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Love Your Life as a Performer
For actors, singers, and dancers who want to love themselves and their lives WAY more.
Broadway performer & life coach Kelli Youngman empowers high-achieving creatives all over the world. Through Kelli Youngman Wellness, she combines emotional intelligence, mindset mastery, and coaching to help actors, dancers, and visionaries achieve success—from Tony Awards to personal fulfillment.
Visit kelliyoungmanwellness.com to learn more about Coaching with Kelli.
Love Your Life as a Performer
Ep 38: Creating Big Shit with Madison Sorrentino
In this episode, I'm sharing a juicy conversation with my friend, client, fellow actor, coach, and writer, Madison Sorrentino, and we really do a deep dive into the major breakthroughs in her transformation into stepping into having anything and everything that she wants in this life. And I am telling you, she is claiming big shit, and she's bringing that into the next round of The Paradigm. So listen up, get ready to take notes and enjoy this magical conversation. You ready? Let's do it.
For a full transcript, go to podcast.kelliyoungmanwellness.com.
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In this episode, I'm sharing a juicy conversation with my friend, client, fellow actor, coach, and writer, Madison Sorrentino, and we really do a deep dive into the major breakthroughs in her transformation into. Stepping into having anything and everything that she wants in this life. And I am telling you, she is claiming big shit, and she's bringing that into the next round of the paradigm. So listen up, get ready to take notes and enjoy this magical conversation. You ready? Let's do it.
Hello, and welcome back to episode 38 of The Love Your Life as a Performer Podcast. I am so fucking excited because I have my friend, client, I'm gonna let her introduce herself because I know that all of my clients know how to stand in their fucking power, but I'm so excited to share Madison Sorrentino with you guys today. Welcome to the podcast, Madison.
Thank you so much, Kelli. I'm so freaking excited to be here.
Okay, so tell everyone just a little bit about yourself before we jump in.
Okay. So I'm Madison. Hello everyone. Before performing Universe, I'm Madison Sorrentino. I am an actor. I'm a writer. I'm a brand coach, and I am a client and friend of Kelli, and we've been coaching together for, we coached together for over a year and a half, right? Yeah. So deep into the work of embodying who you wanna be and letting that kind of unfold into what gets created. So yeah. Yes, that's, yes.
We were literally just talking about this before we kind of came onto the recording of this whole podcast of like, every time we get together, we just have magical conversations and they're the kind of conversations that we wish we could let other people in on. So I thought it would be so fun to share a little bit of Madison's journey with this work, but also just to let it unfold and see what comes out. Because literally it's just always super impactful and eye-opening and all of it. Yeah. Oh, also I'll share, the Madison's gonna be in the next round of The Paradigm. Yes, I am. It's super exciting because I feel like new things are being born too, but maybe just give everyone a little baby, I don't know, snippet of what it looked like to be an actor. Mm-hmm. Before we started working together.
Okay, sure.
I know it's always so funny cause I feel like when we try to go back to those places, sometimes it's hard to access once you've been doing this work for a little bit.
It is a little bit, yeah. So I will say before we started working together, so we started working together, uh, in. In the midst of the pandemic, right? So we started coaching together in early 2021. And that had been sort of a year of me stepping into my entrepreneurial shoes. I was like a baby entrepreneur, baby business owner. And I think in my mindset at the time, I was, um, debating whether or not being an actor was still part of my identity and what I wanted to do. There was the desire there, but I think the desire was tamped down by all of these thoughts of, it's not possible for me. If it was going to happen, it would've happened already. Like this whole narrative of it's too hard. Do I wanna keep doing this to myself? Feeling like a victim of my choice and my desire to be an actor. Right? Mm-hmm. Wishing like, oh, I wish I didn't desire to be an actor. Right. Was kind of the story. And I think I felt at the time, like opportunity happened to me and that opportunities happened to me so few and far between that I didn't know how to generate them. I didn't think that was even a possibility. And I was, I was in a mentality of like waiting around and feeling sick of waiting around. I gosh, think is a good way of, so good think capturing what it was like at the time.
Yes, and honestly, I mean, we were also just talking about this a little bit before we started recording, but it's like that waiting feeling can show up in so many ways, right? Like not only in our careers, but it's like waiting on opportunities, waiting for permission, waiting for someone to say go. It can be really sneaky and I feel like I also have recognized in myself in the last few months being in a little bit of like a waiting. Like it really can be so subtle and then when you realize it, you're like, oh fuck. Yeah, there's nothing, there's nothing here telling me to wait. It's actually like all being created by me. Yeah. Um, and I feel like, just for a little backstory too, Madison and I met because we were both working on our businesses at the time. Mm-hmm. We met in a program where we were sort of in an accountability pod. And I mean, I had so much love and respect for you as an entrepreneur. Cause I was like, look at Madison. She's freaking doing the thing. And so I think you're also the perfect person to speak to, what does it look like to run a business, to be in your career, to have a thriving personal life and like really, like you're such a fucking example of being in the experience of having it all.
Thank you. Thank you so much.
That is also like, I think something that comes up a lot when you know performers are looking to create more financial abundance, more stability. There's like this push and pull of like, Well, if I'm not all in on my acting career, I'm not in it. Like it's, it was gonna happen. It was gonna happen and I'm not in it. I can't live like this any longer. Mm-hmm. So I have to like go move on to the next part because I can't wait to like be happy in my life. But then also feeling like, almost like guilt when you are like, creating your business and, and maybe it's not a business, but like maybe you're teaching voice lessons or coaching or whatever, right? Yeah. Like finding another revenue stream that feels really delicious and amplifies who you are as an actor, singer, or dancer as a performer, rather than feeling like it's taking you away from your career. Right.
Absolutely. I, so, I so resonate with that. I think there's this like super unhelpful narrative that I think. We all heard back in the day, which was if you could choose anything else other than being a performer, do that. Yes. And I'm like, fuck that. Do it all. Like, do everything you wanna do. And I think, I think much of the world and our, you know, socially we've moved on from that idea, but it's, there's still some of it that lurks in the back of our minds I think. It's an outdated concept, but I think. I also think that there's a level of feeling good and the struggle mm-hmm. Where you're like, mm, I want, like, I don't know. I resonate with this cuz for a long time I got a lot out of the identity of being an actor who's fully committed and knows she's talented and is doing the thing and showing up for the work. And even though it's hard, and even though I'm getting very little out of it, I'm here for it. Right? Yes. I thought that my commitment and the struggle was a badge of righteousness in some capacity and yeah, I felt that that was me proving to the universe that I deserved the opportunities I desired. Yes.
And, and this, so this, so this was sort of all like 2019, a lot of that conflict was coming to a head. And I had wanted, I, I had known that I had talent in the world of designing websites, creating brand stories. I mean, it parallels so well to being an actor and a writer and telling stories like you're just telling a story to help someone sell something. Right. Which is exactly what business is, but there was a tension in me of saying, well, I can't fully commit to creating a business because if I do, it means I'm less committed to my acting career. And so there was this sort of tension between the things of saying like, well, if I assume one identity, it means I'm giving up the other. Mm-hmm. And I didn't know how to contend with that. And I think being in the pandemic where, there were sort of like, well, I don't have an option right now to go and audition. It just wasn't happening. So it gave me a little bit of a permission slip to say, all right, what if I, what if I do go full forward on my business, not making that mean anything about me as an actor for a second?
And that's kind of what, let me go down the path. But for eight years I kind of didn't allow myself to even explore what that would look like because I thought other people would be confused. I thought I would be confused Yes. If I was doing multiple things. Yes.
And isn't it so funny? I mean, this is something we, I know we've definitely worked on and something that we work on in general in coaching, but it's like when we are having thoughts about what other people are going to think. Mm-hmm. Really it's just our own thoughts. Yes. And I totally resonate with that because I think even as I was starting my business and growing it, I definitely had the same thoughts of like, oh my gosh, but like, well, it's so hard. How am I gonna be a life coach and a performer? People are gonna be so confused. I know. And it's like, wait, what if it's not confusing at all? Right.
What if it makes perfect sense to literally everyone?
Yes. Yeah. Yes. And so it's so fun. Okay. I, we just have to talk about your business for a second before we talk about how all of this, like how now it's emerging and all the things are coming together, but it's like, can we just talk about some circumstances in your business for a second? Because I feel like. This shit is amazing, so we just have to acknowledge it for a baby second. Thank you.
Tell everyone where your business was when you were doing the eight year sort of struggle of like, I can't go all in on my business. Tell people what your results were then, and tell people what your results look like now.
Sure. Okay, so, so for eight years, um, Where do I even, how do I even encapsulate this? So for eight years, I will say just okay on the, on the surface level. So what I do is I do, at the time I did brand strategy and website design. Right, uh, for small businesses or solo entrepreneurs. And at the time, I didn't market my business at all. I was not out in the world sharing. This is what I do and this is what I offer. It was kind of via referral and word of mouth, and so I. I felt like clients just come to me when they do. I have no control over that whatsoever. La, la, la. Um, so I probably made somewhere between $0 and 30, I think $30K in a year was my max that I'd ever done from my business.
Mm-hmm. Um, from I would say 2014 up up to 2019. And in fact, in 2019 I had zero clients and got a restaurant job. So, um, I, there was even a question of like, am I an actor? Do I have a business? Who's to say yes? Uh, at the time I was like, I'm a struggling actor that works in a restaurant, and that's what I felt like I was supposed to be my entire life, so here we are and it sucks. Yes. Yeah. So that's where that was at the time, um, where my business is now.
I mean, what in the world? I like I'm already dying, like laughing and smiling cuz it's just mind blowing. Okay. Yeah.
Well, okay, so I have a six figure business now. Woo. Which is so fun to say. Um, I freaking love my clients. I have a full client load. I just started my waitlist in fact. Woo. Yes, Madison. Yeah. And, and I also have a group program, so it just really kind of, it fully blossomed in a way that felt like, uh, it felt like I planted seeds, but it felt like the Universe co conspired with me to bloom it into this like, really beautiful garden cuz I listened to a lot of props. Right. So, yes. Yeah. So I, I love my business now.
Yes. And I wanna just like really give you all the credit of like, It didn't just happen. Yeah. You chose intentional thoughts. You worked on your self-concepts. You like took, inspired as fuck action even when it felt hard. Mm-hmm. You put shit out there that was new, even when your brain was like, stop, don't do it. Danger. Yes. And like you did that. Yep. Now you have a six figure business. Didn't you end last year at like $125k or something? Yeah, it was slightly under that, but yeah, it was around that mark. Yeah. Yeah. Like just from deciding that you could be a six figure business owner and an actor. Yes. Yes.
And I would say like me, even two years ago would've not believed that that was possible. For around eight years. I kind of, I even had this narrative of like, uh, uh, I don't know how to kind of encapsulate this shortly, but the whole, the, the time that I was also struggling with my business and whether or not I had one, um, and how to market it or own it was also in the time where my husband and I were in a long distance relationship and a lot of the reason I blamed that on was because I was not able to support us financially and him being able to get outta the military, move home to with me, to New York. And so, It was sort of in, you know, there was this idea in my brain at the time of like, for me to be able to make six figures that was like some impossible dream. Mm-hmm. And sort of, kind of be at the position where that's actually the reality is, is like sometimes it's a little bit mind blowing to be like, yeah, we got there.
Yes. And it's just the beginning. Yeah. Like truly. Okay. So Madison, you have to tell everyone. What do you feel like was the thing that clicked for you, because also like in the work that we've done, you really have had like major breakthroughs in your acting career as well, in addition to like just being this living example of having it all.
Mm-hmm. Right? Because the thing is too, I just wanna speak to one thing before I ask you that question actually. It's like the thing that you said before about being all in committed, right? All in commitment, does not have to mean exhausted, depleted, running around ragged, like struggling to prove, mm-hmm. Struggling to earn, like staying in a constant state of like barely staying afloat. That does not have to be what committed means. And in fact, when you redefine commitment and you choose what committed looks like for you, that truly creates the space to have it all. Mm-hmm. So I just wanna say that really quick because I do think, when I say the words, you get to have it all. Sometimes people wanna like roll their eyes or feel like I'm like telling them to like fill their schedules and like do more. You gotta work harder. And like that is just like not what this is at all. So I wanna say that as like a preface. And as like a caveat. Caveat, is that the word? Caveat? Caveat, yeah. And then like, let's just talk about like what really shifted for you in order to be that version of you. Mm-hmm. Like what do you like, in your own words, what did that journey look like?
I would say, so if I look back at sort of the tent pole, Aha moments that kind of helped create that along the way. The, I mean, the first one was this idea, which I kind of had started buying into before we started working together, which was this idea that you can choose your thoughts, right? So that the very, that was the very first one that like I get some agency over the experience that I'm having. It's not that the universe or these, these outside circumstances are not the thing that's deciding what experience I'm having. I am the one who's deciding what that is and how I interpret these experiences.
Right. You are the creator. Yes. You're the creator of the experience. And the next piece. There's been a lot, but I would say the next big one was when I was talking to you about stuff for my business actually, and it was this breakthrough of realizing like, oh, clients don't just like come out of the ether whenever they decide to, without anything from me, right. I actually create clients. I remember when you offered that idea to me, I was like, Kelli, you are talking to me like unicorns are, are supposed to come outta my butt. Like, what are you, what are you even saying? Like, what do you mean I create clients? And then I was like, oh, I create clients. Which to me translates not just in my business, but it means I create every opportunity that comes to me, right? There's, there's energy, there's intention, there's different things that I can do and put out into the universe that create my results. And it's not just me like having this idea in my brain, this fiction of, oh, this is how I interpret what comes in. I actually have a contribution to make about what comes in.
So it was learning a way to create clients, which has translated a lot into my, into my career also. Um, that was a big one. Another one has been sort of like, and I will say, going along the journey, I think. As an actor, as a performer, and as a business owner, my biggest skill has been learning to be so comfortable feeling my feelings. Mm-hmm. And welcoming my humanness to the party. Yes. I'll say that. I think at the beginning of this work, when we first realized, oh, I get to choose my thoughts. Great. I feel better now. I have some agency over what my experience is. I think there's a natural stage that we all go through where we start making ourselves wrong anytime we experience something that isn't the best. Right? Yeah. Like if we find our It's, and it's something that you have called The Second Layer, right? Yeah. Where it's anytime we have an experience and our brain is not interpreting it the way that we want to, we are like, oh man, you should have done this differently. How horrible, why are you feeling this way, et cetera, et cetera.
So I think going through that and getting to a stage where my perspective was able to get zoomed out so far, that I was able to meet any of those thoughts with compassion. Mm-hmm. And just really be with myself in any human experience. Right. I think was what created the ability for me to move forward in both, in, in all sectors of my life.
Yes. And I think that is like the most important thing. Like truly! Being able to actually have your own back to actually love yourself through any human experience. Yes. That's what creates the emotional capacity, the energetic capacity to do more things. Mm-hmm. Right. Like I know we talked about this, we talked about this in general, but like this idea that when we are letting our energy go towards all of these things. It's like what I like to call leaky energy. Yeah, right. It's like a lot of extra draining trying to solve for trying to understand why am I thinking this? Where did this come from? Like this idea that we have to heal ourselves like wholly and fully and like this idea of perfection. Mm-hmm. Sometimes gets created, especially I think in the manifesting world when we're like, oh, we gotta feel good to attract and. The thing is you can't, we're not in that state a hundred percent of the time. And when you meet yourself in the, in the space, when you're not there with so much love and compassion, that's when your energy is so tight.
Yeah. And like you do have then more to give to the things that you want to give it to, right? Yeah, a hundred percent. And I think something that I noticed is that oftentimes throughout, like at different points throughout coaching with you, we would do check-ins with like, okay, so what do we desire next? What do we wanna create next? Right. And I noticed that my willingness to feel my feelings positive and negative had a direct relationship with my ability to allow myself to feel desire, to feel possibility, to feel excitement over things. Right. Wait, say more about that. So, I think I've even remember the first time you asked me, so like, what do you want, like what would be ideal for you? What would be the dream for you to be able to create in the next six months? And it was kind of like there was a lampshade over my brain of what I thought was possible. Ooh. It was like, well, that's such a good visual lampshade. I was like, well, you know, what do I think is possible? And it was like, well, um, I'd like to have an audition for, you know, um, I'd like to, that that was basically it. That, or like, I think at the time it was like, I'd like to change my representation. Right. It was kind of like, well, yeah, but like, What actually would be desirable, right? Yes. We're not gonna like, what do we think could be possible that's positive? It's like, what would be the dream? And I remember I had such a hard time at the beginning going there. Mm-hmm. Because to me, willingness to dream and desire directly correlates to your willingness to feel whatever happens as a result of having that desire, whether it's celebration of getting it or disappointment of not, and both are equally uncomfortable, right? If you get the big thing, whatever experience you have next is gonna be uncomfortable for you. Madison. Yes. Yeah. Yes. So my willingness to feel that was was the big breakthrough Yes. Of whatever it was gonna be.
Yeah, because that's the thing too, right? Well, you honestly just dropped, everyone needs to re-listen to that a million times cuz you just dropped so many fucking gold nuggets. But it's like truly, I think sometimes people forget that the success is gonna be just as equally uncomfortable as the disappointment or the failure. Yes. Because with that comes a whole nother uplevel expansion. It goes against sometimes who you believe you are. Mm-hmm. Which is very uncomfortable for our human brains.
A hundred percent can confirm. And in fact, I would say that sometimes the success or the celebration of, of getting what you created is sometimes even more uncomfortable than disappointment from it not happening. Yes.
And so then it's like you just get to, you get to choose your discomfort. Mm-hmm. Which way we going here? Like why not be all in for the success of it, and equally be all in for the disappointment of it, knowing that it's always truly fucking working out for you. Yep. Yeah. Truly, truly, truly. Yeah. Okay. Wait, but I'm trying to remember. You just said something that I feel like was really important. I'm gonna pause for a second to remember what it was. Oh, the lampshade, right? Oh, yes. Mm-hmm. I think that is one of the most important pieces of coaching work, period. Yes. Is. Like, yes, we do the work to feel good in the having, and in the experience, and we do all the foundational thought work. But I think that a piece of coaching that, I don't wanna say that people don't understand, but that they don't realize is that what we believe is available to us is based on our past experience most of the time. Right. And so when we do have that lampshade. It's like we can only see so far. Mm-hmm. And I mean, I know for me too, working with coaches, it's been like, wait, that's possible. One that's possible. Two, it's possible for me. Mm-hmm. Yes. Right.
And, and it's sort of like you're, it's not just I see, oh, it's possible. It's possible for me. And then allowing yourself to imagine like, Well, what if, right? Like letting yourself actually get excited and start having the emotions and the thoughts and the experience of what it will be like for you when you do have it. Yes. Which are also critical for actually creating that momentum to move forward. Yes. And like the lampshade, like if you're able to take it off, your power is no longer diffused, like you're able to fully go there, right? Yes. So yeah, for me, whe whether it's me in my own career recognizing when that's happening or even with my clients, right? So I work with a lot of multihyphenate creatives and business owners. We do a lot of recognition of when what they are creating or their relationship to what they're creating is being tamped down. Yes. By you know, sneaky thoughts or even just like this paradigm of paradigm Yes. Of what they think is currently possible or what's been for them in the past. Yes. And having to sort of just like, whoop, take that off for a second. And you're right. Like that is what, that is a really specific thing that happens in coaching. Yeah. Fully understand.
Yeah, and I mean, I know for me, like the way I talk about this is like the concept of Belief Before Results. Like you have to have the belief before you have the result. Mm-hmm. Belief is the embodiment. It's the embodiment that's created, like you said so beautifully in the thoughts, feeling, energy of what it feels like to have the thing with the full desire of the thing. Yes. The full, juicy, energetic frequency of knowing that experience is inevitable for you, available for you, and like letting yourself go there.
Mm-hmm. And I, I will say that I think as performers, We are uniquely equipped to do this. Yes, yes, we are. We, we live with a skill of embodying this idea of like, well, what if this was my reality? Let me pretend as if this is real for me and have these experiences and emotions and speak in this way as if I'm this character. Right? And so I think as performers, we have a unique capability to play with that idea of like, okay, I see something that I would want, let me exist as if that could be true for me. Yes. The suspension of disbelief is something that we like naturally have available to us. That I think, yeah, just to say, I think that that's something that we should recognize in ourselves is a unique ability that we get to harness for ourselves.
Yeah. Okay, Madison. I mean, literally we could sit here and talk all freaking day and honestly it would be of full value and benefit to everyone listening. And what I would love to, if you feel comfortable sharing mm-hmm. I think it would be so inspiring to share what you are creating right now to share the vision of who you're stepping into. Because yeah, like I think that just takes a lot of courage. Mm-hmm. And I think. Because we talked about the lampshade taking it off, like let's just like give listeners a little peek into what it looks like to fucking go there. Sure. And be so bold about claiming who you know the fuck you are. Okay. I am so down.
Yeah. Okay. Okay. So, well I'll, before I actually get into that, because it relates. I wanna share that a way that I approached both this career and entrepreneurship before, which I think has dissipated now, was a lens of perfectionism. Like, if I can nail this, if I can get this right, if I can show up and be so perfect in my thoughts, in my performance, in my preparedness, whatever it is, I will get the result that I want. And there was a lot of pressure that I put on myself for how I showed up, whether it was in my business or it was to an audition or for a casting director workshop or whatever. There was a lot of pressure of, this has to be perfect or I'm gonna fuck it up. Right. And I will say a big switch that has happened has been in letting go of that sense of how perfect I feel I have to be in order to succeed.
And the paradigm has shifted into, if I am experiencing and letting myself experience maximum joy in my business and in my performing career and in my life, that is what I'm here to do. Yes. And so what I'm l, what I'm creating now is I am. Okay. And I've just started owning this as a desire, which is I am here to create a seven figure business. Woo. Of course you fucking are. Of course you are. Yes. Okay. And I'm just gonna let you go and then I'll say some thoughts. I'm here to create a seven figure business. I am here to have a beautiful family. I'm here to travel the fricking world. And I am here to write, direct, and produce my own films and to be a series regular on a television show.
Yes. That is what I'm freaking creating. That is what I'm here to create. Yes. Madison, fuck yes to all of this. And like truly, if you are listening and you're like, wow. Yes. Yes. Wow. And like honestly, like that is the energy of The Paradigm, like owning all of that and moving into that like a hundred percent like yeah, fuck yes. Because why not? Yeah. Why the fuck not? And the thing is like, I know I'm screaming and I'm hooting, and I'm hollering like a wild woman because that's what I do as a coach most of the time. And like it's safe to normalize that that's actually not a big deal. Like not in a way that minimizes the dream, but that like dot, dot, dot. Of course. Yeah. This is what I desire and of course I can have it.
Yeah. Yeah. And speaking again, if anyone is listening where it feels scary to have that desire, that's so normal. Yes. And I think. One thing that's been reassuring for me and is often reassuring for my clients is to know that if it feels scary to desire something that big, yet, that's okay. That the further you go, the more momentum you create. You're gonna start, like you have all this evidence from your past, right? That's telling you why that's scary, but you're gonna start creating new evidence. That you're like, whoa, wait a second. If this is possible, what else could be possible? So you start to sort of thaw this ice around what you think you can be.
And as that happens, it builds more and more and more so that it not only feels exciting, but it feels also safe to desire and claim stuff like that. Yes, Madison. I mean, I tell you this all the time, but like what a fucking example of what's possible. What a fucking example of what's possible. To like be, years ago being like, am I even an actor? Am I even running a business?
This is the power of coaching and utilizing your thoughts and being intentional about what you want to create. This is what we do. Yes. And it gets to be fucking fun. Yes. Okay. I have to do a little shameless plug. Not even a shameless plug. I hate that term, but what I will say is that I literally just reopened The Performers Plan and if any of Madison's before, resonates with you, and you're still a little bit unsure of like, where am I going? What am I doing? How am I gonna support myself in this career? You need to get inside of The Performers Plan. It's the foundational work that I do with my clients to start loving your career, to start feeling like anything is possible in your life and that you are not a victim, but that you are the creator. Like truly it is lifetime access. You get the program, you get community, you get access to coaching for life. And if you're listening to this, when I release the podcast, I am literally doing a promotion right now, which I don't do very often if ever, with my coaching for $111, you can join and change your whole fucking life for $111 one 11. It's literally magic, and that's the coupon code. You can go to kelliyoungmanwellness.com/magic and join us now because it literally just, and not just, but it starts with your thoughts. It starts with your thoughts.
And can I, can I also plug for why people should take you up on this? Yes, please. So one thing that you just said, which you, I think you, you named as one of the benefits, but it's Community. Right. And I think that I love seeing the way that our industry is shifting, where there are more people that are buying into this idea of my career doesn't have to be one of struggle. Right? But if you find yourself often in community in which a lot of people wanna talk about the struggle or what's not working about our industry, or what's hard about this career. And part of you is like, okay, I'm kind of done with those conversations.
If you wanna be having conversations with us, I'm gonna be in there too. Like, this is part of my Community. Like if you wanna be having conversations with us about what you're excited to create for yourself, that community momentum is a big deal, right? So come join us and have different conversations about what it means to be a performer. Because it doesn't have to be the badge of righteousness Struggle anymore. Yes. Yeah. So freaking good.
Madison, thank you so much for sharing your vision, your thoughts, your expertise as a coach. People can obviously connect with you inside of The Performers Plan Community, but where else can they find you?
Oh, yes I am. So I hang out on Instagram. I am @brandwithmadison. It's my Instagram handle if you want to hang out with me, you can find me at www.brandwithmadison.com. And I also just started my own podcast. Yes, and it is called Brand Magic, and you can find it on Spotify and on Apple Podcasts.
So good. Madison, I love you. So grateful to have you here and like truly, let's fucking go. I can't wait to have you in the July class of The Paradigm, and so much magic is about to be created. Let's fucking go. All right, I'll meet you back here for another episode.
Hey, I wanna invite you to get started, because if this is blowing your mind, imagine the impact of when we actually work together. There are two ways to work with me privately one-on-one or inside of The Paradigm with high quality community. Either way, you're gonna go to kelliyoungmanwellness.com/launch to book your free launch call. We're gonna spend 60 minutes together with you and your unique dream and vision to co-create a plan to get you there.
Let's freaking go.