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Chapter 1: What is Jess Hilarious's perspective on healing and purpose?
Life is always lifing. As long as you live life, there will be things thrown at you. There will be trials. There will be tribulations. There will be obstacles that you have to overcome. Some you will, some you won't.
Chapter 2: How did Jess Hilarious emotionally connect with her son?
It's all about your level of resilience and endurance. Everybody goes through something when they are being challenged as a parent, just as a caregiver, just a guardian. You don't even have to be a parent. You can be somebody who watches over someone's kid. I don't get it right every day. That's why I do have a village.
I thank God for my parents, my husband, my son's father, my mother-in-law, my father-in-law.
Chapter 3: What pivotal moment defined Jess Hilarious's stand-up career?
Like it's a village. It really takes a village. None of this is easy. We make so much of so little. It can be such a minuscule issue and we overthink and we amplify it in our mind, just overthinking, creating scenarios and just going down these rabbit holes. And it's like, yo, just breathe, stop and breathe. There's no manual to it. And every journey is different.
Like I always express, like it is different, but we all do what we got to do.
Chapter 4: Why is having a supportive parenting village important?
There's an instinct that kicks in and we got it.
You're listening to Mick Unplugged, hosted by the one and only Mick Hunt. This is where purpose meets power and stories spark transformation.
Chapter 5: What does Jess mean by 'joy over happiness' in parenting?
Mick takes you beyond the motivation and into meaning, helping you discover your because and becoming unstoppable. I'm Rudy Rush, and trust me, you're in the right place.
Chapter 6: How does Jess Hilarious describe the term 'dummy' in Baltimore?
Let's get unplugged.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to another exciting episode of Mick Unplugged. And today, I'm truly honored to be with someone you've known for a long time, from skits to The Breakfast Club.
Chapter 7: What challenges does Jess face as a parent and how does she cope?
But I know her as a best-selling author. And we're going all in today on Baltimore's Finance. Ms. Jess Hilarious. Jess, how are you doing today, dear?
I'm good, Mick. Thank you for that introduction. That was nice. I like that.
Yeah.
Chapter 8: What legacy does Jess Hilarious hope to leave behind?
You heard me say Baltimore, right?
Baltimore all day without the T. Don't put the T in there. I got it down.
Yes. So, Jess, I was just telling you how proud I am of you for this book, and we're going to go places with that book. But, you know, I always like to ask my guests about their because, that thing that's deeper than their why. I call it like your true purpose, your true mission. So if I were to say, Jess, today in 2026, what's your because? Why do you keep doing the things that you do?
Oh, man, for one, you know, the obvious reason, my children, you know, and then legacy is very important. It's very important. I saw a clip of Mike Tyson one day. He was talking to a young reporter and they asked him about his legacy. And he just like his whole aura changed. And he was like, what is legacy? Legacy is stupid. That's just like, you know, and I just I was like, no, no.
Legacy is very important.
obviously there there were things there you know that hurt him i don't know what that was about but that was the first time i ever heard of legacy spoken of in a way that was against everything that i had ever knew known it to be and i was like oh my god no so my heart shattered for him like legacy is one of the most important things to ever leave behind that's why it's important to have children in my opinion it's like
what are you doing all this for it has to be for a reason you know and that's why i wanted to share a piece of literature you know such as my co-parenting memoir so that we parent because parenting is so linear like it's it's different to everybody but it's an ongoing thing it's something that will never end um relationships and friendships contracts um you know everything has an ending except
Parenting, you know, and that's very important, very important in every journey looks different, but I believe that we can all get the same outcome. You know, just with communication, and that's really showing up for your kids, no matter what the other parents put you through. That's the main reason why I wanted to. That's my main reason. Why? There we go.
There we go. I love it. And we're going to get into a lot of the book. And I have a bunch of notes because I made my kids read this book from the viewpoint of this. Because I call them my kids, but, you know, they're in their 20s now, right? Adults, yeah. And they're going to be parents and are parents. And so understanding that something that I thought was really dynamic in the book was,
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