Have you witnessed a time when you industry reversed course on something important? We’d love to hear about it, because when these U-Turns are covered up we lose out on our ability to better evaluate the current direction of our industries.
Breana Brown

During my senior year of high school, I had my required appointment with the guidance counselor about my goals and future aspirations. However, there was nothing said in the meeting that I really resonated with. The talk was mostly about going to college, so that’s what I did. I went to college without any real plan for what I wanted to do. I originally wanted to study anesthesiology, but only because I knew that career made a lot of money. When I started my classes, I did everything right. I took notes, studied, did my homework yet I still was falling behind in class and not doing well on my tests. I switched to the undecided major, but did not enjoy any of my classes. After the first semester I left school. Read more>>
Sari

There was a time in my career when I stood at the front of the room teaching food rules, calorie burns, and the next best diet—believing I was helping women feel their best. As a fitness professional and certified health coach, I truly thought that control and discipline were the keys to achieving a healthy body. But over time, I came to see that my strict food rules and intense workouts weren’t making me healthier—they were leaving me drained, unhappy, and disconnected from what true health means: feeling whole in mind, body, and spirit. Read more>>
Dr. Joseph Arvay DC

Yes — when my daughter started having seizures. I thought I had all the answers. It was 1992. I was a new chiropractor, full of faith, fresh out of school, doing everything right. We ate clean, avoided toxins, adjusted regularly, stayed active, stayed off medications. I believed — deeply — that the body heals from above-down, inside-out. Read more>>