By By Arthur C. Brooks
Our fears about what other people think of us are overblown and rarely worth fretting over.
Read on www.theatlantic.com
CLEAR ALL
I hear repeatedly that women, people of color, and others whose identities differ from the dominant culture, feel relentless pressure to hide aspects of their identities and conform in order to be accepted, to “fit in,” and to succeed.
1
Adessa Barker, a well-being practitioner and the host of the popular podcast, Attitude Changes Everything, spoke about the mental health of women entrepreneurs. Barker shared her insights on some common misconceptions associated with mental health and solutions to improve mental well-being.
She likes pink, will dance to Blurred Lines, occasionally fakes an orgasm… and worries that the sisterhood would not approve. America’s brightest new essayist talks about the dark side of her fierce, funny writing.
By withdrawing from competition citing concerns over her mental health, Biles showed that resisting expectations can be more powerful than persisting through them.
Document takes you inside Róisín’s home as she talks beauty, recovery, and navigating cultural shame.
Many Black womxn experience themselves as fraudulent or substandard. It's a lie.
2