Success from the Inside Out with Kimberly Diaz | DFS 406
Destined For SuccessJuly 06, 2026x
406
39:2154.05 MB

Success from the Inside Out with Kimberly Diaz | DFS 406

Get all the inside secrets and tools you need to help you develop your intuitive and leadership skills so you are on the path to the highest level of success with ease. Kimberly shares practical strategies for rewiring your mind, protecting cognitive health, and creating daily habits that support lasting well-being and purpose.

  • Small, consistent habits create powerful long-term improvements in brain health and overall wellness.
  • Protecting your mental and physical health starts with focusing on the factors you can control every day.
  • Caring for others effectively requires prioritizing your own well-being, boundaries, and self-compassion first.

About Kimberly:

Kimberly Diaz is a Registered Nurse, Dementia Consultant, and entrepreneur with over 27 years of experience helping people navigate brain health, caregiving, and personal transformation. She is passionate about helping individuals build lasting success by understanding how the brain drives behavior, mindset, and meaningful change.

Find Kimberly:

https://www.facebook.com/KimberlyDiazRN/

https://www.linkedin.com/in/kimberly-diaz-rn/

https://www.youtube.com/@kimberlydiazrn

Every person is destined for success—but success begins with understanding your purpose. Take the free Purpose Archetype Quiz at MyPurposeQuiz.com and discover your next breakthrough.

Listen in as Jennifer Takagi, founder of Takagi Consulting, Certified High Performance Coach, 6X time Amazon.Com Best Selling-Author, Certified Soul Care Coach, Certified Jack Canfield Success Principle Trainer, Certified Professional Behavioral Analyst and Facilitator of the DISC Behavioral Profiles, Certified Change Style Indicator Facilitator, Law of Attraction Practitioner, and Certified Coaching Specialist - leadership entrepreneur, speaker and trainer, shares the lessons she’s learned along the way. Each episode is designed to give you the tools, ideas, and inspiration to lead with integrity. Humor is a big part of Jennifer’s life, so expect a few puns and possibly some sarcasm. Tune in for a motivational guest, a story or tips to take you even closer to that success you’ve been coveting. Please share the episodes that inspired you the most and be sure to leave a comment.

Official Website: http://www.jennifertakagi.com

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jennifertakagi/

Facebook: facebook.com/takagiconsulting

I look forward to connecting with you soon,

Jennifer Takagi

Speaker, Trainer, Author, Energy Healer

PS: We would love to hear from you! For questions, coaching, or to book interviews, please email my team at Jennifer@takagiconsulting.com

Jennifer Takagi:

Hey, welcome to Destin for Success. I'm your

Jennifer Takagi:

host, Jennifer Takagi, and I have a new friend now, a new

Jennifer Takagi:

best friend, Kimberly Diaz. And I'm so excited about this topic.

Jennifer Takagi:

We've already spent like, I don't know, 20 minutes in the

Jennifer Takagi:

green room, like hitting all the bases on this. So now, now we're

Jennifer Takagi:

going to share it with you. Success from the inside out,

Jennifer Takagi:

rewiring your mind for lasting impact. Kimberly is an RN, a

Jennifer Takagi:

dementia consultant, and I cannot wait to dive into this

Jennifer Takagi:

topic of rewiring your mind. I think it's so powerful. Thank

Jennifer Takagi:

you for being here today.

Kimberly Diaz:

Yes, thank you, and thank you for this platform

Kimberly Diaz:

that you know that's going to allow conversations like this

Kimberly Diaz:

matter.

Jennifer Takagi:

We've been going on a while about what's

Jennifer Takagi:

inherited, what's not, what choices do we have. So, let's

Jennifer Takagi:

get into it. How did you become so passionate about this topic,

Kimberly Diaz:

yeah. Actually, it was.. I feel like it was a

Kimberly Diaz:

journey that chose me, not necessarily one that I chose. I

Kimberly Diaz:

knew from about four years old that I wanted to be a nurse, and

Kimberly Diaz:

that was from watching my grandmother take care of my

Kimberly Diaz:

grandfather and spending a lot of time at Heinz VA in Cagu,

Kimberly Diaz:

Illinois. He was sick a lot, so back then kids weren't allowed

Kimberly Diaz:

in the room, so I'd be out in the common area surrounded by

Kimberly Diaz:

all these veterans, and from very early on I just felt my

Kimberly Diaz:

heartstrings being pulled, and that these type of people were

Kimberly Diaz:

who I wanted to help, and then, as I mentioned, watching my

Kimberly Diaz:

grandmother for years, you know, have this unwavering devotion,

Kimberly Diaz:

and taking care of my grandfather, you know, it was

Kimberly Diaz:

great, she really showed how to give everything to someone else,

Kimberly Diaz:

but right when you're giving everything to someone else,

Kimberly Diaz:

there's not much left for you, and then you know, I also

Kimberly Diaz:

never.. my parents are really young when they had me, so my

Kimberly Diaz:

grandparent was kind of the first real adult in my life, but

Kimberly Diaz:

then what I learned, I really never learned or felt cared for

Kimberly Diaz:

myself, and for years never really felt like I had a voice,

Kimberly Diaz:

and I learned over the past several years that was really my

Kimberly Diaz:

connection to people with dementia, because they lose

Kimberly Diaz:

their voice and they aren't believed, and because I was

Kimberly Diaz:

like, why, why do I feel so drawn to this, and that's what

Kimberly Diaz:

really is what I found is advocating for them and helping

Kimberly Diaz:

people to understand what they're trying to say under the

Kimberly Diaz:

words that they're not saying, maybe it's the behaviors or the

Kimberly Diaz:

actions that was really what kind of drew me in to dementia

Kimberly Diaz:

specifically.

Jennifer Takagi:

Well, I, my grandfather had, I think, what

Jennifer Takagi:

they called it back in the day was hardening of the arteries,

Jennifer Takagi:

and with hardening of the arteries, some of the memory

Jennifer Takagi:

issues came in, and my mother-in-law had Lewy body

Jennifer Takagi:

dementia, and it's hard, and it's a lot, and it, it truly

Jennifer Takagi:

takes a special kind of person to take care of them. My parents

Jennifer Takagi:

were ill towards the end of their lives, and I was hopeful.

Jennifer Takagi:

I didn't like to take care. I tried to take care of them. I

Jennifer Takagi:

wasn't very good at it, but I loved them and cared for them.

Jennifer Takagi:

And so, caring for a stranger takes a special kind of heart to

Jennifer Takagi:

feel for them, and care for them in a way that I'm not going to

Jennifer Takagi:

speak for most people, but like I could not do, because that's

Jennifer Takagi:

not my calling. I do think we are called to different things,

Jennifer Takagi:

and that's well, that's just not mine, and I'm so grateful there

Jennifer Takagi:

are people that like are so when we're looking at our mind, and I

Jennifer Takagi:

literally use the term rewire your mind for success, so super

Jennifer Takagi:

aligned with you here today, Kimberly. But what can we do?

Jennifer Takagi:

Like, okay, I don't want to get this, I don't have it, I don't

Jennifer Takagi:

have any predisposition, which we talked about that, bring that

Jennifer Takagi:

up, and what can I do to stay healthy and active longer

Jennifer Takagi:

mentally?

Kimberly Diaz:

Sure, so you know one of the biggest things,

Kimberly Diaz:

unfortunately, in this country we have all this ultra-processed

Kimberly Diaz:

food, right, that our bodies don't even recognize that this

Kimberly Diaz:

is food, so controlling the controllables, so what you're

Kimberly Diaz:

putting in your body, in terms of food, sugars, carbs, garbage,

Kimberly Diaz:

right? We have control over that. I understand that some of

Kimberly Diaz:

it is impacted by cost, but there's still things you could

Kimberly Diaz:

buy that are still affordable, um. What we're putting into our

Kimberly Diaz:

minds, social media, news, our phones, you know, all of this

Kimberly Diaz:

negativity that is just bombarding our brains is not

Kimberly Diaz:

good for our minds, and our bodies react to our minds,

Kimberly Diaz:

right, and our bodies don't forget, so illness I really feel

Kimberly Diaz:

comes from your mental state and what's going on with your mind.

Kimberly Diaz:

I myself was, I had a lot of trauma growing up. I became a

Kimberly Diaz:

single mother of two kids before I went to nursing school, and

Kimberly Diaz:

during nursing school I developed some. I couldn't

Kimberly Diaz:

write. We didn't know what it was. Fast forward, I developed

Kimberly Diaz:

something called dystonia, so I had to have brain surgery in

Kimberly Diaz:

2018 and my neurologist, who is an expert in movement disorders,

Kimberly Diaz:

told me that that was, you know, the nursing school was that last

Kimberly Diaz:

trigger for me that flipped that switch for disease, and then I

Kimberly Diaz:

developed this movement disorder that I lost the ability to use

Kimberly Diaz:

my hands, my feet, I mean, it was devastating to the point.

Kimberly Diaz:

Here I was a nurse, I was a trauma flight nurse, I was on

Kimberly Diaz:

the IV team, I was very skilled with my hands, and then I lost

Kimberly Diaz:

my ability to use my hands, but fast forward, it was a blessing

Kimberly Diaz:

in disguise, because I found a mentor that said, you know what,

Kimberly Diaz:

you don't need your hands, you've got, you've got the

Kimberly Diaz:

knowledge, you've got the heart, you've got, so she grew me to be

Kimberly Diaz:

a supervisor, manager, and that's why I'm a small business

Kimberly Diaz:

owner now. So, sometimes we look back at our life, we don't

Kimberly Diaz:

understand what we're going through in the moment, but then

Kimberly Diaz:

later it's like, aha, now I understand that's the path I had

Kimberly Diaz:

to take to get me to where I am, and being able to serve seniors,

Kimberly Diaz:

and mostly the adult children are really the ones that I'm

Kimberly Diaz:

supporting, that sandwich generation, generation 35 to 60,

Kimberly Diaz:

right, trying to manage your career, manage your kids, manage

Kimberly Diaz:

your life, and you just think that in hormones and divorce, or

Kimberly Diaz:

you know, whatever, you think things are finally going good,

Kimberly Diaz:

and then, bam, mom or dad gets sick. Now you've got a whole

Kimberly Diaz:

nother job you never applied for. Yeah,

Jennifer Takagi:

a whole nother thing. I made the comment one

Jennifer Takagi:

time, and I think it's true that a lot of marriages fall apart

Jennifer Takagi:

when they're in their 40s, because now they've been

Jennifer Takagi:

married, you know, often close to 20 years in there, their kids

Jennifer Takagi:

are kind of grown up, ish, and, or, you know, grown and leaving

Jennifer Takagi:

the house, and then you got the parents coming in, and then

Jennifer Takagi:

you've got, I mean, menopause is real, people laugh at it, but it

Jennifer Takagi:

was never discussed in the past, but it's a true thing, and you

Jennifer Takagi:

have all this coming on, and then these poor stupid men, they

Jennifer Takagi:

get a divorce, and they marry somebody way, way younger, 2030

Jennifer Takagi:

years younger, because they just want to bypass, they want to be

Jennifer Takagi:

dead, and they don't have the form to stick it out for the

Jennifer Takagi:

menopause.

Kimberly Diaz:

Yeah, well, and you think about, like, if I

Kimberly Diaz:

think about over the decades, there I've had so many different

Kimberly Diaz:

versions of myself, right? In at least in you as well, Jennifer,

Kimberly Diaz:

we're always at least me, I'm thriving to be better today than

Kimberly Diaz:

I was yesterday, right? Just just baby steps, and my husband,

Kimberly Diaz:

he's always like, you know, I wish we would have met earlier.

Kimberly Diaz:

I said, you know, what, we would have not been together had we

Kimberly Diaz:

met earlier. We met exactly the time we were meant to be. You

Kimberly Diaz:

know, it's the time of season of your life, the season of my life

Kimberly Diaz:

we were meant to be together earlier. He's an engineer, he's

Kimberly Diaz:

an electrical engineer, he's not as nerdy as some, but there's

Kimberly Diaz:

that part of him and I would have not been attracted to that

Kimberly Diaz:

when I was younger, I just wouldn't have been.

Jennifer Takagi:

My husband's almost nine years older than I

Jennifer Takagi:

am, and my mom and I were talking back in the day, and I

Jennifer Takagi:

said, you know, Bill has shared a few stories about how he

Jennifer Takagi:

behaved, because he had been married before, also how he

Jennifer Takagi:

behaved early in his 20s in his marriage, and I was like, "Oh

Jennifer Takagi:

no, I wouldn't have stayed with you either, like I would have

Jennifer Takagi:

totally been out. So sometimes you have to mature, but that's

Jennifer Takagi:

part of like growing old together. I'll just put that

Jennifer Takagi:

kind of together, is you have to grow together, and that personal

Jennifer Takagi:

development is such a big deal. And I had a friend, because part

Jennifer Takagi:

of the work I do is energy healing, and she's, and we, she

Jennifer Takagi:

and I were high school friends, and she said, man, of all the

Jennifer Takagi:

people in high school, you're the last person that I would

Jennifer Takagi:

have thought would have gone into this, and then I worked

Jennifer Takagi:

with her as her. Coach, and she was my client. She was like, oh

Jennifer Takagi:

wait, no, this makes perfect sense. Like, I get how you got

Jennifer Takagi:

on this path. That did we pick it? No, we like, I loved it when

Jennifer Takagi:

you said the journey chose me, because I did not wake up one

Jennifer Takagi:

day and say this is what I want to do with my life. Like, all

Jennifer Takagi:

the way along the way, it, the right doors have opened for me

Jennifer Takagi:

versus like people who are in some fields, like engineering,

Jennifer Takagi:

the law, a lot of medical professional, like you always

Jennifer Takagi:

knew that's where you wanted to be. Sometimes it took longer

Jennifer Takagi:

than others to get there, but you knew that's where you wanted

Jennifer Takagi:

to be. Yeah, I went to college because I didn't want a

Jennifer Takagi:

full-time permanent job yet, like that was my motivating

Jennifer Takagi:

fact.

Kimberly Diaz:

Yeah, yeah, yeah. And we all have to have

Kimberly Diaz:

something that you know motivates us, purpose, right?

Kimberly Diaz:

You know, talk about rewiring your brain. You know, purpose is

Kimberly Diaz:

such a big piece of that. And I think that in dementia and in

Kimberly Diaz:

seniors, what I find a lot of times is here's these people

Kimberly Diaz:

that have been, you know, taking care of a house, taking care of

Kimberly Diaz:

a business, take, you know, who knows all of their life, and

Kimberly Diaz:

then all of a sudden they're put maybe in a community or in their

Kimberly Diaz:

daughter's home or wherever it may be, you just sit here,

Kimberly Diaz:

right? None of us are meant to be that. We all need purpose in

Kimberly Diaz:

order to wake up every day, and I find that we, we put them in

Kimberly Diaz:

front of a TV. Come on, none of us are meant to live that way.

Jennifer Takagi:

No interaction. I, when I left my federal

Jennifer Takagi:

career, became an entrepreneur and was able to have

Jennifer Takagi:

flexibility. I started going to water aerobics. I have a problem

Jennifer Takagi:

with my insurance card not connecting with my gym, and so I

Jennifer Takagi:

haven't been in a while. Also, a couple of surgeries in there,

Jennifer Takagi:

but I'm going to get back in it. And when I started going, there

Jennifer Takagi:

were women in there, in their mid to late 90s, and they were

Jennifer Takagi:

active, and they walked up and down the steps, and got in and

Jennifer Takagi:

out of the pool more easily than I did. Is because I needed knee

Jennifer Takagi:

surgery, I got that taken care of. I can now get in and out, go

Jennifer Takagi:

up and down the steps with ease. But I was like, I want to be you

Jennifer Takagi:

when I grow up. I want to get up every Monday, Wednesday, Friday

Jennifer Takagi:

morning, and be at water aerobics, and then get dressed

Jennifer Takagi:

for the day, and have a day, and not like you say, I do enjoy my

Jennifer Takagi:

hours binge watching stuff, but I also want to be able to be

Jennifer Takagi:

active, so what, like, I mean, we're of the age, right? Like,

Jennifer Takagi:

what can you and I do from now until like when we fall out? I

Jennifer Takagi:

love that book, Younger Next Year. Do you know that book? I

Jennifer Takagi:

love that book. And at the very beginning it said, do you want

Jennifer Takagi:

to go down the cliff slowly or fall off it? And I was like, I

Jennifer Takagi:

don't want to fall off a cliff. And then the analogy hit me. Do

Jennifer Takagi:

I want a slow decline where I can't get out of a chair

Jennifer Takagi:

anymore, or do I want to follow us and be dead? And I was like,

Jennifer Takagi:

oh yeah, I want to go till the end and then just be done. So,

Jennifer Takagi:

what can I start doing now? Cuz it's never too late, right? We

Jennifer Takagi:

can always start being better today than we were yesterday.

Jennifer Takagi:

What can I start doing today to start wiring my brain for that

Jennifer Takagi:

health and success, I get I need to eat better. I'm not going to

Jennifer Takagi:

do that. I'm pretty confident I'm not going to do that. I can

Jennifer Takagi:

do the screen time and what I put into my mind, but what other

Jennifer Takagi:

action? So,

Kimberly Diaz:

for me, what I personally did, three, well,

Kimberly Diaz:

four, four years ago now. I stopped all alcohol. I just..

Kimberly Diaz:

I.. it just was not serving me in the way it used to, right?

Kimberly Diaz:

Yep. I started.. I was referred to Dr. Joe Dispenza. So I

Kimberly Diaz:

started.. so I started a very solid morning routine, which I

Kimberly Diaz:

still do today. I wake up at 440 I go in my room, I meditate, I

Kimberly Diaz:

journal, I read. Then my husband and I last Christmas we bought

Kimberly Diaz:

each other an infrared sauna that we share, so I get over in

Kimberly Diaz:

there for 50 minutes every morning, I'm hydrating myself as

Kimberly Diaz:

soon as I wake up in the morning, and then I'm to the

Kimberly Diaz:

gym, which is three minutes - it's actually pole fitness

Kimberly Diaz:

class, three minutes from my home. I'm there by seven or

Kimberly Diaz:

8o'clock every morning, working out for an hour or two. I'm done

Kimberly Diaz:

by 910, in the morning, and then I'm - I've energized, I filled

Kimberly Diaz:

my cup up, and then I'm ready to serve everybody else, so it's

Kimberly Diaz:

really filling your cup first for so long. I know myself, and

Kimberly Diaz:

a lot of us, a lot of women, we're used to pouring into

Kimberly Diaz:

everybody else, but you can't pour from an empty cup, you've

Kimberly Diaz:

got to fill that cup up, and for me it means getting up early.

Kimberly Diaz:

And I've always been an early riser, so it's not been a big

Kimberly Diaz:

deal, and for some people that's not going to work. You've got to

Kimberly Diaz:

figure out what you can do, what what gives you that spark, what

Kimberly Diaz:

lights you up, and do that. Maybe it's a walk with your dog,

Kimberly Diaz:

maybe it's breathing exercises. You know, breathing is

Kimberly Diaz:

wonderful, um Bless you. But once I started putting myself

Kimberly Diaz:

first, everything changed, and I realized it's not selfish, it's

Kimberly Diaz:

necessary, and getting my hormones in check. Right, Biot

Kimberly Diaz:

has been wonderful, I and

Jennifer Takagi:

I love that, because your morning routine is

Jennifer Takagi:

yours.

Kimberly Diaz:

Yeah,

Jennifer Takagi:

and it works for you,

Unknown:

right?

Jennifer Takagi:

And 440 comes for me once a day, and that's a

Jennifer Takagi:

pm, not an am, yeah, and and you've got a very robust, I'm

Jennifer Takagi:

going to use the word robust, you have a very robust morning

Jennifer Takagi:

routine, but for somebody like me who has a minimalistic

Jennifer Takagi:

morning routine at best,

Unknown:

yeah,

Jennifer Takagi:

going on a walk in and of itself is movement,

Jennifer Takagi:

it's getting up, getting out, getting about, and your walk can

Jennifer Takagi:

be outside, and depending on where you are, it could be

Jennifer Takagi:

indoor. I love all these things on social media about indoor

Jennifer Takagi:

walking, like, and I think it's called tai chi, you know,

Jennifer Takagi:

walking, walking, or tai chi, or Tai Chi for walking or

Jennifer Takagi:

something. Anyway, like, there are so many things you can do

Jennifer Takagi:

without having to leave your home. If you

Kimberly Diaz:

even on YouTube, there's videos where you can be

Kimberly Diaz:

like walking down the streets of London, and you're just in your

Kimberly Diaz:

living room, taking those steps, moving that body, drinking your

Kimberly Diaz:

water, you know, your coffee, what you know, whatever, but

Kimberly Diaz:

just taking some sacred time for yourself, where everybody else

Kimberly Diaz:

is going to have to wait, the animals are going to have to

Kimberly Diaz:

wait, the husband's going to have to wait. This is me time.

Jennifer Takagi:

Well, and if you've ever been on a commercial

Jennifer Takagi:

airplane, which most people have, they literally say put

Jennifer Takagi:

your mask on first if the oxygen mask drops, and then help the

Jennifer Takagi:

person next to you, because if you go to help the person next

Jennifer Takagi:

to you, then you're out of oxygen before you get them taken

Jennifer Takagi:

care of, and obviously they can't take care of you, right?

Jennifer Takagi:

So you have to fill your cup first, and on the water thing, I

Jennifer Takagi:

drink a lot of water. Just in general, I drink a lot of water,

Jennifer Takagi:

and I had someone say what I don't really like water. I'm not

Jennifer Takagi:

gonna drink it, and you know, they said I needed more water,

Jennifer Takagi:

but I just don't like it, and I was like, you know, it's like

Jennifer Takagi:

medicine, and you just do it because you have to, and what's

Jennifer Takagi:

there not to like about water? It's flavorless, it's

Jennifer Takagi:

nothingness, but it hydrates your body, it lubricates your

Jennifer Takagi:

joints, like it has so many great rough, it

Kimberly Diaz:

makes your brain clear.

Jennifer Takagi:

Yeah, and I said I don't understand, like

Jennifer Takagi:

there are things people say, and I'm just like I just almost

Jennifer Takagi:

check out because I totally don't understand it, but I have

Jennifer Takagi:

a water bottle that I have started filling up, it's 25

Jennifer Takagi:

ounces, putting a couple of cubes of ice in it, and I bring

Jennifer Takagi:

it to the bedroom with me, and the next morning my goal before

Jennifer Takagi:

I leave the bathroom from showering, hair, makeup, the

Jennifer Takagi:

whole bit, finishing that whole 25 ounces before I start the

Jennifer Takagi:

day. I heard that was a really good thing to do, and I'm really

Jennifer Takagi:

working at doing that. And I woke up Tuesday morning and I

Jennifer Takagi:

walked in the bathroom, and I flipped on the water to brush my

Jennifer Takagi:

teeth, and we had no water. There was a water line break

Jennifer Takagi:

around the corner, and I went in, and I woke my husband up,

Jennifer Takagi:

and I said, "We have no water. I have a hair appointment, so I

Jennifer Takagi:

had some face wipes, so I just kind of did a whole body wipes,

Jennifer Takagi:

wash off, put my makeup on, gut dress, and if I didn't have to

Jennifer Takagi:

do my hair because I was going

Kimberly Diaz:

to go to the hair salon,

Jennifer Takagi:

and I said I have an order to pick up at

Jennifer Takagi:

Target, so I'm going to run use their bathroom, so I will see

Jennifer Takagi:

you this afternoon, but I had that bottle of water, and so I

Jennifer Takagi:

was able to brush my teeth, and I said I will give you a cup of

Jennifer Takagi:

my water to brush your teeth to, and he was like, "Oh, that's so

Jennifer Takagi:

thoughtful. Thank you for doing that. But it was like, "Man, I'm

Jennifer Takagi:

so glad I went to bed with that bottle of water, or we would

Jennifer Takagi:

have been a little bit out of luck on that. So it's just like

Jennifer Takagi:

medicine, if you're sick, you're. Gonna take whatever,

Jennifer Takagi:

whether it's homeopathic natural stuff or it's actually a

Jennifer Takagi:

prescription, whatever it is, I don't really care. You're gonna

Jennifer Takagi:

take something, a vitamin C tablet, okay? It's the same

Jennifer Takagi:

difference. Just drink the water, suck it up, buttercup

Jennifer Takagi:

treat well,

Kimberly Diaz:

and I'll be honest, I put electrolytes in

Kimberly Diaz:

mine, flavored electrolytes that have no carbs, no sugar, and I

Kimberly Diaz:

do. I take a 32 ounce bottle, I fill it up at night, I put it

Kimberly Diaz:

next to my bed, so it's the first thing I'm drinking in the

Kimberly Diaz:

morning. I finish that whole one before I'm, I you know, I go on

Kimberly Diaz:

to the gym, and then I bring another one to the gym, so I

Kimberly Diaz:

mean it's just a routine. I also have ADD, so I need structure,

Kimberly Diaz:

and I work really well if I have structure, and if my structure

Kimberly Diaz:

gets messed up, I have a hard time. I mean, I'll be honest,

Kimberly Diaz:

but my husband knows when we go on vacation, I still get up

Kimberly Diaz:

early, I do my meditation, and we're at the beach, it's great,

Kimberly Diaz:

because I'll just go outside on the on the balcony, or whatever,

Kimberly Diaz:

and do my thing, and he can sleep in a little bit later. He

Kimberly Diaz:

prefers to exercise in the afternoon. I'm out of energy

Kimberly Diaz:

because I'm up at 440 in the morning, so you know you have to

Jennifer Takagi:

nap when he's..

Kimberly Diaz:

we're in bed by like 830 Someone talked about

Kimberly Diaz:

going out Friday at eight. I looked at my husband, I go late.

Kimberly Diaz:

I'm like 8o'clock to go outside to go out. I don't know if I can

Kimberly Diaz:

do it.

Jennifer Takagi:

Yeah, we do that well. And we talked at the

Jennifer Takagi:

beginning when we were in the green room about how I've been

Jennifer Takagi:

spending a month the last couple years in Spain, and we've got a

Jennifer Takagi:

trip planned for this fall, and one of the things is we work off

Jennifer Takagi:

Pacific time, and so we do sleep till noon in Spain, but our day

Jennifer Takagi:

starts at four and goes till midnight, one in the morning, so

Jennifer Takagi:

it's like we've had to adjust our schedule to the time zone

Jennifer Takagi:

where we are, right, so it works with us time zones, but what,

Jennifer Takagi:

whatever it is, I think the the gist of this is create a routine

Jennifer Takagi:

you can do if you're not going to drink 2532 ounces of water

Jennifer Takagi:

for sale,

Kimberly Diaz:

do 12 exactly start with

Jennifer Takagi:

something, something is better than

Jennifer Takagi:

nothing. The more you do it, the more it becomes a routine. The

Jennifer Takagi:

more routines you have, the less your brain has to work really

Jennifer Takagi:

hard,

Kimberly Diaz:

right? Right.

Jennifer Takagi:

Um, it's Steve Jobs, maybe Bill Gates. There's

Jennifer Takagi:

another one, maybe it's Elon Musk, I don't know, and they

Jennifer Takagi:

wear the same outfit every day, not the same actual clothes, but

Jennifer Takagi:

they're

Kimberly Diaz:

right, right, but the same. Yep, black

Jennifer Takagi:

shirt and blue jeans, I think was Steve Jobs'

Jennifer Takagi:

outfit of choice, and he didn't like to think about it. He could

Jennifer Takagi:

get it like that was one less choice. So, if you have a

Jennifer Takagi:

routine, if you've got that bottle of water, whether it's

Jennifer Takagi:

eight ounces, 12 ounces, 32 whatever,

Kimberly Diaz:

right? If

Jennifer Takagi:

you start doing that every day, your body and

Jennifer Takagi:

your brain are going to get used to doing it every day. Okay, so

Jennifer Takagi:

I need to have a morning routine, whether it's huge or

Jennifer Takagi:

little, robust or minimal. A morning routine. Mine is shower,

Jennifer Takagi:

hair, and makeup, that's what I do every day. Somebody goes, do

Jennifer Takagi:

you wear makeup every day, and I was like, yeah, I've done hair

Jennifer Takagi:

and makeup every day since I was 12, so yeah, I'm going to, yeah,

Jennifer Takagi:

that's just what I do,

Unknown:

right?

Jennifer Takagi:

You may not wear any, and that's fine,

Kimberly Diaz:

exactly, whatever you do, you, yep,

Jennifer Takagi:

whatever your routine is, okay, so now I'm

Jennifer Takagi:

going to, I'm going to do my morning routine, I might add one

Jennifer Takagi:

more thing to be a little bit more in tune with the health

Jennifer Takagi:

side of this brain activity. I'm going to have a little more

Jennifer Takagi:

activity, physical activity, walking, yoga, strenuous

Jennifer Takagi:

sections, and

Kimberly Diaz:

I always tell people, I don't care what you

Kimberly Diaz:

do, as long as you're going to do it, it's got to be what works

Kimberly Diaz:

for you, right? Doesn't matter what works for me, it matters

Kimberly Diaz:

what works for you, and the other huge piece is sleep,

Kimberly Diaz:

sleep. Okay, we need sleep, especially women. I'm menopause

Kimberly Diaz:

now, I'm past the perimenopause. I can't do four or five hours

Kimberly Diaz:

like I used to, I'm a basket case, I need seven or eight, and

Kimberly Diaz:

sometimes I have a heck of a time getting it. I can fall

Kimberly Diaz:

asleep well, but sometimes I wake up in the middle of the

Kimberly Diaz:

night and I have a hard time falling asleep. So I personally

Kimberly Diaz:

use sleep stories. I've got an eye mask with, you know, some

Kimberly Diaz:

headphones in it, and I put sleep stories on, and that helps

Kimberly Diaz:

me fall back asleep. So, again, you know, along with some Dr.

Kimberly Diaz:

Amen, restful sleep, and some magnesium, and things like that,

Kimberly Diaz:

but you know, your sleep is just as important.

Jennifer Takagi:

Well, and I've always been a good sleeper. My

Jennifer Takagi:

one of my sisters said her earliest childhood memories

Jennifer Takagi:

center around my mom banging. In the frame of her bed with a

Jennifer Takagi:

vacuum, because my mom wanted a perfect house, and with four

Jennifer Takagi:

kids and a husband, and we always had dogs and cats, and

Jennifer Takagi:

who knows whatever else running through the house. The only time

Jennifer Takagi:

to do is when she got everybody in bed, and so we're all really

Jennifer Takagi:

good sleepers. If my sisters and I don't sleep one night, we're

Jennifer Takagi:

very cranky the next day, because we're.. and my husband,

Jennifer Takagi:

I first got married, he woke up one morning, he was kind of

Jennifer Takagi:

irritable, and I was like, what's going on, and he goes, I

Jennifer Takagi:

was talking to you last night, and I realized you were asleep,

Jennifer Takagi:

did I tell you good night, and he goes, yes, and then I was

Jennifer Takagi:

saying blah blah blah, and I went, no, I said good night,

Jennifer Takagi:

that's I'm

Kimberly Diaz:

out, yeah,

Jennifer Takagi:

over,

Kimberly Diaz:

yeah, lights out,

Jennifer Takagi:

I don't do that anymore. Okay, I need to

Jennifer Takagi:

hydrate,

Unknown:

yeah,

Jennifer Takagi:

I need a morning routine that includes

Jennifer Takagi:

some kind of activity throughout the day, I need to have it

Jennifer Takagi:

scheduled in the morning, so I know when I'm going to do it,

Jennifer Takagi:

right, whether it's morning or afternoon, like you're right,

Kimberly Diaz:

right.

Jennifer Takagi:

Um, I need to get sleep.

Unknown:

Yeah, yeah.

Jennifer Takagi:

So, are there any like activities to stimulate

Jennifer Takagi:

the brain, get it healthier, or are these all going to be really

Jennifer Takagi:

great platforms for that to happen naturally. Well,

Kimberly Diaz:

I was just going to say, and learning new things,

Kimberly Diaz:

a lot of people, a lot of families with dementia, they

Kimberly Diaz:

think, oh, well, what I've got them doing Sudoku, or I've got

Kimberly Diaz:

them doing crossword puzzles, that is not going to help

Kimberly Diaz:

enhance your cognition, if that's something you've always

Kimberly Diaz:

done, the brain in order to do to develop neuroplasticity, you

Kimberly Diaz:

have to teach it new things. I have a couple of apps with brain

Kimberly Diaz:

games that I use that I just do every morning, but I'm one of

Kimberly Diaz:

those people that's always researching things, always

Kimberly Diaz:

learning things I love to learn, so you know, whatever your

Kimberly Diaz:

passion might be, you know, research, look, looking things

Kimberly Diaz:

up, but learning new things is really important, and reading

Kimberly Diaz:

also helps with that. I didn't used to be a reader, now I love

Kimberly Diaz:

to read, I love just getting in a book and getting in a, you

Kimberly Diaz:

know, in that little world, and kind of tuning out the world

Kimberly Diaz:

around me, you know, and around sleep too. A lot of people, I

Kimberly Diaz:

was having trouble sleeping for about six months, and my

Kimberly Diaz:

doctor's like, "You need to get a sleep routine, like you have

Kimberly Diaz:

your morning routine. So I did that for a while, and that

Kimberly Diaz:

helped me kind of get back on track, which was no eating after

Kimberly Diaz:

6pm screen time over after 8pm You know, making sure that the

Kimberly Diaz:

bedroom - we've got a red light in our bedroom instead of a

Kimberly Diaz:

regular bulb, so that when we walk into the bedroom, our body

Kimberly Diaz:

knows it's bedtime, it's not wake-up time. Soft muse that you

Kimberly Diaz:

know, not having the TV on, just different things like that. To I

Kimberly Diaz:

had to kind of reprogram myself, and now I'm sleeping well again.

Jennifer Takagi:

It's that, it's that routine. I go in, I wash my

Jennifer Takagi:

face, I brush my teeth, I crawl into bed, and I'm asleep, like

Jennifer Takagi:

that's like that's what I do, so whatever that routine is for

Jennifer Takagi:

you, because of course everybody, then the one size

Jennifer Takagi:

fits all doesn't really work any diet

Kimberly Diaz:

or anything. Yeah,

Jennifer Takagi:

well, and we're seeing it well, it just keeps

Jennifer Takagi:

it's it's on replay. You should only eat this and you'll lose

Jennifer Takagi:

weight. Oh, wait, you gained it all back in 10 more pounds.

Jennifer Takagi:

Sorry, we really meant you should do that. Like,

Jennifer Takagi:

everything's extremism, and we don't have to be extreme.

Kimberly Diaz:

No,

Jennifer Takagi:

a little bit goes a long way. Years ago,

Jennifer Takagi:

there was our building manager for I worked for the federal

Jennifer Takagi:

government, and her office was actually in a different

Jennifer Takagi:

building, but she came over, and I would see her in our building

Jennifer Takagi:

in various places, if not daily, pretty regularly. And I passed

Jennifer Takagi:

her one day, and I was like, "Hey, what's going on? And she

Jennifer Takagi:

said, "Well, I'm going to be over here a little bit more. My

Jennifer Takagi:

doctor told me I needed to work 30 walk 30 minutes a day on a

Jennifer Takagi:

treadmill, and you said I could do 310 minute rotations, so I'm

Jennifer Takagi:

going to try to get over here, because we have the gym in our

Jennifer Takagi:

building. She said I'm going to try to get over here three times

Jennifer Takagi:

a day and get my 10 minutes in, and it was like, oh, just 10

Jennifer Takagi:

minutes makes a difference, and it doesn't have to be an hour of

Jennifer Takagi:

strenuous exercise, it can be 10 minutes, because if you're doing

Jennifer Takagi:

zero, 10 is great, 10 is great, do something well, 12 minute

Jennifer Takagi:

success coach, so I'm going to say just add two more and do 12,

Jennifer Takagi:

but

Kimberly Diaz:

there you go, right, right, or you know, I try

Kimberly Diaz:

to you. Setting a timer for myself when I'm at my desk,

Kimberly Diaz:

because hours can go by and I haven't gotten out of the chair,

Kimberly Diaz:

so I always have water next to me, right? And then I have an

Kimberly Diaz:

hour alarm, so I'll get up, and sometimes I'll do like 10 or 20

Kimberly Diaz:

squats, just if I don't have time to actually walk, or those

Kimberly Diaz:

phone calls walk around my house while I'm on the phone, it

Kimberly Diaz:

doesn't have to be big things, you don't have to pay a lot and

Kimberly Diaz:

go somewhere, you know, you can do something in your house,

Kimberly Diaz:

absolutely.

Jennifer Takagi:

And one thing I have found, and I've seen

Jennifer Takagi:

research around, and that is the idea, if you tell yourself

Jennifer Takagi:

you're going to do something, and then you don't do it, and

Jennifer Takagi:

you don't live up to the promises you make to yourself.

Jennifer Takagi:

Then your brain and subconscious are like, I don't really need to

Jennifer Takagi:

support her, because she's not the kind of woman who does what

Jennifer Takagi:

she

Kimberly Diaz:

follows through.

Jennifer Takagi:

And so make your my suggestion and weigh in

Jennifer Takagi:

on this, Kimberly. My suggestion is set up routines that you can

Jennifer Takagi:

do, do them consistently for a while, and then if you can add

Jennifer Takagi:

to add to make it something you're going to do. Not, oh, I

Jennifer Takagi:

haven't worked out in 20 years, I'm going to go to the gym for

Jennifer Takagi:

an hour every single day,

Kimberly Diaz:

yeah, may not be

Jennifer Takagi:

sustainable from the beginning,

Kimberly Diaz:

right. The other thing I do in the morning, too,

Kimberly Diaz:

is I'll kind of try to plan out my day, and I really just try to

Kimberly Diaz:

focus on like three things that have to get done, no matter,

Kimberly Diaz:

right? Because if I have a list of 10, that's too much, it's too

Kimberly Diaz:

much, because there's going to be a phone call I didn't expect,

Kimberly Diaz:

or there's going to be a patient fall I didn't expect, or

Kimberly Diaz:

there's, you know, the dog's going to poop on the fly. I

Kimberly Diaz:

mean, there's going to be something that's going to

Kimberly Diaz:

happen, but if I've got three, that okay, these are the

Kimberly Diaz:

absolute things that are going to get done today. And then

Kimberly Diaz:

think before you go to bed about, look at all the things I

Kimberly Diaz:

did today. You know, pat yourself on the back, give

Kimberly Diaz:

yourself an atta boy. These are the things I didn't. Maybe it's

Kimberly Diaz:

just that I didn't lose my shit in the car right when somebody

Kimberly Diaz:

cut me off, or

Jennifer Takagi:

road rage today.

Kimberly Diaz:

Yeah, or I didn't get angry in the checkout line

Kimberly Diaz:

when they had to do three price checks, I mean, they don't have

Kimberly Diaz:

to be big things, but when you can, just your nervous system

Kimberly Diaz:

likes to know what's going on and likes to be calm, so if you

Kimberly Diaz:

can just take these little moments and really just give

Kimberly Diaz:

yourself the credit where credit's due, it doesn't have to

Kimberly Diaz:

be huge things, right? I didn't bite my husband's head off today

Kimberly Diaz:

when he said something stupid to me, sometimes that's my success

Kimberly Diaz:

for the day, right? Because the old me would have been like, but

Kimberly Diaz:

I didn't do that. I use my insight voice, and I just kept

Kimberly Diaz:

it down, so it doesn't have to be big, extreme things, just

Kimberly Diaz:

baby steps, just little things that are changing the way that

Kimberly Diaz:

you show up for yourself

Jennifer Takagi:

and bond instead

Kimberly Diaz:

of react.

Jennifer Takagi:

Yeah, you get to choose.

Kimberly Diaz:

Yeah,

Jennifer Takagi:

you get to choose.

Kimberly Diaz:

And that's what, when I'm talking to the adult

Kimberly Diaz:

children, you know, when you've got a parent to take care of

Kimberly Diaz:

you're dealing with a whole history with that parent, right?

Kimberly Diaz:

You're dealing with decades of stuff, and now you have to take

Kimberly Diaz:

care of them, and it can be very, very overwhelming. So,

Kimberly Diaz:

just, you know, just really understanding that you're both

Kimberly Diaz:

doing the best that you can, and I have actually something called

Kimberly Diaz:

Aging Parents toolkit.com where people can go, they can kind

Kimberly Diaz:

that they can help to kind of tell you what type of caregiver

Kimberly Diaz:

you are, what type of underlying wounds you may have from growing

Kimberly Diaz:

up with that parent, and what I always try to remind people,

Kimberly Diaz:

too, is you don't have to heal your entire childhood to show up

Kimberly Diaz:

with compassion, because you have a choice in how you show

Kimberly Diaz:

up. We all have a choice, so really just, you know,

Kimberly Diaz:

remembering we're all doing the best we can, and so is Mom or

Kimberly Diaz:

Dad, and they've got their own trauma that they put on us too,

Kimberly Diaz:

right? I mean, this, this is this is cyclical. This is from

Kimberly Diaz:

decades and generational, and you know, just having some grace

Kimberly Diaz:

for them and for yourself goes a long way.

Jennifer Takagi:

Oh my gosh, it's so helpful, so helpful.

Jennifer Takagi:

Okay, so it's aging parents with an S, parents,

Kimberly Diaz:

toolkit.com toolkit.com

Jennifer Takagi:

It will be in the show notes, so if you're

Jennifer Takagi:

listening to this on your phone, just scroll down to the show

Jennifer Takagi:

notes, click the link, get that free gift. That sounds amazing,

Jennifer Takagi:

that sounds amazing, super helpful,

Kimberly Diaz:

and it's a good way to, that if you want to be,

Kimberly Diaz:

you know, stay in contact with me, I will respond to them, and

Kimberly Diaz:

it'll give you, it takes like. Two minutes, and then it'll just

Kimberly Diaz:

have just your name and your email, and then it'll have some

Kimberly Diaz:

follow-up information based on the type, the archetype that you

Kimberly Diaz:

are, and a lot of people think they know who they are, it, but

Kimberly Diaz:

you may be surprised. I was surprised when I took my test

Kimberly Diaz:

myself. I was like, all right, but this makes sense, right? I

Kimberly Diaz:

thought I was going to be different than I was.

Jennifer Takagi:

Well, I'm going to have to take it, because my

Jennifer Takagi:

parents are deceased. But I do have a husband, I do have

Jennifer Takagi:

friends, and so I might need to know how to deal with them too.

Kimberly Diaz:

You know, the other thing I was going to

Kimberly Diaz:

mention, like you taking a month and going with your girlfriend

Kimberly Diaz:

every year, is such a healthy thing that's a taking care of

Kimberly Diaz:

you thing, and that is so healthy for us. I love when I

Kimberly Diaz:

get to go visit my girlfriend in Tennessee, or.. and I love my

Kimberly Diaz:

husband. It's not that I don't, but I can be silly, and that's

Kimberly Diaz:

different, like just my girlfriend, my one girlfriend.

Kimberly Diaz:

We've been friends since we were 10, so 46 years. We've got a, we

Kimberly Diaz:

got in a lot of trouble, we've got, you know, she unfortunately

Kimberly Diaz:

just lost her husband two years ago at 58 and was really going

Kimberly Diaz:

through some really tough grief that I helped her with, but you

Kimberly Diaz:

know, it's still fun just to have those connections with

Kimberly Diaz:

girlfriends and just that's part of taking care of yourself. Plan

Kimberly Diaz:

those trips, do those things. Your husband will be fine.

Jennifer Takagi:

Support system that we need. Right.

Unknown:

Absolutely,

Jennifer Takagi:

it is, Kimberly. This has been

Jennifer Takagi:

delightful. It's been delightful to get to know you, and all this

Jennifer Takagi:

solid information on how we can rewire our brain for success.

Jennifer Takagi:

Start small and grow big. Any final words for the audience?

Kimberly Diaz:

You know, I think I would just say again, remember

Kimberly Diaz:

that you don't have to, you know, heal your child entire

Kimberly Diaz:

childhood to show up with compassion and treat your

Kimberly Diaz:

parents with dignity and have some grace for yourself. You're

Kimberly Diaz:

both doing the best that you can. Dementia is tricky, it's

Kimberly Diaz:

complicated. And what I ask people to do is a little bit of

Kimberly Diaz:

planning goes a long way. So many of the phone calls that I

Kimberly Diaz:

get is after a crisis because maybe the melted teapot on the

Kimberly Diaz:

stove wasn't enough, or the last fall wasn't enough, because it's

Kimberly Diaz:

hard to step up and have that role reversal with your parent.

Kimberly Diaz:

Right now, you're here, they were, this person took care of

Kimberly Diaz:

you, now you're having to step in that role. So, the validation

Kimberly Diaz:

I want, I want you to hear that it's hard, and absolutely it's

Kimberly Diaz:

just to validate people. And then my toolkit, the Aging

Kimberly Diaz:

Parents toolkit.com

Jennifer Takagi:

I can't wait to get it. Thank you for being

Jennifer Takagi:

here.

Kimberly Diaz:

Thank you for having me. I appreciate you.

Jennifer Takagi:

I'm Jennifer Takagi with Destin for Success,

Jennifer Takagi:

and I look forward to connecting with you soon. Bye.