Ivelina says it was also her husband who pushed her to join USHA in the first place, even though he had been leery about a move from Delaware down to Florida. The couple moved south after Ivelina got a promotion working as a manager at a retail store, but it wasn’t long before she said she had enough.
“I walked out of my corporate job because I had four weeks of paid time off and I had shaken hands with my upline and they told me that in October of that year, I could go see my family back in Bulgaria. But when the time came and I said, “Hey, I’m about to go see my family, as we agreed” they said, “Nope, sorry, it’s a bad time, you can’t go.” I said, “What happened to my paid time off?” They looked at me with a smirk and said, you lose it. And that’s when my heart dropped and I said, I can’t do this. I did not move here for this. And I walked away from what I thought was a good corporate job and I sat at home for about three months. I told my husband, I’m not going to get to work for anyone else who can control my life or tell me when I can go see my family and when I can’t.”
After Ivelina saw the initial pitch for the opportunity with USHEALTH Advisors she was still unsure, but it was Andy who told her to take the risk, even though taking risks wasn’t something Andy didn’t like doing himself. But he believed in his wife’s ability to make it happen.
“I said to my husband, this is too good to be true,” says Ivelina. “I walked into a pitch and a group interview and Jason Greif, (USHA Regional Leader), came in, gave us his speech and I thought, again, this is just too good to be true. I walked out and called my husband, I said, “Nope, I can’t do this. I just interviewed for this scam job, it sounds too good. I am not going to waste my time. It doesn’t make any sense.”
“My husband said, “What else are you going to do at home? You’ve been home for three months. You have no idea what you’re going to do and you say you don’t want to work corporate, so here’s an opportunity for you to be self-employed.” “And I was like, you know what? That makes sense. And just the fact that my husband was so supportive it kind of pushed me to do it. And once I started working with USHEALTH Advisors and I looked around, everyone was just so successful. I was like, if all these people can make it, I have to make it. I have no plan B, no choice, no other options. This is it. I have to make it work.”
Work, it’s the four-letter word that is the differentiator between those who are successful and those who are not. But there’s another four-letter word that is a separator between those who just make it and those who rise to the top of their game.
That word is risk.
Since her life back in Bulgaria, not only has Ivelina been willing to put in the work but she has never been one to shy away from taking the risk to get better, to think outside the box, to provide value to others, and to make her own life better. Her advice should help anyone looking to take their own career to the next level.