![]() ![]() You may recognize yourself and your own situation – or that of someone you care about.įrom the first page, Brown puts us in her therapist’s office and shows her own “character’s” fears of losing control. So, I want to essay here a few ideas through Brown’s example as well as through two other entwined books about ordinary creative courage. ![]() In fact, while drafting this piece out in my yard, one of my neighbors – an artist from the city – stopped by and asked, “How does depression and fear fit into your tracking wonder schemata?” Good question. I’ve been observing the many ways that faces of fear impede the authors, business artists, and entrepreneurs I interview, meet, and work with. Brown’s situation as a Texan, a professor, a conversation leader, and an author illuminates some qualities about what it takes to have creative courage in the most ordinary and unheralded moments. In her book Daring Greatly: How the Courage to be Vulnerable Transforms the Way We Live, Love, Parent, and Lead, the fellow multi-generation Texan comes clean about her lifelong resistance to being emotionally vulnerable. ![]() Brene Brown grew up with gritted teeth and a tart tongue.Īrmored, that is. ![]()
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