In this episode, Heather Stewart shares the moment that forced her to slow down—a stroke that completely interrupted her fast-paced, wellness-focused life.
What started as resistance quickly became a shift in perspective. Heather explains how she moved from fighting what was happening to accepting it, trusting the process, and becoming curious instead of reactive. That shift changed everything—not just her recovery, but how she approached her life and work moving forward.
She breaks down the difference between physical health and emotional well-being, and why focusing on one while ignoring the other creates imbalance. The conversation also highlights the importance of allowing rest, asking for help, and recognizing that progress does not have to be constant or forced.
Heather shares how small internal shifts—sometimes just seconds of thinking differently—can create momentum over time. From learning to trust support systems to choosing possibility over limitation, this episode challenges the need to control everything and instead invites a more sustainable way of moving forward.
If you’ve been pushing through life or resisting what’s happening, this conversation will show you a different approach—one built on awareness, trust, and small shifts that lead to real change.
Connect with Debbie Longo, Transformational Coach:
Website: https://lifeinbloomny.net
Email: longo.debbie1@gmail.com
Phone: 321-270-8713
Contact Heather Stewart:
Website: https://heatherstewart.coach
Heather Stewart offers a complimentary Alignment Activation designed to help you gain clarity on what’s happening in your life and identify your best next step forward: https://heatherstewart.coach/alignment-audit
Welcome to the Internal Shift Show. I'm Debbie
Longo. This show focuses on how internal decisions
shape direction, progress, and long -term outcomes.
Today's conversation uses real -world expertise
to examine how subtle internal shifts influence
the way people move forward. We have a very special
guest today, Heather Stewart. Thank you, Heather,
for being on the show today. I appreciate it.
Thanks, Debbie. I'm glad to talk to you today.
I'm going to ask you to tell your story and identify
either a traumatic experience or a life change,
something that you went through in your life
that kickstart a process or created you to go
through a process, right? Where you came out
on the other side, where there was a way out
for you, whether you knew it at the time, it
just happened. And this is what we want to. Talk
about a little bit here and then the end result
should always be positive. Now, there's a few
different reasons why I do this. And one of the
main reasons is because everybody has their own
individual story and people can point out, even
though no two stories are alike, obviously, but
people can point out something in your story.
It doesn't even have to really be what we're
talking about, but could be a little thing that's
a part of the story. So they're gonna see that
and they're gonna be able to identify with that
and if they're not feeling good And if they're
in this negative thing, whatever we're talking
about then they can see that They can come out
of the other side because you're explaining your
process and how you got through it and everything
So sometimes if I'm in a negative or I don't
feel right I don't see there's a way out. I don't
know. I just don't. I don't know if I could even
change. I have no idea. So now I say to myself,
it's going to be like this. I'm just going to
be like this and I'm just going to have to deal
with it when that's not true. It's never true.
But they don't know what they don't want to or
whatever the case may be. So that's really the
goal here. So that's what I'm going to ask you
to do. Thank you. I think it's important to say.
when you're in that space, it's hard to imagine
being out of that space. So give yourself some
grace in being stuck in that space and that you're
looking for something else. And I know that,
I mean, humans, we go through lots of things
in our lives. Sometimes I was trying to decide
which one to talk about because I've had a few,
but I think the one that might resonate a lot
is when I had a stroke. And it was so interesting
because I had left my corporate job to go into
this world of wellness and I went from being
like a corporate executive to running a yoga
studio and being a massage therapist and I was
all into wellness. So then I find myself in the
hospital and they're telling me that I've had
two strokes and at first I'm like, what are you
crazy? I'm the healthy person here. You've got
the wrong file. And it was during COVID. And
at the time, like I was running my yoga studio,
I was running my massage business and I was doing
a little bit of business coaching on the side
because I had a business background and all of
a sudden everything had to stop because I am
now in the hospital, which I had never been before
in my life. And because it was during, it was
in 2021. So because it was during COVID, you
were allowed to have visitors say, There was
no beds in the hospital. So I was actually in
the emergency room for three days. And it was
during Halloween in a major downtown hospital.
So there was like people coming and going. It
was crazy in there. And I've got this pounding
headache because apparently I have had a stroke
and I can't go anywhere. No one can come and
talk to me. And it had affected my vision. So
I couldn't even do what people do, which is go
into their phone. and school. So I'm just laying
there going, well, what the hell is happening
here? And I did the normal thing at first. I
was completely resisting what was going on. I
was like, no, this is impossible. You guys are
crazy. I want to go home. And I had to kind of
give myself a little moment and go, hold on a
minute. They're doctors. They've got a chart.
They've shown you the pictures. Stop fighting
with them. So I had to kind of like take a step
back and take a breath and go so if I just trust
that they're taking care of my body and my brain
and They know what to do to make sure that I
kind of come through this. What else can I notice
here? So For me when I it was I call it surrendering
to what was going on, but not giving up So I,
by stopping finding a guess what was actually
happening to me, but not really like I wasn't
saying I'm going to be like this forever. I was
saying, I'm not going to fight this because I
can't change this, but I can pay attention to
what's going on and how to, how to look at it
in a different way. So at the time, like I said,
I was business coaching, I had a business podcast,
I had all these clients. And I said, so. What
am I noticing that's different? And I noticed
all of the people out in the emergency room and
there was like adults there with their elderly
parents. And you could tell the elderly parents
to really didn't want to be there. They're like,
Oh, I just tripped. I was, I'm fine. Take me.
Like they wanted to go home. There were parents
there with their kids. And I was, and I was in
a cubicle when I had the curtains shut. And of
course there was the Halloween party goers were
there as well who got themselves into trouble.
And I'm thinking, There's a lot of life happening
outside of me. So if I can trust that I'm being
taken care of right now and shift my attention
to what all this information is giving me, I
realized that my process was trusting, was knowing
that I had all of my pieces kind of of my life
sorted out. I mean, I've been all about this
physical wellness for so long. that I forgot
there's an emotional wellness. So I said, I'm
actually pretty happy now that I've stopped fighting
with the doctors. And I'm feeling okay. Now I
know that's not going to be fair. People are
going to be stuck in that unhappy place. But
I just took a couple of breaths. I'm like, and
I knew that my community, the people in my relationships
around me were being supportive because they
were sending me voice messages because they knew
I couldn't read any messages. So they were sending
me voice messages wishing me well. And I knew
that my job was fine because my clients were
saying, oh, Heather, take a look after yourself.
I knew financially I was okay. And I knew, like,
I was being paused. I felt like I was being paused
on purpose to pay attention so that I could shift
that attention from fighting and driving forward
all the time to pausing and being okay with what
was going on. and finding out if I can be curious
about this instead of unhappy that it's the way
it is, what can shift for me? And it shifted.
I mean, it shifted so much for me because I shifted
out of this like driven person. Everything always
has to be go, go, go to hold on. We don't have
to drive forward. We're always moving forward
regardless. And we can go forward at different
speeds, different paces. we can take time if
we need to, to recover. I don't have to go back
to work next week. I can do it because I couldn't.
I tried, I actually tried because I hadn't convinced
myself yet. I actually tried to go back to work
and I could treat one person and then I had to
sleep for an hour. This isn't healthy. So let's
shift that too and let's allow for rest. So this
shift for me was allow it being in a place where
I could be curious about what was going on. and
allowing myself to absorb the, I guess, lessons,
the things that were coming out of it instead
of just, because we have that tendency to, when
we don't want it that way, we just fight, fight,
fight, fight. So stop fighting, start flowing,
really is your best way to kind of manage through
that. Very good, thank you. That was good. How
did you feel when you were going through this
process? Did you feel differently? from the beginning
till the end. And did you feel failure or you
were going in a different direction? When did
you feel or when did you notice that it was changing
direction? Hopefully for the positive, because
it worked out to be positive. So what was your
process with that type of thing? When I talk
about this incident, because sometimes I'll tell
people I had a stroke and they'll be like, oh
my God, how terrible. And I kind of now, at the
time, later, I kind of laugh and say, actually,
it was amazing for me. It was a three -day silent
retreat imposed by the universe on me because
I had nobody to talk to and I couldn't escape
it. And in the beginning, I did, like I said,
I still have the normal reactions when things
go wrong. because we have this brain that's designed
to keep things that seem safe the same. So it's
like, I'm in the hospital, that means I'm not
safe. Let me get out of here. There's something
wrong. And you're fighting, fighting. And it
was when I actually gave myself that minute to
go, wait a minute, hospital's a good place to
be if there's something wrong. So maybe we can
relax. And my shift was actually big considering
it was three days, because I was in that. fighting,
then I stopped fighting it. I started just being
okay with what was going on where I was. And
when I came out the other side, everything that
I did, my whole business and everything was different
after I, it was only three days, really. Everything
that I did afterwards when I came out was different
because I suddenly went, wait, it's not just
physical health. Cause I had been focusing a
hundred percent on physical health. It's not
just physical health. It's like, the whole person
needs to feel safe and supporting them. We can't
split ourselves into parts. It's not advisable
anyway. But you can look at chunks of your life
and you can say, my job's doing pretty good,
but I hate the people that I hang out with. Then
change something, like change small things. All
you have to do is change small things. Or you
hate your job, and then when you come home, you
you just crab all the time to your family. They're
not going to resonate well. They're not going
to have fun with you if you're always stressed
out at work. So it's like I had to expand my
view of how to best help people see a different
way of being. And if you can find pieces in your
life that are working well, grab onto those and
try to understand what about them is working
well. And then If there's part of some of your
life that aren't working well, you need to give
yourself some love because, first of all, it's
not your, like, don't give yourself a hard time
that you're there. I remember I fell in the desert
in Jordan and I broke my wrist. And the first
thought that went into my head was, well, that
was stupid. How could you fall in the desert?
There's no rocks here. And I heard this voice.
I'm like, be quiet, little voice. I'm fine. Look,
it's just a wrist. I got two. Let's go see what
kind of adventure I can go on. And I went on
a massive adventure through the hospitals in
Jordan. But you gave yourself permission to see
the possibility that something could be better
than it is. You don't have to know what the better
is. You can just trust that there is something
better. The universe takes care of whatever,
what the what is. You just have to be curious
and follow it. Very good. Yep. I agree, definitely,
100%. So you explained all of that. You explained
your process and everything and did you feel
at any point like you were not able to accomplish
what you wanted to do and did you feel that your
vision of it being positive or whatever it was.
is now going to go in the opposite direction.
So it's kind of like a feel of fear of failure
or denial or something like that. Did you feel
any of that? Because a stroke is to me is I never
had a stroke, but I've worked with people that
have had it. So to me, it's a very, very traumatic
thing because you don't know how you're going
to be when you come out of it. It takes years
and years. during this process that we're talking
about here, how did you feel? And also when you're
working with other people, did you feel that
that helped you to get over the stroke and the
feelings? And a stroke is a scary thing because
even with all of my knowledge, I knew how bones
healed, I knew how muscles healed, I knew how
to heal things. Your brain is like this black
box and you can't see it and you can't touch
it and you don't know what the heck's going on
in there. When I was healing, I mean, I found
that place of trust when I was in the hospital,
but then you're out of the hospital. And I can
remember I was in the hospital because I'm also
an artist and my thinking was like, how am I
going to paint? I can't see properly. How am
I going to do this? I can't. I had this fear
that my eyes were going to be forever crossed.
And I just, I kind of had to go, okay, well,
we can talk to myself like I was my mom. We can
figure this out. It's going to be fine. You know,
we'll figure something out. We'll get it working.
And when I got out of the hospital and I did
start working again, I had to really talk to
people about what was going on. Because we tend
to, when something's wrong, we pull back so much
because we feel like, oh, I can't tell people,
or I can't let them know that I'm weak or I can't
burden them. I mean, those are two... wrong thinking
things. So I had to kind of share with people
what was going on with me. And I was suffering
vertigo. So if I walked outside, it's hard to
describe, but I just, I couldn't do it. I had
to like shut my eyes and just say, someone lead
me somewhere. And I had to figure out a way to
rehab myself so that I could see properly again.
And the way that I did that was one, trusting
my own body, but also talking to people about
This is happening. How do we work with this?
How does this work? One of my friends sent me
to a specialist that he knew that I never would
have heard of. One person gave me this link to
a way to retrain your eyes and all of these things.
And coming out, being able to accept help. Some
people are afraid to say that they're vulnerable
and that something's going on. But how are you
going to get any help if you always have to be
the strong, independent, I got this person, where
I think it makes you stronger. Like I came out
stronger and I think more able to understand
everything that I've ever gone through in my
life. I always say to my clients, I've gone through
so much. If whatever's going on with you, I've
probably had it happen to me. So just let me
know and we'll figure it out. because it gives
me that experience of how I came through it and
then helping them navigate their way through
it. So like you say, at the beginning, everybody's
story is same, same, but different. Everybody's
got their own way to navigate it. So even if
you get like one thing out of talking to someone,
maybe it's that one thing that unlocks something
for you to be able to navigate what's going on
with you. Doesn't even have to be a stroke, can
be anything. But finding this way to, COVID made
us really isolated from each other. And I think
in some ways it continues. But we're starting
to find this way back out into the real world
and talk to real people. And I feel like talking
to people and being OK with talking to people
helps you reconnect and find that support and
that community and resources that are going to
help you in whatever it is you're struggling
with. Because doing stuff alone isn't the best
way to do things. Yeah. And I totally agree with
that. And you explain that very well. And very
detailed and i really appreciate that because
like i said we don't know who's listening and
for you to explain and talk about your story
which is so personal to you is a very good thing
because that shows us in a way that you went
through a certain process and you realized that.
there was something beyond what you were thinking
and feeling at that time. So if anybody has something
physical, especially like a stroke or cancer
or anything like that, some lot of times is normal
to feel depressed or down or unsure or fear or
something like that. But there's a lot of people
that have these things that happen and again,
it could be anything But this is what we're talking
about and I know this I've worked with a lot
of people like this It could be that somebody
this happens to somebody and they think that
they're gonna be like this Oh, I'm gonna be depressed
and I'm never gonna be happy again Never gonna
fulfill my dreams. You know, I'm just gonna be
like this and also Do I have any desire any willingness
not to be like that anymore? Or do I want to
do it and then I go backwards and then I say
I don't want to be like this and then I have
fear or Denial what's not so bad and then I go
back into it So these are the things so what
my thing is that I always want to listen to my
first thought And I want to be able to identify,
first of all, right, what my first thought is.
But that's another podcast for another day. But
one good way to do this is that what is listen
to your gut. You ever hear of the sixth sense?
Everybody has a sixth sense. People say, oh,
my gut feeling is listen to that, because that's
never going to tell you anything negative. I
can make all the excuses I want all the reasons
why. I want why I'm never going to change. And
this goes for anything, why I'm never going to
be different, why I'm never going to get from
negative to positive. I can make all the excuses
I want. I can point the finger all I want. I
can do this tons of things that I could do. But
the point is the bottom line is, do I have the
willingness just a little bit? To write to take
some action not to be that way and to know that
Just just for a minute. I don't want to be this
way Just for a minute or for an hour and then
what happened after that I'm gonna say oh, I
feel good for an hour. Let's do it for the next
hour Oh, I feel great. Now. It's two hours in
a row. This is fantastic I never felt like this
in years and years and years and I feel great
for two hours Yeah, that's a big thing. Why are
they why are you arguing for your limitations?
Why are you? Why are you arguing to keep these
things you don't want why let's let's try arguing
for something different like and this is to stand
up and say I don't want this I want this if somebody
is going through something this is I this is
one of the things I do but only if a lot of times
somebody is going through something that they
really cannot get out of They really see that
this is how they're completely convinced. But
can you feel different for a minute, even 30
seconds? I don't care how long it is. It doesn't
matter. Because if you could feel if you could
feel that I'm telling you, it's hysterical. If
you could feel better for 30 seconds, then you
could feel better for another 30 seconds. And
then guess what happens then? Then you've got
a minute. So now you can feel better because
30 seconds and 30 seconds is a minute. So now
you can feel better for another minute. Now you
got two minutes. And if I have to plan in massage
school, who I treated, this elderly lady, who,
she was like that. Nothing, she was never happy.
There was always something wrong. And one day
I was just tired. I'm like, her name was, her
last name was White, which was hilarious because
she was so black. And I said, well, does your
toe hurt? Does your big toe hurt? She said, no.
I'm like, hallelujah. Let's enjoy the fact your
big toe doesn't hurt. And after that she loved
me because I just wouldn't let her stay in that
I suck place. Like you can suck all you want,
but I'm not coming into your vacuum. Let's talk
about the things that are working. And that's
not to ignore, but like you said, 30 seconds
of feeling good, you're going to get addicted
to it. And that's not in a toxic positivity,
don't worry, be happy way. That's in the stuff
is going on and I still choose that I'm going
to be okay. So I just need somebody to help me
to change my mindset, to help me see that I don't
have to be that way anymore. And whether somebody
shows me or explains it or tells a story or I
listen to a podcast or I hear a neighbor say
something or whatever it is, that is something
where I can listen to that, even if it's just
a second and even if it's one small thought.
That says maybe I should try this, you know,
and but the thing is, I have to want to do that.
I have to seek help like that client sort you
out. Yeah. So that's the thing. Exactly. I need
to somehow some way create a very small willingness
to do something different. And my brain is going
to tell me that. But again, which way do I want?
Do I want to do it or do I not? So this is the
thing. But. I still need to take the action.
Yeah, you're not going to be like, right. I'm
going to do this and then I'm going to be like
that forever. You're going to go, yes, no, yes,
no, yes, no. But if you do a yes and you can
get a hold of somebody who can help you when
you're in the know, they'll help you back to
the yes. It's like that's part of the process.
Exactly. It's not a snow. Yeah, so that was good.
Thank you. So how do you feel today, right now,
based on your story, your process, everything
we just spoke about in this whole podcast? My
life, right now, I describe it as freaking magical.
So I have my coaching business and I still teach
and I'm writing books and I just feel like everything
that I do, I don't understand always why. But
I just think, wow, this is really exciting. I'm
going to go this way. This is really exciting.
I'm going to go this way. And every direction
that I follow that has that feeling of uplifting,
it's just making my life better. So now, if people
looked at my life, if they looked at all the
details of my life, they would point out things
in here that are like, well, that's not good.
That's not good. I'm like, no, it's fine. No,
it's fine. That's your evaluation. My life is
magic. My life is magic. And I get up every day
happy, really. It's very rare, very rare for
me to get into the grumpy pants phase of life.
Usually it's just if I didn't have enough sleep.
So I make sure I get enough, especially since
my stroke. I love naps. Naps are a superpower.
But 99 % of the time, my life is magic, even
when stuff's going sideways. Instead of getting
upset these days, I go, whoa, why did that happen?
Like something happened just yesterday where
my, it's interesting you say first thought, because
my first thought was, oh my God. And then my
second thought was, no, it's fine. It's fine.
Deal with that tomorrow. I'm like, I'll deal
with that tomorrow. So if you can find those
small shifts and they accumulate, you get to
that place where you just feel like it doesn't
matter what happens, like it or not like it is.
It's going to be an interesting ride and it's
going to be fun at the end. Yeah. Very good.
Yeah, I really like it. Yeah, that was very,
very good. I really like what you said. That
was actually a good way to end, too. So what
stands out from this conversation is that meaningful
change is built through consistent internal decisions,
not traumatic moments. If something resonated
with you, consider where those internal decisions
are already shaping your path. This has been
the Internal Shift Show. Thank you for listening
and thank you for being on the show. I appreciate
it.