EPISODE & TRANSCRIPT SPIRITUAL SOUL PODCAST
Bridging the Gap: Betrayal, Truth & Forgiveness with Krystine Fioravanti Hobson
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Episode Summary
An inspiring soul conversation with Krystine Fioravanti Hobson, author of "Bridging the Gap: Betrayal, Truth & Forgiveness." We talk about her book, life before and after divorce, the catalyst for change, her life, family, children, truth, forming boundaries, the journey of forgiveness and transformation, raising her vibration and the way that changed her outlook, becoming empathic and intuitive, how she changed careers and got into the spiritual field, her new book she is working on & how it is lighter, and she shares a beautiful message at the end to carry your light forward. Plus so much more...
Transcript of the ConversationNatalia Kuna:
Welcome to spiritual soul Podcast. I'm here with Krystine Fioravanti. Hobson, just a beautiful person, a really warm soul who I met several years ago, and she's had some sessions with me. So that's how I know, Krystine. And I remember when I first met you, I really felt that sense of a soul connection, like I've known you before, in another lifetime, or, you know, and just immediately was able to recognize you as an old soul. And very naturally intuitive and he had a brightness to you. So despite anything that, that any time of your life that you might have been that you know, that you've gone through, I could see that light within you. |
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And that was something that really resonated. And then since then you've just been so friendly and warm and supportive. And I just really appreciate that. And so, would you like to just start off by sharing how you first came across me and how those sessions sort of impacted you and what they meant at that time?
Krystine Fioravanti Hobson:
Yeah, absolutely. Thank you very much for having me. I'm excited. I definitely call you soul sister and friends. I was, it was a difficult time in my life, I was really searching, I had ended a 30 year marriage, a couple of years, maybe about a year before, year and a half before. And just really searching for a different path of spirituality. And, you know, I had been very involved in in my religion all my life. And something else was calling me and it had been for a really long time. And I started to notice about three months before I searched you out synchronistic numbers. There were synchronistic numbers that were showing up that I didn't understand and terms that I was hearing that I didn't understand. Everybody hears about soulmates, but I had come across twin flame, I had come across, you know, things that you just were not kind of in the mainstream at the time.
And so I was looking up synchronistic numbers, and I came across your website. And I loved the way you were explaining things. I was happy to see all the other things that were on your site. And I had never had a reading before. And so I said I had got to have a reading. And I think I chose a reading and like a clearing kind of a thing. It was a duel. Right? Well think it was a very long session, we have a giant time difference. Yeah. And I will tell you, it impacted me in such a way and you probably don't remember this, you do so many readings. You were doing the clearing, and I just cried and cried and cried. And that was the beginning of things completely changing. For me. It was the beginning of things changing for me. Yeah, that you showed me a piece of myself that I don't think I would have seen had I not met you.
Yeah, absolutely. Thank you very much for having me. I'm excited. I definitely call you soul sister and friends. I was, it was a difficult time in my life, I was really searching, I had ended a 30 year marriage, a couple of years, maybe about a year before, year and a half before. And just really searching for a different path of spirituality. And, you know, I had been very involved in in my religion all my life. And something else was calling me and it had been for a really long time. And I started to notice about three months before I searched you out synchronistic numbers. There were synchronistic numbers that were showing up that I didn't understand and terms that I was hearing that I didn't understand. Everybody hears about soulmates, but I had come across twin flame, I had come across, you know, things that you just were not kind of in the mainstream at the time.
And so I was looking up synchronistic numbers, and I came across your website. And I loved the way you were explaining things. I was happy to see all the other things that were on your site. And I had never had a reading before. And so I said I had got to have a reading. And I think I chose a reading and like a clearing kind of a thing. It was a duel. Right? Well think it was a very long session, we have a giant time difference. Yeah. And I will tell you, it impacted me in such a way and you probably don't remember this, you do so many readings. You were doing the clearing, and I just cried and cried and cried. And that was the beginning of things completely changing. For me. It was the beginning of things changing for me. Yeah, that you showed me a piece of myself that I don't think I would have seen had I not met you.
Natalia Kuna:
Wow, that was tough. I really hear your feeling through your story. Literally, like, that was really beautiful. I love it. And you've got a really long way since then. And I know you were doing different work at that time. Can you just think a little bit about roughly what kind of work you were doing then and what work you've been doing?
Krystine Fioravanti Hobson:
Lately? Yeah, um, I was working for a staffing agency as an operations manager. So you know, just kind of average normal work. I a recruiter by trade if you want to, you know, call that so I call it that I've been doing that on and off for a very long time. And, again, just life was showing me things that I didn't understand. And I did some coaching classes. I took some I had some coaching training from a few different people. It went well. I liked it, but I was still having, you know, just I have questions. I question everything off. And I was what am I a night life net that I thought everybody knew better than I did. You know, I had not learned to trust that intuitive part of me, you know, and I didn't see a light that you had seen. You know, when I say that you made an impact. I'm not kidding, you made an impact.
And so fast forward five years later, and I do intuitive readings. I work with Tarot and oracle cards. I consider myself intuitive reader and an energy reader different than you, like, you know, I have a different medium than you do. And I, I've learned so much from my clients and the people that I come across every single day that it's completely changed how I move through the world every day.
Natalia Kuna:
I'm absolutely amazed. I think that's amazing! And, you know, and it just goes to show you what people have inside of them, that they either don't know is there or they kind of know, but maybe don't know how to express it, or how to sort of go the next level with that, because there's a lot of stuff that needs to happen first, in order to get to that point, a lot of processing, clearing and realizations, right. And I know that you were in a stage of your life when I first met you.
And you let me know that you had written a book. And I was so excited because I just really take my hat off to anyone who actually goes out there and does the work to write a book because we can think that it's another thing to actually sit there and type it out or write it out. And so that's always something that inspires me. And I went and grabbed the book. And I just think it is, you know, a brilliant little beautiful book that speaks to the hearts of woman and has a real truth and rawness to it, if I'm going to be reading out some excerpts today, because as I was reading it, they'd be alone. And I would get chills.
And it kind of reminds me and maybe you've experienced something like this, too. When I first started using oracle cards, you know, as an amateur, you know, your first you read the little booklets that come with it. And then after a while, it would be one line that would pop out from the book, and it spoke to me like I'd get tingles, it's like the light shone on it. And that's what it was like reading your book. And I was reading it on Kindle. And then I kept highlighting these bits. And in the end, it was fluorescent. Because it was so many pages that were highlighted. Sorry, I doubt some parts that I feel like. Because, you know, it's not just that it touched me something in me, but that I know so many women would relate to and they need to hear these things.
So this book is called "Bridging the Gap." Do you want to show it now you've got it there? Yeah, it's available on Amazon (see further below). It was all about truth, betrayal and forgiveness kind of in a nutshell, but so much more. What I found was it was really raw, like I love the rawness of it, you really went there in your rawness, and that's not easy to do. But you went there and I felt like it was something you needed to do as a cathartic process for yourself. It's not just to heal yourself, but for others to or whoever would come across it.
You dive in, and you narrow into a very vulnerable point in your life. It was a kind of 'cataclysm', a giant turning point in your life. And so this book is like a snapshot, or a series of snapshots, sewn together and threaded with raw truths that really hit the mark and capture the heart, soul and attention of especially the female reader. And it was very empowering. And in that moment of reading some of your lines, it makes you look at your own truth inside you that you know is there that you bury or attempt to ignore or override in your life. And because you share these powerful snapshots and not the whole story, it's the way that you sort of pin your words your message comes through so effectively, and there's a power in it. And then this sort of could feel that sort of that power in that moment. Because it's a seed, it's like a spark that will ignite something in the right reader who receives it. And so there are some lines in the books that just gave me chills.
So let's get a bit deeper. Your story is about a kind of eroding of who you were at that time, and a total sort of distraction before your rebirth or a series of and in that time, a lot of harsh realization and that is the core that is like the number one word for me is realization. Right? It's that coming to terms with AND actually knowing and seeing before anything else. And that was about your private life, your marriage. And so let's start in chapter one. You just wrote this, just to kind of give an introduction:
"While our life may have seemed normal on the outside, I can tell you that having a celebrity for husband and father isn't normal and comes with its own set of challenges."
So just to start off with the backdrop, can you first speak about just roughly what situation you were in whatever you feel comfortable sharing, you know that part of your life that that compelled you to make a giant change. And also was the result of this book also.
Krystine Fioravanti Hobson:
The first thing I want the reader to know, you may already know this, it is not a tell all book, right? It's not an airing laundry or anything, you know, book at all. The book really is more about my journey than the things that happened. So I don't want to give it away. I won't give you the full backdrop. But we did have a very big event in our marriage that happened that created you said clap cataclysmic events. Yes, that is true. It made me question everything. Everything from how I moved through the world, how I was as a wife, as a friend, as a daughter, as a mother, as a spiritual being, you know, in my faith, I questioned everything. And I just didn't know how to get from there to here. And the rawness of the book. That was the whole point, was to be completely honest, in little bits and pieces of my life. So it's not a dirty laundry book. It's not that. And getting from there to here... So we talked a little bit about this before we started. The book itself is, you know, when I was writing it, I thought, Okay, I'm gonna try and put some points together that could make sense to the reader, to predominantly women, women who would read the book, to make sense to the reader that they can hopefully utilize through their own journey.
Since writing the book, and actually, while I was writing, I realized that for every step, there's a million little steps, I felt like, at the time, when I sat down to write the book, that I had lost everything that I had done, every... not just around me, right, not just family, and all of that, and I say this, in the very beginning of the book, what happens to create this chasm in my life, I was married for another 7, 8, 9 years after this happened, you know, so it's not like it was, you know, you know, a one and done kind of a thing, you know, we really, really worked at it. But I just, in those years, I was just losing piece after piece after piece after p[iece, until I literally woke up one day, and I went, I don't know who I am, didn't recognize myself, I didn't recognize how I moved through the world. And that to me, was scarier than everything else that I knew that I was going to lose, if I walked away. That's really hard for anybody who's walking away from something that they've built - it's everybody else or it's IDI does that. And I don't mean physically died, but emotionally die and spiritually die.
Natalia Kuna:
You absolutely are humble and you tell your story without any kind of like defecation of any other person. That's something I really admired about it as well, it made it more poignant and strong and wise, like you, you know, not to go there. Because that is really important. And the one of the first things that I noticed, you know, that I love, and you realized: "Oh, who am I now", so many women can relate to that. And that was one of the things that I felt, you know, in the first few chapters, there's the public facade, which we all have our versions, so you had yours and the versus the real you inside and then there are periods when they're both there and they're kind of you know, intermingled. But then it's like, you know, you start to realize... So there was actually a quote in the book:
"The people you meet at this time in your life don't know the real you...." I mean, so many people can relate to that, and:
"People tend to think they have a right to you to your time to your energy. People think they know you and eventually pieces of you are slowly taken away, pieces of who you are."
You built a kind of fortitude and strength and real sense of boundary that came from a place that was less the opposite of that. So even actually, starting on page 1 you wrote:
"When you think about this life, you start to realize you are not the person you used to be. When you were younger, you spoke your mind I find and you were very direct, you were made to feel guilty for knowing who you were, and saying out loud."
And I think that speaks to every inner child and every, you know, woman with a daughter, and woman for herself, and so many ways. And you went on to say"
"The only thing you were really guilty of, was not having enough experience to set those boundaries with loving confidence instead of the arrogance of you."
I just really liked that line. So how did you come into the point of being able to do that?
Krystine Fioravanti Hobson:
Oh, that was hard won girl! I think I've always kind of been a truth teller. And as I was coming up in life, I'll give you I'll give you an example, about hard won. And this was very, very early on in my marriage. My ex husband was, like I said, a fairly famous guy, especially at the time. And writers used to call from the newspapers. And I was an open, you know, book. I'm honest, I'm direct, you know, and so, they would call and sometimes they wanted to talk to me. And they didn't want to talk to him and whatever. And so, I'm just chit chatting, I'm just telling you, you asked me a question, I'm answering the question...
Fast forward about four or five years later. And those same writers, things were going on for him professionally, so they would call. And those same writers finally started saying... all of them said this to me:
"Krys, you used to be so easy to talk to. Now you tell us nothing."
Because I was learning that, to be that vulnerable, was biting me, right, it was hurting me. To be that open and to be that direct, was not having, it was not coming back in a good way, you know, it was being twisted in the paper. And, you know, those kinds of things were being twisted. And that really bothered me. And I had people in my life that were close to me, that would tell me you know:
"You're too direct!" You know, "You're bowling me over with your opinion!"
So it was hard one over time, to learn how to be a little more diplomatic. Although people still tell me I'm very direct, and I think I'm being very diplomatic. It has come through raising my four children. And 100%, I will say this, my daughter, because I have three sons, and then my daughter's, the youngest... Parenting her, has brought me more wisdom than anything, because it's a whole different thing, right? Raising boys and raising girls. And my middle son also challenged me a couple of times when he was in college, you know, Mom, I need you to hear what I'm saying. And just listen to me. And so these little people, they're not little they're all you know, my kids are all very tall and big people. They humbled me. They were calling me out.
And so I have slowly become not just a better parent, but a better human being to other people, a better friend, a better daughter. I hear ...I've become more empathetic. And I've learned to trust those intuitive hits when somebody walks in a room and you instantly know, they really need something. You know, I couldn't have done that years ago. Does that make sense? Like those boundaries, these boundaries now really come from a sense of compassion and love and care, opposed to me just being really in your face, you're not going to cross that boundary with me. So, you know, I know that was the long answer. But the wisdom has really come from raising my own children, and them calling me out. You know, "I need you to hear what I'm saying".
The book is written for my daughter. And I've told her on more than one occasion that I have. I'm a better woman because she's in my life, she just forced it. So everything that I have gone through in my life, Nat, that culminated in making the decisions that I made, was because I had a young woman that was coming up in the world that needed to know her own boundaries, strength, heart, soul, compassion, joy, care, love, wisdom, respect for herself, and then respect for others. And that really is the giant turning point, when I started this process.
Natalia Kuna:
You say that she's done that for you, and but you're also you're doing it for her, you know, and you're able to be that tower. And that strength of light as well, you know, like, in the book, you mentioned, having this hole inside of you. And it's that sort of typical scenario that many of us fall under, where we feel like, XYZ is going to fill that gap, right. And in your case, he was saying, when you got married, you think that's going to fill the gap. But then it just becomes this kind of giant hole and cover and because you lose yourself in it all, and, you know, and also very good reasons, you know, getting married, having a family raising kids, and I know, you did a splendid job of that for kids doing the things that you've mentioned, you know, taking them, you know, to their sports games, and being there for them constantly, and all the stuff that mums do and we're not recognized for. And in that many women lose themselves. We're all out there doing that. And we're being the go getters.
And we're kind of losing these pieces and parts of ourselves along the way. How do you pick up those pieces? Well, firstly see them... and then... How do you look at each one and come into your own sense of power and realization for the next step in your life, so that you can be more of who you really are and what you came to be. And it's not to say that we're all not that, you know, there's pieces of that. But we do get lost along the way and our voices, become mumbled and unheard. And that's one of the sort of messages in your book. And because, you know, you went through these highly emotional times, and it was about your unhappiness in it all.
When you talked about your highly emotional times, which is something we all relate to, you know, you had a bit of simile and descriptive metaphor that I picked out about I love this line that you wrote:
"Rage was oozing out of my body, like red hot lava, slowly consuming every emotion and reasonable thought, for tears came in waves of throbbing, snotty, choking, breathless heaves... (I like that line so much)... I couldn't pray. I was having panic attacks. The woman that existed a few days before was gone. And her new class was a blank detached wreck. I was depressed, I was throwing myself into everything to stay busy, trying not to think about what was going on, jumped into anything to keep me from thinking no from feeling."
So it really struck a chord because I think so many feel this way, or we have these tendencies to not look within, to do any kind of avoidance tactic to run away, to keep busy, to go in auto mode and have that kind of facade that we can wear. I love that you came back into your own and this long process of many series of steps. What was it really that gave you the clarity, compassion and ability to be able to forgive yourself and the situation and anyone involved? And what made you be able to get to that point? People struggle with that piece.
Krystine Fioravanti Hobson:
That's a really good question. There were there were people involved that including my own children, that were so innocent, right. And, and the picture was so much bigger than I was. And so that was a big part of it.
And the other part was that, and I do write about this, that I had known so many people that lived with anger and bitterness and unforgiveness in their heart. And this is true, I knew them and I watched them in my life. This is long before this happened to me. I watched them, Nat, get sick. When I say old, I mean just age 25 years and a year. Be ill maybe be filled with cancer or suffer some other kind of malady or illness. And I've always been a very big believer in from the time I was a teenager, that that harboring that anger or bitterness in your life is going to make you sick. I've been a big believer in that. That was a wake up for me.
When I realized eyes how angry I was. And I was mad, I've made a decision, I cannot be this way. I don't know how to not be this way right now. But I know I can't stay this way. And so I've got to figure it out. And all the things I was doing to not think about it wasn't helping me be better. I probably went around the wrong way, I'm looking back. But that point was, I was so angry, and I write about a thing in the book that happened to me, that was really ugly. And that was that moment that I was saying:
"I can't live like this, like, I can't live in this anger, I've got to forgive somebody, anybody, pick somebody. Whether it was me, whether it was him, whether it was other people involved, I had to go ahead and start someplace."
So it was it was the twofold, knowing other people that that bitterness makes them sick. And I did not want to be that. Because that sickness in you makes other people close to you sick. See, I instinctively or intuitively knew that the picture was always bigger than me. It was always bigger than me. And so in pretty short order, within a few months, I started to get on this, okay, "Let's make some changes that we can make, to at least start the healing process."
It still took me a long time, don't get me wrong, like, I don't ever want anybody to pick up my little book here. Because it's a little book on this little book and think, oh, you know, it was a magic bullet. It. It wasn't, it was a hard one. But I did come in with some sense of knowing what I did not want. And that poison for myself, and for the people around me that I cared about and loved. I knew I didn't want that. That was the beginning of okay, I have to figure I have to figure this out. Yeah. And I do write a little bit about that a little bit later on in the book.
Natalia Kuna:
That's the thing about forgiveness, it is it's about how it eats you up and what it turns you into, and it can be heard. So it takes time and each to their own with that. But you can find snippets of realizations and understanding to sort of breadcrumbs to get you there along the way. And it makes a powerful difference. And I love that you said that impacts people around you, it impacts everybody, you know, your children, everyone's so you know, you've found your path. And it's not that easy. You know, like, for most of us, it's not easy that you you've found your way, and you're still finding your way navigating through it.
One of the core messages that you talked about was knowing that you have this greatness within you. And that is often the missing piece or the hard bit, for people to get to because they might know it on some level, but they might go like: "Oh Nah..." or "but I can't, it's too hard", or go back to "little old me", right? Because we all have these different versions.
You did say, and it gave me chills, you wrote:
"We are all meant for something great. And we're deep with them. Each of us knows this, we can feel it, it takes up periodically, but we 'tamp' it down, believing greatness is for someone else."
Yeah. And it can be big chills, it gives me chills again. Now literally, I'm covered in chills. And I love that you use the word 'tamp'. Because as a coffee drinker, I know what that means. And it's really great description. You know, so well done a great verb there. You wrote:
"You have to choose change, you have to choose you."
It's simple, it's powerful, and it really is the truth. You heard your call. And then in some way, this is a clarion call to others, to at least face themselves.
It's interesting that now you are actually writing a new book. So tell us about that.
Krystine Fioravanti Hobson:
I have been writing fairly diligently for, you know, a while and kind of little short stories and little groupings. And I decided that I wanted to... At first I thought well, maybe I would rewrite this and add to it and expand to it. So I did a little bit of that. And recently I thought, you know, I would like to start from here from where I am now, from the person I am now, from the things that I'm learning now. And the things that are going out in the world. Today was a perfect example. I was in a place that the energy just felt really heavy, not dark, just heavy, you know, like lower vibrational and I don't live in that space anymore. I got out in my car and the sky is blue and it's beautiful and I'm like "whooh"...
This book is about, what I realized from that, was... Even on the days that are still hard for me, and we all have them, I realized today that even on the days that are hard, and I don't feel like my light is being very bright, it really still is in a really good place, not just for me, but for the people who depend on me or the people that I meet every single day. And the heaviness that I felt where I was today, in contrast to how I live my life, or how my life shows up for me, even on my very worst day, was so different, that it actually pushed the inspiration to write a whole different book.
So the new book is going to be a higher vibrational book, I believe that my life has come full circle to a service, I'm, I live my life from a service position now. And no matter what I'm doing, right, so it's going to be about that. It's still going to wrap into this book a little bit, it's going to have some of the bits of some of the struggles that I still have, I write some short stories that, you know, that on a really hard day, about a year ago, I had a really, really hard couple of days. And I ate my way through the day. And, like, Twizzlers and pop tarts, and I don't even know if you have this stuff where you are so a couple of bowls of cereal. And, you know, and I'm not advocating that by any stretch of the imagination. It's not something I do very often. But it's so struck me at the time, that the next morning, it struck me as funny. And I wrote this very funny, sarcastic piece about me, burying those emotions in Pop Tarts, and this kind of crazy thing.
And so this book is going to be about even though the journey never stops, and there still are hard days, right? Because we're never "there", there's no "there there", right, you know, you still have the hard days. With each day that we get healthier and brighter, those like if we're here, that low isn't 'down here' anymore, that low is 'here'. So that's what made me really decide, I decided a few weeks ago, I'm gonna write something different, and put some of these things together. But today really was the push, where, "Oh, I get how this stuff starts coming together, I get what I've written is starting to come together", that you think you're not making progress. But you're 'here', you're here, you're here, and you've come from 'here'. And so when you drop, you don't drop way down here anymore. You know.
And so the book is really going to be hopefully inspirational. I hope this is inspirational, but inspirational from a different perspective. I hope it's lighter. It's funnier. This book, current book, definitely is me, the words are all me. Tere's some sarcasm, a little bit of 'language' in there. And this one will be probably similar. I hope it's more inspirational. I hope it's a lighter, funnier take on the life that I live now. And the people that I'm come across now and the community that I work with now. Some funny stuff, people are wonderful. So I don't know that it's clearly cohesive right now, but it's coming together. I'm really excited about it. And hopefully in the next few months, it will be done. I already have an editor that will start working in a couple of months and start working when I have so far. And yeah, I you know, like I said it's not 100% cohesive, but it's, I'm, I'm working at it.
Natalia Kuna:
I love it, that you're doing it, and that you found your sense of humor and sort weaved that in. And it sounds, you know, something that relates to your everyday life. And you're bringing this new 'light' that you've birthed, that's always been a part of you, but that has manifested into form from making the changes and the sacrifices too, to come to where you are. And there's no ever perfect, and you recognize that, you recognize that there's no 'there', like a perfect place... we're always just going up and down the merry go round. But at least you're having some fun while you're going around it, right. And you're coming from even just, using the term 'higher vibrational', coming from a higher vibrational place. But in truth and in grounding, not in kind of 'fancy land', you know, so you're bringing that through from a grounded place, which I love.
Talking about all this, you know, I hope that it inspires others, because, it's always so exciting writing and, you know, expressing yourself in these ways and doing something out there in the world. So was there anything else you'd like to talk about? Before we finish off, like about your spiritual experiences, or anything else, or a sort of core message you'd like to share?
Krystine Fioravanti Hobson:
Yeah, I, you know, I just encourage anybody that this resonates with, or my book resonates with, just really keep moving, keep moving forward. Keep looking for what resonates with you. Keep finding people, like I found you, that helped me out. And, even though that I have learned that everything kind of comes from within, right. So you know, I have this incredible connection to Source, to God, to whatever you want to call it, and you have everything that you need right 'here'. These connections that come from this are very powerful. And to be vulnerable, and to say: "I need help", or "I have this question".
Keep asking, keep looking.
If people aren't paying attention, somebody is going to pay attention, somebody's going to hear you, somebody's going to talk you through it, somebody's going to give you a tool that's going to help you find, shine your own light. So this is the last thing that I'll say. I feel like part of my job here in the world, is to shine a light, we all have that job, that's all of our jobs. I shine a light, and if I can shine my light bright enough to illuminate maybe just the first stepping stone in your path, and you get inspired because you could see it. And then you step and now your light starts to shine a little bit brighter, right? Because you're now feeling that and you could start to illuminate your own path, and your light gets brighter and you're illuminating the next person's first stone.
That's what I feel... I'm gonna cry... that's what I feel my job is. And that's why I do what I do. That's why I work in the places that I work and with the things that I work and, so don't give up. I don't care what's happening in your life. And I know we all have a story, Nat. We all have a story that is heartbreaking and compelling. And mine compared to others, I don't compare. But if somebody could say, "Well, I went through this", I understand I have empathy and I have care and I have love for whatever it is that you've gone through.
Keep moving forward to your light. You may feel like your light is "that big" [ie: tiny], but I promise with each step, it gets brighter and brighter and brighter and brighter. And then you are really impacting the people around you. People are watching. And even if you think nobody is watching, there are waves of that vibration going out. Like there are waves. And you are just touching everything around you. And that's the last that I will say because I will get on that and I will go forever....
Natalia Kuna:
That is a pace on its own. That is amazing. And I relate to it in so many ways. I mean just even the metaphor of the stepping stones - that is something that the angels have brought to me clairvoyantly so many times in a session. They will show me the image of the stepping stone - and it's always the next one, and it's lit up. And then like around it is a calm pond. And then so the idea is you go to the next, and that's the next platform of your life, the next part. And then you get your healing and you get all high vibe and you sort of come into your own. And then the next it will be revealed, because they're not all revealed at once, but to know, that they are there. And you're very aware of that.
And I do think too, that many of us who do shine our lights, we do not know the impact at all, you know, like how far that reach goes. Which can be for anybody who just follows a calling, sort of turns on their light or says something nice one day to somebody, smiles to an old person at the shops. You do not know the impact of that, the ripples of that are so wide and expansive, and we've all had a moment of that. So just really, reflect on that, and everyone listening out there, how far that can take not just yourself, but other people. And there's something so powerful in that. So I love that message so much.
I just want to thank you so much for coming here and being so truthful and vulnerable and just being you and being kind. And you're such a great voice because you're so true as a woman, and you've come into your own, you've been doing so many exciting things. And you're now doing readings, and I just love it, it's so exciting, but it's all normal. You know, it's all like that's what you do now and you do other stuff. It's just all part of it. And you've really grown in your spirituality. So just thank you for coming on.
Wow, that was tough. I really hear your feeling through your story. Literally, like, that was really beautiful. I love it. And you've got a really long way since then. And I know you were doing different work at that time. Can you just think a little bit about roughly what kind of work you were doing then and what work you've been doing?
Krystine Fioravanti Hobson:
Lately? Yeah, um, I was working for a staffing agency as an operations manager. So you know, just kind of average normal work. I a recruiter by trade if you want to, you know, call that so I call it that I've been doing that on and off for a very long time. And, again, just life was showing me things that I didn't understand. And I did some coaching classes. I took some I had some coaching training from a few different people. It went well. I liked it, but I was still having, you know, just I have questions. I question everything off. And I was what am I a night life net that I thought everybody knew better than I did. You know, I had not learned to trust that intuitive part of me, you know, and I didn't see a light that you had seen. You know, when I say that you made an impact. I'm not kidding, you made an impact.
And so fast forward five years later, and I do intuitive readings. I work with Tarot and oracle cards. I consider myself intuitive reader and an energy reader different than you, like, you know, I have a different medium than you do. And I, I've learned so much from my clients and the people that I come across every single day that it's completely changed how I move through the world every day.
Natalia Kuna:
I'm absolutely amazed. I think that's amazing! And, you know, and it just goes to show you what people have inside of them, that they either don't know is there or they kind of know, but maybe don't know how to express it, or how to sort of go the next level with that, because there's a lot of stuff that needs to happen first, in order to get to that point, a lot of processing, clearing and realizations, right. And I know that you were in a stage of your life when I first met you.
And you let me know that you had written a book. And I was so excited because I just really take my hat off to anyone who actually goes out there and does the work to write a book because we can think that it's another thing to actually sit there and type it out or write it out. And so that's always something that inspires me. And I went and grabbed the book. And I just think it is, you know, a brilliant little beautiful book that speaks to the hearts of woman and has a real truth and rawness to it, if I'm going to be reading out some excerpts today, because as I was reading it, they'd be alone. And I would get chills.
And it kind of reminds me and maybe you've experienced something like this, too. When I first started using oracle cards, you know, as an amateur, you know, your first you read the little booklets that come with it. And then after a while, it would be one line that would pop out from the book, and it spoke to me like I'd get tingles, it's like the light shone on it. And that's what it was like reading your book. And I was reading it on Kindle. And then I kept highlighting these bits. And in the end, it was fluorescent. Because it was so many pages that were highlighted. Sorry, I doubt some parts that I feel like. Because, you know, it's not just that it touched me something in me, but that I know so many women would relate to and they need to hear these things.
So this book is called "Bridging the Gap." Do you want to show it now you've got it there? Yeah, it's available on Amazon (see further below). It was all about truth, betrayal and forgiveness kind of in a nutshell, but so much more. What I found was it was really raw, like I love the rawness of it, you really went there in your rawness, and that's not easy to do. But you went there and I felt like it was something you needed to do as a cathartic process for yourself. It's not just to heal yourself, but for others to or whoever would come across it.
You dive in, and you narrow into a very vulnerable point in your life. It was a kind of 'cataclysm', a giant turning point in your life. And so this book is like a snapshot, or a series of snapshots, sewn together and threaded with raw truths that really hit the mark and capture the heart, soul and attention of especially the female reader. And it was very empowering. And in that moment of reading some of your lines, it makes you look at your own truth inside you that you know is there that you bury or attempt to ignore or override in your life. And because you share these powerful snapshots and not the whole story, it's the way that you sort of pin your words your message comes through so effectively, and there's a power in it. And then this sort of could feel that sort of that power in that moment. Because it's a seed, it's like a spark that will ignite something in the right reader who receives it. And so there are some lines in the books that just gave me chills.
So let's get a bit deeper. Your story is about a kind of eroding of who you were at that time, and a total sort of distraction before your rebirth or a series of and in that time, a lot of harsh realization and that is the core that is like the number one word for me is realization. Right? It's that coming to terms with AND actually knowing and seeing before anything else. And that was about your private life, your marriage. And so let's start in chapter one. You just wrote this, just to kind of give an introduction:
"While our life may have seemed normal on the outside, I can tell you that having a celebrity for husband and father isn't normal and comes with its own set of challenges."
So just to start off with the backdrop, can you first speak about just roughly what situation you were in whatever you feel comfortable sharing, you know that part of your life that that compelled you to make a giant change. And also was the result of this book also.
Krystine Fioravanti Hobson:
The first thing I want the reader to know, you may already know this, it is not a tell all book, right? It's not an airing laundry or anything, you know, book at all. The book really is more about my journey than the things that happened. So I don't want to give it away. I won't give you the full backdrop. But we did have a very big event in our marriage that happened that created you said clap cataclysmic events. Yes, that is true. It made me question everything. Everything from how I moved through the world, how I was as a wife, as a friend, as a daughter, as a mother, as a spiritual being, you know, in my faith, I questioned everything. And I just didn't know how to get from there to here. And the rawness of the book. That was the whole point, was to be completely honest, in little bits and pieces of my life. So it's not a dirty laundry book. It's not that. And getting from there to here... So we talked a little bit about this before we started. The book itself is, you know, when I was writing it, I thought, Okay, I'm gonna try and put some points together that could make sense to the reader, to predominantly women, women who would read the book, to make sense to the reader that they can hopefully utilize through their own journey.
Since writing the book, and actually, while I was writing, I realized that for every step, there's a million little steps, I felt like, at the time, when I sat down to write the book, that I had lost everything that I had done, every... not just around me, right, not just family, and all of that, and I say this, in the very beginning of the book, what happens to create this chasm in my life, I was married for another 7, 8, 9 years after this happened, you know, so it's not like it was, you know, you know, a one and done kind of a thing, you know, we really, really worked at it. But I just, in those years, I was just losing piece after piece after piece after p[iece, until I literally woke up one day, and I went, I don't know who I am, didn't recognize myself, I didn't recognize how I moved through the world. And that to me, was scarier than everything else that I knew that I was going to lose, if I walked away. That's really hard for anybody who's walking away from something that they've built - it's everybody else or it's IDI does that. And I don't mean physically died, but emotionally die and spiritually die.
Natalia Kuna:
You absolutely are humble and you tell your story without any kind of like defecation of any other person. That's something I really admired about it as well, it made it more poignant and strong and wise, like you, you know, not to go there. Because that is really important. And the one of the first things that I noticed, you know, that I love, and you realized: "Oh, who am I now", so many women can relate to that. And that was one of the things that I felt, you know, in the first few chapters, there's the public facade, which we all have our versions, so you had yours and the versus the real you inside and then there are periods when they're both there and they're kind of you know, intermingled. But then it's like, you know, you start to realize... So there was actually a quote in the book:
"The people you meet at this time in your life don't know the real you...." I mean, so many people can relate to that, and:
"People tend to think they have a right to you to your time to your energy. People think they know you and eventually pieces of you are slowly taken away, pieces of who you are."
You built a kind of fortitude and strength and real sense of boundary that came from a place that was less the opposite of that. So even actually, starting on page 1 you wrote:
"When you think about this life, you start to realize you are not the person you used to be. When you were younger, you spoke your mind I find and you were very direct, you were made to feel guilty for knowing who you were, and saying out loud."
And I think that speaks to every inner child and every, you know, woman with a daughter, and woman for herself, and so many ways. And you went on to say"
"The only thing you were really guilty of, was not having enough experience to set those boundaries with loving confidence instead of the arrogance of you."
I just really liked that line. So how did you come into the point of being able to do that?
Krystine Fioravanti Hobson:
Oh, that was hard won girl! I think I've always kind of been a truth teller. And as I was coming up in life, I'll give you I'll give you an example, about hard won. And this was very, very early on in my marriage. My ex husband was, like I said, a fairly famous guy, especially at the time. And writers used to call from the newspapers. And I was an open, you know, book. I'm honest, I'm direct, you know, and so, they would call and sometimes they wanted to talk to me. And they didn't want to talk to him and whatever. And so, I'm just chit chatting, I'm just telling you, you asked me a question, I'm answering the question...
Fast forward about four or five years later. And those same writers, things were going on for him professionally, so they would call. And those same writers finally started saying... all of them said this to me:
"Krys, you used to be so easy to talk to. Now you tell us nothing."
Because I was learning that, to be that vulnerable, was biting me, right, it was hurting me. To be that open and to be that direct, was not having, it was not coming back in a good way, you know, it was being twisted in the paper. And, you know, those kinds of things were being twisted. And that really bothered me. And I had people in my life that were close to me, that would tell me you know:
"You're too direct!" You know, "You're bowling me over with your opinion!"
So it was hard one over time, to learn how to be a little more diplomatic. Although people still tell me I'm very direct, and I think I'm being very diplomatic. It has come through raising my four children. And 100%, I will say this, my daughter, because I have three sons, and then my daughter's, the youngest... Parenting her, has brought me more wisdom than anything, because it's a whole different thing, right? Raising boys and raising girls. And my middle son also challenged me a couple of times when he was in college, you know, Mom, I need you to hear what I'm saying. And just listen to me. And so these little people, they're not little they're all you know, my kids are all very tall and big people. They humbled me. They were calling me out.
And so I have slowly become not just a better parent, but a better human being to other people, a better friend, a better daughter. I hear ...I've become more empathetic. And I've learned to trust those intuitive hits when somebody walks in a room and you instantly know, they really need something. You know, I couldn't have done that years ago. Does that make sense? Like those boundaries, these boundaries now really come from a sense of compassion and love and care, opposed to me just being really in your face, you're not going to cross that boundary with me. So, you know, I know that was the long answer. But the wisdom has really come from raising my own children, and them calling me out. You know, "I need you to hear what I'm saying".
The book is written for my daughter. And I've told her on more than one occasion that I have. I'm a better woman because she's in my life, she just forced it. So everything that I have gone through in my life, Nat, that culminated in making the decisions that I made, was because I had a young woman that was coming up in the world that needed to know her own boundaries, strength, heart, soul, compassion, joy, care, love, wisdom, respect for herself, and then respect for others. And that really is the giant turning point, when I started this process.
Natalia Kuna:
You say that she's done that for you, and but you're also you're doing it for her, you know, and you're able to be that tower. And that strength of light as well, you know, like, in the book, you mentioned, having this hole inside of you. And it's that sort of typical scenario that many of us fall under, where we feel like, XYZ is going to fill that gap, right. And in your case, he was saying, when you got married, you think that's going to fill the gap. But then it just becomes this kind of giant hole and cover and because you lose yourself in it all, and, you know, and also very good reasons, you know, getting married, having a family raising kids, and I know, you did a splendid job of that for kids doing the things that you've mentioned, you know, taking them, you know, to their sports games, and being there for them constantly, and all the stuff that mums do and we're not recognized for. And in that many women lose themselves. We're all out there doing that. And we're being the go getters.
And we're kind of losing these pieces and parts of ourselves along the way. How do you pick up those pieces? Well, firstly see them... and then... How do you look at each one and come into your own sense of power and realization for the next step in your life, so that you can be more of who you really are and what you came to be. And it's not to say that we're all not that, you know, there's pieces of that. But we do get lost along the way and our voices, become mumbled and unheard. And that's one of the sort of messages in your book. And because, you know, you went through these highly emotional times, and it was about your unhappiness in it all.
When you talked about your highly emotional times, which is something we all relate to, you know, you had a bit of simile and descriptive metaphor that I picked out about I love this line that you wrote:
"Rage was oozing out of my body, like red hot lava, slowly consuming every emotion and reasonable thought, for tears came in waves of throbbing, snotty, choking, breathless heaves... (I like that line so much)... I couldn't pray. I was having panic attacks. The woman that existed a few days before was gone. And her new class was a blank detached wreck. I was depressed, I was throwing myself into everything to stay busy, trying not to think about what was going on, jumped into anything to keep me from thinking no from feeling."
So it really struck a chord because I think so many feel this way, or we have these tendencies to not look within, to do any kind of avoidance tactic to run away, to keep busy, to go in auto mode and have that kind of facade that we can wear. I love that you came back into your own and this long process of many series of steps. What was it really that gave you the clarity, compassion and ability to be able to forgive yourself and the situation and anyone involved? And what made you be able to get to that point? People struggle with that piece.
Krystine Fioravanti Hobson:
That's a really good question. There were there were people involved that including my own children, that were so innocent, right. And, and the picture was so much bigger than I was. And so that was a big part of it.
And the other part was that, and I do write about this, that I had known so many people that lived with anger and bitterness and unforgiveness in their heart. And this is true, I knew them and I watched them in my life. This is long before this happened to me. I watched them, Nat, get sick. When I say old, I mean just age 25 years and a year. Be ill maybe be filled with cancer or suffer some other kind of malady or illness. And I've always been a very big believer in from the time I was a teenager, that that harboring that anger or bitterness in your life is going to make you sick. I've been a big believer in that. That was a wake up for me.
When I realized eyes how angry I was. And I was mad, I've made a decision, I cannot be this way. I don't know how to not be this way right now. But I know I can't stay this way. And so I've got to figure it out. And all the things I was doing to not think about it wasn't helping me be better. I probably went around the wrong way, I'm looking back. But that point was, I was so angry, and I write about a thing in the book that happened to me, that was really ugly. And that was that moment that I was saying:
"I can't live like this, like, I can't live in this anger, I've got to forgive somebody, anybody, pick somebody. Whether it was me, whether it was him, whether it was other people involved, I had to go ahead and start someplace."
So it was it was the twofold, knowing other people that that bitterness makes them sick. And I did not want to be that. Because that sickness in you makes other people close to you sick. See, I instinctively or intuitively knew that the picture was always bigger than me. It was always bigger than me. And so in pretty short order, within a few months, I started to get on this, okay, "Let's make some changes that we can make, to at least start the healing process."
It still took me a long time, don't get me wrong, like, I don't ever want anybody to pick up my little book here. Because it's a little book on this little book and think, oh, you know, it was a magic bullet. It. It wasn't, it was a hard one. But I did come in with some sense of knowing what I did not want. And that poison for myself, and for the people around me that I cared about and loved. I knew I didn't want that. That was the beginning of okay, I have to figure I have to figure this out. Yeah. And I do write a little bit about that a little bit later on in the book.
Natalia Kuna:
That's the thing about forgiveness, it is it's about how it eats you up and what it turns you into, and it can be heard. So it takes time and each to their own with that. But you can find snippets of realizations and understanding to sort of breadcrumbs to get you there along the way. And it makes a powerful difference. And I love that you said that impacts people around you, it impacts everybody, you know, your children, everyone's so you know, you've found your path. And it's not that easy. You know, like, for most of us, it's not easy that you you've found your way, and you're still finding your way navigating through it.
One of the core messages that you talked about was knowing that you have this greatness within you. And that is often the missing piece or the hard bit, for people to get to because they might know it on some level, but they might go like: "Oh Nah..." or "but I can't, it's too hard", or go back to "little old me", right? Because we all have these different versions.
You did say, and it gave me chills, you wrote:
"We are all meant for something great. And we're deep with them. Each of us knows this, we can feel it, it takes up periodically, but we 'tamp' it down, believing greatness is for someone else."
Yeah. And it can be big chills, it gives me chills again. Now literally, I'm covered in chills. And I love that you use the word 'tamp'. Because as a coffee drinker, I know what that means. And it's really great description. You know, so well done a great verb there. You wrote:
"You have to choose change, you have to choose you."
It's simple, it's powerful, and it really is the truth. You heard your call. And then in some way, this is a clarion call to others, to at least face themselves.
It's interesting that now you are actually writing a new book. So tell us about that.
Krystine Fioravanti Hobson:
I have been writing fairly diligently for, you know, a while and kind of little short stories and little groupings. And I decided that I wanted to... At first I thought well, maybe I would rewrite this and add to it and expand to it. So I did a little bit of that. And recently I thought, you know, I would like to start from here from where I am now, from the person I am now, from the things that I'm learning now. And the things that are going out in the world. Today was a perfect example. I was in a place that the energy just felt really heavy, not dark, just heavy, you know, like lower vibrational and I don't live in that space anymore. I got out in my car and the sky is blue and it's beautiful and I'm like "whooh"...
This book is about, what I realized from that, was... Even on the days that are still hard for me, and we all have them, I realized today that even on the days that are hard, and I don't feel like my light is being very bright, it really still is in a really good place, not just for me, but for the people who depend on me or the people that I meet every single day. And the heaviness that I felt where I was today, in contrast to how I live my life, or how my life shows up for me, even on my very worst day, was so different, that it actually pushed the inspiration to write a whole different book.
So the new book is going to be a higher vibrational book, I believe that my life has come full circle to a service, I'm, I live my life from a service position now. And no matter what I'm doing, right, so it's going to be about that. It's still going to wrap into this book a little bit, it's going to have some of the bits of some of the struggles that I still have, I write some short stories that, you know, that on a really hard day, about a year ago, I had a really, really hard couple of days. And I ate my way through the day. And, like, Twizzlers and pop tarts, and I don't even know if you have this stuff where you are so a couple of bowls of cereal. And, you know, and I'm not advocating that by any stretch of the imagination. It's not something I do very often. But it's so struck me at the time, that the next morning, it struck me as funny. And I wrote this very funny, sarcastic piece about me, burying those emotions in Pop Tarts, and this kind of crazy thing.
And so this book is going to be about even though the journey never stops, and there still are hard days, right? Because we're never "there", there's no "there there", right, you know, you still have the hard days. With each day that we get healthier and brighter, those like if we're here, that low isn't 'down here' anymore, that low is 'here'. So that's what made me really decide, I decided a few weeks ago, I'm gonna write something different, and put some of these things together. But today really was the push, where, "Oh, I get how this stuff starts coming together, I get what I've written is starting to come together", that you think you're not making progress. But you're 'here', you're here, you're here, and you've come from 'here'. And so when you drop, you don't drop way down here anymore. You know.
And so the book is really going to be hopefully inspirational. I hope this is inspirational, but inspirational from a different perspective. I hope it's lighter. It's funnier. This book, current book, definitely is me, the words are all me. Tere's some sarcasm, a little bit of 'language' in there. And this one will be probably similar. I hope it's more inspirational. I hope it's a lighter, funnier take on the life that I live now. And the people that I'm come across now and the community that I work with now. Some funny stuff, people are wonderful. So I don't know that it's clearly cohesive right now, but it's coming together. I'm really excited about it. And hopefully in the next few months, it will be done. I already have an editor that will start working in a couple of months and start working when I have so far. And yeah, I you know, like I said it's not 100% cohesive, but it's, I'm, I'm working at it.
Natalia Kuna:
I love it, that you're doing it, and that you found your sense of humor and sort weaved that in. And it sounds, you know, something that relates to your everyday life. And you're bringing this new 'light' that you've birthed, that's always been a part of you, but that has manifested into form from making the changes and the sacrifices too, to come to where you are. And there's no ever perfect, and you recognize that, you recognize that there's no 'there', like a perfect place... we're always just going up and down the merry go round. But at least you're having some fun while you're going around it, right. And you're coming from even just, using the term 'higher vibrational', coming from a higher vibrational place. But in truth and in grounding, not in kind of 'fancy land', you know, so you're bringing that through from a grounded place, which I love.
Talking about all this, you know, I hope that it inspires others, because, it's always so exciting writing and, you know, expressing yourself in these ways and doing something out there in the world. So was there anything else you'd like to talk about? Before we finish off, like about your spiritual experiences, or anything else, or a sort of core message you'd like to share?
Krystine Fioravanti Hobson:
Yeah, I, you know, I just encourage anybody that this resonates with, or my book resonates with, just really keep moving, keep moving forward. Keep looking for what resonates with you. Keep finding people, like I found you, that helped me out. And, even though that I have learned that everything kind of comes from within, right. So you know, I have this incredible connection to Source, to God, to whatever you want to call it, and you have everything that you need right 'here'. These connections that come from this are very powerful. And to be vulnerable, and to say: "I need help", or "I have this question".
Keep asking, keep looking.
If people aren't paying attention, somebody is going to pay attention, somebody's going to hear you, somebody's going to talk you through it, somebody's going to give you a tool that's going to help you find, shine your own light. So this is the last thing that I'll say. I feel like part of my job here in the world, is to shine a light, we all have that job, that's all of our jobs. I shine a light, and if I can shine my light bright enough to illuminate maybe just the first stepping stone in your path, and you get inspired because you could see it. And then you step and now your light starts to shine a little bit brighter, right? Because you're now feeling that and you could start to illuminate your own path, and your light gets brighter and you're illuminating the next person's first stone.
That's what I feel... I'm gonna cry... that's what I feel my job is. And that's why I do what I do. That's why I work in the places that I work and with the things that I work and, so don't give up. I don't care what's happening in your life. And I know we all have a story, Nat. We all have a story that is heartbreaking and compelling. And mine compared to others, I don't compare. But if somebody could say, "Well, I went through this", I understand I have empathy and I have care and I have love for whatever it is that you've gone through.
Keep moving forward to your light. You may feel like your light is "that big" [ie: tiny], but I promise with each step, it gets brighter and brighter and brighter and brighter. And then you are really impacting the people around you. People are watching. And even if you think nobody is watching, there are waves of that vibration going out. Like there are waves. And you are just touching everything around you. And that's the last that I will say because I will get on that and I will go forever....
Natalia Kuna:
That is a pace on its own. That is amazing. And I relate to it in so many ways. I mean just even the metaphor of the stepping stones - that is something that the angels have brought to me clairvoyantly so many times in a session. They will show me the image of the stepping stone - and it's always the next one, and it's lit up. And then like around it is a calm pond. And then so the idea is you go to the next, and that's the next platform of your life, the next part. And then you get your healing and you get all high vibe and you sort of come into your own. And then the next it will be revealed, because they're not all revealed at once, but to know, that they are there. And you're very aware of that.
And I do think too, that many of us who do shine our lights, we do not know the impact at all, you know, like how far that reach goes. Which can be for anybody who just follows a calling, sort of turns on their light or says something nice one day to somebody, smiles to an old person at the shops. You do not know the impact of that, the ripples of that are so wide and expansive, and we've all had a moment of that. So just really, reflect on that, and everyone listening out there, how far that can take not just yourself, but other people. And there's something so powerful in that. So I love that message so much.
I just want to thank you so much for coming here and being so truthful and vulnerable and just being you and being kind. And you're such a great voice because you're so true as a woman, and you've come into your own, you've been doing so many exciting things. And you're now doing readings, and I just love it, it's so exciting, but it's all normal. You know, it's all like that's what you do now and you do other stuff. It's just all part of it. And you've really grown in your spirituality. So just thank you for coming on.
Krystine Fioravanti Hobson:
Thank you very much for having me. You've inspired me and you've inspired so many other people. And so keep doing what you're doing. You are an incredible light in and of yourself. And you've been a big part of how I've gotten to where I am. So thank you. About Krystine Fioravanti HobsonAn Amazon best-selling author, mother of 4, intuitive life coach and a perpetual student of life, Krystine loves what life has to offer.
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She has moved through countless trials with just as many life affirming experiences. Never one to give up, she makes a gift to her colleagues, friends, clients and family, her infectious can-do attitude. During the most difficult moments of her life, when she just wanted to give up, something sparked; a new idea, experience or friend would show up.
Krys is honest with her clients about the climb and that it never ends. But the magic is in the view from every stage, the lessons learned, people along the way and light that grows within and without each step up, sideways, or even backwards... It's never a direct route. Hallelujah for that, how much we would miss along the way!
She has begun again on many occasions, just like most of you. An example of resilience yet a voice of compassion & understanding. Krystine started later in life, a black belt at age 48, a new career at age 52, first time author at 55 & a whole new life since, confirming it is never too late.
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About the Book: "Bridging the Gap: Betrayal, Truth & Forgiveness" by Krystine ​Fioravanti Hobson" Krys artfully weaves her past and present together, seamlessly connecting the dots through her life. This book is her voice. Powerful, inspiring and fearless...[a] raw, honest tale of a journey from betrayal, on the road of truth, moving her toward forgiveness."
Book & Contact Links:The book "Bridging the Gap" is available: on Amazon here. Email Krystine: [email protected] Contact Natalia Kuna: here. |
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