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Elementary Role Models

Elementary Role Models

When elementary school gets out today, I’ll meet Ivy on the playground and then we’ll participate in Girls with Grace, the running club.

While Ivy likes it when I attend Girls with Grace, she doesn’t necessarily want to run WITH me.

It’s okay, I take this slight in stride.

There are plenty of other adults with whom I can run. Other parents who have the day off or sneak out of work early or, like me, work from home on their own schedules.

I like to think that we’re setting an example for our kids.

Maybe that’s true.

And maybe it’s a little arrogant.

After all, we parents are the tag-a-longs.

The ones really leading by example are the girls who show up.

The girls who don’t have any friends in the group (yet), but swallow their fears and show up again and again.

The sixth grader who just might be the only sixth grader.

The kindergartner who just might be the only kindergartner.

The girls who always finish long after the rest of the group, but keep trying anyway.

The other girls who run back to cheer on those stragglers.

The natural athlete who runs double what the rest of the group does to make sure she’s challenging herself.

It’s an awesome group of kids who work hard, have fun, cheer each other on, and engage in healthy activities.

They are a great reminder that when it comes to those who lead by example, we don’t have to turn on the television or the computer, or look for someone older or wiser, or try to identify someone in our field with more money or accolades.

We can find excellent models to follow in the simple kindness of kids.

Join The Community!

Join our Facebook GroupJoin the quest for “The Sweet Life.”  Request access to our Facebook Group.  Let’s learn from each other!  GO HERE

Free Audio Book Download

Full Unabridged Audio Book “Vagabonding With Kids” by AK Turner!  GO HERE

Take The SWEET LIFE Assessment

See how you score? Identify your strengths. Discover areas in your life you want to improve. GO HERE.

Giving Back

Amanda and Mike launched an Impact Club in their hometown of Boise, Idaho in 2017, and have had a blast gathering like-minded individuals, families, and organizations to make significant impact in our community, raising over $200,000 locally and over $1.5 million nationally.  

Join Our Next Monthly CHALLENGE

Every month Amanda and Mike pick a month-long challenge that pushes us out of our comfort zone so we can grow, learn, and become better versions of ourselves.  Sometimes we design our own unique challenge and other times we join pre-established challenges. Email us to find out about our next upcoming challenge. Us@BusinessofUs.com

About Us

Our Story | Mike and Amanda TurnerWe are Mike and Amanda Turner, founders of “The Business of Us.” We are fierce advocates of helping entrepreneurial couples and families improve their lives, livelihoods, and legacies… READ MORE

Team Turner

Team Turner

I successfully completed my 5th half-marathon. The other 4 took place years ago and after I finished the 4th, I remember thinking that I would never do it again.

Why subject myself to so much pain?

But yesterday was different. At the finish line I thought, “Yeah, I could do that again.”

The difference was having Mike by my side.

When you run alone, you have mile after mile to psych yourself out. To get caught up in your own head, in all the fears and doubts about who you are, why you’re out there, and what you’re doing.

When you have a partner by your side, there’s no space for self-doubt. Because you’re too busy chatting about the sunrise and how long you can make it before giving in to the restrictions of your bladder and stopping at a port-a-potty.

At every mile marker, Mike and I would throw our hands up in the air and shout the number. During the last three miles, we listened to “Eye of the Tiger” and AC/DC and the Rocky theme. It was silly and fun. No pain, no fear.

Okay, maybe a little pain.

There is so much value in having someone by your side. Your spouse, your friend, your accountability partner. Your team, your tribe, your dog.

In a few days Mike and I will begin a new physical challenge.

I don’t have all the details yet, but it involves terrifying things like kettle bells and sandbags.

The pull-up bar that Mike bolted to the back of our house will be employed.

I’ve been told to identify a “respectable hill.”

Am I scared? Yes. Yes, I am.

It’s going to be crazy hard. But Mike will be right there with me, as well as a team of people from all across the country.

So there’s no time to dwell in fear and self-doubt. I’ve got a hill to find.

Join The Community!

Join our Facebook GroupJoin the quest for “The Sweet Life.”  Request access to our Facebook Group.  Let’s learn from each other!  GO HERE

Free Audio Book Download

Full Unabridged Audio Book “Vagabonding With Kids” by AK Turner!  GO HERE

Take The SWEET LIFE Assessment

See how you score? Identify your strengths. Discover areas in your life you want to improve. GO HERE.

Giving Back

Amanda and Mike launched an Impact Club in their hometown of Boise, Idaho in 2017, and have had a blast gathering like-minded individuals, families, and organizations to make significant impact in our community, raising over $200,000 locally and over $1.5 million nationally.

Join Our Next Monthly CHALLENGE

Every month Amanda and Mike pick a month-long challenge that pushes us out of our comfort zone so we can grow, learn, and become better versions of ourselves.  Sometimes we design our own unique challenge and other times we join pre-established challenges. Email us to find out about our next upcoming challenge. Us@BusinessofUs.com

About Us

Our Story | Mike and Amanda TurnerWe are Mike and Amanda Turner, founders of “The Business of Us.” We are fierce advocates of helping entrepreneurial couples and families improve their lives, livelihoods, and legacies… READ MORE

I’m directionally challenged and navigationally deficient

I’m directionally challenged and navigationally deficient

Without Mike, I honestly don’t know where I’d be.

I’m not talking about what my life would be like, I’m talking about WHERE I’d be.

I’m directionally challenged.

I can get lost in shopping malls and grocery stores and parking lots.

We’ve been taking the same Greenbelt path for 8 weeks, yet the other day I inexplicably began heading down an offshoot path (which clearly led to a dead end).

Sometimes, when we’re leaving a store or restaurant, Mike deliberately hangs back just to see which way I’ll go. I always (at least I’m consistent) begin heading in the wrong direction. Mike is consistently amused.

I once got lost in a Mexican desert with my mother and aunt. We were following a circular trail. A trail I’d run every day for the previous 6 weeks. Yet when I had relatives in my care, I somehow deviated from the path and took us on the “scenic” route. I pretended we weren’t lost. (We were lost).

I can get lost underwater: Once I was diving in Micronesia and I began following the wrong group of divers. My group was clad entirely in black wetsuits, yet I started swimming after a group of tourists all wearing matching hot pink dive gear. I didn’t notice. Mike had to swim after me and point me back in the right direction. I pretended like it was no big deal. (This was before I’d seen “Open Water”).

I can get lost in the air: An ex-stepfather was a pilot. For a year he trained me to fly a J3 Cub. “Which way is the airport?” he’d ask. I’d randomly point in a direction. I was never randomly correct.

Needless to say, corn mazes do not amuse me.

The only place I ever want to get lost is in a bookstore. Sadly, their exits are clearly marked.

Mike, on the other hand, was born with a GPS implanted in his brain. Sometimes, when he’s giving me directions to a location, he’ll use terms like, “head north” or “on the southwest corner.”

And I have to remind him: “I don’t speak compass.”

Of course, I have other strengths.

I can spell. I understand the differences between than and then, further and farther. (Okay, the latter pair only after my editor explained it to me). But you get my point.

While Mike keeps me from getting irrevocably lost, I’ve saved him from advertising “newly remolded” houses or telling people about events that are “open to the pubic.”

This is important stuff.

However, Mike is constantly improving his craft. He writes, he learns, he requires less of my intervention to curb his remolded pubic errors.

But how do you fix someone who is directionally challenged? How do I improve? How do I get a GPS implanted in MY brain?

I see no cure for my navigational deficiencies.

But that’s probably because I’m looking in the wrong direction.

Join The Community!

Join our Facebook GroupJoin the quest for “The Sweet Life.”  Request access to our Facebook Group.  Let’s learn from each other!  GO HERE

Free Audio Book Download

Full Unabridged Audio Book “Vagabonding With Kids” by AK Turner!  GO HERE

Take The SWEET LIFE Assessment

See how you score? Identify your strengths. Discover areas in your life you want to improve. GO HERE.

Giving Back

Amanda and Mike launched an Impact Club in their hometown of Boise, Idaho in 2017, and have had a blast gathering like-minded individuals, families, and organizations to make significant impact in our community, raising over $200,000 locally and over $1.5 million nationally.  

Join Our Next Monthly CHALLENGE

Every month Amanda and Mike pick a month-long challenge that pushes us out of our comfort zone so we can grow, learn, and become better versions of ourselves.  Sometimes we design our own unique challenge and other times we join pre-established challenges. Email us to find out about our next upcoming challenge. Us@BusinessofUs.com

About Us

Our Story | Mike and Amanda TurnerWe are Mike and Amanda Turner, founders of “The Business of Us.” We are fierce advocates of helping entrepreneurial couples and families improve their lives, livelihoods, and legacies… READ MORE

I am responsible for my happiness

I am responsible for my happiness

What’s in it for me?

This is the mentality with which I approached situations for a long time. What’s in it for me? What am I going to get out of it? I didn’t know that this was my approach, but it was. Everything was bartered. Transactional.

And the “What’s in it for me” mentality is far from unique.

Maybe this makes sense in our society, given how we raise kids into adulthood.

• Do X and you’ll get Y.
• Eat your vegetables so you can enjoy dessert.
• Complete a chore, receive a reward.
• Get a job to earn money.

We’re always focused on the reward. What’s in it for me?

We see advertising play into this mentality constantly. For five easy payments of $29.95, there’s something out there that will make your life better and solve all your problems.

When we have this approach, it becomes invasive and worms its way into every aspect of our lives.

Example: Relationships.

It took a lot of growing up before I realized the fault in this type of thinking. I saw relationships, even my marriage, as battles to be fought. Me versus you. Always keeping score.

This is not the way to foster a healthy relationship, but it works great if you want to breed resentment and anxiety.

My antidote for this line of thinking came in the form of accepting two truths:

1) I can only control MY actions, behavior, and reactions.
2) I am responsible for my happiness. No one else.

From there I realized that I needed to move from “What’s in it for me?” to “Give first.”

No more keeping score. No searching for blame to place. Instead, taking full and fierce personal responsibility.

When it comes to negative, toxic relationships, well, life is too short for that. But for the true friendships, the meaningful partnerships, and the people in our lives for whom we feel constant gratitude, the answer is to give first and without expectation.

Embracing this mentality is freeing (no more worrying if you’re winning or getting what’s due). It’s satisfying (so much more than focusing on that perceived reward).

And interestingly, practicing the Give First approach has allowed me to clearly identify the relationships in my life, which merit all the effort I can muster (versus the negative ones, for which life is too short).

The good ones, the important ones, range from my relationships with my husband and children, to the friendships I have with people seldom seen, but I know that if we ran into each other, we could talk for an hour with genuine interest and concern.

If you’ve read this far, you’re probably one of those people.

So many questions and thoughts race through my mind in the course of a day.

I want to look at them and know them and understand them.

To identify when I’m not asking the right question and, though it will take introspection and the difficulty of tackling bad habits and negative behaviors, change the narrative for the better.

Join The Community!

Join our Facebook GroupJoin the quest for “The Sweet Life.”  Request access to our Facebook Group.  Let’s learn from each other!  GO HERE

Free Audio Book Download

Full Unabridged Audio Book “Vagabonding With Kids” by AK Turner!  GO HERE

Take The SWEET LIFE Assessment

See how you score? Identify your strengths. Discover areas in your life you want to improve. GO HERE.

Giving Back

Amanda and Mike launched an Impact Club in their hometown of Boise, Idaho in 2017, and have had a blast gathering like-minded individuals, families, and organizations to make significant impact in our community, raising over $200,000 locally and over $1.5 million nationally.  

About Us

Our Story | Mike and Amanda TurnerWe are Mike and Amanda Turner, founders of “The Business of Us.” We are fierce advocates of helping entrepreneurial couples and families improve their lives, livelihoods, and legacies… READ MORE

Decline to fit the stereotype

Decline to fit the stereotype

When Mike and I married, starting a family was not on our radar. We looked at examples of the people around us with small children and found households in chaos, where screaming was the most common form of communication between family members. This seemed to be the norm. Just the way it always is.

No thanks.

“Kids are amazing,” a mom would tell me, just after screeching at her toddler to shut the goddamn door.

We had a family over for dinner once. The couple cooed over their little girl who took markers to my walls. Then the dad said, “But once you have kids, you can forget about all THIS.” With that he motioned at our living room, at small wooden sculptures we’d brought back from the South Pacific, intermingled with candles I’d bought at yard sales.

The message was clear: if we had kids we could say goodbye to living in a pleasing environment, because it would be necessary to turn our living room into the private equivalent of a McDonald’s Play Land.

Again, no thanks.

We knew so many couples who professed to love their families, yet couldn’t seem to stand each other.

If they weren’t screaming, they were baby-talking, so much so that the adults began baby-talking to one another. A world where adults willfully baby-talk to one another is my personal version of hell.

And the parents who took the most pride in their children were the ones with downright demonic offspring. Did parenthood turn people insane?

While visiting Mike’s parents in Mexico, we were introduced to a couple close to us in age. Chris and Elizabeth had two young children, ages 4 and 2. But their household was like nothing we’d ever seen.

They spoke to their children as if they were little humans. Because it turns out that kids are really just little humans.

All family members treated all other family members with kindness and respect.

Elizabeth, it turned out, was more addicted to candles than I am. The kids played in the living room, lit candles everywhere.

“Oh my gosh, how do you keep the kids away from the candles?” I asked.

“Oh, um. We tell them not to touch the candles,” she explained.

Genius!

In the middle of their patio grew a giant cactus. Twenty concrete steps led from the patio down to the yard. The kids ran circles around the cactus.

“How do you keep them from getting hurt by the cactus? Or from falling down the stairs?” Other parents we knew had all stairs gated at all times. And running near a cactus would have been on par with playing in traffic.

“Well, honestly, they get hurt once and then pretty much figure it out for themselves.”

Mind blown!

Maybe the examples we’d seen didn’t represent the way it had to be.

Maybe the chaotic, screaming households wanted us to believe that was the norm because that was THEIR norm.

And if Chris and Elizabeth could do it, maybe we could too.

From then on we opened our eyes, not only to the manner in which Chris and Elizabeth parented, but to other households in which parents and children managed to maintain shocking levels of civility. Shocking because they bucked the stereotypes of frazzled mom, barely-there dad, and tantrum-throwing toddlers.

There were other ways of operating as a family, and that’s where we set our sights.

In time, we became a family of four. It wasn’t easy. There were multiple miscarriages, terrifying birth stories, and a child who refused to sleep through the night for the first three years of her life. (Thanks for that, Ivy).

We’ll never have it all figured out. Nor will Chris and Elizabeth, nor any of the other positive examples of parents who we look up to and admire.

There are times when we yell, when our living room does, in fact, resemble a McDonald’s Play Land. But those aren’t the norm. And no one will ever convince me that that’s the way it always is or has to be.

I didn’t realize it at the time, but that early example of what was accepted as normal (for some) versus the possibility of a vastly different course of action, would influence, and lead us to question, everything else we thought to be true.

“You can’t travel during the school year.” Sure you can.

“Children need routine.” Children are incredibly adaptable.

What might you have been told that isn’t exactly true? That you can’t run a marathon? Have to stay in a miserable job? Subject yourself to people you can’t stand because you’re supposed to be polite?

Just because someone feels that a certain way of thinking applies to his or her situation, doesn’t mean it applies to yours.

What works for my family won’t work in every household. We’re all different and unique. But I don’t believe there’s any such thing as “the way it always is.”

Misery loves company, but when misery calls, say you’re busy. Decline to fit that stereotype. Question the status quo. Take ownership of your relationships, your happiness, and how you live your life.

Join The Community!

Join our Facebook GroupJoin the quest for “The Sweet Life.”  Request access to our Facebook Group.  Let’s learn from each other!  GO HERE

Free Audio Book Download

Full Unabridged Audio Book “Vagabonding With Kids” by AK Turner!  GO HERE

Take The SWEET LIFE Assessment

See how you score? Identify your strengths. Discover areas in your life you want to improve. GO HERE.

Giving Back

Amanda and Mike launched an Impact Club in their hometown of Boise, Idaho in 2017, and have had a blast gathering like-minded individuals, families, and organizations to make significant impact in our community, raising over $200,000 locally and over $1.5 million nationally.  

About Us

Our Story | Mike and Amanda TurnerWe are Mike and Amanda Turner, founders of “The Business of Us.” We are fierce advocates of helping entrepreneurial couples and families improve their lives, livelihoods, and legacies… READ MORE

The Inspiration Beside Me

The Inspiration Beside Me

There are (at least) two versions of me.

The first wants to do good, be better, succeed, be the person I know I can be (Heroic Self).

The second wants to do nothing beyond binge serial killer documentaries, have questionable Chinese food delivered to my door, and adopt all the cats (Lesser Self).

Most of us have (at least) these two competing versions. Sometimes the first wins, sometimes the second. When the second starts to dominate, winning out more often than the first, that’s when I find it’s easy to spiral. Depression, the attitude of “screw it, I’m already down, I may as well get comfortable.”

Certain things pull me back up. The inner fire, the fear of disappointment, the dread of someday regretting a potential left unrealized.

The greatest inspiration, though, the reason I haven’t yet seen all the serial killer documentaries or adopted all the cats, is the person beside me.

Mike doesn’t motivate me because I’m afraid of disappointing him. He never judges and always encourages. He is fair and honest and selfless. Our marriage does not include manipulation or keeping score.

He motivates me by example.

There was a time when I thought of myself as driven. Looking back, I had no idea what the word meant.

His drive doesn’t confine itself to one area. He channels it in all aspects of life. He’s constantly striving to improve:

1. His mind (reading, writing, critical thinking).

2. His body (I thought training for our upcoming 13-mile race was sufficient, he added in pull-ups and 100 burpees a day).

3. His businesses (this one requires constant focus, because surely there’s a cap on the number of LLCs one can have).

4. His relationships (with me, with our daughters, with the people he values and respects).

When Mike experiences a win, he doesn’t rest or pat himself on the back. He doesn’t look for validation. He accepts his win and moves on to the next challenge.

Living with someone like Mike is rewarding, exhausting, and motivating.

All at once.

And anyone acquainted with us knows that we are far from all-work-and-no-play. When it’s time to enjoy, we go big. We play hard.

I still gravitate to serial killer documentaries. The fact that I can have food delivered to my door at any time is amazing. (To be honest, I don’t really want to adopt ALL the cats.)

But when you have a constant example beside you of someone who is more prone to being his Heroic Self than his Lesser Self, it’s hard not to follow suit.

That means often turning away from what would be far easier and more comfortable. But I’m lucky to have that example in my life, even when it means tackling what’s difficult.

And I wouldn’t have it any other way.

Join The Community!

Join our Facebook GroupJoin the quest for “The Sweet Life.”  Request access to our Facebook Group.  Let’s learn from each other!  GO HERE

Free Audio Book Download

Full Unabridged Audio Book “Vagabonding With Kids” by AK Turner!  GO HERE

Take The SWEET LIFE Assessment

See how you score? Identify your strengths. Discover areas in your life you want to improve. GO HERE.

Giving Back

Amanda and Mike launched an Impact Club in their hometown of Boise, Idaho in 2017, and have had a blast gathering like-minded individuals, families, and organizations to make significant impact in our community, raising over $200,000 locally and over $1.5 million nationally.  

About Us

Our Story | Mike and Amanda TurnerWe are Mike and Amanda Turner, founders of “The Business of Us.” We are fierce advocates of helping entrepreneurial couples and families improve their lives, livelihoods, and legacies… READ MORE

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