If you’re asking whether your income needs to be at a certain level before this kind of work makes sense, you’re asking a question most programs never let you ask out loud. You’ve already invested in yourself in real ways — books, courses, maybe certifications, maybe therapy. And somewhere underneath the question is something more vulnerable: what if I’m not earning enough yet to deserve to be in a room like this? Or the reverse: what if I’m already earning well and the work in this community will feel beneath me? Both versions are worth taking seriously. And both, gently, point at something that isn’t really about income at all.

The honest answer: no, there’s no income floor or ceiling

There is no minimum revenue you need to hit to benefit. There is no maximum where you’ve outgrown the material. Members inside the community range from people who haven’t made their first sale yet to people running mature businesses with team and overhead. What unites them is not a number on a P&L. It’s the pattern.

The pattern is this: somewhere in their business, the same childhood adaptation is running the show. For one person it shows up as undercharging. For another it shows up as overdelivering until they’re depleted. For another it’s the freeze that hits the moment they go to post something visible. For another it’s the quiet self-sabotage at the threshold of a bigger contract. Income doesn’t tell you which pattern you have. Income only tells you how that pattern has been priced so far.

Why the income question is usually a different question wearing a costume

When the question is “do I earn enough to be here?” — what’s often underneath is: am I too early, too messy, too unproven to take up space? That’s the ACE pattern speaking. The voice that learned, young, that you had to earn your seat at the table by performing first. The community is the wrong place to keep performing for. You don’t have to be polished to enter. You don’t have to be profitable to enter. You have to be willing to look at what’s actually been keeping the income stuck — and that’s available to anyone, at any revenue stage.

When the question is “am I too established for this?” — what’s often underneath is: I’ve spent a lot already on development and I’m tired of being a beginner. That’s also worth honouring. You’re not a beginner here either. The work doesn’t start over from zero. It starts from where you actually are — which, for many higher-earning members, is the place where strategy has stopped solving the problem because the problem was never strategic. If you’ve ever wondered why all that personal development hasn’t translated into the business outcomes you expected, this is the layer most programs skip.

What the work actually addresses (and why income isn’t the gating factor)

The three-pillar approach this community is built around — inner work, outer work, and the alignment between them — doesn’t sort people by revenue. It sorts by where the brake is currently engaged. Someone earning $3K a month and someone earning $30K a month can both be braking on the same pattern: visibility, pricing, receiving, finishing, asking. The amount of money flowing through the business is downstream of the pattern. Change the pattern, and the income tends to follow — not because of a manifestation trick, but because the unconscious deceleration finally lifts.

This is also why programs that promised income outcomes and didn’t deliver often leave people feeling broken. They weren’t broken. They were running an old adaptation through a new tactic, and the tactic couldn’t reach the layer where the adaptation lived.

Some specifics, for both ends of the spectrum

If you’re earlier in your business, or pre-revenue: the work meets you here. In fact, getting to this material before the patterns have calcified into a fully-built business that mirrors them is, in many ways, a gift. You won’t have to dismantle a structure you built around a wound. You can build the structure from a clearer place to begin with.

If you’re earning well already: the work tends to focus on different territory — the ceiling that keeps reappearing at a higher number, the resentment that’s quietly building, the version of the business that looks successful from the outside and feels hollow from the inside, the impact you keep almost-but-not-quite stepping into. The brake at $300K can be every bit as tight as the brake at $30K. It just costs more to keep it engaged.

If you’re somewhere in the middle and uncertain: you’re in the largest group, and probably the most common starting point.

What about affordability — that’s a different concern

Income level and affordability are not the same question. If you’re asking the second one — can I actually justify this spend right now? — that deserves its own honest conversation, separate from whether the work fits you. There’s a more specific piece on how to think about investing in this kind of work when finances are already tight, and it doesn’t push. Sometimes the answer is “not yet, and here’s what to do in the meantime.” That’s a legitimate answer, and nothing about the community asks you to override it.

The quieter version of the question

Sometimes underneath all of it is something simpler: will I be the odd one out? Will I be the only person at my income level? Will everyone else be ahead of me, or behind me, or somewhere I can’t relate to?

The honest answer is that the conversations inside don’t tend to organise around income brackets. They organise around patterns. The person sitting next to you in any given thread might be at half your revenue or five times your revenue, and the thing you have in common — the brake you’re both feeling — is the actual basis of the conversation. That’s part of what makes it work. Income becomes a detail. The pattern becomes the meeting place.

One thing worth sitting with

If the income question is the last gate before you’d consider this, it might be worth asking — quietly, without pressure — what would I need to be true about my income for me to feel allowed in? Whatever number or condition comes up is probably a useful piece of data. Not because it’s right or wrong, but because that same condition is likely showing up in other places too. The permission slip you’re waiting for around joining might be the same permission slip you’re waiting for around charging, around being seen, around finishing the offer.

If any of this resonates and you’d like to see what the work looks like from the inside, the door is open at the Miracles For Me community on Skool. Come in at the income level you’re actually at. That’s the only one that matters.