Callie England’s latest venture has no name or website; When odds are you’ll die next week, you learn to prioritize, she says
March 15, 2022 | Amelia Arvesen
Sometimes hypothetical questions become all too real, said Callie England, a serial entrepreneur who frequently posed a speculative query to herself and clients: “If you were going to die next week, what decisions would you make?”
It was a question she was forced to answer honestly in July 2021, when the veteran Kansas City startup founder was diagnosed with Stage IV Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.
“When I found out I had cancer, everything I knew and believed to be true sort of came crashing down in an instant,” England said. “All of the tomorrows, the next weeks, the next years were no longer on the table. My perception of time permanently shifted.”
In January, England stepped down as president of WallyGrow and vice president of PBS Fabrics to pursue business and brand consulting — previously a side hustle. Going through chemotherapy from July to November, England spent her time thinking about life’s big questions: like how she wanted to spend her time, both professionally and personally.
While she was in the hospital, a client shared how much her tools and advice had helped him grow his company, she said. That’s when she realized she wanted to leave the comfort of a full-time job to pay forward all the lessons she learned as a first-time business owner, from founding snack food company Rawxies in 2011 to scaling Kansas City startups.
“When the odds are greater that you die next week than you live next week, your truest self sort of presents itself,” England said.
As of now, her consulting business doesn’t have a name or a website. Rather than getting stuck in the minutiae, she said she’s more set on showing up for her clients, who have trended toward scalable, small and women-led companies.
In remission since November, England said she finally feels relief. She can eat a meal without feeling sick, get through a day without feeling like passing out, and stand up without feeling dizzy — symptoms she had been dealing with for more than a decade.
Past doctors had always written her off, she said, so she started believing she was a hypochondriac. But after she fell off a ladder in July, a CAT scan at the emergency room revealed large tumors in her intestines and adrenals. The belief is that she’s been dealing with slow-growing cancer for a long time, she said.
Click here to read Callie England’s blog on the role plants played in her survival and recovery.
Through everything, England remained emotionally steady, she recalled. Nurses would ask her how she could be so calm and collected. Ironically, she said, starting a business equipped her with the capacity to endure hardships. Tears only showed up when someone complimented her artistic talents, which signaled to her that she was neglecting her full potential and her creative side, she said.
England identifies as an artist above all, she said, noting business is important, but she’s no longer sacrificing her creative time for her professional career. She’s been incorporating different forms of making, like painting and pottery, into her daily life as she heals.
And she’s still healing.
Tears now flow when she thinks about all that she’s been through and all that she has left to process.
“Could it come back? Sure,” England said about cancer. “But I think that I’ve come to accept that time is not guaranteed and the only way I can move forward is to make sure that I’m using that time in a manner I can never regret.”
The fearlessness on display earlier in England’s career was based largely on a belief that time would never run out, she admitted.
Her health journey has flipped that line of thinking on its head, she said.
“Time is something to be valued and that’s why you should be fearless.”
This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.
For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn

2022 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Meet the 12 KC companies pledging to buy from diverse vendors; Join them in the CEO-to-CEO Challenge
Editor’s note: The following story was sponsored by KC Rising, a regional initiative to help Kansas City grow faster and more intentionally, as part of a campaign to promote its CEO-to-CEO Challenge on supplier diversity. A dozen high-profile Kansas City companies are at the vanguard of a new regional effort to boost supplier diversity programs…
Earworms to the Oscars: They’ve redefined jingle writing, now composing music for motion (pictures)
Notes of passion are composed throughout every piece of Sam Billen’s entrepreneurial melody. But it’s the most recent crescendo in his career that has him thanking the Academy. “It sounds cheesy, but it’s actually pretty cool,” said Billen, composer and founding partner of Primary Color Music, detailing the experience of guests who step foot inside…
Innovators can’t do it alone; C3KC conference calls for cross-sector attack on wealth gap, KC’s biggest pain points
Editor’s note: Startland News is a media sponsor for the Junior League of Kansas City’s C3KC conference. Click here for tickets to the event, which features a keynote address by best-selling author Adam Grant. Challenges abound in Kansas City, Kimberlee Ried acknowledged, but opportunities for innovation to push change are even more plentiful. An in-person conference…
Roll over, Wordle: Tabletop golf, cocktail bar tee’d up as KC’s next big game experience with Power and Light opening
Sinkers Lounge is reinventing mini golf in the same way Top Golf reinvented the driving range, said Matt Baysinger. “With all the ideas we have in our heads about what mini golf is, I think Sinkers Lounge will far surpass that. Tabletop golf is this combination of shuffleboard, mini golf and pool that doesn’t quite…






