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Story & Lesson Highlights with cam kashani of west LA

We’re looking forward to introducing you to cam kashani. Check out our conversation below.

Good morning cam, we’re so happy to have you here with us and we’d love to explore your story and how you think about life and legacy and so much more. So let’s start with a question we often ask: What is something outside of work that is bringing you joy lately?
Lately, the greatest joy in my life comes from my family — my husband and my twin 13-year-old boys. Watching them grow, laugh, and navigate life brings me so much fulfillment and perspective. They remind me daily of what truly matters, and being fully present with them — whether it’s sharing a meal, laughing at something silly, or just spending quiet moments together — fills my life with love, grounding, and pure happiness.
Family is my anchor, my inspiration, and my reminder that joy often lives in the simplest, most authentic moments.

Can you briefly introduce yourself and share what makes you or your brand unique?
I’m Cam Kashani — a women’s empowerment coach, speaker, and author with a Doctorate in Spirituality, often referred to as “The Spiritual Surgeon.” For over a decade, I’ve been guiding women through deep inner transformation, helping them remember who they truly are beneath the layers of wounding, conditioning, self-doubt, and “be small” programming.

My company, Divinus LVX — which translates to Divine Light — is dedicated to awakening the sacred power within women. Alongside my best friend and business partner, Amber Mahoney, we offer courses, community, and immersive experiences designed to support profound healing and liberation.

Through my work, my speaking, and my newly released book, I guide women back to their power, their truth, and their inherent divinity.

What makes my approach unique is that it goes far beyond mindset or strategy. I facilitate soul-level transformation — weaving together spirituality, embodiment, empowerment, and grounded, practical tools. The women I work with don’t just feel inspired in the moment; they leave with real shifts they can integrate into their lives.

I’m especially excited about my new book, “Becoming Unfckwithable: A Woman’s Guide to Transform Pain into Power” — a powerful exploration of the wounds we carry as women and the path to healing them so we can step into our fullest expression. My book is available on Amazon.

My mission is simple yet profound:
to help women rise, embody their divine feminine power, and live unapologetically free.

Appreciate your sharing that. Let’s talk about your life, growing up and some of topics and learnings around that. What was your earliest memory of feeling powerful?
Believe it or not, my earliest memory of feeling truly powerful was only about 10 years ago. It took me a long time to really recognize and claim my power, and 2015 was the year that marked a turning point — it was also the year I became a coach. I was sent to Kuwait by the U.S. State Department on a mission to empower women and youth, and I found myself sitting in the home of the U.S. ambassador, surrounded by some of the country’s most influential leaders. I was asked how they could create real, meaningful change, and in that moment, I spoke from my heart — with authority, clarity, and love. I encouraged them to work together as a community, and the room responded with respect and inspiration. On the plane home, I reflected deeply and realized that what allowed me to speak so powerfully was simply being in the frequency of my own power and gratitude. That moment didn’t just show me that I was powerful — it was the moment I truly stepped into my purpose, which led me to become the coach I am today.

When did you stop hiding your pain and start using it as power?
I stopped hiding my pain and started using it as power during my divorce. It was one of the most heartbreaking and destabilizing experiences of my life, especially with my twin boys only 1.5 years old at the time. But that painful chapter became the catalyst for my awakening.
I realized I could either let the pain define me or use it to rebuild myself, reclaim my power, and create a life aligned with who I truly am. Choosing the latter transformed not only my personal life but also my work — it became the foundation for guiding other women to do the same. That’s when the pain shifted into power, and I’ve never looked back.

Alright, so if you are open to it, let’s explore some philosophical questions that touch on your values and worldview. Is the public version of you the real you?
Yes, absolutely— because any other way of being is exhausting. I’ve spent enough of my life trying to fit into boxes, trying to be who others wanted or expected me to be, and it was suffocating.
Today, I cannot pretend. I don’t have the capacity, the desire, or the tolerance to perform or put on a persona. What you see is exactly who I am — the same woman on camera, on stage, in my programs, and in my everyday life.
Living in full authenticity isn’t just a choice for me… it’s a necessity. It keeps me aligned, grounded, and connected to my mission. And I believe women feel that. They can sense when someone is real, embodied, and unapologetically themselves — and that’s the space I’m committed to holding.

Okay, we’ve made it essentially to the end. One last question before you go. What is the story you hope people tell about you when you’re gone?
I hope the story people tell about me when I’m gone is that I helped bring femininity and women’s power back into the world — that through my work, my voice, and my embodiment, women remembered who they truly were.
I want to be remembered as someone who helped women reclaim the parts of themselves they were taught to hide… their softness, their intuition, their fire, their boundaries, their bodies, their brilliance, their emotional truth. Someone who reminded women that their feminine energy is not a weakness — it’s their superpower.
My deepest hope is that people say I helped spark a movement of remembrance. That because of my work, thousands of women woke up, healed, and returned to themselves. That I helped women stand taller, speak louder, love themselves more fiercely, and live from a place of alignment instead of conditioning.
I want to leave the world more empowered, more conscious, and more connected than I found it — and that generations of women continue to rise because one woman refused to dim her light and chose instead to help others ignite theirs.

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