Julia Miller didn't grow up knowing interior design was a job. She spent more than a decade as a social worker with stable pay, full benefits, and no plan to leave. Then someone close to her asked a question that wouldn't let go: why not you?
This conversation is about what happens after you hear that. Julia walks through the year she said yes to everything, the first design job that paid her $30 at 37, and how she built Yond Interiors, a furniture company, and a teaching studio out of a gift she didn't know she had.
We get into the imposter voice that still shows up even after the magazine features, why discomfort is usually the sign you're moving in the right direction, and the belief sitting underneath all of it: what you think about yourself shapes what you build.
If you've been wondering whether it's too late to bet on yourself, this one's for you.
Yond Interiors
Brunel for furniture
Yond Interiors on Instagram
The Studio Table for designers
One-on-one consults on The Expert
Yond Cottage, North Shore Airbnb rental.