Daring Greatly Summary - Deepstash
Daring Greatly Summary

Daring Greatly Summary

Curated from: fourminutebooks.com

Ideas, facts & insights covering these topics:

17 ideas

·

112 reads

Explore the World's Best Ideas

Join today and uncover 100+ curated journeys from 50+ topics. Unlock access to our mobile app with extensive features.

Author Quote

Author Quote

"Courage starts with showing up and letting ourselves be seen."

-Brene Brown

2

19 reads

Daring Greatly - Book Summary

Daring Greatly is a book about having the courage to be vulnerable in a world where everyone wants to appear strong, confident and like they know what they’re doing.

2

11 reads

Daring Greatly sure was a surprise hit for me. First of all, if you don’t know Brené Brown , she’s a social worker, researcher, PhD and explorer of all things human, especially topics, or rather feelings, like courage, vulnerability and shame. Her TED talk  sits smack behind Simon Sinek’s Start With Why  on the top TED talks of all time list with 25 million views.

This book, one of her three New York Times bestsellers, explains how vulnerability is at the core of all feelings – not just bad ones like fear, anxiety and shame, but also good ones like love, joy, and passion.

She says that we could all use a little more vulnerability in our lives, because it’s neither bad nor good. It just is, and embracing it means being courageous.

2

7 reads

She says that we could all use a little more vulnerability in our lives, because it’s neither bad nor good. It just is, and embracing it means being courageous.

2

7 reads

Top 3 Book Lessons On Vulnerability

  1. Vulnerability means strength, not weakness.
  2. Understand and verbalize your shame to make it go away.
  3. Children can only become who you are, so be a role model.

Are you willing to open up and let this book into your life? I hope you are, because Brené’s ideas are very powerful.

2

7 reads

Lesson 1: If you can be vulnerable, it means you’re strong.

First, Brené makes two core points about vulnerability.

  1. Vulnerability isn’t good or bad . It’s not a black and white subject. It’s just a part of life and if you experience it, it means you’re able to feel things.
  2. Allowing yourself to actually be vulnerable is a sign of strength and courage . It’s a lot easier to avoid the things that might make you vulnerable, rather than lean into them. But that also means we’re missing out on a lot of good things.

2

6 reads

For example, if you’ve ever loved someone you know that being in love makes you very vulnerable. You allow someone into your heart and give them incredible power, which includes the power to hurt you. But only if you accept this state of vulnerability do you have a shot at all the love, joy and kindness you might experience from that relationship. This means vulnerability isn’t just the source of pain and grief, but also the root of many positive emotions.

2

6 reads

Note:  I’m getting coffee with a girl I haven’t really seen in six years today. I was in love with her in high school and it scares the shit out of me to see her again. But if I don’t go I’ll never know why, so my best bet is to go there, be vulnerable, show myself and see what’s to come.

2

4 reads

Second, you could hide from the things that make you vulnerable. The responsibility for a project at work. The girl or guy you haven’t seen in forever. The art you want to create . But you know that’s a cop out. Leaning into vulnerability is something only the strong, the truly courageous can do.

2

4 reads

Lesson 2: Build a resilience to shame by understanding it

What’s worse than completely bombing a speaking gig? Being ashamed about bombing a speaking gig and never doing one again.

There’s a quote that goes “Failure is temporary, giving up is what makes it permanent.” Shame is what makes you give up.

“I’m ashamed that I wasn’t there for my son when he was little.”

“I’m ashamed I didn’t try harder at being a good wedding planner.”

2

7 reads

“I’m ashamed at work, because my co-workers talk about me behind my back.”

Have you thought any of these? Or other variations? I bet you have. But have you said them? Try it. I just did this morning. There’s a certain level of ridicule to be found in every single shame you express. Pinpointing what actually makes you feel ashamed and saying it out loud takes a lot of power from shame .

2

4 reads

Nobody wants to talk about shame. It’s uncomfortable. But the less you do, the more power it has. Instead, pull at it. Drag it out. Throw it into the light. And address it directly. You’ll see things aren’t as worrisome as they seem and that you can live past failure.

2

3 reads

Lesson 3: Be a role model for your (future) kids

Whether you have kids or not, I thought this was worth taking away. Your children can only inherit qualities you possess yourself .

If you’re sloppy, your children will be sloppy. If you’re organized, your children will be organized. And if you’re constantly shame-ridden, you’ll traumatize your kids by making them feel the same.

If you’ve been bullied, threatened or otherwise traumatized as a kid, you know that most childhood trauma comes from shame. Shame about an event, behavior, or even just about how others have treated us.

2

6 reads

Therefore, it’s your job to make your home and family a shame-free zone . It’s the only way your kids will grow up feeling worthy, loved and able to truly be themselves.

Instead of talking about values like honesty, courage and ambition, live them. Be honest. Be courageous. Be ambitious. The best thing you can do for your kids, born or not, is to be a role model. It’s all the parenting they need.

2

5 reads

Daring Greatly - Boo Review

I think the reason Brené’s TED talk and work responds with so many people is that she went through all of the struggles she describes herself. When she first discovered that vulnerability was at the core of any life, especially any good life – she broke down. Researchers and scientists aren’t exactly out to be vulnerable. They’re trying to measure things so they can predict the future better. That’s quite the opposite, so it took some time for her to deal with this new situation and data.

2

3 reads

You can feel that in her talks and writing. She’s not a bullshit artist. She’s seen the dark side. And she’s here to tell us not only that we have to do too, but that we can and that it’ll be okay.

A wonderful person to learn from. I highly recommended Daring Greatly .

2

5 reads

Who would I recommend the Daring Greatly to?

The 15 year old, shy schoolboy, who’s being bullied, the 25 year old mother of this boy, and anyone who never talks about what they’re ashamed of.

2

8 reads

IDEAS CURATED BY

tomjoad

Introverted Extravert

CURATOR'S NOTE

Daring Greatly (Brene Brown) - Book Summary

Tom Joad's ideas are part of this journey:

Mood Boosters: Put Yourself in a Happy Mood

Learn more about motivationandinspiration with this collection

The power of gratitude and positive thinking

Ways to improve your mood

Simple daily habits for a happier life

Related collections

Read & Learn

20x Faster

without
deepstash

with
deepstash

with

deepstash

Personalized microlearning

100+ Learning Journeys

Access to 200,000+ ideas

Access to the mobile app

Unlimited idea saving

Unlimited history

Unlimited listening to ideas

Downloading & offline access

Supercharge your mind with one idea per day

Enter your email and spend 1 minute every day to learn something new.

Email

I agree to receive email updates