Jennie Garth
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And that changed over the years as I became a mom and all of that.
But
I got a crash course in feeling the responsibility and sort of the burden of the pressure, I guess, of money and money management.
It was.
It was difficult.
It was just about going back, allowing myself to really go back and not on a superficial level, but on an introspective level and look at my part in the successes in my life, look at my part in the failures in my life and really stop pointing the finger at other people and start pulling the thumb.
But at the same time, I had other people doing it.
And so they were handling all of the details, all the nitty gritty of managing it.
I had zero idea what was happening with my money.
And so I really wanted it to be from that point of view.
And I learned a whole new appreciation for myself and what I've been through.
Oh, yeah.
I'm pretty sure I did at some point along the way.
And I think that as women, when we reach this phase in our lives, when we're able to like take a beat and think about who am I now?
There were some moments that I was unaware of or โ
decisions that were made on me, my behalf that probably didn't benefit me first and foremost, even as a fiduciary with a fiduciary in place, but I'm not going to look back.
Who have I been?
Who do I want to be?
Like when we have the agency to be able to sit with those uncomfortable sometimes situations.
thoughts, memories, experiences, that is when we truly tap into our superpower as women.