Passion Struck with John R. Miles - Anne Marie Anderson on How to Build Your Front Row | EP 587
Episode Date: March 20, 2025In this episode of Passion Struck, host John R. Miles welcomes Anne-Marie Anderson, an accomplished broadcaster and author of "Cultivating Audacity." They discuss the importance of audacity in persona...l and professional growth, the role of preparation, and how to build a supportive "front row" of trusted individuals in your life. Anne-Marie shares her journey in sports broadcasting, the challenges she faced, and how she navigated her career with boldness and resilience.Full Shownotes here: What You’ll Learn in This Episode:Understanding Your Inner Critic: Anne-Marie emphasizes the importance of recognizing and managing your inner critic, which often undermines confidence and decision-making.Cultivating Audacity: Audacity is defined as the willingness to take bold risks. It is not an inherent trait but something that can be cultivated through practice and intentionality.The Importance of Preparation: Preparation is crucial for success. Anne-Marie shares her experiences in broadcasting, highlighting that thorough preparation leads to confidence and better performance.Building Your Front Row: Your "front row" consists of the people who support, challenge, and uplift you. It's essential to surround yourself with individuals who contribute positively to your journey.Navigating Risks: Not all risks are reckless; understanding the difference between reckless and worthwhile risks is vital for personal growth.Hope vs. Planning: Anne-Marie argues that hope is not a plan. Instead of having a backup plan, focus on amending your primary plan to achieve your goals.For more information on Anne Marie Anderson: https://annemarieanderson.com/Sponsors:Factor Meals: http://factormeals.com/factormeals50off and use code “FACTOR MEALS 50 OFF”Rosetta Stone: Unlock 25 languages for life at “ROSETTASTONE.com/passionstruck.”Prolon: Reset your health with 15% off at “ProlonLife.com/passionstruck.”Mint Mobile: Cut your wireless bill to 15 bucks a month at “MINT MOBILE dot com slash PASSION.”Hims: Start your journey to regrowing hair with Hims. Visit hims.com/PASSIONSTRUCK for your free online visit.Quince: Discover luxury at affordable prices with Quince. Enjoy free shipping and 365-day returns at quince.com/PASSIONNext on Passion Struck:In the next episode of Passion Struck, John sits down with Anne Marie Anderson, an Emmy Award-winning broadcaster, sports journalist, and leadership expert. Anne Marie has spent years breaking barriers in sports media, navigating high-stakes environments, and coaching top athletes and executives on leadership, resilience, and communication. In our conversation, we'll dive into the mental frameworks of high performers, the art of storytelling, and how to build confidence in any field.For more information on advertisers and promo codes, visit Passion Struck Deals.Join the Passion Struck Community!Sign up for the Live Intentionally newsletter, where I share exclusive content, actionable advice, and insights to help you ignite your purpose and live your most intentional life. Get access to practical exercises, inspiring stories, and tools designed to help you grow. Learn more and sign up here.Speaking Engagements & WorkshopsAre you looking to inspire your team, organization, or audience to take intentional action in their lives and careers? I’m available for keynote speaking, workshops, and leadership training on topics such as intentional living, resilience, leadership, and personal growth. Let’s work together to create transformational change. Learn more at johnrmiles.com/speaking.Episode Starter PacksWith over 500 episodes, it can be overwhelming to know where to start. We’ve curated Episode Starter Packs based on key themes like leadership, mental health, and personal growth, making it easier for you to dive into the topics you care about. Check them out at passionstruck.com/starterpacks.Catch More of Passion Struck:Check my interview with Jeffrey C. Walker On The Criticality of Collaboration in Systems ChangeMy episode with Richard Dolan On the Importance of Financial Health in LifeCan't miss my episode with Codie Sanchez on How to Gain Financial FreedomCatch my interview with Adrian Brambila on 21 Brutal Money Lessons You Need NowListen to my solo epísode on Robert Breedlove on the Hidden War on Financial FreedomIf you liked the show, please leave us a review—it only takes a moment and helps us reach more people! Don’t forget to include your Twitter or Instagram handle so we can thank you personally.How to Connect with John:Connect with John on Twitter at @John_RMilesFollow him on Instagram at @John_R_MilesSubscribe to our main YouTube Channel and to our YouTube Clips ChannelFor more insights and resources, visit John’s websiteWant to explore where you stand on the path to becoming Passion Struck? Take our 20-question quiz on Passionstruck.com and find out today!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Coming up next on Passion Struck.
I think in working with your inner critic is acknowledging it's always going to be there, John.
Your inner critic is always going to be alongside you, chirping away.
You need to be able to recognize when it's talking and take away its ability to make decisions for you.
You can explore the ideas, but your inner critic does not get to be a decision maker.
Welcome to Passion Struck. Hi, I'm your host, John R. Miles.
And on the show, we decipher the secrets, tips,
and guidance of the world's most inspiring people
and turn their wisdom into practical advice
for you and those around you.
Our mission is to help you unlock
the power of intentionality so that you can become
the best version of yourself.
If you're new to the show, I offer advice and answer listener questions on Fridays.
We have long form interviews the rest of the week with guests ranging from astronauts to
authors, CEOs, creators, innovators, scientists, military leaders, visionaries, and athletes.
Now let's go out there and become passion struck. Hey, passion struck fam, welcome to episode 587.
Whether you're a long time listener
or tuning in for the first time,
I am so grateful you're here.
You have joined a global movement
dedicated to unlocking your full potential,
living with intention,
and making what truly matters matter most.
Before we dive in, let's take a moment to reflect
on Tuesday's episode with Near IL.
We explored how to master focus,
break free from distractions,
and design a life that aligns with your deepest goals.
If you missed it, I highly recommend going back to listen.
It's packed with actionable insights
to help you reclaim your time and attention.
Now let me ask you this, what if the only thing standing between you and your biggest dreams isn't a lack
of talent or opportunity but a lack of audacity? What if the bold risks we shy
away from are actually the ones that could transform our lives? And how do we
dismantle doubt and step into the courage required to chase what truly
matters? That's exactly what we're diving into today with my guest,
the extraordinary Anne-Marie Anderson, a three time Emmy Award winning
broadcaster for ESPN keynote speaker and now the author of her powerful new book,
Cultivating Audacity, How to Dismantle Doubt and Take Bold Risks.
Anne-Marie's story is a masterclass in resilience, reinvention, and the empower of intentional risk-taking. From her days
as a standout collegiate volleyball player to her groundbreaking career
covering six Olympic Games, heavyweight title fights, and the Super Bowl, she
continually pushed the boundaries of what's possible. In today's conversation
we explore how Anne-Marie made audacity her superpower, navigating
setbacks with grit and grace.
We explore the lessons she's learned from legendary coaches and athletes about achieving
greatness, and then we go into her strategies for dismantling self-doubt, recalibrating
rejection and taking risks that matter.
Anne-Marie's insights go beyond her incredible career.
They challenge us to rethink our mindset, action, and sense of belonging.
Whether you're at a crossroads in your personal journey,
striving to lead with intention,
or simply looking for the courage
to take your next big leap,
this conversation will leave you inspired and empowered.
And for those of you who want to go deeper,
check out our episode Starter Packs
at either Spotify or passionstruck.com slash Starter Packs.
With over 500 episodes,
we've curated playlists on themes like leadership, mental health, and personal growth to help you
find the inspiration that resonates most with you. And don't forget to subscribe to my live
intentionally newsletter at passionstruck.com for exclusive weekly insights, tools, and actionable
strategies to live with greater intention. And if you prefer video, join the growing community on the John R. Miles YouTube channel where you can watch this episode and more.
While you're there, subscribe and share it with someone who could benefit from Anne Marie's wisdom.
Now, let's dive into this incredible conversation about fearless living, bold risk taking,
and the courage to pursue what truly matters with the remarkable Anne Marie Anderson. Thank you for
choosing Passion Struck and choosing me to be your hosting guide on your journey
to creating an intentional life.
Now let that journey begin.
I am absolutely thrilled today to welcome Anne-Marie Anderson to PassionStruck.
Welcome Anne-Marie.
Thanks, John.
I'm excited to talk with you. As I talked about in the introduction, your career is filled with many
extraordinary accomplishments from winning Emmy awards to covering the
Olympics and other major sporting events.
What are some pivotal moments that shaped your approach to boldness and
dismantling doubt, things we're going to cover in depth today?
I started ESPN when I was 21 years old in a temporary position.
It was only guaranteed for six months.
And I think to start my professional career in a competitive way,
knowing that I needed to compete in those six months
and really shine and stand out and be bold and different,
shaped the way that I approached my career.
As a former athlete, I'm used to competing and to be able to, there's no time to warm
up.
There's no time to be shy, which I was when you're pitching story ideas for ESPN's sports
center.
I think right out of the gate, I learned quickly that I needed to be willing to take some bold risks
in my career if I wanted to succeed. Well, I know for me that being a Division I athlete really was
critical in developing so many aspects of who I am and my mindset around the importance of taking
action, how it developed my relationship with teammates
and the power that they bring to supporting you
and encouraging you.
I know you had a really illustrious career at Hofstra.
How did that influence your competitive experience
and resilience that you now have in life and in your career?
I totally agree with you.
There's so much that can be learned
from being part of a team at any level life and in your career? I totally agree with you. There's so much that can be learned from
being part of a team at any level that you take into business. I had a little bit of a unique
situation going into college. I was a pretty good volleyball player and I was being recruited
by a lot of the West Coast schools. I had talked to Hawaii and Long Beach and UCLA and such,
and then I broke my leg.
And so all of my offers, West Coast went away.
I literally went on recruiting trips
on crutches with a broken leg.
And that's how I ended up at Hofstra,
a school I had never heard of before up to that point,
because I'm a Colorado kid and I live in California now.
And I think what I learned being there was the value of adaptation. It
was a different level of volleyball at that point. And I look now at all the kids transferring
from one school to the other to get the best opportunity. And what I learned there at Hofstra
was really how to work within a different system, how to embrace, I mean, New York is a different culture
altogether, how to embrace a different culture.
And I feel like that resilience,
because we didn't win a lot.
And I learned how to reframe my relationship with failure,
with losing at times, until by my senior year,
we were winning quite a bit.
I think if I had gone into a really winning program and sat the bench, by the way, I'm sure I would have, I maybe wouldn't
have been quite as resilient as I ended up being by the time I graduated. Yeah, it really does
make a huge difference and I'm so honored that I had that background. And having gone to a service academy, I sometimes wonder how much it would have been different
if I went to a normal university where you didn't have, where I'm sure the sports
focus would have been even more pronounced.
I think our coaches knew we had these other elements to our existence, so they couldn't
own all our time.
But I think
at other universities you're really owned by the sport that you're part of.
Yes and thank you for your service by the way which academy did you go to?
I went to the Naval Academy.
Thank you very much for your service.
Thank you. Today we are going to be discussing your brand new book,
congratulations on that, Cultivating Audacity.
And I think it's important to start out
with maybe a definition of what audacity is.
Completely, because I think in this country,
we have this negative connotation of audacity, right?
I mean, you have the audacity to ask me that,
or the audacity to say that, who do you think you are?
I mean, my parents used to say that once in a while to me
when I was a teenager.
And then I looked it up and audacity by definition
is the willingness to take bold risks.
That's not negative.
Doesn't have any kind of a negative ringtone to it to me.
In fact, my sister in-laws from Argentina
and she was surprised to hear that there is sometimes
a little bit of a negative undercurrent with the word
because in Argentina, audacity is all the positive things.
Looking at taking bold risk, which is audacity,
I don't think it's something you're born with, John.
I think it is something that you have to cultivate and grow
and that's why that's the title cultivating audacity
because it takes practice in order
to take bold risks and have the confidence to do so.
I have a friend of mine, Scott Simon, who wrote the book, Scare Your Soul, and he's
trying to start a courage movement.
But I think it's the same thing.
You've got to start taking boundary expanding actions if you want to grow from it.
And I think that's, as I read the book, a lot of your philosophy as well.
For sure.
Because again, it's about reframing what failure looks like.
I tell people that like to be, oh, I just, I don't like risk.
I want to stay the same.
That's great if you're completely happy with every aspect of your life, your health and
fitness, your relationships, your work, everything.
But the only thing that staying the same insures
is that there's no growth possible.
So if you wanna grow in any one area of your life,
staying the same is not an option.
You're gonna have to risk, take information from that leap,
whatever it is, and keep using it to drive you
towards your vision and your values.
That's really what it's about, is anything that brings you closer to your vision, your values. That's really what it's about,
is anything that brings you closer to your vision,
your values and who you wanna be.
Emory, you have had a lot of defining experiences
and success stories in your life.
Is there a time when you took a bold risk
that didn't pay off?
And if so, what did you learn from it?
It's an interesting question.
I feel like none of them paid off at the beginning.
It was all about learning.
I mean, my first time on air was in 78 million homes.
And I was horrible.
And I was afraid that I was going
to be horrible and exposed and judged and embarrassed.
And when I went on air, I was all those things.
But I survived it.
I mean, in terms of a bold risk that doesn't work out,
it depends on whether you're looking at the outcome.
I mean, the audacity is in the action.
The victory is in the action, not in the outcome.
So I went on air and everything that I was afraid of
was true and I survived it.
And I got some resilience and some data
to try to be better next time.
As I look through my life and I look at any risk that I took,
they all led me somewhere.
Does that make sense?
I don't count any of them as failures or not working out.
It all just became information for me.
I remember hearing you talk about that appearance
on another podcast that I was listening to prepare for this
and you were in that discussion,
talking about a conversation you were having
with your husband before you did the event
and you were going through your head,
all the things that could happen.
Your career could come,
it could be the end of your being a producer,
it could be the end of you being a broadcaster,
it could be the end of this and that.
And I think that's something that we all tend to do.
I know for me, it's always been intimidating to do public speaking.
And I had one speech that I gave that didn't fall the way I wanted it to for a sales organization.
And when I think about all the successes I had, they, they are not
the first thing that comes to my mind.
It's always that failure moment.
But I think because of it, it's made me prepare even more now about
what does the audience want?
What do I need to deliver?
How do I show up in the best way?
Do you think it's the same thing for you?
I think that's a great example, John.
Isn't that the worst?
First of all, my sympathies, right?
You give the speech and then it falls flat
and you're standing there like the emperor has no clothes.
But you got information from it.
And there's nothing you can do.
There's nothing you can do.
You're standing there naked in your head.
Exactly.
But you got information from it and rebounded.
The incident you're talking about with my husband at the time was I was terrified
that first time going on air, standing outside the stadium sobbing.
You want your reporter sobbing outside the stadium right before you go on ESPN
two, it was in 78 million homes.
And what I tell people is that if you could catastrophize the absolute worst
that can happen at some point, you're going to realize that it's probably not
going to go that far.
So the story that you were talking about, I said, I could be so bad that not
only will I never be on television again, but I'll never be able to produce again.
As you talked about, cause nobody will listen to me and I'll lose my entire career in television.
And if I lose my entire career in television, this is all I've ever wanted to do. So I will
be a miserable person and you will have no choice but to leave me because I won't be
able to be a good mother to our children who haven't even been born yet. And I will die
destitute and alone. And he was like, wow, you went there.
But once you catastrophize it,
obviously I'm not gonna die destitute and alone
because I'm bad on a television camera one time.
So once you take it to that ridiculous level,
you can survive anything.
And that's really what it's about is taking the action
and no matter the outcome knowing that you can survive and make another decision. Sometimes I
feel like when we're gonna make a decision it feels like the last one
we're gonna make. If this doesn't work out and it's not the case, catastrophize
it'll make it seem a little bit easier.
I wanted to ask you one more question on your background before we go further into the book.
Emory, what's the most audacious decision you've made in your career
and how did you navigate the uncertainty that came with it?
The most audacious thing I did looking back, and I almost can't believe it, like that,
the hubris of young people.
When I was 26, I lived in Bristol at ESPN's headquarters and loved my job.
When I was 26, I took a vacation to Southern California to visit my brother in February.
And I was thinking, man, people are playing beach volleyball out there in February and
I'm shoveling snow. And so I went back to the headquarters and I said to my boss, I'd like to be LA
Bureau producers.
And he said, well, we already have an LA Bureau producer.
And I was like, I know that's what makes this conversation so awkward.
Trying to chuckle it away.
And as we discussed, he said, how about this?
Give me two more years here.
And in two years, if we haven't made JLA Bureau of Producer, what have you really lost?
And I thought, well, two years in my 20s. And so I gave him my notice. He called me impatient.
I just knew, John, that I wasn't enjoying my life. I was enjoying my job, but not my life,
my free time. And so I gave him my notice and I quit ESPN, an absolute dream job, but not my life, my free time. And so I gave him my notice and I quit ESPN, an absolute
dream job, and drove cross country and I didn't know what I was going to do. I just knew I wasn't
going to shovel snow. And when I got to Los Angeles, ESPN gave me some freelance work as soon as I
arrived and by the end of the year I had been hired back at ESPN as LA Bureau producer
for double the salary.
And that taught me because I didn't make the decision
for money.
I made it for my life to be able to enjoy the quality
of my life and having more money
was an unexpected consequence.
I am so glad you shared this.
And I think it's something I want to explore a little bit more because I think
there are a lot of people out there who really feel stuck.
I call it on the show, quiet desperation, where they get in a situation where
they're making the money, they have the quality of life they think,
but they tend to be chasing the wrong things
and their life is out of balance.
That is exactly what happened to me.
And how does someone who's in this position
take the steps to get out of their way out of it?
Because it's much easier to talk about it
than it is to actually do it.
it's much easier to talk about it than it is to actually do it.
Yes. So here's the first thing to consider. When I talk about risks, I define in the book that there's risks that are reckless and risks that are worth it. And risks that are worth it
is anything that drives you closer to your values, vision, and who you want to be.
That leaving my job and moving across country was worth it to me at 26 when I didn't own
any property, didn't have a family, no kids.
If I were to do that same thing now, that would be reckless.
So first define those two.
Then as you're talking about, you may have somebody who's making a nice living and really
not enjoying their work, but they're thinking, well, if I leave this, that could be reckless for my family.
Then you want to explore what it is that you really enjoy and that you're good at and how you can get there in a worth it kind of way. And for me, if you have someone who's unhappy, let's say in their job or their current situation,
what exactly is it about it that you're unhappy with?
Is it the actual work? Is it the location? Is it the people that you work with? Is it the field altogether?
Because you need to pinpoint what it is in order to change it.
And then I have a series of exercises throughout
the book to help you narrow the focus. Because I'll tell you this, John, there's always,
after all my research and everybody I've talked to, there's always one of four things that
stands between us and the thing we want to do, the life we want to lead, what we want
our life to look like. It always comes down to one of these four.
Fear, time, money, or your inner critic every time.
And so diving into those and exploring what it is that's been stopping you can be incredibly powerful and breaking free.
It absolutely is the truth.
And I think one of the things that I found when reading your book on this chapter that
we're talking about is, is you're right, there isn't one reason to make a change.
Everyone has a different rationale.
But be careful about external motivation centered on others.
Sometimes we may want to prove something wrong or make them feel proud of us. Other times
we seek approval from those we esteem and aim to please them. We may do something audacious or take
a risk because we want to put it on social media to impress people. Where I'm going with here is
a lot of times we take these risks for external reasons, but what I have found is that if you're going to take a risk,
the ones that I have done in the past
that are focused on external
seem to have a high failure rate.
The ones that I have done
that are based on intrinsic motivation
tend to have a high success rate.
Do you find a correlation in that?
Absolutely. I mean, if you think about the example I gave you moving to Los
Angeles, had I done that for money,
I really think I wouldn't have had the money.
It wasn't about that.
It was internal the way I wanted my life to be. Look,
if you're doing and taking a risk because you want to impress somebody,
understand they may not even notice, right? You're thinking in your head,
Oh, I want them to be proud of me. They may not even notice.
And the easiest way to check yourself about whether your motivation is of pure
intent is,
is it going to give you more of what you love in your life?
Whatever that is more time with your family, more
autonomy, even if it's going to give you more money in your life, why do you want the money?
What are you going to do with the money? But that's the easiest check. Does it give you
more of what you love in your life? If it's an external motivation to make somebody proud,
doesn't fit that definition.
I like this section of the book where you were talking to, it was before you even launched your career and there was an advisor who was talking to about a hundred of you and said that maybe one of
you out of the hundred has a chance to be in broadcasting and to be successful.
And I would think when you started, that would have been even more daunting as a
female at that time in a very male dominated one broadcasting, but two
sports broadcasting world.
So I think oftentimes we hear something like that.
It could be a teacher, it could be a mentor we have.
that it could be a teacher, it could be a mentor we have, it could be a coach who gives us the barriers
to be successful and we end up giving up all hope
and don't pursue it.
For you, what led you to hear that
and have the audacity to pursue it no matter what?
Because I think that's what really differentiates
the people who go for it,
and I'll just make the correlation here,
like when I started this podcast,
people were telling me,
why are you even starting a podcast?
There are like three million of them.
This thing is never gonna be a success.
And if I had listened to them,
I wouldn't be here talking to you.
It's the same thing as you started your career.
Exactly, and can I ask you a quick question before I answer?
Why did you start the podcast?
Why did you start it then?
With people selling you like it's futile.
I started it because I was called to serve people and I felt that the best way to do
it and to get my message out was I needed a vehicle to do it. I di
money. That was never the
care about how many downlo
wasn't the goal. I just f
one person that could hav
And that's exactly what y
example john of like pure
you more of what you love
people. That's the same wa the book. Like I get so excited when somebody does the thing or
takes the risk. And so for me, I always tell people, some of us build backwards. I wouldn't
have gone into accounting. I can't add. I faint at the sight of blood. I don't like
the idea of working inside all day. I started eliminating all these professions. I love sports. I like
talking to people. And so when the professor said that, I didn't have a plan B. I heard
him and I thought, well, that's really a bummer for you guys. Literally, I can't believe it
when I look back. That's my thought when we were in there, but I don't have another choice. And that's why I kept
pursuing it. What's your other choice? I always tell people, if you have a plan B, go do that,
because plan B is always easier. But for me, I knew this was the only thing I ever wanted to do.
And so I was going to have to figure it out no matter how many times somebody
told me no, or what the odds are.
So I want to jump to the area of preparation.
And I remember doing an interview with Susan Kane and I was talking to
her about her Ted talk that went viral.
I think she has 40, 50 million views on it.
And it was such a well done,
well rehearsed TED talk. And she said, well, what people don't see is the 200 times I did
it and failed. Yes. Because I practiced it so many times before I got up there in front
of that stage and tried all different types of ways to approach it before
I got confident in how I wanted to deliver it.
And one of my other favorite interviews on the show was with Sally Jenkins, who I'm sure
you probably know.
And I was interviewing Sally about her book, The Right Call, but she was talking to me
about her time observing the most elite of elite athletes. And she was telling me that what
she saw differentiate them from even A-level athletes was this extraordinary mental and physical
preparation that they do that just goes above and beyond. And using that as a backdrop, how
do you see this relationship between preparation,
our mindset, and then our willingness
to take audacious leaps?
I love that question.
Because if you ask anybody in television about me,
they will say that I'm prepared.
I'm known for my preparation when I'm preparing for a game.
And it's all a safety net.
It was interesting when you were talking about
the person giving the TED talk,
that you said she did it 200 times and failed.
Whereas I would ask, is it really failure?
Is it data or information she's getting
in order to get it to exactly where she wants to go?
Preparation is everything.
And here's the thought when it comes to audacious moves.
I don't want anybody leaping off the cliff to,
oh, I'm gonna succeed at this.
I'm gonna put all my money in this and just jump into it.
It's about the careful preparation.
What are the steps I need to take in order to get there?
What are the plans that, the backup plans that could go?
That for me is where all the good stuff
is in terms of planning and preparing.
When I go on air to call a game,
because I'm still a working broadcaster for ESPN,
people will see me on the air for two hours
calling a basketball game,
but it's been four days of preparation or researching,
talking to coaches, talking to players, interviewing before I ever get on air for those two hours.
The game itself, the speech itself, the cock is the reward.
It's the preparation where you really dig in and grow the most.
I completely agree with you.
And as people have come on the podcast, I get a lot of people who say your interviews
are different from everyone else's.
And I say, well, that's on purpose because I try to do so much research that I don't
want to have the same interview someone else has with a guest, because then what's the
point if they've already done it?
My favorite thing is when I have a guest and I ask a question, I go,
no one has ever asked that to me before.
Yes, exactly.
But it's not like Barbara Walters became Barbara Walters because she
just came up with the questions on the fly before she had a guest.
I have to imagine that she dedicated herself
to the art of preparation to become the person that she was.
And I think the same thing goes with anyone in their field.
Absolutely. Barbara Walters, for example, and her team,
careful preparation and then the ability after that
to be flexible because you can prepare
and have all your questions and then you get an answer you don't expect and you want to just stay with your
questions.
I see that all the time with the ability to be flexible.
Well, you can apply that to any profession, right?
Here's what you plan to do.
Here's something that comes in that's different, some data, and you need to be flexible in
order to take your preparation and
adjust to the current situation. Yes, I think it's both of those things. It's the
preparation and then the flexibility within it. Anne-Marie, I want to jump to a
different area of showing audacity and that is showing audacity to our kids and
as I was reading your book, something really struck me. My grandmother used to always tell us when we were kids,
how she always wanted to go to medical school
and never found her way to do it.
And I can't tell you how many times I heard her tell us this regret.
And in the book, you talk about your mom who's 93 years old
and she told you one time, Anne Marie, I envy you
because I always wanted to work outside the house
but never figured out how to do it.
And I mean, it's an emotional statement, both of them,
because it's like a big part of who they are got trapped
and never got to express itself, which is very sad. But I think there's a big part of who they are got trapped and never got to express itself, which is very sad.
But I think there's a big lesson here that we can learn from this on how by the fact that we're
willing to take risks shows our children that it's okay to do to be brave as well. And I was
hoping you might be able to talk about that. For sure. And the other thing is when something does not succeed,
show that to your children as well.
An example immediately comes to mind
where I had been booked
to be a play by play announcer
for a series of games.
And I was waiting for my contract
and my contract didn't come
and finally asked the producer,
hey, is there a problem?
And they said yes.
They said the general manager and head coach decided that he wanted somebody else. And my contract didn't come and finally I asked the producer, hey, is there a problem? And they said, yes.
They said the general manager and head coach decided that he wanted somebody else.
And I thought, well, I haven't even met him.
You offered me the job.
I cleared my schedule.
You told me you were the person hiring and now somebody else.
And I was so frustrated by that, John.
I tend to cry when I'm frustrated.
I don't hide it.
That's just one of the ways I release it.
So I'm crying in my office afterwards, frustrated. And I decided I wasn't going to let that happen. I have
no control over whether or not he hired me, but I did have control about being able to talk to him
and say, here's who you're not hiring. And so I walked out of my office through the kitchen.
My children were pretty small at the time.
They see me upset.
And I said, never just let somebody deny you something
without asking questions.
And I went to the airport, bought a ticket at the counter,
flew up to, it was a short flight,
met this particular boss and said,
hey, I wanted to have a conversation with you about that.
And it was really important for me to show the kids that I was going to have that conversation with him.
I did. And he said, look, it's not personal. I said, of course it's personal.
I'm a person. I just wanted you to know who you're not hiring.
At the end of the meeting, he did hire me. He gave me a raise.
As a matter of fact, before I even started and I came back and my kids got to see that.
Those are my favorite moments when they get to see their parent, their father is the same way,
be resilient, be resourceful. I'm hoping that on my gravestone my kids will see the words
work the problem because that's what I tell them all the time when there's an
issue. Okay, do you want to be helped, heard, or hugged? And if they say they want to
be helped, I say great, let's work the problem. I think it's so important and I
remember one of these things also comes to I think helping our kids see their
failures and you were in this interview talking about your 12 year old who at the time
was having some confidence issues and some body image issues, which I think
whether you're a male or a female, we all go through it.
I grew up as a heavyset kid and I can't tell you how much that affected how I
viewed the world and looked at myself.
And I loved how you helped your 12-year-old through this.
And I was hoping you might be able to share this story.
The fourth barrier that I find really common, and everybody has it, is you're inner critic.
That voice in your head that is telling you, ready, you don't have all the qualifications,
maybe you're not good enough.
Other people are more qualified for the thing that you want to do.
And in picking my 12 year old up from school one day, and she gets in the car,
hi, honey house school.
And she says, I'm stupid.
I can't do math and oh, by the way, I'm fat.
And I was like, yo, that's a lot in one moment.
And when we talked about it, I asked the questions that a lot of people
would ask
at that point, would you say that to me?
Would you say that to somebody else?
No, why would you say it to yourself?
But we went a step further and I said, okay,
if that's not something that you would normally say,
then that's not your voice.
And a lot of psychology experts I realized
have advised the same thing where you separate
that inner critic from yourself simply by giving it a name.
Just the simple fact your brain will recognize another name.
So I asked my daughter, what would you want to call that voice?
And she said, Jerry.
And I said, okay, so if Jerry were to come up and whisper in your ear, you're dumb, you
can't do math and oh, by the way, you're fat. What would you say to
Jerry? And she said, I would say shut up, Jerry. And so if I hear
her struggling doing homework saying, Oh, I can't do this, I
will literally yell for my office, shut up, Jerry, just to
take her out of the moment and recognize it's only one thought.
It's just a thought.
That's all the power that inner critic has.
It's a thought and you can get curious about it
and explore it.
But the most important thing I think
in working with your inner critic is acknowledging
it's always gonna be there, John.
Your inner critic is always gonna be alongside you,
chirp in a way.
You need to be able to recognize when it's talking
and take away its ability to make decisions for you.
You can explore the ideas,
but your inner critic does not get to be a decision maker.
So I wanna take you to a famous athlete.
And I think we all have moments in our life,
some larger than others,
where we have to redefine how we're approaching life.
And the story I wanna talk about is Tiger Woods.
Here you have a world-class athlete
who's on the top of his game, probably at the time,
the most famous athlete in the entire world,
eyes all upon you.
And then suddenly it breaks out about the rift between him and his wife at the time.
And I remember talking to Sean Foley, his coach about it. And Sean was telling me, here, you got a guy who's an athlete, but he knows
everywhere he goes, everyone he meets, he knows exactly what they're
saying. He knows what they're saying behind his back. And all of that starts eroding your
confidence, getting under your skin, etc. Now, I think any of us can face moments like that. How
have you observed those who are elite be able to get over moments like that happen?
I think that they are absolutely brilliant with not giving a vote to anyone who shouldn't have a voice.
That's a saying from Laura Gassner, audience, who's a friend of mine and an author. And I love that phrase, because
people want to talk behind your back. They want to criticize what you're doing,
everything. They don't get to have a, they shouldn't have a voice in what you're doing.
So you don't give them a vote. I think what I see with the elite athletes, I know what I see with
the elite athletes, they're not even thinking about the person criticizing their performance
or the way that they're doing,
because that person isn't going where they're going.
So they're especially astute at blocking out anything
from someone who they don't give a vote to.
They have very small circles, the elite athletes do
in terms of who gets to have input on what they are doing.
And it is a tiny circle. It's what I would call your front row, the people that you trust
to give you feedback. Everybody else is out of the equation.
It reminds me, and I'm glad you brought that up because that's where I was hoping you would
take it is I have this philosophy. I talk about in my book called the mosquito audit.
And what I'm really encouraging people to do
is we have these invisible influences all around us.
Some of them are the closest people we have in our lives,
but you've got the invisible suffocators,
the pain in the asses, the blood suckers,
different types of mosquitoes
who might be in your front row
and who might be completely negatively influencing everything that you're trying to achieve.
So doing what I say is a mosquito audit on a regular basis, I think is extremely important.
How would you respond to that?
Absolutely. The front row, by my definition, consists of the people that will push, challenge, uplift, tell you the truth
about where you're going.
And the front row maybe doesn't contain your mother
or your best friend because they want you to be safe.
Okay, they're the people who want you to be safe.
They don't want you to be hurt.
It's a great support system to have,
but not necessarily your front row.
And you will find once in a while while you let somebody in, you start
listening to someone's advice who really doesn't have your best interests or maybe has jealousy
or competition.
You pluck them out of your front row and you'll be able to know who's in your front row by
this.
We always talk about friendship as the person you would go to when things are really bad. Your front row consists of people that you would go to
as well when things are great, when something big happens
and you wanna share it with the world.
And you're not gonna tell everybody
cause people might get jealous or brag.
Your front row are the people that you can call
and say, this happened and I'm so excited about it.
I wanted to share it with you.
And your front row will say
heck yeah. The mosquitoes, the gnats, the people who don't even deserve to be in the room have to
be weeded out of that garden. And to me with the front row is also that group that helps you feel
like you matter. Those there are those people who are bolstering your sense of belonging.
And where I wanted to take this is you do a lot of keynotes into companies where they're
dealing with pervasive disengagement.
How does this front row equate to a company setting and maybe why so many employees feel
disengaged right now?
I'm so glad you asked that.
And John, here it is.
Nobody's ever asked me that.
So great question.
All right.
We have a very increasingly individual society, right?
People working from home,
you can order things to your house.
You can ask Chad GPT for some suggestions.
We're able to be in our own bubble.
And it leads to what our surgeon general has called
a loneliness epidemic.
So if you take that into a corporate setting
where you are separate,
maybe not even working in the same space,
you're going to get this kind of isolation.
By developing a front row of your trusted advisors,
people who are challenging themselves,
they don't even have to be going
the same place you're going,
they just have to be going somewhere trying to grow.
You are able to give significance to them, right?
Significance, they have a worth and a value for you.
You hopefully are bringing a worth and a value for them,
and it reconnects.
So when you've got disengaged employees, it's because they don't have that connection to
other people who they believe are also trying to better trying to engage with themselves
with I mean with each other.
When you ask somebody, hey, John, I'm trying to write a book, I know you've written
books, and I'm wondering if you would be in my front row if I can ask you some questions. When
you ask them, and I do use those words front row, it gives them a place in your life and a connection.
People take it very seriously once you tap them and say, I'm going to need your help with this.
I can't do it alone. It's remarkable. The investment people will have within corporation,
create corporations, creating those teams, allowing the best leaders like Phil Jackson,
for example, I think was an excellent coach. They weave individuality into a powerful group culture
They weave individuality into a powerful group culture
by creating systems within that allow for front rows.
And I think that's extremely important. And I don't think a lot of leaders know how to do it.
So what would be, if you're a leader
and maybe the best example I can give is,
I remember I went to Lowe's and I got hired into this position where I was trying to overhaul.
IT operations and our security function after the company had gone through the worst security hack in retail history at the time.
And if that wasn't daunting enough, I get called into the head of HR's office my first week.
And she tells me that my group has the lowest
employee engagement scores in the entire company, 350,000 employees. But what I quickly came to
realize is that the employees, when they were thinking of their front row, their boss was
the chief seat in that front row and the boss that they had before didn't
believe in them, didn't give them autonomy, didn't really entrust them that they wanted
their input on anything.
And I just found in that situation, the more that I put myself in their shoes and looked at their capabilities from where they sat
and allowed them to have a voice into how the organization should look going forward.
It completely changed their willingness to want to invest in me and me reciprocal have
the confidence to invest more in them.
But I think a lot of people don't know how to do it.
Well, and that's brilliant by you.
And it's about, again, giving them significance.
So these employees, with their former supervisor,
didn't have really worth, as I'm listening to you,
because their ideas weren't valued.
And so it's about letting them know,
here's some ideas that I have.
I want your individual strengths.
You have a different strength than you have,
and you have a different strength,
and I want to hear all of it so that we
are building upon each other.
Employers have to create a space to be
able to have a yes and, like an improvisational attitude
where your ideas are welcome,
no matter how outlandish they are,
because even though we may not use that idea specifically,
it may lead us as a team to something else more innovative.
The innovation happens in groups.
The innovation does not happen,
no matter what people say on chat GBT when you're alone. Innovation happens when you're
talking with other people about ideas. And yes, you can get some
help from AI. But the innovation is the back and forth of ideas.
And as somebody who has a staff underneath them or people that
they are overseeing, you have to welcome their
ideas and make it open.
On Emory, one of the last areas I wanted to go into with you is I often talk about the
importance of the power of choices in our life, because I think we tend to gravitate
towards the bigger choices we make instead of realizing that it's really the
micro choices that make up the hours, the moments of our days that influence us the
most. And you emphasize in the book that life doesn't happen to you, but for you when you
live audaciously. How can shifting to this perspective empower people to make more intentional choices?
So audacity in my mind has three components to it. The first is mindset, which really
John is just about optimism, believing that you're going to be okay, no matter what happens,
you will survive that outcome. The second is audacious action, it's behavior. You have
to do something.
You can sit around and be optimistic all the time.
When people start to take an action,
no matter how small, they take control.
Whether they're saying no to something,
whether they are carving out time to look for a mentor,
to ask questions, when you combine those two together,
the mindset and the action consistently,
the optimism that we're gonna try this
and if it doesn't work out the way I want to,
I'm gonna survive it, I'm gonna learn something
and here's the action again and again,
you start to build an audacious identity.
When you have an audacious identity,
one bold risk leads to another,
leads to another because you feel a freedom to try new things,
because you are comforted knowing
you'll be able to deal with the outcome.
I think that's the most important place for people
to start when they're building an audacious life.
Thank you for sharing that.
And I wanted to end on one of the sections
from the part three of your book, which is
the idea of what is your parachute?
Because you explain in here that taking a bold risk is undoubtedly a leap of faith before
anyone takes a scary jump out of a plane, they have to have a parachute of plans to
mitigate the risks.
How does this idea or metaphor of the parachute play into
us living audaciously? It's about all that planning. You talked about preparation earlier,
what we were talking about. That's it. It's not just your front row. It's making sure that you have
the finances set up so that you're not making a reckless risk. That's very important. It's about going through time as one of the barriers,
the urgency fallacy, and listing things that are urgent
and things that are important,
because important leads you closer
to your values and visions,
and making time for what's important
instead of getting caught just on urgency.
It's about money, which is another barrier,
and recognizing that sometimes you're
going to have to spend some money to get some energy back, maybe have somebody do some things
that you don't enjoy doing so that you can continue your audacious dream. You don't just
jump saying here's what I want to do and so let's throw caution to the wind. You have these systems
in place along with your front row.
So you have checks and balances really
for lack of a better term to help you stay on the path
instead of one reckless swing of the bat,
you have many different options
in terms of trying again and again
as you figure out the best way to get where you wanna go.
Okay, and then the last thing I wanted to ask you about was hope.
Interestingly enough the most popular article I've ever written was Why the World Needs Hope.
And in the book you write hope is not a plan and you're not a big fan of hope and you say
I've always been annoyed by the question what is plan plan B? Like plan A is to write the book, but if that doesn't work out, then plan B is to
do what hope is not a plan.
If you want to plan, if you want to hope for plan A, but have a plan B in your
back pocket, then you might as well skip plan A together.
I think so many people put these safety nets in place, and I know I did for a long time.
And the more I thought I had something I could fall back on,
the more it was keeping me from pursuing
what I truly wanted to do.
And I think that's what you're saying here.
Absolutely, that's exactly it.
Look, Plan B is easier.
It's always easier.
Just keep amending Plan A, is what I did throughout my career.
Just, hey, if this isn't working,
I'll make an amendment here or there.
But we're always going to default to what's easier.
And here's the problem with Plan B.
It wasn't what you wanted to do anyway.
It's your second choice.
So you're really not going to be that fulfilled doing plan B. So that's
why I keep saying just amend plan A.
Ann Marie, it was so wonderful to have you here. Congratulations on your book, Cultivating
Audacity. Highly encourage the listeners to go out and pick up a copy. Where can people
learn more about you?
Thanks so much for having me on, John. My website, AnneMarieAnderson.com,
will tell you a lot of what you might need, especially if somebody wants to hire me to
come speak at a keynote. The book, Cultivating Audacity, is available wherever you buy your
books, Amazon, Target, Barnes & Noble, and you can always find me on Instagram as well,
AnneMarieAndersonTV or Cultiv or cultivating underscore audacity.
Anne Marie, thank you so much for joining us and for getting up at way early in the morning to do this.
I really appreciate it.
Thanks for having me. I enjoyed talking with you, John.
And that's a wrap. What an incredible conversation with Anne Marie Anderson.
Her insights on cultivating audacity, dismantling doubt, and taking bold risks remind us that courage isn't just about fearlessness.
It's about stepping forward even when uncertainty looms.
From the lessons she's learned from covering legendary athletes to the strategies she shares
for overcoming rejection and embracing challenges, Anne-Marie has given us a powerful roadmap
for living with intention and confidence.
As we wrap up today's episode, I invite you to reflect on a few key takeaways.
Where in your life are you playing it safe
when you could be taking a bold step forward?
How can you reframe rejection as a stepping stone
rather than a setback?
And what's one action you can take today
to cultivate audacity in your own journey?
If today's discussion resonated with you,
please take a moment to leave a five-star rating in review.
It's one of the best ways to support the show and help us bring impactful conversations like this one to even more people.
And if someone in your life could benefit from Anne-Marie's wisdom, share this episode with them, because a single conversation can change everything.
For all the resources we discussed, including her book Cultivating Audacity, visit the show notes at passionstark.com.
And if you want to go deeper, be sure to watch the video version of this episode on our YouTube channels, where you'll find more enriching conversations like this one.
While you're there, hit subscribe and join our growing community.
Coming up next, I'm joined by Olympic gold medalist and figure skating champion Vincent Jo.
Vincent made history as the first person to land a quadruple Lutz in the Olympic competition.
But his story goes far beyond the ice.
We'll be diving into his journey of resilience,
the challenges of elite competition,
and how he's using his platform to advocate
for mental health, leadership, and clean sport.
You won't wanna miss it.
I just remember the feeling of stepping on the ice
and not knowing what I was doing there.
And that's a really scary feeling because when you've been passion struck your whole life
and all of a sudden you step into the familiar arena, but you feel nothing.
You feel nothing. It's terrifying. It feels like you question everything. You don't know
what's happening. You don't know why it's happening. You realize it's probably up here,
but you start trying to find physical
reasons to turn it around because that's something you can tangibly change in the moment. But
at the end of the day, that's the wrong reason. So you end up seeding more doubt and more
doubt into your mind. And it's just a negative spiral.
And remember, the fee for the show is simple. If you found value in today's episode, share
it with someone who needs to hear it.
And most importantly, take what you've learned
and put it into action.
Because knowledge alone doesn't create change,
but action does.
Until next time, live life, passion strap.