Introduction and Meeting Haley Jewer
00:00:00
Speaker
Welcome back to the podcast. Today we have on Haley Jewer. We connected online, um, had a lot in common and I wanted to have you on and kind of pick your brain. So welcome. Thanks for having me on. I'm excited to talk to you. Yeah. Yeah. How's your day going so far?
Weather and Snowboarding Interests
00:00:19
Speaker
Pretty good. Just another day full of surprises, challenges and good times. Yeah. You guys are having a storm over there right now.
00:00:27
Speaker
Yeah. And, uh, it's going to go from snow to rain, which always makes things a little more interesting as well. That's the beauty of the East coast. We just had a huge storm. We had like 30 centimeters. Yeah. I was watching you do your cold plunge with all that snow around you. And I miss the snow, but it never stays here. You know, it just doesn't get snowboard. Can't do anything fun. Oh, you snowboard.
Social Media Detox and Lifestyle Balance
00:00:50
Speaker
Nice. Nice. Um, so yeah, I wanted to, I got some questions for you because I feel like we got a lot to talk about.
00:00:57
Speaker
Um, the one thing I kind of read, I've read, I've kind of related to a lot of things that you were kind of telling me about yourself. Uh, one of the things was taking time away from social media. And you told me that you took a year off of social media. So I'm just, I'm wondering why, why did you take a year away? Well, social media can have its pros and its cons for sure. I was running my business online from Mexico and was online so much.
00:01:23
Speaker
There's a huge time commitment there when you're trying to run things online, especially when it comes to editing. And even when you're doing lives, I would find just a lot of time and effort being on those apps, like Instagram, you're so easily distracted. There's so many things happening at once on there. And honestly, I just felt like I couldn't help but be distracted by some of the things I didn't love on social media, but that would happen naturally.
00:01:53
Speaker
Um, I came back to Canada and I thought maybe I would be more happy having a combination of my life, half online, half on the ground. But it's so funny because through trial and error, you figure out what works for you and I much prefer the flexibility of just making it happen online.
Trial and Error in Life Choices
00:02:10
Speaker
So that's the main reason I'm coming back full time. I like, I like how you said trial and error because a lot of people nowadays they, they're like, what do I do? And like, I always tell them like,
00:02:22
Speaker
why don't you just go try something and see if it works for you? Like, you know, a lot of people, a lot of people will just listen like, Oh, like there's this fad diet, like I'm going to go do it or the last questions about it, right? They're just unsure about things instead of just, I like to just try things out for myself, see if it fucking works. Right. So, um, I actually took time off of social media myself, um, for about like 40 days. I like, I never, never had a phone, nothing. And I, I found that like,
00:02:50
Speaker
taking away that social media, taking away your phone. It's just like time was just kind of slowing down. And it's like, I wasn't picking up my phone every like two seconds and like just jumping on doing mindless shit, you know? So. Yeah. Yeah. That's so true. Um, when I first took all of the apps off of my phone, I felt like I was still reaching for it a lot, like going to open up Facebook and then being like, Oh yeah, this is exactly why I took it off of my phone because I just don't like that.
00:03:19
Speaker
And when we talked about trial and error as well, um, I tell a lot of people fail fast, fail hard and fail fast. You're never going to nail it the first time around. And it's all about finding your own
Fitness Coaching Philosophy
00:03:29
Speaker
group. And that's what I like working with people. And what I do is every single person is so different. The route to their success is going to look different. And I like just like to peel back the layers with people and see where we end up. Yeah. So you're, you're an online fitness coach or like lifestyle coach or.
00:03:47
Speaker
Yeah, I'm a fitness coach. I primarily was doing personal training when I lived in Canada before I started traveling a lot. Um, but of course there's so much about like the mental and emotional component of fitness that I like to combine with the physical stuff, uh, working out and creating physical workout programs. That is second nature to me. That is the easy peasy stuff for me, but it's really getting people to lock in that mindset and the ability to have a certain level of discipline and feel the rewards of that.
00:04:18
Speaker
Yeah, it definitely is all about mindset. I've done it for a little bit, not very that long. Once I left the oil rigs, I was kind of like,
00:04:29
Speaker
Okay. What do I do? So like I try, I was like really in the fitness. I was like, all right, let's, let's, let's do this. Right. So I always used to tell people that like, you got to change your mindset about the fitness thing, because if it seems like a chore and you fucking hate it and you're like, Oh, I just want to lose weight. You're most likely not going to continue with it. But like, if you change your mindset and like, okay, I'm doing this, I'm feeling better and I'm working towards making myself better, you're probably going to enjoy it more. Right.
00:04:56
Speaker
Yeah. And sometimes you do have to think and act greater than you're actually feeling when you have goals and you're trying to change anything like that. You do have to overcome the struggles mentally before anything else. I mean, I work out every day, but sure as hell, I don't feel motivated to do it every single day. Most days I do, but there's days where I'm like the last thing I want to do. And it's just how you feel after.
Life on Oil Rigs and Seeking Balance
00:05:21
Speaker
That's what I always focus on. And the reason that I work it that way.
00:05:25
Speaker
Yeah. I started personal training actually, because I was a medic on the oil rigs. I was working out in Alberta for three or four years. In Alberta? Where? Where? I was working out of white court. Are you familiar with? Yes, I worked in white court a lot. I used to do fracking. Okay. I've been on a lot of frack jobs for sure. I don't know if you've heard of Cal frack.
00:05:51
Speaker
Yeah, I've been with them for sure. I've traveled around with service rigs, frat companies, drilling rigs. I definitely did it all. But when shit would slow down, like in the spring or the summer, that's how I got into personal training in the first place was to make up for that time when everything was slowing down or was just too dirty to be out there. So.
00:06:11
Speaker
You worked in the, so you were medic in the oil rigs. Like what really, cause you, you make a lot of money, right? You make, you make a lot of money. You were like, well, well, well, probably six figures. Right. Um, what made you like finally leave that? There are a number of reasons that I walked away from that. I mean, there was some instability business would be boom and boom and boom. And then there would be a couple of years where there wouldn't be as much work available. So that was always tricky.
00:06:41
Speaker
Um, definitely giving up your time, the time commitment of being out there three weeks plus at a time, no days off. People don't realize that you lose your weekends. You're not seeing your friends, you're missing family birthdays. There's just so much of a time commitment that makes it really difficult. And I mean, the money, the money definitely kept me happy outside of that for a while, but I felt like I was just working to take a vacation.
00:07:09
Speaker
You know, I would bank up some money and then I would hop overseas and blow it on good times and then have to go back to work and build it up again. And I just really wanted to create more freedom and more balance in my own life. So I, I'm mad. I relate to that a lot cause I, same thing. I would literally like work through my shift was like 22 days straight and then 13 days off and then for 13 days, it was just like.
00:07:34
Speaker
Party, you know what I mean? And then you're just going back to work, hating your life. You're like, all right, fuck, here we go again. But like, like now that I've been away from that life for so long, I can't imagine going away for 22 fucking days and working like 14, 15 hour days, rushing back to the hotel. You're just popping around hotel to hotel to hotel, like living out of a suitcase the whole time, working out, working out shitty gyms, eating shitty fucking hotel food.
00:08:05
Speaker
Yep. Jess and me out even thinking about it. Crazy. It was hard to look in the mindset with that. I mean, I was the only person out of a 20 to 30 person crew that would be actively working out every day, like trying to make that happen. But the food was a big thing. Not having access to really good quality food on the road would really affect me negatively. And I'm such a creature of habit.
00:08:30
Speaker
When I would go out there, like money talks, I wanted to make money. So I was actually usually working for two companies. I would max out my days with one. I can't remember if it was 24 days might've been the maximum that like you're legally allowed to go out, but I would literally drive back, drop off my truck and then hop out with another company. I think the longest stretch I did was like 67 days. Holy geez. That's that money. And again, you don't know what the work's going to slow down. So you're just like,
00:09:00
Speaker
fucking go. Yeah, I see like I was in that I was in the mindset before like every job ever had was always I would always be the guy be like, is there overtime? Can I work extra days, right? And you just get in that like hustle hustle hustle hustle mindset. But like, when I finally stepped away from from that, and I stopped with I'm not like so money driven now. It's like my life is completely changed. Everything's just slowed down.
00:09:30
Speaker
And one thing, one thing I've noticed at like from leaving the oil rigs is I'm actually sleeping and I'm getting a lot of sleep because like, like you said, like most guys would just come home from work, eat their food, go to bed. I would come home, go in the gym for an hour and a half and then be up and like trying to live this other life. And then, but you're like taken away from your sleep. So like when I was at work, I'd be exhausted every single day, you living off caffeine, your energy drinks going off to fucking, you know what I mean?
Living in Mexico and Lifestyle Flexibility
00:09:59
Speaker
Yeah. And the shift work, the shift work would be so hard on me. I was getting sick all the time, like trying to do my best to have a healthier lifestyle. I wasn't going to the bars and drinking like some of the rig crews as soon as they get off there. So that's the other concept that you're kind of fighting within yourself. It's like, I deserve to have a good time, but I want to save my money and I want to feel good.
00:10:22
Speaker
Yeah, I felt like I aged 10 years working too out there. Yeah, yeah, it's man. It's so wild. So and I also realized too, like since I left and kind of went working on my own, is you can actually live off a lot less money. I don't know if you can relate to that 1000% the more you make the more you spend, right?
00:10:43
Speaker
I think that's really true. Yeah. Yeah. Crazy. Crazy. You also mentioned too, that you, uh, you were like living in Mexico for six months of the year. How is that right? No, I was, um, when I quit working a full-time job for anyone else, I wanted the dream was to live six months in Canada and travel for six months abroad. So what I actually did was I got a certificate for teaching English.
00:11:10
Speaker
And I was working that online. Um, I didn't know how to set up a fitness business online at the time. I didn't even think about it at the time. So I was like, what can I do to support moving around and go out going wherever I want to go. So I actually went to Nicaragua first, and that's where I did my teaching course. I got that set up and I was actually making decent money. And the goal was to pick a new country every year, stay there for about six months, go home for six months, visit the family. And I did that for.
00:11:40
Speaker
at least three years before COVID slapped us all in the face and everything started closing in on me. And I felt like I wasn't gonna be able to do that. And I bounced to Mexico. I wouldn't say I got stuck down there because I could always come home, but like the lockdowns and everything that I was seeing from back home was just not it for me. I refused to be a part of that. So stayed in Mexico for three years
00:12:08
Speaker
And that was probably the best experience of my life. I fell in love with Mexico, picked up the language and I'm going back in a couple months. That's definitely where I'm going to set up a bit more long-term now. I actually got my temporary residency there and I'm going to make it permanent so I can go beyond the six months and just keep living it up down there. It's so wild. It's so wild to me that you've done that because it's something that I've been like actually thinking about a lot. Um,
00:12:33
Speaker
Like I work for this company, Michael Simon, and he's, he's the guy that owns it. He's always telling me, he's like, you need to move to Mexico. He's like, I don't know what you're still doing in Newfoundland. And now that I'm like actually working from my phone, like, I'm like, okay, like I could probably go do that. And it's, it's, but it's like, it's like that scary thing that like, I don't know, like, is it going to work out? And you know what I mean? And were you like that at all? Like, were you, were you thinking about this a lot before you actually went ahead and done it? Or you just said fucking did it.
00:13:04
Speaker
Um, no, I'm someone that pulls the trigger pretty hard and pretty fast on most ideas. And again, it's like fail fast, you know, you never know what's going to happen. If you're considering moving out of the country, I definitely recommend that you plan like a three to six month trip just to see how you really feel staying somewhere. That's what I was thinking. Yeah, beyond two weeks at a resort, like it is a different life to really be living on the ground like that. So
00:13:30
Speaker
I think you always hear these stories of Mexico and the cartel and all this bad shit. It's probably not like that at all, right? No, I felt incredibly safe where I was living. It was awesome. Yeah, the media really hyped up things in a negative way. I'm not sure exactly why that is, but I felt incredibly safe where I was. I traveled around alone a lot. I made friends with a ton of locals.
00:13:58
Speaker
If you have the desire to be somewhere else, go for it. Just go for it. You'll see what it's like for yourself. And you probably have a lot of freedom now that you're like working online, right? You're probably a lot more happier, a lot more healthier, right? Absolutely.
00:14:15
Speaker
That's undeniable. Yeah. Yeah. I know. There's, there's just so many, like I've thought about leaving the oil fields and that type of work for years and years and years, but like it's just, I was always just so scared because people get comfortable and they're making this amount of money and they're like, well, and then they probably buy a house and three or four cars and a camper and they got bills up to their fucking neck. They probably can't leave. Right. But you just got to
Traveling with Pets
00:14:40
Speaker
go do it. Cause you never know. You never know. I actually, um, owned a house in white court.
00:14:45
Speaker
It's so funny that you're familiar with that town. I've been all over that place. Yeah, me too. But honestly, year after year, I've just been getting less and less responsibilities off my plate to have the freedom to go anywhere that I want. And that's definitely what's most fulfilling for me. I know some people want the stability of having a home in one place. And I mean, that's the goal. Of course, I want to generate enough income that I can have multiple homes in multiple countries.
00:15:14
Speaker
But right now I'm living the life of just going wherever my heart desires and it's fucking awesome.
00:15:20
Speaker
And I fucking love that, man. Because that's what I want. I want to have the same. I want to have enough income coming in where I can just say, I hate when people ask me if I want to go on a trip and I say, I don't know. Maybe I can't afford it. Or no, I got something that I'm committed to. You know what I mean? I would like to just be able to say, just go. Go wherever. Work from my phone. Do whatever. Just travel. That's the ultimate dream, right?
00:15:48
Speaker
Well, it's easy to get tied down, you know. I didn't really expect to have a little dog that I was toting around with me everywhere, especially like a Chihuahua sized dog. I like bigger dogs and expected to have more of that kind of energy around me. But I actually found him on the beach during one of my six months trips when I was in the Dominican Republic. I found this little puppy that needed a mom. And now he's my adventure dog. We go everywhere together. You take him everywhere.
00:16:18
Speaker
Yeah, of course. He is with me everywhere. He hates the snow. I had to literally throw him out there today and he'll be pumped when we're back on the beach down. So I actually, I got a question like, is there, um, cause I was thinking about that cause like we have the dog and the cat and I'm wondering like, do you need like a passport for them or you just take them on the plane? Like, is there any issues at all? Take them to other countries or how does it work?
00:16:42
Speaker
You do have to like get some kind of health clearance through the vet. And that can be kind of different country to country what that looks like. But basically if they're fully vaccinated and you have all the paperwork for them, you can typically take them anywhere. Just look into the country that you're going to first because sometimes they have restrictions on breeds or different paperwork that they need,
Quitting Weed for Personal Growth
00:17:04
Speaker
yada, yada. It's funny because I spent the money to bring him down to Mexico, have all the paperwork in line. The first two times I went there,
00:17:13
Speaker
No one even checked the paperwork. Mexico, you never know what you're gonna get when you go down there. So the first two times I walked right through the airport, no one even asked about him. The third time I went to walk through security, like these two guys were like, what are you doing? You have to go to this room and check your dog in. And it was this whole thing where I was like, didn't see that coming because yeah, there's just not a lot of consistency there. So that's another thing you should prepare for.
00:17:39
Speaker
Yeah, that's good to know. Something else I wanted to dive into because you said that you quit smoking weed. Now my question to you is why? Because I know there's a lot of people out there that smokes a lot of weed and they probably say to themselves every single day, I wish I didn't smoke this much weed, but they never quit.
00:18:08
Speaker
Well, for me, um, I gotta say I still love smoking weed. I just don't because I'm not one of those people that can have the balance. I cut back for a while because honestly, my whole adult life, I was a pretty casual weed smoker, uh, East coast mentality. It's very common, but, uh, yeah, I cut it back to just being a weekend smoker and I felt like it was still really making me sluggish and kind of making the first couple of days of my week drag on.
00:18:38
Speaker
And I also didn't like how much focus I had on it. I would constantly be thinking about like Friday night when I can finally just relax and have a puff and I hardly drink alcohol. So that was always my escape and my way to really like put my feet up and just enjoy something. But you know, when you mentioned getting off social media and that time slowed down, that was the biggest thing I noticed about stopping weed is that I had so much more time.
00:19:05
Speaker
The days didn't just fly by and I felt like I had so much more time to put into the things that really made me feel good 24 hours a day instead of just those couple hours of being stoned. So yeah, without it, the less I miss it for sure.
00:19:22
Speaker
Yeah. Yeah. I was never really big. And actually I used to smoke it back in high school, but like in my adult life, nah, I don't, I don't really smoke it at all. Um, yeah. And you might do microdose. Did you say that the other day or no? Yeah, not regularly, but it's definitely something that I enjoy. And I think it has its benefits to work into a lot of people's mindsets. And I've had some very good experiences with it for sure.
Microdosing Mushrooms: Benefits?
00:19:50
Speaker
Like larger, larger doses or just, or what? No, larger doses. When I was younger, just for good times, I wouldn't really be focused on like the growth or like the spiritual side of it. Um, I recently spent some time on Vancouver Island and out in DC, it's actually really popular. A lot of people are into the micro dosing and I love.
00:20:14
Speaker
the micro dosing effect of not feeling high on mushrooms, but actually just feeling enlightened and uplifted and creative. There's so much good stuff for me there. But, you know, you try these different brands of capsules or these different teas and once in a while it was not a micro dose. It would be advertised as such. And then I would just be like, what have I gotten myself into? This isn't what I wanted.
00:20:40
Speaker
I think you're right. This is going to be the next big thing in Canada. You know, we've got weed legalized and that's doing its own thing. I really think micro dosing is going to be the next thing that takes off here. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I believe that too. Cause I remember when weed was slowly becoming legal, you were getting these stores pop up around and I know in Vancouver, they do have stores where you can actually walk in and buy mushrooms. I do believe I think they got a couple of stores in Toronto.
00:21:10
Speaker
Um, so it's, it's definitely going to get legal, but it's funny that, that you, uh, uh, what you said, cause I was actually just, uh, uh, filming a video about what people think in their mind when I tell them that they're micro dosing. And like most people have this like idea in their head, like, Oh, I know this guy that had a bad trip and like, you know, I'm never going to do mushrooms, right? They just, they have such like a negative like thought about mushrooms.
00:21:38
Speaker
Well, that's their first mistake when they're trying it too. I find that if you're going in with a lot of negative feelings, that's probably going to set you off in the wrong
Healthcare: Canada vs Mexico
00:21:47
Speaker
direction. You've got to trust the process and let it take its course that way. Yeah, but it's about the dosage too. Like you said, if you take too much, it's going to be overwhelming, right? And like most people don't understand the dosages, right? So when you actually take a microdose, it's exactly what you said. You feel more enlightened and creative and
00:22:06
Speaker
it's a very positive experience. Like I don't know one person that actually tried microdosing and like the actual right amount and had something bad to say about it. I don't know. Exactly. I don't know anybody. That's what it's all about. Yeah. I was watching, I don't know if you watched my story, but I was the Theo Von and Tony Robbins thing and I posted last night. I love Tony Robbins and everybody listens to fucking Tony Robbins. And when he's on there talking about it, I'm like,
00:22:35
Speaker
Wow. Like that's, you know what I mean? There's going to be so much more people interested just because of that one conversation that he's been openly talking about. Absolutely. I was stoked that you shared that. And, um, I don't know if you remember just the little clip that I shared you from doctor, was it my heart that I shared something with you yesterday about how he was saying that like in Canada, you have easier access to medically induced suicide.
00:23:02
Speaker
as opposed to like having some kind of psychotherapy treatment with microdosing mushrooms. And that, if it's true, is just so mind blowing to me. I find Canada, we get halfway there with a good idea and then all of a sudden things get flipped in the medical system and I just don't agree or understand a lot of the direction that we end up taking with our awesome free healthcare.
Travel for Perspective and Self-Discovery
00:23:27
Speaker
So that's another reason that I like to spend time in Mexico as well. It really helps me see
00:23:32
Speaker
some of the differences, what works, what doesn't. I mean, both countries definitely have pros and cons when it comes to healthcare and anything. You can apply that to any type of concept in either country where you'll find good things about it and bad things about it, but I love getting to experience different countries in that way and not just in a vacation lifestyle.
00:23:53
Speaker
Yeah, I need to start traveling more. I honestly do because like at a young age, I moved away from Newfoundland at 17 and I was up in Alberta and Saskatchewan for like 10 years. And anytime I would get time off, I would come back to Newfoundland to see my family and I wouldn't go anywhere else. And like, it was not until I got about, I don't know, 26, 27 that I really started like traveling a little bit, but like,
00:24:16
Speaker
I still haven't traveled to many places. So it's something that I got. You got, you got me motivated to, to go experience new places. Um, good. I'm glad you're feeling inspired. I left home at 18 two to live that out West dream of making money. And I don't understand. It is so expensive to travel in Canada. Like I had the odd trip that would take me out of the country as well, but I spent so much money just going home to visit my family.
00:24:44
Speaker
Like you work so hard, you commit all those long weeks like we were talking about, and then just to go see your mom is like spending everything. When you go back, build up the account again. It's such a weird cycle of living. Yeah, yeah, yeah. One last question. Hold on, not question, Kate. I got this. I don't know if you listened to the School of Greatness, Lewis House, the podcast.
00:25:08
Speaker
No, I haven't heard of that one. Well, he does something with his guests towards the end. I kind of want to do everything that you have learned in your life, like all the things that you've gained, all the knowledge that you've gained. If you just say you were to not be here tomorrow, what would you leave to the world? Like what would be your one piece of advice to the world? First thing that's coming to mind is to travel.
00:25:36
Speaker
Honestly, I think so many people want to do it or they don't take the plunge or they think that they don't have the money or they have commitments holding them back. I think that the experiences that come from traveling and see the world are just incomparable to anything else you can find. It's something that I wished I did when I was younger too, to gain a broader perspective on this world. And, you know, you just learned so much about yourself while traveling and that would be what I encourage more than anything if I had to
00:26:06
Speaker
leave something behind, taking care of your mental wellness as well. And going within is something that I talk about so much. Uh, people get caught up in their jobs or taking care of their families and they really forget that the greatest things are going to come from focusing within and being the best version of themselves for their job, for their family. That's how they do
Internal Happiness vs Materialism
00:26:29
Speaker
it. But so many people get so busy, they don't even realize it.
00:26:33
Speaker
I love that. I love that you said that because a lot of people are always looking elsewhere for happiness and not within here. And I was definitely that guy that like.
00:26:45
Speaker
I'd always be seeking relationships to try to find this happiness that I never had, right? And if they weren't happy, I wasn't happy. And if they were like, and maybe if we were breaking up, you took away my happiness, you know what I mean? And then once I started to actually start working on me, working on myself, and I realized that happiness comes within here, now nobody's gonna take away from my happiness. I don't give a fuck what happens, you know what I mean? So that's great.
00:27:13
Speaker
I've been listening to Tony Robbins for years as well and he'll be the first to tell you that money doesn't buy your happiness. He's worked with how many millionaire and billionaire clients that are struggling and they're unhappy and it's just like that's not the answer. A lot of people think it is as soon as they have the stability and the money that that's the answer but you've got to find happiness without all that stuff. And I've been cutting back on
00:27:37
Speaker
everything, you know, when I worked on the rigs, always had to have a new car. Now I drive something that it's not a beater, but it's 10 years old. Just don't have the biggest, fanciest TV anymore. Like just all of those things that really don't matter. And you can easily spend money on the newest version of the iPhone or
00:27:55
Speaker
whatever it is that you think you need and so often it's not because it really is just about what you can experience in the world, the relationships you can build with people and having that community, that connection, that's such an important part of finding happiness.
Building Relationships and Community
00:28:11
Speaker
Yeah, yeah. I agree with that. I agree with making relationships and having community because you really never know
00:28:20
Speaker
what is going to be offered to you just by like talking to somebody, right? You might have like, you never know, right? I don't know. We're just, uh, a lot of people are just scared. I think a lot of people are just like, I don't know if it's COVID or something, but everybody seems like to themselves a lot, you know? Yeah. That's definitely been a huge shift where that was such a weird time, man. I don't even know how to describe it.
00:28:47
Speaker
Just the fact that like you weren't allowed to leave your house you weren't allowed to go see your family They had like limits on how many people that could go to your Thanksgiving dinner and I'm just like this is not good for anybody and I definitely have no fear of the world or what's in the air I would rather make the most of my time here than live a life in isolation like that.
00:29:08
Speaker
Man, I seen a, I seen a video the other day talking about the COVID vaccines and stuff. I know this is way off topic, but, uh, it was, it was talking about like how many people there are in the world and how many vaccines that they had made. Like, and there was three different vaccines and they were all ready. Like they were ready to go. They were, they were already made. So it was almost, it was, it's definitely, it was definitely planned.
COVID's Impact on Life Choices
00:29:31
Speaker
I feel like it was definitely pre-planned. Man, don't get me started on this topic.
00:29:35
Speaker
because we'll be here for hours. Everything about the rollout of that, the information that was available, how they were promoting it was very misaligned with everything I believe in, and especially like freedom of choice. That's something that I just won't ever let go of myself. And if I have to live in Mexico full time because of certain restrictions or anything that happens, that's what I'll do. But I mean, nothing's permanent.
00:30:04
Speaker
That's another thing like living your life just knowing that nothing's permanent. That's something that you have to accept. Like I could set up in Mexico and commit my whole life there and then their government could change how they run things. And then I'll be reassessing life, creating a new plan that way. But being flexible and adaptable are definitely keys to happiness.
Connecting with Haley Jewer
00:30:24
Speaker
I love that. I love that.
00:30:27
Speaker
Well, I'm going to, I'm going to end this there. Um, if you want to let the people know where to find you, um, I don't know, some projects you've got coming up. You let them know. Cool. Thanks for that. Um, easiest way to reach me is just through good old Instagram. My tag is Oh, hail. Yeah. My name's Haley and it's H a Y L for the hail, but Haley. Yeah.
00:30:52
Speaker
I have a few different programs that are coming up. Some are more fitness and physical based. Some of them are a little bit more mindset based, but all of them are, uh, routed around more of a three month commitment and a three month program. I'm sure you know that, uh, you know, anything you do takes a lot of time and I really try to get people on a short term, but long-term plan so that they can commit to themselves and really see what they're capable of once they throw themselves into something.
00:31:20
Speaker
reap the benefits of committing to themselves. And I would love to work with anybody that's interested in that. Cool. Anyways, guys, thanks for listening. Talk to you later. Peace. Bye.