Does Getting Botox make me inauthentic?

Can we just say this right off the bat?
You can be intuitive, spiritual, and soul-aligned...
and still want Botox. Or a boob job. Or bangs. Or no makeup. Or ALL the makeup.

Episode 6: No Shame in the Self-Care Game

In this episode, we have a raw convo about what it means to feel like your real self—even if that self has highlights, lip filler, a drawer full of concealer, or, let’s be honest, some good old slime boobs (we explain below 😂).

Here’s what you should know: Your intuition doesn’t care if your forehead moves.

Can You Be “Authentic” and Still Want Work Done?

Let’s get one thing straight: authenticity is not a vibe, a trend, or a hashtag.
It’s not “I woke up like this.”
It’s not “No makeup selfies only.”
And it’s definitely not: “You can’t be spiritual if you use Botox.”

Authenticity is about alignment.
Are you making choices that feel like YOU in this moment of your life?
That’s it. That’s the rule.

Heidi’s Botox High Vibe Theory

Heidi got Botox and instantly felt like her energetic frequency matched her reflection again.

It wasn’t about erasing wrinkles.
It was about feeling like the version of herself she actually IS inside: bold, youthful, magnetic.

“When I feel vibrant and I look in the mirror and see tired, it dims my energy. But when I feel vibrant and I look vibrant—holy shit, it’s like double the frequency.”

Also, my makeup goes on smoother. I float differently. My cat eye (when it works) could win awards.

Elise’s Botox Guilt (And Her Pirate’s Treasure Trauma)

First, Elise tells the story of being shamed at a Botox party at 22 (by another 22-year-old, of course).
Then she confesses to getting “Dysport” (the Botox dupe) like she was sneaking drugs at the beauty counter.
Then she confesses her seventh grade crush called her a “pirate’s dream” because she had a sunken chest 😑.

So, yes. We’ve been holding shame about our bodies since forever.

But the key shift?
She realized Botox didn’t make her fake.
It made her feel like her. And she gets to decide what that looks like—no explanation needed.

High Heels, Height Shame & The Teacher Who Deserved to Be Sued

We unpack some body shame moments from wayyy back (you’ll want to scream at Heidi’s 7th grade teacher),
talk about owning your boldness without shrinking to make others more comfortable,
and how what makes you feel powerful changes over time.

And THAT’S OKAY.

Maybe it’s heels.
Maybe it’s sneakers.
Maybe it’s a slick of concealer or a face full of makeup or bare skin with a zit and a prayer.
You get to evolve.

Intuition, Energy, and Fake Boobs

At one point Elise says:
“Your spirit doesn’t care if your forehead moves.”

We nearly died laughing but also—truth.

Wanting a boob job doesn’t mean you’re less spiritual.
Loving your wrinkles doesn’t make you more aligned.
It’s the energy behind the choice that matters.

If your reason is joy, expression, confidence, freedom, or just because you want to…
do it.

So, what do you think? Does me wanting a boob job to get rid of my “slime boobs” (aka: post-breastfeeding shape shifting boobs..) have the right energy and intention behind it? I think so ;)

Journal Prompts to Get Real With Yourself

  1. What’s one beauty-related choice I’ve made that actually made me feel more like me?

  2. What story from my past has shaped how I feel about my body today?

  3. If no one ever judged me again, what would I wear / do / own / try right now?

  4. When have I judged another woman for something I secretly wanted to do myself?

  5. Where am I still shrinking—physically, emotionally, spiritually—to make others comfortable?

Continue the Conversation

We want to hear from YOU
→ Do you feel like Botox and boob jobs can be aligned with self-love?
→ Or have you wrestled with shame, pressure, or guilt around how you present yourself?

Drop a comment on our Instagram post, DM us, or tag us in a rant or reel.
We’re your sisters now. Nothing’s off limits here.

Want support from intuitive women who get it?

Come hang out with us in our free Substack Sisterhood—we send weekly letters that feel like a permission slip to trust yourself more. No shame, no judgment, just the raw, real ride to self-worth and soul truth.

Join the Sisterhood here →

full Transcript

Elise (00:00)
Okay, real talk. This is a judgement-free zone. Well, it always is, but especially today. Can you be authentic with Botox and Boob Jobs?

Heidi (00:12)
For generations, women were shamed for trusting themselves, sensing things before they happened, and believing in their own power. No one encouraged them to embrace it until now. Welcome to Trust Yourself.

Elise (00:28)
Okay, sis, let's dive into this hot and usually heated conversation about the duality of beauty and authenticity. But first, I think we need to set our frame of mind around the definition of authenticity, since it's such a buzzword and it gets thrown around a lot like, just be authentic. I'm so authentic. But what does that really mean? At its core, authenticity is living in

alignment with your values and honoring your truth in every season. Because it can change, right? Your authentic self is not stagnant or linear. It's freaking multi-dimensional and fluid. I love that reel on Instagram of this woman who tells her audience that she is sick of men telling her that they love her natural appearance. And she scoffs and rolls her eyes and she's like,

Okay, Jason, but I have 52 units of Botox in my face, lip filler, chin filler, box hair dye, and my eyebrows are tattooed on. There's nothing natural about me. I loved her honesty and it got me thinking that if we are au naturel or not, women can still express themselves authentically as long as they feel energetically aligned with that enhancement. So, freaking start owning it.

So Heidi, because we talk about being authentic and aligned to be able to tap into our intuition. Absolutely. I'm curious, do you think we can be spiritually aligned and still love a good Botox session?

Heidi (01:54)
Yeah, I'm listening.

I think

so because alignment is all about energy, right? Like your energy alignment, energetic alignment. So I feel like I'm 22 perpetually. Obviously. I, my body likes to remind me that I am for sure not 22. Usually when I wake up in the morning with all the shoulder pains and the back creaks and having to go to the chiropractor frequently. But if I can,

put my body, my whole body and spirit and soul into this alignment, I feel like I vibrate at like my highest frequency. When I got Botox the very first time, it brought me to another level of like, like it was like, my gosh, I remember that youthful feeling when I look in the mirror, like I wanna see my reflection of my energetic frequency.

being reflected back at me. So like when I feel really vibrant and really young and really just like full of life and I look back and I see like aging, I get sad. Because I'm like, don't rain on my parade. Like don't bring my energy down. But with wrinkles, I love the way nature just evolves. But also we've evolved to know how to use Botox, right?

Elise (03:37)
Yeah, I will say, okay, my very first experience with it, I think I actually was 22, maybe 23. didn't get it. No, I didn't get it. But I was invited to a Botox party because that's a thing. And everyone was getting Botox. And first of all, like, I'm not afraid of needles, but anything that's going in my body, I'm like, okay, let me just learn about it first. Fair.

Heidi (03:47)
you never tell me this.

Elise (04:06)
One girl looked at me and said, Elise, aren't you going to get Botox too? And I said, you know, probably not today, but I'm here to support. Cheers. You know, send me the mimosa. Yes, but I'm not ready for that yet. And she looked at me very closely and she's like, I see those deep 11s, the lines between your eyebrows. And I'm like, yeah, and that's how you know I'm mad at you. So I didn't get it then, but ever since then I

was thinking about it constantly, constantly like, my God, maybe I do need Botox. And I think the first time I actually did get it, gosh, maybe I was 35 and, I convinced myself that it's fine. I'm not getting Botox. I'm getting Disport or Disport. What's it called? Disport. Basically the same thing, but that way I can be like, if anyone asks me, do you get Botox? No.

Heidi (04:55)
Yes, for it.

Elise (05:03)
I don't do Botox. I do dys...

Heidi (05:06)
Okay, so that feels like a not full alignment in life. Why you're doing it. Because it's like you're still ashamed.

Elise (05:11)
No.

I was still ashamed, however, I will say, the first time I didn't, I didn't even see a difference. Like, can you please.

Heidi (05:22)
Please

just put one unit on each side of my eye. Thank you.

Elise (05:25)
That was literally me. Yes. I was terrified. I'm like, I just want to, just want to dabble. So then the next time I came back, I don't know, three months later, I'm like, he didn't notice anything. Well, of course you didn't notice anything. You didn't get anything. So yeah, I said, let's crank this bitch up. I want to see it. I want to see some results. And actually I, like you was like, holy shit, my old face is back. It's me in my twenties again. It felt so good.

Heidi (05:28)
Figure, figure.

Makeup goes on smoother, blow a different way.

Elise (05:59)
loved it, but I did feel guilty that I got it. So I probably only got it like three or four times in my entire life and I don't do it anymore. But now bangs are a lot cheaper than bowtie.

Heidi (06:12)
to help. Upkeep. A little bit more on the upkeep, but.

Elise (06:16)
a little bit more, but it's worth it. But I do look at it now as the same way as getting highlights and my hair dyed because hell yeah, when I walk out of that salon, I feel I'm feeling good. I'm feeling fine. And my energy is vibing. I can go and give a speech and not give two shits about, you know, what I'm going to say. I just feel good. So I don't look down on people that get Botox at all. I just like for me, it kind of freaks me out still.

I think authenticity isn't about what you do, it's about why you do it, right? Like if your reason is grounded in joy and confidence and self-expression, then I think that's just as valid as choosing to go au natural or not wear makeup at all.

Heidi (07:02)
Yeah, I fucking love. I fucking love Pamela Anderson's new vibe of like makeup free all the fucking time. Have you seen her? She's fucking gorgeous.

Elise (07:12)
I

did and I was I think I at first I was like who is that? I felt really bad, but yeah

Heidi (07:19)
But I love that she's embraced it. And actually the funny thing was I saw her on the Drew Barrymore show and Drew in like solidarity also wore no makeup. There was a very energetic, slight energetic difference that I could pick up on. watching them, Drew felt very uncomfortable. she didn't, like it looked like she tried to like be very confident and maybe she was, but it just felt like there was a piece of her that was still like,

Ooh, this isn't my normal. This feels a little different. I'm in on the camera in front of all these people. Whereas Pamela had fully embraced it and she's like, I don't give a fuck. This is what I do now. Like completely bare faced, like glowing. And I was like mad props to Drew for doing that because like personally, I don't know if I would have done that if I had that show. And I loved that she did that. But then it just reminded me of like, okay, well, what do like, do I have this core like

baseline confidence in myself that I would just do that. Like I go out, I'll go to the grocery store, I'll go around, I'll go around town, no makeup, no worries. But I also then feel a bit sloppy or I don't feel as like, I don't radiate the same way. Whereas Pamela was just radiating beauty and just confidence.

Elise (08:42)
I absolutely love the idea that going au natural and owning that can be empowering and badass. But let me tell you, I scare myself in the morning when I look into that mirror first thing. Ghost of Christmas future. Reaching out to grab me. But not going to lie, like a little concealer under that eye and BAM! I feel like a whole new me. I mean, we all have insecurities and I truly think that

Heidi (08:59)
Right?

Elise (09:12)
our self-worth can remain intact or even maybe bolstered when these cosmetic choices that we make, whether they're temporary or permanent, if those choices are made from a place of self-love rather than a need for external approval. So yes, I love the wholesomeness and healthiness of au natural, but on the flip side, I think there's an outdated belief that

If you're spiritual, you have to reject anything artificial. And that's just another box, another rule, right? And if there's one thing we know about trusting your intuition, it's that it doesn't come from rules. It comes from resonance. honor your energy in this current era of your life and accept that it's okay if it changes later.

It's okay if it goes against societal norms, right? This is the epitome of do what makes you feel good.

Heidi (10:17)
if you can like almost separate societal expectations and then just focus on your own expectations. And to me, it's the same as like what you said, like how do I feel energetically? And the days when I go out in my pajamas with no makeup, with my hair in a disheveled mess, I'm still fine. I still love myself, but I don't walk or carry myself the same way as if I like put on jeans and put on some like heels or did my hair real well.

Did my makeup, tried something new, put a bold lip on, did my cat eye just perfectly. God, there's nothing better than doing your cat eye perfectly. It feels so good when you nail it, but it's like once every like month for me.

Elise (10:56)
I can't.

Yeah,

lately I've even like kind of ditched the eyeliner because not only does it smudge everywhere, but it's really annoying to me. And I'm like, wow, I feel more free with just mascara. And looking at myself even 10, five years ago, I would not do that. Like, no, I cannot leave the house without eyeliner. I have to have it. But I think it's so funny how your view on how you hold yourself and how you dress and put makeup on yourself can change over time.

Like you were saying, with the heels, that makes you feel good. But I know, Heidi, there was a time that that did not make you feel good.

Heidi (11:38)
There was a time where I didn't own any heels because I refused to have them in my house because I'm already six feet tall and I've been made fun of so many times. guess what this brings up? St. Patrick's Day, seventh grade, walking into reading class with Ms.

Elise (11:59)
She who shall not be named.

Heidi (12:01)
This girl,

this woman, woman, she was a woman, right? She was a seasoned middle school teacher, seventh grade, the epitome of fragile flowers that just have no self-worth and self-confidence typically. So 13 year old me, six feet because I was already that tall at that point. We are 20%, not even Irish, Welsh, 20 % Irish Welsh.

So, but I loved, I love St. Patrick's Day. I love to embrace holidays, all of the holidays. We still do, we love St. Patrick's Day. Head to toe, just decked out in green, bright ass green, like I'm wearing right now. I had like knee high striped green socks. I was probably wearing green leggings, for sure was wearing a green shirt. Definitely had some sort of green in my hair. Probably had sparkly green eye shadow on as well. And I walked in super fucking confident in seventh grade reading.

And she starts laughing and she goes, Hey, everyone, look, it's the jolly green giant. And she thought it was fucking hilarious. And I was instantly like, I need to go to the bathroom. And I fucking bawled my eyes out in the bathroom. And then I remember, I think I to the office because we didn't have cell phones. I went to the office to call my mom and at first I was like, can you come pick me up? I'm having a really bad day. And she's like, no, I'm sure she was like working. But

But she's like, you'll be fine, go back to school. And this was also a teacher who made fun of my height constantly. I was sitting in the front row, like it was assigned seats. So I would kind of stretch my legs out and straight in front of me. And she would purposely like walk over them and pretend to trip over them and be like, get your legs under control. Ha ha ha ha. Like fucking awful. She was awful. And then I remember going home that night and grandpa, dad's dad.

used to be a lawyer and I begged mom to call grandpa and sue her even though grandpa had been retired for, I don't know, decades and probably wasn't even that kind of lawyer. All I knew was like lawyers could sue people and I said she needs to be sued. I have emotional damage and it is irrecoverable.

irreparable, whatever, that word. But she didn't. And I get it, I guess. But I was horribly horrified. And from then on, I was just like, my height sucks. Because not only that, but that was the same year that I had a crush on a boy on our school bus who was like, I think he was in our grade and I had a crush on this boy. And he was shorter than me because they all were at that point. And I told my friend, I was like, I have this crush on this boy.

Can you tell him that I like him? She goes, sure. And then the next day she came back to me and she was like, yeah, he said he likes you, but he doesn't like you like that because you're taller than him. And I was like, oh, bummer, whatever. And then she started dating him. And I was like, oh, okay. Just sit here and cry. So yeah, me and height didn't get along for a very long time. I would just stand hunched over and I was always at the back of the...

Elise (15:13)
Kind. Very kind.

Heidi (15:26)
every school picture and they would always put you smack in the middle in the second row. So it'd be like everyone, everyone, everyone, whoop, Heidi is just like the one tower in the back and then everybody. Yeah, like everyone's the same fucking height except for me. And then like the really little kids that they would put in the front row, like they probably felt sad for being really little, but I was like, at least you guys blend in. I was literally stuck out like a sore thumb. And in third grade, I was taller than my third grade.

Elise (15:37)
The middle finger in the back.

teacher.

I'm so sorry. I also have a high heel story. although even though I am four years older than you, I am four inches shorter than you, but it was my very first job right out of grad school. I was working maybe for a month and then my boss came up to me and said, Hey, do you want to go to this interview with me? Like, my God, I'm just like just out of school. Are you sure you want me? He's like, yep, you're perfect for this job. We're going to do it. It's just going to be you and me. We drive out.

to get this project. And of course it's my first interview. So I dress up, I dress up like to the nines. I got a girl's hot suit on and I've got my high heels. We nailed it. Like the interview was fantastic. We got the job and I'm like riding high and we drive back together and I'm like, my gosh, so how do you think it went boss? And he's kind of quiet and he's like, well, I think it went well, but

Next time we go to an interview together and you're with me, don't wear heels again.

Heidi (16:58)
Fuck you, dude.

Elise (16:59)
He didn't even say please, he's like, don't wear heels again. And I kind of giggled at first because I'm like, you've got to be joking. Right.

Heidi (17:04)
because no normal, sane, adult human would say that to a woman or anyone in general. You just wouldn't.

Elise (17:11)
He wasn't even that short. Like he was my height without heels. So five, nine. And then I put my heels on.

Heidi (17:17)
Like a two inch heel, three inch heel. You don't even go that. Like you don't do a big one. Yeah.

Elise (17:21)
It was a couple inches. Yeah. Even. Yeah. And so he did not like that, but forever I held onto that shame and it took a while. so like you Heidi, like those heels that at one point made you feel good, but now like you feel like you have to hunch, you have to shrink yourself. This is what I think happens when we release the shame around these choices, like around wearing the heels or not wearing heels, wearing makeup, not wearing makeup. We release the shame.

we feel behind it, then we can stop judging ourselves and other women. Like sometimes like you can find yourself judging other people for doing something that you would do yourself. Like, God, she's wearing so much Botox, but yeah, I have a couple injections myself. And we start embracing both our inner work and our external choices as valid, right? And we stop linking our worth to outdated ideas of let's say,

aging gracefully or being real, being authentic.

Heidi (18:24)
think you nailed the aspect of being releasing the shame because you shouldn't be ashamed of what feels good to you because what feels good to you isn't always what feels good to the person next to you or this influencer or that person like or your fucking boss. Like I'm sorry, but my happiness doesn't it kind of trumps like how you feel because it sounds like he has quite a few insecurities that maybe he just

needed to get over, but that's a separate episode on little man syndrome coming to you in a month or two. Maybe, maybe not.

Elise (19:07)
So last night I was looking at myself in the mirror as I usually do when I'm washing my face and we just got new light bulbs. So it was a lot brighter than usual. And all of sudden I notice just a swath of gray hairs and I start freaking out because I have like the little strangly gray hairs here and there, but I'm not quite 40. I'm almost there, but I'm not ready for the full streaks of

Cruella De Vil gray hairs quite yet. I did shed a few tears and my husband asked me like, what, why are you crying about this? I'm, I feel old. He's like, well, I've got gray hair. And I said, yes, but it looks gorgeous on you. First of all, men with gray hair, go, you kill it. And I told him like, yeah, cause you've got dark brown hair with the silver streaks. You're a silver Fox. It's like salt and pepper, but my hair with blonde,

Heidi (19:50)
It works.

Elise (20:02)
It's like butter and salt. What am I, a fricking corn cob?

Heidi (20:07)
I mean...

Elise (20:08)
I don't feel sexy being a corn cob. I just don't.

Heidi (20:14)
If anybody's a sexy corn cob out there, please send us a picture Why live with something if you don't have to if you don't fully love it like you could it goes it goes back to like you love yourself at your core and it's I'm gonna love myself flaws and all but if I don't have to see that I'm not gonna I don't know

Elise (20:35)
It is icing on the cake. It's also though what you can afford because I cannot afford Botox every single month, honestly. So why would I?

Heidi (20:43)
We shouldn't do it every month, I don't believe.

Elise (20:45)
I don't know what it is, but it's about like where you want to prioritize your and invest your energy and your money, honestly.

Heidi (20:53)
And that's where the shame comes in, because people will shame you no matter what. They will say, you spend too much money on your looks and that doesn't matter. But if it makes that person feel good, you shut your fucking mouth. You let them spend it however they want to. Don't yuck somebody's yum, right? If somebody loves it, let them fucking do it. It's none of your business. It's really none of your business. Sorry. It's only yourself's business. My yum is so different from so many people's.

other yums that they think it's yucky. That was confusing.

Elise (21:27)
do want to say that I think this, we're talking about is so relevant right now because we live in a time where self-improvement is celebrated in so many ways. Education, fitness, mindset, work itself, but somehow choosing to enhance your appearance still gets like the side eye, right? And so if we flip the script and instead of asking, is this natural? Let's just ask, does this feel like me?

Does this feel good to me right now in this moment?

Heidi (21:59)
job.

I want a boob job. Let me tell you why. Let me tell you why. It is not because.

Elise (22:07)
Are you kidding me right now? Okay.

Heidi (22:09)
So

here's, this is the thing. I knew you were gonna get upset because growing up, I was well in doubt as they say, and maybe you weren't.

Elise (22:20)
And I was quite the opposite. Let me just say, I'm sorry, Heidi, but my seventh grade crush told me that I was pirates dream treasure pirates treasure. Yes. It means you have a sunken chest.

Heidi (22:35)
Okay, so here you go from whatever you have, pregnancy happens and the fucking line from knocked up, this forever lives rent free in my brain. When she's at work and she's trying to like not say that she's pregnant and the woman dressing her is like, it's okay, it's okay, your boobs are gonna get big and they're gonna get scary big, but then they'll go down and then they'll stay down. And that is not only true, but it's like in my core because

Yes, everything was perky and amazing before kids. And then you have kids and then it like swells up like a big balloon and then it deflates like a deflated balloon. And it doesn't have the volume anymore. And it's not necessarily the size, it's the structure that I'm missing. They for sure got deflated and they have lost complete shape. But it's like I call them like liquid boobs. So like if you put your hand flat, let's just imagine this together and we're going to have a great visual.

So let's say we're getting a mammogram, right? Place your boob on the mammogram and it is also flat like a pancake because there is no shape. It's not like a ball on a flat plate. it's it's for sure like slime. You can put slime into a ball shape, but then if you let it free out of your bra, it has turned into whatever shape you are holding your hand in. And that is why I call it, maybe I should call them slime boobs. That makes more sense.

Elise (23:48)
like slime. Like when you take slime.

Heidi (24:05)
Yeah, yeah, slime boobs. So anyways, I want a boob job to not enhance the size, but just get some firmness back into it with or without a bra. Because right now it's like, I just want a bra on all the time. Well, I don't actually, because bras fucking suck. And my son used to think bras were called brafs because I always would say, I need to take my bra off. But I would say it so fast. I was like, I need to take my bra off, but I want to feel good.

Elise (24:32)
with

a bra.

Heidi (24:34)
Well, I'm not going to walk away out of the house without a bra on. I guess I'm just saying I want to feel sexy all the time, no matter what. And I used to fucking love my boobs. And now it's like the one thing that I'm like, they're just a reminder of like, not like a bad thing. Like I loved that I was able to breastfeed for as long as I did. Like fucking thankful as hell. But also I just miss how I felt before.

And I don't think that that's a bad thing. I think that that's a good thing. Because I'm still very thankful. They did their job. I didn't have to pay for formula. And my kids were fed. And I can appreciate that and want that feeling back again of how it was before. The and's not the but.

Elise (25:18)
I like that.

Yeah. think the important thing here is that we need to embrace more diverse definitions of beauty because when it comes down to it, cosmetic enhancements that are chosen autonomously, that can be an expression of self-determination, self-love. Who gives a shit if it's frowned upon? Do you love how you look?

How you feel, do you feel more like you? Authenticity is about personal truth. And that shouldn't be tied to if you're adhering to external standards or not.

Heidi (25:58)
I think we all need a foundation of self-love. Whatever we choose to do after that, it's nobody else's business because it's, you're already at baseline self-love. You just gotta get to baseline self-love. And once you're there, let it go wherever you want.

Elise (26:13)
So

for anyone struggling with this themselves, like feeling bad for wanting more in themselves, maybe what would be something Heidi that you would suggest that they could do?

Heidi (26:27)
to shame. I think it goes back to shame. think it's like you shouldn't feel shame in wanting something more in any aspect of wanting to look a certain way as long as you're doing it in an aligned way. For example, if I don't get a boob job, I will still be happy and love myself. But if it gets to the point where it's like, I will never be happy until I have a boob job, that's where it's out of alignment.

Elise (26:55)
So you already accept yourself as you are, you love yourself, and then you're just choosing to elevate your experience for yourself. Ask yourself without judgment, why do I want this? And then when you choose it, I would say just own your choices because it's confidence. Confidence isn't about what you do, it's about standing by what feels right for you. Yes, okay. And to bring this full circle.

Heidi (27:17)
Nailed it.

Elise (27:21)
Earlier I asked if you think we can be deeply intuitive, soul-connected, and still choose perceptively quote unquote fake enhancements like Botox or boob jobs. I think it's pretty clear we answered that as hell yes you can. Because authenticity isn't about rejecting the physical. It's about choosing what feels aligned for you. Your spirit doesn't care if your forehead moves.

You're not less connected to the divine because, say, your lips are done. What matters is the energy behind the choice. So if something makes you feel more confident, more you, that is spiritually resonant. And intuition is all about your resonance. Yes, even with fake boobs. Hallelujah. Amen. But trust me, Heidi and I are always asking these questions ourselves. Should I do this? Should I do that? Not just regarding.

physical appearances, but sometimes it's easier to get clarity from an outsider's perspective, which is why Heidi and I started this podcast and our business in the first place to help women get in touch with your intuition and gain the clarity that you need to make bold decisions. So if you feel that you need more clarity on a big decision or you just feel stuck at the moment, please, please book an SOS call with us.

SOS stands for Seeking Out Solutions, where you get a deep intuitive reading, insights to your chakra and energy blocks. And Heidi even whips out her tarot cards for another fun layer of guidance. trust me, these are so fun. And the links in our show notes. So book your call today.

Heidi (29:05)
Also, feel free to comment on our Instagram post or send us a DM. Is the cat eye still in? I've heard it is not, but you know what, guys? Fuck it, I won't give a shit. I am wearing this cat eye till I die. Taylor Swift still wears it. I will still wear it.

Elise (29:20)
So I feel like this comment section might get a little wild. I love it. We talk about all the controversial things. Like, why not? That's what you talk to your sister about. So.

Heidi (29:29)
Exactly. I want to know what are your feelings on Botox and boob jobs? do.

Elise (29:33)
You too.

I'm curious Well, until next time, it's your move, Sis

Heidi (29:37)
Make it count. Bye!
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How to Rebuild Intuition: back to basics