Awaken The Healer Within With Inna Mitev

fear healer intuition manifestation nlp quantum leap Nov 29, 2022
WCP 62 | Healer Within

 

When Inna Mitev was diagnosed with an incurable disease, she heard a faint voice within that told her there was something that could overcome it. This took her to a path deeper than nutrition and fitness. She dived into the power of the mind and our emotions with NLP. Now, she is a mind-body expert, quantum life coach, and manifestation teacher. In this episode, Inna extends her knowledge and experience to help us awaken the healer within. She talks about self-worth, manifestation and the science behind it, and making aligned decisions by recognizing fear and intuition. Follow along to this great conversation as Inna helps you quantum leap in your journey.

 

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Awaken The Healer Within With Inna Mitev

I am so excited because I bring you a very special and inspiring guest, Inna Mitev. Inna is on a mission to help you awaken the healer within and tap into your infinite cosmic power. She's a mind-body expert, quantum life coach and manifestation teacher. Inna, welcome to the show. How are you doing?

I'm so good. I'm so excited. This is going to be such a juicy conversation. I can't wait to see where it goes.

Here's some background so people know how we connected. Inna and I met in one of the spiritual development training I was doing in Hawaii. Time flies by. I'm like, "I don't know when that happened." We immediately connected. We are so passionate about similar things. After I knew her story, I knew I had to bring her to the show. I wanted to provide a quick background there. Tell us about you. Where were you born? Where are you from? What's your background?

I was born in Bulgaria. My family immigrated to the US when I was five. I've lived in Washington state my whole life. My journey started in my twenties. We go through self-discovery and finding our path and breaking free of whom we thought we were going to be originally.

I went through the same. It's funny that you said twenty. I was 23 too when I realized chemical engineering is not for me but since a child I knew. I don't know if the same thing happened to you.

I've been preparing for this show and thinking back on the story. In 9th or 10th grade, I had my first psychology class. I remember this bulb going off. I loved every second of it. I had decided then, "I'm going to go to university, study psychology and do business." Somehow that fell apart. When I got to college, I was like, "I'm not going to do psychology." That's when that light started to dim and I felt like I lost the path. The vision started disappearing. I got into my twenties. I felt very lost. It wasn't until my late twenties that I realigned. The train tracks came back into alignment. I found myself at an NLP training. I felt that same excitement or deep knowing within that this is it.

What did you end up studying in college?

Business marketing. I was going to do finance at first. I went to an interview. It was like that scene from The Matrix where you find yourself in a long conference room. You're like, "This cannot be my life." I changed my major to marketing but that wasn't it either. I was very lost at that time of my life.

You finished your degree and then started working. That's when it started hitting you. That's when a light bulb started coming up again.

I was in marketing. Things were going well. In my mid-twenties, I got into manifestation and intentionally manifesting. Life was awesome. I felt like a rockstar. In my mid-twenties, I also started focusing on health and wellness through my journey of health and wellness and body image. I was also feeling like a rockstar and manifesting my dreams. I got hit with a diagnosis from left field and was told at the time it was incurable. There was a knowing in me, "That's not the answer. That's not right."

What led me back onto my journey was knowing that there's something else within me that can overcome this or that I need to discover. For me, it started very much physically like nutrition and fitness. I got led to NLP. I learned about how the mental body and our beliefs affect our actual physical body. It went a step further. I went into the master practitioner. That was about emotions and how emotions affect the mind. That eventually led me to Huna where I started to understand that frequency precedes form. It's that top-down approach. All those layers clicked into place over time. It was a long journey but it was worth it.

 

The mental body and our beliefs affect our actual physical body.

 

For those that don't know, NLP is what we have been certified on. Neuro-Linguistic Programming is the assumption that our mind is a mega computer. NLP is the code that you put into that computer to align yourself so you can accomplish what you want to accomplish and get your desired outcome. It's reprogramming your mind with all these amazing techniques and skills. It's highly focused on the mental and emotional aspects. Huna, which Inna also mentioned, was a spiritual development training we took in Hawaii that I was talking about. It's physical, mental, emotional and spiritual. It makes total sense. When you got that diagnosis, how did you respond to it? How did you know not to trust that and start finding your path?

It's hard to explain. It's a very faint voice. There's no panic behind it. I say a lot to clients, "You can get a diagnosis but that's not your prognosis. You decide your prognosis." It's a deep knowing, "I have a different path. There's something else for me here."

You got the diagnosis. It was on the physical aspect. In the background, you were still doing the career that you have studied for.

I'm on this personal growth journey in trying to heal myself. It's that wounded healer. I had to go through the hero's journey myself. As I'm finding these around my Saturn Return, which happens around 29 to 30, we have this big shakeout in our life. That's when I ended up at these training for the mental and emotional aspects. There, I had that same gut feeling, "This is it."

It felt like the train tracks realigned and that inner passion reignited. I knew at that point it was like, "You're supposed to shift careers. This is it. What are you doing?" I didn't. That's the interesting part of the story when I was thinking about it. Even though I had that strong gut feeling, I still had work to do on self-worth and self-esteem. I stayed in my marketing career but that internal conflict started getting louder.

Every time I was working on a project, there was this voice in the back of my mind that was like, "This isn't your purpose. This isn't what you're meant to do. You're not sharing your gift with the world." That got. I still didn't listen. It's funny. There's this meme on Instagram. This guy is face down on the ground. There's a post on him that's telling him something. He is like, "This is a post. I need a signer sign."

The signs are there. We just don't listen.

They get louder like when your body is giving you a sign and you don't listen. It gets louder. That started happening. Eventually, what happened is that my needs weren't being met at work in a sense. The universe had to push me out of the nest. There was no other option. Honestly, it wasn't until 2022 that it happened. I've transitioned from that career in marketing and then pursued this full-time. I'm starting to feel that passion, excitement, that creativity is starting to flow but I've had to work through this. I'm still peeling back layers of visibility of being able to come out and use my voice.

To be honest, the entrepreneurship journey is so different from working for someone. You have to tap into that self-worth to be able to show up every day and in a way show up for yourself because in this case, my brand is me. It is working through this self-worth and confidence every single day.

Self-esteem is so critical, even from a manifestation process because even if it's right in front of you, you won't be able to see it. There's a $100 bill sitting right in front of you. You might not even register it. A lot of times, we're asking for things but what's coming back to us is those lessons first. Once we master that, then our ability to manifest quantum leaps from there.

 

I always remind my clients, "This is for requisites for change." Release anything that no longer serves you like negative emotions and all the baggage. Create your compelling future and intention. Where do you want to move forward to? Take action. The fourth one is very related to what you said. Focus on what you want. For example, I have this example of finding your keys. Have you been in a situation where you're trying to find your keys, you're late to go somewhere and you cannot find them?

You're like, "I cannot find them." You realize that they were in front of you the whole time. Your mind was following your directive to not find them by deleting the information that was in front of you. It's focusing on what you want, working on yourself and while going through challenging challenges, always keeping track of the vision that you have of where you want to head. I love what you said.

I had a hard time creating that vision. I had a hard time putting myself even five years into the future, "What do I want?" It had to come down to following the passion or that curiosity and trusting that if I follow that and take one step, eventually it will open up. I got down myself a lot because I was like, "I can vision for others. Why can't I create that in the future?" If anybody is having an issue doing that, follow that curiosity, that passion and that thing that lights you up when you talk to people. Your eyes start to sparkle. That thing will lead you to the next step.

One of the things that I remind myself and my clients when setting that vision is to allow yourself the permission to dream because even when setting that vision of the future, we are so focused on being realistic and able to predict linearly the next step. It is like seeing a baby when they're crawling and thinking, "You're crawling. You will never be able to do the math." You don't expect that things are going to go the way they go for them to grow even further. We assume linear growth or flat growth many times when we are trying to set that vision. You don't know the things that can happen on the path where you can suddenly go to the freaking moon and be where you never thought you would be.

That's a great point. The quantum space doesn't operate linearly at all. I was listening to one of your files where you talked about finding internships. If you go somewhere and try it and it doesn't feel good, ask for another opportunity and pay attention to what's in front of you.

I'm passionate about manifestation. Some people have this idea, "You will manifest while sitting in your chair." I truly believe there has to be an action so the frequency can meet your desired outcome. We talked about the vision, which is an amazing step in the manifestation process. What else have you learned? You're in a quantum culture. Let's even explain what quantum is because some of the readers may not know what it is. What is quantum? What are the other key steps in the manifestation process?

Quantum space to me is a space of infinite possibility. That's the way I like to imagine it. There's no linear timeframe in the quantum space. Everything is available to you. You can explore your imagination. You have all these infinite possibilities. Your imagination, awareness and focus are almost like fishing. You're pulling one in but your focus is what reels it in. You have to keep your focus there and have the patience and faith that it will drop into the physical realm.

There are so many tactics and techniques but it's very simple. I was listening to this amazing lecture by Gregg Braden. He spent many times with monks in Tibet and Asia. He asked the monks, "You're doing all this stuff, chanting all day and meditating. What are you doing that we're not seeing?" It was so simple. He said, "The feeling is the prayer." We're doing all of this stuff to get us into a certain feeling space. That feeling of space is how that thing has already happened. There's no doubt.

That's how simple it is. Whatever you need to do to get you into that feeling space, eliminate the doubt and help you tap into what would it feel like when that thing happens is the key. It can be chanting, dancing or journaling but you don't necessarily have to write something down 50 times a day. The more complicated you think it has to be, it has to be because that's your belief. I like to keep it simple.

What you said is unbelievable and amazing because it is true. We are chasing all of these things all the time like the next promotion, my YouTube video having one million views and getting interviewed by Oprah. What we are after is the feeling of happiness and fulfillment. It's not about the money and the relationship. It's about how you believe you will feel whenever you get that but what Inna is also saying is that the feeling is already within you. You can tap into it. Whenever you tap into that feeling, then those things start coming naturally because you have arrived at where you wanted to go.

This is not woo-woo stuff. There is science. For the people not super familiar with manifestation and quantum, I would love to hear what you think, Inna. Someone that I love reading about is Dr. Jody Spencer. He has many books on this topic with scientific proof of the quantum field. Even Einstein talked about quantum. The scientists that have studied even quantum physics the most understand that there is this universal intelligence no one can consciously understand but it's there. It's the energy. It is scientific too. I wanted to make that clear.

Science has finally caught up to what Eastern philosophy has always known. That's because we have the tools that can measure the quantum. Quantum means very small partners. All of this is based on science and research. The smartest people are studying this and trying to understand it. In this lecture from Greg Braden, what I loved is he was like, "Believe in the mystery again." When we think we have everything figured out, we go, "I have to regurgitate what somebody else has figured out." If you start to think of yourself as this magnificent and mysterious being and that the sky is the limit, that brings the allure and sexiness back into it.

You're like, "What is my limit? How can I tap into these other possibilities?" I like the reminder that we are still mysterious and we always will be because as long as we're searching, we will find that thing. That's the observer effect. If we're searching for the smallest thing, we will keep finding smaller particles or quanta if we're searching for infinity. I was watching this documentary on infinity. If we're searching for infinity, it's going to keep getting bigger because we are observing and looking for it.

 

As long as we're searching, we'll find that thing.

 

That's why science every year discovers something new. They discover a new planet or a new particle because we keep looking. The more you look, you realize the less you know. It's a mystery. That's so nice. This is not a constant feeling but how do you tap into that feeling? Do you have a practice? Do you have anything that is your routine? Here's my second question. What do you do when you're not feeling in that space? What do you do to break that pattern?

We're all human. We have ups and downs and that's okay. Sometimes we also have this fear, "If I think of this thing, it's going to happen." We start getting down on ourselves but if you have a thought, the best way to break out of it is to say, "That was a silly thought." Emotion is what feeds it. Fear and love are the two things that can make something happen. If you have a thought that you don't like, be like, "That was a silly thought." It takes the seriousness out of it and allows it to pass.

When I'm not feeling at my best or I'm feeling more low level in terms of my emotion, I have a list of things. I will go through each one by one and keep doing it, knowing that eventually, it will pop me out of that space. That is walking and taking a walk. If I'm feeling angrier, I like a HIIT workout to help move that emotion in my body. I have a couple of favorite books that remind me, "You are in charge here. This isn't the be-all and end-all. This too shall pass."

I'll read something inspiring and watch somebody that inspires me like Jody Spencer and Gregg Braden. There are so many teachers and people that I love and respect that will help me through that. It's coloring and painting. I get more into that creative space like journaling and music. I have music that helps me dance, relax and move my body because emotions are all narrow peptides that get released in the brain. If we don't allow those to move, they will get lodged into tissues organs and joints. It's important to help move that energy, knowing it's temporary.

I resonate with everything you said. It's also experimenting with what works best for you because every person may be different. Something that has worked well for me is this physical exercise, breaking that habit of being myself or what I'm doing at the moment, doing something unexpected from what I usually do and breaking that linear pattern. If I'm feeling angry or sad, I'm taking a run. I don't like running. That's why I do it. I'm going to be honest. It puts me in that mindset, "I can do hard things." I don't run long, maybe 5 minutes or 10 minutes but that still is a challenge for me. In doing that, I break through the emotion of being angry or sad. I love that.

Everyone is different. Finding the thing that helps you is important in having fun.

Let's go back to your decision. I had this thought when you were saying it. I'm like, "We need to talk about this." I read a quote, "People make hard and aligned decisions out of desperation, crisis or inspiration." When I look back at my career, the first step that I took out of alignment was out of a crisis because I hit rock bottom. I ended up with an anxiety attack in the emergency thinking that I was going to die. After the day ended, the doctor was like, "Go home and drink a glass of wine."

I'm like, "I've been waiting eight hours to receive this news. I'm even more stressed." I'm joking. The first time when I realized I need to seek fulfillment and happiness was when I hit that crisis or rock bottom. To me, that was such a lesson to not wait until that moment again to make aligned and hard decisions. Even though that voice was getting louder, what did you learn from waiting until that moment to make a decision that is aligned for you?

They say hindsight is 2020. A lot of us do have to go through that crisis at least almost once unless we are working with a coach that can help us recognize the blind spots, "This might be a sign. Let's pay attention." If you don't and you're on the journey alone at first hitting rock bottom, then you can look back and say, "What were the voices that I was ignoring? What were those gut feelings that I kept pushing aside? What was my body telling me that I wasn't paying attention to? I was trying to cover it up so I could keep going with life the way it was."

We're not taught to listen to our bodies, which will start to give us signs very early on. The most important thing is learning what that voice sounds like for you. There's this concept of how we have three voices in our heads. It's our intuition, our excitement and then our fear. Intuition is a quiet voice. There's no panic around it because it knows that eventually, you're going to get on your path and learn the lessons you need to learn. Recognizing the difference between the voice of intuition, the voice of fear and the voice of reason and learning that for yourself is important.

 

Intuition is such a major lesson in this life. I always go back to this experience I had. I was starting my entrepreneurial path. In entrepreneurship, every day you wake up and you have to figure it out as you continue working in alignment. There's a lot of fun and excitement. It also can be very challenging mind-wise, physically and everything. Maybe it was right before doing something that I had never done before. That's usually when my emotions start to be like, "Be careful. Go back to your comfort zone." I'm like, "I cannot go back. I made that decision."

I remember that I was crying. I'm like, "What am I doing?" I was having those moments, "What did I sign up for? I'm going to quit." It was crazy because I was into those emotions. Out of nowhere, I heard this voice inside myself, "Keep going." I'm like, "What the heck?" It was so extreme. I was into my emotions a lot. Suddenly, this voice of calm said, "Keep going." I'm like, "I'll do that." That's intuition. I had never heard it put this way. It sounds calm, centered and balanced. Have you had those experiences too of listening in the midst of a crisis or something?

As I've grown down this path, I know what the voice sounds like. I know that it's never going to put me down. It's always your higher self or whatever you want to call that voice. Wherever that's coming from for you, it's always encouraging and unconditionally loving. If there's another voice that's like, "You suck at this. You should quit," that's fear, limiting beliefs and other things. Learn those differences. There's a system called Human Design. That's interesting too because it teaches you that not everybody manifests the same way. Your intuition shows up differently. Exploring how that is for you is important.

 

You were making a decision. I worked through this part. That was the fear of visibility. I'm like, "I'm going to get online. I'm ready for this. I'm going to start making videos and do all this stuff." I had these things come up like saboteurs that had things that would have usually stopped me in my tracks. I had this breakout on my face that would have stopped me previously because I would be like, "I'm going to wait until this clears up."

For my energy, I was like, "I'm feeling tired. The change in the weather must be this." Mentally, there's all this chatter but it's also knowing that when you make a big decision, there are going to be these things that come up mentally, emotionally and physically. They're our saboteurs. They're used to keeping us in our comfort zone because it's more predictable. Being able to break through those, be the director and be like, "We're safe. We're good. We're going to keep going forward," was a good reminder.

It's also recognizing that resistance and fear mean that you're moving to the next level because if not, it wouldn't be there. If not, you wouldn't be experiencing those thoughts and feelings. Learn to expect that fear. Every time I'm going to do something I've never done, I'm going to freak the heck out the day before. I'm going to keep going but I'll be like, "I'm scared."

I've also taught myself to say yes before I can say no. You're like, "Do you want to be on the show?" That tiny voice was like, "Yes." I could feel the tsunami of mental chatter coming on. I've taught myself the moment I get that internal yes to say yes before the fear can catch up.

That is so important. That's something that I'm mastering and learning more of. Even if we allow space and say, "Let me think about it," then our conscious minds start kicking in and we start overanalyzing every single thing and how good this is even though it doesn't feel aligned. It's also the Shiny Object syndrome. I made a decision. My first gut instinct was, "You don't have time for these. A lot is going on in your business. Don't do it." I told the person, "Let me think about it."

When I thought about it, I'm like, "This would be so good visibility-wise. This would be such a good thing to have in your background to say that you're in." The ego part kicks in. I ended up saying yes to realize later on that I couldn't follow through with this if I wanted to show up 100%. I love what you said about trusting your immediate gut feeling because that's something that we don't do enough of.

It's training yourself. If you say yes to something, there's no shame in trusting. If you know you can't give 100% of yourself, there's nothing wrong with saying, "It's too much." It's part of self-love and knowing your limits.

It's also showing up and inspiring others to listen because many people are afraid to disappoint and against what people may expect of them. I always tell my clients, "If you worry about showing up authentically and taking care of yourself, then everything else will take care of itself because everyone else will feel inspired to look up to you as an example."

Somebody said this to me. That lesson stuck with me. What's good for you isn't bad, not in a selfish way where you're narcissistic. You can overflow what's good for you and then give to others freely but if you deplete yourself, then that's not good for others either.

We are getting super deep here even, for example, what you were saying about the fear of visibility, "I want to be an entrepreneur." That's good for you and everyone, "I want to share my message with the world." That's good for you and everyone. There is a point when you also start worrying about yourself so much that you don't want to show up. For example, "I have this breakout. How am I going to look? Am I going to say the right thing?" That's more focused on you rather than the original purpose of what you were doing anyways. It is a balance and also balancing when to focus on yourself versus when to focus on serving other people.

One of my teachers always says, "When you get nervous, focus on the service."

 

When you get nervous, focus on the service.

 

That's because you're there for the people, not for you necessarily. You are there because you love it but if you focus on serving people and getting those lessons and insights, then you are like, "I'm going to have fun with the process. I'm here to help them and guide them." It feels good.

Sometimes it requires deeper work. I had a good session with my mentor. The part of me that was afraid of me being visible was from a long time ago in childhood. I had built up power but it felt like it had a chokehold on me. Being able to do the deep dive and the work with someone else that could guide me through that made all the difference because I tried so many times before to focus on the service and the fact that I had this message inside of me that I wanted to share.

I couldn't break through that on my own but after that session, I had enough leverage. I felt empowered enough to be able to still walk through regardless of those saboteurs showing up. You and I are coaches but we have our coaches as well. We're still going through these layers. Sometimes you need somebody to take your hand and walk you through these things.

One of our teachers is Kumu Patrick. I remember that in one of the training, he said, "We are like onions, full of layers. Do you know when we are going to reach the last layer? When we die. Never." It's a lifelong journey of working through things as they come up. We do breakthrough sessions. That's an in-depth and comprehensive process to release baggage. Even if you release baggage, different contexts will elicit similar baggage from similar situations when you still were a child. It is a lifelong journey but one that is full of empowerment, fulfillment and challenges too because there is no dark without light.

I always joke. I don't have a tattoo but if I ever get a tattoo, it's going to be this quote from Thich Nhat Hanh. He's an amazing monk. He passed away a few years back. He has this quote that says, "No mud, no lotus." If you look at the lotus flower, it always blooms from the mud. It comes from down and then blooms to the surface. There is no success without challenges. The story of success is a story of overcoming challenges. There is no love without also fear because you wouldn't know that it's love. It's all of these dualities that we have to go through to continue growing.

It's a lifelong path. I see myself as a curious person. There's this quote that's like, "Blessed are the curious for they will have adventures." Always be curious about yourself, that next layer and that mystery that's in you. We're the most advanced technology on the planet. We're externalizing all of these things that are already within us. I am so grateful for the path that you and I are on and to be able to help others quantum leap in their journey.

As we are concluding, we didn't talk about mind-body image but that's a topic that a lot of our readers may resonate with and a lot of women that I've met. Sometimes I struggle with body image or self-worth. What have you learned in your path of harnessing that confidence in your body related to your body?

That's a journey I've been on for a long time like yo-yo dieting focusing on hard workouts. I've tried all the diets and things coming into communion with your body, meaning communication and a relationship, knowing that your body always has your best interest at heart from the beginning. It has kept you alive. It's the most flexible thing in your life. No matter what you eat and no matter what you do, it's going to try to meet you halfway. You have this amazing power within you to heal anything. Your body is a mirror of your deepest beliefs about yourself and your place in the world. It's a mirror of your emotional state. It's giving you signs so that you can continue to grow and stay on your path.

Going back to what you were saying about saying when you want to say no, your body is going to start giving you little signs if you're on that. For example, if I get pain, a headache or something unusual for me, I'll ask myself, "What have I said yes to that I want to say no to? I'm looking for an out. What stress am I under that I'm not acknowledging, trying to bypass and keep going with?" There are questions that you can ask yourself that puts you into that communication with your body.

In terms of image, it's those filters in our minds. We could be the most beautiful but if we have these beliefs that we have picked up along the way, we won't see it. At Huna, we do these deeper meditations. One of the first lessons that came to me is getting that subtle voice. I even came out of the meditation. I was like, "I didn't get anything out of this." It was a deep lesson. You have to see yourself the way we see you. That was one of the first lessons that I got there. It's still something that I'm working on.

I'm seeing myself as a once-in-a-lifetime cosmic event or the divine spark. There's inner child work. You could go back and see yourself as a kid before you took on all these beliefs. How would you see that kid? How would you see yourself as a baby? Perfect. There's perfection there. It's divine. Even if you have a voice, you can ask yourself, "Whom does this sound like? When did I pick this up? When did this record start?" Oftentimes, it's not your voice at all. It's something that you heard and started believing.

I reminded a client that most people don't see you as you see yourself. Sometimes, we are like, "I'm so ugly." This client was telling me that. I'm remembering the first time I ever saw her. I'm like, "She's so beautiful." It's the opposite of whatever she was saying. That was such a good reminder that we are our harshest critics. Most people don't see us as we see ourselves and as we are treating ourselves. It's recognizing that blind spot, loving yourself, practicing that every day and making the decision. It's a decision. We have to wake up and make it.

Here's one good practice. It's scary but it's good. You can make a list of five people you feel comfortable with. They could be best friends, sisters or cousins. Call them and be like, "My life coach gave me this assignment. I'm going to ask you this question. That's it. That's the conversation. What's my essence? What do I bring into the room? When you see me, what's the first thought?"

It's funny. I did this exercise a couple of years ago around the same time I got that, "You have to see yourself the way we see you." I did this exercise and called five people. They said all these nice things. In my head, I was like, "They're lying. They have to say this because I called them. They're not going to tell me what they think." You realize, "I have a problem."

I wrote those down on a notepad on my phone. Oftentimes if I'm on a plane or something and I'm going through my phone, I'll look at those. It's a good reminder to see ourselves through the lens of other people without our perceptions, filters and limiting beliefs that we hold. It will give you a clue to where you can begin to work and break apart those beliefs and emotions that you have.

It's evidence, "You are beautiful and capable." I love that exercise because it's outside evidence contradicting what we think of ourselves, which is beautiful. Inna, it has been a pleasure being here with you and sharing your wisdom. I'm so excited that you agreed to do this together. As I conclude, I always have rapid-fire questions I ask my guests. These are questions I'm going to ask. I want you to go quickly. Give me the answer or the first thing that comes to mind. You're good at it. What's your favorite book?

Practicing the Power of Now.

Is that different than the Eckhart Tolle?

It's right here on my desk. It's all of the golden nuggets. You can see I've highlighted, rehighlighted and underlined it. I've read this a million times. This is what I use to help raise my frequency if I'm feeling down.

That's beautiful because I read The Power of Now but I didn't know there was a version of Practicing the Power of Now. That added so much value to this. I'm a fan of books. Who is your biggest role model? Who's the first person that comes to mind or whoever that is?

Alma, my from Huna. She's my mentor, my coach and one of my good friends. She's my role model in the way she treats everyone with such love and respect but also the way she holds the vision and doesn't give you an option other than to live into that.

That's a huge shout-out to Alma here. She's such a beautiful and nurturing soul. We love her. That's awesome. What is the most important piece of advice you would give to your younger self?

Don't lose touch with that knowing and always trust it.

 

Don't lose touch with that knowing, and always trust it.

 

That inner knowing, inner voice or internal GPS is always right. I love that. That's so beautiful. Inna, where can our readers find you? Tell us all about it.

The best place is Instagram. You can find me @InnaMitev. From there, I have links to websites and other social media. That is the best place.

Inna, I'm sure everyone benefited so much from this conversation. They are inspired to manifest and take action. Thank you so much for being here. I appreciate you. I love you. I admire you. Thank you.

Thank you for this opportunity. I hope this is one of many conversations we have because I've had so much fun flowing in and out. Anytime I would love to come back and join you.

Thank you so much, everyone. If you enjoyed this episode, please share it with family and friends so we can continue expanding the light of empowerment. I'll see you next time.

 

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About Inna Mitev

Inna Mitev is on a mission to help you awaken the healer within and tap into your infinite cosmic power. She is a mind-body expert, quantum life coach, and manifestation teacher. For over ten years she has been searching for proven tools that actually help empower people to live longer, happier, and more fulfilled lives She blends eastern philosophies with cutting-edge research in integrative medicine to help people radically change their health and well-being.

 

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