would you guys like to get together. Let’s try this out, let’s see how it feels. You know, I feel like we would be a really good fit for us to connect. And if you’re genuine and you’re authentic and you’re open, and also if you don’t take things personally and maybe not everyone wants to do it, but being not attached to it is also a huge part.

Sarah: Yeah. That’s so beautiful. I love the way you answered that question, because I think what you showed us is that we have more power in this than we might realize. We could go around and going back to our victim part of this conversation and being like, where are my sisters? Where’s my tribe at? And we can be, poor me. Where are all my friends? Or we can set that really clear intention of calling in more like-minded women, men, or women into your tribe and building this soul sisterhood in a really conscious way and being the creator of our reality versus that victim mentality. I think that no one needs to feel shame for feeling that way, but I think just maybe know that there is a way out of that victim mentality and you can empower yourself to then be a conscious creator instead. I think that there’s a lot of people out there and I again resonate with this of just kind of walking around more aimlessly without that clear intention. So to define that intention and get super crystal clear, everything’s ready to flow so much more easily. I don’t know about you, but I’m like let things be easy. I want ease in my life. Is there a way or an intention setting process that you have in your life?

Amy: Yeah. I started by asking myself the question, what do I really want? And sitting with that, what brings me joy? What do I want my life to look like? And I used other people who were inspiring to mw. If you don’t know what you want, that’s okay. If you see something in someone else and maybe you’re even comparing yourself to them, and you’re like, Oh, I don’t have that rr she can have that but I can’t, use that as inspiration. Use them as expanders to show you what’s possible. Lacey Phillips uses that term expanders. So our mirror neurons show us what’s possible for us when we see other people doing it. One of my biggest inspirations is Melissa Ambrozini and Gabrielle Bernstein and Rebecca Campbell, and really looking at these beautiful examples of women who are sharing their gifts with the world.

And so if you don’t know what you want, borrow. Borrow what you see and sit and write in your journal what I really want. And then from there, I create what I call a vision statement. And this is all stuff that I do with my clients too is I take what I really want, and then the vision statement is writing it as if it’s happening now. So it could be I wake up in the morning, feeling energized and excited about my day, and I surround myself with really inspiring women and feel fully supported, and I share my gifts with the world on a daily basis and I make X amount of money and I do that by doing things that I love and whatever that looks like. I travel a certain amount of times per year. It’s got to be really tangible, and when you read it, it gets to feel good. When it feels good, that puts us in the energetic vibration to be in a space of attracting those things.

So same thing with vision boards. Vision boards are great. I’m looking at mine right now. And what happens when I look at it is it feels really good for me. And that’s how we get into law of attraction, of attracting the things that we want the most. So, to rewind and do a step-by-step process. The first thing is asking yourself, what do I really want? And maybe it’s starting to look at what don’t I want and start there, and that’s okay, and start to do more of the things that light you up, that bring you joy and start to do less of the things that don’t do that for you. And then creating a vision statement and reading it every single day. I rewrote my vision statement four months before I actually took action and really created and manifested what I wanted in my life.

Sarah: Yeah. That’s really helpful. Thank you for sharing that with all of us. Is there anything else that you wanted to touch on today or anything else you’d like to leave the listeners with?

Amy: Yeah. I would just love to share that wherever you are in your journey, your health journey, your spiritual journey, you’re exactly where you’re supposed to be. And if you’re listening to this podcast, it means that you’re already seeking out and committed to finding ways to grow and to learn. So you’re on your journey already. You’re exactly where you’re supposed to be, and you are perfectly whole as you are. You don’t need anything outside of you to fix you or change you, so you’re only getting this stuff out of the way that’s getting in your way and coming back to who you truly are. So that’s the first thing that I would say is really, I acknowledge you for being where you’re at right now and you’re exactly where you’re supposed to be on your journey.

The second is I would say creating time each day to listen. For me, it’s 20 minutes of meditation, whether it’s going outside in nature, but if we don’t listen, we can’t hear the answers. We can’t hear our truth. And if we just stay busy and run all over that, then we don’t make space for what we’re truly seeking, which is our truth. So, making space for that is really, I think, essential for any healing journey and spiritual journey.

Sarah: It is. And thank you for reminding all of us of that too. I think that we just can’t hear that enough, that it’s okay to stop and listen and not be that do-do-do, go-go-go woman like you were talking about before, even in the masculine and feminine energy as well, and just allowing ourselves to embrace stillness. So thank you so much for being on the show today, Amy. Can you just let listeners know also where to find you, follow you, join you in any of your programs?

Amy: Yeah. Thank you. I really enjoyed sharing time with you today, being here with you. And I know that this will resonate, even if you take one thing away from today, my invitation to you is to implement. There’s so much information. And I found myself doing this so much – listening to so many things, reading so much. And I think the information overload sometimes keeps us stuck. So take one thing that you learned today and implement it for 30 days and see what happens. You can find me on Instagram at @spiritualnutritionist. I also have my website, www.spiritualnutritionist.com. Send me a message just to say hi. I would love to connect with you. And my next program specifically for entrepreneurs, healers and coaches is going to be starting in February. So, there’ll be a limited amount of spots, six to eight women in that program. So if you’re curious about that, want to learn more, I’d be happy to connect with you and hear where you’re at. See if it’s a good fit.

Sarah: Thank you again, Amy. You have beautiful, grounded energy, and thank you so much for sharing it with us today.

Amy: Yeah. Thank you.

Sarah: Thank you so much for tuning in to today’s episode as always. I am so appreciative of all of you – really, truly. I’m so grateful for you. If you are loving the Healing Uncensored podcast, I would appreciate it so much if you would go into iTunes and leave a heartfelt review. Thank you again for listening today, and if you want to find any more information about Amy, all the links are in the show notes. I will see you next time. Have a beautiful rest of your week.

 

 

Follow Amy here:

www.spiritualnutritionist.com

www.facebook.com/spiritualnutritionist

@amynatalieco

Connect with Sarah:

Instagram | Facebook Community | Pinterest | YouTube

Work with Sarah:

Online courses | 1:1 coaching | Send show requests to sarah@theuncensoredempath.com!

This post contains affiliate links. We may receive a small commission for purchases made through these links. Thank you for your support!

April 23, 2019

SHARE THIS POST

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

DOWNLOAD NOW

FREE EMPATH EMPOWERMENT GUIDE

A 7-day email course to help you discover what type of empath you are, how to protect your energy, harness your intuitive strengths, and release energy vampires.

Thank you for subscribing!