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HER in healing

MB MAGAZINE: “Do you miss any of it?”

ALEXIS SKYY: “Absolutely not. I haven’t made money from OnlyFans or hosting in like four months. Not a dollar.

MB MAGAZINE: “How has God sustained you?”

ALEXIS SKYY: “I saved money from when I was working. Now I’m reinvesting that money and turning it into clean money. I have a Christian clothing brand that I’m about to launch, and I have a 90-day prayer journal, Daily Soft Life with Her and God, that is available in digital and print format. So, I’m turning my pain into purpose.”

MB MAGAZINE: “Let’s talk about next steps. What does that look like for you?”

ALEXIS SKYY: “Self-love. Self-care. Building my connection and my relationship with God to where God is first. That way I can continue this path. I need to block out all distractions right now. I don’t want anybody to come into my life and knock me back down or distract me and pull me backwards. I need to just focus on Alexis and my daughter.”

“I’m 28 years old. For the last 10 years of my life men have been my downfall. So, I have no plans on dating. I need to detox from guys and sex. I shouldn’t be having sex before marriage anyway. Especially now that I have changed my life. I don’t really listen to rap music anymore. I don’t have anything against it. It’s just that my ears won’t accept me listening to it anymore.”

“Even my patience has changed. I used to have a bad temper. I would snap. Now, I feel that I’ve always been a sweet person, but I had my ways. I could be a little snobby when I wanted to be, but now I have just left that energy alone. It’s not in my spirit at all no more to be like that toward anybody. I also stopped cursing. I used to curse a lot. Even though people around me are trying to stop cursing. We have this thing like, (laughing) ‘You curse, you got to give me $20!’ So yeah. My life has really changed.”

MB MAGAZINE: “What legacy would you like to leave for your daughter?”

ALEXIS SKYY: “I want the best for her when she grows up. I created a company for her called KoKo Mi. We provide “mommy and me” products like shampoo, conditioner, and hair drops, and we’re working on developing hair bonnets for kids who have been diagnosed with hydrocephalus, which is a condition that my daughter was diagnosed with, and for kids who have cancer. It’s not easy raising a child with special needs or a kid that has cancer. So, we’re trying to tap into that awareness. My plan is to leave that business for my daughter and her kids to carry forward.”

MB MAGAZINE: “What's next for you in your faith walk?”

ALEXIS SKYY: “I don’t know. I’m just waking up and I’m just asking God, ‘What do I do now? What’s next?’ Every day is something new.

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