Change Can Happen With Love
Tonya Coppin Fox is the Founder and CEO of Global Resources and Support and Co-founder of Our.Love. She is a bold and purpose-driven entrepreneur who built a multi-million dollar industry focused on bettering women and their families. Tonya earned her Master’s in Education with a focus in Special Education and Teaching from Mercy College.
Here’s a glimpse of what you’ll learn:
Tonya Coppin Fox shares where her passion for contributing to relationship success began
Why you should prioritize cultivating an atmosphere of emotional intimacy with your partner
How to learn from your past relationships to better understand how to build in the future
Tonya describes creating keepsake memories with people in your life
Tonya discusses mindfulness in expressing your feelings
An in-depth look at the process and inspiration behind Tonya’s work with acceptance and love
In this episode…
How do you make sure your most important relationships are meaningful and intact? In a relationship, how can you discuss difficult topics and halt heated disagreements so you can spend time where it matters?
According to Tonya Coppin Fox, there is a way to love and be loved better — the epicenter is mutual respect and understanding. Tonya’s experience has taught her that love is an untapped resource. When you open up to the concept of allowing yourself to create a healthy awareness, respect, and authenticity, love is an endless tool.
In this episode of Our.Love Podcast, Tonya Coppin Fox, Founder and CEO of Global Resources and Support and Co-founder of Our.Love, talks with Jeremy Weisz. Tonya discusses how to construct authentic discussions with your partner, create a healthy awareness and respect around love, and the importance of being cognizant and mindful when expressing your feelings. So, are you ready to unlock your best love?
Resources Mentioned in this episode
Sponsor for this episode
This episode is brought to you by “Our.Love Company.”
If you want to build a strong long-lasting relationship with your significant other and explore new-exciting ways to engage each other, download our Our.Love app today - it is free!
Go to www.our.love and sign up for the latest insights on all topics related to relationships and love! as well as Access to our app! It’s free.
Episode Transcript
Intro 0:03
Welcome to Our.Love Podcast, where we share insights from top scientists and relationship experts on all things about love that are out of the box, refreshing and new. Now sit back, grab a cold drink or hot one if you prefer. And enjoy today's episode.
Jeremy Weisz 0:26
Welcome, everyone. I'm here with Tonya Coppin Fox, the Co-founder and President of Our.Love. We're here at the Our.Love Podcast. I am Dr. Jeremy Weisz, I'm with Rise25, and I’ve done 1000 interviews. And we flipped the script for this one and I will be interviewing Tonya. And before we dig into this, this episode is brought to you by Our.Love Company, if you're in a committed relationship, and you want to build a better relationship with your spouse or partner, right Tonya, who doesn't want to do that, right? download the Our.Love app today, it's free. Okay, I don't know if it's gonna be free forever. So you better download it when you listen to this. But they have top scientists relationship experts who have poured their expertise, their blood, sweat, and tears into this thing, go to Our.Love, sign up for the newsletter about all things relationships, get access to the free app, if you have questions, you can email them at connect@ourlovecompany.com Tonya, are there any other places online we should point people towards for Our.Love?
Tonya Coppin Fox 1:21
So we have our Instagram and we have our Facebook page. So just if you go on our website, Our.Love, it'll point you to our Instagram page and our Facebook page.
Jeremy Weisz 1:37
Great. And I want to formally introduce you, Tonya and Tonya Coppin Fox is Co-founder of Our.Love with Tal Zlotnitsky. And I mentioned Our.Love, they have a unique relationship wellness technology dedicated to helping couples of all financial means socio economic backgrounds. She's also a Founder and CEO of Global Resources and Supports. She's a staff of nearly 150, outstanding, dedicated professionals. I don’t know how she does does it all. But Tonya, thank you for joining me.
Tonya Coppin Fox 2:06
Thank you, Jeremy is pleasure to be interviewed today.
Jeremy Weisz 2:11
I want to start with why you decided to start the journey of helping to create Our.Love because you're so busy, you're present a nonprofit, you teach you have your own company, why do you start on this journey?
Tonya Coppin Fox 2:21
You know, Jeremy, for me, it was really about evaluating my legacy. I think that, you know, we're here on this earth for a limited amount of time. And we have to make a mark on on this on this, this world while we're here. So for me, I looked at love as that untapped resource. And I know that it will be here for the the end of time, people will always fall in love people will always be in relationships. And if there is some way that we could contribute to people loving better, and being left better, I wanted to I wanted to be part of that journey.
Jeremy Weisz 3:05
I'm curious, you know, when when you say that it makes me think of the book The Art of Happiness by the Dalai Lama. And, and I'm wondering who's inspired you in the relationship worlds? It could be someone you know, or so maybe a distant mentor through a book, or whoever it may be.
Tonya Coppin Fox 3:26
You know, for me, I have to say my grandmother probably inspired inspired me in terms of loving, not necessarily relationships. I learned though I learned a lot from the relationship she had with my grandfather. But definitely the love that she had and how that exuded and how she was so selfless and but still a strong businesswoman and strong and every other in every aspect. She really, I think my first sense of what it is to, to love someone and something unconditionally had to come from her honestly.
Jeremy Weisz 4:04
What was an example that you think back of what she said to you or something? She you observed her?
Tonya Coppin Fox 4:13
You know, I always tell people so I don't want anyone to get mad I have these West Indians saying so remember a saying where they say, Love who loves you? And you know, I experienced that so much in in my second marriage. I'm walking into it how loving and affectionate my husband is to me. I mean even just a few minutes ago, I don't know Jeremy as we were preparing for this, he walked down and he just, you know, lips me, you're so beautiful. I mean, you know when you have someone that truly values you and can see your inside not even your outside. You also might look great but can see your inside. It's always reaffirming that that To me, that is really, it makes you love that person. So it's easy to love who loves you.
Jeremy Weisz 5:07
You know when you say that I picture inside the app. What's your husband's name? Harold. Harold, I picture inside the app. So let's say I subscribe. I'm like, What should I say to my wife today? So you should know that I love her. And I, I'm picturing going inside the app, clicking and having Harold's face. I don't know what it looks like, face. Beautiful. I would do that with my wife. So what tell me about what's going to be inside the app like when someone what should they expect when they go inside the app?
Tonya Coppin Fox 5:35
Wow. One that we know our app now has gone through a couple of iterations. And the one great thing that I love about it now is the weather we have the app is centered around the relationship house. And what we've done is we've allowed couples to see how the other couple is how the other person in the cup in the relationship is feeling through the use of the weather. So if it's a great day, and all things are cheery and happy you get this. And that kind of looms outside the window pane. And if you know one person a couple is not feeling great, and it's a little rainy to be may not necessarily be something that's happening within the really shouldn't be work related can be whatever, you can see a little rain shower, and the couples are able to communicate what is causing that effect.
Jeremy Weisz 6:28
That's really cool. I love that. Yeah. Back to your grandmother for a second. You mentioned She's a strong woman, strong businesswoman. What was what did she do?
Tonya Coppin Fox 6:38
So my grandmother was one of the most influential women in the country of Barbados. In the 80s and 90s. She started with a third-grade education, she started a bakery, and it taught bakeries in Ireland, she had a staff of probably, maybe at that time, over 100 150 people, she had van routes that would go all throughout the country, selling her bread, she would serve as the grocery stores. And then she also had small, like corner stores where she would not she would sell goods and she would sell the brand. And she would also sell you know, liquid because it is the Caribbean and we drank. So anti, you know, just going up, seeing her being able to get up at five o'clock in the morning and sometimes not go down until midnight. And you know, she indoctrinated me in how learning how to do banking transactions and how to do staffing. But there was also a humanistic side. You know, a lot of people think that in business, you have to be ruthless you have to be you have to be hardcore, but you can be steadfast, but you can still also be human. And that is the one thing that really attracted me to my partner, Tal Zlotnitsky is when we got together one of his things was like I want to I want to be in business, I want to we want to do well, but we want to empower people to be their best selves. Want to we know we want people to to enjoy this journey with us. And that was very attractive to me.
Jeremy Weisz 8:14
seem like you've got a lot of grit from your grandmother. Yeah
Tonya Coppin Fox 8:19
Yeah definitely.
Jeremy Weisz 8:20
I want to talk about you know, with obviously, with our love, it's about relationships, but specifically talking about women in relationships. And I'd love for you to talk about that.
Tonya Coppin Fox 8:32
It's so funny, because today I had a session with one of my employees, and I know this is like really weird, like, your, your boss is having a session with you. But I find that I do. I was telling her that, you know, my background was in psychology and education. And I said, I made a promise. I said, you know, the Lord, if You know, I'm successful, I don't want to just be successful making money, I want to be able to impact people's lives. And I had a staff member that came to me, and she was in tears. She was about to be, you know, evicted, and she was dealing with a lot of trauma. And I sat down and talked about maybe an hour and going through the different episodes and things that happened in her life and the current relationship that she's in now. And how how stressful and how strained that relationship is. And I think that you know, I wouldn't take anything away from men because I do want to be very cognizant that men also have you know, trauma and things that that that are they bring into the relationship but specifically women and my sisters that are in relationships, we are asked to be everything we're asked to be the moms we're asked to have careers we're asked to, you know, be you know, intimate and and be sexy and vivacious and you know, do all these things to cook you know to And, you know, we wear many hats. And I, you know, and oftentimes growing up as, as girls were told that we have to be all these things, and we have to do it just a certain way. And, and what happens is, by the time you get to the relationship, you you're a little tired, cuz you've been a shadow, you've been a teacher, you've been, you know, and at nighttime, sometimes intimacy can suffer and, you know, and your partner doesn't always understand. So as as a woman, I'm, I really like to really talk to other women about how we can have that balance, you know, because intimacy is just as important for us. And, but how, you know, it's very hard sometimes to kind of relax and be intimate when you spent 12 hours, on the going and being everything to everyone, whether you're taking care of a mother or elderly parents, or family members or paying bills, whatever it is, when and then when it's time for you know that that time to be intimate, it's very hard. But you have to like, you have to have the balance. And you have to make yourself, you know, kind of say, You know what, today, I'm not going to be everything. I'm not going to be Oh, no, it's okay, I'm going to have a day off today. Because today, I'm just going to concentrate when my husband, and I'm going to create this beautiful atmosphere for us. And something I do I go to hotels, I might be in the same state. But I go to I say, Honey, let's go to a hotel. And it's just us today. And I try to create those those events that we you know, we can reconnect, and we can we can bond.
Jeremy Weisz 11:38
I love that. Yeah, there's a lot of pressure there. And what you said, I feel the pressure, as you say it, of all those things that build up. What do you say to someone, a woman who, let's say, has not had great relationships, and has found a second chance?
Tonya Coppin Fox 12:02
Well, here's the thing. I think people will say, and I go back again, to the conversation I had today, the young lady said to me, she was embarrassed because of the relationships she was in and I said, there's no need to be embarrassed, every experience teaches us something. Right? So I think as humans, we have to recognize that there are no mistakes. There are events that happen in life, right? And these events are meant to teach us what do what did we learn? So when you go from one relationship into another, you have to take a moment of reflection? What did I learn from this previous relationship? What was great about it, and what was not so good about it? Right? And those are, those are moments that we get to reinvent the wheel, we get to start over. Right. And I think that going into that second relationship, you have to be honest, you have to be honest, and you have to be transparent. And those are things that I know, everyone gets caught up in the honeymoon stage. And oh, you know, well, you know, I'll he raised his voice a little bit, I'll just forgive him now. No, but it is the honeymoon stage where you kind of have to kind of put those building blocks in place, and set the tone for the rest of the relationship.
Jeremy Weisz 13:17
I'm wondering what makes me think of when you say that is I should have a red flag list. Like of things from a past relationship, like you, like you said, if someone raised their voice a little bit in the honeymoon stage, what's it going to be like, when you have three kids? And you're working full time? It's not going to be any better than 100?
Tonya Coppin Fox 13:34
Correct. Correct. Correct. You're right, you're right. And, you know, you know, we one of the things that we talk about women in relationships, women by nature, I think tend to be fixers, we think we can fix everything, right? And when you are trying to select a partner, I don't think that that's the time to try to fix something, right? That's the time where you need someone that can be compatible with you, and that you guys can build together. Because you can't build if you're trying to repair at the same time. Think about a house that you know, you got to break if you're if you're trying to build the house something but you got to keep going back here to repair all the, you know, the sink or whatever. Think how much longer it's taking you to build.
Jeremy Weisz 14:23
Totally. Yeah. What about you know, you know, we talked about the pressure, and I don't know, balance is the right word, but talk about women having to balance relationships, parenting and business and how do you go about doing that? Because you've done all these, I would say successfully, whatever success means, but it seems like that would be the case. So talk about how that balance comes into play.
Tonya Coppin Fox 14:54
You know, I think for me, it is understanding There's 24 hours in a day, right? And when I wake up, there are maybe the three major things that I have to get accomplished business wise. But number four is my child, my children, and number five is my husband or however or whatever order you want to put it in. So I have five, right? So asking myself at the night, okay, I accomplish these three major things. Did I remember to spend time with my kids? Did I remember to spend time with my husband? Right? So that's how I kind of look at that balance. Because I think people try to do too much in a day. And it just, it just not possible, right? But you want to make sure that, you know, at the end of it, business, you know, what have you that you still have your your most important relationships intact, because those are the relationships that are going to take you through illness that I'm going to take you through as you age, you know, those are the relationships that are most meaningful. And I always have this, I tell them, I tell my friends, as I said, I've never seen on a tombstone, here lies a loyal employee, right? You always see here, who here lot lies a loyal a great mother, a great wife, but never a great business woman or a great employee or a great human resources director, right? So you just have to kind of put that in perspective.
Jeremy Weisz 16:27
You know, when I love what you said about with your husband, if you feel because we do get busy with business and other things, one of the things that you like to do is, Listen, let's get outside of our normal day, let's go to a hotel. Let's you know, so we could spend time each other. What are some things you did with your kids? When things got busy with work? With the business? What did you do to carve out time for them?
Tonya Coppin Fox 16:54
silly stuff, you know, I have this, I have this tradition every, every October for me, it's kind of September, October, they know mom is going to plan this apple picking trip. And it may seem weird, dumb or whatever. But it's like me ushering in the new season, but taking the day to be able to spend time with them doing something that doesn't cost a lot. Because often it's not even about the cost of something, it's just being able to spend that quality time with them. So I'm like, I don't care, you're going apple picking me and you know, as teenagers, I know, I don't want to do that. But you know what, by the end of the day, they love it, we go apple picking we go to Cracker Barrel, you know, we do everything we go and then afterwards we go to the little winery, because you know, Mama needs a little wine. So but, you know, spending a day with them and you know, taking some time or asking them what they want to do. One of the things that my daughter and I have done probably from the time, I would say she was three, there are these places called like Amazing Glaze. I don't know, you know, what they're like, where you go, and you get the ceramics. And you get to and you paint them and then they do the fire the fire blazing. And I literally have products that my daughter and I from the time she was three on up we've always done it's been our place to just kind of decompress, you know, on a Friday, hey, let's go let's let's do some art. To this day, I think she really, really was alright, that's her. That's her place of relaxation. So in us doing it, it also created something an outlet for her to kind of let her hair down. But definitely just finding finding those those those those projects or those trips are those events that can be some concentrated time shut your phone off and just say hey, it's about you today, you know, whether it's the kids or even what if it's your, your spouse,
Jeremy Weisz 18:49
I love that. It's like just creating that special time carving out the time and what I love about that Tonya is it creates the last one with your daughter creates a keepsake so you actually remember all of those times and it's a constant reminder because it's there. Yeah, definitely, um, you know, this is this is a tough question. But what is a healthy relationship look like? Because I think I can we can spot oftentimes, what a non one a non healthy relationship looks like what is a healthy one relationship look like?
Tonya Coppin Fox 19:23
Yeah, you know, it is a very tough question Jeremy. Um, you know, I think a healthy relationship starts with respect, right? Because in let me fast forward you can be you can decide, the two partners can decide that. They don't want to continue in the relationship for whatever reason, but if there is mutual respect, there is a way that that that pans out which looks very different. Then something that's unhealthy. So respect is I have my process my thought process, I have my opinion you have yours because though it you know, people say, Oh, it's 50/50 it's not 50/50 and a relationship, Jeremy, it's really 100 and 100, right? People need to bring their whole self, who they are, they're our authentic self in that relationship, and you need a whole person, as the companion, you don't need a half a person, as we talked about that I can see 70 And understanding that right. So when you have respect that person, your partner understands, oh, this is this is my wife, you know, often for me, sometimes even now, as I get older, sometimes my Caribbean comes out and some words come out that my husband's like, what is that? But, you know, he understands now he respects it, you know, and I always thought, oh, gosh, you know, that, you know, you're so self conscious about words that, you know, are not the American words that people don't always understand. But he respects me. And he, what he tried to do was try to learn my culture. I mean, obviously, I was I was raised in the United States, um, for the most part went to school in the United States, but I'm heavy into my Caribbean roots, because that's where I was born. And I go, I went home every summer. I mean, I'm back and forth. Now I have businesses here. And so the more I'm here, a lot of that Caribbean, that West Indian stuff comes out. And He's respectful of it. We are very mindful of not doing what I call irrevocable, revocable, it reconcilable damage. So what does that mean? So that means like, you don't say things to people that they won't be able to come back from, you can be angry, right? But you don't get so angry that you say something that's gonna terminate in the person's brain long after. So it's, I'm angry, I'm upset about this particular situation. But you know, what, rather than me say something that's toxic, or something that that person is going to remember? And it's going to leave, you know, this, this this scar, let me just walk away. Take a moment. And that's what and That's respect. Right? People think and then, you know, it's not that people don't have conflict, people have conflict. And I know Kristen, and Leanne themes are some of our, our behavior therapists that work with us. Psychologists say people have conflict, it's not that you don't have conflict, it's the way you have conflict. Right? So if you're going into a relationship, and you're having conflict, and you're aiming all end goal in that conflict, is to really cause pain to really, you know, I'm angry at this person. So I want them to feel, you know, and you say, the most vile mean and do mean destructive things. That how do you how do you repair that, and then it's a buildup, so you do it, once you do it twice, you do it three times, and then the buildup is there. And then after a while, the relationship, the fabric of the relationship is so torn away that you can't even come back from it. So just being mindful of the things that we say, the things that we do, how we treat that partner, if you love someone, I don't think that you honestly want to inflict pain on someone that you truly love. So
Jeremy Weisz 23:17
I'd love to hear your advice, Tonya on that, you know, personally as well. But about, you know, a lot of times, you're in the moment, okay, things are heated. Yeah, um, what self talk you use to stop yourself. You've all these things flooding in. Sometimes I feel like it's easier said than done, and maybe like in a heated, you know, argument. And I'm just wondering, what do you tell yourself in those moments, you're like, Okay, I don't want to say something I'm going to regret here because emotions are running high.
Tonya Coppin Fox 23:52
So my husband and I, we have kind of, I don't know, if it's a code or whatever, who will sit will say to each other, you know, this is getting a little heated his skin is getting so let's, let's take a moment and come back doesn't mean that we're not going to finish the conversation, we will. But in that moment, in time, it's probably not the best time to have that conversation. Because, again, if you're just coming home from work, or you're just coming home from other stressors, and you try to engage in a conversation that mate temperatures may flat, you will say, you know, it's human nature, you might say things that you don't, you don't absolutely mean, but it's just you're just lashing out. So taking a moment and taking a pause and being able to say your spouse saying you know, right now I think we should kind of table this discussion, evaluate, that I think you should take was such because it's getting a little heated. Let's go have something to eat. Let's take a moment and let's revisit this in you know, in a few hours.
Jeremy Weisz 24:49
Yeah. I like that. It's almost like something that's established ahead of time. Okay. code word. It's heated. It's almost like in sports. It's like okay, timeout. Yeah, we got we gotta we got to regroup. So you need that like timeout regroup, word to like, just halt the escalation of it. Yeah, definitely. Um, one other thing I want to ask is about Global Resources and talking a little about Global Resources. And then I want to get into some of the lessons you learn there, which I know obviously, you take to Our.Love.
Tonya Coppin Fox 25:27
So Global Resources is a I've been in human services for just about 30 years, I started out as a direct support professional, where we, we do we provide residential and day services to a very vulnerable population, persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Um, my journey was kind of, you know, kind of crazy I am, I started out, you know, actually going to undergrad and grad school for psychology and then going into education. And then I started teaching special education in the New York City public school system. When I came back to or can't went to the District of Columbia, I still taught for a little bit and then I that I was introduced to the field of IDD, we call it intellectual disabilities, developmental disabilities as a cue MRP, which is a qualified mental, we don't use the word anymore, but it's qualified intellectual disability professional. And working with people with intellectual disabilities. I, you know, we teach them basic skills, we realize that everyone has a strength has strength, and instead of focusing on what people are not able to do, we start at a place of what can they do, and we build out from there. So we work with their strengths to teach new strengths and new skills. And so for me, it was working with staff I did, I was a staff developer, I was quality assurance, working with staff and working with the government to create policies that made sense, because oftentimes you have government professionals that will come out and they just check the box. But the practicality of doing the work was missing the human data, human ality of doing the work was missing. So I worked with the district government in trying to develop training modules and looking at standards that just did not, it didn't make sense for the, you know, practically working with this population, we work with a lot of people who have medical, medical challenges and behavioral challenges. And so it is really something that I'm a champion of, over the last couple of years, you see that there's been a rise in children being diagnosed with ADHD and autism. And we have a lot of people within our residential and day program that will carry a diagnosis of ADHD or autism along with other other disabilities and learning to, to, to work with them and then seeing how they grow and that smile and it might be something small like learning to tie their shoelaces, but also the staff and how the staff get such a joy and and a love of working with this group of people I've been able to do it in Washington DC, done it in. In Vegas, Las Vegas, we have an office in Las Vegas, we have Office and Virginia and we have home here in Barbados.
Jeremy Weisz 28:35
Amazing. You know, obviously, I could see a lot of carryover from Global Resources to our love. One thing that sticks out for me is just an acceptance, acceptance, people are different water, some other things you've taken from Global Resources to make Our.Love amazing and will continue to shape Our.Love.
Tonya Coppin Fox 29:02
I think change can happen with love. I think that is the big common theme. Change can happen with love. So we use love as a tool and a resource. And even if you look at children who are in foster care system, and who have been bounced around from home to home, and then finding that one family that loves them unconditionally accepts them for who they are, is willing to work through any of those challenges that they may have. Look at those success stories. Look at how we and we see them over and over again. It's the same thing with the individuals that we support. You know, sometimes society looks at people who are different and they think that they're, oh, we're going to discard them or they don't have any purpose. All of us have purpose. And we use the vehicle of love to unlock those that purpose. Same thing in relationships, you know, you can sell time see the most two unlikely people you might want how can they get in the relationship, but they have respect. They've created a healthy awareness. And they have a relationship that will marvel, you know, arrival. Other people that you think should be together but they it just doesn't stand up. So I think Love Again is that tool that you use to change is a change agent, it can change things.
Jeremy Weisz 30:31
I love it. You know, I have one last question, Tonya, I want to just thank you for for sharing your lessons and expertise and stories. Before I ask it, I want to point people toward towards Our.Love. Check it out, get the app, it's free, and sign up for their newsletter because they have amazing relationship information on there. So last question today, I want to have you talked a little bit about the Ladies of Success. And what that is and some of the influence.
Tonya Coppin Fox 31:01
So the Ladies of Success is a organization that I'm a part of the Elaine Swan and meany leads the Real Housewives of Atlanta, and we we are again, championing entrepreneurial women, women who are eating the fruits of their labor, they are women who are in business who are doing great and big things. We travel together, we have fun together, we cry together, we have pillow talk, we have, um, we promote each other's businesses. And I kind of became, I guess, a mentor, in a sense, um, sometimes ladies will call me up and they'll ask me either for resources or, you know, they're in relationships, and they're, they're asking for, you know, sisterly advice. But again, it's a way for me to help other women be their best selves. And, and I just, I love I love I love I am a, I'm a champion for women. I'm a champion for men too, because we need both, right? You need you need, you need good strong men, you need good strong women. And so I again, I just think that when you have both people coming, and their their, their their whole self, I think that it makes for the best relationships. But Ladies of Success is just that it just is an organization for entrepreneurial women who want to be successful in, in business in and in relationships.
Jeremy Weisz 32:33
Where can people learn more and check out more about laser.
Tonya Coppin Fox 32:36
We have a website, it's ladiesofsuccessmiami.com. So you can go on the website and check us out. Also, we have an event coming up in June,
Jeremy Weisz 32:50
and in Miami, or wherever
Tonya Coppin Fox 32:53
I know it's going to be an actual Las Vegas, Las Vegas. Our first one was in my family, so we kept it. But we said we actually going to be in Las Vegas at the Wynn in Las Vegas, Nevada. And you see how I say that word because now I am in Nevada again. Have to say Nevada, okay? Because if you don't they know that you're not from there. Now most people want to say Nevada. No, it's Nevada. So Las Vegas, Nevada at the Wynn and come on out and we'll be actually starting to sell tickets for that event in the coming weeks. So check us out.
Jeremy Weisz 33:30
Awesome. Tonya, I will be the first one to thank you everyone. Check out Our.Love checkout ladiesofsuccessmiami.com and thank you. Thank you
Outro 33:45
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