In today’s episode, I’m joined by Jen Bee, a powerful and passionate coach for female entrepreneurs who are ready to break through what’s holding them back.
Get your free Roadmap to Supercharging Your Business Impact and Income here!
Jen specializes in helping women overcome limiting beliefs—the quiet, persistent thoughts that can sabotage growth, confidence, and clarity in business. Whether it’s fear of visibility, perfectionism, or feeling like you’re not “ready yet,” Jen has seen it all and coached women through it.
This conversation goes beyond mindset buzzwords. We dig into the real internal struggles that female entrepreneurs face every day and how those struggles are often rooted in much deeper narratives. Jen shares the exact tools and coaching techniques she uses to help clients reframe their thinking, take bold action, and create businesses that feel both successful and sustainable.
If you’ve ever felt stuck, questioned your worth, or hit an invisible wall in your business, this episode is for you. By the end, you’ll walk away feeling more empowered—and more equipped—to get out of your own way and move forward with confidence.
About Jen Bee

Coach Jen Bee is an empowerment coach and motivational speaker on a mission to help every woman get unstuck and live her best life.
Bullied from a young age, her confidence and sense of belonging were shattered for years. ❤️ But six years ago, Jen decided enough was enough—she transformed her life and never looked back!
Through consistent habits in business, and in her wellness, she reclaimed her health and also built a 6-figure business shortly after leaving a career in Human Resources and stepping into full on entrepreneurship!
Now on a quest to turn her mess into her message, she empowers women and women entrepreneurs to get out of their way and create their best life and business!
The Becky Beach Show – Overcoming Limiting Beliefs with Jen Bee
Hey, welcome to the Becky Beach and today’s guest is Jen Bee. She’s a business and life coach and speaker over at Grow With B. Welcome Jen. Bee.
Jen Bee: Hey, thank you for having me here. I love the excitement.
Becky Beach: Oh, yes. We’re really excited to have you today. Like I just love Jen Bee. I bought one of her or her zip up jackets.
She was like, these jackets, they’re like zip up, you know, hoodies that she sells and they’re beautiful and purple and purple’s my favorite color. So I went ahead and got one and, and I, and I’ve been wearing it when it gets too cold in my house and outside. You know it, it’s already summertime here. It was 90 degrees yesterday.
And yeah, so she sells them at her website, GrowWithJenBee.com.
Jen Bee: Yes, yes. Um, I love my good swag. So I mean, my tagline is you are worthy. So I think the more we can spread that message in the world, the better the world will be.
Becky Beach: Oh yes. There are like so many women out there that have like suffered from limiting beliefs and like even people have told them that they’re not worthy.
Becky Beach: Me, myself, like I’ll, I’ll just briefly share my story. My mother would tell me I was stupid, fat and ugly, you know, when I was a child growing up and I carried those beliefs into my adulthood and then I was feeling that way in college and then up till I got to be like 30, I was just feeling really bad and then I just had, Hey, wait a minute, I need to.
Becky Beach: Stop thinking this way, you know, and then I end up changing my mindset.
Jen Bee: Absolutely. So I can relate to some of that. Um, but yeah, I’m looking forward to talking about limiting beliefs today. Let’s smash some limiting, limiting beliefs, actually.
Becky Beach: Oh yeah. So, um, to tell us about your story.
Jen Bee: So, um, I’ll, uh, I’ll kind of guide you through.
Jen Bee: This journey called life. Um, and, um, so, but I, I’m actually [00:02:00] an only child. Uh, both of my parents are Cuban immigrants, and my dad was a political prisoner in Cuba. Oh. He was incarcerated for 12 years.
Becky Beach: Mm-hmm.
Jen Bee: Um, and once he was liberated through some kind of luck and hard work and all these kinds of things, um, they ended up finding themselves in the States.
Jen Bee: So they ended up getting amnesty from the US government. And so I was born in Miami. So I, uh, my father was significantly older when he had me.
Becky Beach: Mm-hmm.
Jen Bee: And my mother, um, had a ton of fear, ton of fear about the language and the money and the people. Mm-hmm. And that fear very easily got transitioned over to me growing up.
Jen Bee: Mm-hmm. So what that sounded like was, be careful somebody might hurt you. Careful when you ride your bike, you might fall down, break your arm, and then we have a medical bill. So there was a lot of fear in the household and um, that’s really where my limiting beliefs start about the age of, um, eight.
Becky Beach: Mm-hmm.
Jen Bee: Is while mo most kids, I mean my, I have two boys at [00:03:00] eight and 12, they spend a lot of time outdoors. Um, that was not my life. And, um, a lot of what my talk track started becoming is that I couldn’t do certain things. I could never learn how to ride a bike. I was never really part of a sports team whatsoever.
Jen Bee: Mm-hmm. So nobody would ever pick me. And so these limiting beliefs start to take hold and of course, um, we then go find evidence to substantiate ’em. And um, it’s interesting when you see the world in that way. But, um, Becky, what, what kind of, uh, ends up happening? Um, really where my, there’s a lot of meat in the middle and we can definitely touch base on that if wanted.
Jen Bee: But where my life starts to change is about seven years ago.
Becky Beach: Mm-hmm.
Jen Bee: Um, I did a really scary thing where it felt it was really scary. Um, I ended up, uh, joining a group fitness community. Oh,
Becky Beach: neat.
Jen Bee: And when I first stepped in, or before I stepped in there, a lot of what I was fearful of [00:04:00] was that the coach was gonna call me names and they were gonna ridicule me in front of the class.
Jen Bee: Yeah. That I was not gonna be fast enough, that I was gonna be in last place. And all these thoughts that really started about this age, the age of, you know, about eight, around there somewhere. And, uh, here’s what I started realizing. I, I did sign up. I ended up, uh, consistently going and, um, when I would go, the coach didn’t make fun of me and I wasn’t well, and I did finish a workout.
Jen Bee: And so what ends up happening over the course of about the first six months is that I started to realize that a lot of the stories that I’ve been telling myself, a lot of the limiting beliefs I was having were not true. They were not real.
Becky Beach: Mm-hmm.
Jen Bee: And they were not mine. And when I got to this place, what ends up happening next is if I figured that these stories weren’t true, real and mine, then what other stories were not [00:05:00] true, real and mine and other aspects of my life, in my career, in my relationships, whatever.
Jen Bee: And so I start peeling back this onion and unraveling this mess. Um, that’s really what guides me to today. And so now I help women and women entrepreneurs to do the same thing in their life and business because we are all darn worthy. Yes. And all these stuff that, you know, take, uh, real estate up in our head.
Jen Bee: Don’t help us feel worthy.
Yeah, it’s just really hard for, for women these days because we’re just, just constantly told, you gotta look a certain way. You have to act a certain way. Like in the media, we’re seeing these picture perfect models. Even on Instagram, people are picture po posting pictures of themself looking perfect, and then we’re thinking, well, I don’t look like, look like, does I got cellulite?
You know, I got, yeah, like I got these baggy arms and I go, oh, I don’t know. What am I gonna do? I don’t fit, you know, the mold of someone that’s beautiful, so therefore, how can I be worthy?
Jen Bee: Absolutely. Um, and, and there’s a lot of expectations put on us, and, and I think even more than men, I would say. Mm-hmm.
Jen Bee: You’re too [00:06:00] much, you’re too little. This is wrong. That is wrong. And, and the reality is that, um, marketing to whatever degree, uh, does not help us feel good in many situations. Right. The magazines we watch, the, the news that we see and all these different elements, right? And we start to very quickly start to wonder what is wrong with me?
Jen Bee: Mm-hmm. And I’ll tell you exactly what’s wrong with us. Nothing.
Becky Beach: Yes. Yeah. But if
Jen Bee: we believe it, we become it. And so we think that there’s something’s wrong with us. Yes. We will find aspects of our life where we’re not gonna feel like enough.
Yeah. I like how, how you said believe it. If we believe it, we’ll become it.
I’m gonna write that down. We will. Become it like that is so true. Like, uh, I’ve also heard the, the phrase fake it till you make it. Like if yes, that sounds kind of similar, but this, I like this better. Thank you. Believe it and then you’ll become it.
Jen Bee: And it’s a play
on B, so if you believe it, you will become it.
Oh, right. ’cause your name’s June. BII love your, your last name. There you go. Yeah. You [00:07:00] can have a lot of fun with that. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. So what, what would you say to like a woman out there that’s thinking, yeah, this is, this is great and everything. My, my unique circumstances are preventing me from feeling worthy.
Like what would you say to her?
Jen Bee: Hmm. I just had a conversation with a client today about this.
Oh, oh, really?
Jen Bee: Yeah. Yeah. So there’s a little model that, um, it’s not mine. It’s something that I apply when I coach clients. Um, and, uh, we, we all have circumstances.
Becky Beach: Mm-hmm.
Jen Bee: Right? We all have things in our life that, um, we might not have certain privilege, certain things may not go and be going exactly as we wish.
Jen Bee: Um. We all have a little bit of that. And so I think, first off, I’m gonna go side tangent for a second. I think the more we, we start sharing those circumstances, the more we start feeling like we’re in community ’cause we’re not alone.
Becky Beach: Mm-hmm.
Jen Bee: Like this doesn’t just happen to me. Right. Um, so this little model that we talked about today in this client [00:08:00] conversation, um, is something that I refer, I don’t refer to it, but it’s known as cfar.
Jen Bee: It’s
Becky Beach: C-T-F-A-R-C-T-F-A-R.
Jen Bee: It’s an acronym. Oh, so I, I’m gonna go through it real quick, but it’s funny that you mentioned the word circumstance. ’cause a C stands for circumstance. Yeah. Okay. And so what this basically means is that we all have stuff. We, you know, we, and, and we can, you know, I don’t know if you’ve ever come across one of those people.
Jen Bee: My dad was this kind of person, my dad had, uh, kidney failure. He was, um, terminally ill by my age of 10.
Becky Beach: Mm-hmm.
Jen Bee: And he had a number of things that had happened before. Like I mentioned, he was a political prisoner, but he was a really positive man in the world.
Becky Beach: Mm-hmm.
Jen Bee: And you end up with, with folks who, regardless of all the greatness, the cup is always half empty.
Jen Bee: Then you end up with folks that regardless of all the circumstances that might not be in their favor, the cup is half full. And the reason why the cup is half [00:09:00] empty or half full is because of the tea. And the tea stands for thoughts. So whatever you believe you’ll become. Yeah. And so then the tea, which is thoughts, usually has a feeling associated with it.
Jen Bee: And the feeling’s either gonna serve you or not serve you. That feeling’s gonna make you do something called the action or the a. And then every action has a result
Becky Beach: so that
Jen Bee: ours for result, and then we continue in this loop until we decide to shift it. And the easiest place to shift your feedback loop is in your thoughts.
Jen Bee: So circumstances happen, life happens, life gets lifey, and we can still choose to determine what thought process we wanna give to that. And, and when life doesn’t go our way, is there a lesson there to learn? Could that be the good in it? Right? Yeah. But life doesn’t go our way, is it? Because maybe we were meant to be on a different path and that’s good in it.
Jen Bee: So I I love that you asked that question. I, I would say based on [00:10:00] circumstance, what, what good, what lesson could we find in this to help us to, uh, be more energetically aligned to what we wanna create in our life.
Yeah. Because when you work from circumstance, like that’s just no way to live. ’cause a lot of people will, will like, will think, well, I, I don’t have enough money, or I don’t, you know, have this, I don’t have that.
Yeah. Like, she has that, why don’t I have that? And they right. Think in terms of their circumstances and they go, well I, I can’t do that because I’m this or I can’t do that because I’m that.
Jen Bee: And if you believe that, you’ll become it. Um, I love what you said about like, this, that, and the other, like the other people.
Jen Bee: Right. And, um, I, I didn’t, again, I take a lot of lessons from other people that I highly look up to, um, as far as as publications and books and things like that. I don’t know these people, uh, people and in person, so I can’t vouch for their life. But, uh, Brene Brown mm-hmm. Which a lot of us are familiar with, um, she, she mentions that one, that comparison is a thief of all joy.
Jen Bee: So if you choose to [00:11:00] consider what other people have or don’t have and how their life is better and whatever it is, um, my friends, we, we will, uh, we will never be in joy ’cause there will always be somebody that has something a little different, a little more, a little of what you want.
Because, um, yeah, I’ll just tell like a personal story.
Well, there, there’s a, I I, I’m trying to, you know, get my name out there to grow my business, and I see these people that are really high up that just have so much, you know, going for them and they’re, they’re just making millions of dollars. But then I look and they, they have like whole team’s working for them and, and I don’t have that.
So I, I can’t really compare myself to these women with that. The millions of dollars in the big teams. ’cause I, I’m just like a solopreneur. I have like a VA that’s in the Philippines that just where it works full time. You know, they just got one person, but they got all these teams and they got people running their Facebook ads, they got people doing their Pinterest, their Instagram, like everything.
And they’re all, all their marketing and I, and I don’t know what, what they’re doing themselves.
Jen Bee: Right, right. Absolutely. You know, and then [00:12:00] there there’s also the, the saying about don’t compare your chapter 10 to somebody’s chapter 200. Right. And we don’t usually know all the circumstances that go into somebody’s.
Jen Bee: Current state, what’s currently happening in their life. Um, and just keep in mind that, and I tell people this often, even in my own social media. Many times what we see is called the highlight reel. It’s called the highlight reel for for a reason, right? It is the best of the best of somebody’s life. So think about, you know, a two minute clip that you would watch after a football game.
Jen Bee: It’s not gonna give you all the play-by-play. Mm-hmm. It’s literally gonna give you the best two minutes of that game. And that is what we often see on social media. So if we’re comparing from that point of view, we will never be happy because our lives are not highlight reels all the time.
Like, people usually put the best of their lives on social media.
Like they’re not gonna put their screaming kids, you know, or, or themselves tripping and, and hurting their baby toe or stubbing their toe. Right? They’re not gonna put that up there,
Jen Bee: right? Not usually. Right. At least not consistently.
Yeah, you just never see that. But there are, are, I’ve seen some women [00:13:00] that will air their grievances, like, like that, that woman that talks about her husband and, and, uh, all the time and, and, um, she’s always whining about her husband.
Like she’s on TikTok. I always, she’s always talking about how bad her life is all the time. Like that, that’s one person I see doing that. And they got viral because of it.
Jen Bee: Yeah. Well, and at some point we kind of get sick and tired of just, uh, watching somebody complain, right. Because we. It’s not great energy to be in.
Jen Bee: Um, so that, that’s a different story for a different day. Um, but uh, yeah, again, what you, what you’re seeing is what people choose for you to see. There’s probably a lot more behind it.
Yeah, so true. Yeah. For, for instance, at, at my church, there’s this, this woman that just seems to have it all, like her husband supports her and, and that, that would be my dream.
I wanted a husband that could support me ’cause I was working 60 hours a week. I was a web developer and I was just envious of all these women that just got to stay home with their kids. ’cause their husband makes enough money to support them. And my husband, you know, doesn’t make that much. He makes about like 50,000 a year and that’s, uh, [00:14:00] difficult to support a whole family on in these days anyway.
Yeah. So I was like, oh, I just wish I was like these women. But you just never know what’s behind the scenes. Like you don’t know what’s going on, so you can’t really judge them based on what, what they’re presenting on social media.
Jen Bee: Uh, absolutely.
Yeah, so I’m glad that I don’t have a husband that does that.
’cause otherwise I wouldn’t be able to, I wouldn’t have started this business where I’m, I’m making enough to support our whole family and then some, you know, I’m doing really well for myself and I would never get to this level if I did have a husband like that. So, and so you can’t really be envious of other people, like, like you said, like that that was, uh, I really like, like that the believing what will become it.
’cause you just can’t, you know, think of what people have ’cause they’re not showing you the full, the whole picture. Like everything.
Jen Bee: Absolutely. And I love what you said there, Becky. It’s, it’s a great, uh, you know, interpretation on your circumstance. You can be like, well, this fricking sucks and my husband doesn’t make enough money and blah, blah, blah.
Jen Bee: Or you can say, well, okay, how can I change the circumstance for me and my family? Right? What can I do? What can I add? What impact can I create? [00:15:00] What income can I bring in? Um, right. That is a, being the creator of your life instead of being the victim of your circumstances.
Oh yeah. I love that. The victim circumstances.
Yeah. Yes, exactly. ’cause I, I could go through a life saying, oh, I had a miserable childhood. I was raised in poverty, I had abuse, you know, and so therefore I can’t do anything. Like, do you ever get anybody like that?
Jen Bee: I ab absolutely. There’s a lot of that. Right. Um, you know, I’m kind of gonna pivot this real quick because one of the things that I’m very, uh, ate about and that’s the intersection of pissed off and passionate.
Oh, I was wondering what you meant.
Jen Bee: That’s what piss it means, uh, pissed off and passionate is I, I’m very passionate about women making a ton of money. Mm-hmm. Making all the money that they ever have wanted in their life and more like having so much money that they don’t even know what to do with it.
Jen Bee: And I think a lot of that also stems from our limiting beliefs is our limiting beliefs that we are worthy of receiving all the things, all the money, all the compliments, all the [00:16:00] goodness in our life. Or are we like, you know, yo money, you are scary, you make me feel unsafe, you are complicated. I mean, if I were to talk to my best friend like that and my best friend money here, you know, and say those things.
Jen Bee: Mm-hmm. My best friend money would be like, yo, I’m, I’m gonna look for a different lunch date or a different dinner date. Not you. So again, mindset plays into so much of what we get to create in our life, um, including abundance.
So true. Like I, I’ve heard, heard the same where if you, you know, tell money, it’s just not, it’s not, it’s not, it’s not enough of it.
Like, it’s like a relationship. You wouldn’t tell your, your spouse or, or significant other, like, Hey, you, you’re not good enough for me. You’re, you’re not enough for me. Right. Like that, they’re gonna end up leaving you just like, money’s the same way. And I always, I’m telling my clients, if you open yourself up and just keep providing value, you know, and showing up, you know, because, you know, 99% of life is just showing up.
Mm-hmm. And the money’s gonna come to you.
Jen Bee: A hundred percent. Yeah. So, love it.
Yeah. So what, what would you, um, you [00:17:00] tell someone out there that, that’s interested in working with me, with, with you? Like where would you tell ’em to find you if somebody would to be interested? Oh yeah. If someone was interested in working, working with you.
So
Jen Bee: my website’s pretty simple. Um, first off Grow. Mm-hmm. Stands for Get Ready to Own Your Worth.
Oh, I like that. No, it meant something you,
Jen Bee: um, yeah, so it’s an acronym as well. I’m all about the acronyms these days, I guess. Um, so the easiest place to find me is grow with gen b.com. Um, I’m also very active on social media, specifically Facebook.
Jen Bee: Mm-hmm. And so you can find me there as coach Gen B. Um, I love to interact with people. I love to create community. Those are the things that I love to do. Mm-hmm. Um, but, uh, I’m easily findable and I think that when. You, you have a message on your heart and it resonates with someone. You wanna be easily findable.
Jen Bee: Like you said, 90 plus percent, 90% plus of the, all of this is just showing up, being there, being easily findable. So thank you, Becky. I.
Yeah, as long as you just show up in your business. I know some days I just wanna sleep in and not do anything, but then I’m thinking, Hey, I [00:18:00] got a why. My why is Brian, I had my, Brian’s my 9-year-old son.
I, I gotta make things happen ’cause of Brian, you know? ’cause everybody, it’s always good to have a why that what drives you and motivates you.
Jen Bee: Absolutely. Um, when most of my business clients start working with me, we actually go through a five y process. Mm-hmm. Because if it’s just grounded and I wanna be more happy and I wanna, you know, make more money, the reality is that life is gonna get lifey.
Jen Bee: And so what is it really, really, really, really the reason why you wanna do these things? So I love that. You’ve got your, you got your why. I love it. Mine is my dad. Oh, cool. Who I lost at 18 again. And, uh, I believe he is been a big, uh, push big nudger to everything that, um, has come, uh, that I’ve created here with girl.
Oh, yes. I love your website. I was just taking a look and you said $1 million left on the table by women and women are leaving millions behind.
Jen Bee: Yes. Um, I’ll tell you a little secret, um, before I became an entrepreneur, I was an HR leader for 14 years.
Becky Beach: Oh, wow.
Jen Bee: So, [00:19:00] um, as an HR leader, part of my job responsibility was to provide job offers, um, to candidates.
Becky Beach: Mm-hmm.
Jen Bee: And, um, even for the same role in the same location, uh, when I had a multiple job offer offers to give out when I gave one to a male versus a female, or at least those that identify as, um, I got very different reactions from a male. I typically got like some kind of negotiation. It was their salary, their time off, their benefits, something.
Jen Bee: From the majority of women, what I would receive would be, thank you so much for the job offer. I’m so excited to start. When do I start?
Interesting.
Jen Bee: So here’s what I know, Becky, because of the role that I was in, most jobs have a range of pay. Okay. And
Becky Beach: mm-hmm.
Jen Bee: I typically, um, as a company advocate, um, my goal [00:20:00] was to also hire talent at the best rate for the company.
Jen Bee: So there have been multiple situations where I knew there was negotiation room, but the candidate didn’t negotiate with me and I didn’t come up and say, by the way, there’s 10 grand more behind if you just ask for it. Yeah. So, um, over the course of a lifetime, a woman leaves on the table about a million dollars.
Yeah, I bet.
Jen Bee: Um, for women entrepreneurs it gets even worse.
Right.
Jen Bee: And it’s about 62 cents of the dollar of what we make because of a lack of confidence. Um, people pleasing, toxic relationships, not feeling worthy, et cetera. So knowing what I know now, I’m pissing it. There’s that word again. Okay. Yeah. I love that we’re making money and not leaving a million dollars on the table.
Jen Bee: ’cause we, when we make more money, our communities are better off it. It’s just, you know, our families are better off, we’re better off. So, um, yes, I’m very passionate about that.
What would you say to like a, a female entrepreneur that’s [00:21:00] that, just thinking, oh my God, I just, I just don’t, can’t raise my prices.
I don’t think I can charge as much as this man that probably has less experience than me. What would you say to her?
Jen Bee: Ugh. Um, so imposter syndrome is a real, real thing. Yeah. Is a real, real thing. Um, and, and I would tell my friend that you gotta feel worthy, you gotta feel confident. Your your money mindset, you.
Jen Bee: Figure out the value drive, price it at a point where you’re a little scared and a little excited about it. Go find your ideal client and make a pitch. Mm-hmm. And the more we take intentional action of realizing that a lot of the reasons that we’re stuck is up here in our brain
Becky Beach: mm-hmm.
Jen Bee: The easier it’s gonna get.
Jen Bee: And then at some point you might be like, Hey, I’m gonna add a 25% more to that. There’s usually somebody not usually, like, I’m gonna say 99.9%. If you’re a woman entrepreneur, you’re probably not the only one in the world in that industry. There’s probably many people in that [00:22:00] industry, and I can tell you that there’s people who are charging all types of prices, who typically may even be under-skilled compared to what you deliver for your clients, and they’re charging higher prices.
Jen Bee: You’re worthy of getting those higher prices. You’re worthy of getting comfortable in your prices. You’re worthy of charging more, and at at the end of the day, you get a no. Hey, congratulations. You made an offer. Go find the next door. It’s okay. It’s gonna be okay.
Yeah. ’cause, um, because I, my, uh, model is I’m high volume, low, lower prices, that, that’s what I’ve been doing all the years I’ve been in business.
And, and now I’m noticing like a shift. I’m getting less volume, but my prices are still low. I was gonna be raising my prices. Because I have low volume annual lower volume than I did. But yeah, I’ll just, I’ll just take, I’ll just stop talking about that and we’ll just, yeah.
Jen Bee: Yeah. And, and sometimes just a 10% makes us feel better.
Jen Bee: It doesn’t have to be like, I’m gonna two x my prices. Just something like that can make us and could feel incredibly, um, better.
[00:23:00] Okay. So, so Jen is what as is at Grow with gen b.com. And what’s your social media
Jen Bee: coach? Gen B on Facebook. That’s usually where I hang out. I also hang out on LinkedIn. Funny thing about my last name.
Jen Bee: My last name is not b, that’s a lot. That’s a story for a different day as well. Uhhuh. Um, so my last name is Blanco, so on LinkedIn I am Jen blanco b.
Interesting. Yeah, I, I like that.
Jen Bee: Yeah. There’s a lot of play on B these days. I mean, you know, believe it, comment, you know, I get gifted a whole bunch of B things.
Jen Bee: Um, but my last name, my given last name is actually Blanco.
Oh that. Yeah, it means white. It’s cute. Yes. Yeah, that means white. Got it. Like white. White be. That’s right. You got it. Awesome. Well, thanks much for being here. Jen. Do you have any last words for the people listening?
Jen Bee: I, again, I remind every single woman who comes across me, and this is the reason why I’m so passionate about the swag that you picked up, Becky.
Jen Bee: We are worthy, my friends, and until we are struggling with our worth, it’s, it’s gonna feel hard, [00:24:00] it’s gonna feel unfulfilling, but go find your people. Go step into your worth, go make more money. And you’ve got this. You’ve got this one step at a time.
Jen, I hear that you have a workshop in June,
Jen Bee: like could you tell us about it?
Jen Bee: Absolutely. So as you can, uh, realize I’m very passionate about women stepping into their confidence mm-hmm. Stepping into their worthiness and also elevating their income. So my signature event is called Break Free and that is exactly what I gift you in, um, a two day experience or a one night experience.
Jen Bee: It’s your choice. Um, but this is an event that hundreds of women have attended and, um, it’s free and it’s virtual, so why not? And I’d love to see you. Um, the URL for that is break free dot grow with gen b.com.
Oh yes. We’ll have that in the show notes@beckybeachshow.com. So we’ll have her workshop and everything else like on our social media and website.
Well, thanks so much for being here, Jen. That’s just been so amazing. I’ve learned so much. I’m sure our listeners have also learned to run a great deal. Yeah. Well, have a great day [00:25:00] everybody. Bye.