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Life, Values & Legacy: Our Chat with Mindi Getz of Northwest Kansas

We’re looking forward to introducing you to Mindi Getz. Check out our conversation below.

Hi Mindi, thank you so much for joining us today. We’re thrilled to learn more about your journey, values and what you are currently working on. Let’s start with an ice breaker: What do the first 90 minutes of your day look like?
Since I’m on my own schedule, I wake up when I wake up most days. No alarm clock or cell phone alarm. My daughter and I sleep on a mat on the floor, so I roll over and go straight into a deep squat to stretch.

After I turn on my PEMF mat to warm up, I make a hot beverage. I typically make raw milk hot cocoa with maple syrup and spices. While the milk is heating, I start frequencies and scans for my family.

Depending on the time of year, I might enjoy my drink in the garden or hammock, or I might sit by a window. While I sip, I might journal, message friends, pull weeds, harvest huckleberries. I’ll get sunlight on my eyes and bare feet on the ground. I might do a fascia maneuver or two.

Then, if I have timed things right and my daughter is still sleeping, I’ll get in my frequency therapy stack before breakfast.

The stack?
PEMF with infrared heat – usually set to a randomized program in theta brainwave state
Inner Voice music from my bioresonance app to balance my emotions
HUB brain enhancement with a choice of 3 unique frequency therapy options delivered through 3 modalities – pulsed white light, binaural audio, and cranial electric stimulation.

After my frequency stack, it is time to juggle all the things – movement with my daughter before breakfast, meetings, homeschooling, mom/adult life.

Can you briefly introduce yourself and share what makes you or your brand unique?
2025 has been a year of paring down and realigning for me. I’ve let go of branches of my business and changed the way I schedule my days – focusing on the priority of the task instead of when the I can squeeze in more work. Kate Northrup’s motto of “body first, business second” is an anchor point for me.

This past summer I started to focus on ways to help more people with their gut health. While gut health might be trending, I think it is a multidimensional issue that gets dumbed down into either elimination diets or long lists of “must take” supplements. I believe there are foundations of good health that are ignored by many and not even suggested by western medicine. I pair these foundations with frequency therapy and a bundle of specific supplements to support people as they heal. We focus intently for 30 days and encourage them to continue for a full 90 day reset.

I continue to see clients in person for Hub brain enhancement sessions. People are using this system for post-surgery recovery, relieving pain from old injuries, and changing patterns around chronic pain. Bringing the brain into the process of healing maximizes results, and quite honestly makes the entire process a little easier. I find it satisfying to watch people experience what feels like miraculous shifts for them.

I am headed to a bioresonance conference in Utah in September. Each year when I attend, my life and my business shift in ways that I don’t quite expect. So, you’ll have to follow along on Instagram to see for yourself.

In the meantime, any reader can get a 50% off discount on their first Inner Voice bioresonance scan. You’ll get custom sound therapy delivered as a live URL or mp3 file to your email. Click this link for this deal – it is not available anywhere else.
https://boards.com/a/gnpDa.lxUCWz

Amazing, so let’s take a moment to go back in time. Who taught you the most about work?
My father’s father, Papa Bob, was someone who worked 7 days a week and wouldn’t have it any other way. He worked that way into his 80’s. The last time I saw him, he said, “I’ve run my route.” He did what he loved for as long as he could.

I worked for him as a teenager. He told me if someone was going to pay me a dollar to do a job, I should do $1.10 worth of work. Back then, I thought he was all about having a hard work ethic. I did what he said and always arrived early to each job. If I had a shift that started at 8 am, I was there early – clocked in, set up, and working at 8:00. I spent several years riding city buses to work, taking the extra early bus, even if it meant arriving more than 30 minutes early – just in case.

While I’m extremely grateful to be my own boss and NOT have to ride 2 hours one way on a city bus anymore, I still carry some of those lessons with me. I’m loyal and dependable. However, as I have aged, I have begun to think his work every day ethic wasn’t all hustle. He truly enjoyed his grocery store. He loved his customers. He took pride in a beautiful produce display and a clean store. He knew food was a vital commodity and he wanted to be the one to provide it for his community.

I believe frequency therapy and comprehensive healthcare are also vital to a community and I am grateful for the opportunity to provide it. I’m also grateful to serve beyond our tiny town because of the nature of tools that I use.

Do you remember a time someone truly listened to you?
Who truly listened? Dr. Vandersloot, 2004.

Dr. Vandersloot was the first homeopath I ever had. He practiced in Rockland, Maine. I do not recall who recommended him or how I found his office in a renovated house on a one way street. I’ve never before or since had someone write a prescription that included the title of a book and the instructions, “Look up when you walk.”

I could sit on the loveseat in his office and cry. He would ask gentle but probing questions. He never hurried me along. Never said an answer was wrong or that I needed to change how I spoke of my experiences. He wasn’t a psychologist or counselor, he was an MD turned homeopath.

He was also wise enough to make the recommendation that I see a Jin Shin Jyutsu practitioner that practiced on the first floor of the home where his office was. This woman also listened well. Some with her ears, but mostly with her fingertips. The two of them sent my life down a path I had not expected.

Years later, as my life was taking another nose dive through transformation, I worked at a homeopathic college as the director of the medicinary. I started seeing one of the practitioners at the college, Michelle Kardys. She was way spicier than Dr. Vandersloot. However, she could hear all that I wasn’t saying as much as what I was. She became a dear friend whose spirit reminds me to enjoy my life – all of it, because tomorrow isn’t promised.

Sure, so let’s go deeper into your values and how you think. What’s a belief or project you’re committed to, no matter how long it takes?
I am committed to being a mother. I am committed to investing in the relationship I have with my daughter. She is a gift that I was told would be impossible. She came to me in my “geriatric” years as far as western medicine is concerned, but I believe she came right on time. We homeschool and travel together. She is my biggest mirror and greatest challenge.

My daughter came to work with me for the first 6 years of her life while I was an assistant at our local library. She grew up as the littlest librarian. I loved having her there, growing up surrounded by books, but we ‘retired’ the day before her 6th birthday. She had been working since she weighed approximately 6 lbs and lived life around my work schedule since before she was supposed to be outside the womb. I wanted more for us both and that meant I had to go all in on myself and the work I wanted to do in this world.

These days, if you come to my dining room (aka my office), you’ve likely heard her sing or seen a favorite stuffed animal. Maybe she even gave you a fact or two about bioresonance scanning. She’s also keen on sharing her opinion about the taste of different supplements.

She is the only project that is mine alone and I am grateful and stretched by the work of motherhood every single day.

Okay, so let’s keep going with one more question that means a lot to us: What is the story you hope people tell about you when you’re gone?
Personally, my most important legacy is my daughter. If she feels seen, valued, and loved, then I have done the job. If she knows she can talk to me and be heard when she speaks, then she’ll have a chance to know her worth, to know she is loved, and have the confidence she needs to walk through life.

Professionally – What is the story I hope people tell about me when I am gone and what would people miss if I retired today are very similar answers.

I hope people say that I listened well. That they were heard and seen by my presence. I hope people feel my loyalty and sincerity.

My customers would likely miss our conversations. They are constantly learning, just like me. Whether they are learning some new thing about brain states or about how their emotions are causing physical reactions in their body. Many of these conversations aren’t business transactions and would likely continue whether or not I had office hours. However, if I were retired, I would likely be off on an adventure somewhere and hopefully without constant wifi, making such conversations more difficult.

Honestly, tap dancing my way to work is how I feel when someone commits to starting with me – whether it is one-on-one sessions or empowering themselves with a subscription to the AO Scan app. I love the possibilities that unfold when someone says yes. It starts with the first connection and questions. I can feel their anticipation and curiosity which is what lights me up.

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Image Credits
All photos are mine.
Images of my daughter on a work trip, growing up at the library, and how she got here – starting out life in the NICU, Photos of the AO Scan at the Colorado Springs airport on another trip for my business, and on the coast of Maine where I have traveled twice this year for both business and pleasure.

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