Life Helping Us with Grace Kelly

Unbroken - A podcast by Alexandra Amor

After rapid success in her own coaching business, coach Grace Kelly now helps others wanting to do the same. She has learned the value of trusting our own innate wisdom, and also the importance of taking care of ourselves before we can help others.Grace Kelly is a transformational coach.She left her job as a school teacher in London and traveled the world coaching clients. Her work has been recognised by Forbes. Today she writes about lessons in love and loss and hosts clients on retreats in Italy where she currently resides.You can find Grace Kelly at GracefulCoaching.net and on Instagram @gracefulcoaching.You can listen above, on your favorite podcast app, or watch on YouTube. Notes, links, resources and a full transcript are below. Show Notes* Recognizing the symptoms of burn out as a signal asking for change * How our wisdom is always speaking to us, even when we can’t hear it * Tips for paying attention to your own wisdom * What we can learn from doing less * How urgency is a habit of thought * How money loves a purposeResources Mentioned in this Episode* Living Miraculously, Grace’s course with Dominic Scaffidi * Create Your Thriving Coaching Business, Grace’s small group mastermind for coaches * Dr. John Demartini * Michael Neill * Julia Cameron’s book The Artist’s WayTranscript of Interview with Grace KellyAlexandra: Grace Kelly, welcome to Unbroken.Grace: Thank you, Alexandra. It’s lovely to be here. Love your title.Alexandra: Thank you so much.Tell us a little bit about your background and how you got interested in the Three Principles.Grace: My background is as a school teacher. I spent six years in the classroom teaching, ruling unruly teenage boys in a London suburb. I loved the kids, I loved the experience of being with the children, but I really was not lit up by my environment, it was very bleak and dreary. It was in a small, just a very small suburb in North London. And it didn’t even have a decent coffee shop.That might sound like a strange thing for people. But I was moving to the big city. And I wanted city life and it just didn’t yield that, that location. Now the people were fabulous, the children were amazing, the school was fantastic. But over time, I kept getting this tapping, like, there’s something else for me to do.I had a turning point, Alexandra, when it occurred to me, is this it? Is this where I’m going to stay and is this what I’m going to commit my life to. And at the same time, I had been so burned out at work, because I really didn’t enjoy what I was what I was doing. Many teachers listening will know that you have a passion for teaching, but you end up doing a lot of paperwork and a lot of a lot of heavy lifting around bureaucracy and around paperwork.But anyway, it was a good grinding for me because I knew I was a teacher’s from a young age I used to pretend to teach classroom when I was when I was very young. I would pretend I had a set of students in front of me. So I knew that that was my, my path.I didn’t realize there was another way to teach. I didn’t realize there was something beyond a school teacher, as a teacher, until I was fortunate enough to come across my first mentor. His name was Dr. John Demartini. And he really opened my eyes and those years when I was a school teacher of just what was possible.