A few weeks ago, I had the good fortune to meet Eva Medilek, The Style Mogul 4 Success. She’s a dynamo, and is on a mission to inspire and empower other women to ignite their dream life NOW.
Eva is hosting a no-cost online interview series called “Midlife on Fire: How to Create Powerful Shifts in Thoughts and Actions to Ignite a Life of Wow!” The event brings together more than 21 experts to share insights and expertise on how to remove the limiting beliefs that stop women from pursuing their dream and goals. When she asked me to if I wanted to participate, I was instantly in!
The series started Monday, February 12. You can access the interviews with this link:
Ditch Mediocrity and Ignite Your Life
Click the link above to watch these REAL, short, content-rich conversations with women who are creating the life they want. You’ll get tons of great, practical techniques and strategies to shift from the inaction of your comfort zone into action towards your dreams.
The video interviews cover:
- How to break old habits and beliefs that are holding you back.
- How to laugh at the challenges of midlife
- One thing you can start doing right away to feel better, physically and emotionally, and look great doing it
- Simple, powerful tools you can use, starting today, to take control of your finances, making happiness a habit (Yes, it’s possible!), and promote overall well-being.
- Where you are now, in your comfort zone (where dreams go to die), and how to escape
- Exercises to repair your brain and prevent dementia
And much more!
Have you ever dreamed of doing something else with your life? Something “more,” or bigger? Maybe you’ve dreamed it, but never pursued it? Maybe you think you’re “too old.” You’re not. The time to live your dreams is NOW.
Eva is the perfect person to host this event. Over seven years ago, when she turned 50, life threw her a curveball. Eva chose to view it as something that happened for her, not to her, and she began moving toward living the life she knew she deserved. She did the work to remove the self-imposed limits on her life. Now, she’s hosting Midlife on Fire to show you how to do it too.
I was so excited to be part of this event. Eva and I had a blast doing the interview, and I don’t know yet if I made a total fool out of myself (which, as you all know, happens a lot), but Eva is so much fun and so passionate about her mission to help other women achieve their dream life, I found myself wishing I had more time to spend with her.
Again, here is the link to the interview series that will give you unique and varied insights about the midlife journey. I think you’ll love hearing from these women, as they share advice and tips on midlife that will help you have the fabulous life you want. (And it’s free.)
Create Your Plan to Live Your Best Life NOW.
Why wait another moment to love your life?
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Here’s the link to my interview, which airs on February 25th. It was so much fun!
http://midlifeonfire.com/VikkiC
valleycat1 says
Sorry to be Debbie Downer here. I am sure many of these interviews are informative and fun. However, as the child of someone who died from dementia (not Alzheimer’s, one of the many other forms), I feel compelled to speak to the fact that whoever is addressing topic 6 has co-opted the word ‘dementia’ when what really is being addressed is the increasing forgetfulness many of us experience with age.
Dementia in all forms is a physical disease that inexorably destroys neurological processing abilities to the extent that the brain cannot compensate. My parent was always active, raised 5 successful children, interested in the world around us, an avid reader and crossword enthusiast, had a wicked sharp sense of humor, enjoyed stimulating conversation and travel, etc. We watched all of that disappear over several years despite overall great physical health, to the extent that not only was there no recognition of family and friends or even orientation to location, but also the complete inability to recognize hunger pangs or food (eventually starving to death).
The experience brought home the reality that dementia is much more than something that a few exercises or supplements might be able to stave off. Do not play on people’s fears of actual dementia or diminish the lives of those suffering from it by promoting attempts to ameliorate old-age forgetfulness by calling it ‘dementia.’