Guest: Nicole Lehr, Owner of Purity Spa & Wellness
Episode Introduction
Some stories remind you what true perseverance looks like.
In this episode of The Hook, I sit down with my dear friend and fellow entrepreneur Nicole Lehr, owner of Purity Spa & Wellness in Williamsburg, VA. Nicole’s story is one of courage, community, and transformation — from rebuilding her business after cancer and a pandemic to redefining what “wellness” really means.
We talk about the winding path that led her here: growing up in small-town Virginia, discovering her calling in aesthetics, surviving breast cancer at a young age, and how she built a thriving wellness center rooted in compassion and healing.
Early Life and Family Roots
Sarah: Hello friends, and welcome to the podcast. This is The Hook with Sarah Larsen. I’m your host, Sarah Larsen, and my guest is Nicole Lehr, owner of Purity Spa & Wellness. I am so happy to have you here today. And I wanted to say thank you because we did this once before. What I really wanted was to have a deeper conversation, and Nicole kindly agreed to let us rerecord.
I would like to talk about your experiences in life. Where did you grow up, and what was your family situation?
Nicole: I grew up in Gloucester, Virginia. Which is about an hour from Williamsburg, across the water from Yorktown. My parents came from New York and Connecticut. So when they moved down here, when my brother was a baby, they thought they moved to the end of the earth cuz it was the middle of nowhere compared to New York City.
We grew up there, and I was quiet. I have an older brother, he currently lives in Richmond. He’s a tattoo artist. He’s my best friend. My father passed away when I was 23, so it’s just the three of us, my brother and my mom, my brother’s family, and my family.
So we’re a very close-knit family.
Sarah: And how many kids do you have?
Nicole: I have two. I have a 13 year old and an eight year old. So they keep me busy. Especially the 13 year old. We’re in the thick of it right now,
Sarah: Thick of the teenage years or we’re heading into the teen years?
Nicole: Yeah, she just turned 13. The day after she turned 13, she said, “Okay. What’s up with crop tops now?” Nothing has changed.
Sarah: “You’re not wearing them.”
Nicole: Yeah. “Nothing’s changed from when you were 12,” you know? Lots of fun.
Love, Ambition, and Finding Her Calling
Sarah: How did you meet your husband?
Nicole: He’ll kill me, but we actually met on match.com. Back when you didn’t talk about it. I always tell him we’re one of those success stories on the commercials, you know? Um, we met in 2006 and we emailed for a while. Then we finally met in person, and we were inseparable. We’ve been together ever since.
Sarah: What a great story.
Nicole: He’s a good guy.
Sarah: What did you do after high school?
Nicole: What did I do after high school? Well, in Gloucester there’s not a whole lot to do.
Sarah: No, it’s growing.
Nicole: Yeah, it is growing a lot. But job-wise, you kind of had to leave the area. There was not a whole lot in Gloucester, so I worked over here in Williamsburg. Um, I started working at a little nail shop and I was 19. She put me in her apprenticeship program. And fast forward 24 years.
Sarah: And you have your own place.
Nicole: I’m still doing it. Yeah. It’s so funny because I just hired a girl last week for the front desk, and I said, “So tell me about yourself.” And she said, “Well, I’m gonna be you in 10 years.” And I’m like, “That’s such a compliment. I’m gonna help you to be me.”
Like, let’s do it. She’s 22, so she’s a baby. She’s me 23 years ago, you know? Right. So it’s, it’s pretty crazy to see someone so ambitious at such a young age when I didn’t find my ambition, I don’t think, until I started practicing aesthetics in 2008. So that’s when I was like, “This is what I’m gonna do.”
Then ironically, in school we had to set goals, and I set a 10 year goal to own my own business, and to hold a license in every service that I offered. Massage is the only service I don’t offer or have a license to offer. I was planning to go to massage school right before [the pandemic], but things changed and I decided to go elsewhere. Change my path.
Sarah: What services do you offer currently?
Nicole: I personally, offer facials, manicures, pedicures, body treatments, waxing, pretty much everything we offer, except massage.
Sarah: That’s a pretty big offering.
Nicole: Yes.
Sarah: The spa offers all of those things plus massage.
Nicole: Yes.
Sarah: Do your masseuses offer some special types of massage as well?
Nicole: Yes. We are a wellness center, so yes, we wanna help you relax, but we are here to fix issues so they, everyone, specializes in something. When hired, I ask, “What is your niche? What do you fix?” It took me 17 years to figure out what mine was. So I don’t expect them to know it straight off the bat, but that’s the goal, you know? I want them to further their education.
Everyone here specializes in something. So we have lymphatic drainage, myofascial release, connective tissue massage, medi cupping. Even just hot stone massage, sports, and stretching. I mean, pretty much any kind of massage. But they specialize in helping you feel and move your best. So, getting to the root of the problem.
From Apprentice to Entrepreneur
Sarah: Let’s travel back in time a little bit.
Nicole: Okay.
Sarah: You were working as a nail tech at the first salon.
Nicole: For my apprenticeship.
Sarah: Yes. So tell us more about what happened after that?
Nicole: Well, actually, I was hired as a receptionist front desk. I interviewed myself. She felt I had steady hands, and so she put me in her apprenticeship and I did that for a year. And then, I started working at another location in Gloucester, and I worked there a few years. Then I started working in Newport News at another salon there.
And that’s when I went to aesthetic school and I actually managed that salon for seven years. And then from leaving there, I came back to Williamsburg and worked at another salon and practiced the aesthetics. I was there for eight years and then I had just moved all of my clients to another salon or spa.
A year to the day, she told us that she was closing. I didn’t want to go backwards. I was an independent contractor there. I felt like going back to where I was working previously or going to work for someone else would be going backwards in my career.
My former colleague and I were both losing our jobs, and she was a massage therapist. I was everything else. So we started Purity Day Spa. We were business partners for four years, and then, right before the pandemic, she decided to go off and do her own thing. And then the world shut down. Since we reopened after, Purity has just blossomed, and it has blossomed into Purity Spa and Wellness.
I could just feel this shift in the business and the direction we were being taken in. And so we went with it, and for the last year we’ve just developed this whole other side of the business. So that’s the name change portion.
Sarah: You were previously Purity Day Spa, and you switched to Purity Spa and Wellness earlier this year.
Nicole: Yes, and now we are incorporating these other wellness services into our venue,
Sarah: So the two of you had a bit of a career disruption when you were working for that other salon and then they shut down.
Nicole: They did, they closed their doors.
Sarah: At that point you opted to do your own thing.
Nicole: So we had a five week notice that we were losing our jobs. My wonderful husband sold his beloved truck and made me promise I’d buy him a newer, better one, one day. I bought all of my equipment and everything with that money, and and within three weeks we painted and renovated this space. We closed one day at the former place and reopened at the new location.
Sarah: Oh my gosh. Two days later. Wow. I didn’t even realize that. I mean, I knew the story a little bit, but I didn’t realize how fast that had happened. That’s incredible.
Nicole: My plan was… I always laugh. I have this one client that gets every service with me that I offer, and she would have a spa day once a month, and that was her spa day. And I was gonna make sure, I was like, “There may not be pictures on the wall, but I will have a table for you to lay on.”
And it made me get everything ready, and I had it ready. And ironically, she was my first person in this new location, too. The first day we opened here. I was like, “You’re my first again.”
Sarah: So, and you moved into this space… has it been a year?
Nicole: It’s been a year and half.
Sarah: A year and a half. Time flies. That’s incredible. That’s so cool that she was the first client at the original location and today.
Nicole: Isn’t it? I was like, “I’ll remember you forever.”
Surviving Cancer, a Pandemic, and the Power of Community
Sarah: Yes, of course. And just a testament to you that A. she followed you to the new place B. Yes. She has been still with you all these years.
Nicole: Oh yes. All of my clients are like family. In 2018, I was diagnosed with breast cancer, and the business was two years old at that time. My first thought was, okay, how am I gonna fight this and continue to work? Because I was technically three quarters of the services of our spa, right, and, you know, physically not working. My clients just amazed me. I mean, I had some that paid my rent, they brought me food, they brought things that I was gonna need. They just went above and beyond, and they went from clients to family.
Having been in the industry so long, I worked with a lot of people, and they are amazing. And a few of them stepped up and came in and worked for me and took care of my clients on their days off and didn’t let me pay them. And my clients just continued coming in and seeing them for the times that I wasn’t physically able to be here. And for that I will forever be indebted to them.
Sarah: You know what?
Nicole: There are amazing people in the world.
Sarah: There really are. But you know what that says to me is that you are a pretty amazing person for all of those people. For those clients to be, you know, so caring. And for all of those other industry friends to come and help you out. I mean, that says so much to me about you, which I already know, but to our audience… Absolutely incredible. I love that.
Nicole: They’re incredible people and I think, they know I would do it for them. And I think that’s the difference. And you know it, they’re good people and you meet a lot of people along the way, you know, so yeah, some of them, I’ve been fortunate enough to actually work with me now.
Sarah: Oh, that’s great. You brought them along.
Nicole: Once I expanded a little bit. They were able to come, but I just can’t get over how amazing everyone was. And I mean, that’s when you’re faced with something tragic. And ironically, the business did better that year than it had the year before, when I wasn’t even really here much. Everybody just rallied and stepped up. It meant a lot.
Oh, that was a long tangent. I’m sorry.
Sarah: No, it’s perfect. I actually, well, you know, I wanted to talk about your cancer story. I realize, you know, what I love about talking to even people that I know fairly well, is that I always learn something new. I always learn something new about them.
So little details, even though I’ve heard the stories before, little details come out that I don’t know. Or didn’t actually catch, you know? I think that’s great and I loved that you shared all of that. So of course when the pandemic hit, you had to shut down for a period of time.
Nicole: 10 weeks.
Sarah: 10 weeks. So tell me about that. I mean, as a business owner, what was going through your head?
Nicole: Can I be frank?
Sarah: Yes, please.
Nicole: “Shit, shit, shit.” Well, I will share that where we previously worked, of course, we were employees. We didn’t see the behind the scenes, but we watched her close her business and financially she was not in a place where… these unredeemed gift certificates were rolling in, in a crush before we closed, and she had to accept them and pay her staff, which was turning into paying with her own personal funds.
And when we opened here, we both said, we will never do that. That will not be us. We will make sure whoever works with us gets paid first. So from the day we opened, we had been putting away money as an Oh Shit Fund. That’s literally what we call it.
Sarah: And so smart too. You never know. I mean, you never know what could come up. Surely you did not expect it to be a pandemic, but it could have been anything.
Nicole: Yes. I mean, when we closed that day for the two weeks that we were all “doing our part,” and then next thing you know, two weeks goes into two more. Then two more, and two more. So yeah, I was very fortunate that we had that.
I’m not sure what we would’ve done. And then, once reopened, I mean, that was, I just, I have always felt fortunate as a woman business owner to even receive an income. Only 10% of women that own businesses actually pay themselves. So I’ve always kept that in the back of my mind anytime when it was like, man, it’s tight this month. At least I’m getting something. Most women don’t.
So, I always had that attitude, and I was very thankful that we had that. And I quickly went through that. I mean, we were down to the end of it, and it was like, okay, something’s gotta happen. Again, my amazing clients, multiple of them, were reaching out to me saying, “What can we do? We wanna help.”
So I did a Christmas in July sale for service packages. And even though they had no idea when they were gonna be able to use them, we sold probably a quarter of the year’s worth of revenue. People just prepaid for their services, for when they were able to come back.
And that kept us afloat until we were able to come back in. And again, the family that we have here, clients and staff, is just remarkable. I was very grateful for that as well. So Purity has gone through cancer and a pandemic and is not only going strong, but has really grown a ton.
Sarah: How many people did you have, because your previous spa space was much smaller. So how many people did you have there and how many do you have now?
Nicole: For the first four years there was, off and on, three or four of us. We’ve had a couple that came and went, but just the core two of us. The beginning of 2020, after my former business partner left, it was just me.
And I was panicked, because I’m not a massage therapist. So I hired a massage therapist, and then the world shut down. Now there are nine of us. At one point there were 11. I feel like it got to be a little too much. I feel like we’re in our sweet spot at nine or ten.
Growth, Expansion, and the Shift to Wellness
Sarah: Um, I really enjoyed hearing the way you talked about your growth, saying, “I just felt the business going that direction,” toward the wellness, and opportunities popped up for you. Someone was going out of business or selling and wanted to send their clients to someone that they trusted. And that was you?
Nicole: Yes. We had a referral partner in town who we had been working with for a couple years. She offered services we did not, and then we would, refer back and forth. She called me one day – I have my certification in lymphatic work, but only for the neck and face, for aesthetics – so she thought that maybe I was a massage therapist. She was looking into retiring. I consulted my therapist and said, “Hey, we have this opportunity.” and I contributed to their education. I didn’t pay the whole thing, but I did contribute to it to assist them in going and getting their certification.
And she came in and did training with them and held their hand and passed her clients on to us. So that just sealed the deal. And ironically, the day she called me, two of my full-time massage therapists had just put in their notice that day with their previous jobs, and they were really nervous about coming to work with me full-time.
I called them and I’m like, this is the job. If this doesn’t tell you, you’re doing the right thing… the universe is telling you it’s gonna be okay. So that just sealed our deal for the wellness portion coming into it. That was the lymphatic work.
And now it’s, “What are you gonna do with that?” Because lymphatic work will take over your practice if you allow it. It has taken over my aesthetics portion of my business. Trying to talk to the women that work with me and getting into their brain of “What do you want to do with this craft you have now? Do you wanna further the education or be content with how you are? How are we gonna do this going forward?” That’s kind of where we are right now.
Coaching, Clarity, and Knowing Your Worth
Sarah: Going back to when you first started your business. You had mentioned to me that you worked with a coach, that your partner convinced you to hire a coach. Tell, tell us about that.
Nicole: Well, when we opened, it’s like, okay, now you’re open, and now you’re business owners. What do we do now? I don’t know. We’ve never been able to think for ourselves. It’s always been “This is what you do, this is how you do it. This is the protocol and this is what you do.” We’re like, “How do we want it? I don’t know.” We didn’t really have the opportunity to think about that. We just reacted to what we were dealing with at that moment.
So we had a mutual friend who said, “Hey, my former massage teacher lives in Missouri or somewhere out west, and is getting his certification in being a business coach for massage. So would you guys be willing, would you want to work with him because it’s half price, blah, blah, blah, blah.”
And my old business partner was like, “Come on. I could really use that, Nicole.” I’m like, what am I gonna do? I’m not a massage therapist? So I was like, “Okay, if you coach one, you gotta coach us both.”
And he’s like, “I don’t know what I’m gonna do with you, but okay.” Because he’s like, “I don’t know anything to tell an aesthetician or a nail tech.” So it got down to the nitty gritty of “What do you think?” and “What drives you?” and he helped me find my niche, my calling, and all these things that I never really thought of.
It completely changed the way I look at my practice now, it just made me find my worth and my value. I think because I got to do it how I wanted to do it and not being told what to do. So I still say, “Well what would Sean do?” because what would he tell me to do?
He still laughs, and he says, my “referral/connection thing.” I always am thinking of somebody that, “Oh, I know somebody that knows you and you guys need to talk,” or whatever. He’s like, “That’s gonna take you far. You need to keep up with that.” But he says that he was like, “I didn’t know what to do with you, but you’re actually probably my best success story because you listened.”
Sarah: You listened to him, and you actually implemented the things that he suggested.
Nicole: Yes, and I tell every single person that I talk to in regards to this practice, you can be mediocre at 15 things or damn good at one or two. That’s what he taught me. And I’m like, do I wanna waste my time and energy and education or money learning something that I really don’t care about? No.
That’s why, I mean, I love massage, but it’s not my calling. That’s why I chose to go another route. Because yeah, I’d be mediocre at it. So that’s the way I look at it. He changed my perspective on aesthetics and nails, period. I’m grateful for him. I still message him and I’m like, “Can I get an hour?” and he coaches me on different situations.
Sarah: I love that he’s still available for you.
Nicole: Yes. We’ve never actually met in person. We just talk on Facebook or Zoom.
Sarah: Well, that’s the way the world works these days, right? That’s perfect.
Here for the Girls: Paying It Forward
Sarah: One other thing I want to touch on is when you had breast cancer, you were quite young, and there’s a nonprofit that was started here in Williamsburg. It was originally known as Beyond boobs. They changed the name a few years back to Here For the Girls. Yes. Can you tell us a little bit about what they did and how you’re involved with them now?
Nicole: Here For the Girls is an amazing nonprofit for women – not just local women, but it’s nationwide with virtual support – but it’s for women under the age of 51 that have been diagnosed with breast cancer, regardless of the stage and how advanced and all this stuff. So ironically, Purity, or even where I worked previously, is how it all started.
We would volunteer with them really. And the day I was diagnosed, I had just gotten off the phone with their representative confirming that we would be there for their ball or golf tournament. And so about an hour later after I got my diagnosis, I called her back, and said, “Well, now I’m one of the girls.”
So she amazingly took me under her wing and put me in connection with who I needed to talk to. I have met some of the most amazing women. A lifetime of friendships. They just have support groups, they have fun outings, so it’s not all about cancer, but just to have other women that know how you are feeling or have been through what you are currently going through is lifesaving.
My first day or first time meeting them, two other women, I had triple negative breast cancer, and triple negative, If you Google it, is like a death sentence. It is one of the worst types you can have. I knew once I left the doctor and I heard this, I needed to meet other women on the other side.
So they connected me with these two amazing women, who I still refer to as my “Bigs”, because it’s the sorority nobody wants to be in. These big sisters. And they held my hand, and they had the same treatment I did, and they said, “Okay, on this round of chemo, you’re gonna feel this, and the next time you’ll feel this. And don’t be alarmed by this cuz this happens.”
And it just eased my mind on what to… Now I am that side for other women going through it ,and I know how important that was to me. My children meeting their children, to show that there is a life after.
Sarah: That’s gotta help to maybe make it a little less scary for their kids.
Nicole: Absolutely. Yes. My Bigs were very involved with another organization, which is amazing, it’s Camp Kesem. Camp Kesem is a nonprofit for the children who have been affected by cancer. Their parents have been affected. Whether it’s their guardian, their parents, or grandparent, whoever is raising them.
They have a sleepaway camp every summer. I was so nervous about sending my daughter. At first she was saying she did not wanna go, because it was thick of my treatment. She didn’t wanna leave my side. She finally went and she came back as a different child. It was like, “It’s gonna be okay.”
I will give you an example. We got to go to a talent show that they have at the end of the week. And she didn’t know we were there. We were sitting there watching and before the talent show they all had dinner together in this mess hall. And she’s eating, and she gets up, and she’s dancing in the middle of the room with these other kids having a dance session in between.
I looked at my husband, I’m like, “Who is that child?” She never would’ve done that before, but there’s no judgment. Everybody loves each other and supports each other, and it just melted my heart. And before Camp Kesem, when I had no hair, I wasn’t allowed to be at the bus stop. She was very self-conscious of that, and nervous of people staring at me and things.
And after that, her teacher called me and said, we were talking about radiation in school today. And Brinley stood up and said, my mom’s getting radiation. And actually told the class that her mom was going through cancer. When she wouldn’t talk about it before. But it made it okay. It was okay now.
I just think it’s an amazing organization. That’s magic as well. That’s magic. So every newly diagnosed person, if I hear that they have children, I’m like, Camp Kesem. You have to go. And unfortunately, now my brother has been going through treatment for melanoma.
So now his children will be going to Camp Kesem next year with mine. So I think that’s amazing too.
Sarah: So do your kids still go?
Nicole: Yes. Every year they go and they can go till they’re 16 for free. This sleepaway camp, it is run by, of course it’s nationwide, but this local chapter is run by William and Mary, or put on by William and Mary.
And it’s literally organized, chaperoned, everything. The students raise the money in their funding. They fundraise. They put on a gala to raise money for this week, and they do everything they, anything you wanna do. They have undivided attention by 50 22-year-olds. To think that at 22, I did not care about little six year olds. Every time I look at these kids that are so young, I’m like, “Thank God you’re our future.” They’re just such good kids and they genuinely care about these children and. Most of them have been affected by cancer as well. So it’s very important to them. And now my daughter says she’s gonna go to William and Mary, and she wants to be a camp counselor.
Sarah: Oh my gosh. I love it. What a reason to choose William and Mary.
Nicole: Right. I’m like, great. “Get a scholarship.”
Lessons in Leadership and Letting Go
Sarah: You have such a magical story. But what I love, and what I really want to share with my audience, is that being a business owner is not easy.
Nicole: No. You’re going to have lots of challenges and everybody has them. I mean, they may be small, they may be big, they might be cancer, they might be a pandemic. Just about every business owner has been through some challenges in the last few years. So I think that sharing these stories and just letting other business owners and would be business owners know, look, it’s not an easy road and you know, you get, you put in the effort, you put in the work to do, you know, to have your business and it’s not gonna be all roses every day.
Sarah: Would you say it’s worth it?
Nicole: Absolutely. I mean, there’s days that I would probably say no, but then when the dust settles, I’m like, I wouldn’t have it any other way. I don’t think I could go back to working for somebody else.
Sarah: That’s really it. Knowing that you’re in charge of your life. I heard something not too long ago, a meme or something, where it was like, “I quit my nine to five to work 24/7 as a business owner,” and it’s not far off. You don’t have to put in that much to have a successful business if you’re doing it right. Or have the right mindset, I guess is really what I wanna say. There’s something to be said for it. It’s not for the faint of heart.
Nicole: No. And it takes three to five years to get to that. I can say, too, I’m not there. I feel like I could never be comfortable to sit back, and the ladies here laugh, and say, “You’ve been saying you’re gonna step away for two years,” so like, it’s really hard to say you’re done, you know?
Sarah: It’s still your baby. It’s still growing.
Nicole: Absolutely. But this past spring, I finally bit the bullet and hired an office manager, and let me tell you, she is worth her weight and gold.
I’ve known her since high school, but she is here, and I constantly am telling my husband, “If it wasn’t for Sarah, I wouldn’t be able to be doing this right now.” I couldn’t spend three hours doing yard work, you know, freaking no way. But she makes it so I can relax.
Sarah: You needed that.
Nicole: Yes, very much so. And I tell her all the time, “Have I told you how much I appreciate you?” I think that’s the difference too. I have an amazing group of women. I mean, it just happens to be all women, but everybody works well together. Everybody gets along. We help each other. We are here to do amazing things, and we’re having a good time doing it. So yeah, it’s pretty amazing.
Sarah: Obviously you’ve found the right people, but also you’ve built a culture that breeds that.
Nicole: Yes, and I am a service provider as well.
Sarah: Yeah. So you’re in the trenches.
Nicole: I’m working alongside them. So when I am here, I am just the same as them, you know? They’re my coworkers. They’re not my employees.
Looking Ahead: A Vision for the Future
Sarah: So, what does the future hold for Nicole and Purity?
Nicole: Everybody that knows me knows I have a two-year and four-year and 10-year plan. I have all these plans.
Sarah: It’s good. You should.
Nicole: Yes. So, next year I have three classes that I would like to get under my belt, and then I will actually be able to check off the box of my education that I’ve been trying to slowly plug away at for a few years. I won’t be finished with, I mean, I crave education. I will have my certificate. I will be a certified holistic aesthetician. I will have taken all the classes that require that. I have two more to go and then I’ll have that.
So that’s on my radar for next year. Um, and I’ve got some other things cooking in my brain. It’s never stopping, of course. I’m thinking a continued education school or a facility where we can host classes.
I prefer the holistic approach cuz that’s how we approach things here at Purity. But um, there is nowhere around that holds continuing ed classes. I have to go to Asheville, North Carolina, or New York, or California. There is nothing around here.
Teaching is in my future. That’s one thing that the pandemic taught me is I got my instructor license, for nails currently, and then I will get aesthetics, and I’ve started doing apprenticeships. I have two apprentices currently. So teaching. It’s my four year plan.
Sarah: I’m so excited with everything that you’ve been doing, the growth that I’ve seen, just in the short time that I’ve known you, and what the future has to hold. I will be here to watch it.
Nicole: Well, I’m excited to watch it grow too.
Sarah: Thank you so much. This has been really fun.
Key Takeaways
- Resilience is built through community. When Nicole faced breast cancer, her clients and colleagues stepped up in extraordinary ways.
- Listen to your intuition. Every major shift in her business — from founding Purity to expanding into wellness — began with a feeling that it was time.
- Growth takes time and trust. Success didn’t happen overnight; it unfolded through faith, education, and staying true to her values.
About Nicole
Nicole Lehr is a Licensed Holistic Master Aesthetician and Nail Technician with Integrative Aesthetics, Williamsburg, and the founder of Purity Spa & Wellness, a collaborative space for likeminded therapists in Williamsburg, VA. Her mission is to help clients feel and move their best through integrative spa and wellness services.
Connect with Nicole: Website | Instagram
Energetic Reflection
Every conversation on The Hook carries its own frequency, and this one is pure grace. Nicole’s story is a reminder that healing and business can coexist beautifully when you lead from the heart.
If this conversation moved you, you’ll love my Reiki-infused newsletter, where I share stories and energetic insights for creative entrepreneurs.

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