Jasmine Star didn’t wait for permission. She built anyway.
She’s the CEO of Social Curator, host of The Jasmin Star Show, and a sought-after keynote speaker and coach to more than 35,000 entrepreneurs worldwide. But behind the success is a far less polished truth: years of self-doubt, identity battles, and moments where quitting felt easier than continuing.
In this episode, Emily and Jasmine go beyond the highlight reel into the reality of what it takes to bet on yourself when nothing is guaranteed. They talk about identity, burnout, obedience, motherhood, and faith, and why most people stay stuck, not because they lack opportunity, but because they haven’t fully committed to who they’re becoming.
What You’ll Learn:
- The “permission” problem – why women are still asking, still waiting, and still talking themselves down
- Navigating the messy middle: burnout, obedience, and identity
- Why the most powerful brands are built through repetition
- How to turn everyday content into long-term positioning and authority
- Faith as an anchor in seasons of pressure
Timestamps:
(03:42) – Permission vs Partnership: The Hidden Block Keeping Women Stuck
(09:47) – Building a Life on Intentional Alignment
(15:33) – Betting on Yourself Before You’re Ready
(19:10) – Authenticity As the New Currency
(31:00) – The Hidden Cost of Building a Business No One Talks About
(35:00) – Why The Real Deals Are Built in the DMs, Not on the Feed
(38:16) – Why Social Media Will Never Stay the Same and Why You Have to Adapt
(42:52) – High-Trust Yap Videos That Actually Convert
(44:27) – How-To and BTS Content That Builds Trust Faster Than Polished Posts
(47:23) – Your Personal Brand as Your Business Moat
(49:54) – Content Burnout and the Discipline of Consistency
(56:29) – Motherhood, Faith, and Redefining Success
(01:05:18) – Faith as the Strength That Heals What Confidence Can’t
Connect with Jasmine:
More from Emily Ford & Fordivine:
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She survived childhood trauma. Beat lupus into remission. Brought the world’s first cauliflower pizza crust to market when grocery aisles only sold the head. And exited her company at the top 1% of women founders to ever do an 8-figure deal.







