The Sheila Botelho Show
Sheila Botelho is a business strategist guiding visionary leaders to more profit, freedom, and self-trust. With decades of experience in wellness, sales, and transformational coaching, she helps founders grow businesses that generate wealth and impactāwithout burning out or dimming down.
On this show, Sheila sparks future-focused conversations about growth, leadership, and the shifting landscape of business in an era of rapid change. Her self-trust-centered approach equips founders to align strategy with soul, scale sustainably, and create a legacy of influence and abundance that touches every area of life.
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The Sheila Botelho Show
What Moving Taught Me About Leadership and Trust | EP 543
š Mentioned on this Episode: Show Notes š
Thereās a moment in every founderās journey when doing it all alone stops working. The systems that once fueled growth begin to feel heavy. The words, the habits, even the rhythms of success need to evolve. In this reflective episode, youāll hear how my recent move became a mirror for my business. How it revealed the deeper power of trust, teamwork, and the courage to let go.
Through stories of motherhood, entrepreneurship, and community, we explore how expansion often begins in quiet surrender. Delegation, interdependence, and rest can truly create the conditions for creativity and true leadership to flourish.
If youāve been feeling stretched thin or hesitant to let others carry part of your vision, this conversation will remind you that asking for help is wisdom in practice. Tune in to learn how trust, clarity, and space can become your most strategic business tools.
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You know that moment when life asks you to let go because expansion won't happen any other way? Well, that's been my life these past few weeks as Peter and I pack up our home and prepare for our move. Every box, every conversation, every moment of letting someone else handle something I used to control has been a masterclass in trust. And what I've been reminded of is that asking for help is often the very thing that helps you grow in business, in leadership, and in life. Hi, welcome to the podcast. I'm Sheila Botelho, and I believe true success is built from the inside out. This episode is a story about moving, about building teams, about trusting others with your vision. And really, it's about what happens when you realize that carrying everything on your own shoulders is the one thing that can be keeping you from expanding into what's next. This past week, as my family is preparing for our move, I felt waves of nostalgia rise up between the stacks of boxes and the scent of cardboard. And literally every drawer I open feels like a time capsule. I found a photo the other day from when my kids were small. They were laughing their heads off because it was the 20th take of me trying to get a really nice shot of the two of them. And they were laughing at how frustrated I was getting. And it's my favorite photo. It's the one I ended up framing. It wasn't the quote, perfect one I was looking for. I found in their memory boxes all of their little projects that they wanted to keep and the things that defined our homeschooling days. And I remembered something really important. That was the season I really learned how to ask for help. Back then, I had a much simpler vision. I wanted my kids to thrive, to be curious, and to have a childhood that felt full and connected. But I couldn't do it alone. I wanted them to have community, joy, and friendship. So I reached out. I called a few other moms who were on the same path and bumped into many others. And together we built something beautiful, a rhythm that really felt like a sisterhood. We shared lesson plans and snacks, laughter and tears over the years. And we prayed for each other, prayed for each other's kids, especially when those days felt long. And we celebrated when one of our kids learned something new. And through it all, I learned that leadership is often about creating the container where others can shine beside you. And one of the other memories I had is of making lunch for my boys and letting them sit in the tree to eat it in front of our house. And my neighbor even let them sit in her tree. And uh it was just such an idyllic experience that they had. And now this same energy that I was talking about that I've developed over the years with these beautiful women in my life, it's of building something together, this trusting others to help carry the vision. That's what I'm feeling again right now. Except this time, the team looks a little different. It's a blend of coaches, collaborators, women in my world around the world who are building their own versions of success. And as Peter and I tape the last boxes closed, I'm reminded how each person who touches our lives leaves an imprint and how expansion happens in layers. It often starts small. It starts with a whisper that says, you cannot do this alone anymore. Perhaps you've heard that whisper. Maybe the whisper has been showing up in your business, in your home, in your relationships. Maybe you've been feeling the tension between wanting to control everything and knowing that it's time to let someone else help carry the vision. That is the edge of leadership, most people don't talk about. Because for years, the message we've heard is that strength means independence. But real expansion, the kind that's life-changing and world-changing, requires interdependence. I love that word. Peter and I were introduced to that word by a dear friend in the personal development space many, many years ago. And it has really been the thing that has defined our relationship. And it can define your life and your business also. Interdependence is the ability to trust others with what you've built and the humility to let them help it grow beyond you. When I started building my programs, I didn't know how to lead a team in the online space. I just knew how to hold space and lead kind of a team in the face-to-face type of space. And so it was a little different because you couldn't see what everyone was doing all the time. And truly, I was able to create a framework of how to handle this in the online space that has been really incredible to witness grow. In 2015, I realized that community was something I really enjoyed. And it was also something that my growth depended on. And that's when I joined my first membership community, or at least shortly after that, and started hosting small group masterminds myself. Those early groups shaped everything. And they showed me how to elevate my brand, refine my voice, create from a place of collaboration. And it was all about celebrating each other and celebrating anything that we could think of to celebrate, because this process of building something from your brain that becomes an entity that is a business, it takes a lot of energy and encouragement. And so now as I prepare to open the season circle this January, I feel that same spark again, that reminder that sisterhood is the heartbeat of sustainable success. Because when women gather to hold a vision together, everything shifts, revenue grows, energy expands, and we remember that business isn't meant to be built in isolation. You see, this move, both physical and energetic, has been something showing me the power of delegation through a new lens. I've had to trust movers, realtors, lawyers, my goodness, shipping companies, team members to handle things that I once would have micromanaged. And every time I let go, something opens time, space, clarity. And that clarity has allowed me to think beyond the day-to-day and back to my bigger vision, the legacy lens that guides everything that I do. When you're scaling to seven plus figures, you start realizing that your next level of growth isn't about just doing more. Like certainly there is the doing more portion, but it also becomes more about structuring your world so that you are not the bottleneck. And that may take a little bit of effort and time to find, but it is so worth it. These people who move with integrity, who feel ownership and who care about the mission as much as you do. That truly is how legacy leadership is built. And the funny thing is, that lesson isn't new for me. It's just resurfacing in a deeper way because it's never just one moment that changes us, it's a series of moments connected like a constellation in the sky. Each one is reminding us of what's possible when we trust ourselves to take the next step. When I look back on the years of building a business with Peter, oh my goodness, late nights, very, very long drives to go meet with people who then didn't show up. The shared coffee, when I used to drink a lot of coffee, the laughter in the middle of the deadlines, I see how much we've created was possible because we trusted each other's strengths. We both learned how to lead and how to follow, how to delegate, and how to step back so the other could shine. And that really is the heart of this season for me. Creating the spaciousness to allow others to step into their own power in my work, whether it's my team or my clients, the women that I mentor inside of expansion season and my VIP days, because the truth is expansion without support isn't expansion. It's exhaustion. And if you're listening right now and you've been feeling stretched thin, trying to do it all on your own, this might be your invitation to pause, to just take a deep breath and ask yourself, who can carry part of this vision with me? It could be a team member, it could be a mentor, it could be a friend who reminds you to eat lunch between calls. I've done that for so many friends. Like, have you eaten today? I do that for my clients too. Like, have you gotten outside? Have you touched grass, as the kids like to say these days? Support shows up in many forms, and every single one of them counts. So as I look around my home one last week before I move, surrounded by boxes and memories and a whole lot of bubble wrap, I feel immense gratitude for where we're headed, as well as for the people who helped us get here. We didn't do it alone. Those people who carried a piece of the dream when my hands were full, the ones who believed in the vision even when it was still forming, the ones who held me during unimaginable times of grief. Because that's what leadership really is. It's not about perfection, it's about presence. And presence requires space. This space that only appears when you stop clinging to control and you start trusting the support that's already around you. So maybe that's your reflection this week. Where can you let go just a little more? Where can you invite support in as a strategic advantage? And when you do, notice what happens. Notice what expands. Notice how your creativity starts to flow again. Because that's what happens when we move from self-reliance into co-creation. That's when business becomes art again. That's when leadership starts to feel lighter. And perhaps that could be when the next level of your impact begins. Because we can only hold what we have space for. And space doesn't just appear by accident if you haven't noticed. It's something we consciously create, one decision at a time. The decision to delegate, the decision to trust, the decision, yes, to rest. And I have a story about rest during this very busy season of my life. I created a beautiful plan of action for one day recently that involved me getting to the gym early, doing a massage chair session, then doing a red light session, a beautiful push day weight workout, and then having a shower, getting to all of these different places I needed to go to to pick up various things, and then packing up my entire kitchen except for a few things, and then going to visit someone, and then having a final walkthrough of my house and just all of these things I had completely planned. But guess what happened? I, the night before, woke up at 12:30 in the morning, fell back asleep, but then it wasn't really a restful sleep. I was in and out, awake, asleep, awake, asleep. Finally at 3 a.m., my eyes opened. I'm like, I don't think I'm gonna go back to sleep. And I tried for another hour. I got up at four and I went and I did my whole, started my plan at the gym. Got there at 5 a.m. Well, by 2 p.m., I was toast. I was, I didn't know what was going on. And here I had a choice. I could have just pushed through and had some caffeine, which works really well for me because I'm not a big coffee drinker. Or I could actually take a 20-minute nap. And of course, because history has taught me this is a great thing for me, I took a 20-minute nap. And I became a new woman after that small little snooze session. And the rest of the day was not lost, although I certainly did not get everything done that I had planned to, that totally was in the realm of possibility for me. But sometimes rest is the answer. And here's what happened: I made it an early bedtime. And the next day I woke up after a great sleep, so incredibly empowered, and everything went so smoothly that day because I was rested. Had I pushed myself through being exhausted, so many mistakes would have been made. Who knows if I would have broken things? Like this happens. And what do we do? We end up breaking things in our business, breaking things in our relationships, perhaps, because we're not rested. I cannot state the importance of rest more powerfully. So I hope you carry that with you. Because I have to say, this is one of the key things that a lot of the women in my world struggle with, carrying so much. Sometimes we have to let it go and let our bodies recalibrate. This week, as all of this activity in my home has been happening, I realized something. For years, I would have been the one trying to organize every single box myself, making sure each label was perfect, each category sorted, each fragile thing double wrapped. And yes, I've been doing some of that. However, now I stand back and let everyone do their zone. I offer direction if it's required, but usually it's not even required. And then I breathe. I go grab a cup of tea and I let the process unfold. And in that letting go, I can feel the energy shifting in my house, but also in my body because control takes energy. But trusting, it gives you energy. It gives it back to you. I've come to believe that that is what expansion actually feels like. Not the adrenaline rush of a new project or the hustle that once felt so familiar, but it's this subtle, powerful surrender into alignment, the kind where you realize that your dream is no longer yours alone. It belongs to everyone who's helping you bring it to life. When I think about what's next, new spaces, new collaborations, the season circle opening in January, I don't just feel excitement. I feel a sense of calm. This kind of calm that comes from knowing that the right people are already walking beside me. And that's what I wish for you. That as you grow into your next season, you let yourself feel safe receiving support, that you start to see the people around you not as people you need to manage, but as co-visionaries who carry the dream with you. That your team, that your relationships in your life have a lot of communication that flows both ways, where respect and creativity fuel the work. And of course, where laughter becomes part of the process. Because you can hire for any skill, but you build legacy through shared intention. When the people who are supporting you in your vision understand the why behind it, delegation stops feeling like letting go. It actually becomes multiplication. Every task or idea and touch point starts amplifying what you stand for. And suddenly your business doesn't just grow, it breathes. So as I look around this house one last time before the move, I am taking a mental snapshot. Right now, sunlight is filling in through the windows, and my oak tree has still not dropped off all of its leaves, and it's a beautiful, rusty, golden color. I just love it. And I'm feeling the quiet hum of change in the air and a sense of completion. I can almost feel the next version of me standing at my new doorstep, ready to step inside, surrounded by the people who helped make it happen. And that's the feeling that I want you to hold on to for your life. That moment when you realize you're not doing this alone anymore, that you've built something sustainable. And because you trusted others enough to help you carry the dream. And maybe as you listen to this, you are in your own kind of move. Perhaps not into a new house, but maybe into a new level of leadership or a new way of being. Whatever it is, know this. You're ready. You've already been preparing for it with every small act of courage, every yes to support, every moment you choose connection over isolation. So breathe. Look around at the life you've built. Feel the ground under your feet. Let yourself be proud of how far you've come. You're standing at the edge of your next expansion. And you're not standing there alone. Thanks so much for listening, and I'll catch you on the next episode.