The Language Alchemy Podcast

Alejandra Siroka

The language you use every day shapes your world and is your bridge to deeply connecting with yourself and others. Through the Language Alchemy Podcast, host Alejandra Siroka, a transformative communication teacher and coach, invites you to explore and express your deepest truths with clarity, confidence, and compassion. Give conscious shape to a fulfilling life and meaningful relationships with Language Alchemy.

  1. 3D AGO

    196. Immigrant Language Barriers. Multicultural Communication & Belonging Series, Part 2

    Alejandra Siroka continues the Multicultural Communication and Belonging series by inviting you to anchor in compassionate understanding and notice the daily invisible effort immigrants make to communicate skillfully.    She reflects on the magnitude of leaving one’s native land for reasons such as safety, survival, opportunity, love, education, spiritual fulfillment, or childhood circumstance, and explains how communication becomes essential from the first moment in a new country—across fast, ordinary exchanges and unspoken cultural rules.    For immigrants and second-language speakers, every ordinary conversation — a sandwich order, a comment in passing, a server's rattled-off special — is an act of invisible effort that most native speakers do not have to make.   Through stories of a British friend being singled out for his accent and her own experience “performing understanding” at brunch, Alejandra highlights how small moments of othering accumulate and exhaust.    She offers a Language Alchemy® tool: asking clarifying questions in four ways, reframing from “you” to “I” to reduce blame and create belonging, and she discusses how English phrasal verbs can confuse even fluent speakers.   Alejandra walks through four concrete ways to ask clarifying questions that keep conversations open and create space for real understanding.   At the center of it all is an invitation to consider what it feels like to navigate a world that was not built around your language, your accent, or your cultural frameworks, and what it looks like to meet someone in that experience rather than around it. Quotes "Every immigrant and every speaker of a language that we speak as a second language is constantly navigating language and cultural situations that most native speakers around them hardly ever notice." (07:26 | Alejandra Siroka) "Saying 'I'm sorry, I didn't catch that” sometimes feels like announcing I'm not from here and risking the feeling of not belonging." (13:05 | Alejandra Siroka) "The constant code switching, second guessing, the performing of belonging is exhausting in a way that can be very hard to explain to someone who has never had to do it." (13:48 | Alejandra Siroka) "This small shift from you to I is language alchemy in action. It keeps the conversation open, it removes blame, and it creates space for both people to belong." (18:45 | Alejandra Siroka) “If you are someone navigating English as a second language, you're not struggling because you're not smart enough. You're just navigating one of the most idiomatically complex features of the English language." (22:00 | Alejandra Siroka)   Links To leave a review on Apple Podcasts, click: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-language-alchemy-podcast/id1576461366 To leave a review on Spotify, click: https://open.spotify.com/show/5yTj9hSotq8EAjPCYg2jYw?si=aQNuoStRQomTNUKHGSD56A&nd=1&dlsi=064dcb42ba8d4706 To work with Alejandra, visit: www.languagealchemy.com/workwithme To join the Language Alchemy mailing list, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/mailinglist To ask questions you'd like Alejandra to answer in the podcast, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/podcastquestion To find out about 1:1 transformative communication coaching with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/oneonone To find out about couple transformative communication coaching with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/couples To schedule a reduced-rate coaching consultation with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/newclient To follow Alejandra on instagram follow @languagealchemy Podcast Music composed by Gary Lapow: open.spotify.com/artist/1HlMhcNfKIELxYil5mVqD Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm

    24 min
  2. MAY 6

    195. Diversity is Richness. Multicultural Communication & Belonging Series. Part 1

    What does it take to feel like you belong in a place that does not yet feel like home? Alejandra Siroka opens the new Multicultural Communication and Belonging series with a story from her life as a 15-year-old exchange student from Argentina. Prepared to adapt to a new culture, she was met by a host family who chose to meet her in her own. That moment of mutual effort, two cultures reaching toward each other, became a lasting example of what true belonging looks like.   That moment became a lasting lesson in what belonging can look like. It can begin with a greeting, a pause, a question, or the willingness to notice what makes someone feel welcome. Alejandra invites listeners to consider how culture shapes the way we connect through body language, silence, directness, warmth, and the assumptions we carry about respect.   This episode sets the tone for a nine-part series on multicultural communication, the immigrant experience, xenophobic language, microaggressions, accents, unconscious bias, and the daily choices that help people feel seen.    She also addresses the broader cultural moment we are living in, one where diversity is increasing, yet often misunderstood or feared. Rather than approaching this with blame or division, Alejandra invites listeners into a space of curiosity, love, and intentional communication.   Throughout the episode, she highlights how most of us were only taught to communicate within our own cultural frameworks, and how expanding beyond that is essential in a diverse, interconnected world.   At the heart of the conversation are two questions worth carrying with you: How do you communicate to help yourself belong? And how do you communicate to create belonging for others?   Quotes “Belonging is a universal human need. Every one of us wants it. Every one of us longs for it.” (09:13 | Alejandra Siroka) “Most of us were not taught to communicate across differences intentionally.” (09:43 | Alejandra Siroka) “Diversity in culture, in language, in perspectives, in the ways we live and communicate is one of the greatest sources of richness in our shared human experience on this planet.” (11:36 | Alejandra Siroka) “Belonging, understanding, and connection are worth showing up for.” (12:22 | Alejandra Siroka) “When it comes to belonging, we are all responsible for communicating in two directions. In one way that helps us belong, and also in ways that create space for others to belong with us.” (17:08| Alejandra Siroka)   Links To leave a review on Apple Podcasts, click: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-language-alchemy-podcast/id1576461366 To leave a review on Spotify, click: https://open.spotify.com/show/5yTj9hSotq8EAjPCYg2jYw?si=aQNuoStRQomTNUKHGSD56A&nd=1&dlsi=064dcb42ba8d4706 To work with Alejandra, visit: www.languagealchemy.com/workwithme To join the Language Alchemy mailing list, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/mailinglist To ask questions you'd like Alejandra to answer in the podcast, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/podcastquestion To find out about 1:1 transformative communication coaching with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/oneonone To find out about couple transformative communication coaching with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/couples To schedule a reduced-rate coaching consultation with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/newclient To follow Alejandra on instagram follow @languagealchemy Podcast Music composed by Gary Lapow: open.spotify.com/artist/1HlMhcNfKIELxYil5mVqD Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm

    22 min
  3. APR 22

    194. The Language of Ethical Marketing

    Before someone decides to work with you, your words give them a sense of what that experience will feel like.   Alejandra Siroka and Justine Chang talk about the kind of marketing language many people have come to accept as normal, especially messaging built on urgency, scarcity, and fear. It can get attention, but it can also leave people feeling pressured or uneasy. This conversation explores marketing in alignment with your values as a more grounded way to connect, one shaped by trust, consent, honesty, and clear boundaries. What are people picking up from your message before they even know the details of your offer?   The episode also looks at voice and identity. Justine encourages listeners to get clear on who they are, who they want to serve, and what values shape the way they talk about their work. That kind of clarity helps uncover language that feels borrowed, overly polished, or disconnected from real life. Small choices carry weight. One phrase can create warmth. Another can create distance. Which parts of your message actually sound like you? Which parts feel like something you learned to say because you thought it was the right way to market?   Quotes “The more you educate people, the more they can make a clear and intelligent decision for themselves.” (00:00 | Justine Chang) “I like to reframe marketing as relationship building because that's really what we're doing is building a relationship.” (05:56 | Justine Chang) “If you think about those pressure tactics, it's actually very violating. It's not allowing us consent. It's like being in an abusive relationship because you're being pressured to make these decisions and being told, like you were saying earlier, if you don't buy now, you're going to miss out.” (06:56 | Justine Chang) “It's less about specific language and more about first really knowing who you are.” (23:14 | Justine Chang) “You are not number one on the call list. Your audience is.” (33:10 | Justine Chang)   Links Connect with Justine Chang: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/j-isforjawesome/ Substack: https://substack.com/@justinechang YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@redballoonstation Website: www.redballoonstation.com   To leave a review on Apple Podcasts, click: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-language-alchemy-podcast/id1576461366 To leave a review on Spotify, click: https://open.spotify.com/show/5yTj9hSotq8EAjPCYg2jYw?si=aQNuoStRQomTNUKHGSD56A&nd=1&dlsi=064dcb42ba8d4706 To work with Alejandra, visit: www.languagealchemy.com/workwithme To join the Language Alchemy mailing list, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/mailinglist To ask questions you'd like Alejandra to answer in the podcast, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/podcastquestion To find out about 1:1 transformative communication coaching with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/oneonone To find out about couple transformative communication coaching with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/couples To schedule a reduced-rate coaching consultation with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/newclient To follow Alejandra on instagram follow @languagealchemy Podcast Music composed by Gary Lapow: open.spotify.com/artist/1HlMhcNfKIELxYil5mVqD Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm

    43 min
  4. APR 8

    193. Stop Waiting for Others to Change How They Communicate

    Hard conversations often reveal an uncomfortable truth: we are still asking other people to do the emotional work, which deters our own growth and capacity to tap into our confidence.   This episode centers on a powerful shift in perspective: the realization that many adults still relate to conflict from a younger emotional position, especially when they are waiting for someone else to create safety, calm, or connection for them. Alejandra Siroka explores how that pattern can show up through blame, emotional dependence, resentment, or the belief that peace will arrive once the other person finally changes. What are you handing over when your inner stability depends on someone else’s tone, reaction, or approval? What becomes possible when you stop organizing the relationship around that hope?   Alejandra then offers a more grounded path by inviting listeners to reconnect with their inner environment and speak from lived experience instead of accusation. The shift opens space for greater honesty, clearer requests, and a deeper sense of agency. Rather than waiting for another person to create the conditions for connection, the episode asks listeners to explore how to connect to themselves and find the emotional regulation or inner resourcing they need. Quotes “When our primary motivation in relationships is for the other person to change how they communicate so that you can feel better, safer, more at ease, more seen, then we are relating to that person from the perspective of a child.” (03:11 | Alejandra Siroka) “We learned the language of, you did this to me. What did we learn there? To externalize our inner world and place it in the hands of another person.” (06:24 | Alejandra Siroka) “We grew into adults who believed that if the other person would just change, we would finally be okay.” (06:51 | Alejandra Siroka) “Adult communication means taking responsibility for your growth while also inviting the other person into a genuine partnership.” (19:29 | Alejandra Siroka) “Every time you choose to turn inward before you turn outward, every time you choose to own your feelings instead of outsourcing them, you are doing something quite radical.” (20:49 | Alejandra Siroka)   Links To leave a review on Apple Podcasts, click: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-language-alchemy-podcast/id1576461366 To leave a review on Spotify, click: https://open.spotify.com/show/5yTj9hSotq8EAjPCYg2jYw?si=aQNuoStRQomTNUKHGSD56A&nd=1&dlsi=064dcb42ba8d4706 To work with Alejandra, visit: www.languagealchemy.com/workwithme To join the Language Alchemy mailing list, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/mailinglist To ask questions you'd like Alejandra to answer in the podcast, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/podcastquestion To find out about 1:1 transformative communication coaching with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/oneonone To find out about couple transformative communication coaching with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/couples To schedule a reduced-rate coaching consultation with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/newclient To follow Alejandra on instagram follow @languagealchemy Podcast Music composed by Gary Lapow: open.spotify.com/artist/1HlMhcNfKIELxYil5mVqD Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm

    25 min
  5. MAR 25

    192. Blame Doesn't Resolve Conflict (This Is What Does)

    Blame can feel like a good way to navigate a difficult movement in  a relationship, but it blocks the honesty, repair, and self-awareness that meaningful relationships require.   This episode centers on understanding blame and why it so often takes over when people feel hurt, disappointed, afraid, or exposed. Alejandra looks at blame as a habit that searches for a verdict instead of understanding. Whether that judgment is aimed at someone else or turned inward, the result is often the same: learning shuts down, defensiveness takes over, and the real issue stays unresolved. Rather than helping people feel closer, blame tends to create distance. What are we actually trying to protect when blame shows up? What gets lost when the goal becomes proving who was wrong? And how often does self-blame pose as responsibility when it is really shame?   Alejandra then offers a more grounded path through the idea of transforming blame into contribution. The shift changes the conversation from punishment to understanding by asking how each person shaped the dynamic, what values are underneath the conflict, and what can be understood more clearly going forward. The episode invites listeners to consider conflict through a wider lens, one that makes room for vulnerability, accountability, and repair. The result is a thoughtful reflection on how relationships begin to change when people move away from verdicts and get more honest about what is really happening.   Quotes “When blame becomes the center of a conversation, learning what's really causing the problem becomes almost impossible.” ( 06:02 | Alejandra Siroka) “In the face of big feelings, we learned the language of blame.” (07:46 | Alejandra Siroka) “When people feel blamed, they become defensive, less open, less honest, less willing to reflect on their own behavior, let alone to apologize.” ( 08:35 | Alejandra Siroka) “Self-blame, just like outward blame, is looking for a verdict.” (11:46 | Alejandra Siroka) “That insight was liberating to her because it wasn't a verdict. It was information. And information, unlike shame, can actually lead us to transformation.” ( 20:42| Alejandra Siroka)   Links To leave a review on Apple Podcasts, click: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-language-alchemy-podcast/id1576461366 To leave a review on Spotify, click: https://open.spotify.com/show/5yTj9hSotq8EAjPCYg2jYw?si=aQNuoStRQomTNUKHGSD56A&nd=1&dlsi=064dcb42ba8d4706 To work with Alejandra, visit: www.languagealchemy.com/workwithme To join the Language Alchemy mailing list, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/mailinglist To ask questions you'd like Alejandra to answer in the podcast, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/podcastquestion To find out about 1:1 transformative communication coaching with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/oneonone To find out about couple transformative communication coaching with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/couples To schedule a reduced-rate coaching consultation with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/newclient To follow Alejandra on instagram follow @languagealchemy Podcast Music composed by Gary Lapow: open.spotify.com/artist/1HlMhcNfKIELxYil5mVqD Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm

    23 min
  6. MAR 11

    191. How to Talk to Kids About Phones & Screens

    What happens to family connection when the most powerful force competing for your child’s attention fits in their pocket.   Digital devices now shape daily family life in ways many parents never anticipated. Phones create constant access to friends, entertainment, and information, yet they also interrupt conversations and pull attention away from shared moments. Alejandra Siroka sits down with Amy Hill and Reichi Lee to unpack the tension many families feel as they try to protect connection at home while raising kids in a world designed to capture their attention.   Amy and Reichi share what they hear from families every day. Many parents feel overwhelmed by the constant decisions around devices, limits, and parental controls. Teenagers are wired for connection and social feedback, which makes smartphones especially compelling during adolescence. The result can feel like a quiet competition between family life and a digital world that never turns off. What happens when a child’s social world lives inside a device? What do parents need to understand about the pressures teens experience online?   The conversation also turns toward family culture as a grounding point. Instead of focusing only on restrictions, the discussion invites parents to explore ways to have dialogue with their children about device use and rules rather than impose rules that children may find unreasonable or unjust punishment. Device-free meals, phones set aside during family activities, and winding down without screens before bed can reinforce values such as presence, respect, and time together. Modeling awareness of personal device habits becomes part of the learning process for everyone in the family.   A key theme throughout the episode is the power of storytelling and community. When parents share real experiences, isolation fades and common challenges become visible. These conversations help families uncover new perspectives and consider small shifts that support connection at home. What changes when parents speak openly about their struggles with technology and attention? What becomes possible when families realize they are navigating the same questions together? Quotes “I believe that individuals are not powerless. Yes, we need more research to study the effects. Yes, we need more laws to regulate tech companies. Yes, we need tech companies to change. But as individuals, we're not powerless.” (16:00 | Reichi Lee) “It really is never a one-time decision. It's an ongoing thing that requires a lot of investment of time and energy, research, set up the controls, monitor how the device is being used. And then of course, trying to do your best to enforce limits when they're pushed back on.” (18:09 | Amy Hill) “The modern day currency that's being exchanged on the market is their attention.” (19:32 | Reichi Lee) “Instead of imposing this is how you have to use it, creating space to have that conversation and to really hear her perspective and then together come up with the agreements has been the only thing that has worked.” (25:38 | Amy Hill) “If we were to all act individually, we each would have to pay a cost. But collective action sort of takes away that cost.” (38:22 | Reichi Lee)   Links To contact Amy or Reichi, visit  www.Reichilee.com To learn more about Parenting in the Digital Age Workshop, visit: https://www.reichilee.com/parents#digital To leave a review on Apple Podcasts, click: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-language-alchemy-podcast/id1576461366 To leave a review on Spotify, click: https://open.spotify.com/show/5yTj9hSotq8EAjPCYg2jYw?si=aQNuoStRQomTNUKHGSD56A&nd=1&dlsi=064dcb42ba8d4706 To work with Alejandra, visit: www.languagealchemy.com/workwithme To join the Language Alchemy mailing list, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/mailinglist To ask questions you'd like Alejandra to answer in the podcast, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/podcastquestion To find out about 1:1 transformative communication coaching with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/oneonone To find out about couple transformative communication coaching with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/couples To schedule a reduced-rate coaching consultation with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/newclient To follow Alejandra on instagram follow @languagealchemy Podcast Music composed by Gary Lapow: open.spotify.com/artist/1HlMhcNfKIELxYil5mVqD Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm

    46 min
  7. FEB 25

    190. Three Words to Keep Your Marriage Thriving. It's Not I love you.

    Long-term love stays alive when you stop assuming you chose each other once and start consciously choosing each other again today.   Alejandra Siroka reflects on how the early days of a relationship were filled with small but meaningful expressions of choice. You paid attention. You considered your words. You showed up with care. Over time, familiarity can replace that intentionality and the partnership can slip into routine. The shift from “I chose you” to “I choose you” becomes central. One points to history. The other renews commitment in real time. What changes when you speak of your love as a present decision?   She shares three grounded ways to bring that awareness back: turn toward your partner with full presence, notice and appreciate who they are becoming, and create small rituals that protect connection. Things to avoid are distracted exchanges and reducing the relationship to logistics alone. She also explores choosing each other during conflict, when saying “I choose us” can create steadiness in hard moments. The invitation is simple yet powerful: treat your relationship as a living connection that can be consciously renewed each day.   Quotes “When you are giving someone your full attention, you are saying, in this moment, nothing is more important than you. I choose to be here with you. I choose you.” (00:00 | Alejandra Siroka) “What I've learned from working with them and also in my 20 plus years of marriage is that this courageous, loving and conscious choice needs to be communicated regularly.” (09:30 | Alejandra Siroka) “This might seem like a small distinction, but it's profound. I chose you speaks to a decision made in the past. It's history. It's done. But I choose you? That's alive. It's happening now. It's a renewal.” (10:45 | Alejandra Siroka) “Sometimes the most powerful time to communicate, I choose you, is during conflict or difficult seasons.” (18:17 | Alejandra Siroka) “Your intimate relationship is not a done deal. It's not something that happened in the past and now just exists on autopilot. It's a living, breathing connection that needs to be renewed, tended to, and consciously chosen.” (21:04 | Alejandra Siroka)   Links If you'd like to listen to the song For Keeps by Kimberly Khare, click youtube.com/watch?reload=9&v=IQiB74Dmqog   To leave a review on Apple Podcasts, click: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-language-alchemy-podcast/id1576461366 To leave a review on Spotify, click: https://open.spotify.com/show/5yTj9hSotq8EAjPCYg2jYw?si=aQNuoStRQomTNUKHGSD56A&nd=1&dlsi=064dcb42ba8d4706 To work with Alejandra, visit: www.languagealchemy.com/workwithme To join the Language Alchemy mailing list, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/mailinglist To ask questions you'd like Alejandra to answer in the podcast, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/podcastquestion To find out about 1:1 transformative communication coaching with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/oneonone To find out about couple transformative communication coaching with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/couples To schedule a reduced-rate coaching consultation with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/newclient To follow Alejandra on instagram follow @languagealchemy Podcast Music composed by Gary Lapow: open.spotify.com/artist/1HlMhcNfKIELxYil5mVqD Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm

    26 min
  8. FEB 11

    189. Break Free from Stuck Patterns in Your Marriage

    What happens when love stays strong but silence and self protection quietly run the relationship.   After more than two decades together, Laurie Kubicek and Kimberly Khare reached a moment many long-term couples recognize but struggle to name. Care and commitment were still present, yet familiar patterns kept pulling them into quiet withdrawal, unspoken frustration, and lingering resentment. In conversation with Alejandra Siroka, they reflect on how habits formed early in life shaped the way they spoke, listened, and avoided hard moments, often without realizing it.   This episode explores core relational values like safety and connection and how they can quietly work at cross purposes. Laurie and Kimberly share how tracking each other instead of themselves led to assumptions, faux feelings, and stories that felt true but created distance. The work shifted when the focus moved toward understanding of your patterns, not just wanting your partner to change. From there, they began to notice things to avoid, such as staying silent to keep the peace or speaking from prediction rather than clarity, while also exploring language that helped them reconnect with their own inner experience first.   What becomes possible when you slow down and name what you are actually feeling rather than what you assume the other person is doing? How often does silence feel easier in the moment but cost more over time? This conversation invites listeners to consider how long-lasting love deepens through awareness, responsibility, and a willingness to look inward before reaching across the table.   Quotes “I really want to be clear about my intention and that my intention is to love you. And that means to grow and to stretch and to learn about myself and to learn what you need that I may not be clear about, but gosh, I want to do the work.”  (07:36 | Kimberly Khare) “There was both a large gap, a disconnection that I felt really deeply. And then the other thing I felt was this circle, this rut that we would just slip into so fast and then all of a sudden it's just not going anywhere.” (9:05 | Lorrie Kubicek) “My pattern that I learned about is I tend to track with other people in a way that I prioritize that over tracking with myself.” (11:51 | Kimberly Khare) “If you haven't been your authentic self and I haven't been my authentic self, in some of these moments that may have more charge or conflict, well, then we are creating a narrative that now I'm working with.” (12:58 | Kimberly Khare) “One of the things that was so sad and enlightening at the same time was I realized how disconnected I was from myself. And from even knowing that I didn't know.”  (23:24 | Lorrie Kubicek) “My pattern that I learned about is I tend to track with other people in a way that I prioritize that over tracking with myself.” (11:51 | Kimberly Khare)   Links To leave a review on Apple Podcasts, click: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-language-alchemy-podcast/id1576461366 To leave a review on Spotify, click: https://open.spotify.com/show/5yTj9hSotq8EAjPCYg2jYw?si=aQNuoStRQomTNUKHGSD56A&nd=1&dlsi=064dcb42ba8d4706 To work with Alejandra, visit: www.languagealchemy.com/workwithme To join the Language Alchemy mailing list, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/mailinglist To ask questions you'd like Alejandra to answer in the podcast, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/podcastquestion To find out about 1:1 transformative communication coaching with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/oneonone To find out about couple transformative communication coaching with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/couples To schedule a reduced-rate coaching consultation with Alejandra, visit: https://www.languagealchemy.com/newclient To follow Alejandra on instagram follow @languagealchemy Podcast Music composed by Gary Lapow: open.spotify.com/artist/1HlMhcNfKIELxYil5mVqD Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm

    40 min
5
out of 5
32 Ratings

About

The language you use every day shapes your world and is your bridge to deeply connecting with yourself and others. Through the Language Alchemy Podcast, host Alejandra Siroka, a transformative communication teacher and coach, invites you to explore and express your deepest truths with clarity, confidence, and compassion. Give conscious shape to a fulfilling life and meaningful relationships with Language Alchemy.

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