How One Mom is Raising 4 Kids Across Cultures While Building a Global Company | Elodie Ferchaud
This week on Mom to MORE®, Sharon sits down with Elodie Ferchaud, co-founder and Chief Revenue Officer of Boundless Life, a global community helping families live, work, and learn around the world. A French mother of four raising her children across cultures, Elodie shares how an unexpected loss reshaped her perspective on life, motherhood and what is truly possible.
Elodie opens up about building a company while raising four children, the power of community and why motherhood has made her a stronger leader. She discusses slow travel, raising global citizens, navigating cultural expectations around motherhood and creating a life aligned with her values rather than society’s script.
Tune in for an inspiring conversation about reinvention, courage, community, and giving yourself permission to imagine a different kind of life.
[00:00] Introduction
[03:17] Raising Four Children Across Cultures
[05:02] What Daily Life Looks Like Living Abroad
[07:23] Why Community Is Essential for Families
[10:04] Raising Global Citizens Through Travel
[13:38] How Grief Became a Turning Point
[17:30] Building Boundless Life From an Idea to a Global Movement
[20:04] Marketing a Lifestyle That Didn't Exist Yet
[21:24] The Countries Where Boundless Life Operates Today
[23:09] Why Reinvention Requires Community
[25:17] How Motherhood Made Elodie a Better Leader
[29:48] Navigating Cultural Expectations of Motherhood
[31:55] Advice for Moms Who Want Something More
[33:48] Elodie's Vision for Her Next Great Adventure
Meet my guest, Elodie Ferchaud
Website: https://boundless.life/
Instagram: @boundless.life, @eloferchaud
Want to interview Sharon? Connect here.
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Keep an eye out for episode #67 of the Mom to MORE® podcast where Sharon is joined by Libby Ward, author of Honest Motherhood. Coming soon - you won’t want to miss it ♥
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Sharon Macey (01:14)
hi, it's Sharon. Welcome back to a new episode of Mom to More. Hey, one quick thing before we dive in, hit that subscribe button because every time you do,
you help another mom figuring out her next chapter to find this show. Okay, let's go. Today you are in for something completely unexpected. Whether you've ever thought about packing up your life and moving to say Greece or Uruguay for three months, or whether that sounds absolutely insane to you, this episode is going to make you rethink what's actually possible. And maybe more importantly, what you've been telling yourself about why you can't.
It might just be the time to rewrite what you have been thinking about a family gap year or extended vacation.
Elodie Ferreiro is a French mom of four, co-founder and chief revenue officer of Boundless Life, and a woman who is living her reinvention out loud. She runs a global company, raises four kids across cultures, and does it all as an intentional hybrid mom, present for what matters, building what she believes in, and refusing to choose between the two. Boundless Life, which she co-founded in 2022, has grown into a movement
that has welcomed over 5,000 people from over 50 countries across eight destinations worldwide. But Elodie didn't build it from a boardroom. She built it from lived experience, years as an expat, a grief that cracked everything open, and the conviction that motherhood doesn't shrink your life. It can be the very thing that expands it.
Elodie, welcome to Momtomore. I am so excited to chat with you today about your truly outside of the box life. And I will mention also that we have overcome some pretty significant time zone changes of what? I think it's 13 hours.
Elodie (03:04)
Yes, we made it.
Sharon Macey (03:05)
Yeah, morning for me, evening for you. Thrilled to chat with you today. So let's dive in. I like to start with what I call my essential mom question. And that is how many kids you have and where are you raising them?
Elodie (03:17)
Oh, perfect. Let's get started with that. Yeah, I'm a lucky mom of four. So I have an 11, a 9, a 7, and a one-year-old. So quite the age spread. And currently, we're in Japan. So we came back here a few months ago to launch Boundless, its location. The kids have been born in various countries. They were born in between Japan and the UK, largely.
Sharon Macey (03:20)
Yeah.
Elodie (03:46)
My husband is Swedish, I'm French. So they truly believe that they're global citizens, which has been my dream since the beginning. So that's our family in a nutshell, global family.
Sharon Macey (03:59)
such a global family. And where are you in Japan right now?
Elodie (04:03)
So currently you're actually catching me during my break. I'm in an incredible island that everyone should visit when they're coming to Japan. Usually I'm living in Tokyo, the big city. Now currently I'm in Tishima, which is the art island of Japan. So we've just spent the whole day enjoying incredible art with the kids, which at the end of the day is, think for me, the epitome of traveling, like being able to enjoy new places, getting the kids exposed to incredible
Sharon Macey (04:18)
Yes!
Elodie (04:32)
culture and enjoying those moments together. At different levels, we enjoy different things, but we're enjoying those moments together.
Sharon Macey (04:40)
And what I've heard from friends who have been there that the art islands are absolutely extraordinary. And that's on our to go back to Japan one day and do that. Okay, so Elodie, before we get into your story, paint me a picture. It's Tuesday morning in Japan. Walker listeners through your day when
Elodie (04:45)
Very critical.
Sharon Macey (04:57)
you're not on break and you're in
Elodie (04:59)
in Kamakura,
Sharon Macey (05:01)
Kamakura, okay,
Elodie (05:02)
mean, believe it or not, but we actually have a pretty structured life. We're traveling around the world, but it's slow travel. So when we're in one location, we actually go through a routine, which for me is really important as a mom of four, and more importantly, really matters for the children, I believe.
So we'll be waking up and everyone will get ready for school. As usual, the kids will get started with school at 8.45. That's when the Boundless School starts. All the kids are gathering up. We drop them at the education center and they'll be there until 3.30. So every day, like they will go to school and have their normal day with their teacher and their friends. And in the meantime, I'll be heading to the co-working space where
most of the parents are actually working together. So it's a lovely space, very productive, where we can all run our various operation and also connect. So have some common time together. There might be also some activities that are scheduled. So trying to make some time for, I don't know, learning about tea ceremony or going to a pottery class with a sensei on location. And then eventually picking up the kids again.
At 3.30, there will most likely be an impromptu play date or some kind of gatherings because the families often spend time together after school. And we love to have that spontaneity happening on location. Dinner and then very often I will have some work again going in evening when the kids are in bed, like a podcast like now. And I don't mind working until 10, 11 if needed just because
I've had the quality time with my kids when they were the most receptive and when I was the most receptive, largely between three and six. And for me, that's priceless having lived a life where I didn't have those moments, like making sure that I'm present for those quality times.
Sharon Macey (06:59)
Right, that's so important. just what an invigorating day you have. also being in another country, living that culture, I think it's fabulous. Okay, so as I said in the intro, you are what I call an intentional hybrid mom. You are raising your kids while building this company, but you have the benefit of a built-in community. So how does that help you and your partner raise your family?
Elodie (07:23)
I don't think I could do it without the community. I've had, I feel like I've had different lives. When we were living back in London, it was like a very, very busy life. We didn't have a powerful community like we have at the moment. And it was hard. I think all moms need to some degree, a community.
Community is really the infrastructure. It's not fluff. It's really the infrastructure that makes it possible to operate and support the family in general, but also support the mom. Because we generally talk a lot about making sure that the kids are fine. But if the mothers don't have that energy in them, I think it's the whole family that just takes the hit.
And the community is there to support when there is a day that is a little bit more off and there is extra support needed or just simply to get like additional inspiration for the kids. always say, like my daughters have grown a lot through being exposed to other parents as well, like learning from them. I'm not able to provide everything and I know my own limitation. And I find it beautiful when...
you know, suddenly one of my daughter connects really well with another mother and they're able to have like really intense conversations around other topics. I find it so enriching. And that's for me the power of the community for my children, but also for me as a mom.
Sharon Macey (08:48)
also they say it takes a village. So you are really living that phrase, you know, to raise your family,
Elodie (08:53)
Yeah, it does. yeah,
like, he would have asked me the question, let's say, like five, six years ago, I didn't understand back then the power of the, of the community. When we started Boundless, we really thought a lot about the education program at the center of it. And what quickly became the reality is how much like we need this community and this support network around us as we're growing families.
This is something I feel that we've lost to some degree, like in big cities when you have a very fast pace. It takes time, it takes energy to invest also in the community and we don't always have it in us. But it brings back so much to the family and to the parents. I think this is the beauty of this village.
Sharon Macey (09:41)
It's really an extraordinary organization and the opportunities that you have.
even before Boundless Life, you were already living a pretty unconventional life, before the company existed, you clearly have a, what I'll call a travel and adventure mindset. So how has living around the world shaped your children? And also how has it shaped you as their mother?
Elodie (10:04)
So for my kids, think raising your kids globally is really helping them to grow up with the understanding that there are many ways to live. I think in many ways to belong, many ways to be at home in the world. For me, that really feels like a gift. They're obviously learning to be more independent.
we're having locations that are pretty safe. So the kids are able to walk around Kamakura or in Greece in Syros by themselves when they're like seven, eight year old, I would just let the girls go and pick up a coffee or meet up with their friends at the square. I would never do that in Paris. Like I'm not that kind of mom. I would be scared, but in those locations, it's so safe. And that feeling of independence is everything.
And for me, think as a mom, having been able to build a family across different culture hasn't been always easy to be fully transparent, especially as a first mom. I found it extremely confusing. Everyone had a very strong opinion on what a mother should do. My mom, who is a French mom, had a very strong opinion. My mother-in-law, who was Swedish,
Sharon Macey (11:14)
yes. yes.
Elodie (11:20)
My mama Tomo's, my Japanese friends had a different way. And then I was hanging out with American moms who were doing it completely differently. And I was so confused as a first mom. But I think eventually, like mom of two, three, four, I found it like easier and easier, like started to understand who I was. And then suddenly living globally was a gift because I could pick and choose. Like there are some things that made sense in the way that Japanese mom did it.
Sharon Macey (11:32)
Hmm.
Elodie (11:50)
some ways that didn't make sense for me and so I didn't take it and I kind of built I think in a clearer way what I was hoping for for my family but it was not an easy ride
Sharon Macey (11:58)
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Well,
there are so many opinions about what a mom is and what a mom should be and how she should act. I think the beauty of what you're doing is that you have all these different cultures to choose from and you can sort of pick and choose what really resonates with you as a woman, as a mom, and take those pearls and carry them with you, right? Yeah.
Elodie (12:27)
Yeah, yeah, definitely.
And in that sense, think Japan, where we've lived for a very long time and where I have, I've had like three of the of the children has been like incredibly rich and meaningful for for family. It's it's beautiful to see like how close you know, Japanese mom are to their kids, how warmly they raised them.
But it also has made me very aware of how strong cultural expectations around motherhood can be because they're very, very high in Japan, as you might have heard. Yeah.
Sharon Macey (13:01)
Yeah, I realized that, yes. And I want to get into that.
first of all, you must speak many languages, right?
Elodie (13:09)
I try to, I'm not fluent but yeah I speak quite a few languages that's always helpful even if you're not perfect at least showing that you care and that you want to learn I think goes a long way.
Sharon Macey (13:11)
Okay.
Absolutely, absolutely. So when we first spoke, you mentioned that your brother's passing is something that you talk about as a real turning point in your life. How did that grief change what you were willing to do with your life?
Elodie (13:38)
Yeah, that was five years ago, so right before Boundless. And for me, was a very sudden and unexpected and tragic passing. So was really a shock. And it was that moment of realization that life could be so short, and that I was lucky enough to still be there.
my role as someone still able to enjoy that life was to maximize it, make the most out of it because I was still the lucky one on this earth and being to spend that time with my family, with my partner, with my friends. So I was really giving tribute to life. think you can go both ways, right? It can be terrifying or it can be this calling for something more
profound and bigger in terms of life. I'm happy that that's the way that I took. And since then, there is not a day that doesn't happen without me really feeling like, okay, I'm lucky I'm here. What are we gonna do out of this day? Not in the feeling of like, it could be the last one, like very tragic, but just more as a, yeah, I'm...
I'm so lucky to be here. Let's make the most out of it. And I think that's also where then, know, boundless and this lifestyle, which is controversial, came up. But at the end of the day, I think it's just asking yourself the question when this happened of what matters to me? What kind of intention do I want to bring into my everyday?
How do I want to design this life of mine? It doesn't need to be as crazy as ours, but it's really important to ask yourself that question.
Sharon Macey (15:18)
Yeah, beautifully said. Thank you for that. Elodie, we are going to take a quick break. And when we come back, we are traveling deeper into the world of boundless life. Don't go away.
Hey, it's Sharon. We are back with Elodie for show, mama for and co-founder of Boundless Life. If you are loving this conversation, please take a second to subscribe to the show so more moms can discover the podcast, The Shaping Culture. Okay, Elodie, I found this fascinating. The timeline of Boundless Life. You met your co-founders and in 20 days, you had homes, an education center and a co-working space up and running.
turning this bold idea into a living, breathing community with 10 founding families. First, how the heck did you do that?
Elodie (17:30)
It was such a, it was a very bubbling and crazy moment. think there was a, it was post COVID right after everything started to reopen and everyone had this, you know, craving for living and traveling again and experiencing life. And there was a big calling for everyone.
And so yeah, we pulled together the founding families. They were all looking for something different. And then we all came together in Sintra and you just make it happen when you really wanted something to exist, something that has never been before, and you find the right people, the right energy, then you just make it happen. It was not perfect.
Sharon Macey (18:10)
You just gotta run
with it, yeah.
Elodie (18:11)
like there is,
we've come a long way, like Boundless now versus Boundless four years ago, the values are the same, the mission and the vision are the same. A lot of the execution has changed, but it was a very invigorating time, definitely.
Sharon Macey (18:26)
can appreciate that. Okay, so
you just talked about that spark that made you want to move at warp speed, you know, to get this up and running and make it happen. What did you not know that maybe you're glad you didn't know in terms of restrictions or things that, you know, roadblocks that were going to come up your way?
Elodie (18:43)
Yeah.
There are so many, I think I'm trying to focus on a few. Usually when you build a startup, the number one rule is focus on one thing, right? And do it perfectly. When we started Boundless, at the end of the day, we were starting multiple pillars, right? Because Boundless, when you're joining, you're joining an education program, but we also help you with your homes, with your co-working space, and with experiences, things that are happening in a community.
Sharon Macey (18:46)
Hahaha
Elodie (19:12)
So it's kind of like a lot of different businesses. And so that was like the big, I think the big hardship. was making sure that all the different pillars were working as well as they should be. The second big one has been just the amount of human needs to manage. have our organization is now getting quite big with more than 200 employees. So it's a lot of like.
people to manage and we also obviously welcome families, so kids and parents. So it's a lot of emotions in general that we need to just take care of during times that are also like traveling. So there is a lot that is happening. So we've had to step up a lot there and learned a lot along the way. But that was definitely like one of the biggest learning curves for us moving forward with the business.
It's been a fun ride.
Sharon Macey (20:04)
And how did your specific marketing and sales lens shape what Boundless Life is becoming?
Elodie (20:11)
Hmm. So I was coming from a very, different background. I've been managing like big brands for PNG and Coty before, especially in the beauty space. And then moving into a program that is more about lifestyle and education and traveling, very, very different. We started from like basically zero and the market didn't exist.
This kind of product didn't exist either. So there was really a lot to create from a marketing standpoint. We've focused a lot on explaining the story. Boundless is a very unusual product. So when you don't know it, it's really hard to imagine what it can be. So that's why we focused a lot on content, explaining through videos, like how does it work.
encouraging families to record their experiences and share so that others can imagine better whether it's right or not for them. And that has been really the key, like long form content, more videos, more experiences shared for families to just to get a feeling on whether that would work for them or not.
Sharon Macey (21:20)
And what countries are you presently operating in?
Elodie (21:24)
So we're currently welcoming families in eight destinations across three continents. So in Europe, we're able to welcome families in Portugal. We're in Sintra, very close to Lisbon, fairy tale town. You've been there? You've been? We're going to see you everywhere. Then we launched in Greece, in Syros, which is very close to Mykonos, gorgeous island, the capital of the Cyclades.
Sharon Macey (21:36)
I've been there actually. Yeah. I have been to Sintra. Yeah.
Elodie (21:48)
in Tuscany, Italy, we're in Spain as well in the south of Spain in Estepona and we're also in Montenegro in Cotor, a very underrated, beautiful country in the Bay of Cotor, very close to Croatia. Yeah, exactly, that's right. Then we have two locations in Asia, so we're in Bali, Indonesia and
Sharon Macey (22:02)
Just south of Croatia. Yeah. Yeah.
Elodie (22:12)
in Kamakura, so 45 minutes away from Tokyo in Japan. And then we're also in Uruguay in Latin America. And many more to come.
Sharon Macey (22:20)
Right.
Fascinating. I'm feeling that travel bug, itch, even though our kids are grown and flown. And this is really just for families, right? For families with younger kids, yeah.
Elodie (22:24)
Thank you.
Yeah, so at the moment we're
focusing on families and we've had a lot of requests of other groups like single people or empty nesters or the kids have grown and they still want to travel and have the community. I'm pretty sure this will happen because our families will also, their needs will change so definitely there are some opportunities there but for the moment.
only families with kids between one and a half and 14 year olds. That's the age span covering.
Sharon Macey (22:57)
Got it, got it.
So why do you think community matters so much for women who are trying to reinvent themselves or thinking about what they're gonna do when their kids grow up?
Elodie (23:09)
so I've had a pretty big reinvention myself, and it was a hard one, but moving from big corp to eventually, I had no clue who I wanted to be. But I think in general, when you're reinventing yourself, it's a very vulnerable moment. That's what I remember. There is so much unknown.
There are so many questions. It's hard to imagine where you're gonna go. And I don't think it's that women like courage, like we're so strong. Look what we're able to build and like we're able to raise incredible human beings. But I think often we lack the support systems that make that courage sustainable.
Sharon Macey (23:46)
Amen, mama. I'm with you on that one. Yeah, for sure.
Yes.
Elodie (23:53)
because you can have that spark, but it takes time, right, to reinvent yourself. It doesn't happen from one day to another. And I think that's where community matters, especially for mothers who are reinventing themselves, because it gives them this breathing space, but it also shows them that they're not the only one. Like, all of us go through those moments of doubt, questioning, which are so healthy, but very scary and sometimes painful. That's where just feeling surrounded by others.
And being able to relate and talk and exchange just makes all the difference.
Sharon Macey (24:26)
so agree with you on that. mean, how affirming to have a community of women and men that you can ask questions to and lean on and bounce ideas off of. mean, to be able to have that, any woman in whatever stage, reinventing whether your kids are older and they're in school full time. And I always say, you're never really too young to start thinking about what.
a next chapter could be, So I love what you're building and how that is manifesting in reinvention. So thank you for that.
So you went from what you call a type A controller, haven't we all been there, to someone who now goes with the flow and picks her battles. And you also said that having more kids makes you a better leader. So unpack that for me.
Elodie (25:17)
Yeah, this, I feel it more and more every day. I still remember when my oldest was born, when Lili was born and the first like five years or so, like I had to have everything under control and it was the same at work. And I think it's been so interesting to see how
life and work have been aligning to kind of teach me the same lessons but in different ways. I wouldn't have been able to be an entrepreneur without being a mom, I think.
And at the same time, obviously, being an entrepreneur, I do think makes me also a better mom. And that's the kind of mom, at least, that I want to have as an example to my daughters and showing them that it's possible and that you can have fun and have that energy even as a mom. So they kind of like help each other or contribute to each other. But generally speaking, think having two, three, four children has just taught me that.
There is a lot that I can plan for and it's useful to plan like I've been doing during this trip. Like I've been planning for a few things, but then nothing always go according to plan. Like in the more kids you have, the more imposed it's just impossible to have everything under control. but that was really hard for me to accept like 10 years ago. now I'm very comfortable with, you know, things going off script.
And I think that ability to be comfortable with the unknown and with the discomfort makes me a better entrepreneur. Cause that's a key skill when you're building a business, when you don't know where you're going, when you're reinventing yourself by essence, like there is so much that will not go according to script. So I'm just, I'm feeling more comfortable with it. I think that's the biggest piece.
and it also built like a huge amount of empathy as well. think mothers have that in themselves. They're able to read the air, listen, see how, you know, the room is feeling each individual in the room is feeling and kind of reacting to it, which is critical. So as you're building, as you're having a team or building a company, just, or partners being able to, to relate to them, connect and enable them.
Sharon Macey (27:11)
Mm-hmm.
And so when you think
Elodie (27:31)
been the journey.
Sharon Macey (27:32)
you just mentioned some really important skills like pivoting and critical empathy and the ability to really just let it flow off your back without it really becoming problematic. You know, and reading the room and what each person needs and flexibility. Obviously those are the same skills that you're drawing on not only with your family, but to run the company, right?
Elodie (27:53)
Yes, definitely. I really don't experience motherhood and work as competing identities anymore. I think I used to, or I remember I used to like in my past life, but for me, they now like deeply inform and help each other. And I, I do think that motherhood has made me build differently and lead differently.
Sharon Macey (28:01)
Hmm.
Elodie (28:17)
but also define what success means for me differently. I was very externally focused before. I was climbing the ladder. There was a script for what a successful life would be. And now, when we started Boundless, was...
We didn't know if it would succeed, right? But I just felt a calling. Like that felt right. That felt aligned with who I was and what kind of world I wanted for my children. It was aligned with my values. And that was more of an intrinsic motivation and drive. And I think that made all the difference also with the energy level that I could put in without burning out or without compromising too much on my family.
Sharon Macey (29:02)
really, it just sounds so organic to who you are. But you've built all of those, like that hidden mom resume, all those skills, along with, you know, Elodie growing up and becoming the woman that you are and the leader that you are. I think it's so fabulous. Everything is just knitting together to create your, you know, your universe, which is fabulous. You know, I want to talk about the cultural differences you are living. You're in Japan right now.
And a culture where, you know, once you are a mom, that is the identity that you keep, right? And so as someone building a company while raising four kids, what does it feel like to realize that you are not living within those confines? Does it make you see more clearly about where you've come from?
Elodie (29:48)
Yeah, I think Japan has helped me in so many ways to reflect on who I was as a mother, what was the role and expectations also around women and mothers, and I think those can feel both beautiful and very heavy sometimes. I think there is just so much, when you're living in Japan, there is so much care.
but also discipline and education in the culture. I find them like deeply moving as values, but at the same time, like there is a very clear sense of what a good mother is supposed to look like, right? And it just really made me think how, like how easy it can be sometimes for women to disappear inside those expectations. And I think that's anywhere in the world.
Like in Japan, definitely so, but I think many cultures also have that. And I think there is this underlying tension for many women in many places. It made me reflect on the fact that...
I want as much as possible to live or design this life according to what I feel is needed and kind of break free from some of those expectations, which sometimes is not easy, right? If the family doesn't like this or the society doesn't like this, so you need to handle that kind of tension and be comfortable with the fact that some people will not like it.
Sharon Macey (31:11)
Not at all, not at all.
Elodie (31:22)
But yeah, I have a huge admiration for Japan in general, but there is this cultural pressure that I've noticed talking to friends, et cetera. I'm lucky enough to be a foreigner, so I don't fit in any boxes, right? I'm a working mom with four kids and starting a company. Like I don't fit in any boxes, but I know how hard it can be sometimes.
Sharon Macey (31:44)
Yeah, well said, Elodie. Thank you for that. What would you say to the mom listening who feels the pull for something bigger, but is scared to disrupt the life that she has?
Elodie (31:55)
I think then just start smaller. The first step can be anything, right? It doesn't have to be geographic and moving to the other side of the world. It doesn't have to be this. It can be just emotional, relational, changing things in your everyday life. I think at the end of the day, a different life.
Sharon Macey (31:58)
Mm-hmm.
Elodie (32:18)
often starts with a more honest question and if you have that calling already and be able to recognize it and be self-aware that's a huge first step like that's the hardest usually it's being able to to read that get that feeling or be able to to connect to that feeling so once you've done that i would say you already like so far already so just start small
make some little changes, see how that feels. It's always easy to go back if it doesn't feel right. I think that's what I learned during my sabbatical. I was so scared. I was like, what am I doing? I have this beautiful career. Everyone is so proud of me. And you know what? I could always have come back. Like there is always a way to go back. So I would say just start small, see how that feels. And then from there on,
once you start experimenting, it just magically opens new paths. And then you just keep going and keep, I think what is very, important is reading what's happening, being aware of how that feels for you, whether that opens those doors you want to be open.
Sharon Macey (33:30)
thank you for that, very well said. So my last question is something I ask all of the incredible moms I get to interview.
Elodie (33:30)
100%.
Sharon Macey (33:37)
And I have a feeling your answer is going to be as unique as your life is. So Elodie, for sure, since this is the Mom2More podcast, what is your more?
Elodie (33:48)
So when I was little, one of the books or the book genres that I loved reading was, and you won't be surprised, but it was about adventures. And they would be walking. they would, I remember the Poussin who did like the whole Africa by foot or this crazy adventure who did all around the equator. And I think that's something
that I've always had in the back of my head. I would love to have just a year of adventure. At the moment, it's really, you're gonna say, but you're already living an adventure. And yes, I am like living around the world, but there is still like a very strong structure. I like to challenge myself. I like to go for like a crazy bet. And so when the kids will be a little bit older and they need me less.
I think there is definitely this desire of going on an adventure that is also quite like physically and emotionally challenging, pushing myself and maybe writing a book around this and around this adventure would be something that gets me excited. That would be a new challenge on so many different levels. So that would be my more.
Maybe in a few years. Who knows?
Sharon Macey (35:05)
I love that. Fantastic. Thank you. And please tell our listeners where they can find you and Boundless Life online. And folks, everything is going to be in the show notes.
Elodie (35:16)
Yeah, there are two main resources, I think, for everyone. The first one is our website where you're able to read a lot more about Boundless. So it's boundless.life. And then you're also able to connect with our family reps, ask all the questions you want, schedule a call. They're all living the Boundless life. So they're usually very good resources as well to ask anything.
And then on Instagram, we have the Boundless Life account where you can see a lot of what's happening currently on cohorts, follow some families, see how their kids are doing, how they're doing, how they're growing. So I usually encourage also people to join us there and see.
Sharon Macey (35:56)
Elodie, what an inspirational conversation. You have so many pearls of wisdom. Thank you for that. And I love, you and I are very similar in the regard that I love a challenge and I love to push boundaries and I love to go, okay, how far can I take something?
I truly love your adventure, your travel, your challenge myself.
you know, exploring other culture mindset. And this has been such an invigorating conversation. I am ready for travel. And I'm sure everyone listening is as well.
Elodie (36:23)
Thanks for listening.
It was a pleasure. Thank you Sharon for having me.