
The emPOWERed Half Hour
Ready for meaningful change? The emPOWERed Half Hour with USA TODAY best-selling author Becca Powers, brings you inspiring stories of individuals who turned their toughest setbacks into their greatest successes. But this podcast isn’t just about overcoming obstacles—it’s about embracing the powerful mindset of AND. You can be exactly where you are AND start moving toward your dreams and desired outcomes. Each episode is a reminder that you have the power to take the first step toward a life filled with purpose, joy, and fulfillment. From record-breaking achievements against all odds to deeply personal victories, these stories aren’t just inspiring—they’re proof that if they can do it you can do it too. Listen, and ignite the change within…it’s TEHH (tea) time!
The emPOWERed Half Hour
Redefining Success: Using AI, Empowerment, and Vision to Build a Life You Love with CEO & Founder of Behind the Design, Jacqueline Green
What if the very tools you’ve been avoiding could actually free you from burnout, from busywork, and from playing small in your business?
In this energizing and eye-opening episode of The EmPOWERed Half Hour, Becca Powers sits down with entrepreneur, AI strategist, and podcast host Jacqueline Green, founder of Behind the Design and Your Fractional Marketing Team. Together, they explore how embracing AI tools can empower women to scale their passions into real businesses without sacrificing their peace or purpose.
From navigating burnout to letting go of control, Jackie shares how shifting your mindset, embracing tech, and prioritizing you can move you from overwhelmed to unstoppable. Whether you’re a solopreneur juggling it all or someone dreaming of turning your side hustle into a sustainable business, this conversation will inspire you to step into your CEO energy—with strategy, clarity, and grace.
Key Moments You Won't Want to Miss:
- Jacqueline shares how burnout led her from corporate marketing to interior design and how that pivot opened the door to entrepreneurship.
- Becca and Jacqueline explore the emotional and energetic cost of overworking, self-neglect, and staying in situations that no longer support growth.
- Jacqueline opens up about the impact of hearing "You are a survivor" from her late father and how that message continues to fuel her belief in herself.
About Jacqueline
Jacqueline Green is an entrepreneur, AI consultant, national speaker, and podcast host dedicated to helping business owners scale through smart marketing and AI-driven strategies. As the founder of Behind the Design and Your Fractional Marketing Team, she brings expertise in marketing, AI strategy, real estate investing, and interior design. Through her new podcast, The Hobby to Profitability Podcast, Jacqueline shares actionable insights to help entrepreneurs turn their passions into profitable businesses.
Connect with Jacqueline Green
Join Jacqueline Green for the Marketing Momentum Workshop—a private, 4-hour session designed to help small business owners map out a clear, focused plan for growth.
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Note: We use AI transcription so there may be some inaccuracies
Becca Powers: Welcome to another episode of The Empowered Half Hour, and I know you guys are loving my brand Builders friends, but I have another friend from Brand Builders Group, Jackie Green, and I am so excited to introduce. You to her today because we're gonna talk about something we haven't talked about yet. Ai Jackie is an AI expert and the CEO and founder of Behind the Design, I would just like to welcome you to the show, Jackie.
Jacqueline Green: Thank you. I'm really excited to be here.
Becca Powers: Yeah, I'm excited too. And as we were talking about before we hit record, I haven't had an AI expert on and with my tech backgrounds. I am so excited to open up that conversation. But I always like to ask my guests first, like, what's your background? Like, how did you get to this point where you're passionate about talking about AI and what, what happened to get you here?
Jacqueline Green: Yeah, I was in corporate marketing for 15 years. I eventually left the corporate arena and decided to go out as a freelancer consultant, basically in marketing. And eventually it burned out because, and this gets to the AI story, I burned out because In the freelance world, if you're not working, you're not making money.
And the whole idea of going out on my own was so I could spend more time with my kids and go to their events and so forth. So I went back to school, became an interior designer. eventually worked for three different firms, architecture firms, and started teaching, and I realized that I could actually help.
Business owners in that space grow their business. So that's how behind the design all came about was we started helping interior designers with different aspects of their job, of their businesses. And that just evolved into architecture and contractors and Sure. It's just grown from there. And part of that journey though was this AI part, and I didn't even realize it until last year, that we were actually early adopters of ai, not.
Intentionally, but all of a sudden I was using this, and when you first start using ai, you feel like I'm cheating. then you realize there's so many things within AI that can improve the efficiency of your business, especially if it's a side hustle, if it's a solo entrepreneurship. you can get so much more done using some of these tools beyond just chat, but just really using how do you build those efficiency?
How do you get rid of the repetitive tasks? And so. That's where I started doing it. I started exploring even more than what I was already doing and started testing out different, products, seeing what worked within my own business, what I could recommend, how I could talk about it, and that's where we got to.
Becca Powers: Nice. So I wanna talk more about ai, but first you hit on something that I think is just still really relevant because it's part of my backstory too, is the. Working yourself into burnout. Yeah. I feel that so many people listening to this right now could probably relate, but I would love for you to share, maybe a lesson that you learned from it and before you do.
I just wanna shape this a little bit more, is that I feel like when you're in burnout, you feel so stuck, right? Oh, so stuck. Yeah. You can't. See what's possible and what I would love for you to share is a lesson learned, but also give that hope for possibility if anybody's going through that.
Because once I got through my burnout, I was like, oh, I went, tapped back into passions. You went into interior design? I went into writing and coaching and consulting. Which is, it's kind of what you're doing, but I went in the professional development space and really geeked out and became a super nerd, and got really happy.
But I would love for you to talk about that a little bit and just what's your take on, lessons learned and, what might be possible on the other side?
Jacqueline Green: Yeah. When I burned out, it was really hard. I lost a big client and it hurt. It really did hurt. And I realized that they had every reason to, leave me.
I had burned out. I wasn't offering the service that they had come to expect. And that was on me. And I realized there had to be a better way. And that's when I started searching and I'm gonna tell you throughout my entire journey, I have been an entrepreneur off and on since 2011.
more recently I have been this business in 2019. And there have been days that I have been like, I am done. I am quitting. This is ridiculous. This is way too hard. I'm going back, I'll get a job, whatever. And to get through that, it took me a long time to really try to figure out how to get through those things to really believe in myself.
And it all came back down to mindset of where my mind was. I know, and I tell myself this every day that I can get through anything. I am stronger than I know and that I'm going to get through it. And it's just a matter of believing in myself. so, yeah, there's a lot of tactics I do. I might write down, okay, what are our priorities?
Where are we going? Let's refocus the vision. Let's re-get back into those things. But at the end of the day, I know based on the ups and a lot of lows. Throughout this entire process that I can make it through anything I really can. I might not feel like it in that moment, but if I just keep reminding me, myself and my father used to call me.
I first moved out to Colorado after I left, or after I finished college, and he used to call me and leave these voicemail messages. He's since passed and I would die to have one of these messages, but throughout he would tell me, I'm a survivor. I can do anything. I can overcome anything.
He's proud of me. And to this day, I still remember that going through my head, especially now that I've lost him. But, that tiny little messages a dad gives a daughter was so powerful that it is still affects me 30 years later. And so to, be there and to hear that. I just keep re-saying that to myself as I go through those hard times.
But I'll be honest, there have been days where I was like, clear out everything. I'm done. Shut it down. There is no way I'm getting through this. And I go to bed and next day. I'm like, Nope. I. We're gonna do it. We make commitments, we're doing this. And so it's just a matter of continuously believing in yourself and even when you don't feel like it, constantly telling yourself, you can get through this, you can do this, you're going to make this work.
Becca Powers: That message is so powerful. I like the goosebumps all over my body. 'causethrough my own story and now working with people and. I have learned that too. I think that so many messages in what you shared that I am trying to refrain from going down multiple rabbit holes right now because I'm like, uh, I could go in so many different directions.
But you said something that we are so much stronger than we know.
Mm-hmm. And
Becca Powers: I really just want that to hit with the audience because. We doubt ourselves sometimes. We doubt what we're capable of. We stay in situations that may not be horrible, but they're not contributing to our growth. And then there's other situations where we start tolerating the intolerable.
And I think that that one liner message as you are so much stronger than you know, is just such a beautiful gift of wisdom to the audience. To thank you for sharing that.
Jacqueline Green: Yeah, absolutely. And it's also about having grace with yourself. Understand that life is full of mistakes and you're gonna make wrong turns, but it's okay.
These are things we learn from. Failure is actually a good thing. I. I know in a lot of ways, shifting my relationship
Becca Powers: with failure was so huge. It was so huge because I don't know if you're into the map of consciousness or the energy of emotions or the frequency of emotions.
But shame and guilt are the lowest level emotions. And so when you fail and you have a negative relationship with it, you go straight to the bottom of the emotions. when I found that out, I was like, I got to stop that stuff. That is not
Jacqueline Green: good. I look at it, okay, if I start feeling that way, let's think about.
What are all the things that came out of it that were positive? What did I learn? who did I meet along the way? Where were there opportunities that maybe I'm missing right now? 'cause I'm feeling bad for myself. And so I really tried to look at, okay, this is a situation, but what were the positives coming out of that?
And that does help to some degree.
Becca Powers: It does help a lot, just Once you can start asking yourself all the things that you just said, like, what are the lessons? Who did I meet? You start saying, oh my God, it's this thing that I perceived as failure, actually. taught me a lot and if I keep moving forward, I'm not starting at ground zero anymore.
No, I mean, that's what I've learned too about failure. I'm like, actually I'm on a much stronger foundation now because I failed a couple times.
Jacqueline Green: Yeah, absolutely. And there's a lot of truth to that is that we have that problem of. we think, oh, well failure, I'm never gonna survive from this. But you really do elevate your wisdom, your knowledge, to the point where then you are much better in the next challenge that you go through.
That you are much stronger, that you know more. I always laugh. I wish I had this wisdom to 20 years ago.
Becca Powers: I know. Same, same sister, same. well let's get to AI a little bit because I would love to talk to you about that. Now for the audience, they probably think about AI as chat, GPT, which is fine. We can talk about that for a minute too, because I think, in your opening you said learning to leverage that into your roles are actually gonna help you.
So I don't wanna bypass the chat GPT piece, but being in tech myself, I also just wanna talk about how AI is like under the hood of everything and Let's get on board people. So let's just start with, AI and, how you said you started just leveraging it and realized how much it was helping you rather than hurting you.
So kind of what do you have to say about embracing things like chat, GPT.
Jacqueline Green: Sure. So of course, like everyone else, we start with chat, GPT. That's like the, first step. And at first we were using it as a content creator. That's what a lot of people use it for. But when I realized I could start using it for things like how do I build my systems out?
How do I build checklist, how do I improve efficiencies? How do I approach something I don't know how to do, and I can ask questions about this? How do I dive into more information? And so think about it beyond just content creation of how can I use this and use expertise. It makes you smarter. I actually saw a stat the other day that all these AI tools are actually making us smarter.
Becca Powers: Ooh,
Jacqueline Green: I know. I was pretty dang excited about that one. Im like, like, yeah.
That's the first step. You're using chat. You're starting to kind build out systems and processes, systems and processes within a business if you're wanting to go, I talk a lot about going from a zero to a million. How do you get to a million dollar revenue business? With ai. I personally think this is going to revolutionize how those who have solo entrepreneurship have small businesses that are under five people are really going to be able to compete on a much larger scale.
I like that. So if you think about what you do in a day, what are those repetitive tasks that. Over and over and over. I'll give an example. I talked to a design build company. A design build is interior design all the way through construction. And the interior design director was telling me, well, I have to enter this information into this system and then I have to enter it manually into this system, and then I enter it manually into this system, and then I add this all to my spreadsheet and I'm like.
That is way too many things for human air. you transpose a couple numbers, you're ordering a cabinet that is. The wrong size you're ordering the wrong amount of wallpaper, whatever that is, it could really up and increase the cost of that project. So how do we build efficiencies within the systems that you have today?
And that's looking at different tools. Just using something like an Otter ai, which is a note notetaker is huge for small businesses because. If I'm on Zoom, which so many of us are, my Otter automatically comes on. It takes a transcription of the entire meeting. It gives me key takeaways. It gives me who needs to do what, a summary of the meeting.
I can then have that sent to my client as well. Everybody's on the same page. I've communication. I've really narrowed down what I need to do after this meeting. And I was able to focus more in the meeting. I mean, that's just one simple, easy tool. No,
Becca Powers: but that's a really powerful point because, I would consider myself old school.
I've been in corporate America 20 years, and my note taking, this is serious. Yeah. And even though I do notes, I'm still just like avidly writing down. Think about that. Like if I actually hit record or went into my settings and said do auto summarization to my AI tools.
That would relieve me of one task that I'm doing.
Jacqueline Green: Yeah. And I think Zoom has it now automatically too, that you can do. So a lot of these different softwares allow you to do it automatically without a separate, I just happen to be using Otter AI and continue using it.
Yeah, yeah,
Jacqueline Green: yeah. So there's a lot of tools out there, but that's just a simple thing.
If I could summarize that our meeting and there are three takeaways. I know. Okay. I can get these done. I can also make sure that I'm in, connection with my client You don't realize AI is being used behind the scenes. Just like if you're on Netflix and you watch one show and then it's telling you, Hey, you might like these other shows.
That's ai. That's not a person back there going, oh, this person watched this. They might like this. No, it's ai. That is actually looking at how you're using this product and making additional recommendations based on how you're using it. Same with Facebook and Instagram, any type of social media typically, how are you using it?
What are you talking about? What are you liking, what are you engaging with? And then they show you more of that. And so it's all around us, whether you know it or not. And I know a lot of people are very hesitant on it, but there is just so many opportunities to get more. Done than what you could, especially for a small business.
When you feel so overwhelmed by the. Sheer amount of work that has to be done, but you don't necessarily have the money or the revenue to hire a big staff. Yeah. Then you may not even want to in the first place. A
Becca Powers: hundred percent. Like there are so many, tools out there that can help us. Like I haven't invested in it yet, but I was even looking at opus clips, which has gotten a lot of.
We
Jacqueline Green: love Opus. We use it a lot.
Becca Powers: Do you? Yes. And I was just like, oh, it uses AI to take the highest points, turn 'em into a handful eclipse. It gives a summary, and I'm like, I have paid as an entrepreneur. Thousands of dollars over the course of years to have other people do that for me. And I'm like, you serious?
I could just upload it and opus and then it's done. And so I think that, as you talk about the budding entrepreneur, the solopreneur, and the small teams like. I just love what you're saying. Again, I'm like, Ugh, because I wanna say three things, but I'm just like, it's so powerful to embrace ai, not only to, save you money, but also to modernize your business so that you can focus on the things that are most important serving your clients.
Jacqueline Green: Absolutely, and really elevating what so many small business owners don't realize is when they start their business, their business becomes all about them. So whether they spend 10 years, 20 years in this business and they go to sell it. is no business there because it's all about them. You can't just pull them out.
That's why systems and processes are so important, and I believe AI can really help with that. And it can help, again, with all the things that you're not getting done. How do we serve our clients better? How do we also become CCE O of our companies rather than working in our company's constantly? Ooh, that just gave
Becca Powers: me the goosebumps because that is a hard mindset.
Jacqueline Green: It's so hard and so many people go into the business and you love your business. I mean, it is your passion. Youthis is coming from your heart. But you are not doing your business any good if you are so entrenched in it and can't pull yourself out, can't take vacation, can't operate it at the right level.
And that's why you really have to start letting go of things and become that CEO of your business. Whether that's, hiring someone, whether it's using AI tools to help you get more done. You really have to kind of step back and realize that you are building an entity beyond yourself.
Becca Powers: I love that so much and I wish I would've gotten that wisdom three years ago.
I had to, I had to fail a couple more times, Jackie, before I was able to catch that.
Jacqueline Green: It's so hard. It really is if you're doing what you love to do, it is hard to pull away. I remember at a point when I stopped. Having to write content so much. I love to develop content. Me, it is one of my passions, but to let go and let somebody else on my team start building some of our content was really hard for me because it was something I enjoyed, at the time, it was taking me four hours to write one blog post.
That is not a good use of my time. Now with ai, thiswe've sped up blog posts to less than an hour, but. Four hours of a CEO's time, and if you're putting two podcasts out or two blog posts out a day or a week, I mean, that's eight hours. You're losing one whole day just by writing. Yes, those are time consuming things and even though I love 'em now, if I write one or write something, it's because I want to, there's a passion and or something extra.
But when I started letting go of that, it was hard. And then as I did, I'm like, this has gotten a lot easier. And now, and when I come up with my blog ideas, I'm like, Hey, and I send off, this is the summary. This is what I'm thinking it should go. And I let somebody else actually do the work. And that feels really good that I can kind of direct more than actually do.
Becca Powers: That's awesome. That's awesome. And I think that there's a lesson in that too, and I am curious your point of view on this, but I have found. Are pretty capable, crazy.
Jacqueline Green: Yeah, I mean, it's hiring the right people and the right people that fit in your organization, but absolutely they are very capable. I learned this lesson a long time ago when I was in corporate. I was running a pretty sizable marketing department, and I realized that I would give somebody an assignment and then they would come back a project and they come back, and it wasn't done the way I wanted it to be done.
Then I had to really look at it based on the instructions I gave them. Did they do it wrong? No, not at all. Based on the instructions I gave them, that was their interpretation of it. Was the end result wrong? No. It was just my ego getting in the way thinking, well, why didn't you read my mind to do it the way I would do it Instead, I realized that they are actually doing it.
Yeah, it's different than what I thought it's getting done and it actually might be better. And so when I started changing my mindset, realizing that I love that everything doesn't have to be done the way I would do it, that other people have other experiences, they bring something to the table. That's why I hired them.
That's why they're on my team. Then it made a lot more sense.
Becca Powers: I love that. And it brings me to another question, which I think we've kind of somewhat answered, but I always like to ask things directly 'cause I do get a different answer. But how would someone be able to take the concepts that we're talking about and use it to empower themselves and their business?
Jacqueline Green: I think that you have to keep in mind throughout your business the vision of where you're going. And when we look at, I know at the end of the day on my priority board here to my left, it says at the very top, our revenue goal this year. Every week I rewrite it. I keep that in mind.
Where are we going as a company and revenue's only one side of that, right? Sure. I mean, there's a lot more we wanna accomplish, but it is easy to say, okay, this is our revenue goal. If we wanna do these other things, we need to hit this revenue goal. So I am constantly going, okay, the why behind it. Why are we doing this?
Who are we helping? Keeping our end clients in mind, and then taking, how can I. Better serve them. How can I make my products better without, creating excess of work? I'm not trying to create excess work, but I'm really under that revenue. I also have the priorities for this week. These are the three things that we absolutely need to make sure they get done, and then I break it down by employees as well and help them with their priorities so that we're constantly focused on the right things and not just.
Unnecessary work that we think, oh, well this won't take me, but five minutes. When really it takes you an hour. It's really important to stay focused on where you're going and how you're going to get there and work on the things that are really going to move that needle.
Becca Powers: I love that. And I wanna just, expand on it a little bit.
So I love that you're talking priorities. In business. And then, I think we can also use that topic and talk about personal life too. but in business too, am still working full-time and I basically work two full-time jobs. So eventually there'll be a retirement from tech, but with, started off as a passion project.
Five years later is now a full business, right? Oh yeah. So it's awesome. I'm happy and I'm working my ass off. So I, have had to learn a lot of, what you're talking about, out of necessity too, because I only have so many hours in a week. And I realized that same thing I was working on at one point, social media, then I was working on blogs.
Like I was doing all the things. 'cause it's my work. It's like mine, right. My passion. Yeah. I could do this. Yeah. And I enjoyed it. and there was the joy to it too. Mm-hmm. Like you were saying. but what I realized is that if I really wanted to have a business and not a passion project. Then my relationship with what was most important and who was able to do it needed to change.
Jacqueline Green: Yeah, absolutely. And I,
Becca Powers: and so I love what you said about the priorities, because I think it's also, as you're maybe turning your passion project into a business, or if you're already in it, it's easy to get blindsided by task. But every week I have to come back to what's the most important things that need to get done this week to move the business forward.
And how you're talking about those priorities. If I don't do that every week, I get lost in the sauce. I'll go down a rabbit hole. I mean, I'll even go down a rabbit hole and chat GPT. 'cause it'll be like, do you wanna explore how to do this? And I'm like, yes I do.
Jacqueline Green: Yes I do. I'm so excited.
Becca Powers: Thanks for asking. And then I'm come out two hours later, I'm like, whoa. What happened?
Jacqueline Green: Exactly. I mean, it's same as chat's become the new social media for a lot of people. You could be in there and hang out for quite a while and waste time and be like, what happened the last two hours? Where did that go?
Perplexity is another one. It does a lot of research and I just love it, so it'll. Proposed questions. You wanna know more about this? I'm like, yeah, yeah, I do. This has nothing to do with what I'm working on.
Becca Powers: I know. You just like keep going. as it relates, we've opened up the conversation talking about burnout and stuff like that too.
And what I realized also is I'm very into meaningful work. So whether I'm at my corporate job or I am doing my passion projects, both of them, my heart's tied to, so I get a lot of meaning from what I, do. but what I realized is that I would always prioritize work over myself.
That's ultimately what led, in my version of burnout is that's what happened, is that I was off the priority list. So I just wanna tie that beginning part of the conversation back for the listeners too, that, as you talked about, priorities, kind of being one of the ways that you can. stay empowered as a business owner.
Use AI to stay on more of the, top priorities, but also prioritizing yourself is one way that as you're working your ass off, you can keep yourself out of burnout. So I don't know if you have anything you'd like to say about that.
Jacqueline Green: Absolutely. This is a huge thing for me because I came from an environment.
I was taught to work hard. More you work, the harder you work, the more you're gonna get advanced. Then I went into corporate and that's very much, they want you to work a lot of hours. They want you to really push yourself and that's how you get ahead. And so it took me a very long time before I realized that I was not doing myself any good if I wasn't taking care of me.
I raised, two kids, but they're now adults And I put them before everything else. I put my marriage a lot of times before everything else and it dawned on me. I'm like, hold on a second. I'm really burning myself out. So just one thing that I realized was just the simple act of working out, going to the gym a few times a week wasn't so much for my health physically as much as it was for my health.
Mentally, oh, I could tell a big difference in productivity, in attitude and things, how I was feeling about things if I worked out on a regular basis, but I would feel guilty of taking that hour to work out and half hour to drive there, and then I go to pretty nice gym, and that's expensive. I would have all this guilt around that, oh, I should be getting this project done, or I said I would do this.
I need to get it done. I actually get more done by taking that time for myself than I would have by not doing it, because I can absolutely now know by knowing myself when I haven't gone to the gym in a while. Now I'm not some big, huge, you know, muscle. Driven person. It could be just a matter of going there, doing some light lifting and going to the steam room.
It could be something as simple as that. Yeah. it has such an impact on my mental health that I have to make sure that it is scheduled in my day. And there are other things like that of, my husband works so weird shift. He, is gone for days and back four days. So when he is home, I wanna make sure that.
I am taking advantage and deliberately spending time with him. Yes. Not just, Hey, in passing, glad you're home. But actually spending time talking with him, enjoying him, having a nice dinner together, doing things like that, that's prioritizing my. Overall self care because he's such an important aspect of my life and staying connected with him actually makes me stronger.
And he is a huge fan of mine and he's constantly giving me a lot more support than I feel at times. I need to make sure I prioritize that time with him. So there are things like that that. I don't ever second guess the time I spend with my adult kids because I realize that now we have two grand babies that have just arrived in the last two months.
And I'm making sure that, hey, I work so, and they're in Southern California so that I can go out there every other month see those babies and be a part of those babies' lives. So when you start shifting that mindset, and I don't know if that just came with age, if it came with just. All the failures and wisdom that came out of those.
Yeah. But
Jacqueline Green: I realized that I was not doing anybody any good if I wasn't taking care of myself and that I was going to die a young death if I. Didn't start taking better care of myself. so I joke with the kids, I'm like, I'm living 102. So
Becca Powers: that's where I'm at now too. I'm like, yeah, you're gonna be stuck with for a while back, game out too.
And I'm like, y'all, I'm gonna live a long time, so you better get used to having me around.
Jacqueline Green: I love what you, focusing on my help. I feel great right now. I really Hey to that.
Becca Powers: Awesome. Yeah. Well, I just looked down. We're at 30 minutes. It's sad because if I could keep going. But I wanna ask you two more things.
So one is, how can the audience stay in touch with you? And explore maybe working with you or finding out more about what you do?
Jacqueline Green: Sure. my website is behind the design co.com, behind the design code.com. And I'm on LinkedIn. I'm on YouTube as well. And then I have a podcast called Hobby to Profitability, which talks a lot about what we've talked about is how do you go from that hobby or that passion to making a million dollars
Becca Powers: that is.
Awesome. And I was like, you're a woman after my own heart. I'm like, we're friends now. so, guys, I'll have all of that in the show notes. And last question for you, it's more of a statement, but in a powerful summary. What empowering message do you have for our listeners to conclude today?
Jacqueline Green: I think it's believing in yourself.
You got to believe in yourself and that you can do it. And there are going to be days that you don't feel that way. But just remember, you are stronger than you know, and you will get through whatever's thrown at you.
Becca Powers: Woo. I love it. I got the goosebumps again. I'm so happy that you came on the show. Jackie, thank you so much for being our guest.
Jacqueline Green: It was great being here. I really appreciate it. It was a lot of fun.
Becca Powers: It was. All right. I'll see ya.