Actress Photos Actress Brené Brown HD Photos and Wallpapers October 2021 By GethuCinema Admin October 30, 2021 Related Posts Actress Brené Brown HD Photos and Wallpapers January 2024 Actress Brené Brown HD Photos and Wallpapers January 2024 Actress Brené Brown HD Photos and Wallpapers October 2022 Actress Brené Brown HD Photos and Wallpapers March 2022 Actress Brené Brown HD Photos and Wallpapers February 2022 Actress Brené Brown HD Photos and Wallpapers September 2021 Share This Post FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsAppReddItTelegram Thank you to @mrbrettgoldstein and @aclfestival for making Saturday night so fun! Thank you to @ginachavez and @carrierockriguez for not only singing the podcast music live, but writing and singing our introductions. Y’all are amazing. ❤️ Brett came to the lake with us on Sunday. We went swimming and Charlie was his partner for tubing. The water was rough and they caught a lot of air. I asked Charlie if he learned any new language. He just smiled: Nope. Just a different accent. 😉 Stay tuned to hear our convo on Unlocking Us! Thank you to @mrbrettgoldstein and @aclfestival for making Saturday night so fun! Thank you to @ginachavez and @carrierockriguez for not only singing the podcast music live, but writing and singing our introductions. Y’all are amazing. ❤️ Brett came to the lake with us on Sunday. We went swimming and Charlie was his partner for tubing. The water was rough and they caught a lot of air. I asked Charlie if he learned any new language. He just smiled: Nope. Just a different accent. 😉 Stay tuned to hear our convo on Unlocking Us! Thank you to @mrbrettgoldstein and @aclfestival for making Saturday night so fun! Thank you to @ginachavez and @carrierockriguez for not only singing the podcast music live, but writing and singing our introductions. Y’all are amazing. ❤️ Brett came to the lake with us on Sunday. We went swimming and Charlie was his partner for tubing. The water was rough and they caught a lot of air. I asked Charlie if he learned any new language. He just smiled: Nope. Just a different accent. 😉 Stay tuned to hear our convo on Unlocking Us! Thank you to @mrbrettgoldstein and @aclfestival for making Saturday night so fun! Thank you to @ginachavez and @carrierockriguez for not only singing the podcast music live, but writing and singing our introductions. Y’all are amazing. ❤️ Brett came to the lake with us on Sunday. We went swimming and Charlie was his partner for tubing. The water was rough and they caught a lot of air. I asked Charlie if he learned any new language. He just smiled: Nope. Just a different accent. 😉 Stay tuned to hear our convo on Unlocking Us! “Dare to Lead” is back! I’ve missed y’all. We’re jumping in with a conversation with Dr. @amycuddy about an article that she and JillEllyn Riley wrote for the @washingtonpost on “Pandemic Flux Syndrome.” I don’t know about y’all, but I’m worn-out, which is hard because September is my “new year” and I’m always hopeful and ready. Instead, my anxiety and pissed-offedness about COVID have taken on a new shape. I found this conversation really helpful. The first step to moving through emotion is naming it. Despite the mythology and what we see on our TVs, building meaningful, intimate, vulnerable friendships requires meaningful and hard work. No one makes a stronger case for the payoff of this type of work than Aminatou Sow and Ann Friedman. On today’s episode of “Unlocking Us,” we dig into their book, “Big Friendship: How We Keep Each Other Close.” It’s a masterclass on what it means to keep showing up—in both our Big Friendships and all the other kinds of relationships in our lives. Tag a friend to say, “Hey! And thanks for showing up.” ❤️ A couple of episodes back, we talked with Charles Feltman about his incredible book, “The Thin Book of Trust,” and what it means to build trust between people in teams and organizations. In the latest episode of “Dare to Lead,” Barrett (my sister and the chief of staff of Brené Brown Education and Research Group) and I dig in on what trust looks like in our organization and what we’ve learned from bringing this work to people across the globe. This is the first part of a two-part episode on how to approach the topic of trust in a way that’s productive and actionable. He’s here, he’s there, he’s . . . on the podcast!! @mrbrettgoldstein and I recorded this one live a couple weeks ago at the Austin City Limits Music Festival in Texas. It was equal parts wild and fun! We talked about “Ted Lasso,” vulnerability in the show’s writers’ room, and why drama without humor is not good art. We also talked about the Muppets, the meaning of bollocks, and death. You know—just a normal chat. Excited to share that HBO Max has ordered an eight-episode series based on “Atlas of the Heart.” I’m grateful for the opportunity to continue to explore this framework for meaningful connection. To talk about the emotions and experiences that define what it means to be human—and the language and grounded confidence we need to find our way back to ourselves and to one another. See you in your living room next spring! Sarah Niles is mesmerizing in this season of “Ted Lasso.” Her performance as Dr. Sharon Fieldstone, the new team psychologist, is so deeply rooted in truth and humanity, love and kindness, that I have just one word for the show’s creators: spin-off. Getting to talk with Sarah for this week’s “Unlocking Us” was a gift. We dive into her background in the theater, her commitment to story, and how she’s harnessed her self-proclaimed superpower: vulnerability. I loved this conversation, @sarahniles_! I hope you get to do something that brings you joy this weekend. For me, joy + play = pickleball. I’m obsessed and try to play four to five times a week. The court might be the only place in the world where I’m fully in the now. Not thinking ahead, worrying, wondering—just keeping my eye on the ball and my head in the game. When I don’t do both, there’s immediate feedback. Like a ball to the face. Excited about the launch of Major League Pickleball @majorleaguepb, with the first tournament in Austin next weekend. I’m a part of the ATX Pickleballers owners’ group. It’s a league with full gender equity—same court time and same prize money. If you’re in Austin, it’s going to be fun. And great competition! Stay awkward, brave, and kind (on and off the court), BB ☝️ This article, co-written by Ruchika Tulshyan and Jodi-Ann Burey for the “Harvard Business Review,” is required reading for anyone who has even a smidgen of responsibility for building and shaping cultures of belonging in the workplace. (It also happens to be among the HBR’s 100 most-read articles of all time.) In the piece, Ruchika and Jodi-Ann write: “Even if women demonstrate strength, ambition, and resilience, our daily battles with microaggressions, especially expectations and assumptions formed by stereotypes and racism, often push us down. Imposter syndrome as a concept fails to capture this dynamic and puts the onus on women to deal with the effects. Workplaces remain misdirected toward seeking individual solutions for issues disproportionately caused by systems of discrimination and abuses of power.” I am so deeply grateful to @rtulshyan and @jodiannburey for digging in with me today on this powerful episode of “Dare to Lead.” Hard conversations are never easy—it’s a commitment and a practice to choose courage over comfort. On “Dare to Lead” this week we talk about the Engaged Feedback Checklist: the primary tool we use to build a daring feedback practice. 9/29 EDIT: By “unsurface” we mean unearth or surface, but we can’t change the image, so there’s no undo for unsurface. #imperfect In today’s “Dare to Lead” episode on the “Hardest Feedback I’ve Ever Received,” I share how difficult it was for me to hear that I can be scary when I’m scared. I come from a long line of scary scared people, so I know what it’s like to be across the table from that energy. Being a scary person when you’re afraid is such the antithesis to courageous leadership. It unravels trust. It keeps people on eggshells. I don’t want to be that kind of person, or that kind of leader. But the paradox is, the intensity that fuels my fear-to-scary self is the same intensity that fuels one of my greatest strengths as a leader: my creativity. So finding the balance on this intensity continuum is something I work on every day. Every. day. Stay tuned for part two in this feedback series, coming next week, when Barrett and I will unpack the ins and outs of the Engaged Feedback Checklist. I got Esther Perel-ed, y’all. In a matter of just a few short minutes, she explained how it was that the past 18 months with Steve have been simultaneously the toughest season of our marriage AND a period where we’ve known each other better than we have in three decades. She says, “In a couple, it’s a fascinating thing what happens to a paradox. It’s called ‘to split the ambivalence.’” And in our marriage, Steve and I have been splitting the ambivalence over uncertainty. And the struggle of the pandemic was just the thing to expose it. Dang. @estherperelofficial Charles Feltman’s definitions of trust and distrust have been foundational for me—they simply and elegantly capture what we’ve learned from 20+ years of data, and they give us handles for the huge, gauzy construct of trust. His book, “The Thin Book of Trust,” is a book every single person should have—whether you’re in an organization, you’re a creative, or you’re just working to build more trust with the people in your life. It’s solid, actionable information. I am so grateful to Charles for joining me on today’s episode of “Dare to Lead,” where we dig in on these definitions and explore how they play out at work, in relationships, and in our everyday lives. Liz Wiseman—author, executive adviser, and someone who’s done tons of research in organizations all around the globe—is out with a new book called “Impact Players: How to Take the Lead, Play Bigger, and Multiply Your Impact.” If you could see my copy, you’d see a lot of highlighting. It just gives us—both leaders and working professionals—a lot of new language around how to make our work and our impact at work more fulfilling. I’m grateful to @bylizwiseman for joining me on “Dare to Lead”—and for digging in on what impact players look like, what sets them apart, and how they contribute. Hope you enjoy this episode. Thank you @melindafrenchgates for this important article in @time: “Instead of making it possible for U.S. workers to be active parts of their families and the economy at the same time, our country has long operated on the wildly outdated assumption that we all have stay-at-home partners to handle the caregiving. This may be because so many of the people who set policy in this country are in precisely that position.” “At some point in our lives, almost everyone who works will need time away from their job to take care of themselves or someone they love. A new baby, an aging parent, a sick family member, a startling diagnosis: these are constants of life. Workers want to know that when the inevitable happens, they’ll be able to stay connected to their jobs and maintain some financial security.” To find the article, see link in profile or click the link in stories. Sarcasm. From the late Greek “sarkazein,” meaning to “tear flesh”—yes, you read that right. To tear flesh. Is sarcasm: a. Funny b. Unclear and unkind c. Hurtful d. Confusing and potentially painful for children who have not mastered second-order mental state reasoning e. All of the above depending on context and if it’s masking pain, anger, or resentment While researching for “Atlas of the Heart,” the research was clear that the answer is “e”—no question. I’m looking for your favorite film or TV clip that shows sarcasm in action. It can be funny, hurtful, or confusing. I need a clip that’s approximately 30 seconds to 1 minute. It can be longer if it’s REALLY on point. Thanks, y’all! Happy 21st day of September (courtesy of Earth, Wind & Fire). Happy UNBOUND launch week to my friend @taranajaneen. This book will take your breath away! Yes, we’re keeping our day jobs. But we’ll never stop singing or laughing. We’re baaaaaack! In today’s episode of “Unlocking Us,” Ashley, Barrett, and I reunite to answer just a few of the questions that came in over social media this summer during the series we did on “The Gifts of Imperfection.” We dig in on . . . ▪️what’s really going on when we’re constantly looking for something ELSE to make us happy. ▪️how to navigate the gauntlet of upset responses when we choose discomfort over resentment (pro tip: don’t turn into a boundary bully). ▪️how to tell the difference between polling and seeking genuine advice from others. ▪️how to practice authenticity with someone who doesn’t practice the same. Plus, as three people who are all knee-deep in caregiving of both kids and parents, we take time to talk about the stress sandwich. Hope you enjoy this episode. And keep the questions coming. Mark your calendars: On December 2, we’re kicking off “Atlas of the Heart” with a virtual book launch! I’ll be in conversation with one of my favorite people, @priyaparker. Check out the link in my profile to find your favorite local independent bookstore to purchase tickets! Can’t wait to start sharing this work with all you mapmakers and travelers. Looking forward to seeing you on Zoom soon! “Unlocking Us” is back, and we are diving straight into a conversation with the singular Tarana Burke. @taranajaneen Tarana’s new memoir, “Unbound,” came out yesterday. I’ve already read it twice and I’m starting again. Tarana is unflinching in her storytelling. As she takes us on the journey that transformed her life and the world, we can feel our own transformation happening. The person who starts this book is not the person who finishes this book. P.S. Sorry, not sorry about the hysterical laughter. We can’t help ourselves. Every now and again I come across an artist and think to myself, I’m just so glad I’m alive at the same time that this person is alive. And that’s what I think when I listen to the music of @jakewesleyrogers. I first came across him on TikTok and fell truly, madly, deeply in love with his art. How it made me sing, cry, dance, and feel. He is such a gift. And I am so grateful for his art, his unapologetic authenticity, and the light he shines into hard, dark places. Let his goodness shine on your face today as you listen to this deeply special episode of “Unlocking Us.” (And, at the risk of spoiling the surprise, don’t bow out of this one early: Jake’s beautiful, ethereal track “Pluto” closes the episode.) ❤️ TagsBrené Brown Previous articleActress Ashu Reddy HD Photos and Wallpapers October 2021Next articleActor Scott Borchetta HD Photos and Wallpapers October 2021