
Have you ever wondered if you were meant for more? That you have unique talents and a burning desire to step up and make a difference, guided by your faith? Yet, perhaps something deep within holds you back – the voice of self-doubt or not knowing where to begin. If these thoughts resonate with you, you're in the right place.
I'm Dara Koenig, a Christian leadership coach, author, and speaker. Even though I am successful in many areas I know what it's like to wrestle with insecurities, to feel lost, and to question my ability to lead. Yet, through a profound understanding of my identity in Christ, I discovered a strength and calling I never thought possible. Now, my mission is to help women like you do the same. Together, we'll unlock the powerful leader within, guided by unwavering faith, and focused on leaving a lasting impact on the world.

As a Christian woman, your identity as a beloved daughter of God is the foundation for everything you do – including how you lead. When you know who you are in Christ, you gain the confidence and clarity you need to step into your calling.
Overcome Self-Doubt: Let's replace the voice of insecurity with the truth of who God says you are - capable, gifted, and worthy.
Discover Your Purpose: Your identity holds the key to unlocking the unique way God wants you to lead and make a difference in this world.
After spending years battling the lie that I wasn't good enough, God transformed my life. When I was filled with His truth about who He created me to be, I finally developed unshakable confidence. My identity was no longer tied to shifting feelings or the words of others, but anchored in the promises of God's Word. That's the kind of confidence I'm here to help you discover.

As a Christian leader, your integrity is essential. When you live in alignment with your faith, your actions and words become a powerful beacon, inspiring others to follow.
Ethical Decision-Making: Navigating challenging situations can be daunting. Let's develop a framework for making God-honoring choices that align with your values. We'll cover practical strategies and Biblical principles to guide you on your leadership journey.
Influence Through Action: Leadership isn't just about what you say, but how you live. Discover how your actions can inspire, motivate, and earn the trust of those you lead. Together, we'll identify steps to ensure your behavior reflects your faith and has a positive impact on the world.
Integrity is the bridge between identity in Christ and the influence you desire. Once you know who you are, doing the right thing comes naturally. This builds trust – when others see your values in action, they're open to being influenced for good.

As a Christian woman leader, your influence extends far beyond titles or positions. It's woven into the fabric of your relationships and interactions, shaping the world around you.
Everyday Influence: We all have a sphere of influence, impacting those closest to us – our families, friends, and colleagues. Discover how your daily choices, words of encouragement, and Christ-like actions can inspire others and create a ripple effect of positivity.
Leadership Amplification: Whether you lead a team at work, a small group at church, or simply head your household, your influence takes center stage. We'll equip you with practical tools and strategies to leverage your leadership for good, fostering a spirit of collaboration, service, and excellence.
The question isn't whether you have influence, but how you'll choose to use it. Schedule your free Discovery Call today and let's explore how to turn your influence into a powerful force for God's Kingdom!
With over two decades of experience empowering women, I offer more than just coaching. My approach blends practical leadership strategies with the life-changing power of the 3 I's Framework (Identity, Integrity, Influence). Whether it's through one-on-one coaching, inspiring keynote addresses, conferences like Equipping Ambassadors, or the transformative Fill(ed) devotional series, I'm committed to equipping you with the tools and inspiration to unlock your full potential. Together, we'll craft a personalized plan to help you overcome obstacles, amplify your influence, and leave a lasting legacy as a Christian woman leader.

Let's discuss your leadership aspirations, identify areas where you lack confidence, and create a clear roadmap guided by your faith. Whether you're seeking guidance on specific leadership scenarios, or want to deepen your understanding of how faith applies to your work, this call is your starting point.

Earlier Kendra was standing in a partially renovated Victorian home in Benton Harbor, Michigan. The dining room floor is missing. Outlets are exposed. There is, quite literally, a hole in the roof. And yet she is at TJ Maxx, holding a vase of flowers she has no business buying, because something in her insists they belong on a table that does not yet have a finished floor beneath it.

“I know the dining room floor was missing”, she told me. All the outlets needed to be done and there was a hole in the roof. “But it is really important for me to put these flowers on this table.”
That sentence is the whole story. Not because it is about flowers, but because it is about a woman who refused to wait for her life to look finished before she let it feel like home.
The Mayor's House was never just a renovation project. It was Kendra rebuilding herself, one nail and one impossible decision at a time.

Long before Kendra ever signed a mortgage on a crumbling Victorian, she was a little girl trailing her architect father through construction sites that doubled as playgrounds. She remembers the smell of fresh wood the way some people remember a grandmother's kitchen. Her father built new homes rather than renovating old ones, and the people around her were realtors and builders, the kind of people who talk about square footage the way other families talk about weather. She did not choose this world. She was raised inside it.
So many of us assume our becoming starts the day we make a bold decision. Kendra's story is a reminder that sometimes becoming is a homecoming to pieces of yourself placed there long before you had the language to name them. She was not learning to love old houses and creative spaces. She was simply remembering it.
By the time Kendra found the Mayor's House, she was not looking for an adventure. She was looking for the opposite. She was settled in a duplex two blocks from Lake Michigan in St. Joseph, living in the lower unit, renting out the upper, telling herself this was enough. A calm life. A simple one. Maybe some painting on the side, since that was the thing she did for herself.
Then she found it while helping someone else.

She was searching for clients who wanted something move-in ready in the hundred to hundred-thirty thousand dollar range, which, as she quickly realized, does not exist for a sprawling historic Victorian. But there it was on the market anyway, asking one hundred twenty thousand dollars, far too big and far too broken to make sense for anyone who simply wanted a quiet life by the lake.
I guess I have to get this property, she told herself. Not because the math worked. Because something in her recognized it before she fully understood why.
What followed was not a smooth path toward ownership. She had been licensed as a realtor for less than two years, which meant traditional banks would not touch her loan application. She had to go through a hard money lender and clear hoop after hoop, all while knowing that if her offer fell through, it would not just cost her a house. It would cost her reputation. She then spent thirty days terrified that withdrawing would make the listing look damaged, like something was wrong with it, like she could not be trusted to follow through.

“I know that I can make this thing make money”, she told herself, even when she had no proof yet that it would. She describes the feeling now in language that has become something like a personal theology: God was laying the tracks right in front of my train. She was not waiting for the rails to appear before she started moving. She got on, and the tracks kept showing up exactly far enough ahead to keep her from derailing.
That is not the language of someone who had it figured out. It is the language of someone who decided to move anyway.

What Instagram never showed was the month Kendra could not walk through her own living room.
She closed on the house the day before Christmas Eve, and almost immediately moved in, determined to give her teenage son something that still felt like a home rather than an abandoned construction zone. The furnace failed. The windows were plexiglass, doing nothing to hold back a Michigan winter. Then the pipes burst, and the entire dining room floor had to be torn out, beams and all, after discovering the wood had been hollowed out by insects. This meant the dining room's contents migrated to the living room, resulting in weeks where there was nowhere in her own house to simply sit down.

She was bartending at night, selling real estate by day, raising a teenage son, managing two dogs and three cats, dating, and tearing apart a house around all of it.” If you had interviewed me a year and a half ago”, she told me, laughing at the memory now, “you would have said no one should ever be an entrepreneur. She looked like she was about to lose her mind.”
And still, she kept buying candles. Still, she kept finding a picture for the wall, a vase for the table, a small intentional detail with no functional purpose other than reminding her, and anyone who walked through her door, that this was still a place where someone cared. Those things are what I need to get through the mess, she said. Not decoration for its own sake. Survival dressed up as beauty.
Kendra was not waiting for her life to stabilize before she let it become beautiful. She built warmth into the wreckage, because she understood something many of us forget in our own unfinished seasons: home is not the absence of chaos. It is the decision to plant something tender in the middle of it anyway.
Somewhere in the middle of all that disorder, Kendra started showing up at Lowe's covered in paint, hair unwashed, makeup nonexistent, teeth sometimes not even brushed. Not because she stopped caring about herself, but because she ran out of room to care about the version of herself that needed to look finished in order to feel worthy of being seen.

“I started developing relationships”, she said, “not based on me feeling good about myself and my appearance, but just like what I'm doing that day”. The Lowe's employees learned her name. They asked what she was working on. She built friendship on the foundation of her actual life rather than her curated one, and something in her loosened because of it.
“I gained a lot of self confidence in a different way”, she told me. Not the confidence of looking put together. The confidence of discovering she could do hard things even while looking like she had been wrestling a house, because she had been.
There was a moment at a women’s conference that anchors this entire transformation. Kendra originally wasn’t going to go. Rest did not come naturally to her, not when there was a house falling apart and a business to build and a son to raise. But she made the time and someone in the event said something that cracked something open in her: you are worthy even if you are not doing anything.
“That sounded ridiculous to me”, she admitted. “And I needed to hear it.”

Because Kendra, like so many women carrying both ambition and exhaustion, had quietly built her worth on a foundation of constant motion. Productivity had become so tangled with identity that stillness felt like failure. The renovation stripped away her need to appear polished. What it left behind was something sturdier. Not a woman who finally looked like she had it together, but a woman who no longer needed to.
For most of Kendra's adult life, home has been wherever her son was. That is shifting now. He is nineteen, working, gone three weeks out of every four, and Kendra finds herself asking a question she has never had to sit with before: what is home to me, now that it is not defined by him?

She does not have a tidy answer yet. What she has instead is the Mayor's House itself, transforming from a structure she built around her own family into a space designed to hold other families' moments of rest. She is no longer only building a home for herself and her son.
She is building one that opens its door to strangers and lets them borrow that same feeling, even temporarily, even just for a weekend.
That is its own kind of becoming. Motherhood loosening its grip just enough to let identity expand into something new. Purpose shifting from protecting one family to welcoming many.

Kendra's advice for anyone whose dream is taking longer than expected is not complicated. Keep going. One step at a time. You do not have to know all the steps. Just get on the train, even when you cannot see the next several miles of track. Trust that it will appear because you started moving, not because you waited until the path was fully visible.
Her story is not a tidy one about a woman who had a vision and executed it flawlessly. It is messier and far more honest than that. It is the story of a woman who bought a crumbling house she could not really afford, lived through a winter with no functioning heat, lost her appearance-based confidence and found something more durable in its place, and kept lighting candles in rooms that were nowhere near finished.

Kendra did not figure it all out before she moved. She discovered that courage often looks exactly like that, flowers on a table with no floor beneath it, trusting that the next length of track will be there the moment her train needs it.

Kendra Spohn is a realtor, entrepreneur, and owner of The Mayor’s House Bed & Breakfast in Benton Harbor, Michigan. Blending her love of design, hospitality, and historic homes, Kendra has spent the last several years restoring a Victorian property while simultaneously building a new chapter of life for herself and her family. Through real estate, entrepreneurship, and creating spaces that feel warm and welcoming, she is passionate about helping people feel at home — both physically and emotionally. Connect with Kendra and follow the journey of The Mayor’s House on Instagram


Dara has been a huge support in this amazing way, her empathy, kindness, and patience along with her strong knowledge and dedication, made this journey an amazing experience.”

