In this deeply moving episode of Spiritual Infinity, Zenzi Sewaah sits down with entrepreneur, speaker, mentor, and author Mary Korn, speaking from Columbus, Ohio, to explore a life journey shaped by unimaginable hardship, resilience, spiritual awakening, and purpose-driven leadership. Mary’s story begins with generational trauma. The daughter of two Holocaust survivors, her childhood was profoundly shaped by her mother’s suffering. Her mother had been imprisoned in Bergen-Belsen concentration camp at just thirteen years old and survived years of brutality, starvation, displacement, and unimaginable loss before eventually immigrating to America as a single mother with two children and almost nothing to her name. Growing up, Mary witnessed the hidden emotional scars left by war and trauma. Her mother carried unresolved pain, grief, fear, and emotional unavailability, often reliving horrific memories through nightmares and emotional breakdowns. During periods when survival became too difficult, Mary spent parts of her childhood in orphanages, separated from family and navigating profound feelings of abandonment and instability. Yet within those difficult beginnings, seeds of resilience were planted. Mary reflects on how these experiences quietly shaped her life mission — creating opportunities for people who society often overlooks or excludes. Inspired by her mother’s courage and later influenced by the film Schindler’s List, Mary became deeply moved by the idea that meaningful work can restore dignity, identity, and hope to human beings who have been marginalized. The conversation then follows Mary’s adult life — a difficult marriage, emotional hardship, raising two children as a single mother, and eventually reaching a devastating turning point after leaving a long-term career that no longer aligned with her soul. After taking a new position that proved to be a terrible fit, she was fired after only two months, leaving her terrified, humiliated, financially unstable, and emotionally broken. It was during this dark period that Mary experienced what she describes as a divine intervention. Walking through an alley in complete despair, she prayed openly for guidance, telling God that if shown the path forward, she would dedicate her life to helping others who felt as lost as she did. In response, she heard two unexpected words internally: “Medical associations.” That moment became the catalyst for everything that followed. Mary began contacting CEOs across Ohio’s healthcare and medical association sector, asking not for employment, but for insight into how she could transfer her years of marketing and healthcare experience into a meaningful new direction. Within weeks, an opportunity emerged that allowed her to begin building her own company. What started as a small business quickly evolved into something extraordinary. Unable to find traditional workers willing to perform outbound sales work, Mary took a chance on hiring individuals with severe physical disabilities — including quadriplegics, paraplegics, blind workers, disabled veterans, cancer patients, and individuals confined to their homes. Using adaptive technology and remote systems long before remote work became mainstream, she created meaningful employment opportunities for people who had been rejected, ignored, or underestimated by society. Over the course of twenty years, Mary’s business grew from a handful of employees into a nationally recognized organisation employing more than 1,300 people across 30 states. Many employees came from economically disadvantaged backgrounds or lived with severe disabilities, yet through Mary’s leadership they found not only work, but dignity, community, purpose, and belonging. One particularly emotional moment in the conversation recounts the story of a Vietnam veteran who became quadriplegic after an accident and had not worked in nearly three decades. After joining Mary’s company, his wife wrote Mary a nine-page handwritten letter explaining that for the first time in 29 years, their family came home and listened to him talk about his day, his work, and his purpose. The interview also explores Mary’s spiritual path through Judaism and later Kabbalah, which she describes as the first spiritual system that truly resonated with her soul. Through Kabbalistic teachings, she found deeper understanding around karma, destiny, reincarnation, life purpose, and humanity’s shared spiritual mission. Today, after selling her business, Mary has entered a new chapter devoted to mentoring, speaking, workshops, podcasts, and writing her upcoming book, Fired to Inspired. The book centers on overcoming fear, discovering one’s life mission, and learning how to align work with purpose and soul. Throughout this powerful conversation, one message echoes repeatedly: Ask.Be open.Listen. And trust that even the most painful chapters of life may ultimately be guiding us toward the work we were born to do. Closing Reflection Some people build businesses.Others build healing. Mary Korn built both. What makes this conversation so moving is not simply the success story — it is the depth of humanity behind it. A child shaped by generational trauma.A daughter watching her mother carry unbearable pain.A woman navigating abandonment, emotional survival, single motherhood, fear, rejection, and uncertainty. And yet somewhere inside all of that suffering, something sacred remained alive:the ability to care for others. Mary’s story reminds us that our wounds do not disqualify us from purpose. Very often, they prepare us for it. The people she hired were not statistics or disabilities to her. They were human beings longing to feel useful, valued, included, and seen. Through meaningful work, she restored something many people lose long before income — dignity. Perhaps that is one of the deepest spiritual teachings of all:to help another person remember their worth. This episode is also a powerful reminder that divine guidance rarely arrives when life feels comfortable. Often it comes when the old identity collapses, when certainty disappears, and when we finally become willing to ask for help. Mary listened. And because she listened, thousands of lives were changed. For anyone currently standing in fear, transition, burnout, heartbreak, or uncertainty, this conversation offers a gentle but powerful truth: Your hardest chapter may not be the end of your story.It may be the doorway into your true mission. — Zenzi SewaahFounder & Spiritual Visionary of Spiritual Infinity Guest Contact & Bio Mary Korn is an entrepreneur, speaker, mentor, and social impact leader from Columbus, Ohio. She is the founder of a groundbreaking company that created employment opportunities for individuals with severe disabilities, veterans, economically disadvantaged communities, and people traditionally excluded from the workforce. Over a 20-year period, Mary grew her organisation from a small operation into a nationally recognised company employing more than 1,300 people across 30 states before eventually selling the business. Today, Mary focuses on mentoring, leadership workshops, public speaking, and writing her upcoming book, Fired to Inspired, which explores overcoming fear, discovering purpose, and aligning career with soul mission. Her work combines spirituality, resilience, leadership, social impact, and personal transformation. Connect with Mary Korn Website:Fired to Inspired LinkedIn:Mary Korn LinkedIn Email:Mary@mpkenterprise.com Get full access to Zenzi’s Substack at zenzisewaah.substack.com/subscribe