The School of Greatness - 612 Sara Blakely Shares How To Be Kind To Yourself
Episode Date: March 9, 2018"THERE’S A HIDDEN BLESSING IN EVERYTHING WE GO THROUGH IN LIFE.”Running your own business can be one of the hardest things on you mentally. It’s a very masculine dominated world, and there’s o...ften times not enough love.I often notice I’m being hard on myself, especially when things go wrong.All of this got me thinking about the important words I received in the past from Sara Blakely.If you don’t know Sara, she is the CEO of Spanx. She is the YOUNGEST female self made billionaire in America. She didn’t do that by going to war with her competitors; she did it through love and encouragement.Along her route she also suffered from severe grief, having lost 11 people that were close to her in a very short period of time.Listen to how you can be kind to yourself, and be successful in business, on Episode 612.In This Episode You Will Learn:The one thing that will help you the most in your life (00:52)What people said to her when she started her business (1:50)How she was able to build a business differently (2:32)The grief she has had to encounter (2:50)Sara’s views on our mortality (3:21)Plus much, much more
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is 5-Minute Friday!
Welcome everyone to a special edition of the School of Greatness podcast.
We are so pumped to have Sarah Blakely in the house.
Now for those who don't know who she is, she is the founder and CEO of the intimate apparel company Spanx. And in 2012,
she was named in Time Magazine's top 100 most influential people in the world list. And as of
2014, she is listed as the 93rd most powerful woman in the world by Forbes. She was also named the youngest self-made female billionaire in America.
One thing that I feel like has helped me the most is to be kind to myself. So I realized that when
I became a mom, I spent a lot of mental energy beating myself up,
feeling so guilty. And when I was working, I was beating myself up that I wasn't with the kids and
mentally. And when I was with the kids, I was beating myself up with that. So I think a lot
of mothers were our own worst enemy. And when I really stopped and said, I don't know how to
juggle all this. Some days I feel like I'm doing it right. And some days I feel like I just want to cry. At least I made that change. And it was a huge change for me. I just catch myself when I
start doing that to myself. And I just, I change it to kindness and forgiveness.
As opposed to beating yourself up.
Yeah. I'm just like, okay, it's all right. I'm most proud of the fact that I was able to achieve
this in a really kind way that I can look at myself in the
mirror and just, I am where I am and I feel really good about it. Really good about myself. I didn't
feel like I had to compromise. You know, when I first started Spanx, I was at a cocktail party
and three guys came up to me and they said, Sarah, we heard you just started a business
and invented something. And I said, yes. And they go, you know, business is war.
a business and invented something. And I said, yes. And they go, you know, business is war.
And I just looked at him and, and, and then one guy, you know, pat me on the back and he said,
yeah, I hope you're up for it. I hope you're ready for war. And I went home that night in my apartment and I sat down on the floor and I literally started crying. And I remember thinking,
I don't want to go to war. Like, why does it have to be war? I want to go about this in a
completely different way. And so the whole journey of Spanx, I really took a feminine approach to it.
I mean, I didn't know business.
I'd never taken a business class.
I didn't have a business plan.
I didn't go out and raise VC.
So I trusted my gut.
I stuck with intuition.
I just did things what felt very, yeah.
I think traditional business has been very male energy.
And so I wanted to see what would happen if I took a very feminine energy approach.
So I've been dropped to my knees many times in life by grief.
I mean, just, it's like unbearably painful.
By the time I was 31, I'd lost 11 different people close to me from separate tragedies.
Oh my gosh.
Yeah.
But I will say that going through that, I always think there's a hidden blessing in
everything that we go through in life.
And one of the blessings was that facing my own mortality at a really young age had all
these hidden gifts.
I use mortality and sort of the insignificance of all of this
in a positive way, just how temporary this all is to fuel me and to say, why would I ever not do
this? What? Because I'm afraid that person, that person's not going to remember me five minutes
after I make a fool of myself anyway. Like, let's do this. We're all here for just a short period
of time. So it freed me up in a way that I think most people in the natural course of life, you know, maybe
starts to think about in their forties when they might lose a parent or a grandparent or something.
So yeah, really. How do you get through a challenging loss like that? Like what's your
process? Oh my gosh. I, one day at a time. I mean, it is just one day at a time. The more you experience in life, the more you'll have to offer others. So experience everything, anything and everything. Don't hold yourself back. Smile and be kind and don't take it all too seriously. Remember to laugh along the way.