Fear can hold us back from the life we truly want, but taking just one step forward can change everything. In this episode, we dive into how small, intentional actions lead to lasting transformation. Special guest Rhonda Britten, Emmy Award winner and founder of Fearless Living, joins the conversation to share her powerful insights on overcoming fear, building confidence, and embracing progress—even when it feels uncomfortable.

We’ll explore how shifting your mindset, setting clear intentions, and staying consistent can help you break through barriers and create an EPIC life. Rhonda’s expertise in fearlessness will provide practical strategies to move beyond self-doubt and take action toward your goals.

Your journey doesn’t require giant leaps—just the decision to move forward, no matter how small the step. If you’re ready to conquer fear, gain clarity, and take control of your future, this episode is for you. Tune in now to learn how to step into your power and start living fearlessly!

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Overcoming Challenges & Achieving Your Dreams With Rhonda Britten

I am so honored to be joined by Rhonda Britten. Rhonda, tell us who you are and what you do.

Zander, that’s so much. Who am I? I’m a girl. I live in Los Angeles. No, so basically my credentials are first life coach in television in the world to change lives. Six hundred episodes of television. I won an Emmy for my work in Starting Over, the NBC daytime reality show. I have been changing lives for 30 years and written 4 books. My most popular one is Fearless Living, which is the name of what I do.

I tell people to live fearlessly. I have been on Oprah. I have done a lot, and really what matters the most is that I have devoted my life to one thing and one thing only, which is to help people master fear. That is really what my calling card is. That is what I’m devoted to and what everything I do is about on some way, shape, or form.

From TV Coach To Fearless Living Expert & Her Unexpected Journey

Now, that is awesome. I am all about that because I think oftentimes the things that scare us most about doing are those bold, audacious things that we think about, those, dare I say, epic journeys that we think about going on are often the most rewarding. I just started my own TV show, so I’m interested. How did you pitch a TV show and get it on the air?

One, the first TV show I was on, I did not pitch. I didn’t pitch any of the TV shows I was on. I have pitched lots of TV shows, which is a separate conversation. How I got on my first television show, there was no such thing as reality television when I started. Nobody had it. It was not anywhere in the world. I was on book tour for my first book, Fearless Living, in England.

 

EPIC Begins With 1 Step Forward | Rhonda Britten | Fearless Living

 

My publicist and I are going to the bookstores and everything, and my, she goes, “Rhonda, she’s got a call from a production company and they’re trying to create this reality show to change people’s lives. They’ve auditioned everybody in the UK and throughout Europe and even in the United States. They’ve done auditioning for nine months. They can’t find anyone who can do it. I’m just hoping that you could do a screen test tomorrow.”

I was like, “Yes, I can. Let me do that.” I was an actress when I was younger and I quit acting. This is what’s the irony is. I quit acting because I realized I no longer wanted to be anyone else but myself. I didn’t know who that was. Now here I am auditioning for a show to be myself and change lives. I go to the screen test and they have a young girl there. She’s about probably 25, 27, and she’s about dating. Again, I was an actress and I just went for it because cameras are easy for me.

Anyway, three weeks later I was living in London and doing the first reality show of its kind in the world. It was called Life Doctor, changed to Help me, Rhonda, the second season. After the second season, as I do every year, I moved back to the States after we put filming and they were starting to cast for the first reality show in America, Changing Lives called Starting Over. That was on NBC, Monday through Friday. I was on every single day for three years.

Since I was the only person in the whole world who had done it, when I was in the production meetings with the executive team before they hired me is like that last meeting. They’re like, “This is how the show’s going to go.” I went, “No, actually it’s not because I actually am the only one here that knows actually what’s going to happen.” I said to myself, “If they’re brave, they’ll hire me because I know more than they do. If they want full control, they won’t, because I know more than they do.”

They did hire me. From there, I did Starting Over for three seasons. I did Celebrity Fit Club Coach changed to Celebrity’s Lives, and then I’ve pitched tons of shows. Oprah bought a show of mine. Yes, I have done a lot of pitching, know the TV industry well, wrote for books, so I know the publishing industry well.

You certainly accomplished a lot. That is awesome. How did you make that epic decision that you wanted to help people conquer fear?

 

EPIC Begins With 1 Step Forward | Rhonda Britten | Fearless Living

 

I did not make that epic decision. I did eventually. I made it eventually. Let’s just say I had a lot of history in my past. If you want to talk about that, we absolutely can. I think I have to to tell you this part, so if you don’t mind.

Absolutely. It’s a conversation. Let’s see where it goes.

A Life-Changing Tragedy: Rhonda’s Story Of Resilience

It doesn’t make sense if I don’t. I’m just going to tell you about the worst day of my life. That’ll lead us to why I made the epic decision to actually help people change lives. I grew up in a little tiny town, and I believe by the way, that our worst days of our life actually hold the seed of our destiny.

I believe that too.

You don’t see it in the minute, you see it in hindsight. Tracing back your life, you can see, like even me quitting acting, it just set me on a path. Who knew that acting was going to lead me there? It’s just so fascinating. The worst day of my life was when I was fourteen years old. I grew up in a little town in upper Michigan. Two restaurants, Douglas House Buffet Hotel, and Big Boy.

The worst days of our life actually hold the seat of our destiny.

My parents had recently separated. It was Father’s Day. My father was coming to take us out to brunch. Me and my two sisters. It’s my mom, 3 of us, my dad, there’s 5 people, a lot of money. My mom is in her bedroom, fluffing up her beehive and putting on a blue eyeshadow and a rose-colored lipstick. My 2 sisters are fighting out in our 1 bathroom. My dad walks in, “Come on, let’s go.” Me and my mom start walking out. My sisters were still in the bathroom fighting it out. As we start walking out, it’s starting to sprinkle. My dad says he has to get his coat from the car. Now this coat is a tan Naugahyde leisure suit coat, which in the day was really good looking.

He opens the trunk and instead of grabbing a coat, he’s actually grabbing a gun. He starts yelling at my mother, “You made me do this,” and he fires. I start screaming, “Dad, what are you doing? Stop.” He cocks the gun again, points it at me. I believe I’m next. He blinks. I blink. We’re basically in a stare down. My mother, literally with her last breath, sees what’s happening and screams out, “No, don’t.”

In that moment, my father, realizing my mother is still alive, takes that bullet intended for me and shoots my mother a second time. That second bullet goes through her abdomen, out her back, lands in the car horn, and for the next twenty minutes, all I hear is the horn. My father cocks the gun, puts it to his head and fires. In a matter of two minutes, I was the sole witness of watching my father murder my mother and commit suicide in front of me.

I don’t know how you would respond, Zander, but this is how I responded. It must be my fault because I was the only one physically out there that could have changed it. I didn’t grab the gun and I didn’t kick a shin, and I didn’t jump in front of my mother. When you watch your mother die and you’re frozen in space, you don’t get to be happy ever again, just FYI, because that’s off the table. Basically, in that moment, I always like to say that it’s like I split in two. The outside, Rhonda, I was fine. That’s how I lived. The inside, Rhonda, again, don’t get to be happy, you didn’t save your mother. You’re a piece of it. You don’t ever get to have anything good happen to you.

I went to high school, went away to college and thought, “Nobody knows my story. I’m a clean slate,” and then I found alcohol and alcohol numbed the pain. I became an alcoholic. Eventually, the three duis. I eventually tried to kill myself three times. It was that third suicide attempt that I realized I’m not very good at killing myself. That’s one. Two, I’m not dying, so there has to be a reason I’m alive. I wasn’t happy about it, by the way, Zander.

Overcoming Adversity: Rhonda’s Path To Healing

When you try to kill yourself three times, they do put you in a psychiatric ward for evaluation. They put me in the psychiatric ward and after a few days, they deemed me not crazy and sent me home. I remember going home and thinking to myself all the times I was drinking and DUI and suicide, I was also going to therapy, reading books, going to workshops. I was doing everything I could to help myself.

As I sat there in my little tiny studio apartment, I said to myself, “I have a lot of knowledge because I’ve done all those, those things and I have a lot of tools. None of that took away the feeling that there’s something significantly wrong with me. There’s something wrong with me and I don’t know what it is. I have to start over.”

I just have to start over because none of that has helped me. It hasn’t gotten me anywhere. I thought to myself, “What do you do in kindergarten? I have to go to kindergarten. What do kindergartners do? They get calendar gold stars.” I actually went to the store, got a calendar in gold stars, and every day for the next 30 days, I put a gold star on the calendar anytime I did anything good. I‘m talking about drinking, but not getting drunk or getting angry and not breaking anything. At the end of 30 days, I had a calendar filled with gold stars. That was what started giving me hope that maybe I could change. It also set me on a quest to figure out what was that thing was telling me that there’s something wrong with me, that I was broken, that I could never heal.

Eventually, over a course of my own work is fear. That is how I started on that journey of embracing fear. Back to your story of asking me the question of how I started helping people. Here I am, as I said before, I was an actress, I quit acting. By this time, I have a little PR company and I work with solo entrepreneurs. One of my clients is one of the first executive business life coaches. He would always tell me, “Rhonda, you’re going to be a better coach than me.” I would look at him like he’s crazy because I really believed my past was who I am. Who is going to listen to somebody who tried to kill themselves 3 times was an alcoholic, and now sober, of course, and had 3 DUIs?

When you get three DUIs, you got to go to jail for a little while. I was in jail. I’m not a role model. When he would tell me this, I would literally look at him like he is a crazy person. That is never going to happen. By the way, I don’t think I’m alone. I think a lot of people don’t follow their calling and make those epic decisions because of their past. They believe their past is who they are. I believed that.

A lot of people don’t follow their calling and make those epic decisions because of their past. They believe their past is who they are.

What I’ll say, and I talk about it, is the meanest person in your life is you. The amount of mean things, not taking anything away from your horrific story there of losing your mom and your dad and witnessing all of that, we are so mean to ourself, the things that we say, “I’m not good enough. I don’t deserve happiness.” In my book, I was like, “That’s exactly it.”

I call it my 97-3 rule, which is that 97% of your day is actually really good and up to 3% isn’t as good. Yes, some days it’s much higher than 3%, but in general, on average, there’s a lot more good happening in your day. Yet when we talk to people, we focus on just that 3%. Honestly, I’m baffled by that because I was like, “There’s so many great things.”

That’s fear. That’s how fear work.

It is fear. I woke up this morning, not that I didn’t think I’d wake up, but it’s a great start. I should celebrate that.

Finding Her Calling: Rhonda’s Divine Guidance

We all inundated with fear and unless we understand how fear works, we will have a difficult time transcending it. To answer your question, finally, I’m at my client’s house who’s a coach. As I said, he keeps telling me I’m going to be a better coach than him. I think he’s crazy. One day, we’re brainstorming. He’s at the whiteboard and he’s writing things down. We’re brainstorming his next class. I’m sitting on the couch. Here’s the woo-woo part. The mystical, freaky part is that out of the corner of the ceiling, a cloud comes out. A book is on it and it makes a sound.

It shuts, goes back on the cloud and goes back in the ceiling. I am like, “What the hey?” I got a message when that happened and I thought, “That message can’t be for me.” I turned around to look to see somebody must have walked in. It can’t be for me. I just accidentally heard it. No. Nobody walked in. I look over at Paul, it must be for him. He’s talking, still working on the board. I start realizing that message might be for me. I am freaking out inside because the message is, first of all, it answered every question I’d ever had about life. Now I had all the answers to everything. The second thing it told me is, “Now you must go and share this. You must go and teach this.”

I’m like, “Did you forget I’m an alcoholic suicide?” The next day, I happened to have an appointment with my minister because I was actually in a spiritual practitioner four year program. I run to my minister, I say, “I got this thing. The sky came down. The book, the cloud, the ding.” She goes, “You got the call?” I go, “Yeah, okay. I got the call, but I’m not ready. I have to go finish my Bachelor’s,” because of course, I left college with three classes left to be rebellious. “I’ve got to go finish my Bachelor’s, get a Master’s, get a phd, write my book and then it’ll be 7 to 10 years. I’ll be ready in 7 to 10 years.”

She just kept saying over and over, “If you got the call, you’re ready.” I literally was like, “You are a crazy person.” It took me about six months to surrender, to then make the “epic” decision that I was scared to death to make, because I still didn’t believe I had a right. I just knew that I was supposed to based on divine guidance.

I leaned on that for the first six months, like, “I guess I’m supposed to be here.” Paul was my client, but he was also a coach. I would have a session with somebody, and then I’d go to his house and be like, “They said this, I said this,” and get mentoring. After about a year, I was like, “I got this. I know what to do.” That really was when I surrendered to saying yes to this new journey I was on to actually claim the title of life coach because by the way, there’s only five of us in the world at that point. Nobody knew what it was. I really put out my shingle as I can change your life. That was a big deal. The good is, absolutely, I could

I can say I totally relate to that because if you told me in college that I was going to write 1 book, never mind 3, I would’ve told you that you’re crazy. “You’re drinking. Absolutely not. I’m a talker, not a typer.” I hate writing and stuff. When I wrote my first book, I sat on it for five years. I kept telling people I was coming out with a book, but I was no more coming out with a book than I was flying to the moon, Rhonda. I didn’t want to be one of those people that twenty years later says, “Yeah, I’m coming out with a book.” People are like, “Yeah, right.” Even though I had nothing, I had feedback that I wasn’t a particularly good writer all through my academic career, all of that, I really hated writing, I got brave and I put the book out there. Some people called it the imposter syndrome, whatever. I think you can relate to this whole, “I’m supposed to write a book.” No, I’m not. I don’t have a degree.

“Who do you think you are?”

Exactly. People came up and I’d hear that they really liked the book, that it was helpful and all of that. I would’ve believed more if they told me it wasn’t worth the paper was printed on than positive feedback. Again, going back to being the meanest person in your life.

“By the way, you have to give me evidence how it changed your life, because I don’t believe you right now.” That’s just a compliment. “Give me the facts.”

Yeah, exactly. “Really? You liked my writing. You liked what?” “It was helpful.”

“Tell me how it did it. Tell me how it made a difference.”

Exactly, but people did like it. I’m like, “Look at that. I’m a published author.” I did this and it is helping people, which is what I want to do. Just like you, I spent seventeen years as a technical instructor. I taught people how to use software for various companies. I really enjoyed it. However, when I got laid off for the last time, I was like, “Why am I teaching someone else’s stuff when I know what I want to teach is my stuff?”

As you’re telling your story, I’m like, “I can relate to that.” It is any big change we make when we have a dream and we go, “Alright, I’m going to start doing it.” As my book says, it begins with one step forward. Oftentimes, that step is not nearly as difficult as we anticipated it being because it’s not some monumental thing. You want to sit down and write a book. You type the first letter.

You get a piece of paper out.

Right. You write a word. Just start it.

Actually I teach a couple writing classes. One is Fearless First Draft. Your first book, your first draft, and everybody doesn’t know what they’re doing. That’s the point. I love that. I love that story. I love that epic decision.

What’s so funny, when I’m working with people, and I’m sure you get the same thing, people are like, “How am I going to do this? I don’t have all the answers. I don’t have all the steps.” Guess what? I don’t have all the answers to everything that’s going to come up now, but it didn’t prevent me from getting out of bed and starting my day.

It’s so exciting too. We have these callings because when I went to that minister and the minister’s, like, “When you got your calling.” I think we all hear something. I don’t want to say all of us, but many of us at some time in our life have heard something, some message been moved by something, been inspired by something. We are like, “Yes.” Just that moment. It lasts maybe for a millisecond for some of us. I always like to say that that millisecond of clarity, I don’t even care if it lasted a millisecond of a millisecond. If you got some moment of clarity, some vision, some insight, some like that, then that moment is the most important thing in your life.

That is the truth of your life. More than anything else, more all that negative self-talk, like you’re saying more than anything. Your job right now, keeping that moment, that just a millisecond of clarity, that little bit of calling just to keep it in this safe space of like, “This is what I am going to be moving toward. This is my future.” Keeping it protected instead of naysaying it because I can’t tell you how many people, which I’m sure you have too, so many people go, “I had something like that happen, but I didn’t do it. I didn’t believe it. I thought I was crazy. I thought I needed a medic. I thought I was mentally ill because I heard this voice.”

It’s like, no, it’s actually your calling and that’s what you’re actually supposed to be doing. Many people, because they don’t have support, because they don’t understand how fear works, they focus more on their negative self-talk than who they really are, then they take away their right to that moment. They take away their right, that vision, that moment of, of inspiration, they take it away from themselves thinking they, again, don’t deserve it, or they haven’t earned it, or they’re crazy. I think that moment of clarity, no matter how small, no matter how quick is actually the most important moment of our life.

 

EPIC Begins With 1 Step Forward | Rhonda Britten | Fearless Living

 

The Power Of Fear And Choice: Transforming Your Life

I think another thing that sometimes there are absolutely moments of clarity, but sometimes I believe there’s something that keeps coming up over a couple of years. It’s like I’m supposed to do something about that. The idea for my first book, I was a motivational speaker, I knew I needed a book, but I’m like, “What the heck am I going to write a book about?” It was offhanded comment from a college friend of mine who I met with her. She had recently lost her brother, and I lost my sister many years ago.

I was just at Borders books. For those of you who may be younger and don’t know, that’s a bookstore, it was a place that sold lots of books. She goes, “There were lots of books on loss of a parent, loss of a child, but really nothing on loss of a sibling.” As I walked away from that cup of coffee, I was like, “I know that. I could write a book about that,” and I did. The book you see over my shoulder, Why Don’t They Cry? That came because as I was doing work with siblings, I met lots and lots of parents who had lost a child, had other living children, and they go, “Zander I lost a son, but I have other living children. Why don’t they cry? Why don’t I see them grieve in front of me?” It kept coming up.

Perhaps sometimes we’re a little deaf to the messages. It comes back to you. I was like, “I need to write something.” You’re right, we do have those moments of clarity and we have those moments where there is the things that we know, really we know, but we just don’t want to admit to ourself. It’s scary because it’s scary to say, “I’m doing the wrong thing. This relationship isn’t right for me. This job isn’t right for me. I’m really not happy. I find that I’m happy when I’m doing this other thing, but how would I ever do that? I can’t make a change.” I talk to people all the time that one of the most powerful forces we have in our life is choice. I will absolutely grant that in all of our lives at some point, our choices are crap and crappier.

As I always say, in order to live the life that epic life that you’re describing is, are you willing to be wrong about everything to find the right life for you? Unless you have the humility or be willing to be have humility and be willing to be vulnerable and be willing to self-reflect. In that moment of being willing to go, “I’m not living the life that I want to live,” it takes great humility to even ask yourself that question.

Are you willing to be wrong about everything to find the right epic life for you?

To even reflect on that question takes so much humility, and it takes so much compassion to allow yourself the grace and then just the space to actually explore what that even means. One of the things that’s missing in so many of our families and inside our own self is the refusal to give ourselves that compassion.

Be gentle with yourself, folks. You should be your number one cheerleader because honestly, if I don’t believe in what I’m doing, how can you believe what I’m doing? When we watch TV and you see an ad, the car companies, I’m like, “Our car is pretty good and we hope that at 50,000 miles of transmission doesn’t drop out.”

Nobody’s doing that in sales. I was raised in the Midwest as I shared and thinking of yourself in any way, shape, or form as you’re describing, I would’ve been told I’m bigheaded or I’m too big for my britches or, who do you think you are? That I have a right to live the life my soul intended is really crazy. How dare you? Due to all this fear that’s been handed down generation after generation, many of us don’t give ourselves the grace, the compassion, the permission to actually do it.

I’ll go back to what you just said a minute ago, which is be gentle. The more that we’re gentle with ourselves, the more these things can wash away from us, the more they can melt away, the more that they can start shifting. The more that we’re willing to look at our fear with open eyes, the more it won’t run us.

Absolutely. I say to people when I’m talking about grief and stuff, “You can choose to define your grief and not have it define you.” I lost my sister. That was devastating. I choose every day how I want to define it and how I want to celebrate her. That makes all the difference. I work with some people who it’s like they stop living. However, here’s the thing. Life is a participatory sport and it will go on whether you’re participating now or not.

It’s so much better when you’re actually out on the field living your own life. We’re all going to make mistakes. The only thing that we’re going to fail 100% on are the things that we don’t try. Regret is a bitter pill to have to walk around in your mouth. “I could have done this, I should have done this, I would’ve done this.” Yeah, you’re right. You didn’t and deal with it.

Forgiveness And Freedom: Releasing The Past

Love yourself anyway. Being willing to just be gentle with yourself and love yourself and not berate yourself or not judge yourself and just really go, “Whatever’s happening to me right now, whatever happened in the past to me is where I stand today. Am I willing to just know that all of that added up to where I am.”

Everything that’s ever happened to me, every decision I’ve ever made, every relationship I’ve ever had, or not had every decision I didn’t make, refuse to make, so to speak, then that’s who I am today. How do I want from this moment to move forward? For most of my life, I didn’t allow myself to move forward because I felt like I had to carry my past on my back. It wasn’t until I forgave my father first, he was the easiest one to forgive by the way, then my mother, forgiving her wasn’t as easy, and then forgiving myself so that I could let them go, so to speak.

I did this on the twentieth anniversary of their death. I did a big forgiveness ceremony and I asked my friend, my best friend to witness it because I do believe we need witnesses. I went to a lake and she sat on a log in the back 10, 15 feet away. She wasn’t involved in it. I just sat there and wrote letters and wrote things about the good things about them being my parents and burned it. I wrote all the things that were bad about them being my parents and burned it. I said, “This is who I’ve become.”

I just wrote letter after letter and just kept burning and burning. At the end, I buried all of my burnings and of course said a prayer, etc. I remember so distinctly when I stood up from being sitting on the lake there on the ground and stood up and turned to go to my car and started walking, I will never forget the feeling of the realization that I was walking with my own two feet for the first time in my life. I’d been carrying my parents. I didn’t even know I was carrying my parents until I released them. All of a sudden, I remember just walking to my car and feeling like I could breathe for the first time, and that I was walking alone for the first time. They weren’t on my back

That weight is gone. I remember exactly where that moment of clarity where I was on the Massachusetts turnpike, where for months, I’d been wrestling with why my sister had been murdered, like, “Why did this happen?” I just had that moment of clarity where I’m like, “I’m not ever going to get that answer,” and that’s okay. I need to let that go because I could spend the rest of my life like a dog chasing its tail, holding onto that. When I let that part go, I can actually breathe. I don’t have this on me. I got chills when you were talking about all that you were doing to release all of that grief and pain about your mom and your dad and yourself. Congratulations on that. That is truly epic, Rhonda.

Thank you. I love that girl that went through all that. The fourteen-year-old girl, I love her. I can’t believe she kept going. I love my 16-year-old, my 18-year-old, my 30-year-old, my 20-year-old. I love every single one of them. Even though I know I was drinking and I was getting DUIs and I was trying to commit suicide. I look back at that girl and go, “She just kept going despite everything.”

Dichotomy of I am self-medicating, I am trying to commit suicide, and yet I’m going to therapy and I’m reading books. I almost laughed because I was like, “That is hilarious.” It’s like, “I’m doing everything to preserve myself.”

I think that’s true for so many people who think that they want to die, they want to leave the earth because it’s like, yeah, I was doing every possible thing I could think of and then it wasn’t working in the way that I thought it should. Yeah, dying seemed a whole lot better than keeping on hitting my head against the wall. What the good thing is, is that I did keep hitting my head against the wall. I’m glad those did fail, those three suicide attempts. I am glad that I went through the excruciating pain of forgiving my parents and, and then getting sober and forgiving my parents and doing all the work that I did in order to be able to even notice the message from the cloud and the book and the sky.

I would’ve probably not even seen that. I’m just grateful for all those mes and I think that’s one of the ways that we can move forward in the future, is actually looking back all of our ages and just saying, “Thank you.” No matter how screwed up effed up they were, they got you here. They got you here. Even if you don’t like here, you are still alive. If you’re alive, if you’re breathing, then you’re not done.

If you’re alive, if you’re breathing, then you’re not done.

Rhonda, can you believe our time is up?

Rhonda’s Gift: Stretch Risk Or Die Free Course

No, it’s too fast. Too short. I have a gift I haven’t even given yet. Do you mind?

Absolutely. Please.

I’ve just mentioned fear a few times, and I would love to gift everyone reading a free course. It’s called Stretch, Risk or Die. It’s all about curing procrastination and moving forward in your dreams. Whatever you want to make happen in your life, whether it’s health, finances, career opening, your own business whatever it is, go and get Stretch, Risk or Die. It’s at FearlessLiving.org/risk. You’re going to put your name and your email in it, and it’s going to then give you access to the platform and you’re going to go.

It’s three fifteen-minute videos. That’s it. At the end of the third video, I actually describe what I mentioned briefly, which is the wheel of fear. You’re going to actually see how I work with fear and what the wheel of fear is. You have one and I have one. We all have one. You can discover what that wheel of fear looks like and how you can start working with it so that you can understand your fear. Go get that free course.

Rhonda, thank you so much for that very generous gift. I encourage all of the readers to go out and do it. I’m sure that it’s just going to be transformative for all of them.

It will be.

Thank you so much for joining me. Truly epic. Thank you. I want to remind everyone that if you’re ready to begin your epic journey, go to EpicBegins.com. As always, remember, epic choices lead to the epic life that you want.

 

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About Rhonda Britten

EPIC Begins With 1 Step Forward | Rhonda Britten | Fearless LivingRhonda Britten – Emmy Award-winner, Repeat Oprah guest, and Master Coach – has changed lives in over 600 episodes of reality television, authored four bestsellers, including her seminal work “Fearless Living” (translated into 16 languages), and founded the Fearless Living Institute, home of Fearless Living Life Coach Certification Program, considered the Ivy League of Life Coaching Training. She was the first Life Coach on television in the world and appeared for three seasons as the head Life Coach on the hit daytime NBC show, “Starting Over.”

Named its “Most Valuable Player” by The New York Times and heralded as “America’s Favorite Life Coach,” she brings the neuroscience of fear down to earth, giving you a path out of “not being good enough” using the “Wheels” technology she developed that saved her own life. She’s been read, heard, and watched by millions, coached tens of thousands of clients, trained hundreds of coaches, and now wants to share all she knows with you!

Free Gift https://fearlessliving.org/risk