The Daily Mastery Podcast by Robin Sharma

Speak Your Truth [Even If Your Voice Shakes]

Robin Sharma Season 1 Episode 1047

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0:00 | 2:53

Being authentic means daring to voice your thoughts and beliefs, even when they challenge the status quo.
 
It’s about recognizing that your perspective is valid and valuable.
 
When you speak your truth (even if your voice shakes), you not only empower yourself but also inspire others to do the same. Each time you choose honesty over approval from others, you create a cascading effect of authenticity, encouraging those around you to step into their own light.
 
This is what my latest book The Wealth Money Can’t Buy is all about. Real wealth versus fake success. True winning versus spending your life climbing a mountain, only to find out at the end that it was the wrong one. You can order it now by clicking here.

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Happy home, happy life. Think about it. When are you at your best in your professional life? It's when your home is peaceful. It's when there's no conflict. It's when everyone's getting along. I really do believe that your home is your foundation and you want to make sure you have the happiest possible home. And part of that means you have great conversations and if something's not working at home, you talk about it. Most people, they swallow it, they don't talk about it. And
then relationships fall apart, not because of some big conflict, but all the little irritations that were not talked about that would have taken about two minutes to clear up. But most of us are too scared of conflict so we don't speak our truth. Speak your truth even when your voice shakes.

Here's another incredibly important point when it comes to communication, not only at home, but in the world. You can say what you want so long as you say it with respect. Often we swallow it, we pretend we're not hurting. Say it, but say it without blame. Say it with respect. Say, you know what, when you just said that it made me feel like this, or every time I hear that, it just makes me feel so bad. There's no blame whatsoever. You're talking about what's going on. The other person hears it. Remember, they are not mind readers. and then you can work to find the solution and improve the communication.