The Giving Garden® Loyalty Program
When We Gather, We Grow Together
By Martina Halloran, CEO, Dr. Hauschka Skin Care USA, Founder, The Giving Garden®, and Host of The Giving Garden® Podcast
There is a belief I return to often, one that has quietly shaped both my personal journey and the work we nurture through The Giving Garden®. Women grow in the most spectacular ways when we choose to gather with purpose. Not to compare. Not to compete. But to expand one another.
When women come together in honest conversation, something shifts. Growth stops feeling like a solitary climb and begins to resemble a shared horizon. We multiply courage. We normalize ambition. We soften one another’s fears. I have witnessed this truth again and again. When women intentionally uplift one another, we do not simply support individual success. We create ecosystems of possibility.
For me, this understanding began long before boardrooms and podcast microphones. It started years ago at a beauty counter, where I met my dear friend Florence Ferrat. We were both early in our careers, navigating an industry that moves quickly and demands resilience. What we built in those early days was more than professional camaraderie. It was a friendship rooted in mutual belief.
We stood beside one another through career pivots, personal milestones, and moments of quiet doubt. There is something sacred about friendships that grow in parallel with your life. You witness each other becoming.
In her own words, Florence shared “To me, friendship is defined by presence. It is the choice to truly show up for one another, not only in words, but in actions. We stand beside each other through distance, through challenges, and through growth. There is honesty, encouragement, and a quiet, unwavering support. It reflects the strength of women uplifting one another, creating a bond that reminds you that you are never alone.
Martina and I have been showing up for each other for over 30 years, and there is a bit of magic in that commitment.”
Today, Florence is an accomplished artist whose work is layered with intention and emotion. Recently, she gave me a piece I will treasure always. It is an abstract barcode representation of the people who matter most in my life. At first glance, a barcode suggests commerce or identity. But in her hands, it became something entirely different, a visual language of love and belonging.
Each line holds connection. Each space carries history. It is a reminder that none of us moves through the world alone. We are, in many ways, encoded with the presence of those who lift us, challenge us, and grow beside us.
This spirit of shared growth is something we explore often on The Giving Garden® Podcast. Over time, I have had the profound privilege of sitting in conversation with extraordinary women who are redefining what care looks like in their communities.
One of those leaders is Erin McAleer, president and CEO of Project Bread. Erin leads with both clarity and deep humanity. Her work centers on a truth that should never be negotiable, that access to nourishing food is foundational to dignity, learning, and long term wellbeing. Under her leadership, Project Bread continues to advocate for systemic solutions to food insecurity while meeting immediate needs with compassion and precision.
What moves me most about Erin’s work is her understanding that policy and programs are not abstract concepts. They are lifelines for families. When children are nourished, they can focus, learn, and imagine their futures more freely. Erin embodies what it means to gather with intention and to build systems where everyone has the opportunity to thrive.
I have also been deeply inspired by Demi Knight Clark, whose work creates pathways for women to access skills, mentorship, and meaningful economic opportunity. Demi is not simply teaching technical abilities. She is cultivating confidence and agency. Her leadership reminds us that when one woman advances, the ripple effect often reaches far beyond her own life.
And then there is Georgi Enthoven, who invites us to rethink our relationship with work itself. Georgi challenges the notion that purpose and livelihood must live in separate spaces. Instead, she encourages us to design careers that reflect our values and our desire to contribute meaningfully. For so many women navigating reinvention, her perspective offers both permission and possibility.
When I reflect on Florence, Erin, Demi, Georgi, and the many women who have shaped my path, a clear thread emerges. Growth is relational. It is fueled by mentorship, collaboration, and the courage to uplift others as we rise.
There is a quiet revolution unfolding when women gather with intention. We exchange stories that normalize both struggle and resilience. We model leadership that is strong and compassionate at the same time. We create circles of care that extend far beyond our immediate reach.
Gathering, at its heart, is an act of reciprocity. It is not only what we receive, but what we offer. A listening ear. A word of encouragement. A resource shared at just the right moment. These gestures may seem small, yet over time they accumulate into something profoundly transformative.
So I invite you into a simple moment of reflection. Think of the women who have shaped your journey. The friend who stood beside you when the path felt uncertain. The mentor who recognized your potential before you fully claimed it. The colleague who chose collaboration over competition.
Reach out to her. Celebrate her. Thank her.
Because when we gather, when we gather for good, we are choosing collective elevation. We are affirming that there is room for all of us to grow, to lead, and to flourish. And together, we continue tending this ever expanding garden of women who uplift, inspire, and lead with heart.
To learn more about The Giving Garden®, visit drhauschka.com/loyalty-program
Discover more about Florence Ferrat’s art at FlorenceFerrat.com