Cali Sober Mom

Changing the Vibe: Kenya’s Quest to Bring Playfulness, Feminine Energy, and Authentic Voices to Cannabis

Episode Summary

Kenya joins Monica and Britney to share her mission of infusing the cannabis industry with playfulness, feminine energy, and authenticity. From her journey as a fractional CFO to her passion for creative expression, Kenya opens up about destigmatizing plant medicine for moms and empowering others to find their voice in a traditionally rigid industry.

Episode Notes

In this episode, Kenya Alexander-Davis joins Monica and Britney to discuss her mission to bring authenticity, feminine energy, and creativity to the cannabis industry. As a mom of three and a former cannabis CFO, Kenya shares her journey of moving from corporate roles to creative ventures, all while challenging the rigid stereotypes around cannabis use, especially for mothers. They dive into the realities of destigmatizing cannabis, the challenges of parenting while advocating, and Kenya’s new projects aimed at connecting the cannabis community and industry through storytelling and subtle, stigma-free products. This episode explores what it means to be a “weed mom” on your own terms, how to balance parenthood with advocacy, and why empowering others to find their voice in cannabis is more crucial than ever.

[00:00:03] – Introduction to Kenya
[00:00:49] – Kenya’s mission in cannabis
[00:03:05] – First experiences with medicinal cannabis
[00:04:24] – Balancing motherhood and plant medicine
[00:06:29] – Corporate roles vs. creative freedom
[00:09:57] – Explaining “fractional CFO” and its benefits
[00:12:07] – Misconceptions about the cannabis industry
[00:13:17] – New project: Stash Bag Data
[00:17:06] – Embracing subtle cannabis advocacy
[00:18:09] – Cannabis-inspired sticker collection
[00:22:38] – Redefining the “weed mom” stereotype
[00:24:26] – Unity and shared experiences in motherhood
[00:28:02] – Kenya’s closing message on authenticity

Where to find Kenya:

Website

LinkedIn

Instagram

 

 

Episode Transcription

Monica Olano [00:00:03]:

Welcome to the Cali Sober mom podcast. Monica and Brittany are changing the conversation about motherhood, cannabis and mental health. Considering themselves unhinged, Martha Stewart adjacent. Monica is a previous corporate America warrior turned mom and voice in the cannabis and consumer advocacy world. Brittany is an artist, business owner, mother, and mental health advocate. Now, here are your hosts, the Cali Sober Moms.

 

Britney Brown [00:00:28]:

And today, we are going to be incredible. Kenya, Alexandra Davis.

 

Britney Brown [00:00:33]:

Kenya, how are you today?

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:00:34]:

It's all good. I'm so happy to be here with y'all. Thank you for having me.

 

Britney Brown [00:00:38]:

Tell us what you do. Tell us a little about what you do and why it's so fucking cool.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:00:43]:

I do a lot of stuff.

 

Monica Olano [00:00:46]:

Kenya is awesome.

 

Britney Brown [00:00:47]:

You lead her in, Monica.

 

Monica Olano [00:00:49]:

Yeah, I found Kenya on LinkedIn. I had to say that because it makes Brittany rolls her eyes every time I say LinkedIn. But no, Kenya kept popping up on all my, like, LinkedIn stuff, and I'm like, man, this chick is doing some really cool things. That seems like I want to talk to her more. So we connected. And I would say within 30 seconds of us getting off the phone, I was like, oh, you're my spirit sister. We might not be in the same state, but we're so similar. Because you're also a mom of three, you're interested in cannabis, but you don't.

 

Monica Olano [00:01:21]:

You're not trying to run the cannabis world. You're trying to make it less stigmatized, conversational, creative, fun, everything a woman is right. And so I think you're perfect for here for us. But I'll let you explain in a little more detail what you do.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:01:39]:

I love that you said that. I am just, like, the fact that that's the vibe I gave you that makes my heart so happy because you get me completely. I do want to bring back, like, the fun. Right? Like, the cannabis industry has been so just corporate and structure y and, like, hard. Like, I want to be a part of it, but, like, not like that. Like, so it is just kind of bringing that more fun, playful, feminine vibe back to the cannabis industry. So it can, like, flow a little better and it can be a little. Just more loving, I guess.

 

Monica Olano [00:02:21]:

Yes. And you have definitely been in it longer than Brittany and I have. Like, I accidentally tumbled into it in, like, February, January, February. And my whole goal is to help destigmatize, but it's not necessarily where I want to be forever. And Brittany, how long? It's just really. When I dragged you down with me. Right.

 

Britney Brown [00:02:42]:

So I had already used cannabis for. Specifically for migraines. It is Also, the only thing that ever treats my. I have chronic shingles. I've had shingles since I was 20, which is wild. Most young humans do not get it, but it's one of the only things that's ever been able to treat it. And I remember being in Colorado at a wedding. I was shooting a wedding, and I had shingles.

 

Britney Brown [00:03:05]:

And if you've never had it, it basically feels like somebody's punching you in a bruise all over. Like, just constantly, all the time. And I knew I had to get through this wedding. I literally walked into my very first dispensary and said, I'm begging you to give me something to knock this out. I have to be able to shoot this wedding. It's a weekend long wedding. We were shooting in Estes Park. We were all over.

 

Britney Brown [00:03:24]:

Like, it was. I did not have time, energy, or patience to be in pain the entire time. And it was the first time that I had used cannabis medicinally. And it changed everything for me. Everything. It's how I treat my migraines, it's how I treat my anxiety. And yes, I still have sleep, pharmaceuticals and all of these things, but at the end of the day, it's just what helps. So that's what I use.

 

Britney Brown [00:03:49]:

And when Monica asked me to come on her last season, we talked a little bit about mental health and kind of the roads that we had gone down. And at the end of the day, like, we had a lot of aligned visions for what we wanted for ourselves and for our kids and for our futures. And I think that we might be on two sides of the same coin, but ultimately we're flipping for the same thing.

 

Monica Olano [00:04:13]:

And how long have you been in cannabis now? Kenya?

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:04:16]:

Oh, my God, it feels like so long. It really does.

 

Monica Olano [00:04:21]:

How'd you get here? Tell us all the things.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:04:24]:

So I'm a mom, too, and I had. I was really not a weed person, like, at all. Like, I tried it, like, in college, but, like, it was just not for me. But that was different, right? And then I got all of these children, these children yarn in my life, and I just did not have, like, any space. And so I started exploring plant medicine. I started doing. I initially started, like, microdosing shrooms and then started smoking more cannabis. And it just has, like, helped me so much.

 

Britney Brown [00:05:04]:

Don't you feel like a better mom most of the time?

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:05:06]:

I'm such a better mom.

 

Britney Brown [00:05:08]:

I'm so much less of a bitch.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:05:09]:

Better. So much less person, right? Like, it's.

 

Monica Olano [00:05:12]:

I'm a better human. I'm a better Wife, I'm a better mom. Like, why I am better to be around. Like, you should all be thanking me, not judging me, that I am microdosing this through out my time with you.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:05:29]:

Honestly, because it just. It just helps my mind. Okay, baby, get one.

 

Monica Olano [00:05:35]:

And this is the best part about being a mom, folks, is that this is what makes this fun, is that we are still moms. We're still moms. We're trying to do things and they're gonna pop up. And that's the beauty of that. Okay, I get my 32nd political rant. I feel like the world wants to separate us, right? Like, send your kids to school, go to a 9 to 5 job. Like, everything about the standard matrix world separates us more and more and more from our kids. But by getting these opportunities to be entrepreneurs or be creative or just step outside the matrix, we face judgment first and foremost that then we have to destigmatize.

 

Monica Olano [00:06:16]:

But we're with our kids. We're getting to teach them, we're getting to show them the world. We're getting to do all that. And that's such a beautiful thing. So in case anyone heard Kenya's amazing child there, we love it and we support it.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:06:29]:

I love that you said that because I was in, I was doing accounting in cannabis. I was doing cannabis accounting. And what a wish. So hard. It was so serious. And so just like unbending and like, unwilling to let me be creative, right? And so, like, it felt like I was building my business. I was building, building my fractional CFO firm. And it felt like, okay, yeah, I'm getting it.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:06:59]:

Like, now I can put my daughter in daycare. I can afford to do that. And then it was like, okay, now I got to work more. It feels like I might have to get my kids in an after school program if I'm going to do this for real. And I was like, wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute. This is not what we wanted. Scale it back, scale it back. And so I recently just made this shift into creating stickers and being just doing more fun things that really matter but don't really matter.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:07:33]:

You know what I'm saying? So I'm glad that you said yeah.

 

Monica Olano [00:07:38]:

And I'm, I'm so proud of you for realizing that, because I think so many people don't. I think, you know, we're pre programmed to believe, like, this is what we're supposed to do. And the mentality just keeps that grind going. So for you to realize that and choose to Take a step back is so huge. So if nobody's told you, kudos to you for making a hard decision and going against the grain. And guess what? You're still normal, you're still awesome, you're still a badass mom. But also for the listener that might not know, because it's a term that I've now become very familiar with. But whenever I say it to others, I feel like they either stare at me blankly or they directly ask, but do you want to explain what up fractional something is? Because I think a lot of people outside the entrepreneur world might not know that.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:08:27]:

I work with a bunch of different people in this industry, a bunch of different companies under my own company, but I'm able to just take this process or take this, this department over from, from them and build my own team to be able to do that over and over again in other cannabis businesses.

 

Britney Brown [00:08:46]:

So kind of like a contractor.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:08:48]:

Exactly, exactly. Like they would pay me as a contractor or like a business. So instead of hiring and a whole accounting department, you just pay me this and I use my accounting.

 

Britney Brown [00:09:00]:

Interesting. Very cool.

 

Monica Olano [00:09:02]:

And also it's cool because in life right now there's so many startups, right? It's either go work for a set in stone brick and mortar company that's been around forever and work your way up, right. And everything that comes with that. But by going with fractional, it benefits both you and the company. Because say me for example, like being in a new startup and trying to start something, like I have a lot of accounting needs that I can do some basics, but I can't do everything. But I'm nowhere near being able to hire a full time financial officer for my company. So by using Kenya as a fractional, she is that caliber, but she's doing that like 10% for my company and 10% for this company. So we can have a quality level person but not pay those rates that we just aren't capable of yet because we also don't need that much yet. It's fascinating.

 

Monica Olano [00:09:57]:

There's chief marketing officers, there's fractional human resource officer officers. Like it's just a really cool thing. So listener, if you are very skilled in something and you're like, I have no idea what to do with it, look up fractional. Whatever you're good at, there is a market out there for you. So thank you Kenya for sharing.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:10:18]:

Yeah, absolutely.

 

Britney Brown [00:10:20]:

What are your favorite things that you've done so far with that? Like who is, who's your favorite people you've worked with or things that you've been able to do. Moving outside of that, I really actually.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:10:31]:

Enjoyed all of the people I got to meet in all of the businesses. I got to like, touch with my fractional CFO firm and I have made like really lifelong friends and connections from doing that. I specifically tried to work with women and minority owned businesses in the space. Small mom and pop people in the space who couldn't necessarily afford to go out and get that accounting firm to do it. And so my, I mean, my favorite cannabis client is Roland Lowe. They are a dispensary in Las Vegas, New Mexico. Family owned business. Just very, very charitable, great people who really are serving the community that they're in.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:11:19]:

So, like, shout out to them. And it's been such a great experience. Like the people that I've been able to meet as a result of doing that.

 

Monica Olano [00:11:28]:

That's amazing. We will put that in the show notes because as Brittany and I say, like, those are the businesses we want to support. Part of this podcast is finding those because when you Google, it's who's paid the most. We all know that. But we really want to support the people in the companies that are providing these products we love, but also giving back to their community, which I absolutely love. My question for you, since you've been in this industry longer, way longer than either of us, what would you say is the biggest misconception the general public has about the cannabis industry?

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:12:07]:

That everyone's just smoking weed and having a good time. It's not a good time. Not that fun. There is so much work to be done. So people think that, like, people are just smoking weed and it's going to be. It is. It is. It is hard.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:12:25]:

The cannabis industry is a very tough industry.

 

Monica Olano [00:12:29]:

It is. And it's like the government makes it hard, business practices make it hard. But then also sometimes people make it hard on each other. Like, it just, it blows my mind. What can happen in this industry. What do you think as consumers, people could do to help break some of that stigma?

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:12:55]:

Well, something that I'm actually working on right now is I'm trying to get more consumer data, like directly from consumers to try to help. And so we are professional. Okay, let me put this in the sock. And then I need you to go out and close the door. Okay. Can you help me out and do that? All right.

 

Monica Olano [00:13:17]:

Are the best people on this planet.

 

Britney Brown [00:13:20]:

I tell people all the time. So I have five kids. Kenya, not to interrupt your story, but I could do anything with one child. Anything. Like, I can, I can conquer the world. With one by myself World.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:13:31]:

Just one. That's it. Okay. There's no one to fight with.

 

Monica Olano [00:13:34]:

I need not take it. Total side note, last March, we took our kids, so three kids under three on a Disney cruise.

 

Britney Brown [00:13:44]:

Oh, ma'am.

 

Monica Olano [00:13:45]:

And we were with this. There was a sweet, sweet, dear couple behind us in line one time and they had one son who was 3. And they were like, I don't know how you do it. We have one and we have our parents here, one for four adults. I just wanted to slap them, but then I was like, you don't know what you don't know. Like you don't know how easy one.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:14:11]:

Is currently queuing up the video for if she comes back so that it's already ready and I can just like hand and move on.

 

Monica Olano [00:14:22]:

I know that, yes. Okay. So going back, you are about to do something or you are doing something in this space that's going to help us crush some stigmas. Tell us.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:14:32]:

So I have a company that I'm starting, it's called, called Stash Bag Data. And the whole point of the company is to connect the cannabis community better to the cannabis industry so that our insights are being taken account for in the industry instead of the industry kind of directing what we have access to. So right now I am trying to put together a social media campaign where people can come on and actually tell their story. Your face will be blanked out, your voice will be distorted, so no one will know who you are. But if you have a story to tell, we want to hear it. We have a few questions that we have you answer and we just want to break the stigma and let people know that like people are using cannabis and it is benefiting a lot of people in so many different ways or just the platform to tell your story, but really still stay as secure as you need to while we kind of navigate this transition of breaking the stigma. Because we have a. I was telling you, Monica, it's a blessing to be able to speak out about cannabis, like openly and not have to have anyone like worrying about who's going to take my paycheck or if it's going to like how.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:15:51]:

How that's going to affect my livelihood. So just kind of making the platform for people to be able to do that in their own way.

 

Britney Brown [00:15:58]:

I love that. It's incredible.

 

Monica Olano [00:16:00]:

That's amazing. And it reminds me of like you remember when you were a kid and they would kind of talk about some of the like drug cartels or drug runners and they would wear the mask like those Big dudes were wearing masks and like doing their voice because they were afraid of being killed. Right. Like repercussions. You snitched on us. Like they were actually worried for being gruesomely murdered, which is a big deal. Right? But as women and as moms, we're still the same. A lot of us, because just like you and I have talked about is that if your employer doesn't like it and they hear or see anything, oh, wow.

 

Monica Olano [00:16:37]:

We have the right in your handbook to randomly drug test you whenever you want, you're gone. I have a friend right now that's in a custody battle and he had her randomly drug tested for marijuana. And that can take away her children. It's just mind boggling because it's not. Anywho, I won't go down that rant, but that is so important for you to do, which I love that you're doing that. Where could a listener go to watch those right now?

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:17:06]:

So we are still building the campaign, but feel free to follow our Instagram page. It's dashbagdata, just all together. So follow us there. That's where we're going to be sharing these stories as we get them in. And there will also be more information on how to submit your story if you'd like to share. Oh, God.

 

Monica Olano [00:17:29]:

And we will post that all in the links. And outside of stash bag data, being a fractional cfo, being a wife, being a mom to young children, you are also starting something that I think you and Brittany are really going to bond about, which is a sticker collection to destigmatize to make cannabis approachable and not like that giant weed stuff sticker, which is cool if that's what people want. But as a mom, I don't want to walk into my kids pre K3 class with a giant weed sticker. But I also don't want to have to hide it. So tell me and Brittany a little bit about this sticker collection.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:18:09]:

It's cute, right? It's cute. It's. It's little nods to cannabis. It's not so just obvious. Like I, I wanted it to be fun, like where if someone's just glancing by your sticker, they may not notice, right? Like they may not notice that it's a cannabis sticker, but if they take the time or if they speak the language, they will know. So it's just these cute nods to cannabis and it's going to be from various, various viewpoints, various communities. So I have a mom collection coming out. Just nods to moms.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:18:47]:

And I have a neurodiversion collection that I'm working on. So there's like, approaching all of the different communities who actually use cannabis and kind of just given them a way to acknowledge it but not, not, not yell it out to the universe.

 

Britney Brown [00:19:06]:

Almost like, like a bat signal to other cannabis using moms.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:19:10]:

I love that how we find each other. It's how we find the weed people out in the public.

 

Monica Olano [00:19:16]:

Yep.

 

Britney Brown [00:19:17]:

So I don't know if you guys have heard of these. There are these baby carriers called tulas. It's like this whole, like, cult of baby carrier people. I had several of them. Clearly I was the fan. Um, but the magic of them is this thing these women, like, concocted on the Internet where if they saw somebody out in public that also had a TULA on, you would go, ca. Caw. Because there was this thing where people would, like, recognize that they were like TULA users.

 

Britney Brown [00:19:45]:

It's almost like the jeep thing where people are like, friends. It's a whole thing. The ducks, like, we need a thing for ours.

 

Monica Olano [00:19:52]:

So this weekend I had a really good friend over on Saturday night, but she is. Oh, my God. She's like a board certified pediatric dentist. Also, like, surgeon. I don't know. She's mind blowing. She can't say she uses this. She can't and she doesn't.

 

Monica Olano [00:20:08]:

She might have a drink like once a week. Who knows? It's very minuscule, but it's still. She can't say it. And I had my Cali Sober sweatshirt on. And she was like, I can wear that. And I was like, oh, but look at this one. And I, like, lifted up my shirt and it was one like, you've got to vote for your right to party. But the party had instead of an A, the, like, we leave.

 

Monica Olano [00:20:28]:

And I was like, you want to get this one? She's like, my children's parents would leave immediately if they ever saw me in this. And I was like, yes. So we do need, like, what you're doing is so needed.

 

Britney Brown [00:20:39]:

It doesn't mean we're not necessarily proud of it. But also the stigma that still exists almost has to be. It's one of those things where we have to support each other in order for people that are having those stigmas still affect them, be able to work around them so that they can speak out in safe spaces. And that way the stigma around it can be released slowly and not feel like we're outing people, because that's not cool. We don't like that. But at the same Time. The only way to change getting rid of that is to change public perception. So it's this slow, like, work up a hill kind of thing to make sure we don't fall back down, but at the same time, still making sure that we.

 

Britney Brown [00:21:21]:

We know we're not alone.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:21:23]:

I think that's the thing. It's because, like, the last thing I want to do is be like, the weed mom, right? Like, I don't want to, like, I don't, like, want that to be my identity. But, like, someone has to talk about the weed, right? Like, someone has to do it.

 

Monica Olano [00:21:39]:

That's exactly what I speak scream. I'm like, do I want to be this? No. But if I don't, who's doing it?

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:21:45]:

Yeah, right, Exactly. We have to come together.

 

Britney Brown [00:21:48]:

It's important because we have to rewrite the stereotype of what a weed mom is. Because what is a weed mom? Well, in my house, it's a mom that doesn't yell at her fucking kids. It's. In my house, it's a mom that will actually hang out and play with her kids because she's not so overstimulated that she literally needs to go hide under a weighted blanket in her bed. That is who I was before cannabis was a regular part of my routine and how I do things. I don't know that my kids have ever seen me actually high, but they most days see me with cannabis operating in my system. And I think that that's the difference between what a weed mom is, quote, unquote, supposed to be and what today's 2024 weed moms actually are. So rewriting that stigma, rewriting that stereotype is why we say shit out loud.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:22:38]:

That's why one of my mom's stickers in the mom collection is like, I like to get high in color with my kids.

 

Britney Brown [00:22:46]:

Yes, that, yes, I will actively craft with my children if I am high because I'm not so obsessive and psycho about colors getting mixed or because you know what I mean, like, my crazy isn't their fault, so I have to temper it in ways. Man, I should put that on a sticker. My crazy is not their fault.

 

Monica Olano [00:23:08]:

My biggest one is I am learning by giving up alcohol and learning all these traumas about myself and using this mindfully, I'm learning to regulate my emotions. Something that I was never taught before.

 

Britney Brown [00:23:25]:

I.

 

Monica Olano [00:23:26]:

Last night, my daughter was having a full blown meltdown in the mall and all I could think was, you should be happy. I'm just letting you cry. I wasn't Even allowed to cry. And so it's given me. I feel like I'm learning how to regulate the emotions the exact same time I'm having to teach my children how to regulate their emotions. And it's. It's hard. It is.

 

Monica Olano [00:23:48]:

But it's so much better than just yelling, shutting down, and creating another generation of people that are told to just shut things down and survive. I think people think that we just go get high, and it could not be more of the opposite. The other thing, if you're listening to this, go check out the podcast cover, but also go on YouTube, because the other thing that I think is so huge about this is that we all come from, like, different places in different backgrounds and different groups of people that we associate with daily. But if you listen right now to us, we are all the same person, and we've been taught that we're not.

 

Britney Brown [00:24:26]:

And if you looked at us, like, if you like, hey, oh, screenshot. If you looked at us and said, like, are these three women friends in. In real life? If you stereotyped us, the answer would be, fuck no. Like, yeah, no. Monica looks like a bougie crazy mom from the south. Kenya looks like she's way too cool for both of us, and I look mildly homeless sitting in my warehouse. It's a wild ride, you guys. But at the same time, that is what we're finding out on this podcast, is that there are so few things that separate us.

 

Britney Brown [00:25:01]:

There are so few.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:25:02]:

We're going through the same things. Like, we are. We are living the same experiences, and some of those experiences are different, but, like, the day to day, like, at the core, when you think about it, we are moms, right? And so we all are going through, like, mom things at this point.

 

Monica Olano [00:25:24]:

And we're women, too. Like, I never thought. I always said, oh, I'm not a feminist, or, oh, I'm not. There was almost like that word had been weaponized against us, where if you speak up, it puts you over here and it. I think it scared men, to be honest with you, that it's just gets shoveled over there and now. Like, I wrote to somebody yesterday that was originally going to be on the podcast, and I said, hey, I think we need to switch it up, because I'm finding this podcast is leaning very heavily into women empowerment. And I don't think a man on here is going to be great at this time.

 

Britney Brown [00:26:00]:

It doesn't mean we couldn't find the right one.

 

Monica Olano [00:26:02]:

Yeah, not that I didn't want to work with them, but I Just never thought that that's what I would be doing. And there was such a negative connotation in my head around the words feminist. But we have had to fight different battles, and we do have a different experience in the world. And I feel, at least for me, it. I was told I didn't, and I. We do, and it's okay to talk about it. That doesn't mean someone's bad. They don't know that we have that experience.

 

Monica Olano [00:26:28]:

So I think feeling free to come out and talk about that adds so much to what else we do as moms, as entrepreneurs, as we're so many things.

 

Britney Brown [00:26:37]:

We live different lives, quite obviously. I'm currently stickering envelopes for my sticker club because that's. That's. That's what I do, because I can't just sit still. Look at this one I just pulled. It's feminist witch. It's literally the one I just pulled out while you were saying that. All I'm saying.

 

Monica Olano [00:26:56]:

So we're going to find a way to do a Cali Sober Mom Imperfect Inspiration, Kenya. Like, we are going to have a collaboration sticker. I don't know when. I have no clue what it's going to look like, but we will figure this out.

 

Britney Brown [00:27:10]:

I've decided this is my new campaign for Cali Sober Mom. Kenya and I are going to design a line together, and we'll launch it.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:27:16]:

Let's do it.

 

Britney Brown [00:27:17]:

We're going to do it. We're going to do it. It's going to be cute as shit. I love it. For us. We're going to do it.

 

Monica Olano [00:27:21]:

Well, Kenya, we cannot thank you enough for bringing your spirit, your energy, your time to us. It is. I could talk to you forever. Like, I love everything that you are doing.

 

Britney Brown [00:27:32]:

Also, your child is so freaking cute.

 

Monica Olano [00:27:36]:

You want to know?

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:27:37]:

Hi.

 

Monica Olano [00:27:38]:

Do you want to say hi?

 

Britney Brown [00:27:41]:

Oh, my God.

 

Monica Olano [00:27:43]:

Hi.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:27:44]:

Hi, sweetie. Oh, my gosh. Okay, hop down.

 

Monica Olano [00:27:49]:

And no rush. Before we jump off, we will let you leave the closing remarks. Anything you want out there or insight you want to add into this little world we're creating.

 

Kenya Alexander-Davis [00:28:02]:

My insight is just to remind everyone that life does not have to be hard. Like, there is. Like, you can find, maybe not easy, but easeful, right? Like, life can be easeful, and you can create the life that you want, and it doesn't have to necessarily fit the structure that we've been seeing over and over. We can create something different. And so if you have something that it's on your heart to do, be brave and do that. And the universe will support you as you go through that whole thing.

 

Britney Brown [00:28:41]:

You're such a cool person. Oh, my God.

 

Monica Olano [00:28:45]:

Oh, and tell us what you do, ladies, because we're going to support you, too. So you tell us what you're doing, what you're stepping out on a limb to do, and we will share it on our socials. We will share it. Just let us know. Well, thank you for listening and we will see you all soon.

 

Monica Olano [00:29:01]:

Thanks for listening to the Cali Sober mom podcast. The best way for us to get the word out is you. So share this episode with someone you know who will enjoy it. And be sure to follow Cali Sober mom on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you're consuming the show right now.