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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
In this powerful episode of The School of Greatness, Tabitha Brown reveals the transformative prayer that changed her life forever: "God, if you heal me, you can have me." (03:17) After battling chronic illness for over a year and seven months while doctors couldn't diagnose her condition, Brown experienced a profound spiritual awakening that led her to shed the masks she'd worn for decades. From code-switching in corporate America to conforming for Hollywood roles, she had spent years suffocating her authentic self until that pivotal bathroom prayer shifted everything. (18:57) Her journey from making videos for 33 viewers to becoming a multimedia empire proves that when you stop performing for approval and start living your truth, abundance follows naturally.
Lewis Howes is a New York Times bestselling author, entrepreneur, and host of The School of Greatness podcast. He's built a multimedia empire focused on helping people achieve their potential and has interviewed thousands of high-achievers over his eleven-year podcasting career.
Tabitha Brown is a multiple New York Times bestselling author, actress, and social media personality who became a viral sensation after authentically sharing her plant-based journey. After overcoming chronic illness and stepping into her truth, she built a multimedia empire including books, product lines with Target, and acting roles while inspiring millions with her message of love and authenticity.
Tabitha distinguishes between praying out of habit versus truly surrendering to divine guidance. (02:04) Her breakthrough came when she moved beyond reciting learned prayers to making a genuine offering: "God, if you heal me, you can have me." This shift from going through religious motions to authentic spiritual surrender opened the door for her transformation. The key is moving from asking God to bless who you're pretending to be to allowing Him to work through who you actually are.
Brown emphasizes the importance of recognizing divine confirmation in everyday moments. (36:58) She shares how a drive-through worker mistook her for someone on television twenty years before she won an Emmy for her children's show. These weren't coincidences but confirmation signs pointing toward her destiny. When you pay attention to unexpected comments, recurring themes, or moments that align with your dreams, you're receiving guidance about your path forward.
The principle "obedience is better than sacrifice" means following your inner guidance even when it's uncomfortable, rather than making sacrifices based on what you think should work. (40:25) Brown explains that obedience might be the harder path initially, but it leads to quicker, better outcomes with greater rewards. When you ignore that gut feeling and choose sacrifice instead, you often end up burned and having to learn the same lesson again.
To discover your authentic self, Brown suggests returning to childhood memories before you were taught to have fear or that you weren't enough. (13:43) Your truth is found in what you naturally gravitated toward as a child - the games you played, the activities you loved without being told to do them. These childhood passions often reveal your core purpose and gifts that got buried under societal expectations and conditioning.
Brown makes a crucial distinction between dreams and goals that can help you identify your true calling. (27:01) Goals are things you create and can check off a list or abandon if they don't work out. Dreams, however, are deposited inside you and persistently nag at you - they won't let you rest until you pursue them. Even when you achieve aspects of your dream, it continues to push you toward more growth and expansion.