Faith Over FOMO: Biblical Truths for Contentment in a Comparison World
Nov 13, 2025
Title: Faith Over FOMO: Biblical Truths for Contentment in a Comparison World
Podcast Date: November 11, 2025
Listen Here:
Description
In this encouraging episode of the Compared to Who? podcast, host Heather Creekmore delves deep into the ever-present fear of missing out—aka FOMO. As part of the “Fear Free Fall” series, Heather unpacks the spiritual roots of FOMO, exploring how it impacts our faith, contentment, and even our relationship with God.
Heather explains that FOMO isn’t just a modern phenomenon brought on by social media; it goes back as far as the Garden of Eden. Through honest reflection and biblical truth, she challenges listeners to consider whether FOMO is really about doubting God’s goodness and wondering if He’s holding out on us.
You’ll learn:
- Why FOMO can reveal a lack of “little faith” in your daily life
- The connection between social media envy and spiritual insecurity
- How the story of Adam and Eve perfectly illustrates our struggle with FOMO
- Why God’s timing isn’t the same as God’s favor, and what that means for you
- The myth of competition and the futility of trying to “win” at life through comparison
- How to stop chasing others’ dreams and dig into your unique, God-given calling
- What true abundance and blessing really look like—and how it differs from what social media promises
Heather encourages listeners to stop focusing on someone else’s life and instead trust that God’s plan for YOU is personal, intentional, and truly satisfying. If comparison has kept you feeling “less than,” this episode offers authentic hope and practical gospel wisdom to help you stop comparing and truly start living.
Resources & Links:
- Heather Creekmore’s Website & 10 Days of Encouragement
- The Book: The Comparison Free Life
- Coaching with Heather Creekmore
Connect with Heather:
If you enjoyed this episode, please leave a 5-star review and help others find gospel-based encouragement!
Transcript
Disclaimer: This transcript is AI-generated and has not been edited for accuracy or clarity.
Heather Creekmore [00:00:02]:
Life Audio. Hey, friend, Heather Creekmore here. Glad you're listening to the Compared to who podcast. We are in a series. It's called Fear Free Fall. And the idea behind it is to recognize those things that are keeping us afraid, call them out and put some gospel truth in front of them, to squash them so that we can live with greater faith. And we've talked about suffering. Well, that was a fun one.
Heather Creekmore [00:00:32]:
We talked about fear of rejection. We talked about fear of failure. And today we're talking about the fear of missing out. What if everyone else's life is really better than mine and I'm missing out on all the things ever felt that way? I have. That's where we're going today. I'm so glad you're here for it. Hey, if we don't know each other yet, go to heathercreekmore.com and and you can learn more about me and the ministry of compared to who and what we do to help encourage women to grow in their faith. I've got 10 days of encouragement to give you there.
Heather Creekmore [00:01:09]:
Sign up for the email list. I will send you an encouraging email every week after that, but you can unsubscribe at any time. But hey, I you get a lot of sale emails, a lot of spam emails, a lot of people asking for your bank account information so you can inherit something from a prince and become wealthy, right? This is going to be different than all of that. This email is just going to be encouragement for your heart. Who doesn't need that? So sign [email protected] now let's get to today's show O FOMO. Man, that term FOMO, I don't know when it came out. I feel like it's been. Has it been a decade already.
Heather Creekmore [00:01:55]:
And when the term came out, that was all I saw on social media. I think pastors preach sermons on it. I mean, every Christian woman, influencer, speaker was talking about fomo. Fomo, fomo. Fear of missing out, fear of missing out. But it's been a while since it's been hot. And as we talk about fears and things that we are afraid of, and really in this conversation of things we're afraid of, what we're really saying is these are areas where I have a hard time making my faith apply to my daily life or my daily struggle or my daily challenge, right? We say we have a big faith, right? I've got faith that Jesus died on the cross, and I've got faith that God made the whole world. And I've got this Big faith.
Heather Creekmore [00:02:41]:
But what we're sometimes missing is a faith that applies to what we live through every day. I call that a little faith. And so how do we have a little faith? That's what we're doing in this series. And today we're talking about how do you find some faith, some little faith? When you are scrolling the Gram or TikTok or YouTube or whatever, you scroll, maybe you're flipping through the channels, maybe you're old school and flipping through a magazine, that sounds kind of refreshing now after having social media for so long, doesn't it? But whatever you're flipping through, looking at, observing, and that feeling starts to creep in. You know the feeling, maybe it starts with a pit in your stomach. Maybe it's just a little bit of a queasiness. You're like, oh, I wish I had that. Oh, I wish I looked like that.
Heather Creekmore [00:03:38]:
I wish I was going on vacation there. I wish my life looked more like that. And when we have those thoughts, those feelings, those I wish things were different for me feelings, what's often happening is two things. Okay, thing one, so we may be envying or coveting. Oh, I don't think you wanted me to say that, right? But I gotta be honest with you, right? I have to love you and give you the truth in love, there may be some sin involved, okay? And so we gotta. We gotta take care of that, right? But in saying I wish I had what she has, we're expressing a fear under that, which is, I wonder if I'm missing out on something. And the fear under that is, I wonder if God's not being as good to me as he is to her. I wonder if God loves her more than he loves me.
Heather Creekmore [00:04:45]:
I wonder if God is playing favorites. He's nicer to her. Man, look at her life. She's got everything going for her. And look at me over here. What we're really doing is we're wondering if God's holding out on us. We're questioning God's goodness, aren't we? Yikes. Good news is, this isn't new.
Heather Creekmore [00:05:13]:
We didn't come up with this. This predates social media, the interwebs. It predates magazines, predates the printing press. It goes all the way back to Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, when God gave them one simple instruction. Don't eat of this tree. You can eat of all the other trees. Enjoy everything in this luscious garden. It's just this one tree.
Heather Creekmore [00:05:40]:
Don't eat of this tree. And when Eve decided to listen to the Serpent. The serpent lied to her, of course. He said to God, really say that? And Eve's wheel started turning, huh? He said, if we eat it, we'll die. And the serpent's like, you're not gonna die. And Eve must have thought, yeah, I'm probably not gonna die. I mean, if she really believed she was gonna die, if she really believed God and took God at his word and believed she was gonna die, she probably wouldn't have eaten the fruit, right? She would have told the serpent to bug off. She didn't want to be dead.
Heather Creekmore [00:06:15]:
But instead, she ate it. She believed him. And I have to wonder if, as her wheels were turning, the real thought process was, hmm, I wonder what's so good about this tree that God doesn't want me to have it. I wonder what I'm wait for it missing out on. I wonder why God's holding back from giving me something so wonderful. And instead of trusting God, instead of believing God, right? Eve did the opposite. She doubted God's character. She actually insulted God's character, right? She's like, oh, God isn't generous with me.
Heather Creekmore [00:07:03]:
God doesn't love me. God's holding out on me. And so she ate the fruit. And friend, I think when we struggle with fomo, the fear of missing out, that's the heart behind our struggle most of the time is the question, is God holding out on me? Is there something better that he has for me and just not giving it to me yet? And then some of us take that as a challenge, right? Like, oh, okay, maybe God wants me to do abc and then he will unlock def. And some of us just get frustrated and mad and, I don't know, maybe pouty with God. Like, I don't believe in God. It's not fair she got this and I didn't. Some of us doubt God even more, right? Like God, if you really loved me, then you would xyz.
Heather Creekmore [00:07:53]:
We can turn into complainers. Scripture tells us that envy can make us bitter and rot our bones out. Like, it can have health consequences on us, right? But between the envy and the covetousness between us doubting God's goodness, between us underestimating God's character, right? No wonder we're afraid, right? No wonder we get caught in fomo. No wonder the fear rules our faith. Because like we talked about about a month ago, our faith has to be in God. Our faith has to be in God's character. Our faith has to be in everything God says is true and that God is good and that he loves me so, so much. And that he actually wants what's best for me, that he's a good father.
Heather Creekmore [00:08:45]:
I have to fully 100% believe in my heart of hearts. And of course sometimes I'm gonna doubt, but I have to believe God is good all the time. I have to believe that about his character. And then I have to believe that he's a personal God, that he knows me, that he knows me intimately, like Scripture says. He knows the number of hairs on my. He knows the number of my days. I have to believe he cares enough and I have to believe he's involved. He wasn't just like, oh, here, Pop Heather on the planet.
Heather Creekmore [00:09:22]:
Good luck. I'll check in with you when you die. No, he's involved. He's a personal God in that he walks with us, he talks with us. We can know him through Jesus thanks to Jesus. Right? We can commune with God, our relationship with God is restored. Right. But when we have the fear of missing out, we have a theological issue, we have a problem.
Heather Creekmore [00:09:49]:
And that's what we're going to look at today, right after this quick break. Okay, so if you were to like Google fomo, what is fomo? You'd read something like this. FOMO is like the anxious feeling that something better, more meaningful or more exciting is happening without out you there, right? And it can be triggered, you know, by social media. By comparison, you feel like everyone's ahead of you. It can also be a scarcity mentality, which I've done several episodes on scarcity mentality. I think that's really important. I talk about a lot of this in my book, the Comparison Free Life, which is really a book about understanding grace. I know you might not have thought my book on comparison was really about grace, but it is, and that's what makes it so good.
Heather Creekmore [00:10:35]:
So if comparison is something you are struggling with all the time, I really hope you'll pick up a Comparison Free life. It used to be called the Burden of Better, but has a pretty new cover and a pretty new title. And you guys like it might be the favorite, my favorite book that I've written because, oh, goodness, until we understand God's grace, we do stay stuck in things like FOMO and comparison and fear of failure and fear of rejection and all these things. So go check out that book. But beneath all of our scrolling and our striving, our fear of missing out reveals a spiritual ache. It reveals a way that we misunderstand who God is and how he works. And I think the first way we do this is we confuse God's timing with God's favor. We say this lie to ourselves.
Heather Creekmore [00:11:25]:
Or maybe more accurately, we allow the enemy to whisper this lie in our ears and we believe him. But the lie goes like this. If God really loved me, then I'd have what she has. If God really loved me, I'd look like her. I'd have a husband like hers. I'd have a home like hers. I'd have a job like hers. I'd have vacations like hers.
Heather Creekmore [00:11:52]:
And when someone gets those things that we've prayed for or longed for, we tend to doubt God's goodness to us. We tend to. And I think we've really been trained this way by culture. But we tend to view our lives as a competition, one in which we are always trying to get ahead or be first or at least just be on pace with everyone. And the question I ask when this comes up, when I'm coaching women, because I coach women around body image issues, it's one of the great joys of my life to talk to women about these issues and have deeper spiritual conversations about really the roots of these issues. We're not just talking about, like, how you eat and how you exercise. No, no, no. We go deep into the spiritual roots of these issues because heart, body image issues are not biological or physiological or even appearance issues.
Heather Creekmore [00:12:49]:
Our body image issues are spiritual issues. And so when I'm talking to women about these issues and we're talking about this drive they have to compete and to win. And they need to look better because they need to win, I always ask them this question, what do you win? And a lot of times they'll laugh and be like, no, seriously, like, what do you win? Like, is there a prize for being the most beautiful 45 year old in your town? Like, is that a thing? Or maybe there's a prize for being the skinniest 50 year old in your state. I don't know. Like, are you in a competition? Maybe it's a prize in your family. Whoever can stay looking the youngest after a certain age gets a prize. Whoever can delay forehead wrinkles a lot. Like, what do you win? What is this prize? Because oftentimes I'm talking to women who have spent a great deal of their life working on their bodies or working on the way they look.
Heather Creekmore [00:13:50]:
And so I'm like, man, you are putting so much effort in here. What are you gonna win? And they laugh. They're like, heather, I know I don't win anything, like, except for maybe my own satisfaction. And then I always am Able to challenge them on that one. Oh, your own satisfaction. How's that going for you? Are you satisfied? And then they laugh even harder and say, well, no. Like, yeah, I don't think you're satisfied. Otherwise you wouldn't be talking to me.
Heather Creekmore [00:14:17]:
And so what do you win? It's not a competition. And what happens too often is we blame God for feeling like we're losing the race. We're not keeping up, we're not in the lead in the competition, and we blame Him. And we say, you've given your favor to someone else. Why don't you see me, God? Why aren't you blessing me like that? And that's just not true, right? Maybe it's God's grace to you that you're not out front like she is. I don't know. But I do know it's not consistent with Scripture to believe that, yes, God does shower his favor on us. It's a wonderful gift, right? But Scripture tells us, Psalm 84:11, no good thing does he withhold from those who walk uprightly.
Heather Creekmore [00:15:17]:
God's goodness isn't in limited supply. It's not like, oh, you can't have that thing now because God already gave them all away. Whoopsie, sorry, you were last in line. No, that's just not biblical. Our problem is we forget how good he is and we forget that he has a good plan and his plan isn't a competition. Her story and her victory quote unquote, is not your missed opportunity. God is still writing your story. It's not over yet.
Heather Creekmore [00:15:54]:
The other theological challenge that is behind fomo, fear of missing out. And we mentioned this briefly, but really behind FOMO is the faith issue that we don't fully trust that God sees us. We wonder if God is actually aware of the way he made us, the gifts he gave us, the calling he put on our lives, the desires we have. And maybe because of that, we say yes to everything. We don't save it for our best. Yes, we say yes to everything. We try everything, try every open door, because we have to pave our own way, carve our own path. Because God just like again, dropped us here on the planet with.
Heather Creekmore [00:16:41]:
With these gifts and callings and passions, and we can't actually trust him to do anything about it, to open any doors for us. So we got to knock on them all and barge through them all ourselves. Right? But that's not theologically consistent either, right? God is a personal God. He does see us. And I know in my life he's opened doors that I couldn't even figure out how to get to. And those doors that I've tried to crash through myself or break open myself, oh, goodness. A lot of times those were really bad doors to walk through. My life has always gone better when I've been surrendered to God and said, okay, God, I know this is the calling you gave me.
Heather Creekmore [00:17:28]:
I know this is the gifting you gave me. Now will you open the door and show me where to use it? You know, scripture says in Psalm 139, 16, that all the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to be. God has a good plan for you. It's a personal plan for you. And you can't miss out on what God has prepared for you. Again, it's for you. So there's no, I need what she has. What she has, what she has.
Heather Creekmore [00:18:06]:
This is for you. And real trust, real faith in God, not faith in our plans. We talked about that about a month ago too, right? We tend to say we have faith, but the faith is that my plan will work and then everything will work out right. But real faith is not faith in my plan. Real faith is faith in Jesus and knowing that ultimately he's got me, he's got a good plan for me. And so trust replaces our fear of missing out. Only when we realize we're not in charge of opening the doors, God is. And think about how much pressure that relieves.
Heather Creekmore [00:18:42]:
Man, the pressure is off. If I can just relax and say, okay, God, I know you've made me on purpose, for purpose, show me, lead me, take me to the places you want me to be. Of course, I think the biggest angle to why we Christian women wrestle with FOMO is because we're more afraid of missing out on those things that we see around us that look like life, that they look life giving, they look magical, they look amazing. Wow, that woman lost weight. That must be amazing. Wow, that woman got a new car. That must feel amazing. And all of those things are idolatrously showing us a tale of this is where life is.
Heather Creekmore [00:19:27]:
This is where contentment is. This is where rest is, this is where joy is. And we believe those lies instead of believing that what we should be most concerned about missing out on is God's good plan for our lives. Right? I should be most concerned about chasing life in these other ways, trying to find life in getting a new body or a better body, trying to find life in the right man, trying to find. Find life in doing family life a certain way. And what I should be most afraid of is doing, chasing all those things to find life and missing out. So I use this illustration in my first book, compared to who, and it's an illustration that came to me while I was in the airport. So, Eric, my husband, and I, we were traveling to a pastor's conference, and we were super early because we used to fly out of dfw and Dallas airport was always crazy.
Heather Creekmore [00:20:21]:
And so we got there way early, and we were sitting there way too early at our gate, and I decided to do a little people watching. And what I noticed in the airport is that people walk with determination in an airport. I mean, it's kind of like being in New York City, or I used to live in D.C. and have the same vibe in D.C. or New York City, where people are just walking in suits, carrying briefcases or nice leather bags, and they're walking with purpose. They know where they're going. And I was like, man, that's a lot like the airport. You don't really ever see anyone walk through the airport.
Heather Creekmore [00:20:59]:
I mean, they're looking at the gates, maybe looking at the board, maybe looking at the restaurants or trying to find the bathroom. Right? But most people walk through airports pretty quickly, and they're headed for a specific destination. They don't dawdle. As I sat at the gate, and we were actually headed to Miami for the conference, as I said, at the Miami gate, I didn't see anyone kind of stumble up and look at the Miami gate and be like, oh, I'd like to go to Miami. Huh? Maybe I should go to Miami today. All these people look like they're gonna have a great time going to Miami. Maybe I should go to Miami. Now I'm singing a Will Smith song in my head.
Heather Creekmore [00:21:40]:
You know what I mean? Going to Miami. But I didn't see that happen at all. Why not? Well, because after September 11, they changed things in the airport significantly, right? Where you can only actually get into the innards of the airport through security if you have, what, a boarding pass and what is written on your boarding pass? Your destination. You actually can't just walk into an airport without a destination. You can't walk into an airport and be like, oh, I'm supposed to go to Miami. I think I'm gonna go to Minnesota instead. Instead. I mean, if that happens to you, you're actually pretty angry, right? That means your flight has been changed or canceled or derailed, and you're frustrated.
Heather Creekmore [00:22:27]:
People in the airport walk with confidence and determination because they know what their destination is. And yet, for Many Christian women. We're confused about our destination. We're scrolling, we're thinking, her destination looks good. Oh, wow. It looks like she's headed to Miami. Here I am sitting in Minnesota in the dead of winter. That's no fun.
Heather Creekmore [00:22:51]:
I'm ready to go to Miami too. How do I get to Miami? And we forget to read what's written on our boarding pass. We forget that God has a specific plan and purpose for each of our lives. And in trying to chase the way she did life or the way she did life or the way she does life, and trying to have a ministry like hers, a marriage like hers, a house like hers, and trying to be fit. Fit like she is, or eat like she does, or put great Christian memes and thoughtful blogs up like she does. Right. Instead of asking, God, what do you have for me? We're just becoming copycats of everyone else. Why? Because we think that's where we'll find life.
Heather Creekmore [00:23:39]:
We think that's where the blessing is hiding. But here's some things we forget. First of all, the blessing isn't hiding. We just have to remember that we can't see it all. We don't know everything God is doing behind the scenes. We don't really even know what blessing looks like, friend. Because honestly, I can tell you some things in my life that I prayed for that I thought were gonna be big blessings were not. And then there've been things in my life when I was like, no, God, I don't want that.
Heather Creekmore [00:24:07]:
I want nothing to do with that. I am not interested in that. And. And it came, and it's like, whoa, that was a huge, huge blessing. You know, I had two book ideas at the same time, and one of them was the Body Image Workbook, and one of them was the aging book. And I'll be honest with you, I was 47, and I was like, yeah, I'm kind of interested in the aging. But I was really excited about the Body Image book. But the aging book.
Heather Creekmore [00:24:40]:
That contract came through right away, and I just had a great relationship, a great time working with our daily bread on that book. And again, in my heart, I'm like, yeah, but the real blessing is this Body Image workbook. The real blessing is the work I get to do over here on this book. But yet I was faithful. I was faithful to the aging book and put my heart into that and thought it turned out okay. And what I didn't expect was what a blessing that book would be. Do you know there are more than 85,000 copies of that book out in the world, 85,000. It was a huge blessing to me, but it wasn't the way I would have planned it.
Heather Creekmore [00:25:25]:
It wasn't what I thought a blessing was supposed to look like. I thought a blessing was supposed to look like this other book idea I had. God is always working. He is always doing things that we can't see or know. And that's why our best choice is to trust Him. You're not missing out on anything, friend. You just gotta look to him more. The other thing we get confused about is what the word abundance really means, right? I mean, social media teaches us abundance is like number of friends, number of followers, like amount of activity and how visible you are, right? That's successful.
Heather Creekmore [00:25:59]:
That's what living fully means. Living fully means you got thousands of followers and you have a fabulous life and fabulous clothes and you look fabulous, right? And we think that that's what abundant life is. But friend, if you read John 10:10, right, Jesus came that we could live abundantly, right? The first part of that is the thief comes to steal, kill and destroy, right? But Jesus came that we could live life abundantly. That's not what abundant life is. Abundant life is about depth. Abundant life is about being so deeply rooted in Christ that we can do what Paul says in Philippians. We can be content in all circumstances because our deepest satisfaction, our deepest joy comes from our relationship with Him. The world's abundance is full schedule, full bank account, a full closet.
Heather Creekmore [00:26:56]:
And God's abundance is a full heart. And we chase what others are doing when we're trying to find life in all the different ways they're showing us that we might find life. We miss the quiet, beautiful, unseen abundance of what God is doing inside of us that maybe no one else sees but goodness. We're growing, he's working. And that's where true abundance is. Bottom line, as we close here today, friend, fear of missing out is really a distrust of God's goodness, right at its core. It's being more afraid of missing others lives than God's plan. And I don't want to be more afraid of missing out on what others have than I am of missing out on God's good plan for me.
Heather Creekmore [00:27:46]:
But what it reveals about my heart is that my heart doubts. My heart wonders, is God's plan gonna be enough for me? I'm just like Eve. Am I gonna be okay if I have all the other trees, but not that tree? Mmm, I don't know. Do I believe God's holding out on me, that he's got something better he's keeping from me. But we know that's not true. We know that's not God's character. We know. Psalm 138.
Heather Creekmore [00:28:13]:
- The Lord will fulfill his purpose. For me, the only antidote to the fear of missing out is faith that God is good, that I can trust him, that his story for me is intentional. It's sacred. It's beautiful. And it's going to be for my good and his glory. And when I can truly believe that, I can stop chasing what others have and I can start resting. So here's what I want you to do.
Heather Creekmore [00:28:47]:
Today as we close, I want you to think, in what areas of my life have I felt like maybe God was holding out on me? Have I been afraid I'm missing out? Maybe you've seen that woman lose weight and you're like, oh, man, she's living such an amazing life now that she's used Ozempic and lost all that weight. Okay, maybe she does feel better, friend, but that's not where life is. Life is not in weight loss. Life is not in getting a new house. In fact, I heard this story. It broke my heart of a woman who just really had everything. Like, she married a man who was very well off, and they bought a beautiful home. And as soon as they moved in, she decided she needed another, better home.
Heather Creekmore [00:29:29]:
And as soon as she moved into that one, she decided she needed to do upgrades on that home and redo the bathrooms and redo the kitchen. And so they spent years fixing up this home to make it her perfect home. And at the end of it all, they divorced because it wasn't enough. She tried to find life in having the perfect home, and it wasn't there. And friend, I promise you, whatever ways you are seeing other people find life, that's not where life is. God stamped something on your boarding pass. He made you on purpose for his purpose. What's that purpose you say, Heather? I have no idea.
Heather Creekmore [00:30:12]:
And friend, honestly, if you've been stuck in body magic just for a while, that makes sense to me, right? Because you've been so focused on the outside that God's purpose has kind of had to be, I don't know, second place, third place, fourth place, right? It's like, I gotta get my body looking a certain way, and then I'll do what God wants me to do. Do you know your spiritual gifts? That's a great place to start. How did God make you? How did he wire you? What things are you passionate about? What gifts has he given you that can combine with issues that you're passionate about. That's a sweet spot where you're going to find something maybe he has for you to do. And when you find that thing at that intersection of the way you've been gifted and called and what you have a passion about, oh, friend, you start going after what he has for you to do. That's when you're gonna find life. That's when you're gonna feel like, wow, this is why I'm here. Nothing makes you feel more alive than that.
Heather Creekmore [00:31:11]:
And that's really when you're gonna defeat that fear of missing out. Because you're no longer gonna think, I need a life like hers or hers or hers or hers. You're gonna know, oh, this is exactly the life God has designed me to live. And man friend, that feels good. I want that for you. If you need help, if that's like, oh, Heather, I have no clue how to find that, how to do that, reach out. We've got coaching available. I'd love to help you figure out what God designed you for so you can stop focusing on your body and stop comparing yourself to others and feel like you're missing out and really start living.
Heather Creekmore [00:31:48]:
That's my heart for you, and I know it's possible. Hey, thank you for listening today. I hope you've enjoyed this whole series on Fear Free Fall. Next week we're going to move on to something really interesting. How altered images change our brain wiring. Because you are seeing altered images all the time, my friend, so that's going to be a good one. Don't miss out on that episode. I'm glad you listened today.
Heather Creekmore [00:32:11]:
I hope you are too. If this show's blessed, you will you leave us a review? Your 5 star reviews are so important to this show, being available and shown to other people who are looking for help and encouragement. So leave us a review if you can. Hey, thank you for being here once again. I know you got a lot of podcast choices. Thanks for choosing this one and I hope something today has helped you stop comparing and start living. Bye. Bye.
Heather Creekmore [00:32:39]:
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