Episode 203: Three Money Habits Grade School Should Have Taught You

Stop what you are doing as you plan to listen to this episode. Think back on your life recalling the places and activities you learned some of the most impactful lessons and life philosophies. In this episode, Lori and Jimmy share some of the their most powerful life lessons and where these impactful stories were discovered. You will be surprised!

Episode Keys:

  • How lessons can be learned in all areas of life and in any circumstance you may find yourself.
  • Why you must reflect on moments in life that give you empowerment through new philosophies to gain better understanding of the world.
  • When you are experiencing some of the most difficult periods of life, you will gain more understanding to guide your future.
  • Who you find for inspiration should be a example to you in creating your own experiences when faced with a similar situation in life.
  • How lifetime habits start from childhood and serve you well for decades!

Podcast Transcript

LF:
Good morning everyone, and welcome to your weekly motivation of positivity with Live a Life By Design. This morning, we are gonna kick it old school for those of you who might have… Well, maybe it’s not been a hot minute since you’ve been in some type of school, but Jimmy and I are gonna talk about old school, kicking it back to elementary school about what we might have learned about finances at a very young age. Good morning, Jimmy.

JW:
Good morning, Lori. Here at Live a Life By Design, we take it back to the days before this podcast even was an embryo. I mean, man, we’re taking it back, Lori, today to when I, and well – you weren’t even thought of at the time – but hey, I was a very young lad when I learned some valuable lessons that I have carried through to today in my professional career. Some philosophies – I didn’t know that’s what they were, I didn’t know they were lessons at the time, but Lori, you and I are gonna unwrap this package today.

LF:
And we’re gonna do it old school pencil-paper style, because for those of you that remember pencil paper as we do, it’s part of our old school throwback if you will.

JW:
Lori, number two, pencil, big Chief tablet. Remember those? Yes.

LF:
Big Chief tablets, they, they don’t even practice write handwriting anymore. My son’s handwriting is terrible.

JW:
Don’t wanna brag, man. I’m a product of the old big chief tablet. And back then, in this first grade, we actually had a number five pencil, if you remember, it’s a much bigger pencil than the number two we have today. So, yeah, so the little fingers could, I guess, grasp it and start that motor skill development or whatever we had. I do know they’ve made a very good weapon if you needed one.

LF:
I didn’t know that. Number five pencils.

JW:
Yeah. If a girl, for example, was bothering you, cuz back in the first grade, you didn’t really care for girls, so you whacked ’em with that number five pencil. It’s just like a small stick. So that’s the lesson I learned there. Well, Lori, I think you and our audience will be amazed and amused today by some of the lessons I gained in grade school that have been a resource for me, as I said, throughout life to this day.

LF:
So, to open the show today, we’re gonna segue to Jimmy about financial lessons that he learned or more importantly, should have learned in grade school. Jimmy, you ready?

JW:
I think I’m ready, Lori. But hey, live a life by design doesn’t discover those of us in our professions. Lori, I’m taking it back. Old school today.

LF:
Old school, pen and paper.

JW:
Big chief tablets, number two pencils.

LF:
Pencils. Not that, not pens. Pencils.

JW:
That’s it. That’s it. Yeah. You know, one of the greatest things about life is, is you learn at all phases of it. And so today, here on the show, Lori and I are going to venture way, way back, as he said, in Star Wars, in a land a long, long, long, long time ago, Lori.

LF:
Star Wars. Woo. Those are some high tech references this morning. I, I honestly that show still confuses me or movie. That franchise it’s hard to keep up.

JW:
Hey, may the force be with you this year, Lori.

LF:
Well, let me tell you, you talk about going back old school just for half a second. I will tell you one of the lessons that I did not learn in college. Oh, I financially in college, I was part of the generation that on every college campus, every beginning of school, every end of semester, there would be all these people set up outside on with tables or flyers. And they would try to attract you to come over to their table. They had things like water bottles and frisbees and free coupons for food. And all you have to do is fill out this piece of paper and sign your name and you know, you’ll get a free gift. And magically this card will appear in seven to 10 business days. And I thought, well, oh, okay. So I filled out all of those pieces of paper and got all the free gifts.

LF:
And then magically this thing comes in the mail called a credit card. No one told me that it had to be paid off every month. No one told me that it had a variable interest rate. And I just thought, oh, this is great. I can swipe it now and pay whenever I want. No one told me there were rules. So I learned a very hard, valuable lesson when those paper bills. Yeah, that’s how old school that is, back when you got a paper bill in the mail. And they were expecting you to pay them even if you didn’t have the money. And as a poor college student, I found myself in a predicament of having to take on extra jobs to be able to pay back all of that fun, play money. So financial lesson learned. I do now believe that it’s probably against the law or against the rules to target college kids on campuses like that.

LF:
But I fell victim to probably one of the biggest financial scams ever because we just didn’t know any better. My parents always taught me about saving and checking accounts back when we wrote paper checks, but no one talked to me about credit cards because my parents didn’t have them. And I now know why, because they are, you know, make people irresponsible. So I’ve learned a very, very valuable lesson as an adult that if you use a credit card, you’ve gotta be smart. You’ve gotta pay it off, and you’ve gotta know what that interest rate is. So that’s probably one of the biggest financial lessons I learned right off the bat, the hard way.

JW:
And since Lori’s only 29 folks, she was only about seven, eight years ago when that happened. So she’s still carrying that with her. But her parents, as you could tell by the conversation, was trying to protect her from the CD underbelly of unsecured credit, so.

LF:
Yes, financial lesson learned. I mean, I didn’t learn, like I said, I didn’t learn that in elementary school. I learned that in college. But I, I certainly hope that there are other people that didn’t make that same mistake that I did because I think I, I just was so naive. I was 19 years old. I was, you know, handling my own finances. I was super proud of myself that I was, you know, out making it on my own in the world. And that first phone call home where I had to explain, I don’t have any money to pay for this, and they keep saying that they’re gonna charge me more if I don’t pay it by this date. It was kind of scary.

JW:
You know, you’re absolutely right. And that’s a lesson though that stayed with you, right? Yes. So this is the point I think we’re trying to make today on our show, is that there are lessons in life philosophies gained at all aspects and ages of life. And so today, Lori, I think our audience, and probably you will be amazed and amused by some of the lessons I gained in grade school and that have been a resource for me throughout my life.

LF:
Do tell.

JW:
So let’s take you back. First lesson I learned this is one that that I’m not real proud of, but it was paramount to my philosophy of life as an adult. The lesson is simple, yet complex in its nature. Now, if you can imagine that back in the early seventies, all right, stay with me here. I’m taking you back to where TV just barely became color, right? Ooh. But my best friend Steven still one of my best friends today, great, great guy, wonderful man. Offered me an opportunity to eat breakfast at school one day. Now that in itself didn’t seem too shocking. I mean, they just started this new program called Breakfast at at school. So they didn’t have that until first grade. Now here’s what happened though. When I saw all that wonderful food being served, Stephen’s job on selling me to eat breakfast was pretty low.

JW:
I mean, I’m talking like, you know, in a candy store and you see a kid holding a 20, I mean, you’re gonna sell some candy, right? And so I told Steven I didn’t have enough money for my, from my parents to eat breakfast and lunch cuz mom gave us enough money to get lunch, right? And, and Steven made a comment though that just piqued my interest, Lori, he said the magic words that a lot of us, and you thought when you were in college, he said, there is no cost, it’s free. You simply print your name in this book. Lori, you printed your name on a little application. It was free, right? And probably got something free. A t-shirt, sweatshirt, yes. Pizza something, right? Yeah. So can you imagine a seven year old, oh, a second grader seeing hot biscuits, gravy, scrambled eggs, pancakes, chocolate milk, everything I love lined up in the cafeteria. And all I had to do, Lori was print my name.

LF:
Sign me up.

JW:
You bet. Well, this one quote had Jimmy written all over it. For full disclosure though, my mother had fed me as she did every morning before she sent us children to school. Okay. But what you don’t know, Lori, or you may cuz you have a teenage son now, but a growing young boy can always eat more food than what he is given at home. All right? I could eat all day. Okay? Yes. So I ate breakfast for more than a month at school when I was confronted at home after school one day by a very upset mother. And this Lori is where the lesson was truly learned. It wasn’t learned in printing my name and consuming it was learned. When I got home, my mother asked, have you been eating breakfast at school? I replied with a big smile on my face, feeling so satisfied that, oh, I’ve done something great and she’s recognizing me, right?

JW:
I’m the youngest of six. I replied, yes, Steven told me, all you have to do is print your name in this book and you get to eat all the food you want. And being proud of myself was an understatement, Lori, that I had learned this new skill. My mother’s face relaxed a little as she explained to me that Steven’s mother, a single parent of three school-aged children qualified for the free breakfast. But let, we did not. She then showed me a piece of paper with numbers on it. I didn’t quite understand what it was. But in today’s world, I will tell you, Lori, it’s called an invoice. Somebody’s wanting some money from somebody. I didn’t understand it until she pointed out the amount of money we owed the school. And I said, ouch. The total was like, don’t laugh, Lori. This was 1972. $9.

LF:
Oh $9. Well, in 1972, that was a lot of money.

JW:
Quite a bit of money. Gasoline was about, I don’t know, 60, 75 cents a gallon then. So, you know, pretty, so those were 1970 $2. So it was quite a bit of money for the time. She continued to inform me that there are no free lunches in life. Someone is paying for them. That was a sobering moment for me. And I couldn’t look at school biscuits and gravy in the same way. Again. It was just earth shattering.

LF:
Oh, yeah. And still till this day, every time you probably eat tho eat biscuits at gravy, you think about that time flashback to your childhood. It’s funny that things that we carry with us, whether it’s financial, whether it’s personal, whether it’s funny, you know, we all have those stories that just you’ll never forget. And I’m sure that your mother never invited Steven over after that.

JW:
It’s a humorous story to this day. She always brags about her, her youngest son that’s into finance and has all these advanced degrees. But back then didn’t realize that you had to pay for something like breakfast at school, you know, kind of thing. But Lori, tell me something you learned in life, maybe even on top of the college years, but if it’s in grade school, be great. What did you learn about life?

LF:
You know, going back to grade school I grew up in a very small community and absolutely loved. We, everybody knew everybody. And you know, your classmates were your classmates from the time you started until the time you graduated. But I’ll never forget, in third grade, we had a teacher and she was trying to teach us about money, the value of money the different, you know, bills and coins and who was on what bill and who was on what coin. I mean, you, you don’t, I mean, now we take that for granted because kids don’t know. I mean, they’ll tell you they know what a Benjamin is because it’s a hundred dollars bill. But I mean, back when I was in grade school, we learned about the nickel in the quarter and the significance of each person and what you know, contribution they had made to be able to be on a, a piece of money. And so we were designing our own tree. And stay with me here cuz I, I know.

JW:
From money to tree, but it does come from paper trees.

LF:
Yes, and so we were talking about the old adage about how money doesn’t grow on trees.

JW:
I love that.

LF:
She, she taught us, you know, we draw a tree and with the branches and the solid roots, the, you know, solid financial roots are in the ground. And those are the things that you learn as a child. And you learn about how to earn money and how to save money. And then as the branches grow, you grow, you know, up and you get older and you learn things and, and those are your branches out into life and different experiences. And then, you know, the leaves are the money and that’s, you know, they’re green and they come from paper. And then as they grow and you work hard and you save and you invest in your education and you grow smarter and you have skills, the more money you can make. And then when you make poor financial decisions, or you owe money because you have to take care of utilities and taxes and fees and different things and mortgages, then those leaves fall off.

LF:
So I will never forget that lesson. As simple as it is, I think it was a visual lesson for third graders. It certainly was impactful for me. You know, I learned that, you know, money doesn’t grow on trees, but you know, it sure seems to disappear in the wind sometimes. So whenever I look at trees, that’s what kind of what I, I see, I see a, a financial placeholder or marker or metaphor, if you will. And so that’s, that’s my elementary version of how I learned about the importance of money. Cuz money doesn’t grow on trees, but it can kind of look like one.

JW:
I’ve got a few questions about that. That’s an interesting story. Lori.

JW:
So I must ask where you were going to school, is this where the term, if money came from trees, is this where the term hopefully affectionately called tree huggers came from? Or are those the people on the other side conserving trees? Yeah, so I love, I love trees. I love money. If I hug a tree, is that the same thing as loving money? I mean, I don’t know.

LF:
Well, it could cause that tree eventually becomes the paper that that money is printed on. So maybe.

JW:
Okay, I got a little story to addendum that, if you don’t mind, Lori. I was with the, our older daughter’s eighth grade class. My wife and I helped chaperone the kids at private school, so they needed chaperone. So we were helping chaperone them at Washington DC for their eighth grade class trip. I had more fun than the kids. I think, you know, I’m a big history nut as we’ve established on this podcast many times. We’re at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. Do you know what goes on there?

LF:
Yes, yes.

JW:
Yes. They make money, Lori. Money. Yes. Now I was the first, and I, as far as I know, the last person, I think I hold the record there of having to be dragged out of where the money is inspected. I mean, I just stuck my nose on this big pallet, not a box, a pallet that you see stacking for commercial goods of hundred dollars bills. Wow. And I’m just sitting there and my eyes rolled back in my head with great euphoria and my wife, my wife said, quick, somebody get some water. He’s going under anyway. Had throw water in my face, cool me off and get me outta there. I’m telling you I had to get some fresh air because the smell of that ink, it was just like an aroma of perfume to me. And I, so what I did is I, my wife did something for me first she got me about $800 in, in those bills, but she didn’t tell me how she got the form of those and what they are. They’re irregular bills that they shred and they put ’em in a bag and they sell ’em to you. So I’ve got $800 in shredded money to this day, by the way. And I showed it to my daughters of what they were doing to me when they were first in college. Look at what you’re doing to my checking account. You’re, no, I’m just kidding.

LF:
See, but it’s a good visual representation.

JW:
Yes. Going back to your paper, ain’t you? Right? I love it.

LF:
Yeah, absolutely. So what’s another lesson you learned?

JW:
But the third lesson here, to be very honest with you, one of the best I learned I learned this one when I was about 11 years of age around the fifth grade. And I became an entrepreneur. That’s the life lesson I learned then. And I learned, well, you know, so, so at 11 it’s hard to get jobs that are really, you know, gonna be beneficial for you unless you create your own. A lot of my friends were lawn mowing, but that limited you only to the summers. You know, some of them might have been raking leaves that only limited you to the fall, right? And so what I did, I became an entrepreneur. I said our, you know, our family never missed a meal. But at age 11 I decided I wanted to do something for myself that I could call my money.

JW:
You know, so, so parents had the family money, but if you wanted quote your money to blow on, you know, baseball cards, cuz back then that was a big deal for me. A comic books or you wanna do anything with your boy scout troop, that was a special thing besides your uniform and all this stuff, right? So I read about an opportunity and decided it’d be a great one for me. So I talked to my mom, mom and dad, and I said, Hey, I really wanna do this. And they said, here’s the responsibilities. Here’s what it’s gonna take. You have to get up earlier, blah, blah, blah, you know, this kind of stuff. And and I researched my market. Now I know you’re gonna say 11 year old researched the market. Now I didn’t know that’s what I was doing, but at the age of 11, nonetheless, I researched the market before I jumped into this venture.

JW:
And in my small community of about 300 people, don’t laugh. That was our community. It was not big at all. There was no one offering this service. So I thought, man, I’ll corner the market as I knew later in life. That’s not what I knew at age 11. And this sounded pretty promising. I mean, I had all the equipment I had a bicycle my mother, my mother had had sewn me a a bag the, the paperboys called it paper bag. So you put all your rolled up papers in it so you could carry it like a sling, okay? And then you could throw from it. And and the rubber bands that my parents helped me buy the first first batch. And so yes, I became, and I hate to laugh, but going back to my Spider-Man comic book days and my daredevil comic book days, I was the kingpin of Cameron on the newspaper.

LF:
Oh, Kingpin of Cameron. That is a wow.

JW:
Yeah, that sounds pretty –

LF:
That’s important!

JW:
A lot more lillustrious than it was. But anyway…

JW:
I began throwing grit newspapers. Each week is a weekly publication. And I thought, wow, you know, this is once a week I can get this done. And so my goal was to throw 100 newspapers a week, Lori, because if I threw a hundred a week, don’t laugh. That gave me $5 for the week. Now I told you that 11, that’s 1970. I was 11 years old. So I was born 65. That’s 19, you know, 76 year. So five bucks is five bucks to a kid. Yeah.

LF:
$5 is paying off that 1972 breakfast debt.

JW:
You got that right. It took me two months. But anyway, two months. But you, yeah, but you know, the first week I only sold 10 newspapers. So keep in mind, brand new route. I had to go get my sales and my distribution together and I had to get this thing set up where I could automate it a little bit. So the second week I sold 25 newspapers. Remember my goals a hundred. I had to get to that $5 a week thing, right? Well I’ll never forget how many miles I pedaled that single speed bicycle. This wasn’t a 10 speed cuz I was wanting a 10 speed. That’s why I was working. Okay? And you’re gonna laugh. So I finally hit my mark of getting the money and I actually grew from the a hundred papers a week to up to a $10 paycheck for a week.

LF:
Wow. That’s a lot of papers.

JW:
Now, Lori, don’t wanna brag, but that buys you a lot of what they call back then, RC Cola and Moon Pies at the, at the gas station.

LF:
Yes, Moon Pies!

JW:
And, and so, so then what I thought was, you know, I talked to my dad, I had this money I’d saved up now. And it was so funny. He said, well hey, you know, what are you gonna be doing this? What are you gonna do when summer’s over? You’re gonna have to ride that bike in the winter? And I said, yeah, you know, I’ll just get a coat and I’ll do what I need to do to stay warm. So I could just keep up wearing, you know, keep up my route wearing a big coat, gloves, hat, and do my things I should do. But to expand in the spring, this is where entrepreneurism taught me something. If I can do newspapers, you’re meeting people, why couldn’t you sell them something else? And Lori, what is it people wanna buy in the spring? In the spring, in the spring, primarily, what do people want to buy?

JW:
The sun shining grass is becoming green flowers. Flower seeds. Yeah. So Isaac looked up some more that happened to be an ad in those grit newspapers that I could sell flower seeds. Now while I’m there selling you the newspaper and collecting my money, wouldn’t you be interested in some pansies or some whatever that I’m selling? And they had all say, well of course, you know, it’s spring. And so I got into selling two lines of products instead of just the one so I could diversify a little bit of my interest for revenue. And so now I’m selling these two lines of products, making more money since I could sell seeds all week long instead of only on a weekly paper route. So I went to these people and I went to more people. So I got about time to be in the boy that you didn’t want to talk to, because he would sell you something, right?

LF:
He would sell you something. You’re the salesman.

JW:
But lemme tell you the reason for all this entrepreneurism to me has been the lifeline and been the freedom for me to do what I wanna do when I wanna do it with whom I wish to do it and how I wish to do it. That is what I call living successfully. And I did that in this year of you know, 1976, I actually went over with my dad. He drove us over to the nearest community that was large enough to have one Poteau, Oklahoma, where I was born eight miles away. And there was a friend of my dad’s that owned an Otasco store. Now, back in the day, let’s think about Montgomery Ward or think about pre-war. These are stores that had all kinds of hardware, bicycles, chainsaws, everything, clothing, whatever you want. And I went into this Otasco store owned by a gentleman named Mr. Bill Barber. And Mr. Barber was, boy what I considered one of the wealthiest people I knew back at the time. And Mr. Barber had some new Schwinn 10 speeds in blue. The one I wanted, it screamed out to me, Lori, but it was $100 for this bike. Ooh, I’d saved up about half .now don’t laugh at age 11, 50 bucks was a lot of money for a kid. Back in that day, I went in and I told Mr. Barber, because my dad’s standing behind me. I said, Mr. Barber, I said, I wanna buy that bicycle and I have $50. And he went over there and he looked at the price and he brought to take it over to me. And he said, now son, he said, that says a hundred dollars, you understand that? And I said, yes, sir. He goes, you don’t have a hundred dollars, you have $50. And I said, yes sir. He taught me something in that instant, Lori, that just like your credit card issue would help me in life to understand how to use credit. He said, what I’m going to do is give you that bicycle today for $50. And I said Yes. And he said, Nope, nope. Just a minute. You’re gonna, you’re gonna print your name here and your dad’s gonna sign underneath it on this little thing called a note. You’re going to have to make payments on this bicycle. And he said, if you miss a payment now, I’m going to to come looking for you. Cuz I want you to make your payments on time. And if you can’t make it on time because something’s happening there better not be many of those. You better have you or your parents call me. Now, I didn’t realize at the time, but he’s over there telling my dad, shaking his hand, yep, teach this boy, teach this about credit. This is how this works. Yes. And did you know that’s how I paid for my first bicycle? Is that crazy?

LF:
Through credit.

JW:
Through credit. Never missed a payment.

LF:
The elusive thing that you didn’t even know that you were doing at the time.

JW:
Thought I was getting a $50 bicycle that cost a hundred, but that wasn’t what I was doing.

LF:
You were so industrious as an elementary school student, I not, not even close. I don’t know that I ever had a job before I was 16. I mean, other than to go to school and have, you know, do well in school and have good grades. So, I mean, goodness, Jimmy, that’s, that’s quite a feat. And now I, it makes a whole lot more sense as to why you’re in financial planning for a living. I mean, you’ve been doing it since you were itty bitty tiny. I mean, that’s a lot. Most 11 year olds now, they wouldn’t even think about having, you know, not one, but two, you know. Well, and now they don’t call ’em jobs, they call them oh, what’s the fancy word? The side hustle.

JW:
Oh yes, the hustle. Yes.

LF:
Yeah, they call ’em a side hustle.

JW:
Know, and it was a different time though, Lori, I don’t know that I’d allowed my children at age 11. And we’re in a much larger community now, you know, 20,000 people. I, I wouldn’t, I don’t know that I would let them ride their bicycle around not knowing the neighborhood. Perhaps they’re going, I i, it’s just a different time. But my point here to be made is, is find something that your unique ability allows you to perform almost effortlessly. I love to talk with people. I love to ride my bike. I put the two together. I’m making 10 bucks a week. Come on. Who’s not getting rich on that? Right? At the, you know, age of 11. But it, it’s, it’s so funny. You know, it sounds really silly at this point, but that was a foundational moment in my life, Lori, that told me right then I’m gonna be entrepreneurial. I just love the fact I can control most of my destiny, if not all of it.

LF:
And I think that’s so important to remember is that even, you know, life lessons that you learn, like I said earlier, when you learn them young, you don’t really remember most of them. But there are those little nuggets that you think about when you’re an adult. You’re like, yeah, I remember that. And you don’t realize it, but you’ve been implementing it in your adult life this entire time. So let’s just do a brief recap about our three lessons. First, Jimmy, this is for you. There are no free lunches in life.

JW:
Heard you found that one out the hard way, Lori.

LF:
Hard way. The second is, money doesn’t grow on trees, but tree trees can be great metaphors for the representation of money. Love that. Courtesy, courtesy of myself and that entrepreneurialism is the pathway to greatness, no matter the age of, no matter the age that you are in your life. So all these that were learned at a young age and that we’ve continued to evolve into what is today multimillion dollar operations for people. These are, you know, companies that have started off of, off an idea, off of something that someone else learned when they were younger. You never sell yourself short and always know that you’re capable of doing something, even if you don’t think you are. You’ve gotta be able to take that risk. And I myself am not a risk taker. However, I have found that as I have gotten older in life, I am willing to put myself out out there just a little bit more.

JW:
Let me give some perspective, lemme give you some perspective just to don’t, don’t stick your head too far outside the box. You know, when you think outside the box, Lori, Lori pushes right to the edge, folks, I’m tell you, she’s a edge runner on the box. But think about this guys, think about what did Amazon, the Amazon we know today where you can buy thousands and thousands if not millions of products by a click of the button of the mouse actually started out doing, he started out doing what? Selling shoes.

LF:
Shoes. Yeah. Yeah. Amazing.

JW:
Think about that. He, he’s selling shoes, Lori. That’s it. And he sold them at the back of his car and then he decided he’d put up shoes online and then all of a sudden he’s like, well, if I can do shoes, I can do socks, I can do books, I can, you see where I’m going? I love the thought process. He’s like, you lord. He was thinking outside the box by pushing his ear up against that certain wall and go-

LF:
Don’t, don’t go! Don’t go!

LF:
So to our audience and our listeners, what financial lessons have you learned from grade school? Maybe middle school, maybe high school, maybe college. Go to our Live a Life by Design community page on Facebook and join us today and tell us what lessons that you’ve learned that someone else could benefit from knowing. We’ll be offering exclusive tools and other helpful items through the Facebook page to our members. So go and give us a like and a follow and make sure that you’re not missing out on any of this fun stuff that we’ve talked about today.

JW:
Yeah, Lori, I’m excited. So we are working on ramping up some of the great stuff we can put on that Facebook page. And, and just thank you to everyone for listening to our podcast. Lori and I do this because we believe in making an impact in the lives of others. You know, our world is gonna be so much better, Lori, when we continue to do positively powerful messages, it eventually gets through to the mind, and the mind then puts the body into action. So from all of us here at Live Life by Design, thank you for watching us this week-

LF:
And join us next week as we tackle some of life’s biggest challenges here on Live a Life By Design.

Let Us Hear From You

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Related Blogs

See More