Roxanne Jones: How do we keep ourselves together underneath that? Jones: There's a story that comes to mind. It took talking about it in public for me to receive that love, to know about her love and acceptance. She says the kind of like self love industrial complex is not just tied into our general cultural belief that everything can be must be done by yourself.Jones: I would like to think we could go deep inside our solitary selves or read a book and heal our shame.
Earlier this year, our listener, Rell, nearly failed a promotion. Not because she was unprepared or unqualified, but because she didn’t maintain enough eye contact with the interviewers. Rell’s eye hasn’t been fully receiving information since she was born, a condition that’s outwardly visible and known colloquially as a “lazy eye.” It’s beginning to affect her self-confidence and is this “ugly thing [she] can’t let go of.” On this episode of How To!, new co-host Carvell Wallace brings on Sarah Ruhl. Sarah is an award-winning playwright, and author who wrote about her experience with Bell’s palsy in her recent book, Smile: The Story of a Face. Sarah has some wonderful advice for letting go of your inner rage, making interactions with strangers less painful, and even finding people who light up your mirror neurons.
If you liked this episode, check out: “How To Dress with Confidence.”
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