Embracing Self-Love and Holistic Wellness with Sherri Dindal and Christa Dias, co-owners of Wholesome Hippy
- Savannah Rose Johnson, BA, CLC, RTT.P

- 3 days ago
- 40 min read
In this episode of the Eclipse Evolution podcast, host Savannah Rose connects with Sherri Dindal and Christa Dias, co-owners of Wholesome Hippy, to discuss their journey in creating an all-natural skincare and wellness brand. They share their mission of promoting self-love and holistic wellness, particularly in addressing issues like anxiety, menopause, and the unique challenges faced by women. The conversation emphasizes the importance of self-advocacy in healthcare and the need for more open discussions about women's health issues. Sherri and Christa highlight their innovative products designed to support mental and physical well-being, including solutions for neurodiversity and hormonal balance. Their mission to promote self-love and holistic beauty resonates deeply, offering valuable insights into caring for our bodies inside and out.
Conversation Snapshots:
1. The Birth of Wholesome Hippie
Sherri and Christa share the inspiration behind Wholesome Hippie, which launched in March 2020, a challenging time marked by the COVID-19 pandemic. The duo started their brand out of necessity, particularly addressing Sherri's sensitive skin and the desire to avoid harsh chemicals. They quickly pivoted to create wellness products that cater to various needs, driven by a commitment to using clean, natural ingredients. Their best-sellers include a topical magnesium cream aimed at alleviating anxiety and promoting relaxation, which became a hit on TikTok in 2023.
2. A Labor of Love
The magnesium cream, initially developed for Sherri's daughter, highlights the personal connection behind their products. After researching alternative options to pharmaceuticals for managing anxiety, they discovered the benefits of magnesium supplementation. The effectiveness of their cream not only helped children but also adults facing anxiety, pain, and sleep issues. Sherri and Christa emphasized the importance of quality ingredients, creating blends that cater to various needs, such as the "super sleepy" blend and the "daytime focus" blend for those struggling with attention.
3. Addressing Menopause and Inclusivity
One of the standout aspects of Wholesome Hippie is its focus on inclusivity, particularly concerning menopause. Sherri and Christa discuss the lack of conversation surrounding menopause and the need for products that cater to this demographic. They aim to empower women by addressing the changes that come with aging and providing natural alternatives to traditional medications. Their philosophy emphasizes that wellness is for everyone, encouraging people to embrace aging as a gift rather than a burden.
4. Wellness Beyond Beauty
While Wholesome Hippie began as a beauty brand, the founders stress that their mission goes beyond aesthetics. They aim to help individuals manage everyday challenges, whether it’s anxiety, headaches, or skin conditions. Sherri’s personal experiences with eczema and migraines fueled their commitment to creating effective, natural solutions. Their holistic approach to wellness integrates beauty and health, ensuring that customers not only feel good on the inside but look good on the outside as well.
In this enlightening conversation, Sherri and Christa exemplify the power of self-love and holistic wellness. Their journey with Wholesome Hippie is a testament to the importance of listening to our bodies and addressing our needs through natural, inclusive products. Key takeaways include the significance of magnesium for mental and physical health, the necessity of addressing menopause openly, and the value of creating products that cater to everyone’s wellness journey.
For more information about Wholesome Hippy, Sherri, and Christa, please visit the links below.
Website: https://wholesomehippy.com/
Sherri's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/therealslimsherri/
Stay Connected with Savannah Rose
Website: www.eclipseevolution.com
Podcast Instagram: @eclipseevolutionllc
Savannah's Instagram: @the_savannahrose
YouTube: @the_savannahrose
TikTok: @the_savannahrose
Below is the companion video, timestamps, full transcript, and also available streaming platforms.
Thanks for listening!
Chapters:
00:00 Introduction to Wholesome Hippie
02:09 The Mission Behind Wholesome Hippie
06:29 Creating Products for Wellness
11:01 Navigating Anxiety and Mental Health
13:40 Embracing Aging and Menopause
19:06 The Importance of Women's Health Conversations
24:55 Natural Alternatives to Pharmaceuticals
28:29 Breaking the Silence on Women's Health
30:40 The Importance of Advocacy in Healthcare
32:46 Empowering Women to Speak Up
35:03 Understanding Postpartum and Women's Experiences
38:58 The Need for Change in Women's Healthcare
42:03 Holistic Approaches to Wellness
48:46 Wholesome Hippie's Mission and Products
Podcast Streaming Platforms:
Companion Video:
Transcript:
Savannah Rose (00:01.695)
Hello, hello, and welcome to the Eclipse Evolution podcast. I'm your hostess, Savannah Rose. Thank you so much for joining me today. I'm so excited to connect with you all. Thank you for such a beautiful 2025 year. The growth has just been truly heartwarming. And I'm so excited to announce my final guest, plural, for the season for the year, Ms. Sherri and Krista. They're tuning in from my home state. Finally found someone in my neck of the woods to connect with.
Christa Dias (00:15.593)
you
Savannah Rose (00:29.629)
Their message of self-love and just promoting holistic wellness and beauty is something that I feel like you all will be able to connect with no matter where you are in your life, because really it's about the inside self-care that gives us our glow and gives us that true, I would say, holistic approach. But I'll let them explain more about what they have going on. It's very exciting. But whoever would like to start first, if you wouldn't mind just introducing yourselves and we can get this convo rolling.
Sherri Dindal (00:57.774)
I'll go first. I'm Sherri Dindal, I am a co-owner of Wholesome Hippie, an all-natural skincare company that's manufactured right here in the state of Georgia. And also on social media, I go by the real Slim Sherri. And so I make a lot of content, not just about holistic wellness, but also just about general everyday life. So that's me. I'll let Krista take it.
Savannah Rose (01:22.409)
Love it.
Christa Dias (01:23.925)
My name is Christa Dias. I am the other co-owner of Wholesome Hippie and I am not, I mean I'm on socials at That Too Mom Life, but I don't post a ton of content. I'm mainly doing like mostly Wholesome Hippie stuff, so yeah.
Savannah Rose (01:42.249)
Perfect. Yeah, the behind the scenes is just as important. Then we have a fourth guest. I forgot to introduce him. This is my loyal sidekick, Cuddly. He's one of my five cats. He'll be joining us today. You might see his tail from time to time. Yes. Well, perfect. Well, I appreciate y'all just taking the time out of your busy days. And so just to kind of kick things off, would you please share more about Wholesome Hippie? Because from my understanding, it is an inclusive
Christa Dias (01:50.773)
here.
Savannah Rose (02:11.369)
beauty along the lines of like skin care mostly products, but there's all different kinds of, I would say, needs that you cater to as well. I would just love to know more about how it started and the mission behind it.
Sherri Dindal (02:25.902)
Krista, go ahead.
Christa Dias (02:27.807)
Okay, so Wholesome Hippie, we're a small batch, all natural company, and honestly, a lot of it came from our own needs. Sherry has super, super sensitive skin. We try to be aware as much as we can of, you know, harsh chemicals and things that we put on our skin because hopefully you know, and if you don't, what you put on your skin goes in your skin. So it affects like all of it. And we do have...
a very, very hefty beauty side of our business. we also have we mainly our top sellers are our wellness products, which is like good for the whole family. So one of our we went super mega viral on TikTok in like fall of twenty twenty three, twenty twenty four, something like that.
Sherri Dindal (03:10.126)
2023.
Christa Dias (03:11.221)
2023, it's been a blur. then, and it was our magnesium cream, our topical magnesium cream that was our takeoff point. And we've been around, Wholesome Hippies been around since we actually launched in March of 2020, which wasn't ideal, but our, our cuts.
Savannah Rose (03:26.003)
One of our own. Yeah.
Sherri Dindal (03:28.75)
We didn't plan it that way.
Christa Dias (03:30.229)
Obviously we didn't say it way. But our customers ended up falling in love with the products. And when it was time to repurchase, was a crazy ride because we couldn't get containers. We were just doing mismatched stuff because the demand was so high. They loved it. So we've basically just been clawing our way through since March of 2020 and then going viral on TikTok. like I said, our biggest seller is our Magnus.
and that actually came from a need from our 14 year old daughter who at the time when we produced this was only 10 and she was going through some major anxiety situations and we were researching things we could do. The pediatricians of course was like well if you don't want to try big pharma meds which were not anti-big pharma we just look for alternative options first. She's like try L-theanine which is a magnesium.
So we tried that and they have like gummies and supplements that you can take but trying to get a 10 year old to swallow a capsule it was like near impossible and then when Sherry was trying to research how we you know feed her feed it to her like rich magnesium foods in her diet like there would just wasn't enough that she could eat and again a picky 10 year old isn't gonna you know down you know a bunch of spinach and like whatever you know so She had in her research figured out that when you actually take supplements you're only
8 to 10 % when it goes throu it's topical, it can be 40 and 60%. Um, and we use, quality ingredients in very, very big on like par long no no list. And um, that magnesium helps with functions in your body. A actually more than 80 % of
Savannah Rose (05:05.983)
wow.
Christa Dias (05:29.973)
your mood, can affect your sleep big time, it can affect anxiety. When someone is in an active panic attack, it's actually using all of the stores of magnesium in your body. So your body is in fight or flight mode when you're having an anxiety attack. your magnesium, any stored magnesium you have just goes right plummets, right? So it affects everything. So when we created this, I mean, we did it, we had our chemists like create like, this is what we're looking for, this is what we want, this is what we
Savannah Rose (05:42.207)
Thank
Christa Dias (05:59.835)
need and it's just it's been amazing. have now like five different, we call it our calm cream. We have five different blends of calm cream. We have a super sleepy. We have a daytime focus for all of my ADHD or just have a hard time focusing or staying awake in that like afternoon slump. We have a pain blend, which is great for arthritis and you know all headaches things like that. Joint pain, unscented. like so we've really grown that part of the wellness
aside and it just really stemmed from our 14 year old daughter.
Savannah Rose (06:34.207)
What a labor of love. I love stories like that where it's like you see a need and one that's close to your own heart and then, gosh, being able to share that with so many people, that's really special.
Sherri Dindal (06:45.934)
Yeah, it,
We didn't, you when you when you have a child that's going through something like that, and I think a lot of kids, it's funny because we happen to launch our company March of 2020 when COVID right before the break right before the shutdown, I call it a breakdown, because that's what it feels like right before the shutdown. You know, we didn't plan it that way, but we were we were there and not knowing, you know, then fast forward like a year later when the kids are kind of coming out of that, even though we were still in the thick of it, you know, not really, I think understanding what the long term effects were going to be on.
some of these kids, these COVID kids as they call them. And so we started seeing this, you know, anxiety surface with my now 14. And you want to, as a parent, you want to help them, right? And so naturally you take them to the doctor and you, you know, the doctor does what doctors do and instinctually, typically doctors would want to prescribe a pill. And like Krista said, we're not being anti-drug or anti-big pharma, but you you're trying to find alternatives.
for like how can I keep my kid healthy and help them through this thing? And so that was a labor of love. For me it was figuring out like okay, I did a bunch of investigating work around what could be causing her anxiety and I saw a lot of studies around low magnesium, low vitamin D3, low vitamin B6 and that we're in a world today where
Savannah Rose (07:50.729)
Mm-hmm.
Sherri Dindal (08:13.23)
agriculturally speaking, our food, we just don't have the same nutrition in our food that we once had. Our food has a lot less rich minerals and vitamins in it than it used to have 50 years ago. And so we're just not getting enough, we're not getting enough of all of vitamins and minerals, but magnesium plays a huge part in not, you know, just mood stability. Krista said sleep, it helps your muscles to relax and contract. you know, tension and muscle fatigue, menstrual cramps.
Savannah Rose (08:25.982)
So, thank
Sherri Dindal (08:43.184)
Magnesium can weigh on all of those things and so much more. And so I was like, well, you know, like Krista said, first thing was, I find a vitamin or a supplement? Good luck finding that on the market for kids that has magnesium, vitamin D3, vitamin B6. It does not exist. And then looking at all the foods, I'm like, well, the amount of food I'd have to feed her to get enough magnesium into her was just as, at the time, 10 year old, that sounds impossible.
It really was like a curiosity thing of like calling my manufacturer because we were new, we were about a year old and we were making a lot of body butters and we were making a lot of soap. We have amazing soaps and we were making all this stuff, you know, and I was like.
I had done research and I saw that magnesium was something you could do transdermally. So I called her and I was like, hey, we're already making these really awesome body butters. How hard would it be to add some magnesium and vitamin D3 to that? And she was like, we can do that. And so it started off, we almost called it Lily's Cream because it was for her. And then we tried it and it worked. And then we started sharing it with our customer base. And we had so much feedback coming back from people about how it was helping them.
Savannah Rose (09:43.826)
Wow.
Savannah Rose (09:47.815)
Yeah.
Sherri Dindal (09:58.864)
And it started off just as a lavender magnesium cream. now we have, like she said, we have five of them now. And even a sixth that we've added, which is our pain relief plus that has a bunch of other stuff in it. anyway.
You know, you develop something like that and then you try it and you see how much it helps your child and how it's now helping not just children, but it helps adults who struggle with anxiety, adults who struggle with pain, adults who struggle with sleep, adults who struggle with, you know, fibromyalgia and just a multitude of things. And it helps people. It makes that worth every single, you know, minute that I spent trying to figure out if I could help her. Because ultimately we make products that
We just want to help people.
Savannah Rose (10:44.287)
Mm. Ugh, that's what it's all about, y'all, isn't it? Gosh, that makes my heart so happy. I think it's just, I mean, this is why I do it. This is why I like to have really awesome guests like y'all on here, because not only do I get to connect and learn from you, but it's just such an honor for me to be able to help you share, like share your message and spread just the good work that y'all are doing. And right in time for the holidays, so a little shameless plug, too. I know, right?
Sherri Dindal (11:07.275)
Yes. I mean, who doesn't have anxiety around the holidays? My goodness.
Now, thank you for having us too. I mean, we love talking about Wholesome Hippie, but you know, I mean, we love talking about how we help people manage the day-to-day stuff, you know, not just beauty. Beauty is one aspect of it, and we started kind of as a beauty brand initially, although we had some wellness products in the beginning. I struggle with migraines, so we had a head rescue very early, and still have a head rescue. You know, we have stuff for first aid, know, an all-natural first aid.
Savannah Rose (11:35.696)
no.
Sherri Dindal (11:43.36)
That was one of our early products. But mostly we were body butters and soaps and we were the feel good stuff, right? And then beauty came along after that, like really good beauty, know, serums and moisturizers and all that stuff. But really the core of our business started with wellness. It really did start around eczema rescue. I had eczema really bad as a child and nothing helped. All the medications they gave me burned my skin. Everything broke me out. And so I wanted to
to something that would help kids with eczema. I wanted to help people with headaches. I wanted to help people with pain. Now I'm at the phase of life where I have a whole different level, which is menopause. I want to help people with that. when we, like you said, we see a need, we do try to fill it if we can. And people don't, I don't think the first logical place that your brain goes is like, hey, I should use a body butter for pain. That doesn't make sense, like in your brain, right? You're like, I should take an ibuprofen or use a muscle rub or something.
There are so many things that we can do through the skin to help manage those day-to-day things. while the bonus here is that not only do you get stuff that's good for your body, but it's also good for your skin. We are an all-natural, small batch. We make everything in small batches, all-natural, no GMOs, all clean ingredients. So we're making body butters with shea, cocoa, and mango butters that are just so you not only are doing good for the inside of your body,
Savannah Rose (13:04.915)
Mmm.
Sherri Dindal (13:13.687)
outside's gonna look good too. So there's a bonus.
Savannah Rose (13:16.443)
yeah, yeah, no, I love that. I think that's so important. And something that I really appreciated about Wholesome Hippie when I was exploring, which is the inclusivity aspect of it. I know one of y'all's kind of focuses on is agelessness. This is for everyone. Wellness is for everyone. But something I specifically wanted to highlight that I know you just mentioned, Sheri, was just these kind of targeted products that are for people going through menopause. Because I feel like menopause is something that isn't talked about enough.
And as women, we're all gonna go through it. And if you love a woman, you're going through it too because it changes so much about how we feel, about how we function. And I don't think it's something that is as honored as it should be, just in my opinion, because what a gift aging is. There's so many people that don't get to live to experience menopause. So if you're going through that, I think it's something that can be embraced. And I was just really happy to see for my mom and folks and
down the line, that there's something that is catering to that population and making it a part of the bigger conversation too, because I just don't think, again, I'm not anti-Big Pharma, maybe just a little bit, but I'm not anti it, but it's also something that I feel like does not prioritize the female population the way that it should, especially around menopause.
Christa Dias (14:27.924)
Okay.
Christa Dias (14:36.915)
Well, yeah, not, yeah, not only that, you know, when if you are on the younger side of Savannah's demographic.
you know, even after having a baby and like how you should feel after having a baby, for example, a lot of times doctors just gaslight the hell out of us, right? About like, well, that's just normal. That's just normal. That's just, and then once you get into our phase of perimenopause, which can happen as early as 35, when you can start getting brain fog and you know, some of the symptoms, there's a lot of symptoms that are go unnoticed by.
everybody when it comes to perimenopause. And again, I would urge you if you are in the era of having babies and things like that, just, you know, researching what you can do because their first line of defense is typically just meds, right? Meds, meds, meds, meds. Here, take this. Take this. It'll make you feel better after you have a baby because it's completely normal. You just have a baby. Your hormones are in complete out of whack because you've had a surge of hormones to carry the baby.
and then you get depleted of hormones after you have the baby and it's a mess. And so like I do wish we as a America as a society did more about post-maternal, you know, hormone balancing and you know, just even physical therapy. Like we went through, you went through a major trauma in your body by either having a C-section for one or, you know, or not having a C-section, having naturally either way. was a huge,
Savannah Rose (15:52.415)
and
Savannah Rose (16:01.255)
Yeah. Yeah.
Christa Dias (16:09.623)
It's surgical, right? After most surgeries, you have physical therapy. But for some reason here in America, we don't give physical therapy to women after they've had a C-section to be able to reuse their abdomen muscles. And again, I mean, I could go on and on, like, you know, our medical side of America, unfortunately, doesn't really take into consideration women's studies as much as they should.
Savannah Rose (16:15.921)
Over here.
Savannah Rose (16:35.24)
Agreed.
Sherri Dindal (16:35.649)
I would say first, wanna go, because I wanna go back to what you were saying, Savannah. It's very refreshing to see somebody that is younger thinking about.
what that's going to be like for them, or no recognizing that you have somebody in your life that you love that's going through that. Women, for the most part, have lived silently, quietly, suffered silently and quietly, as Krista said, being gaslit by doctors, going to the doctor, them just even, not even just maternity, but thinking about menopause, doctors saying, well, that's just the change of life. That just is how it is.
women have suffered and now there's studies coming out that are showing that the effects that that's having on women and our mortality. And so the mortality rate is now being looked at going, hey, we can actually prolong women's lives if we start looking at menopause, the menopausal age of life, where so many things are going wrong. for centuries, they've just said, they think that women, elder women, are just crazy.
We are crazy our hormones are completely out of whack our bodies are looking for a hormone. That's not being generated It's not being created anymore like it like it once was and so things start to go sideways and They write they write you off as just being crazy or you know old or whatever But now they're saying it's linked to you know our bone density. It's linked to our muscle Structure it's linked to fragility. You know like the you know your bones you get more brittle
our cognitive function, a lot of women. And not only that, take all of that out of the equation and just look at the mental health of women at this age. Krista's kind of touching on that with the post-maternity, the mental health aspect. You layer on not just your hormone depletion after having a baby, but then layer on being, generally when you have a new baby, you're also sleep deprived and sleep deprivation causes all kinds of problems. now take that and go into menopause.
Savannah Rose (18:21.023)
going.
Savannah Rose (18:34.974)
Mm-hmm.
Savannah Rose (18:41.757)
Mm-hmm.
Sherri Dindal (18:42.795)
Hormone depletion that's not coming back. That's number one number two. It affects your sleep It causes insomnia and all kinds of other things. So now you're not getting enough sleep now like that you add in the muscle issues and pain and joint inflammation and all this other stuff that comes out of nowhere that wakes you up and then throw in a few hot flashes and some night sweats and things get really wild and so if they want to know why we want to Maybe kill people for breathing too loud. That's why
Savannah Rose (18:46.623)
Mm-hmm.
Savannah Rose (19:06.162)
you
Christa Dias (19:12.2)
you
Sherri Dindal (19:12.681)
Okay? But there's so many things that are happening and what I love is that my age, my generation, my age range, we're starting to talk about it. Nobody warned us. Nobody talked about it. Our mothers, they kept it quiet. Their mothers kept it quiet. We're not being quiet about it. We're starting to talk about it. And I love that it's becoming a topic of conversation, especially for younger women, because that is your future.
Savannah Rose (19:24.511)
Mm-hmm.
Sherri Dindal (19:39.894)
And the more you know and the more educated you are, the younger you are, the more prepared you are, the more that you can advocate for yourself, the more that you can advocate for the greater community of women where it's like, there are things that we can do and we should be talking about. We developed a hormone balancing cream because there are women out there that can't do hormone replacement therapy. There are women out there that are looking for a natural solution. There are women out there that are just looking for something to help them feel
Christa Dias (20:01.78)
you
Sherri Dindal (20:10.488)
somewhat like the person they used to know because that's kind of what menopause does it kind of you kind of out goes one chapter and you you open a new one there is there is life past menopause there definitely is but But you know we wanted to develop something that gave them things that they could use to manage it naturally but also now I love seeing that we're there's conversations being had in even in Congress about Hormone replacement therapy for women that was you know men get their hormone replacement
Savannah Rose (20:14.131)
Mm-hmm.
Savannah Rose (20:20.329)
Yeah.
Sherri Dindal (20:39.887)
therapy paid for by insurance companies. We don't. They don't pay for women's hormone replacement therapy. So it's things like that. The more we talk about it, the more we put it out in front of people, the more young people like yourself become aware of this. Like, hey, wait a minute. Like, I wasn't thinking about menopause in my 20s. I wasn't thinking about it in my 30s. I didn't realize I was in perimenopause in my 40s. No, I had no idea. And so it wasn't until I actually arrived at, like, the phase of menopause where I was like, now all these things make sense once I started to
myself. So I like to spend time when I get the opportunity to educate people that are younger than me to say, hey, you should be thinking about this. Maybe it's early, but the earlier you think about it, the more you're aware of it, then when it happens, you are going to recognize it go, okay, I know what this is. I'm not just crazy. You can't just gaslight me into thinking that I'm crazy and I just have to accept it because it's the change or whatever the way of life. There's so much that we can do, especially as a collective.
to bring about that kind of awareness. And so I love that you're even willing to talk about it or have curiosity about it and that you recognize there's women in your life that are going through that.
Savannah Rose (21:39.935)
Mm-hmm.
Savannah Rose (21:50.119)
Absolutely. Well, thank you. I appreciate it. And thank you for being so open about sharing your own experiences and the mission behind what y'all do at Wholesome Hippie. And that's something I appreciated about just the messaging, that kind of subliminal aspect of what I was seeing on just the website where it's not, I didn't see any verbiage of anti-aging. I hate that so much because, well that and it's like, mean,
Sherri Dindal (22:11.255)
I hate it too. Because we're going to age, you can't stop it.
Savannah Rose (22:17.349)
Like I said before, what a gift aging is. I don't think it's something that is talked about enough. It's a blessing to be able to age, to be alive. And I think why I appreciate y'all's mission of this is a self-care thing. This is a mental health thing. Yes, you get to look good. Who doesn't want that? But also it's about really taking care of ourselves from the inside out. And I'm really glad that y'all brought up the...
Like the gaslighting that some people can experience when it comes down to like these very normal things that happen when our bodies are changing no matter what age we are, whether it's after having a baby or whether if you choose to do that or just going through something like menopause. I feel like it's something that is avoided because I think especially in American culture there's such a like the amount of value that's put on youth and then
as soon as we step away from youth, which is inevitable. It's like, we're not valued anymore. Therefore, the research, the conversations, the aid is also not available anymore and that's also avoided. But, and even in my field, because I'm in the mental health, mental wellness field and one of my specialties is helping people with psychedelics and using that as an alternative method of treatment. And I even remember, I'm solo practitioner now, but when I worked in a group practice,
Sherri Dindal (23:14.209)
yeah.
Savannah Rose (23:44.351)
the male practitioners and doctors did not consider how something like a psychedelic, like a substance that had both chemical and emotional impacts would change women's hormones. And that was something that a lot of my female clients and even myself going through my own training experience because of just the ingesting of a chemical that can throw your hormones out of whack. It threw my cycle out of whack.
Sherri Dindal (24:11.221)
yeah.
Savannah Rose (24:12.829)
And then like the changes that my body went through healing sexual trauma, healing emotional trauma and how our body also responds to that. I remember one of my clients thought she was pregnant because she healed so much during her treatments that her breast grew and her cycle was thrown off and she's like, my God, am I pregnant? And I'm like, well, go ahead and take the test if you want. But no, I think what you're experiencing is your body is responding to the emotional changes right now.
and all the male doctors were like, not just blown away, but I think they didn't even want to have that conversation. They're like, you're not an MD, you can't talk about that. And I'm like, but it's happening. It is real. Like people are impacted by this. So I get a little heated and fired up.
Sherri Dindal (25:00.362)
It's alright, I love it.
No, think it's that kind of passion that we need, I mean, we need that kind of passion in so many things, especially when it comes to women's health. again, how over, I can't say overlooked, but often overlooked in the medical world. I am going to be the first person to tell anybody out there listening, if you have a doctor that doesn't advocate for you, you have a doctor that doesn't listen to you, get a new doctor. Get a new doctor.
Savannah Rose (25:05.929)
Mm-hmm. Yeah.
Sherri Dindal (25:32.609)
The number of women I hear that say, my doctor won't listen, or they tell me this, or they tell me that, they're not listening to what you're saying, they're not really after trying to get to the root of whatever the issue is. Get a new doctor, get one that will listen to you, and will care about you, and will make you feel seen, because a lot of times, even if they can't fix you,
Having a doctor actually see you, actually hear what you're saying, and make you feel seen in that space, that feels safe in that space, that alone makes a huge difference when it comes to our mental health, especially as women. so, you know, those, like I said, I'm not anti-drug, but I try to take, I hate taking pills, I hate it. And especially because,
Savannah Rose (26:04.564)
Mm-hmm.
Sherri Dindal (26:20.994)
We live in this world that we live in. Watch any commercial that comes up on the television about some new drug and just listen to what they're saying. All the...
Savannah Rose (26:28.411)
It's crazy! Yeah.
Sherri Dindal (26:30.434)
Just think about that. The fact that they have to give us that disclaimer that, by the way, this could cause this, this, this, this, this, this, this, and this. What I really have freaked out by are the commercials around drugs that are for like depression or mental health, but then it says can cause suicidal thoughts and all these other, and I'm like, wait a minute. I'm supposed to take this to make me feel better about being depressed or make me be able to function, but it might actually make it worse. So it's that kind of stuff that I'm like, what is that?
Savannah Rose (26:43.817)
Mm-hmm.
Sherri Dindal (26:59.02)
If you just step back for a moment and think about what are they trying to tell you? They're trying to tell you that, this may not really be good for you, but we're going to give it to you anyway because it alters a part of your brain that makes you feel like you're healthy or feel better. But it doesn't mean that you're better on the inside, right? Or that your health is better. Because a lot of those drugs cause a lot of crazy side effects. And so again, back to part of our mission here is that we try to create products that don't have that. There's zero drugs in any of our
Savannah Rose (27:27.295)
Thank
Sherri Dindal (27:28.944)
products and we use nature. Nature has everything we need to heal us and so we create products that are all natural that you know are not going to have that icky effect on your on your body and you can feel good putting on your kids you can feel good putting on yourself you can feel good putting on your parents or your grandparents because everything that we make is for everybody in the family.
Savannah Rose (27:32.127)
Period.
Sherri Dindal (27:52.619)
including the men, because men always think, like they're like, can I, because we do live shows and talk about our products on TikTok. And we'll have guys that'll be like, can guys use this too? And I'm like, what part of what I was talking about made you feel like you couldn't use it?
Savannah Rose (28:05.183)
Yeah.
Sherri Dindal (28:06.734)
Except, mean, because we not the hormone balancing, although that's for guys too, because guys have hormones. But just any of our products are magnesium creams, whatever they're like, can guys can use this? And I'm like, why do think you can't use this? Do you have skin? You can put it on your skin. That's it.
Savannah Rose (28:21.031)
Sure?
Christa Dias (28:23.029)
Hey, don't want to interrupt and hopefully you can edit this out, but I have a package that has to be signed for. I'll be right back. I'll be just 30 seconds. All right.
Savannah Rose (28:29.417)
Go for it, yeah, no problem. I understand.
Sherri Dindal (28:31.694)
It's one of those FedEx where you have to sign and she of course they would show up while we're doing the podcast of course.
Savannah Rose (28:34.847)
Yeah, then, no, that's how it always goes, right? And then it's like a nightmare if you don't sign for it and you have to go to the warehouse and it's just the pain. Yeah, by all means, I understand.
Sherri Dindal (28:42.456)
yeah, yeah, yeah. So anyway, I love that you are, again, back to, I don't know, I'm guessing you're in your 20s somewhere. When I was your age, I was not thinking about any of those things. And so I love that we've, how our young...
where our youth and our young people are thinking today where we did not. But again, part of that had to do with the fact nobody was talking about it. Like I said, was, you menopause and...
postpartum after you've had a baby, anything really to do with women and their reproductive systems and just women's health in general was a very taboo subject for my mother's generation and my grandmother's. They just didn't talk about it. Women just suffered silently. And I think we've gotten to a point where it's like, but why are we doing that? We don't have to do that. And so a lot more women are speaking out. And I think that that's obviously trickling down
Savannah Rose (29:29.096)
and
Sherri Dindal (29:45.321)
to younger people and I love that. Because I wish somebody had been talking about it when I was younger because then I would have been like, is this something I should be thinking about? I might have been more curious. I might have had questions. Meanwhile, I'm over here just trying to figure it out because there's no rule book. There's no handbook. So wisdom and sage, the wise sages or whatever are starting to share that. But we're doing it in a way where
Savannah Rose (30:02.597)
I'm not.
Sherri Dindal (30:14.394)
like no, we're kind of more pissed off that nobody talked about it, so that's why we're talking about it. Yeah.
Savannah Rose (30:19.741)
Rightfully so. Shit. Yeah, no, absolutely. It makes sense. Yeah. And I mean, I wanted to circle back to something you said a second ago, Sheri, about the advocacy piece. And that's one of the reasons, like with a practitioner, like a doctor or someone, because that's why I wanted to bring this up, because it's something that I saw that y'all have experience in, not just as women, but in catering to the different needs that show up for people. Because with my...
practice, like my mental wellness practice. I mean, I work with women from all walks of life. So I feel like it's my duty to be curious and to understand, not just for myself, because it's coming down the pipe eventually, but to be able to understand like what, like people I love, like my mom, but also like my clients because they're going through different things. And maybe yes, because I'm 28, I don't totally relate to everything, but I know it's something that is just, it's
part of our shared human experience. But with the doctor advocacy piece, I think if anyone's listening, I'm so glad you brought that up because it's something I share with my clients because I can't tell you how many times I have to remind people if they're maybe seeing like their psychiatrist, which I'm grateful to work with many fantastic psychiatrists, but there's also a lot of them out there that aren't good and that have this kind of like authority complex. And I know especially with like women of color, they have
been facing this for on a whole other level of extremes. know like, natal care for women of color is like historically like very tragic. And I think that's something else that needs to be talked about. But circling back to like, I always remind people like you're paying this doctor's bills. Like you are showing up, you are, you are hiring this doctor. You're hiring me. Like you can fire me. Like what I say is not the gospel truth, but you're
you're employing me right now as your care provider because I have experience and education, et cetera, but you don't always have to agree with me. And at the end of the day, you have free will and you're a person. And even if that person has a medical degree, yes, let's hope they are practicing what they preach and doing the right thing. But if they're not making you feel safe or if they're just like, try this and see how you feel in three months, and that's your life. You can't just put your life on hold or feel like shit.
Savannah Rose (32:42.729)
for three months. Like at the end of the day, like if it's not working, you can say goodbye and move on to someone else. And I just feel like that's also something that's not talked about enough. So I'm grateful you brought that up.
Sherri Dindal (32:43.724)
Right.
Sherri Dindal (32:53.429)
No. No, I talk about it often,
Christa Dias (32:55.925)
Not in the, not in the exhibit. sorry.
Sherri Dindal (32:59.543)
I was going say, I talk about it as often as I can if the opportunity is there, because I think a lot of women don't feel like they can get a different doctor, don't feel like they can advocate for themselves. Especially, and I don't mean to be sexist in any way, but I think even, especially if they have a male doctor. And so, you know, get a new doctor, especially when it comes to your female health.
And wellness, get a female doctor. Not that all the female doctors are great, because they're not all great. But find a good female doctor, and one that will listen to you, and one that has awareness of her own body, and whatever she might be going through, makes them, I think, sometimes, not always, but sometimes more empathetic and more willing to listen. And not just write a prescription and send you on your way.
Savannah Rose (33:31.486)
Mm-hmm.
Savannah Rose (33:50.975)
Mm-hmm.
Savannah Rose (33:57.119)
Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
Sherri Dindal (33:57.666)
What were you saying, Christa? I'm sorry.
Christa Dias (33:59.829)
was just gonna say not only that, but no is a complete sentence. So like giving permission to say no when something doesn't feel right. And also, as women, we were kind of bred to just be yes sir, no sir, yes ma'am, no ma'am. mean, especially down here in the South.
Savannah Rose (34:02.963)
Period.
Christa Dias (34:19.681)
and really advocating for yourself, you know what? Because in the end, it doesn't matter what these people think of you because this is your health and your life. And if you have to be like, am going to explore other things, then you go and you explore. And they don't even have to know for that matter. And mean, young people probably don't realize that. Like if you walk into a doctor in their 20s, especially when you are going on your own for sometimes the first time to some of these doctors,
You don't really know. Like what, didn't know what to expect. I just was like, okay, I'm 20 or I'm 20, whatever. And this is how this goes. So I just have to go along with it. You don't have to go along with it. If you don't feel safe and you don't feel like that's where you are getting the most help in a safe place, then you need to bounce, you know?
Savannah Rose (35:10.031)
Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. Yeah, well said absolutely and I wanted to circle back to something you said to Krista about just going back to like Postmen are not postmen of pause. why am I blinking after you have a baby? I Got the postpartum right? but anyways, yes the postpartum and how that's I think sometimes people don't always understand like
Sherri Dindal (35:24.087)
Postpartum.
Christa Dias (35:25.129)
postpartum.
Savannah Rose (35:36.191)
like you said, like the surgical level that women's bodies have experienced. And I think like what a lot of people kind of forget too is like women, not only did we like when you make a little baby, like you're creating a human being with all these organs, but like you yourself are creating and shedding a placenta, a whole other human organ. And to me, if you really think about it, that shit's crazy. I'm like,
Sherri Dindal (36:04.493)
It is crazy.
Christa Dias (36:06.047)
You think about it, not only that, but when you get a C-section, they're literally cutting into your abdomen muscle, like to get to that nape, to get to that placenta. I think that, and again, this isn't like a male bashing session, but I think that if any male were to have their abdomen, think about that. If their abdomen was cut through to get something, I just think post-care would be very different.
Savannah Rose (36:06.131)
Crazy!
Savannah Rose (36:12.083)
Yeah!
Savannah Rose (36:33.246)
Yeah, shoot. I even think about IUDs. think they, just, yeah, like I almost passed out when I got my ID put in and I had to, I was unwell for a couple days. Like I couldn't leave the doctor's office cause I was like just so messed up from it. And then I heard like that they're making, and of course what you see on the internet, take with a grain of salt, but.
Christa Dias (36:37.007)
yes, yes, yes,
Savannah Rose (36:58.611)
but there's like a male IUD that's coming out that they can go under anesthesia for and I'm like, get the fuck out of here. I'm like, my God. Yeah.
Sherri Dindal (37:03.393)
Of course, course Listen, they don't the guys the guys they put that they will knock them out for anything where women
Christa Dias (37:07.356)
I saw it in the fan.
Sherri Dindal (37:13.741)
If you, you know, think it just talking about IUD, like when a woman gets a biopsy, they don't numb anything. They just, they're literally taking a chunk of you out of your body and they don't know. They're like, oh, you know, it's going to pinch a little. No, it hurts. Same with when they do your pap smears, you know, all kinds, so many different fema mammograms, you know, they literally turn your boob into a pancake. There's just so many things that women endure in the, what, what almost feels like these, like
Savannah Rose (37:29.862)
yeah.
Sherri Dindal (37:43.695)
The mammogram feels like a torture device. It's not, but it feels like it. And it looks kind of like one too, especially, we won't get into that, but.
Savannah Rose (37:46.781)
Yeah!
Yeah. I remember my mom telling me about it and I'm like, they do what? I still thought I have little titties right now.
Sherri Dindal (37:55.502)
It's so, it's, the fact that we are in 2000, about to be 2026 and we are still doing this is crazy to me. But men, don't know. They're not, I heard that now they even have, what is it? Cause we get like our pap smears and our mammograms, whatever the annual ones are, that, the men's prostate exam, they now can do through a blood test.
now so that they don't have to endure, you know, the finger up the...
Christa Dias (38:26.591)
So how much, yeah, so how much research had to be done for that to happen versus we've been getting pap smears and all these things for however long at this point and it's still probably, it's the same, it's the same. So for all of you ladies out there in your early 20s, mid 20s that are going through this stuff, I would actually seek out somebody else's advice. Like you don't have to keep that to yourself. These are not conversations.
Sherri Dindal (38:29.537)
For blood work, just blood work.
Christa Dias (38:50.099)
that can't be discussed now. think back, you know, even when I was younger in my twenties, it's not really something that you discuss. think people are more open. Yeah, there. Yeah, there's lot more open now. So if something doesn't quite feel right, like speak, speak up. It's OK.
Sherri Dindal (38:56.449)
I said it was very, very taboo topic. Yeah.
Sherri Dindal (39:05.077)
Yeah, no, think, you know, talking about the blood, like the blood test for the guys or whatever, I think here's what I think the difference is.
Savannah Rose (39:05.192)
Mm-hmm.
Sherri Dindal (39:14.995)
Men, they do advocate for themselves. And they do speak up when things are uncomfortable. And they speak up when things are like, no, that hurts. I'm not going to do that. Women haven't done that. for centuries, probably thousands of years, have endured and kept quiet and just took the pain. And now I think it's our time to speak up and advocate for ourselves. But I think that's why they get stuff like that, because they have advocated for themselves. And it helps that in the medical field,
Savannah Rose (39:18.015)
Mm.
Sherri Dindal (39:44.832)
there was a time when all the doctors were male. Women weren't allowed to be doctors. And so now that we have more female doctors, we have more women that in that world and are using their voice, I think we'll see more change. But unfortunately, I still think we're probably a 10 years out before we see anything significant.
Savannah Rose (39:57.588)
Mm-hmm.
Christa Dias (40:01.993)
takes time. Yeah.
Savannah Rose (40:06.271)
Yeah, yeah. Yes, well, I'm gonna carry the torch, ladies. Don't you worry. I'm gonna carry the Oh, yeah.
Sherri Dindal (40:10.613)
You do that, you do that. We're counting on you.
Savannah Rose (40:16.111)
I think it's so important and it just I mean thinking about like god I saw this photo of like lawmakers and the conversation was women's health and there wasn't a single woman in that room and I am so firm on no ovaries, no uterus, no opinion! I'm like I don't want to a damn thing out of your mouth. I don't care like
Sherri Dindal (40:33.782)
Right.
Sherri Dindal (40:38.765)
Well, think that's another, I think that that going back to what I was just talking about where the men advocate for themselves and more, there were more male doctors and they had more of a presence or whatever. I think the same thing applies to what you're talking about. When you look around the room here, you have a woman standing there addressing an entire group of people about women's health and everybody in the room listening are men. That is a problem. And so until we fix that, I don't think we'll see the change. That's why I said, I still think we're probably a good 10 years out before we see that. Cause we've got to cycle through hopefully most of them.
Christa Dias (40:39.006)
I smell that.
Sherri Dindal (41:08.719)
I'll shut my mouth.
Christa Dias (41:09.907)
Yeah, yeah, it's okay.
Savannah Rose (41:11.267)
This is the same space, listen, this is the same space.
Sherri Dindal (41:13.549)
It isn't till listen I have seven over seven million followers somebody's gonna listen to this that's gonna be like Look what she said I can't I have to be I have to be careful I have to be careful because what I would want to say is Not very nice, and so I'll just keep it to myself Because that'll get me in trouble
Savannah Rose (41:17.599)
haha
Savannah Rose (41:22.47)
I feel you, I feel you, yeah.
Savannah Rose (41:32.371)
Well, there you are, being so conscientious, and that's what women, we've all had to do that too, as well. Yep, yep, yeah, well.
Sherri Dindal (41:36.951)
Bite my tongue. I've been biting it for a long time till it bleeds. Yeah.
Savannah Rose (41:42.437)
I feel you, I feel you. Well, shifting gears a little bit, I just wanted to touch on this real quick too, just with the overall holistic side of Wholesome Hippie and the accessibility piece. This is like going back to way earlier in our conversation with the magnesium cream that has like the components to help you focus for folks who maybe have ADHD or are other neuro-spicy kin out there. I think that's something too that you don't see very much of. feel like it's...
Just a lot of wellness stuff is very, like one size fits all. And if you're neuro-atypical or neuro-spicy, like sometimes these certain kind of things don't factor that in. So I just wanted to give you another shout out when it comes down to thinking about that for folks of us out there and listeners and viewers who need something that not only helps them feel better, but that has them and their brain in mind. Cause I just don't feel like that's also talked about enough.
Sherri Dindal (42:25.847)
Thank you.
Christa Dias (42:41.461)
We have a lot, I just want to touch on this real quick. We have a lot of parents with...
you know, kids with autism and that are on the spectrum and that just have a hard time calming, you know, cause imagine like they're, you know, what's going on in their brains and that they're, if they're not able to fully communicate what it is that they need that I imagine that their anxiety levels are very high, right? So, you know, even something and something that is topical and easy to apply for them. And they're not, again, having to give a pill or, know, something like that is, is, is great for,
parents with you know kiddos with special needs that need help with sleep or need help with you know pain or or like you said our neuro spicy people out there who you know need a little added focus to their day and pain and and those kids also usually are in pain in other ways it's like the comorbidity that word's hard for me you know so we do we really really want to help those parents and and the kids you know because it's tiresome for everybody
So in the house and when when people aren't sleeping, you know, you're going a little cray cray. So No
Sherri Dindal (43:49.037)
But.
Sherri Dindal (43:52.418)
Yeah, our daytime focus cream though is not just for kids. We did develop it with kids in mind, the kids that are struggling because again,
Savannah Rose (43:58.727)
And... yeah.
Sherri Dindal (44:02.069)
Medicating, I mean when I was growing up, they didn't label, nobody was neuro spicy or neuro divergent, they didn't call it ADD, they just called you hyper or a problem, right? That's what they call them. And so those kids typically, they dealt with them either through corporal punishment or tried to beat it out of you or they would drug them. They put them on drugs. There are parents, I don't wanna drug my kids if they're either on the spectrum or they struggle with ADHD or whatever it is.
Savannah Rose (44:11.572)
Yeah.
Sherri Dindal (44:32.013)
focus. We wanted something that was good for the kids. But in all honesty, I see it more. I'm surprised now. I'm not surprised anymore. But there was a time when I was very surprised at how the number of adults that were actually struggling with this. now that I've hit, by the way, menopause, another thing menopause brings into your life that you weren't prepared for is how anxious and also how difficult focus becomes. And so now I, you know, I'm like,
Savannah Rose (44:59.103)
Mm-hmm.
Sherri Dindal (45:01.903)
Have I always been ADHD? I feel like I am, but I'm undiagnosed. I'm not diagnosed. But I feel that anxiety and that stress around struggling to focus, struggling to keep my brain from going a million miles an hour.
We developed our daytime focus cream for everybody, but we really wanted something that was really just mild and safe and helps people with, you know, get through their work day if that's what they're struggling with, whether it's energy levels, because being personally, one of the days when I really struggle with that focus side and my brain feels like it's all over the place, I don't know, maybe it's just me, it's exhausting. It makes me tired. And so, you know, our daytime focus cream
Christa Dias (45:33.82)
Savannah Rose (45:43.463)
Yeah?
Sherri Dindal (45:47.102)
is our magnesium cream with still has the magnesium and the vitamin D3 but we added Guarana and B12.
Savannah Rose (45:53.778)
Mmm.
Sherri Dindal (45:53.998)
To help with your energy levels to keep you without the jitters that you might get from coffee a lot of people reach for that afternoon coffee But then they get the jitters. So this is giving you a little bump of energy without the jitters. It's got the b12 in there it people don't if you don't know guarana and b12 are very Beneficial to your cognitive function and so and also it smells we call it happy hippie. It's our it smells like bergamot orange So it has a nice invigorating uplifting scent and so you get all the benefits
Savannah Rose (46:20.767)
Eww!
Sherri Dindal (46:23.951)
It can help with it helps calm anxiety. It helps with the focus. It helps with energy. You can but you can still use it for pain. You can still use it for muscle cramps like it still has all those same ingredients. We just added some extras in there because we wanted something to really help and that one be most of our products came out of my own personal needs. This one came really out of Christa's. She's extremely add and it was she needed something to help her and so we developed it. We wanted something that would
Help target, you know when hey because I've been I'd look at her and be like focus I need you to just focus for two minutes. Can I get two minutes? It helps with that So she uses it quite frequently and we send it to kids with our send it with to our kids with to school Especially on days when they have tests or they have Some big something big they have to study for you know that they really need that focus to be there They have it in their backpacks and they know they can reach for it when they need it to help them with their to get through their school day and so Again, we're always looking
Savannah Rose (47:11.091)
Yeah, you know.
Sherri Dindal (47:23.811)
for not like we want to fill every need, but when we see that there's a need that we can fill.
Savannah Rose (47:29.107)
Mm. Mm-hmm.
Sherri Dindal (47:31.375)
through a holistic practice or all natural way, we work through development. Now we try to develop other products that haven't come to fruition yet. We always have ideas, but when we see them, like the menopause thing, I was like, have to come up, we have to make something to help me with all this stuff that I'm coping with and perimenopause, and then thinking about when I wasn't in menopause, I wasn't in perimenopause, still having hormonal issues. So it's really our
It's called Pump Up the Yam, Wild Yam Cream, is for everybody that's having, if you've had a cycle and beyond, it's for anybody in that age range. So it's not like just for women in menopause or just for women that are postpartum. It's for even teenage girls that struggle with heavy cramps and heavy bleeding and major mood swings. It helps with, you know, from them on. And so, again, always looking for ways that we can help.
That's really what it boils down to. It's like, how can we help, especially for the number of people that tell us they can't take whatever medication maybe that would be normally prescribed for something like that, or they can't use a certain something because it has something in it that interferes with something with their health in some way. We provide products that help them manage those things.
Savannah Rose (48:53.407)
Well, I really appreciate, I mean, it just sounds like and it's so clear that thoughtfulness and love and generosity are at the heart of Wholesome Hippie and I'd love to see that and I'm very grateful that you both have been so open and generous as well with sharing just about your mission and the development and how you got here and your own journey.
And just thank you for that. And so where can folks track you down and learn more from you and get their wholesome hippie products? Cause they gotta do it and they need to know.
Sherri Dindal (49:19.32)
Thank you.
Sherri Dindal (49:28.11)
So you can find us at wholesomehippie.com. We have a website where you can find all of our products. If you're looking for something a little bit more beyond that, find us on the socials. We're Wholesome Hippie Naturals on TikTok. We're on Instagram, we're on Facebook. And if you catch us, you might catch us sometime live on TikTok where we sit and we do just this. talk about what the products do and how they can help. We answer people's questions. We get a lot of people who come in and say, well, Ken, do you have anything that helps with this or anything that helps with
with that. So we know that there are people that are out there constantly seeking something to help them with whatever they're struggling with in their life. And so we spend a lot of time getting to know those folks and helping connect them with products or if we don't have something they need, just sharing a story that might be able to help guide their, you know, their path. so yeah, you can always find us on the socials. most of the everything you're looking for is at wholesomehippie.com.
Savannah Rose (50:25.919)
Beautiful, amazing. Well, either Krista or Sherry, was there anything else that was on your heart today? I know we covered such a nice, broad amount of information today, but you both are so dynamic. Was there anything else that you wanted to mention to anyone listening or viewing today?
Sherri Dindal (50:43.318)
I don't. You got anything, Krista? I think I've said enough.
Christa Dias (50:46.833)
I think that, you mentioned about our focus, we just want everyone to feel their absolute best so that they can go.
take over the world. don't know. Like you can't get everything out of this life that you want if you're feeling some sort of way that is kind of blocking you to, whether it's pain or whether it's hormones or whether, you know, any of those things. If that's in your way, then there's things that you're not able to achieve. you know, imagine what you can achieve if you're feeling whole.
Savannah Rose (51:25.215)
Mm-hmm. Mm. Well said. I think that's the perfect place to wrap up. But I appreciate you both. Shari Krista, thank you so much. This was so much fun. And to those who tuned in, thank you for listening. Thank you for watching and for being on this journey with all of us. And I will drop the links and socials in the description so it's easy for y'all to find these two amazing lightworkers out here doing amazing work. Thank you both so much.
Sherri Dindal (51:34.616)
Thank you.
Sherri Dindal (51:50.296)
Thank you.
Christa Dias (51:50.751)
Thank you. Thank you.
Savannah Rose (51:53.125)
Alrighty y'all, take care and until next time, this is Eclipse Evolution. Yes ma'am, y'all have a good one.
Sherri Dindal (51:54.606)
You too.









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