Have you ever noticed how easy it is to lose yourself in the roles you’ve been playing for years?
Mother. Partner. Professional. The strong one. The helper. The one who holds everything together.
In this first part of my conversation with Kimber Hardick, we explore what it truly means to remember who you are beneath the conditioning, expectations, and “shoulds.”
Midlife has a way of bringing radical honesty. Suddenly the patterns, emotional reactions, and stories we’ve carried for decades become visible.
And that’s where real freedom begins.
Kimber shares powerful insights on emotional awareness, the difference between feeling an emotion vs. feeding the story around it, and a simple practice she calls Wait, What, Watch — a way to pause, return to yourself, and respond from truth rather than autopilot.
This conversation is an invitation to slow down, feel what’s real, and reconnect with the woman you’ve always been beneath the armor.
By the end of this episode, you may begin to see your emotions — and your life — with entirely new eyes.
✨ In This Episode You’ll Learn
🦋 Reflection Questions
✨ Where to Find Kimber
HOME is my monthly membership for midlife women who are already doing the inner work and are ready to embody it.
Through nervous system regulation, Neuroepigenetic Breathing, and grounded integration practices, you create safety in your body and expansion in your life.
This is where insight becomes lived experience.
Join the Waitlist: home.midlifebutterfly.ca
🦋 Work With Me
If this episode landed in your body and not just your mind,
you may be standing at a threshold.
I offer connection calls for women who feel ready to move, align, and embody the inner work they’re already doing.
This is an intimate conversation to feel into whether working together is a true yes.
If you’re done searching and ready to choose yourself more fully,
you’re invited to book a call through the link below.
Trust what brought you here.
RSVP now: https://links.ivorey.io/widget/bookings/connection-call-midlife-butterfly
Song: Reborn by Alexander Nakarada