Laws of Abundance cover art

Laws of Abundance

Laws of Abundance

By: Angel Latterell
Listen for free

About this listen

This isn’t your typical legal advice podcast and Angel M. Latterell, Esq is not your typical lawyer. Angel understands the heart and soul, just as much as the judicial system. As an attorney, she has over 16 years of legal experience in the areas of business law, intellectual property, complex litigation, and landlord-tenant law. As a project manager, Angel is all about building and nurturing systems that work. As a certified transformation coach, practicing Buddhist, spiritual guide, and poet she knows it all starts with a healthy abundance mindset. Angel is any heart-based entrepreneur’s trusted advisor. She understands the law wasn’t written to be understood and wants to empower you to stop avoiding your legal matters. Angel teaches you how to manage your assets and properly contain your abundance so you can prosper systematically and energetically. More info at latterelllaw.com/laws-of-abundance-legal-advice-from-an-angel/ Find me on Facebook and IG - @lawsofabundance Produced by Elizabeth Drolet@2021 Hygiene & Healthy Living Personal Development Personal Success Psychology Psychology & Mental Health
Episodes
  • Recipe for a Joyful Life
    Jul 22 2025
    Recipe Card (can be a visual of an actual recipe card for blog or content on website) Preparation: Take stock of your current situation to know where you began. 1 Full cup of gratitude 2 hours of meditation 6 spoonfuls of daily practices (x2) A hearty handful of boundaries A sprinkling of laughter Stir Clockwise while smiling and holding a vision of living a life you enjoy. Repeat for no less than 10 weeks, then revisit your current state, your vision, and account for progress. Celebrate your accomplishments and continue until you allow purpose to set in. ********** Making a recipe card like this might sound kind of funny for something as ephemeral as Joy or living a Joyful Life. But what if Joy wasn’t something elusive? Most of us chasing Joy think of it like the wings of a butterfly. Something beautiful that you cannot touch. And like those wings, if you do touch them, they are destroyed. What if it was something you could actually touch and not only feel its tangibility- but build beneath you like the firm foundation of a house? I’m here to tell you that you can, and the recipe is quite available to you with a little bit of commitment to the discipline of the practice of know thyself. First to my butterfly wing analogy, the reason many people think Joy and enjoyment are elusive, and that experiencing joy (like touching butterfly wings) destroys it, is because most people are chasing Happiness. Happiness is an external fleeting thing that depends on factors outside ourselves. And the other side of the Happiness coin is sadness. Take, for example, you place all your expectations for happiness on a relationship with a significant other. And you are in that relationship and everything is all perfect in your life because someone loves you and accepts you and wants to do things with you. This is Happiness you say. Then one day that person says I’m leaving, or that person dies, or that person changes because of some factor outside of your control and the relationship ends. Now you are sad. You are sadder than you ever were before the relationship because for awhile you had The Thing you thought made you happy. And in a way you are right. You touched the butterfly's wings and it couldn’t fly anymore, and it died. Now you have no more feeling of Happy - you have the memory of it, the longing for it. But you no longer have it so that attachment to this past state of Happy you lost now makes you Sad because it is draining your today (like a leak in a boat). I watch this play out with my partner every time he speaks of his past fiance who left him because he stopped fulfilling her narcissist needs. He has this attachment to that belief in that with her, when he was in the peak of his health, in the peak of this happiness having all these activities with this other built purely on external circumstances that He was Happy. And maybe he was Happy. For a moment, because he bought her the right ring, he took her to dance in the right place, he provided everything she needed so that she could get on her feet, save for a house, make a down payment and leave him when she didn’t need him anymore. And then his Happy came crashing down, when the lie was revealed and she left him because his usefulness to her ended - putting him in a pit of depression that caused him to harm himself with alcohol and other choices due to the severe sadness felt after the high of Happy. Now today, he isn’t in that depression anymore, we are in a healthy relationship of exchange co-creating together, but I can still see that attachment to a past version of himself when he believes he was Happy. Because in that past he had health (and no liver disease) and he had for this brief moment some combination of external factors (fleeting as they were) that made everything “Perfect.” So now, this attachment to a past version of himself when he was quote/unquote Happy inhibits his ability to fully experience his present moment and the amazing life he and I are creating. He is working on it, and acknowledges his attachment challenges, and having physical limitations is a real obstacle,- which is why finding our inner source of Joy (and thus resilience) is so essential. Ok, let’s talk about Joy again and how it is different from Happiness. Joy is not ephemeral and intangible. Further, Joy is not Happiness. Happiness is external and its opposite is Sadness. So the happier you are, when the source of that happiness leaves you the sadder you get. It is cause and effect and the hermetic principle of rhythm. One extreme always swings back to the other like a teeter totter or those sets of silver balls that click on your desk. Joy is built in your life from within and is not dependent on external factors. My recipe card is not facetious. It is true. Just like laying a foundation and building something - you go through a specific set of...
    Show More Show Less
    15 mins
  • The Art of Getting the Right Things Done: How to Gain Wisdom Instead of Just More Knowledge
    May 30 2025
    “Critical thinking is the ability to analyze, evaluate, and reason through information logically. It’s about questioning your and others’ assumptions, recognizing biases, and seeking evidence before forming conclusions. Wisdom, on the other hand, transcends simple logic. It calls upon the spirit, not just the mind. It seeks the Light — the knowing of a matter. It discerns the unseen and weighs the good of every situation beyond mere logic. Truth is only ever found in immutable reality, but what often serves us better is understanding — a deeper grasp that wisdom provides, aligning with the eternal rather than chasing fleeting facts.” – Sovereign Ipsissimus Dave Lanyon In the past year, I had a hip replacement, got engaged, moved into a new home with my fiancé, and walked with him through the ups and downs of his liver disease. I continued running a law practice, took the Florida Bar exam — twice — and wrote two books. At the same time, I continued my mission as a Guide in the Lineage of King Salomon, initiating those ready to walk the path of progression. People say if you want something done, ask a busy person. I might just be that person. But for the first time in my life, I also had to let some things go. I quit some commitments. I stopped doing things that no longer aligned with the quality I expect of myself or the service I offer others. Because when everything piles on, even the strong have to reevaluate. So this year, I chose to attend only the required Professional Integration Days (PIDs) with the Modern Mystery School International, — not to pursue more training, but to honor my current bandwidth. I came in feeling a mix of pragmatism (yay, boundaries!) and a little FOMO over not diving deeper into the higher-level teachings. But from day one, something was different. This wasn’t just another “recert.” It was real Light, real Teaching — the kind that delivers weeks’ worth of transformation in just a few days. And one of the biggest insights that landed for me? The art of getting things done isn’t just about doing more. On the surface, it seems simple: take action, get results. That’s Hermetic Principle #6 — Cause and Effect. Action leads to reaction, which leads to outcomes. Kabbalistically: Idea → Thought → Plan → Action = Result. Magickally: you place the ingredients in a container, add the right energy, and something new is born. But here’s the nuance: you can accomplish a lot through sheer will. But at the end of the day,do you have anything meaningful to show for it? Have you gained wisdom, or just collected gold stars? If I had focused only on being a good lawyer, I’d probably be a partner in a firm by now,and miserable. I’d have achievements and accolades, sure. But a hollow life. Thankfully, something deeper stirred in me,a knowing that just being “successful” by society’s standards wasn’t enough. I wanted more. I needed joy. Fulfillment. Purpose. And when I didn’t have those things, I numbed the ache with food, alcohol, and distraction. Some people thought I should be grateful and settle. But I couldn't. The mundane was never my calling. We don’t come into this world with an owner’s manual that tells us our purpose on page 42. We fumble, experiment, search. And if we’re fortunate, we encounter someone with a key,someone who helps us fumble more efficiently, and begin to uncover our own answers. From a young age, I knew there was something greater. As a little girl talking to Jesus in my heart, I felt it. That drive led me to Catholic confirmation, then to studying Buddhism, and later to a degree in Philosophy. All gave me glimpses, but never the full picture. What stuck with me from that academic journey was my advisor, Mr. West, who told me: “These people,CEOs, world leader,they have degrees in philosophy. Logic and reasoning can take you anywhere. The others are just hoping someone will tell them what to do.” And he was right. That skillset carried me through law school and beyond. But critical thinking alone doesn’t lead to fulfillment. For that, we need wisdom. And true wisdom doesn’t live in textbooks. I found the key,my first real key,in May of 2014 at Healer’s Academy in Toronto. I had no idea why I went. I had no plan to be an energy healer,I was a lawyer, a senior project manager. Where was that going to fit in? But something called me. And when I came home and gave my first Life Activation, everything changed. It changed her life. And that changed mine. In that moment, I discovered something far beyond the mundane: I had the power to help someone heal. To step into more joy and wholeness. And for the first time, I felt real fulfillment. The kind that isn’t logical, but undeniable. The kind that propels you forward through every obstacle. That’s when everything in my life began to shift. My partner at the time left. My home no longer felt like home. My job felt empty. The distractions lost ...
    Show More Show Less
    8 mins
  • The Glory of Choice (and Free Will)
    Apr 22 2025
    Our current circumstances are the result of the fruits of our choices. Yes, the news may say this about the President and his administration doing that, and everyone has opinions. But what are you doing with your life? Are you making choices to better yourself? A student called me the other day, upset and angry at the world, spouting, "There needs to be more light!" And I said, "Then you need to become THAT light." I told them that being angry and negative is just adding more anger and negativity to the world. They heard me and applied for the Ritual Master path in the Modern Mystery School. They then chose to work on themselves to bring more light and higher vibrations to this world. We need more light, but it can only start with first bringing this light to the darkness of our hearts and daily lives. Are you making choices for yourself to better yourself? Turn off the TV and the radio, get off social media, and sit with YOU for a second. What do you want? What brings you joy? What unburdens your heart? Do you want to make your home, neighborhood, and family more peaceful? Do you want to be less stressed out? Do you want more abundance? Do you want purpose? Or do you want to enjoy tea in the morning while listening to the birds without racing your mind? Do you want to find your proper, indestructible, happy place? We all have a choice. Even if it is a situation in your life where you feel the odds are against you and all directions appear to be rivers of poo. YOU still have a choice. The Choice can be to continue and sit in misery or we can choose how to face adversity. And we can also decide how we face the possibility of JOY within our actions. I once lived a life where I constantly chose to limit my joy. Because of my belief system, it had to be hard to produce results (as in non-enjoyable). Now, hard work is important, but not at the expense of your health and family and living a joyful life. We also cannot sit back and wait for things to knock on our door and for others to create happiness and abundance for us. We must take personal responsibility and action toward our goals. But that doesn't mean choosing the path with the most painful obstacles or the path you have deemed "responsible" is the best. I once chose a seemingly "responsible" path to become an attorney. I didn't choose this path because I was excited about the work. I chose it because it was good, honest work that I knew could be well paid for, and I had the necessary skills. I knew I would be good at it if I could achieve it. So, in a way, I didn't choose to be a lawyer - I chose a path of achievement. Thus, when I completed my law license in Minnesota at 23, I looked around and said, "Is this all there is?". I didn't like being a lawyer. But it was a hard-to-achieve and honorable profession, so I dove in head first, working myself to almost a full head of grey hair and chronic fatigue by age 27. I was well paid in a successful profession and ultimately miserable, but to the world, I was "successful." Inside, I was full of anxiety and despair. I began drinking every single day to manage the deep-seated anxiety and dissatisfaction from the weight of other people's problems. So, I chose to run away from it. I left Minnesota and ran to Seattle, Washington. I thought life on the West Coast would be different, that lawyers there would be different, that everything would be different. But wherever you go, THERE YOU ARE. I was still me, and instead of choosing my joy, I kept choosing the path of what the world told me success looked like. I needed a change and began searching for a new career. It wasn't surprising when I found myself taking the job as a project manager. Yes, it was a new career, but it was still wholly based on achievement, and I was ready to put on my work boots and fully (get things done) again! And I was good at it. I got the same sense of accomplishment and superficial pride because I was doing lots of work - but it was other people's work. Not my work. I was drinking less, but still too much. I was at least meditating with my Buddhist practice regularly. I achieved a state of OK, of just getting by, of occupying myself with the mundane. But I was still choosing to suppress my joy because I was ignoring my motivations for living. I was on the path of what I SHOULD do out of fear and scarcity and programming - and honestly, a complete unwillingness to face my negative ego that kept me a codependent functional alcoholic pretending that this is what life should be. Then, I found something that opened my eyes so wide that I couldn't continue to ignore my power to choose joy. I found access to my source of power, my will, my courage, my higher self. I found the ability to articulate what I enjoyed and what I wanted to create for myself. It was there all along, but I had buried it deep and ignored it for so long that the sound of my desire, intuition, and ...
    Show More Show Less
    13 mins
No reviews yet
In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.