About Eunice

Eunice

The Early Programming

I grew up watching two completely different versions of womanhood. During my early childhood in Mexico, my mother was a strong, independent single woman. She worked hard, she was disciplined, and she carried the responsibility of raising me while building a life for us. I admired her strength and resilience. But everything changed when she entered a new relationship.

Over time, I watched her become a different version of herself — a woman who slowly began losing the independence I had once admired. Without realizing it, I absorbed a powerful belief very early in life: Independence equals freedom. Dependence means losing yourself.

So I made a quiet decision as a child. I would always be independent.

The Identity I Built

At 18 years old, I moved to the United States, and those years became some of the most formative years of my adult life. The American culture exposed me to entrepreneurship, ambition, and the belief that you could create your own opportunities through discipline and hard work. I built my career there, developed my business mindset, and learned how to execute and create results.

On the outside, I looked like the strong, capable woman who could handle anything. But internally, something was missing. I had built success through discipline, productivity, and control, but I was operating almost entirely from masculine survival energy. I knew how to work hard. But I didn't know how to integrate my emotional world, my intuition, or my vulnerability into my leadership.

The Internal Conflict

Inside of me, two forces were constantly fighting. One part of me was the responsible, structured version of myself — disciplined, logical, always evaluating every decision and pushing forward. The other part of me was creative, intuitive, curious about life, cultures, and human transformation.

That tension started showing up everywhere in my life — especially when I entered a serious relationship. For the first time, I began to realize that the identity of the strong independent woman I had built wasn't as balanced as I thought.

Conflict

The Collapse

Eventually, the identity that had once made me successful stopped working. I started feeling disconnected from my purpose. Business ideas that once excited me no longer felt aligned. I began questioning everything I had built and the direction my life was taking.

So I made one of the boldest decisions of my life. I left the life I had built in the United States and moved alone to Europe. Most people around me thought I was crazy. But for me, it was a search for something deeper — clarity, meaning, and a life that felt aligned with who I was becoming.

The Dark Night

When I arrived in Europe, the reality was much harder than I expected. None of my business ideas were working. I felt lost, isolated, and unsure if I had made the biggest mistake of my life. For the first time in years, the identity of the woman who always had a plan and always figured things out stopped working.

I started questioning whether I had moved closer to my dream life — or further away from it. It was one of the lowest emotional moments of my life. But something important happened during that time. Instead of escaping the loneliness, I faced it.

The Turning Point

During that period, I began reconnecting with practices that had been part of my life for many years — mindfulness, journaling, emotional awareness, and deep self-reflection. But this time, something was different. I started combining those practices with something I had learned from my years building a career in the United States: structure and execution.

I began regulating my nervous system, setting boundaries, and building simple habits that grounded me. And slowly, clarity started coming back. I realized something powerful. My biggest problem had never been business strategy. It was identity fragmentation and emotional dysregulation. I had been trying to build external success while my internal structure was unstable.

The Pattern I Discovered

As I began understanding my own transformation, I started noticing the same pattern in many women around me. Women often fall into one of two extremes. Some become extremely independent — carrying everything alone, burning out, and struggling emotionally while trying to hold everything together. Others become deeply dependent on relationships for stability and direction. Both extremes create chaos. Neither creates real freedom.

My Philosophy

Through my journey — and through living across three different cultures: Mexico, the United States, and Europe — I began seeing leadership from a much wider perspective. Each culture taught me something different. Mexico showed me the importance of emotional depth and human connection. The United States taught me ambition, entrepreneurship, and execution. Europe gave me the space to question everything and rebuild my identity with intention.

What I discovered is this:

Success without emotional regulation always leads to chaos.

A powerful woman is not the one who simply works harder or pushes through everything alone. A powerful woman is the one who learns how to regulate herself, trust her intuition, and build structure that supports her vision.

Philosophy

The Work I Do Today

This realization is what led me to create Inside GLOW. Today I help women entrepreneurs move from emotional chaos to structured self-leadership. Through identity awareness, nervous system regulation, and decision frameworks, they learn how to create clarity, stability, and consistent growth in their businesses and lives.

Because when a woman stabilizes herself internally, everything changes. She stops chasing opportunities. She starts attracting them. And she builds a life that feels aligned with who she truly is becoming.