Mosaic Sparks with Lesley George

The Impact of a Father's Voice on Identity and Leadership

41 min · 16. juni 2026
episode The Impact of a Father's Voice on Identity and Leadership cover

Beskrivelse

Thank for listening. Let me know what you liked best. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2440807/fan_mail/new] What happens when a father’s voice becomes the voice you hear inside your own head? For some people, that voice sounds like encouragement, protection, wisdom, laughter, and the steady reminder that they are capable. For others, it sounds like criticism, silence, disappointment, emotional distance, or the ache of words that were never spoken. For many, fatherhood holds both love and complexity, with memories that built confidence alongside moments that created questions they are still trying to answer. In this Father’s Day episode of Mosaic Sparks, Lesley George uses Simba’s journey from The Lion King to explore the lasting impact of fatherhood on identity, leadership, emotional healing, and legacy. This conversation creates room for celebration, grief, gratitude, disappointment, reflection, and growth because Father’s Day does not feel the same for everyone. Simba begins life with a strong sense of identity, yet he does not fully understand the responsibility attached to his future. Through Mufasa’s guidance, he learns that leadership requires courage, wisdom, accountability, and service. Then loss, guilt, manipulation, and shame change the way he sees himself, causing him to disconnect from his identity and run from the responsibility attached to his life. That journey opens a deeper conversation about the voices people carry long after childhood has ended. A father’s words can become emotional anchors. The words “I believe in you,” “I am proud of you,” or “You can learn from this” can shape the way a person handles pressure, failure, opportunity, and leadership for years. Encouragement can help a child develop confidence, resilience, and belonging, while consistent presence can create emotional security. The absence of those experiences can also leave a lasting imprint. A child who receives constant criticism may grow into an adult who questions every decision. A child who experiences emotional distance may learn to hide feelings or avoid vulnerability. A child who feels abandoned may carry questions about worth into relationships and leadership. A child who learns that love is tied to achievement may become an adult who works constantly while still feeling that success is never enough. This episode does not reduce fathers to heroes or villains. It explores the truth that fatherhood carries influence, and influence carries responsibility. A father may have loved his children and still lacked the emotional tools to communicate that love clearly. A father may have provided financially while remaining emotionally unavailable. A father may have done the best he knew and still created wounds that deserve acknowledgment. Through Simba’s story, Lesley also explores how unhealed pain can influence the way people lead. Childhood experiences can quietly shape adult reactions, communication patterns, relationships, and leadership decisions. A leader carrying an unhealed rejection wound may interpret disagreement as disrespect. A leader who experienced abandonment may become overly controlling because uncertainty feels unsafe. A leader raised around harsh criticism may struggle to give feedback without becoming defensive or severe. These patterns do not mean wounded people are incapable of leading. Every leader carries a personal history. The challenge is deciding whether that history will be examined and healed or allowed to lead without awareness. One of the strongest messages in this episode is that the people around you should not have to pay for pain they did not create. Children should not have to carry the emotional weight of what their parents failed to receive. Teams should not have to manage a leader’s insecurity. Spouses should not have to spend years proving they did not cause an old wound. Healing becomes part of leadership because unresolved pain has influence. Simba’s journey also creates a meaningful conversation about running. Running does not always look like falling apart. It can look like working long hours, staying busy, helping everyone else, avoiding serious conversations, overachieving, or building a life where painful questions never receive attention. A person can appear successful and functional while remaining disconnected from a part of themselves. Simba finds companionship, laughter, and relief, but relief does not become resolution. Eventually, he must face the truth that his past remains connected to him, his choices affect others, and his identity still carries responsibility. That moment leads into one of the central lessons of the episode: legacy is built through presence, responsibility, and the courage to return. Legacy is often discussed as something people leave behind, but it is also created in real time. It grows through daily conversations, consistent presence, emotional availability, listening, accountability, and the way someone responds when another person makes a mistake. It is shaped by how a father handles pressure, how a mentor listens, how a leader communicates, and whether people feel safe enough to tell the truth. Over time, these moments become the evidence people carry. Children may remember that their father worked hard, but they will also remember whether he made time for them. They may remember what he provided, but they will also remember whether they felt known, heard, and valued. They may remember correction, and they will remember whether love remained visible during that correction. Presence does not require perfection. It requires intention, consistency, honesty, and the willingness to repair what has been damaged. A father can apologize. A leader can admit a mistake. A mentor can acknowledge that a situation could have been handled with greater wisdom. Accountability does not weaken authority. It builds trust. This episode also speaks directly to those grieving on Father’s Day. Grief does not follow the calendar, and this week may bring memories that arrive unexpectedly. A song, photograph, familiar phrase, or family tradition may bring gratitude and sadness at the same time. For those who carry a complicated relationship with their father, this episode gives permission to tell the truth without forcing the story into a neat conclusion. A person can acknowledge love and harm, honor good memories, establish boundaries, and pursue peace without pretending the past had no effect. For those who experienced absence, rejection, or emotional neglect, the episode offers an important reminder: a father’s failure to show up does not determine a child’s value. The inability of one person to affirm you does not mean there was nothing worth affirming. Emotional absence does not define the size of your future. The question “Why did he fail me?” may never produce an answer that feels satisfying, but healing can begin through a new question: “What do I need now, and how will I stop this pain from leading the rest of my life?” That question does not excuse what happened. It creates room for healing, responsibility, and a different future. One of the most powerful possibilities explored in this episode is becoming the healthy voice you once needed. A person who experienced silence can become a father who communicates. A person who experienced criticism can become a mentor who corrects without humiliating. A person who experienced absence can become an uncle, coach, teacher, pastor, leader, or community member who shows up consistently. That is how emotional patterns begin to change. The episode is built around three leadership lessons. The first is that your voice can become part of someone else’s identity because repeated words shape emotional language and self perception. The second is that unhealed pain will eventually influence how you lead because present reactions can carry the weight of older experiences. The third is that legacy is built through presence, responsibility, and the courage to return because growth requires people to face reality, repair what they can, and show up with greater intention. Simba carried identity, purpose, and legacy even during the season when pain disconnected him from those truths. Pain may interrupt confidence, but it does not erase purpose. A person may stop answering to the truth, but the truth does not stop being true. Your voice still matters. Your leadership still matters. Your healing still matters. Your presence still matters. This is an emotionally honest conversation for anyone reflecting on fatherhood this week. It is for the person honoring a loving father, grieving someone important, healing from absence or disappointment, becoming a more intentional father, or leading others with the understanding that words and presence shape people. Tune in for a powerful Father’s Day conversation about the voices that built us, the wounds that shaped us, and the legacy we have the power to create now. Support the show [https://buymeacoffee.com/MosaicSparkswithLesley] Thank you so much for tuning in to Mosaic Sparks! Remember, the journey doesn’t end here, keep exploring, learning, and striving for your best. If you enjoyed today’s episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who could use a little inspiration. We’d love to hear your thoughts, so connect with us on Facebook.com/themosaicinc or visit our website https://www.podpage.com/mosaic-sparks-with-lesley-george/ and let us know what resonated with you most. Leave a review. Until next time, stay bold, stay curious, and keep making moves.  One Love!

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19 episoder

episode The Hidden Weight Silently Draining You (And How to Finally Let Go) cover

The Hidden Weight Silently Draining You (And How to Finally Let Go)

Thank for listening. Let me know what you liked best. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2440807/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://buymeacoffee.com/MosaicSparkswithLesley] Thank you so much for tuning in to Mosaic Sparks! Remember, the journey doesn’t end here, keep exploring, learning, and striving for your best. If you enjoyed today’s episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who could use a little inspiration. We’d love to hear your thoughts, so connect with us on Facebook.com/themosaicinc or visit our website https://www.podpage.com/mosaic-sparks-with-lesley-george/ and let us know what resonated with you most. Leave a review. Until next time, stay bold, stay curious, and keep making moves.  One Love!

30. juni 202633 min
episode How can I overcome common obstacles when creating a lasting legacy? cover

How can I overcome common obstacles when creating a lasting legacy?

Thank for listening. Let me know what you liked best. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2440807/fan_mail/new] How does vision become legacy? That is the question we are opening up in this episode of Mosaic Sparks with Lesley George. This conversation is for the woman who knows she has something inside of her that cannot stay hidden. She may be carrying a message, a story, a book, a business, a calling, or a lesson shaped through life, leadership, faith, growth, and the decision to keep showing up even when the room was not ready for her. Vision becomes legacy when it receives movement, structure, strategy, and a place to live beyond the moment. Many women are carrying powerful ideas, but they have not yet built the bridge between inspiration and impact. They have the story, but they have not shaped it into a message. They have the message, but they have not turned it into a framework. They have the framework, but they have not created the book, workshop, podcast, community, product, experience, or platform that enables others to access it. In this episode, Lesley George explores how a vision grows when it is expanded with intention. The conversation pulls from a powerful business and leadership lesson about creativity, collaboration, brand expansion, and the importance of giving your message somewhere to travel. The heart of the episode is clear: your vision may already be powerful, but power without placement limits impact. A message needs a place to land so people can connect with it beyond the first moment of inspiration. A story needs structure so the lesson can be understood, remembered, and shared. This episode speaks directly to authors, speakers, coaches, entrepreneurs, podcasters, ministry leaders, community builders, and women in leadership who are ready to stop treating their gifts like side notes. Your idea may not need to be replaced. It may need to be released into more rooms. There are three major lessons inside this episode. The first lesson is that vision needs expansion. A strong vision rarely stays in one place. It grows, travels, and touches different parts of people’s lives. A book can become a workshop. A workshop can become a retreat. A retreat can become a community. A podcast can become a live event. A phrase can become a journal. A framework can become a leadership curriculum. Many women limit their vision because they see it only in the form in which it first appeared. They say, “I want to write a book,” but they do not see the coaching program within it. They say, “I have a podcast,” but they do not see the community waiting to be built around the conversations. They say, “I speak at events,” but they do not see the product, workbook, or training experience that could help the audience keep applying the message after the room clears. Vision becomes legacy when you stop asking only, “What is this?” and begin asking, “Where else can this go?” The second lesson is that collaboration multiplies what creativity begins. A vision may be born through one person, but it often grows through the right relationships. Expansion requires people who can see different parts of the vision. Some people carry the creative spark, while others carry the strategic mind. Some people understand systems, while others know how to package a message. Some people know how to build community, while others know how to put language around what they have been doing naturally for years. Collaboration is wisdom because it allows the vision to be strengthened by gifts you may not personally carry. Too many gifted women are trying to be the visionary, the designer, the editor, the marketer, the accountant, the project manager, the event planner, the social media team, and the customer service department. A bigger vision demands bigger support. The right collaborator does not take away from your gift. The right collaborator helps your gift reach further. The right person can help you organize what you already carry. They can help you see opportunities you missed because you were too close to the work. They can help you shape the message, build the structure, protect the brand, and create a pathway for people to experience the transformation. The third lesson is that your message needs a container. This is one of the most important lessons for anyone building a brand, writing a book, launching a podcast, creating a coaching program, or preparing to speak on bigger platforms. A message that only lives in the moment can be powerful, but a message with a container can keep working after the moment is over. A container can be a book that organizes your lived experience into lessons others can use. A container can be a journal that helps people reflect, write, and apply what they heard. A container can be a workbook that turns a powerful idea into practical action steps. A container can be a membership community that gives your audience a place to grow with you over time. A container can be a retreat that creates space for deeper transformation, connection, and clarity. The container gives people something to hold, revisit, practice, share, and remember. It takes the message from “that was good” to “I am using this in my life.” People may enjoy what you say, but they need a way to carry it into their daily lives. They need tools, reminders, language, a process, a place to belong, and something that helps them keep becoming the woman they decided to become when the message first touched their spirit. This episode challenges listeners to think beyond the single post, episode, event, book, or room. It invites you to look at your message and ask how it can live beyond the first time someone hears it. It challenges you to consider how your message can become part of someone’s daily life and help them make a better decision, use their voice, write their book, lead with confidence, build their business, or finally stop shrinking. For the woman who has been saying, “One day I will write the book,” this episode is a nudge to stop treating your story like a maybe. Your story may be the starting point for someone else’s courage. For the woman who has been building quietly, this episode is a reminder that visibility is part of stewardship. You cannot impact people you keep hiding from. This conversation also connects deeply to personal branding and thought leadership. In today’s world, people are looking for voices they trust. They want leaders who have lived the lesson, not only studied the topic. They want stories with substance, strategy with soul, and people who can teach them how to move, grow, lead, heal, build, speak, write, and show up with honesty. Your lived experience can become a leadership tool when you shape it with clarity and purpose. Your book can become a bridge when it helps someone move from confusion to confidence. Your podcast can become a classroom when each episode gives people language, insight, and action. As you listen, think about the thing you already have in your hands. Maybe it is a phrase people always repeat back to you. Maybe it is a story you keep telling because it still carries power. Maybe it is a book idea that keeps tapping you on the shoulder. Maybe it is a workshop you have taught more than once. Choose one thing instead of trying to build everything at once, and ask how that one thing can live beyond the moment. Your vision is waiting for movement, and this episode of Mosaic Sparks is your reminder to stop sitting on brilliance and build with intention. You do not need to copy someone else’s path. You need to honor what you carry, clarify the message, create the container, invite the right collaboration, and let the vision travel. That is how vision becomes legacy. That is how you move from being heard to being remembered. That is how you build something that keeps speaking after you leave the room. That is how you Unbox Your Brilliance™. That is how you BRAGG™ with purpose. Listen to this episode, take notes, share it with a friend, and leave a review if this conversation helped you see your vision differently. Support the show [https://buymeacoffee.com/MosaicSparkswithLesley] Thank you so much for tuning in to Mosaic Sparks! Remember, the journey doesn’t end here, keep exploring, learning, and striving for your best. If you enjoyed today’s episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who could use a little inspiration. We’d love to hear your thoughts, so connect with us on Facebook.com/themosaicinc or visit our website https://www.podpage.com/mosaic-sparks-with-lesley-george/ and let us know what resonated with you most. Leave a review. Until next time, stay bold, stay curious, and keep making moves.  One Love!

23. juni 202633 min
episode The Impact of a Father's Voice on Identity and Leadership cover

The Impact of a Father's Voice on Identity and Leadership

Thank for listening. Let me know what you liked best. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2440807/fan_mail/new] What happens when a father’s voice becomes the voice you hear inside your own head? For some people, that voice sounds like encouragement, protection, wisdom, laughter, and the steady reminder that they are capable. For others, it sounds like criticism, silence, disappointment, emotional distance, or the ache of words that were never spoken. For many, fatherhood holds both love and complexity, with memories that built confidence alongside moments that created questions they are still trying to answer. In this Father’s Day episode of Mosaic Sparks, Lesley George uses Simba’s journey from The Lion King to explore the lasting impact of fatherhood on identity, leadership, emotional healing, and legacy. This conversation creates room for celebration, grief, gratitude, disappointment, reflection, and growth because Father’s Day does not feel the same for everyone. Simba begins life with a strong sense of identity, yet he does not fully understand the responsibility attached to his future. Through Mufasa’s guidance, he learns that leadership requires courage, wisdom, accountability, and service. Then loss, guilt, manipulation, and shame change the way he sees himself, causing him to disconnect from his identity and run from the responsibility attached to his life. That journey opens a deeper conversation about the voices people carry long after childhood has ended. A father’s words can become emotional anchors. The words “I believe in you,” “I am proud of you,” or “You can learn from this” can shape the way a person handles pressure, failure, opportunity, and leadership for years. Encouragement can help a child develop confidence, resilience, and belonging, while consistent presence can create emotional security. The absence of those experiences can also leave a lasting imprint. A child who receives constant criticism may grow into an adult who questions every decision. A child who experiences emotional distance may learn to hide feelings or avoid vulnerability. A child who feels abandoned may carry questions about worth into relationships and leadership. A child who learns that love is tied to achievement may become an adult who works constantly while still feeling that success is never enough. This episode does not reduce fathers to heroes or villains. It explores the truth that fatherhood carries influence, and influence carries responsibility. A father may have loved his children and still lacked the emotional tools to communicate that love clearly. A father may have provided financially while remaining emotionally unavailable. A father may have done the best he knew and still created wounds that deserve acknowledgment. Through Simba’s story, Lesley also explores how unhealed pain can influence the way people lead. Childhood experiences can quietly shape adult reactions, communication patterns, relationships, and leadership decisions. A leader carrying an unhealed rejection wound may interpret disagreement as disrespect. A leader who experienced abandonment may become overly controlling because uncertainty feels unsafe. A leader raised around harsh criticism may struggle to give feedback without becoming defensive or severe. These patterns do not mean wounded people are incapable of leading. Every leader carries a personal history. The challenge is deciding whether that history will be examined and healed or allowed to lead without awareness. One of the strongest messages in this episode is that the people around you should not have to pay for pain they did not create. Children should not have to carry the emotional weight of what their parents failed to receive. Teams should not have to manage a leader’s insecurity. Spouses should not have to spend years proving they did not cause an old wound. Healing becomes part of leadership because unresolved pain has influence. Simba’s journey also creates a meaningful conversation about running. Running does not always look like falling apart. It can look like working long hours, staying busy, helping everyone else, avoiding serious conversations, overachieving, or building a life where painful questions never receive attention. A person can appear successful and functional while remaining disconnected from a part of themselves. Simba finds companionship, laughter, and relief, but relief does not become resolution. Eventually, he must face the truth that his past remains connected to him, his choices affect others, and his identity still carries responsibility. That moment leads into one of the central lessons of the episode: legacy is built through presence, responsibility, and the courage to return. Legacy is often discussed as something people leave behind, but it is also created in real time. It grows through daily conversations, consistent presence, emotional availability, listening, accountability, and the way someone responds when another person makes a mistake. It is shaped by how a father handles pressure, how a mentor listens, how a leader communicates, and whether people feel safe enough to tell the truth. Over time, these moments become the evidence people carry. Children may remember that their father worked hard, but they will also remember whether he made time for them. They may remember what he provided, but they will also remember whether they felt known, heard, and valued. They may remember correction, and they will remember whether love remained visible during that correction. Presence does not require perfection. It requires intention, consistency, honesty, and the willingness to repair what has been damaged. A father can apologize. A leader can admit a mistake. A mentor can acknowledge that a situation could have been handled with greater wisdom. Accountability does not weaken authority. It builds trust. This episode also speaks directly to those grieving on Father’s Day. Grief does not follow the calendar, and this week may bring memories that arrive unexpectedly. A song, photograph, familiar phrase, or family tradition may bring gratitude and sadness at the same time. For those who carry a complicated relationship with their father, this episode gives permission to tell the truth without forcing the story into a neat conclusion. A person can acknowledge love and harm, honor good memories, establish boundaries, and pursue peace without pretending the past had no effect. For those who experienced absence, rejection, or emotional neglect, the episode offers an important reminder: a father’s failure to show up does not determine a child’s value. The inability of one person to affirm you does not mean there was nothing worth affirming. Emotional absence does not define the size of your future. The question “Why did he fail me?” may never produce an answer that feels satisfying, but healing can begin through a new question: “What do I need now, and how will I stop this pain from leading the rest of my life?” That question does not excuse what happened. It creates room for healing, responsibility, and a different future. One of the most powerful possibilities explored in this episode is becoming the healthy voice you once needed. A person who experienced silence can become a father who communicates. A person who experienced criticism can become a mentor who corrects without humiliating. A person who experienced absence can become an uncle, coach, teacher, pastor, leader, or community member who shows up consistently. That is how emotional patterns begin to change. The episode is built around three leadership lessons. The first is that your voice can become part of someone else’s identity because repeated words shape emotional language and self perception. The second is that unhealed pain will eventually influence how you lead because present reactions can carry the weight of older experiences. The third is that legacy is built through presence, responsibility, and the courage to return because growth requires people to face reality, repair what they can, and show up with greater intention. Simba carried identity, purpose, and legacy even during the season when pain disconnected him from those truths. Pain may interrupt confidence, but it does not erase purpose. A person may stop answering to the truth, but the truth does not stop being true. Your voice still matters. Your leadership still matters. Your healing still matters. Your presence still matters. This is an emotionally honest conversation for anyone reflecting on fatherhood this week. It is for the person honoring a loving father, grieving someone important, healing from absence or disappointment, becoming a more intentional father, or leading others with the understanding that words and presence shape people. Tune in for a powerful Father’s Day conversation about the voices that built us, the wounds that shaped us, and the legacy we have the power to create now. Support the show [https://buymeacoffee.com/MosaicSparkswithLesley] Thank you so much for tuning in to Mosaic Sparks! Remember, the journey doesn’t end here, keep exploring, learning, and striving for your best. If you enjoyed today’s episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who could use a little inspiration. We’d love to hear your thoughts, so connect with us on Facebook.com/themosaicinc or visit our website https://www.podpage.com/mosaic-sparks-with-lesley-george/ and let us know what resonated with you most. Leave a review. Until next time, stay bold, stay curious, and keep making moves.  One Love!

16. juni 202641 min
episode Stop Performing and Start Standing cover

Stop Performing and Start Standing

Thank for listening. Let me know what you liked best. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2440807/fan_mail/new] In this episode of Mosaic Sparks, Lesley uses Mulan’s story to explore confidence, courage, identity, leadership, and the emotional cost of performing a version of yourself that keeps everyone else comfortable. Mulan did not fit the mold assigned to her, yet she possessed the courage, strategy, instinct, and heart needed for the moment before her. Her story sparks a powerful conversation for women who have been shrinking, overexplaining, staying quiet, overperforming, or trying to live up to expectations that no longer match who they are becoming. This episode speaks to the woman who is tired of editing her voice, hiding her ambition, managing everyone else’s comfort, and waiting until confidence feels perfect before taking action. Through Mulan’s journey, Lesley reminds listeners that courage can begin before readiness feels complete, leadership can re-emerge before the room approves, and truth becomes necessary when the performance starts to cost too much. Through the lens of BRAGG™ and Unbox Your Brilliance™, this conversation invites women to stop performing for approval and start standing in their voice, their courage, their leadership, and the brilliance they have carried quietly for too long. Support the show [https://buymeacoffee.com/MosaicSparkswithLesley] Thank you so much for tuning in to Mosaic Sparks! Remember, the journey doesn’t end here, keep exploring, learning, and striving for your best. If you enjoyed today’s episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who could use a little inspiration. We’d love to hear your thoughts, so connect with us on Facebook.com/themosaicinc or visit our website https://www.podpage.com/mosaic-sparks-with-lesley-george/ and let us know what resonated with you most. Leave a review. Until next time, stay bold, stay curious, and keep making moves.  One Love!

9. juni 202637 min
episode Don’t Miss Life Chasing the Moment | A Soul Inspired Lesson on Purpose cover

Don’t Miss Life Chasing the Moment | A Soul Inspired Lesson on Purpose

Thank for listening. Let me know what you liked best. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2440807/fan_mail/new] A new month often brings pressure to start over, reset everything, and prove that progress is happening. In this episode of Mosaic Sparks, Lesley uses the story of Joe from Disney and Pixar’s Soul to open a deeper conversation about purpose, presence, leadership, and the quiet moments that shape our lives. Joe’s journey reminds us that ambition can move us forward, yet our daily lives still deserve attention while we pursue the dream. This episode speaks to the person who has been focused on the next milestone, the next open door, the next achievement, or the next sign that life is finally moving in the right direction. Instead of rushing into June with the pressure to become someone new overnight, this conversation invites listeners to slow down, notice what already carries meaning, and reconnect with the life they are building right now. Through a motivational and reflective lens, Lesley explores how focus, gratitude, and intentional living can help us lead ourselves with more clarity and courage. This episode is for dreamers, leaders, authors, speakers, creatives, professionals, and women who are building something meaningful while learning to stay present in the process. If you have been chasing the big moment and need a reminder that your life already carries purpose, this episode will speak to you. Tune in for a powerful reminder to stay focused, honor the small things, and continue to Unbox Your Brilliance™ with courage, clarity, and intention. Support the show [https://buymeacoffee.com/MosaicSparkswithLesley] Thank you so much for tuning in to Mosaic Sparks! Remember, the journey doesn’t end here, keep exploring, learning, and striving for your best. If you enjoyed today’s episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who could use a little inspiration. We’d love to hear your thoughts, so connect with us on Facebook.com/themosaicinc or visit our website https://www.podpage.com/mosaic-sparks-with-lesley-george/ and let us know what resonated with you most. Leave a review. Until next time, stay bold, stay curious, and keep making moves.  One Love!

2. juni 202634 min