I’ve done a lot of self-development work around money. I’ve read books like Happy Money by Ken Honda and worked hard to get out of scarcity and shame thinking. What I didn’t realize was how different it feels when the learning doesn’t end. Books closes, seminar end, unmuted money is there when you need it with real people to talk to weather is it Coach Becky or other helpful community members. One of the first things that stood out to me was her challenges, simple, practical, and non-judgmental. Things like: just look at your bank account. Just look, no shame or judgement. Most of us avoid those $1 balances or only check on payday, but what you don’t track, you can’t control. Practicing that in a safe space matters more than people realize. Since joining Unmuted Money, I’ve started changing my habits. I check my accounts regularly, not just when I’m about to buy something. More importantly, I’m slowly separating my self-worth from my account balance. That shift alone is huge. What really sealed it for me was Coach Becca’s story about her father—how money wasn’t talked about until late in life, and how meaningful it was that he had bought a money book for his granddaughter. It reminded me that money conversations have no age, gender, or boundaries, and that people can change. That story carries the spirit of this community. Unmuted Money is a truly safe, shame-free space to practice talking about money—when it’s good, when it’s hard, and when you’re still learning. It helps you get smarter, calmer, and more at peace with money, instead of seeing it as something that’s always working against you. If you want to break the cycle of silence around money and start becoming friends with it, this community is a beautiful place to begin.
I’ll be honest: I was really on the fence about joining this community. I am a huge "AI person," and reading the description, I worried that I maybe wasn't "human enough" for Eva's space. I actually only joined to support her run for the Skool Games, figuring I would toss in the $7 and leave right after. I was wrong. I got hooked. As part of the run for Skool games she hosted an "Anarchy Day." Eva was posting all day, allowing promos, and I got to see her, and move beyond my notions of what her no AI ment, and what it really ment. I realized her rules aren't about "AI being evil"; they are about keeping the "human in the loop" and avoiding low-effort AI slop. It actually made me respect the space more—I haven’t even had to disclose AI usage because being here makes me want to write in the spirit of the group. Living in Hawaii, I deal with the "time zone tax," so I miss a lot of the live stuff (too early!), and I haven't met many new collaborators yet (all the cool kids I know from other Skools are in here, but I am sure I'll meet some new and interesting people soon). But honestly? It doesn't matter. Eva has such a magnetic personality that you just want to be around her. I’m currently going through the "Spiff Up My Skool" challenge (waiting for the shortcuts/hacks, because I'm still human!), but mostly I am here to learn. Eva won the Skool Games for a reason. Being around successful people is my jam, and I plan to glean as much as I can from her success to build my own in 2026.
I met Matt in an ADHD support group, and we bonded over our shared neurodivergence. I have become really fascinated by all the woo stuff over the last few years so when Matt invited me over to his intuition group I said yes. Matt is a funny dude who approaches the "woo woo" like it’s science. He teaches intuition as a structured system, not just magic vibes. I’ve done workshops with him—including kinesiology tests where we made choices we couldn't even see—and it really works. He helps you dig out the intuition buried under years of trauma and "survival mode" bs. But he does it with so much humor that you can actually laugh at the heavy stuff, forgive yourself, and finally let it go. I feel like I have a genuine friend here who appreciates my logical AI brain just as much as I appreciate his intuitive gifts. Suspend your belief for one minute and go back to being a kid when you dreamed of being a Jedi Master. Take a chance. If anyone can "Yoda" you into being one with the Force, Matt can.
I have always been the type of person who reads a lot of books but rarely puts them into practice. I was stuck in a cycle of consuming information without taking action, and that is exactly where Heather stepped in to help. Heather isn’t just a community host; she is like that cool librarian you had in high school who knows exactly which passage from exactly the right book will set you straight. Her lessons on Napoleon Hill and Mel Robbins really hit home for me, and she is helping me finally "get out of my own damn way." What makes this group special is how personal it feels. Heather reaches out for one-on-one calls and hosts meetups where we just talk with no set agenda. It doesn't feel like a transaction; she feels like an old friend you have known for 100 years. Her intuitive readings always seem to hit the spot. I’ll be honest—I haven’t even started the Mindset Shift challenge yet (I’ve been slacking!), but because of the supportive environment Heather built, it is the number one (or 10) thing I plan to tackle in 2026. If you are on the fence, just do it. You are missing out on getting to know your next new best friend and accessing a treasure trove of wisdom that is curated with love.