Jill Wright, speaker, coach, and author of Happy, Healthy Wealthy, and Wise joins the Skirts Up Squad today! Jill helps us understand what our superhuman powers are, and how to make them work for us. She shares the phrase "Eat your frog first" which leaves a lasting impact on Samantha and Melissa. Get all the tangible tricks you need to have the healthiest work/ life balance you could ever imagine.
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Hey, you.
Samantha:You're tuned in to the Skirts up show with Samantha and Melissa.
Melissa:Join our mission to normalize failure, but still uncover the positives at every twist and turn.
Samantha:Skirts up, but keep your panties on.
Samantha:What's up, Skirts Up Squad?
Melissa:It is Samantha and Melissa.
Melissa:We are here today, and we're excited to bring you what we're bringing you.
Melissa:But it did kind of start with our fail.
Melissa:We forgot to put our headphones on for this interview today.
Melissa:So there was a lot of shit that Sam had to work with to try to get a good episode for you guys.
Samantha:We were like, yeah, the headphones.
Samantha:We don't have to hear them.
Samantha:That was the thing.
Samantha:We were like, this is useless.
Samantha:And so then it wasn't until after we recorded the whole conversation that we, like, went and replayed a little bit of it, and we were like, oh, my gosh, you can hear her in our feet.
Melissa:Yeah.
Melissa:So that was a shit show for you today.
Samantha:It was.
Samantha:It was a very long process of uploading and uploading, uploading, trying something different, unloading, and just doing it over and over again until finally our usual way just was not going to work.
Samantha:And that is just what we were going to have to flow with.
Samantha:And so what.
Samantha:We used to usually record our voices.
Samantha:I just thought, well, if nothing else is working, I'm going to go ahead and drag them into that forum.
Samantha:And then from there, I had to literally go through the whole episode and then splice out all of our pauses on our recording so that you wouldn't hear our sweet, sweet guest, like, echoing.
Samantha:Yeah.
Samantha:So then I had to put it back into our usual thing.
Jill Wright:So it was a lot.
Melissa:You guys, she was working on this.
Melissa:I would say.
Jill Wright:I wouldn't.
Melissa:I'm.
Melissa:I'm not going to say how long you worked on it, but I wouldn't be surprised if it was five, six hours.
Melissa:Am I wrong?
Melissa:So I think that it's kind of a success because I think that.
Melissa:That we have a really good support in our.
Melissa:In our skirt sub squad.
Melissa:So we feel, like, comfortable enough to tell you guys, hey, this episode might be a little choppy, but in Melissa's opinion, Sam worked magic.
Melissa:And you're gonna like it.
Melissa:So please.
Melissa:No, you're gonna love our guest, though, for sure.
Melissa:Yeah.
Melissa:Whether you like it or not, you're gonna love our guest.
Samantha:Honestly, the fail ties into our episode because, like, I have had so much on my plate, whether it be family and health podcast too, event and podcasting, and that it's, like, been so much to where you Go, I'll do it tomorrow.
Samantha:I'll do it tomorrow.
Samantha:But then tomorrow never comes because then it becomes a big thing.
Samantha:And it's really funny because that's exactly what Ms.
Samantha:Jill is here to talk to us.
Melissa:Holy crap.
Melissa:She did that.
Melissa:So eat the frog.
Melissa:Just remember that.
Melissa:Guys, listen to the episode.
Melissa:She says, eat the frog.
Melissa:It changed my life.
Melissa:And Jacob says it to me all the time.
Melissa:Now if I have like a day where there's a project I'm just not wanting to get to, he's like, just eat the frog.
Melissa:So.
Samantha:Oh, I definitely say that to more than I thought I would like.
Samantha:That was like the key thing and why it's titled that.
Melissa:Oh, guys, I didn't actually know that.
Melissa:We're just on the same page.
Melissa:Holy crap.
Melissa:Okay.
Samantha:All right, guys.
Samantha:Now shut up and listen to this perfectly put together episode.
Samantha:You're welcome.
Jill Wright:Skirts up.
Melissa:We are so excited to have with us today speaker and coach Jill Wright.
Melissa:She is the author of the book Happy, Healthy, Wealthy and Wise.
Melissa:She also is the producer and host of her own podcast, Growth Like a Mother.
Melissa:And so kind of excited to hear more about that.
Melissa:Of course.
Melissa:Yeah.
Samantha:Jill has some ways to help us identify our superpower and to help us understand how we can use it to have that healthy work life balance that we all desire to have.
Melissa:So welcome, Jill.
Melissa:Welcome.
Melissa:Thank you for being and taking the time to be with us.
Jill Wright:I'm so happy to be with you girls today.
Jill Wright:This is awesome.
Samantha:So tell us a little bit about yourself.
Samantha:Tell us about how your podcast and your book and your prototype in general became.
Melissa:Yeah.
Jill Wright:How, where did you start?
Melissa:How did it come to be it?
Jill Wright:Well, I think as with most businesses, it came.
Jill Wright:It came from a place of just needing the information.
Jill Wright:Myself, I'm a mom, and at the time of this, I was a mom of two when everything sort of started to fall apart.
Jill Wright:I'll say.
Jill Wright:I think a lot of us can experience those moments in early motherhood where we're just like, everything is hitting the fan.
Jill Wright:This is crazy.
Jill Wright:I was also trying to start start a retail business.
Jill Wright:I was leaving my full time job.
Jill Wright:I had just finished my second maternity leave and I was like, you know what?
Jill Wright:I don't want to go back to work.
Jill Wright:I want to work for myself.
Jill Wright:I want to be available to these kids a little bit more without the commute and blah, blah.
Jill Wright:So I thought, I'm going to open up a consignment store for women in my neighborhood.
Jill Wright:And the timing could not have been worse.
Jill Wright:It was the early days of the pandemic, as it turned out.
Jill Wright:So it was really challenging to get a retail store up and running.
Jill Wright:And I had one of my kids die diagnosed with autism during that same time period.
Jill Wright:And I was really suffering quite badly with postpartum depression and anxiety.
Jill Wright:So it was.
Jill Wright:It was just out of necessity of trying to keep it all together.
Jill Wright:And I started to, like, research different productivity tools and time management hacks and figure out how to do it all, because I really wanted to do it all well.
Jill Wright:And I realized that as a mom, as a working mom, the tools, although they seemed really great, were really difficult to implement in my real life.
Jill Wright:And so I started tweaking them to make them work for me.
Jill Wright:And I wanted to share what I was doing with other moms because I thought for sure I can't be the only one who, like, wants to do a whole bunch of things but can't figure it out.
Jill Wright:So that's where the Girl Like a Mother podcast started.
Melissa:Girl like a Mother.
Melissa:Okay, can you give us an example?
Melissa:Like, what were you finding?
Melissa:Like, okay, this is what they're saying we should do, but this just doesn't feel realistic.
Melissa:And then maybe you kind of, like, realized, okay, I can tweak this totally.
Jill Wright:My favorite example that I think everyone will resonate with is the morning routine.
Jill Wright:Because we hear all the successful professionals, they get up, they do their workout, they do their gratitude, they have their green juice.
Jill Wright:Like, they have a routine that helps set them up for the day, which feels incredible.
Jill Wright:And I can see the value in all of those things.
Jill Wright:But my kids woke up at 4:30 or 5am and I'm like, no way.
Jill Wright:Yeah, no way am I getting up at three to do this.
Jill Wright:Like, that's just not possible.
Jill Wright:And for a while, I felt really defeated.
Jill Wright:I thought, well, I just can't be successful if I can't have a morning routine because my kids are early.
Jill Wright:I'm.
Jill Wright:But.
Melissa:And that's what executives who are successful do.
Melissa:And it's like, yeah, okay.
Jill Wright:So I thought, well, wait a minute, maybe I can make a night routine instead.
Jill Wright:Maybe I can set myself up for success the night before.
Jill Wright:I can use that hour after my kids go to bed.
Jill Wright:I can do all the things that most people do in the morning.
Jill Wright:And then I fall asleep, and I wake up fully rested, having done all the things I wanted to do as part of my routine, and just start the day from there.
Jill Wright:And that was, I think, the moment that I realized, oh, we can just tweak it.
Jill Wright:We can still do this.
Jill Wright:We just need to Tweak it.
Melissa:I love that because, like, that makes sense.
Melissa:I love that because I feel like I'm going to start thinking of it that way.
Melissa:Oh, this is my night routine.
Melissa:Because I feel like there have been instances where I think, okay, I just going to do this tonight because I know I'm not going to want to get up and do it in the morning.
Melissa:But if I start like planning every day, like every future day, that way I could see that and just thinking like, this is just how I work.
Samantha:That's actually one of the stressors that was just put on me.
Samantha:So I relate.
Samantha:In the therapy that I'm doing, they were like, okay, so to help manage your symptoms and what's going on with your pts, PTSD and all the things anxiety.
Samantha:She's like, you need routine.
Samantha:So you need to have the same routine that you do every morning and every night so that no matter what happens in the day, you have that to fall back on.
Samantha:And you can at least say, well, at least this happened and this happened like as it's supposed to.
Samantha:And I'm like, what the fuck am I supposed to do?
Samantha:Because I.
Samantha:There's.
Samantha:I don't have time for that.
Samantha:Like, the kids are up so early.
Samantha:You never know what mood they're going to be in.
Samantha:You never know, like your whole day is adjusted by them.
Samantha:So that's just not feasible.
Samantha:So it's interesting to maybe think of, okay, maybe I don't have to have like a full routine in the morning and a full routine at night, but also the big kids go to school, so maybe an afternoon routine is maybe where I need to start thinking.
Jill Wright:Yeah, you could even have a lunchtime routine.
Jill Wright:It doesn't have to be any particular time of the day.
Jill Wright:Right.
Melissa:Okay.
Melissa:So that being said, do you think everybody functions better if they have a routine or do you think because, like, people are different.
Melissa:Right.
Melissa:And that kind of brings up your quiz that you have, actually.
Jill Wright:Yeah, no, that's such a good point.
Jill Wright:One of the things that I realized as I was doing so much learning and putting together all the tools was that some of them worked well for me and some didn't.
Jill Wright:But that didn't mean they were bad tools.
Jill Wright:They didn't work for me in the particular phase of life I was in.
Jill Wright:Or there was something about my personality, my circumstances, my preferences that didn't jive exactly with that thing.
Jill Wright:But I could think of someone that would work really well for.
Jill Wright:And so what I ended up doing was classifying all of the hundreds of tools that I'VE learned into four different categories.
Jill Wright:And I developed a quiz so that people can easily find out which archetype that they are in terms of how they manage their time best and then give them tools that are going to actually work for them.
Jill Wright:Because what happens is that we hear about something on a podcast or in a book, and we try it, and then if it doesn't work for us, we get defeated and we think it's us, and we're like, well, that's just more proof that I can't.
Jill Wright:Can't do it.
Jill Wright:Right.
Jill Wright:And that's not the case.
Jill Wright:It's just, you need the right tool.
Melissa:What are the.
Melissa:I want to know before you tell us so many questions.
Samantha:I know, sorry.
Samantha:Before you tell us the types that you have found and broke it down into.
Samantha:How did you develop that?
Samantha:Is it just through observation of, like, how you categorized these protocols, or is it actually something that was studying?
Melissa:That's a really good question, Sam.
Jill Wright:Thank you.
Jill Wright:It's a great question.
Jill Wright:And I don't have, like, a super solid answer because I almost feel like I intuited them.
Jill Wright:They almost felt like all of a sudden, there they were, and I knew that there was the four, and I could see different people in my life as one of these four.
Jill Wright:And I just started to experiment with it, and I just made a spreadsheet.
Jill Wright:I'm pretty systemized in the way that I do things.
Jill Wright:And so I added all of the tools under the.
Jill Wright:The archetype that I thought would match.
Jill Wright:And I did some testing, I did some research.
Jill Wright:I did some trial coaching runs with people after they had completed the quiz.
Jill Wright:And it all worked, and with a few tweaks here and there.
Jill Wright:And as I go, I continue to.
Jill Wright:To really hone it and perfect it as I get feedback from people.
Jill Wright:But it was.
Melissa:How long have you been doing this?
Melissa:Sorry.
Jill Wright:No, no.
Jill Wright:I would say probably I'm about eight or eight or nine months into having this framework.
Melissa:Okay.
Melissa:Okay.
Melissa:So it's still new, but you are learning a lot.
Jill Wright:Yeah.
Melissa:Oh, I'm impressed.
Melissa:Okay.
Samantha:All right.
Samantha:Well, I already did your quiz that is more geared towards the moms.
Samantha:And so I learned what my super strength is, and I am a high performer.
Jill Wright:You're a high performer?
Jill Wright:Exactly.
Jill Wright:As you mentioned, there's a quiz that's geared towards moms.
Jill Wright:And then I have the exact same quiz with slightly different questions and different names of archetypes, but the bones of it is the same, that's geared towards people who aren't moms.
Jill Wright:And I use that quiz a lot when I do corporate workshops and things like that.
Jill Wright:Because not everyone is a mom.
Jill Wright:And even though you're, let's say a non mom, but you're a working woman in the workforce, or you're a dad in the workforce or you're a stay at home dad, all of these types still relate to all people.
Jill Wright:So it's just how we talk about them.
Jill Wright:So, Sam, you got the high performer.
Jill Wright:And if we're talking about that same archetype, when I do the non mom version, it's called the energized achiever.
Jill Wright:And so this particular person is what I am as well.
Jill Wright:I nickname it lovingly the workaholic.
Jill Wright:Right.
Jill Wright:We are.
Melissa:Oh, maybe I am the hyper.
Jill Wright:Right.
Jill Wright:We're so.
Jill Wright:And we have so much we want to do and we can often suffer with guilt of being somewhere else in our mind.
Jill Wright:Even though we're present, maybe with our kids, we're at work in our mind and vice versa.
Jill Wright:Um, and so there's a lot of interesting things that come up with that.
Jill Wright:Like for example, I always joke that when I'm in my high performer role, it's me on the couch watching a movie with the kids, but like sneaking a peek at the, at the messages on my phone just to see what's going on at work and make sure that I'm all up to date.
Jill Wright:And once I run through them all, I can give you guys some really specific tips for each category of what is a good type of rest for you and maybe awesome tools.
Jill Wright:Yeah.
Melissa:Okay, really quick.
Melissa:Do you.
Melissa:I just would like to say I didn't realize that you had two quizzes or I couldn't find it this other quiz.
Melissa:And so we're going to have the link for you, for everybody out there who, whether you're a mom or not.
Melissa:So you can take the quiz.
Melissa:But I tried to take it as if I was a mother, which it's.
Samantha:Difficult, kind of tricky.
Melissa:And then I got the same response.
Melissa:That not response, but answer that Sam did where it said I'm a high performer.
Melissa:And I was like, this can't be right.
Melissa:So two things I had thought, maybe I am a high performer and I'm just a different type of personality and so I handle it different.
Melissa:I don't know.
Melissa:We can get into that.
Melissa:But also, you did offer to do the, the non mother quiz for us live for our audience with me.
Jill Wright:Yeah, I think that'd be super fun.
Jill Wright:And like I said, the questions are pretty similar, so you might end up with the same result.
Jill Wright:But think there's Two ways to do the quiz or two things to think about.
Jill Wright:I guess when you're doing the quiz, you can think about answering the questions from the work version of you and.
Jill Wright:Or you can think about answering the questions as the home version of you because you may have different styles in your different roles.
Jill Wright:So you may be a high performer at work, but at home, you might be the selfless giver, or you could be today the high performer.
Jill Wright:And then things change in your life in two years.
Jill Wright:Down the road, you take the quiz, but now you're the multifaceted mama.
Jill Wright:And all of a sudden, different tools are going to work for you.
Jill Wright:So it's seasonal based on where you're at now, not what happened before, not what you think might be going on, but where you're at today.
Jill Wright:And then just keep in mind if you prefer to answer the questions from work you or home you, and that will help guide you.
Melissa:Okay.
Samantha:This is not putting us into a box.
Samantha:We evolve.
Melissa:Yeah, I love that.
Jill Wright:Exactly.
Jill Wright:Okay, cool.
Jill Wright:So we're going to take the quiz.
Jill Wright:It's called the transform your time quiz.
Jill Wright:First question at a restaurant with your friends, you're the one who figures out the tip, tries something new on the menu.
Jill Wright:Make sure everyone gets the seat that they want or wants to know what everyone's ordering before you choose.
Samantha:I know what I would say for you.
Melissa:I know what you would say for me.
Melissa:I know everybody who goes out to eat with me would definitely say I need to know what everyone's ordering before I choose.
Jill Wright:Yes.
Melissa:That being said, I definitely am looking around and trying to make sure everyone's in the most comfortable space for them, sitting by who they want to sit by.
Melissa:And then like that at the end, when it's time to do the tip, we.
Melissa:I don't know.
Melissa:So I don't know which way to go for this.
Melissa:But because there's an outside version and an inside version of me, I'm going to go with the outside one that everyone sees anyway.
Jill Wright:Okay.
Melissa:Which is I have to know, what are you guys gonna get?
Jill Wright:Cool.
Jill Wright:Okay, we'll go with that one.
Jill Wright:And then we can always retake the quiz and see if a different answer resonates based on changing that answer at a later date.
Jill Wright:But we'll go with that because that was your first.
Melissa:Okay.
Jill Wright:Your first instinct.
Jill Wright:Okay.
Jill Wright:Second question.
Jill Wright:Your superpower is connecting all the dots, building connections between people, seeing all perspectives of a situation, or learning new things at lightning speed.
Jill Wright:Even as a kid, you remembered all of your friends birthdays, excelled at whatever you Put your mind to.
Jill Wright:Had fomo, fear of missing out or had fun doing the group activities.
Melissa:Okay, group activities.
Jill Wright:Excelling at whatever.
Jill Wright:Not that.
Jill Wright:Okay, explaining it.
Jill Wright:Whatever you put your mind to.
Melissa:I would say maybe that one, because I feel like I like to try lots of different things and I feel like I can do what I want to do.
Melissa:I just got to do it.
Jill Wright:Okay, perfect.
Jill Wright:Next question.
Jill Wright:Your biggest fear.
Jill Wright:Your biggest fear is not being able to protect your loved ones, not living life to the fullest, never discovering your true calling or stress induced burnout.
Melissa:Oh, that is tricky because the first one is what I want to say.
Melissa:But throughout the years, I've learned that I have to watch out for the stress induced burnout because it can happen.
Melissa:It's not a big fear for me anymore because I know some of the signs.
Melissa:So I guess I'll say the first one.
Jill Wright:Not being able to.
Melissa:I kind of know when to step back so I don't burn out.
Melissa:Yeah.
Melissa:Not being able to protect loved ones.
Jill Wright:Okay, two more questions.
Jill Wright:If there was a yearbook for adulthood, you'd be voted most likely to master the corporate landscape, travel the world, start a charity, or become an entrepreneur.
Jill Wright:Oh, gosh.
Samantha:Well, you are an entrepreneur.
Samantha:So I say I guess that one.
Melissa:Yeah, yeah.
Jill Wright:And then the last entrepreneur.
Jill Wright:The last question.
Jill Wright:In six months, you would love to achieve a major career milestone, receive a promotion, tackle a new project that excites you, or confidently step into a leadership role?
Melissa:I think I would have to say achieve a major career milestone.
Jill Wright:Okay.
Melissa:Which is kind of happening right now.
Melissa:A little anyway.
Samantha:In the midst of it.
Jill Wright:Yeah, yeah.
Jill Wright:So based on those answers, you actually did get placed in a different category.
Jill Wright:So the category that you're placed in is called the cooperative visionary, which on the super mom version is called the team player.
Jill Wright:And so I'll read you the little results, see if this resonates.
Jill Wright:So it says, congratulations, you're a cooperative visionary, which means that you have a knack for working in community with others.
Jill Wright:I wonder if you struggle with decision making or gasp, even procrastination.
Jill Wright:You're not alone.
Jill Wright:I totally.
Jill Wright:I totally know what it feels like.
Jill Wright:You likely have an incessant inner critic or nagging self doubt that emphasizes your fear of disappointing others, causing you to resist being the leader even in your own life.
Jill Wright:Others might think that you're unmotivated, but really just you're scared of getting things wrong and you wish you had a clear rulebook for work and life.
Samantha:That doesn't sound like you at all.
Samantha:I don't know who that Sounds like, oh, that's funny.
Melissa:I don't think the last part does sound like me, actually.
Samantha:Not necessarily the last part, but like, everything.
Melissa:Oh, my God.
Samantha:I was like, hello.
Melissa:So I'm wondering because you.
Melissa:This is kind of brings up my question from earlier.
Melissa:So can team players or modified or wait, wait, motivated.
Melissa:Wait, what are you again?
Melissa:High performer.
Melissa:Thanks.
Melissa:So Sam's a high performer.
Melissa:I'm a team player, so they say.
Melissa:So Jill says, actually, can you have, like, among each category or archetype, can you have, like, different personalities still handling the same archetype in a different way?
Melissa:So first, the reason I ask this now is because the last part of the description was saying, oh, you have a hard time being a leader.
Melissa:I would say that leading is not hard for me, but I definitely still have that nagging doubt and the self doubt.
Melissa:And so a lot of times I will kind of just step back and wait until I feel like, okay, somebody needs to, like, make a decision and then maybe I'll jump in, but I don't know.
Samantha:And I would lovingly say that you worry so much about hurting people's feelings on your team that you will back off until, like, and let them.
Samantha:You're likely to get stepped on until you're like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
Melissa:And then you take charge.
Melissa:Oh, interesting.
Melissa:Okay, that's fair.
Jill Wright:It's a good.
Melissa:Thank you for that outside assessment, my friend.
Jill Wright:It's always so interesting to see how others perceive us as well, because one of the questions that I ask when I'm coaching, one on one, is, what would others perceive you as on this quiz versus what did you get?
Jill Wright:But to answer your original question, yes, different personalities can certainly be in these different archetypes and experience them in different ways.
Jill Wright:It's just a bucket.
Jill Wright:And then from there we get really personal.
Jill Wright:I also love to bring in human design.
Jill Wright:If you know your human design, which is just based on your birthdate, like astrology is, and sometimes your human design will fit in really nicely with one of your archetypes, and sometimes it will complement it and we can dive even more deeply into tools that will work for you.
Melissa:Is human design the.
Melissa:I feel like I've heard someone talk about this before.
Melissa:Is that where kind of helps you find your life path and your calling?
Jill Wright:Yes.
Jill Wright:So it's actually.
Jill Wright:It's a framework that's pretty new.
Jill Wright:I think it was developed in the 70s or 80s and it's a combination of astrology of there's four different main types of things that have sort of merged together to do Your human design and it goes really deep.
Jill Wright:But essentially you can be one of five main energy types.
Jill Wright:And so I just look at it from high level like that of the five energy types, how do they relate to the super mom types and how can we use that information to support you through.
Jill Wright:Because it's energy management as much as it is time management, what I teach.
Melissa:Oh, thank you.
Samantha:Okay, so why don't you go ahead and tell us the subdivisions that you have in your quiz and a brief description of what they are and then.
Samantha:Yeah, let's talk about delving in.
Samantha:Yeah, let's get into it.
Melissa:How to personalize it maybe.
Jill Wright:Yeah, for sure.
Jill Wright:So the first one I talk about is that team player or the cooperative visionary.
Jill Wright:Right.
Jill Wright:Which we established.
Jill Wright:Melissa is that person I like to describe as somebody who is very community oriented.
Jill Wright:They like to work in a group and they care deeply that everyone is heard and seen.
Jill Wright:So much so that as Samantha, you were reflecting, you can often step back and defer to others.
Jill Wright:Even though you do have a lot of knowledge and value to bring to the table, you can sometimes be overlooked.
Jill Wright:Right.
Jill Wright:The real life situation that I often think about for these cooperative visionaries is the decision making function can be stressful.
Jill Wright:Right.
Jill Wright:So this could be someone who obsessively researches before making a decision.
Jill Wright:Like if you're getting a car.
Jill Wright:Right.
Melissa:Is me.
Melissa:I get made fun of one of my very dear friends, Melissa Walker, you all know her, she teases me because I love reading about everything before I try to get something.
Melissa:And I know that that can be lead to analysis paralysis.
Jill Wright:Mm.
Jill Wright:But that is just how you innately will function through life.
Jill Wright:That's how you best distill decisions.
Jill Wright:Because you want to have all the information, you really want to get it right.
Jill Wright:That's the other thing is you really, you want to get things right, you want to do it right.
Jill Wright:And so that can be really a growth edge, if you will.
Melissa:Yeah, it could.
Melissa:It could be a double edged sword.
Jill Wright:Yeah, it's a double edged sword.
Jill Wright:Absolutely.
Jill Wright:Absolutely.
Jill Wright:And so some of the things that I recommend for people with this archetype is doing things, for example for productivity, doing co working.
Jill Wright:So if you have, if you're working and you have a computer in front of you, you can find other people who can literally hop on zoom at the same time as you take five minutes and say what you're working on and then just mute each other, turn the video on or off, it doesn't matter.
Jill Wright:And work for a designated amount of time.
Jill Wright:And then you come back at the end.
Jill Wright:And you're like, hey, I accomplished this, or I.
Jill Wright:And.
Jill Wright:And you can be celebrated, but you can sort of be held accountable for the work that you're trying to do.
Melissa:You're like, it says, if you know me.
Melissa:That is crazy, because Sam literally just.
Samantha:Asked me, hey, when we're done with all of our tasks today, can I just sit in the corner with my earbuds in and you can pretend I'm not here, but then I'll feel like I'm being productive because you'll be holding me accountable.
Melissa:Well, like, yeah, because, like, I'm here.
Melissa:I've got all my stuff open, and it's not like it's closed.
Melissa:I'm transferring back to a different part of my life.
Melissa:Like, I can focus on this here and now.
Melissa:And so that is so interesting.
Melissa:Yeah, that's how Cool.
Melissa:Well, that's what works for me.
Melissa:Okay.
Jill Wright:So I'm glad that that is already something on your radar, because that's going to be really helpful.
Jill Wright:Another really cool thing for team players is figuring out how to prioritize your tasks.
Jill Wright:So there's a couple ways that I like to suggest to do that, but have you heard of the rocks, pebbles, and sand analogy?
Melissa:Yeah, like, do, like.
Melissa:I'm gonna guess that it's like, you fill a jar, you're gonna throw in the rocks and pebbles first, because sand can sip through around.
Melissa:So you're gonna do your biggest tasks first and try to, like, you can skip the smaller ones in later, but if you try to, like, exactly have the little ones first, you're gonna not have enough time to do.
Melissa:You won't be able to fit everything in the jar.
Melissa:You got it right.
Jill Wright:And my favorite way to describe this to people is called eat your frog.
Jill Wright:There is this old fable that says, if the first thing you do every morning is eat a live frog, nothing worse can happen to you for the rest of the day.
Jill Wright:And so if the first thing that you do every day is eat a live frog, nothing worse can happen to you for the rest of the day.
Jill Wright:So in I.
Jill Wright:In the late 80s and early 90s, a productivity consultant named Brian Tracy took this to heart, and he.
Jill Wright:He sort of made the frog the thing on your to do list that you most don't want to do.
Jill Wright:So he's like, eat your frog.
Jill Wright:Do the thing that you don't want to do first.
Jill Wright:Because what happens is that if you leave this frog on your desk, it's going to grow smellier and grosser throughout the day.
Jill Wright:You're going to Want to do it less and less.
Jill Wright:Right.
Jill Wright:And you're going to get busy doing a hundred other things that aren't important, but really they don't move the needle for you until you eat this frog.
Jill Wright:Whereas if you eat the frog first, you get energy from the protein of the frog.
Jill Wright:You get momentum for having done the thing, and it often will take you a lot less time and it will be a lot less painful than you think.
Jill Wright:So you have the rest of the day to get things done in a better mindset.
Jill Wright:So eat your frog.
Jill Wright:To me, do the hard thing first.
Jill Wright:Do the thing you want to procrastinate on first.
Jill Wright:Ah, I love that.
Samantha:I like that.
Jill Wright:Yeah.
Melissa:It's something I have learned about myself, actually.
Melissa:I've got.
Melissa:Because, like, if I leave it too long, it becomes like a huge mental block and I suddenly, like you said, it grows stinkier and it's more daunting.
Melissa:Yeah.
Melissa:Which is all.
Melissa:It's all in your mind, but cool.
Jill Wright:So I'll take you then to the next type, which is called the multifaceted mama or the passionate adventurer.
Jill Wright:So this is the type of person who might have squirrel brain.
Jill Wright:They're into a lot of things at once.
Jill Wright:They multitask and they get very easily distracted.
Jill Wright:But like, it.
Jill Wright:It works for them, the multitasking thing.
Jill Wright:Whereas for most other people, it's not something I would suggest.
Jill Wright:But multitasking is actually an okay thing if you're this particular archetype because your brain naturally wants to have a lot going on at once.
Jill Wright:You have many different interests and you want to.
Jill Wright:You want to do it all so you don't miss out.
Jill Wright:Right.
Jill Wright:A real life example would be.
Jill Wright:I feel like a lot of us can relate to this anyways, just with overwhelm happening in our brains.
Jill Wright:But the multifaceted mama is the one who calls her kids by different names all the time.
Jill Wright:Like she just can't quite figure out who's who.
Jill Wright:You know, she's too busy in her mind to really sit down and get it right.
Jill Wright:She's like, you there, Bob and Claire and I.
Jill Wright:Let's just.
Jill Wright:Let's go.
Samantha:Who I'm talking to.
Samantha:Let's go.
Melissa:I'm just going to share.
Melissa:We did a grounding exercise today.
Melissa:We were like, there's too many things going on.
Melissa:And Sam was like, I can't.
Samantha:My brain is skipping.
Samantha:And I died.
Samantha:We need to close all the tabs.
Samantha:And she goes, okay.
Melissa:So we took a break and we.
Samantha:Were like doing like this energy drop release exercise.
Samantha:And I was like, okay, I Think I at least close five tabs.
Samantha:All right, we're okay.
Jill Wright:Love it, love it.
Jill Wright:Um, one of the things about the high performer is you're probably gonna find that you have literally on your browser a million tabs open at any given time.
Jill Wright:It's the same with the multiple multi, passionate.
Jill Wright:Another really good thing to do is putting times on your to do list.
Jill Wright:So if you've got your to do list and beside each test, just write a dash and how long it's going to take, that can really help you structure your day.
Jill Wright:If your brain's kind of scattering because you're like, okay, I've got 20 minutes.
Jill Wright:Instead of wondering what you're going to do and wasting the 20 minutes, you can look at your to do list and find things that are less than 20 minutes and just knock it off.
Melissa:Right?
Melissa:Okay, okay, I'm liking this.
Jill Wright:Yeah, that's actually a really good one as well.
Jill Wright:For the cooperative visionary and the team player, if you struggle with I don't know what to do next.
Jill Wright:The third type is called the selfless giver.
Jill Wright:I also call that the relationship builder.
Jill Wright:Right.
Jill Wright:So this is the type of person who will almost martyr their.
Jill Wright:Martyr themselves in service of others.
Jill Wright:They care so deeply and they just want everyone to know how much they care, even to the point where it builds resentment because they don't feel that they're being recognized as they should be.
Jill Wright:Right.
Jill Wright:So in real life, this person is probably the one trying to fix everybody else, like out of love.
Jill Wright:But it's really annoying because they're the like almost the hoverers, right.
Jill Wright:And the ones who are always like, be careful, be safe.
Jill Wright:Right.
Jill Wright:Usually what I find with moms who, who categorize in this type is that their self care is non existent and they have no boundaries.
Jill Wright:Like they just give and give and give.
Jill Wright:And like when I teach my definition of burnout is the inequal exchange of energy out and energy in.
Jill Wright:And so when you're giving so much out and not getting enough back, of course you're going to burn out.
Jill Wright:Right?
Jill Wright:And that's really common for this type.
Samantha:So this sounds like how my husband and I talk to each other when we are a little feeling off.
Samantha:We talk about it as like the love cup.
Samantha:And we're like, all right, my cup is half full.
Samantha:So I feel like we need to balance it a little bit.
Melissa:The exchange, it's, it's interesting that she said that because I was actually writing down a note for myself to say that.
Melissa:It kind of reminds me of the energy Exchange in relationships is, is it's important to have an equal balance.
Melissa:But it sounds like you're saying we also need to remember that energy exchange within ourselves, in and out.
Jill Wright:Yeah, absolutely.
Jill Wright:Because we can, we can get depleted if our focus is always on other people a lot more easily.
Jill Wright:Some of the other types inherently will protect, protect their energy and protect their boundaries a little bit more than this selfless giver, relationship builder type.
Jill Wright:So for them, some of the tools that help them move through their day are things like time confetti.
Jill Wright:Time confetti is a really fun way of looking at the free time you have in your day when they come in pockets of like five minutes or ten minutes.
Jill Wright:Right.
Jill Wright:Feels like it could be wasted time throughout the day.
Jill Wright:But if you're intentional about using those moments to do something for you, then you can fill up your cup throughout the day so that as you continue giving, you're continue filling.
Jill Wright:But it doesn't have to be an hour of self care, it can just be, oh, I've got five minutes, perfect.
Jill Wright:I'm going to do some gratitude work.
Jill Wright:I'm going to grab a glass of water, I'm going to go for a walk, I'm going to call my friend.
Jill Wright:Whatever it is for you that fills you up, which is again beautiful.
Melissa:I do love your gratitude work in as something to do for yourself because.
Samantha:It does bring yourself positivity.
Melissa:Yeah, it does.
Melissa:That's beautiful.
Melissa:Okay, thank you.
Melissa:Yeah, it's really still interesting because I feel like in every single one of the tips you've given, I've kind of seen like, oh, I could use that too.
Melissa:Even though I'm not maybe that tight per se right now.
Melissa:But so this is, this is beautiful.
Jill Wright:And some of the tools, if they feel resonant for you, might need to be crafted just slightly in a way that works for you.
Jill Wright:Yeah.
Jill Wright:So this high performer, slot energized achiever is the last archetype and tools that work well for you because you are that workaholic.
Jill Wright:Maybe checking your laptop on vacation type of thing.
Jill Wright:Right.
Jill Wright:We talked about that.
Jill Wright:Frequent breaks, either that 40 to 45 minute mark or the pomodoro method.
Jill Wright:That's really good.
Jill Wright:Um, but one thing actually that's a bit counterintuitive to time management.
Jill Wright:It, it's this energy management.
Jill Wright:But it works so well is having affirmations that you speak aloud or write down that are based on your self worth, not being tied to your productivity.
Jill Wright:Because what happens is we find in this role like we want to keep going and keep Going, Keep going.
Jill Wright:Because we get our worth from what we produce.
Jill Wright:And so if you can shift in your mind subconsciously through affirmations or hypnosis or meditation, my worth is intrinsic, just as I am when I rest, I am still worthy.
Jill Wright:Right.
Jill Wright:Which brings me into.
Jill Wright:The next idea for.
Jill Wright:For high performers is reframing rest as a productivity tool.
Jill Wright:I have a framework that I.
Jill Wright:Depending on your human design type, I can recommend lots of different types of rest that differ between energy types.
Jill Wright:So I'd be curious to know.
Jill Wright:Send me a note later.
Jill Wright:Figure out your human design type.
Jill Wright:Just Google it.
Jill Wright:You can find it.
Jill Wright:And I can give you some ideas on the different types of rest that will work for you.
Jill Wright:Because some people need to rest through busy work.
Jill Wright:Sitting and meditating is not restful for them.
Jill Wright:They need to wash the dishes or be on a walk.
Jill Wright:Right.
Melissa:This morning, she could rest while she was washing dishes, and I was like, hell, no, I'm not doing dishes and telling myself it's a rest.
Melissa:That's just a trick.
Melissa:But if it's.
Melissa:If it works for her, that's what works.
Samantha:I feel like she talks to my therapist because literally, like, it's.
Melissa:You feel like Jill talked to your therapist?
Samantha:Yeah, I feel like Jill talked to my therapist because she says that I have to unlearn that my worth is tied to what I accomplish in the day.
Melissa:Yeah.
Samantha:Like, just because I didn't accomplish the 15 things on my list today doesn't mean that it was an unproductive.
Samantha:In that I failed for the day.
Samantha:Instead, you got to look at it as well, at least I did these three things and got the kids ready for school and cooked dinner.
Samantha:And she's like, even though those weren't on your list because it's an everyday thing, you still need to reframe the mind to be appreciative that you did those things because you did them and that you did three things.
Melissa:Yeah.
Melissa:And it's like, I know other people, too, and I feel like you kind of fall into this where it's like, almost like you said, you need to reframe your resting time, like, as something that's actually productive for you because it's going to help re.
Melissa:Energize you.
Melissa:It's like, I know people who feel like they need permission, like, someone to just tell them, yes, you should rest.
Melissa:You have to take care of yourself.
Jill Wright:Yeah.
Samantha:Simon will be like, all right, you need to go lay down in bed or you need to go have a quiet time.
Samantha:And I'm like, I don't have time for that.
Melissa:But this is a way to like.
Samantha:Go sit in quiet time.
Samantha:My brain's going, okay, so quiet time, I'm giving myself five minutes.
Samantha:And then during the five minutes I'm thinking, all right, so in five minutes I'm going to go and do this and then I'm going to do that and then I'm going to do this and then I'm going to do that and that's my five minutes of quiet time.
Jill Wright:Yeah.
Melissa:So you could literally like get your whatever you need while you're doing dishes.
Melissa:I just.
Melissa:That was, that blew my mind.
Jill Wright:Yeah.
Jill Wright:Yeah.
Jill Wright:And here's another one that would work probably for you, Samantha, and feel really supportive is when you're doing your to do lists.
Jill Wright:I'll give you two ways to do it.
Jill Wright:You could have a have to list and a hope to list.
Jill Wright:So your have tos are like your frog gotta get done today.
Jill Wright:Whereas.
Jill Wright:And, and so if you accomplish everything on the have to list, you're golden.
Jill Wright:But then you also have a hope to list.
Jill Wright:And your hope to list is things that you'd like to get done.
Jill Wright:But like don't beat yourself up if you don't.
Samantha:I like that type of thing.
Jill Wright:Categorizing it and separating those visually into different.
Melissa:Yeah, it's another way of like giving yourself permission to.
Samantha:Yeah.
Melissa:Celebrate the things that I did have to get done.
Melissa:Got done and I have value.
Melissa:Oh, nevermind, wait, they're not tied together.
Melissa:You have value regardless.
Jill Wright:But it's a nice transition while you're getting to the new mindset.
Jill Wright:Right.
Jill Wright:Another way to look at that tactic is high energy versus low energy lists.
Jill Wright:So I always create.
Jill Wright:I'm.
Jill Wright:I have a lot of fluctuation in my energy and most times I have low energy.
Jill Wright:But occasional get that day of like I can power through and do a hundred times the amount anyone else can do, but they're few and far between.
Jill Wright:So I have a low energy to do list for the following day where there's three things on it or one thing.
Jill Wright:And then I have a high energy list, which is more like my hope to list where if I have enough energy and things are flowing good, this is my to do list.
Jill Wright:But if not, if I'm having a low energy day, I'm maybe I slept crappy and the kids were up or I've got my period or I'm just, I'm not feeling it.
Jill Wright:Permission to only do low energy tasks.
Jill Wright:Like that is enough for really like.
Melissa:That because it kind of even makes me wonder if it will Help you eat the frog a little bit better, too, because you're telling yourself, like, this is something that I.
Melissa:Is hard for me to do, but if I don't get it done today, it's okay.
Jill Wright:Yep, totally.
Samantha:Well, I love all these categories and hearing all the tips, because, like Alyssa said, you can have a little bit of each.
Samantha:And like you said, Jill, tweaking it just a little bit can work for you.
Melissa:Yeah.
Melissa:That's awesome.
Samantha:I like that.
Samantha:Yeah.
Samantha:Can we circle back for a minute to what?
Samantha:So it sounds like what is intuitive to you?
Samantha:Because we're talking about human design.
Samantha:We're talking about how you intuitively came up with these ideas.
Samantha:What brought you to that?
Jill Wright:In the last few years, I've really been working on honing my intuition because it's something that, as a kid, was really strong, and I sort of grew out of it or just through our school system and through the way I was raised.
Jill Wright:It was not encouraged.
Jill Wright:Right.
Jill Wright:We were meant to learn things in a specific way and not question and learn it and move on.
Jill Wright:And so I kind of.
Jill Wright:I kind of lost that a little bit.
Jill Wright:And as I became a mom, I realized that I had to do things in a way that felt right for me.
Jill Wright:And I started to listen to my intuition because I got sucked into that trap of listening to all of the advice on the Internet, and it felt so overwhelming.
Jill Wright:I came to a point where I was like, no, I just.
Jill Wright:I can.
Jill Wright:The answer is here.
Jill Wright:The answer is within.
Jill Wright:Like, what is my heart, soul, spirit, whatever.
Jill Wright:What is my intuition saying?
Jill Wright:And I've done a lot of work on how I can open up that channel a little bit more and listen more clearly.
Jill Wright:And now I'm at a point where there's so many tools I use on a daily basis.
Jill Wright:I'm moving through my whole day solely based on intuition all the time.
Jill Wright:And there are things, like, different practices that I do.
Jill Wright:There's, like, numerology that comes into it.
Jill Wright:There's different body.
Jill Wright:Like, I use muscle testing a lot, which is a way of using your body to get the answer.
Jill Wright:So intuition's a really big part of.
Samantha:My life, really big time to that.
Samantha:And I just want to say that it's kind of funny that we keep attracting people who rely strongly on their intuition, because that's something that we've been particularly me, like, experience experimenting with and dabbling in.
Samantha:And it's working for me.
Samantha:And it's just so funny that a lot of our guests end up being intuitively led.
Samantha:And that was unintentional.
Melissa:Yeah, I kind of.
Melissa:It made me kind of think about how we've been talking about intuition a lot, every single one of our guests, and it kind of begs the question, do you feel like everybody has an intuitive part of themselves that they Ability.
Melissa:Yes.
Melissa:That they can tap into, or do you think maybe it's something that can be learned?
Jill Wright:It's definitely innate, I think, in all of us.
Jill Wright:And the reason that some of us are able to tune into it more strongly than others is practice.
Jill Wright:And the thing about intuition is I think of it as just the truth, your truth.
Jill Wright:And because we're in lives right now where there is so much noise around us, we tend to have our intuition drowned out.
Jill Wright:We need to intentionally get quiet to be able to hear it because it's the truth.
Jill Wright:It doesn't need to yell and scream to get your intention.
Jill Wright:It knows it's the truth.
Jill Wright:Right.
Jill Wright:So it doesn't need to compete.
Jill Wright:It's there, but we have to go in and listen to it.
Jill Wright:We have to intentionally quiet the noise in small spurts.
Jill Wright:Right.
Jill Wright:To start.
Jill Wright:You'll notice that when you're out for a walk in nature or when you're in the shower or right before bed, that's when you get your creative ideas.
Jill Wright:That's when you're like, oh, of course.
Jill Wright:Because you're quiet.
Samantha:Well, I know we're running short on time.
Samantha:The last thing that I want to talk about that you and I briefly spoke about when we did our little pre interview is habits.
Samantha:So how do you incorporate all of these things?
Samantha:Because, you know, thinking back, it feels like we were just talking about a lot of things to try and a lot of things to do.
Samantha:So how do we prioritize and structure our day and make it a healthy habit that is productive and a healthy work life balance?
Jill Wright:Yes.
Jill Wright:So the thing that I would recommend always is just choose one of the things that you heard in the podcast today and start there.
Jill Wright:Because with habits, consistency is key.
Jill Wright:That's the way that you develop a habit.
Jill Wright:Essentially, a habit becomes a subconscious action.
Jill Wright:So driving to work as a habit, you don't think about it.
Jill Wright:It's because it's gone from the conscious part of your brain to the subconscious part of your brain, and you just do it automatically.
Jill Wright:So you have to.
Jill Wright:That's how we rewire the brain, is through consistency.
Jill Wright:And so you cannot be consistent with a hundred things.
Jill Wright:You have to start small and you have to take one thing you want to change, whether it's adding in or removing from your life and be consistent about it.
Jill Wright:And have really low expectations.
Jill Wright:Like if you're wanting to add in movement to your day, like go put on your running shoes or step onto the yoga mat.
Jill Wright:Like so ridiculously easy that you're embarrassed if you don't do it right.
Jill Wright:There's just no excuse not to.
Jill Wright:And then you build slowly, like 1%.
Jill Wright:James Clear, who wrote Atomic Habits, talks about this and he's like 1% every day, 1% improvement.
Jill Wright:And it can change the trajectory of your life one percent at a time.
Jill Wright:But all of a sudden you're going down a completely different path before you know it.
Jill Wright:And it doesn't feel like work because it's such small increments.
Jill Wright:Jerry Seinfeld, when he's developing jokes, he, he practices every day and he has a big calendar and he'll put a red X on every day that goes by that he, he practices creating new jokes and he says it's okay to miss one day, but I never miss two in a row.
Jill Wright:And so taking the pressure off of being perfect, recognizing that life happens and we're all human and we don't get things perfect, that's just not part of the game.
Jill Wright:But focusing on consistency, because you can control the consistency.
Jill Wright:You can't always control how the day goes, but you can, you can make sure that with your ridiculously easy action, you don't miss more than one day in a row.
Melissa:That is so.
Samantha:It's so hard to choose what you're going to start with.
Melissa:I was, that's the one thing I did want to ask you before we started.
Melissa:I thought, okay, the thing that is the hardest for me is I'm a yes person.
Melissa:And so how are you supposed to prioritize now?
Melissa:I'm, I'm learning it's about priorities is what I guess I'm learning.
Melissa:But my question was going to be like, how do you time.
Melissa:How do you manage your time when you're saying yes to everything and you don't want to be a no person?
Melissa:But it sounds like it's about priorities and just putting it in level of importance.
Jill Wright:It's funny that you say that because my little nickname for your type is the yes Mom.
Jill Wright:You know, like we always know the yes man.
Jill Wright:It's like the yes mom.
Jill Wright:So I get that where I would recommend people start with prioritizing is their intuition and.
Jill Wright:Or if that feels foreign to you, writing things down that are values of yours and making like our little pieces of paper or post it notes and then arranging them in order so you can clearly move things up and down and you can see what's at the top of your priority or value list.
Jill Wright:And it can change from day to day if you need to change your tasks.
Jill Wright:But making sure that where you're spending your time actually reflects what you value.
Jill Wright:Because a lot of us will say, hey, I really value family.
Jill Wright:I value adventure.
Jill Wright:I value fun.
Jill Wright:And we've structured our days with no room for any of that.
Jill Wright:And so we're not.
Jill Wright:We're feeling misaligned because our life doesn't accurately reflect our values.
Jill Wright:We're not spending our time in a way that supports what we care about.
Jill Wright:So of course we feel like, ugh, this is crappy.
Jill Wright:I'm unhappy.
Jill Wright:Nothing is as I expected it to be.
Jill Wright:I felt like I'd be farther along.
Jill Wright:All those types of feelings.
Jill Wright:It's because we're not spending our time in the way that we want to.
Samantha:Again, you talk to my therapist.
Samantha:She'll.
Samantha:She, like, has me say all the things that I wish I could be doing and, like, incorporate.
Samantha:And then I have to give it a number on a scale of 1 to 10 on how time consuming it takes up in my brain to know what seems more important this week.
Samantha:And then that's what you focus on this week.
Samantha:And then like the next week or next month, you reevaluate.
Samantha:Okay, where is this ranked this month?
Samantha:Where is this ranked this month?
Samantha:And then you know how to adjust.
Melissa:I feel like I'm hearing two scales.
Melissa:And I know we're wrapping up here, but I am going to add.
Melissa:I feel like I'm hearing, like, a value scale, like a core value.
Melissa:Like my values.
Melissa:Like you said, family or.
Melissa:Or it's community or whatever it is.
Melissa:But then.
Melissa:And you can rate those values, but then in each value, like, you might have to move tasks around.
Melissa:Like, some of my tasks, where they.
Melissa:Are they taking up, like, maybe they're going to take up a lot of time, but it sounds like you kind of need to put that on the value scale, too.
Jill Wright:Absolutely.
Jill Wright:You nailed it.
Melissa:I like this.
Samantha:This has been really fun.
Melissa:Yeah.
Melissa:Jill, thank you so much.
Melissa:I feel like there's so much more that, you know, that we could probably delve into.
Samantha:There is.
Melissa:Yeah.
Melissa:Yeah.
Melissa:So definitely read her book, right?
Jill Wright:Totally.
Samantha:I will say follow her on Instagram.
Samantha:I have been following her on Instagram.
Samantha:What's your handle?
Jill Wright:Grow like a mother.
Samantha:I've been following her since we have connected.
Samantha:And I will say I enjoy seeing those little videos.
Samantha:And each time I listen to one, like, the one I listened to most recently was Jill was talking about if you're longing to connect with a friend that you haven't connected with in a long time, but you don't have time to really sit there and make that phone call and sit on the phone with them for 45 minutes.
Samantha:Minutes.
Samantha:Send them a little voice message of like, hey, I'm thinking about you.
Samantha:This is what's going on in my life.
Samantha:I would love to hear what's going on in your life.
Samantha:Send that voice memo.
Samantha:And then you feel like you connected with them even though you didn't have the actual time to have a 45 minute conversation with them.
Samantha:And I was like, I could do that.
Melissa:That's actually really cool.
Samantha:So I love the little snippets that she shares on her social media.
Melissa:She's like doable tasks or not tasks, but she makes your tasks sound doable.
Samantha:Yeah.
Melissa:Okay.
Melissa:I love it.
Melissa:So girl like a mother on Instagram also, that's the name of her podcast which I'm going to be listening to because I do some driving here and there and I love.
Melissa:I want to hear more about what you have to say.
Melissa:So.
Melissa:And then I guess if we any of us have time or like to read, definitely check out Happy, Healthy, Wealthy and Wise, which is Jill Wright's book.
Jill Wright:Thank you.
Jill Wright:And the book is even structured so that you can literally read one page a day.
Jill Wright:It's like a page a day calendar in book form.
Jill Wright:So it's really doable.
Jill Wright:Everything is tidbits, small bite sized pieces.
Melissa:Okay.
Melissa:Yeah.
Samantha:That's so fun.
Melissa:Thank you.
Samantha:Anything else we need to know?
Jill Wright:Well, thank you for having me on.
Samantha:I loved it so much.
Melissa:Me too.
Melissa:Is there, is there one anything that maybe you felt like we didn't get to say, like Sam was just saying that you want us to know.
Jill Wright:I think trust yourself is the thing that wants to be said.
Jill Wright:Trust yourself.
Jill Wright:Know that even though you have choices, you know, you know what's going to be the right thing, you know what's going to be the next best thing.
Jill Wright:And trust yourself that you can make the decision.
Jill Wright:And if it's the wrong decision for some reason, trust that you can change your mind.
Melissa:Thank you.
Samantha:That permission to change your mind.
Samantha:It's okay.
Jill Wright:It's a great way.
Samantha:Jill, we're going to be friends now.
Samantha:Just FYI.
Samantha:We're besties.
Melissa:Yeah.
Melissa:And Sam accomplishes what she sets out to do.
Jill Wright:I'm so happy to have met you, girl.
Samantha:And we met you too.
Samantha:I love it.
Melissa:Thank you, Jill.
Melissa:We really appreciate your time.
Jill Wright:It's my pleasure.
Melissa:If you liked what you heard today hit that, like, button or the subscribe button or whatever button it is that you have.
Samantha:Just hit it.
Samantha:To continue this conversation with us, join the Skirts up show on.
Samantha:What?
Samantha:What is it?
Melissa:Well, we have Facebook, we have YouTube and Pinterest.
Melissa:And no, we do not have a Pinterest, but we have Instagram.
Melissa:You knew what I meant.
Melissa:Rate and review.
Samantha:Rate and review.