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  • 134 | How to Belong in Luxembourg When You Arrive as an Expat
    2026/06/09

    Moving to a new country looks simple on paper. A job, a flat, a fresh start. Then you arrive, and the real life begins.

    In this episode, María Lucia talks with Denis Niedringhaus, who has spent eight years supporting expats and their families through relocation and cultural integration in Luxembourg.

    María knows this from the inside. She left the corporate world to build her own business here, and she remembers what it takes to go from arriving to belonging.

    What you will learn:

    • Why the promise of Luxembourg and the reality of the first months are often two different things
    • How to approach the housing crisis, and the best time of year to look for an apartment
    • What the four languages of Luxembourg mean for your daily life and your sense of belonging
    • How expat spouses can build a network and feel at home, even when they arrive alone
    • What it takes to start a business and find clients in a small, formal, relationship-driven market
    • Why asking for help is the single most useful thing you can do when you land

    This is a conversation for anyone moving to Luxembourg, living here already, or supporting someone who is. Honest, practical, and full of the kind of advice you only get from people who have lived it.

    Guest: Dennis Niedrinhaus, relocation and intercultural specialist, Luxembourg.

    Connect with him on Linkedin.

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/denis-niedringhaus/

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    42 分
  • 133 | How a Layoff Turned My Frustration Into a Brand for Women
    2026/05/27

    You have the stable career. The title, the salary, the clear path. And still, something keeps pulling at you. A small voice that says this is not it anymore.

    In this episode, Tine Van Camp shares how that pull turned into a decision. She spent seven years in the Big Four, became a mother twice, lived through a birth that scared her more than anything in her life, and then lost the job she had given everything to. Instead of rushing into the next role, she used those six months to build the thing she had wanted for years: Bonbeur, a rainwear brand made for women who want to feel good even when the weather is against them.


    This is a conversation about the moment you stop waiting for permission. About what it really takes to start something with two small kids at home. About confidence breaking and slowly coming back. And about turning a personal frustration into a product the world actually needs.


    What you will hear:

    How a traumatic birth changed the way Tine saw her career and her time

    What it really feels like to be slowly pushed out of a job after years of being the strong profile

    How she built discipline and structure from scratch as a new entrepreneur and mother

    Why she made Bonbeur for women specifically, and where the name came from

    The one word she would plant as a Seed for a Better World

    Guest: Tine Van Camp, founder of Bonbeur, rainwear for women.

    Host: María Lucia Romero.

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    36 分
  • 132 The Woman Who Refused Every No. Cancer, Infertility, and the Brand Born From Both
    2026/05/13

    A story that become a brand. At 33, Irene Del Olmo went in for a routine checkup. She came out with two pieces of news that changed everything. A rare form of breast cancer. And the confirmation that becoming a mother would not be possible.

    What she did next is what this episode is about.

    In this conversation, Irene shares how she rebuilt her health from the inside out, spending years as her own testing ground, reading research, fine-tuning supplements, and refusing to accept impossible as a final answer. She tried fertility treatments across three countries. Nothing worked. Then, naturally, against every medical prediction, she fell pregnant. She miscarried. And three months later, fell pregnant again.

    Her daughter Theodora, a name that means gift from God, is now here. And so is Birtz Nutrition, the supplement brand Irene built from everything she learned.

    In this episode:

    • What it feels like to lose your identity after eight months of chemotherapy
    • How Irene used nutrition and supplementation to restore what the treatment took
    • The moment a doctor suggested she consider getting a dog instead
    • Why she went back to university to silence the imposter syndrome
    • What grit looks like when every expert has already told you no

    Irene is a former lawyer, founder of Birtz Nutrition, and a woman who built something real from the hardest chapter of her life.

    Find Irene and Birtz Nutrition at www.birtznutrition.com

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    47 分
  • 131 | How Plant-Based Footwear Is changing the way we think about buying
    2026/04/29

    What if your shoes could be a vote for a different world?

    In this episode, María Lucia speaks with Stefan Woben, co-founder of NOOCH, a 100% plant-based footwear brand built around one question: What if Mother Earth was our CEO?

    Stefan and his co-founder Lotte have spent 13 years rethinking not just what a shoe is made of, but how a brand is financed, how products are ordered, how customers are kept close, and how honesty becomes the business model.

    You will hear how a visit to an eco-camp in Spain started everything.

    How anger, despair, and a glimmer of hope all arrived at the same time, and what they did with all of that.

    How they handled a key supplier going bankrupt.

    How over a thousand customers were waiting, with barely five cancellations, because Stefan and Lotte write emails from the heart.

    This is a story about a perfect sustainable brand. It is a story about what it really costs to build one, and why that cost feels worth it.

    Explore the brand at https://nooch.earth/

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    26 分
  • 130 | How to Speak With Confidence When Fear Is Louder
    2026/04/14

    What happens when you lose the one thing your career depends on?

    Judit Nagy was a news anchor in Hungary. Her schedule ran on adrenaline and early alarm calls. Then burnout arrived quietly, and not long after, a near death experience during childbirth took her voice entirely. Literally. She woke from a coma and could not speak. Surgery failed. Recovery was not guaranteed.

    What she built from that silence is the episode.

    In this conversation, Judit shares how chocolate making taught her patience and self-expression before she had words to speak.

    She talks about the internal messages we carry from childhood, the ones that make us say yes when we mean no, and perform when we need to rest. And she gives us something practical: breathing, posture, warm-up rituals that change how we show up before we even open our mouths.


    Key takeaways from this episode:

    • Why losing your voice can be the beginning of finding it

    • How internal drivers from childhood shape the way we communicate today

    • The Choco Coaching method and how the senses unlock what words cannot

    • Practical breathing and posture techniques you can use before any presentation or difficult conversation

    • Why your voice is your business card and your communication is your power


      Get in touch with her, here: https://www.juditnagy.info/choco-coaching

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    36 分
  • 129 | Why Hard Choices Feel Wrong and Easy Choices Destroy You
    2026/04/01

    Most people think that having more, more experience, more resources, more certainty, is what makes building easier.

    Arthur Salkin has been doing this for over 20 years and he will tell you the opposite.

    In this episode we get into the real mechanics of building across uncertainty.

    How clarity works as a decision tool when emotions are high.

    How to identify the problems worth solving and ignore the noise.

    How to lead people when nobody knows exactly where things are going. And what it actually costs you when you choose the easy option over the right one.

    He also talks about something most people with his track record skip. A moment where he had to walk away from a company he built with people close to him, and what it took to stop letting it hurt and start understanding what it was telling him.

    Honest, grounded, and very concrete. This is the kind of conversation that gives you something to think about long after it ends.

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    27 分
  • 128 | What changes when life forces you to start again?
    2026/03/24

    Katrijn woke up one morning and couldn't speak, couldn't write, couldn't get back to the person she was the day before, and she had to decide what to do with that.


    In this episode she talks about what it actually looks like to build work around what you have, not what you planned, including the moment a stranger's creative chaos became her unexpected calling.


    If you're somewhere between who you were and who you're becoming, and you're not sure the two will ever connect, this one is for you.

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    23 分
  • 127 | How Your Voice Shapes Your Brand
    2026/03/10

    How Your Voice Shapes Your Personal Brand

    Sound is something we experience every day, yet very few people think about how powerful it really is.

    In this episode, María Lucia Romero speaks with Christophe Strotz, singer, creative audio producer, and Managing Director of Linster Studios in Luxembourg.

    Their conversation explores the emotional power behind sound and why tone of voice plays a deeper role in communication and branding than many people realize.

    Christophe shares his personal story, from arriving in Luxembourg as an adopted child from South Korea to discovering how music allowed him to connect with people even before he fully understood the language around him.

    Through that experience, he began to understand something powerful. Sound communicates emotion faster than words.

    Together, María Lucia and Christophe reflect on how tone of voice shapes the way we connect with others, whether in personal relationships, public speaking, leadership, or brand communication.

    From the recognizable sound of global brands to the simple act of recording and listening to your own voice, this episode invites listeners to think about communication in a completely different way.

    Because sometimes, the most powerful message is not what we say.
    It is how we sound when we say it.

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    32 分