When the Universe Changes the Price Tag | Building The Becoming Webinar

When the Universe Changes the Price Tag

July 16, 20264 min read

"The more I trust my intuition, the less surprising it becomes when it's right."

Today is one of those days where the to-do list is already full before I've even finished my coffee. The Becoming Webinar is officially becoming real. Not the "I've got an idea" kind of real. Not the "I should probably do something with this someday" kind of real. The kind of real where you're building automation, writing emails, connecting workflows, testing registrations, and making sure all the little pieces behind the scenes actually work. It's the part nobody sees when they register for an event and assume it somehow magically appeared. What makes me laugh is that this entire project wasn't born from some elaborate marketing plan or a strategy meeting. It wasn't the result of months of forecasting or carefully crafted business projections. This has been one of the most Source-led projects I've worked on in a very long time. The idea arrived, grabbed my attention, and refused to leave. Since then, I've spent countless hours researching, digging into the astrology, exploring the Barbault Basket, looking at the portal energies, and piecing together everything I felt needed to be understood before I could confidently share it with others.

Today is the day I finally sit down and build the technology side of it. Which is slightly ironic considering Mercury Retrograde has been treating technology like a personal science experiment lately. Between power outages, internet issues, systems acting strange, and random tech hiccups that seem to appear out of nowhere, voluntarily dedicating a large chunk of my day to automation feels a little ridiculous. Yet here we are. Registration pages need to be built. Follow-up emails need to be connected. Workflows need to be tested. The boring stuff has to happen before the magic can reach people.

The thing that surprised me this morning wasn't the technology though. It was the pricing. I woke up with an absolute knowing that the VIP pricing needed to change. No spreadsheet told me. No marketing expert suggested it. No business coach handed me a formula. I simply knew. Years ago I would've argued with myself about it. I would've opened calculators, compared competing offers, built spreadsheets, and tried to logic my way into a decision. Now I've learned something different. When that deep inner knowing arrives, I pay attention. Not every thought is intuition. Fear talks. Ego talks. Anxiety talks. Excitement talks. But intuition has a very different voice. It doesn't yell. It doesn't panic. It doesn't try to convince you. It simply says, "This way."

Learning to trust that voice has probably been one of the hardest lessons of my life. Harder than learning astrology. Harder than Human Design. Harder than building businesses. Because intuition rarely arrives with an explanation attached. It doesn't hand you a business plan or a PowerPoint presentation. It doesn't tell you exactly how everything will unfold. It simply nudges and waits to see whether you'll trust it. Looking back, every major breakthrough in my life has started exactly the same way. A feeling. A knowing. A nudge I couldn't logically explain. And every time I've ignored it, I've eventually found myself circling right back to the thing it was trying to show me in the first place.

Maybe that's why this webinar feels different. It's not just another event. It's not just another offer. It feels like an invitation. Not only for the people who will attend, but for me as well. An invitation to trust more deeply. To stop needing every answer before taking the next step. To recognize that if Source was powerful enough to plant the idea, it's powerful enough to help guide the execution. That doesn't mean I won't second-guess myself a few times between now and Sunday. Let's be honest, I'm human. But these days the second-guessing doesn't get the final vote.

So today I'll build the systems. I'll connect the automations. I'll test the workflows. I'll make sure everything is ready to go. Then I'll start inviting people into something that has been quietly unfolding behind the scenes for weeks. Because sometimes the most important thing you can do isn't have every answer. Sometimes it's simply trusting the nudge and taking the next step anyway.

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