The Movement Mentality Podcast
with Missy Bunch
Ep. 20 Imperfect Consistency - with Gilliam Brown
In this heartfelt and energizing episode, Missy Bunch welcomes Gilliam Brown—a movement specialist, wellness leader, and mom of three—for a candid conversation about what it really takes to stay consistent in a wellness practice while navigating the chaos of life. Gill shares how she’s learned to embrace “imperfect consistency,” the difference between flexibility and excuses, and how movement has become her lifeline through motherhood and business building.
This episode is full of real talk about creating momentum, parenting with grace, and showing up for yourself in a way that actually works.
In this episode
02:48 - Gill’s journey: from marathon training to motherhood
06:23 - Why “showing up” looks different every day
08:10 - The myth of motivation and how discipline actually works
10:44 - Letting go of perfection and embracing “imperfect consistency”
13:30 - How movement supports emotional regulation and mental clarity
16:05 - Morning routine reality check: what’s doable for a mom of three
20:21 - Tracking progress without the pressure
22:40 - How to reset after falling off the wagon
27:01 - What Gill tells her clients who “don’t have time”
30:15 - Advice for moms who want to stay active and feel empowered
Quotes
· “I used to think if I couldn’t do it perfectly, it wasn’t worth doing. Now I know that showing up imperfectly is the win.” [07:56]
· “Movement has become my therapy, my meditation, and my anchor. It’s not about changing how I look—it’s about how I feel.” [13:35]
· “You don’t need to ‘start over.’ You just need to take the next step.” [22:42]
Connect with Missy & Sydney
· Instagram: @missybunch15.
· Instagram: @themovementmentality
· Watch this episode on YouTube: @TheMovementMentality
· Movement IQ Membership: movementiq.co
About Missy
Missy is a multi-certified movement therapist who has been educating and coaching for over 14 years.As a young professional dancer, she battled many injuries over her career and one day she found someone who studied neurology (the study of the brain and nervous system). After one session with this person, her 4-year knee pain was completely gone. She knew she wanted to teach this approach to the world.
The importance of brain function and using the nervous system to rapidly “debug” movement patterns, decrease pain, and increase performance, has led her to teach and create lightning-fast improvements with people from all walks of life. Her specialties include injury prevention, injury rehabilitation, joint mobility, and decreasing pain, holistically.