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Story & Lesson Highlights with Kristy Angelee of Round Rock

We recently had the chance to connect with Kristy Angelee and have shared our conversation below.

Kristy, we’re thrilled to have you with us today. Before we jump into your intro and the heart of the interview, let’s start with a bit of an ice breaker: What do the first 90 minutes of your day look like?
Most mornings, I’m up by 4:45 a.m. Before the world starts moving, it’s quiet — and that’s when I meet with God. Around 5 a.m., I settle into prayer and study. It’s my space to realign, refill, and let His presence touch every part of my life — how I show up as a mom, a woman, and a leader in ministry and business.

By 7:30, it’s breakfast time. Nothing deep, just oatmeal, toast, some fruit, and coffee. After I feed my spirit, I like to feed my body — slow and simple. Those early hours keep me anchored. They remind me that what I build during the day is only as strong as what I receive in the morning.

After that, I usually have what I call my “business meeting with God.” It’s where vision meets structure. I bring my ideas, goals, and even my challenges to Him — and together, we sort through what needs to stay, what needs to shift, and what needs to wait. That’s the moment where strategy meets surrender. It’s where purpose starts to sound like a plan.

Can you briefly introduce yourself and share what makes you or your brand unique?
Absolutely! I’m Kristy Angelee — Founder and Visionary of Angelee Vision Reclaim Co., a refinement house for elite transformation. Our mission is to economically empower 5,000 single moms by 2030 through mindset, wealth, and personal development, helping them move from survival to legacy living.

What makes our brand unique is our fusion of faith, elegance, and empowerment. We don’t just coach women to set goals; we help them reclaim their identity, align with divine purpose, and refine how they show up in every sphere — business, lifestyle, and leadership.

Through our signature “What’s Your I Can?” (WYIC) Framework, we guide women through self-discovery, spiritual realignment, and capacity building. From our Inner Circle community to Ascension and Legacy experiences, every program is designed to unlock personal, professional, and spiritual abundance.

What I’m most excited about right now is our expansion — building out a complete ecosystem of transformation that includes wealth refinement, image architecture, and divine leadership development. I didn’t always imagine my single moms’ ministry would look like this — but God had a bigger vision.

At Angelee Vision Reclaim Co., we’re not just transforming lives — we’re redefining what abundance looks like for women of faith in the modern world.

Great, so let’s dive into your journey a bit more. Who saw you clearly before you could see yourself?
I’ve heard this question asked to celebrities and public figures — people who’ve made a big impact in their communities or the world. Most of their answers point to someone who spoke life into them when circumstances spoke something else entirely.

For me, that person was — and still is — myself.

I always saw me, even when the vision wasn’t crystal clear. But it was clear enough to recognize the woman I was becoming — the trailblazer, the world-changer, the Christian leader called to impact nations. I saw the savvy businesswoman and ministry leader long before she fully existed.

Honestly, I don’t know how that was possible. Maybe it came from my parents and how they nurtured our ability to dream. I still remember my father telling me as a teenager, “You don’t always have to sing someone else’s song — write your own.”

That kind of wisdom shaped me. It gave me permission to see myself first — to believe in the version of me that was still becoming.

What did suffering teach you that success never could?
I love this question — because suffering has been one of my greatest teachers.

It’s taught me how to suffer well.
If I’m going to walk through pain, I’ve learned to get a return on investment from it.

Through suffering, I’ve gained lessons that success could never teach me: wealth management, compassion, grace, boundaries, insight, shrewdness, generosity, healing, rebuilding, and most importantly — humility.

I could go on and on about what I’ve harvested from those hard seasons. And trust me, I’ve had plenty. (Shameless plug — I share a lot of those experiences in my book, What’s Your I Can: Realize Your I Can in Purpose, Business, and Family, available on Amazon.)

Success never taught me how to build stronger relationships as a single mom.
It never showed me how to create a scalable business infrastructure from scratch,
or how to give beyond my means — even in seasons of lack — through abundant joy.

Some lessons can only come through suffering.
Don’t run from the hard places. They’re where your strength, wisdom, and character are built

I think our readers would appreciate hearing more about your values and what you think matters in life and career, etc. So our next question is along those lines. Is the public version of you the real you?
As much as I know about me — yes, absolutely. I am true to the core of who I am.

At my core, I’m a Kingdom citizen first, which means I live my life through my faith in God.
Has it always been that way? Not at all. There was a lot of growing, healing, and development I had to walk through — and truthfully, I’m still navigating it.

I tell my children often, “Charity first starts at home.”
That means I can’t be out here adding value to the world while my home goes neglected.

When I show up for the public, I want my teens to be proud — to see my work, applaud it, and know that what the world experiences is the same woman they see every day at home.
My public life is simply a reflection of the private one I’m committed to living.

Before we go, we’d love to hear your thoughts on some longer-run, legacy type questions. Could you give everything your best, even if no one ever praised you for it?
Absolutely. What I do isn’t for the applause of people — it’s for the approval of God.

If I can make Him rise to His feet and shout my name in heaven, and that echo reaches the earth, that kind of praise is everlasting, genuine, and deeply rewarding.

I’ve learned not to live for the noise of human applause — though when it comes, I receive it with gratitude. But even when the stage grows silent and the crowd disperses, I keep giving my best.

Because as Scripture says in Isaiah, “The mountains and the hills will burst into song before you, and all the trees of the field will clap their hands.”

That’s the kind of applause I live for — heaven’s standing ovation.

Contact Info:

  • Youtube: @KristyAngelee

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