So when I say move… I mean that. Move if the environment is suffocating your growth. Move if your spirit keeps nudging you. Move if your dreams are bigger than your surroundings.
We are mid-year of 2026 now, right in the thick of it, and looking back, that December decision was exactly what needed to happen. And 2027? It is already looking very good 👀♥️
Cape Town broke me down and rebuilt me in ways I can’t even explain. It taught me how to process. To grow. To become. To build the version of me that could handle the next level of my life.
By December 2025, I knew I had to move. The nudge was too loud to ignore anymore. So I made the leap and moved to Cape Town… and BABY when I say the Mother City became a school for me 😭♥️
I spent years building, working hard, and pouring myself into what I did. But I used to ask myself… “Is this all I was made for? To only operate at this capacity?”
Then eventually, I started feeling like I was outgrowing Port Elizabeth. My dreams have always been BIG. I’ve always had something inside of me that refuses to quit. Deep down, I always knew I was meant for more.
My first move was just a shift in perspective, but even small changes start to rewire you. Your nervous system becomes more regulated. You start seeing more, dreaming more, believing bigger… and because you can see more, you can obtain more.
I encourage you to move out of your hometown ♥️ Not because it’s “bad”… but because sometimes we don’t thrive in environments that no longer align with who we’re becoming.
This is not about chasing more for the sake of having more. It’s about building something strong enough to lift others with me. When I move forward, it’s never alone.
Every late night, every sacrifice, every uncomfortable decision carries more weight than just personal gain. When I rise, families eat, confidence spreads and belief gets restored in people who needed proof that it could be done.
My ambition is rooted in impact, not ego.
If you knew how many people win when I win, you’d understand that my ambition was never greed. It was responsibility.
It was knowing that my growth creates opportunities, my discipline sets an example and my success becomes a doorway for others who might not see one yet.