Ep 139. Building a business and tackling bold goals WITH your partner with Guests Rosemary & Corey Lewis
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Sara Mayer: [00:00:00] Welcome to the Bold Goal Crusher Podcast. For anyone looking to stop letting life get in the way and start crushing bold goals. I'm your host, Sara Mayer, and I'm thrilled to navigate this journey with you because it's time to start boldly achieving without working double time. So let's dive in.
Hello, bold goal crushers. I am super excited today to introduce you to one of my friends who I now am going to be best friends with her husband as well for the show today. And I think you're going to really enjoy having a couple's perspective. So let's jump in from the outside, looking in Corey and Rosemary Lewis may be described as high school sweethearts turned real estate.
moguls, but there's so much more beneath the surface, both Chicago [00:01:00] natives. This is how I knew instantly. I was going to like them. Corey has always dreamed of a life of entrepreneurship and had a vision beyond what he even knew to be possible. Growing up in a family of entrepreneurs. He's always aspired to be his own boss and needed on the contrary.
Rosemary desired safety and security and found that in becoming a classroom teacher, I didn't know you were a teacher. Interesting. Whenever on the same page at the same time, they butted heads for many years and never quite got their stride. And one day a heated discussion about their environment sparked a pivotal question.
Are we in Chicago because we know it or because we love it? When they honestly answered that question, finally on the same page, they made the decision to relocate to Texas. That decision was the catalyst. For change that started them on a path of [00:02:00] personal and professional development. And they decided to do it scared.
And today they own multiple businesses along with a seven figure real estate portfolio. I didn't even know that about your story. I love that, but I could see I only know a little bit about Corey. But from what I've heard on the podcast, I could see you two having some heated discussions.
Rosemary Lewis: Well,
Sara Mayer: welcome to the show. I'm so excited to have you on where we talk all things goals. And I love that your story shows that you two had different goals and you didn't agree, but you were able to come together around that one question.
Rosemary Lewis: Yeah, absolutely. Absolutely. We did. You want to elaborate? So we, you stated it in our biography, but the funny thing is that a lot of people, because I am the more extroverted of Corey and I and very front facing in my business, people automatically assume this is who I've always been.
. So it's funny to them when [00:03:00] they find out that not only is this not who I've always been, but I begged my husband to just get a real job to not take risks. And to, I just wanted to play it safe and that's just not who he was. And the term is correct. That opposites attract.
And the very thing that I wanted him to stop was what sparked entrepreneurship and creativity, just really setting and going after goals and dreams. And it's. I'm saying it like it's all beautiful, but definitely been a lot of ups and downs, but I'm so grateful for the journey. I love it.
Sara Mayer: I love it.
And so many people, myself included, set out to start a business, to leave their nine to five, to do something, maybe even not in that path, but something that's different or maybe what can be considered a risk. And they have a spouse or a family member who says, when are you going to get a real job?[00:04:00]
Or, Oh, in 1910, my uncle lost his business and, he never recovered. So you probably won't either. And I think it's really one of the things when you are a couple that's difficult is being on the same page with risk. Especially when it comes to family. You have a family, so how are we going to feed our kids?
Corey Lewis: I think you just got to understand that there's growing pains in the beginning, right? She talked for 14 years and I think the transition. That she was heading towards in real estate. She just really didn't want to feel the inconsistencies, right? You get used to the two week checks and the something was off and all that kind of stuff.
So it's if I leave that or the pain of dealing with something and starting something new. I just she didn't
Rosemary Lewis: want to do. And the unknown, right? And I had a front hand seat for years of Corey, our bio is real cute and put together now, but we didn't talk about the 27 failed thing, plus one.
[00:05:00] All of the things that, he tried we tried, that didn't work out and now I can look back and say, I understand why those things didn't work out. One being that, it just really wasn't what we were called to do. But the other is we really just would go after things that we really didn't have a plan.
We really didn't have a format. We really didn't have a way to execute. We just executed and you. When we hit some hard times, we didn't know how to rebound. So all of those things contributed to, I used to say, I'm a realist. I'm just a realist. Don't be mad at me. I'm just keeping it real.
But the reality is that I was not a dreamer. And we have a little story about when he first challenged me to dream and had to get out of my own way. And luckily. In that transition of me getting out of my own way, I didn't deter him right from building because I was not I wasn't, I wasn't a mean spouse, but I definitely was not a [00:06:00] willing participant where I will support you because we married.
But I wasn't a willing participant.
Sara Mayer: I love that. I love that Corey challenged you. I think that's interesting because I think sometimes the challenges come from outside. I love that he challenged you to dream. How were you open to that at first?
Rosemary Lewis: So what happened is that we were in the car, we had been married. So Cory and I met when I was 15 years old, but we didn't get married until I was 25. We actually. Our six year old was at our wedding, so we did things very uncovered and we were in the car and our son, we have been married about a year and our son had been like at a bat.
I want to say he's a basketball practice and we're in a car and he's so tell me about your dreams. And he's just really excited. I'm like dreams. Now you want to thought we would have had these conversations over the past 10 years before we got married, but we didn't. And I'm like, I was like, I actually, I said boldly, [00:07:00] like I actually achieved all my dreams.
And he was like, no, seriously, like for real, tell me your dreams. And I was like, Corey, I, I, when I was little, I wanted to be a teacher check and I'm going to add it to check. I wanted to own a home check. I wanted to be married. Check. I wanted a child check. I was like, honestly, all of my dreams have come true.
And then I got defensive because I was like, everyone's not like you, Corey Lewis it's okay. Some of us just are grateful with what God has given us. And, I got really defensive and he got quiet. Normally when I get defensive, he would have reacted. And that made me even more upset because he didn't react and he was actually thoughtful.
And he looked at me and he says, babe I understand that all of your dreams come true, came true. But what I don't understand is why you haven't dreamt again. And true story. Like that comment, [00:08:00] it would take years for me to step out and do something different because everything that I was doing up until that point was within the realm of what I knew to be possible.
What I knew myself to be capable of. Where Corey, like he is literally, and has still been that person that we're driving down the street on the way home. He's Ooh, I wonder if I turn right, where's that's going to take me? I'm like you should go home. But that question lingered with me for a very long while.
And I just needed to, I had to do some work to really unpack things that happened in my past that made me just settle for where I was.
Sara Mayer: I love that question about why you didn't continue to dream more. That was not a hard, difficult conversation for you, Corey. What were you thinking in that
Rosemary Lewis: moment?
In the
Corey Lewis: beginning, it wasn't until I heard the answer and then I had to take some time to process it. Cause she's right. Everybody's not like me. Everybody doesn't take risk. Everybody's not going [00:09:00] to bet it all on, black or red and just see what happens. But I think that so again, I'm from a family of entrepreneurs, everything always having, perfectly, it's definitely been some lessons.
But I understand financial freedom and that's what I want. I wanted us to be able to live a comfortable life, but to be able to travel and, I'm thinking future, right? I'm not thinking, I got married at 28, so I'm not thinking, Hey, what I'm gonna do at 30, right? Yeah. I'm thinking retirement. I'm thinking kids.
I'm thinking what life would look like on the other
Rosemary Lewis: side. And I was thinking about going to work tomorrow or she was
Corey Lewis: thinking about just having summers off.
Rosemary Lewis: Yeah.
Corey Lewis: I had a great school year. Let me have these two and a half months and then I'm fine. So to answer your question, I don't think it was hard until I really heard her audibly say everybody's not like me.
And then I had to understand, that I had to meet her where she was and slowly just [00:10:00] work on her to get her to really,
Sara Mayer: yeah. I think you really hit the nail on the head when you said. You were looking at what's possible, like those things in your mind were not possible for you.
Rosemary Lewis: Absolutely. Like even like financial freedom what does that even mean?
And don't get me wrong. I came from a, so Corey and I both like he, his parents were employees. Parents were employees. Now his uncle was the entrepreneur in a family that his mom always says she just doesn't understand how he wasn't his kid. So we, yeah, our immediate examples were like you.
Go to school, you get a job, you work hard. And there's, and I understood that everyone is not meant to be an entrepreneur. I still feel that in my bones. And I feel like every person, there are some people that I meet that I'm like, I, you are an awesome number two. And that's no disrespect, but we have to understand and know our skillset.[00:11:00]
And I, on the other hand, I had these. Entrepreneurial must be like a lot of businesses that Corey would try. And in particular, the business that really changed things for us was he has a barber college. And when he started to open that, we knew that there was something missing in the business. We knew that what was missing was my skill set, but I wasn't willing to take the risk of both.
So even when I knew that my skill set was leaning towards us doing something together and I could see the possibility, I went for safety because I had a lot of experiences in my life. I've lost siblings. I've had quite a few siblings pass away. That I just wanted to fly under the radar and be safe.
And until I got to the point where safety was no longer comfortable, and beyond it not being comfortable, I knew that I was not, my heart was no longer in the classroom, and I loved my students too much [00:12:00] to continue to stay there for comfort if I knew I wasn't going to be impactful. And that's what really shifted me.
to join him in entrepreneurship. We're not necessarily in business together, like people think we are because we're in the same business. But it was the catalyst to make me think
Corey Lewis: differently. Now I will say, you asked me about a hard conversation. The Barbara college was
Rosemary Lewis: a hard conversation. Oh really?
Sara Mayer: That wanted to go or that?
Rosemary Lewis: He wanted to open one. I wanted to open one.
Corey Lewis: So I've been in real estate. I started in 2000 and. When I went to 2008, the market crashed, I lost everything, got down to my last piece of money, a really good friend of mine, I owned a barber college, and pretty much showed me the ropes and what to do, so I opened that September 1st,
Rosemary Lewis: 2009.
Okay, he is running through it. I don't know how much time we have. I just want to say real quick, because he, Mind you, at this time, I've been with poor when the market crashed. I'm like, see, that's our sign. We need to [00:13:00] go. When the market crashed instead of doing that, he comes home and he tells me, I'm going to open a barber college.
And I'm like, I haven't even ever seen you cut hair. So what, how does this happen? So that's why I was reluctant to market crashes. Like we, and we were struggling, like our house was just shy of being a foreclosure. Like we had a lot of challenges because a big income source was no longer there.
And now you're coming home telling me you don't start another business. Come on friend, but it was the best thing that we could have done.
Corey Lewis: So I opened it in 2009. In six months we were green, we were making money. Everything was great. So I had to have the hard conversation of getting back in a real estate in 2011.
She was like, it's working. We pan up bills back on our feet. What are you doing? And that. So it's the real estate and then it's the Bible college for me, but it was just a [00:14:00] transition of figuring out when we were in trouble, how to get us out of trouble. Yeah.
Sara Mayer: It's interesting because we talked a little bit about risks and a lot of people had to take risks in 2008 and other things to figure that out, but I love the fact that you.
Yeah. We're able to come around. I don't know how that conversation went or if it was an ongoing drag down fight, but now it's still a part of your portfolio today,
Rosemary Lewis: right? It is. And now we live in Texas. He, the beautiful thing about the Bible college is that when we moved to Texas, we were able to partner with someone in the industry.
So we opened it up to a partnership opportunity, which was a risk, but we took the risk for, and hired his mom to work there full time. And and it's been a hands off business for us now, right? Like he has everyone working in it and now it's just another source of income for our family.
But more [00:15:00] importantly, he was able to employ his mother. And I think to. No, tomorrow is her last day. He's actually retiring his mom.
Corey Lewis: 10 years. She retires tomorrow and the barber, the gentleman I'm partnering with, his name is Larry Roberts. We have four schools, we have two in the jail system and we have two shops in Walmart. So it was definitely been an
Sara Mayer: amazing partnership. And I guess I have to ask the question, do you. Do you know how to cut hair or you still don't know how to do that or what?
Corey Lewis: I'm a licensed instructor in Illinois. Yeah, I had to learn how to cut hair because when I first started, I had to teach the students and, I can do color, I can do eyebrows, I can do everything, but in the beginning,
Rosemary Lewis: yeah, it was all bad. So do
Sara Mayer: you cut your kid's hair? Or do they not let you touch
Corey Lewis: it at nine o'clock last
Sara Mayer: night?
Yes. All right. You only have one son. You have one. Yeah, two. I thought you had two. Yeah. Yeah. [00:16:00] All right. So they let you touch their hair. So that's good. Cause teenagers, it's a hard pass.
Rosemary Lewis: Yeah,
Corey Lewis: I can cut hair for sure.
Sara Mayer: That's awesome. So I love this idea of your question. What are your dreams?
How do you, I know you, you all, you both have a podcast. How do you help people to really tap into
Rosemary Lewis: those dreams? That's when you want to take that one. Yeah, I think,
Corey Lewis: So here's the thing in the beginning. So we started the podcast and it'd be in the pandemic.
Rosemary Lewis: And it was just a, an Instagram
Corey Lewis: live. It really just started us.
We couldn't go anywhere. So we sit on the back patio and just have conversations with each other. And I'm like,
Rosemary Lewis: it was somebody.
Sara Mayer: It wasn't like a wild Cory idea. No,
Rosemary Lewis: no. It was
Corey Lewis: just me and her, just talking. And then it evolved to Instagram Live and then it evolved to just talking to people, right?
Then we had a [00:17:00] conversation of what's our, what, who is our ideal audience? Mainly entrepreneurs. And then we had to figure out what do we talk about? Because we can talk about anything, family, kids, business, whatever. And then we realized that we needed to help people solve problems. That's when the goal came.
Yeah. I think that's
Rosemary Lewis: where we are now. Yeah. That's the gist of it. And like Corey is 45, I'm 42. And what we began to notice, and I was on my way down that path until he asked me that question about dreaming, is that we are at that age where people just start settling, right? No. Yeah.
Sara Mayer: It's too
Rosemary Lewis: late to, it's too late.
And settle for, mediocre marriages. Settling for just running the kids around, settling for a job they don't like, just thinking and then what we will find and what we even looked at with our parents while we love them. Is that sometimes people think that magically something's going to happen when you're like 60 and you're [00:18:00] going to be happy, magically, you're going to want to go on a date with that spouse that you've ignored the whole 18 years.
Your kids are around magically. Your finances are going to change. And I think it's no, we want to. Start educating our demographic right now and in terms of age in terms of, like they try something and it didn't work the first time. That's not a signal that you should quit. So our thing is just transparently sharing our story because people will look at you.
On chapter, we've been together for 28 years, right? This chapter and think because you started your ice cream cart last Tuesday and you didn't get 100 people, like something must be wrong with me. And I think it's no, we want to have these authentic conversations with entrepreneurs, with somebody who wants more, but not really sure if they're qualified, not sure how to do it.
Not, you're not sure how to show up and just say, Hey, we are, you were just like you. [00:19:00] And if we can be used greatly, you can too, but it's going to take a yes from you. It's going to take a shift in mindset. And that's what our whole mission is to just really help people think differently. And then the
Corey Lewis: underlying of everything is the lesson is learning a failure.
People think that when you get there and you succeed no. It's the way up the mountain is the way you get all the lessons, again, the problem solved. That's just like where we at now. Cause in the beginning we talked
Rosemary Lewis: about everything. Everything. Everything. We had no idea.
Right now we'll go to the podcast. What's happening to you today? Cool. Let's talk about pizza. Yeah.
Corey Lewis: That's just how it was. But now we're here and we understand first. That people actually want to hear what we have to talk about, but that we have to give them something that is relatable in their life.
Rosemary Lewis: Yeah. And valuable. Yeah. That's what we're doing now. Yeah.
Sara Mayer: Yeah. I love it. And it just started from like porch talk. We were talking,
Rosemary Lewis: we were like, [00:20:00] This is good because one thing is that in our marriage, we have not always been the best communicators and as we learn how to communicate and really, just really share.
Obviously, of course, my husband, he's also my friend. And what we understand is that everyone does not have somebody that they can just talk to. And we would just have just different revelations, especially during the pandemic, but beyond. And we were like, somebody else needs to hear this. What the let's just go live.
So
Sara Mayer: funny story. I lived in Georgia for a long time. In, and I, we lived in an apartment. My best friend and I lived in an apartment. It was full of military guys. And we, she was a back of house kitchen manager. I was the front. And so we would come home late at night, like two in the morning. And we'd be out there with everybody just hanging out drinking.
This was a long time ago. We'd be drinking, talking. It was all girls. [00:21:00] And when we moved out, we called it porch talk. And when we moved out, these two guys upstairs that we had never met, like we'd never met them, came down. They're like, wait, you guys are moving out. Yeah. They're like, we've been listening to you every Saturday night for the past year.
We have learned more about relationships, sex,
Rosemary Lewis: everything just by
Sara Mayer: sitting up there and listening to you. We're like. That's creepy, but it was so funny. They're like, we sat in silence, just trying to figure out women.
Rosemary Lewis: That's actually pretty good.
Sara Mayer: Yeah. So we should have, back then there weren't podcasts, but we should have maybe took that show on the road.
Rosemary Lewis: Because what you learn is that a lot of. I think in life, a lot of us discount our skillset. We discount relationships we did. And we just think that everyone has those [00:22:00] and everyone does not. And unfortunately, and especially as it relates to entrepreneurs and even marriage, Corey and I like to be transparent about marriage because we see people throwing in the towel.
Because they feel like they're the only ones who have this tension and not that we don't want you to ignore the tension, right? We want you to have the tough conversations, but respectfully learn how to communicate, but let you know that you are not alone, right? So I don't want you to think that something must be wrong with your relationship or your business or your child.
But a lot of people think that because no one is talking transparently. And saying, this is really what it looks like or has looked like for us. I think for me,
Corey Lewis: let me tell you the magical thing about what we're doing and what you're doing is We're creating content, right? But you never know when it reaches somebody or when somebody watches.
Like you just don't, it's not like you get a notification every time somebody clicks your video,
Sara Mayer: right? Yeah, they might just be up on the top of [00:23:00] the porch creeping on you and you have no idea.
Corey Lewis: I met a guy about six weeks ago in a cigar lounge for a mass seminar. And it was just crazy how he was like, yeah, I'll watch your podcast and he literally pulled out his phone and he had a video of him, his wife and his kids in the living room watching Eagle talk.
And I was like, that is amazing because I never would have thought that, you know what I'm saying? Like anybody, not that you wouldn't think it, but it's just man, you. You're reaching so many people, you don't want your platform, right? You just never know when somebody six months from it.
That's, that's when it becomes like really amazing to
Sara Mayer: me. Yeah. And I think there's this value in real people sharing their real lives. I think for a long time, it was all produce a lot of things that people were consuming was very produced and fate, like when Instagram came out, it was the, it's still that's the Instagram posts and this is real life.[00:24:00]
Perfectly
Rosemary Lewis: curated, things when yeah,
Sara Mayer: It's interesting because Rosemary and I met in digital course Academy with Amy Porter fields, and there are a lot of people you mentioned this. Compare your chapter 32 to their chapter one, and I love Amy and she has some great content out there, but she still has on her YouTube one of the very first videos that she ever did, and she's in this background, there's like a door.
You can see into her hallway. It's so awkward. And I love that she keeps that up because I think so many times to your point that people look at where you're at and they're like, Oh, everything's perfect, easy road. And, millions of people following them and.
Rosemary Lewis: Yeah, they don't go, they didn't go through the problems that I had.
Yeah. Corey has this great thing that he says is that if we all threw our [00:25:00] problems in a pile, I bet you'll take yours back out. Oh, I love that because everyone goes through something like there are there. I posted something last year and it said, who's going through something. So right now, literally everyone.
So be kind, and my battle may look different than your battle, but we are all going through something. And that is why I almost feel like we have a responsibility, not to air your dirty laundry, but to be transparent about your process. And that Transparent. I'm not trans. Parency from others like Amy, it's been encouragement from me at times that I've wanted to give up.
Even if I never know who I may be encouraging along their journey, I feel the responsibility to do that. Yeah.
Sara Mayer: And I also want to touch on we are reading Be Your Future Self Now. Have you guys read that book? I just started it last night. So fresh news, but we're reading that book for book club.
And one of the things that you mentioned is that a lot of times [00:26:00] people think when I turned 65, my bank account will magically have all this money or I'll want to date my spouse. And so in this book, they're talking about how we aren't very kind to our future selves. We set our future selves up to magically be these people that.
They don't have the tools to be because we've made decisions now. And so I'm just on like chapter two, but I thought that was really interesting because so many times people are like when I retire from this job, then I'll live my dreams. Then I'll do this. Then I'll travel.
Rosemary Lewis: Yeah we're not about that life.
Like this is, we have a good friend whose father was in perfect health. And within a year of retirement, he died, bought his dream home. And literally got pneumonia and four months later died. And, unfortunately a good portion of Corey and I's story is a lot [00:27:00] of. He was in his 70s, probably.
He
Corey Lewis: worked for the water department
Rosemary Lewis: for 42 years. Yeah, but we've experienced a lot of premature death, right? We've had siblings, we've had friends to pass away. So we are very much I'm not waiting to retirement to do X, Y, Z. Be responsible, but also one of our biggest goals is to be a fit grandparent.
Like we want to be, we have two sons, never had a daughter. We love our boys love them to death, but we are really hopeful we get a granddaughter one day because we're not having any more kids, but we often go for walks together and, we make sure that we're taking care of ourselves because when we have a granddaughter, we want to be able to show up for her, we love on vacation.
We will always. Find a seasoned couple at the pool and we want to snuggle up next to them and just learn, what their story was like. And nine times out of 10, they're not like, Oh, this is our first vacation. They're like, Oh no, we've been coming to the Caribbean for 40 years. Like we, we do a trip [00:28:00] together.
Then we do a trip with our kids. So those are the things that we want to, those are the people we want to be in our future selves. So we show up as that right now. So I'm totally with that.
Sara Mayer: Yeah. Yeah. So it starts off with Mr. Beast. I'm sure you're familiar with Mr. Beast. The YouTuber who does all that crazy stuff, gives away a million dollars.
He's got 50 million things, but he didn't want to study. So this is in high school. He didn't want to study for a test. So he recorded three videos for his future self. And he scheduled them on YouTube to go out six months, one year. Now he's got five years, 10 years to go out on those dates. And he was like talking to his future self.
And it was really interesting. One of them was like. I hope that you've put in the work to get to a million followers. And when that video released, he's 17 recording these. When that video released, he had 25 million followers. So it was [00:29:00] like really cool. Yeah. So it starts off like talking to your future self.
So I'm interested to dive into that. This is our current book club. Book of the month club.
All right. It's been great talking to you. I think you just are the coolest couple, but this is the deal Baker question that I need to ask. Of whether or not you guys are truly my buddies from Chicago cubs or socks.
Rosemary Lewis: Oh.
Corey Lewis: Hate to let
Rosemary Lewis: you down. Ready? Neither. Oh,
Sara Mayer: okay. That's good. So that's
Rosemary Lewis: good.
We've never
Corey Lewis: been really big sports people. She says we're a
Rosemary Lewis: fan of the party. Whoever is throwing a party, I'm a fan of your team.
Sara Mayer: Okay, good. All right. I don't have to be heartbroken with the answer to that question. Is always socks. Okay.
Rosemary Lewis: Yeah.
Sara Mayer: So I was on this tour and they were talking about how the [00:30:00] Cubs were ridiculous for trying to get their logo added to the Chicago flag when they won. And. Somebody on the thing was like yeah, because they're the only team that's ever won. And the whole socks, but it was like a, it was a boat, the architecture to it.
And everyone's like reading the history of the socks. And we're like, we did not ask to be put on the flag.
Rosemary Lewis: Right, great question though.
Sara Mayer: All right. If somebody's listening to this and they're like, we need to have more Rosemary and Corey, how do they find you? And what could they expect?
Rosemary Lewis: Yay. We have a podcast called Eagle talk with team Lewis, L E W I S. So we are on YouTube. We're on all the podcast platforms, so you can, oh, and that is our name on Instagram, Eagle Talk with Team Lewis. Yeah. Or is it Eagle Talk podcast? It's one or the other. . But we'll put it in the show notes.
We'll give it to Sarah. But definitely Eagle Talk with Team Lewis is where you can find us on all [00:31:00] podcast platforms and YouTube. Yes.
Sara Mayer: And what could they expect? Cory, if you were to sum it up in one sentence.
Corey Lewis: It's changing, again, we're going to our targeted audience. So we're talking finance.
We're talking future. More importantly, she taught me habits. We're talking habits to get to your goals and what you're trying to do. Again, we're solving problems with people, but we're identifying just the different things and habits that you need to. To do in your daily life and, monthly for you and
Sara Mayer: yearly go.
I love it. And I think you can expect some real talk. You too. Don't seem like the type that are going to sugarcoat anything.
Rosemary Lewis: Not a lot of fluff.
Sara Mayer: Do we get some insight into your your TIFs? It's a lot of tips,
Rosemary Lewis: We have heated discussion, we don't really, I say we really don't fight anymore but we definitely, you definitely see [00:32:00] the dynamics of our relationship.
And that's nothing but, but God, like just the way that we have been able to grow and evolve because a lot of the things that we used to cause us to compete against each other or not mesh are honestly compliments now. So you definitely hear some different of opinions, but it's not real housewives.
So I just think we
Corey Lewis: figured out how to communicate without taking a person.
Sara Mayer: Yeah. I love it. Yeah. Yeah, that's a gift. I've really enjoyed this conversation. I feel like there are so many listeners out there that are. Are in the same boat. They're either not dreaming or they're dreaming. And somebody else is not on the same page with those dreams.
So I hope bold goal crushers, you get out there and really start to dream about what your future can be and know that there are people out there that can help you get there. So it's time to get to it. Thank you guys for being on the [00:33:00] show. It was so great to connect with you.
Rosemary Lewis: Thank you, . We appreciate you.
Yeah. Have a good one.
Sara Mayer: All right.
Rosemary Lewis: You too.
Sara Mayer: Thank you for tuning into the bold goal crusher podcast where we crush goals and everything that gets in the way.
I look forward to seeing you crush your goals this year.