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Summer 2024 Program
2024 Course List
Pregame: Attitudes & Perspectives
Money 101
Better Decisions
3 P's (Perspective, Passion, & Plans)
Managing Uncertainty & Differences
Money 201
Power of Role Models
+CLUB Playbook
Denzel Washington Essentials
LWYM
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3P's
Body and Mind
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Financial Literacy
Eric Pennington
Challenging Situations
Michael Ojo
LeAnn Elder
Vaughn Crowe
Kim Singleton
Jeffrey Robinson
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About +CLUB
About +CLUB
In The Media
About: Kim Singleton
About: Eric Pennington
About: Vaughn Crowe
About: Michael Ojo
Fellowship
Newark Advisory
Yonkers Advisory
Welcome to +Club TV
+Club Experience
Financial Literacy
3 P's
Charles Brown
Body and Mind
Mayor Lance Bottoms
Eric Pennington
LeAnn Elder
Michael Ojo
Kim Singleton
Jeffrey Robinson
Vaughn Crowe
+CLUB Experience
+CLUB Experience
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03:09
The +Club Journey
In this brief video, we hear from +Club students on their first-hand experience in our Rutgers Bootcamp and their personal journey with the +Club.
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03:05
Essence
Miyokee Saint Florant offers valuable insights to Rutgers Students in a +Club session with B-STAR program. Miyokee is the Senior Program Coordinator for the Office of Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, and Access at Rutgers Business School. She is a passionate advocate for empowerment and community wholeness. Miyokee's journey is one of transformation, from overcoming personal adversity to dedicating her life to making a difference in the lives of others. Her dedication to empowering individuals and uplifting communities makes her a true agent of positive change.
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14:13
+CLUB Live Sessions: Denzel Washington Essentials Program
Exceptional role model and acting legend, Denzel Washington offers insightful and actionable advice as +Club highlights and discusses his commencement addresses at University of Pennsylvania and Dillard University. Kim Singleton was the +Club instructor and host with +Club Role Model Michael Ojo and +Club Fellow Mariah Ledbetter. The +Club session was at the Newark SYEP's Grow With Google program,
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01:18
+CLUB Jeffrey Robinson Series: Success & Significance
Transcript: Success is very interesting term because people think about success in lots of different ways. Let me tell you how I think about it and why. I also think about another word called significance. For me to be successful, it's about you and your personal achievement, getting things done, achieving certain things that you want to in your life, but significance is what you do for others. And so I would say that not only have I tried to be successful, but I've also tried to be significant in the lives of others. You grow up, you do well in school, you find those things that are really interesting to you and that you're really good at, and people start to pay you for those kinds of things. That would be sort of the great story of anybody's life. If they can do what they love and do what they're good at and people pay them for it. But I think there's another part, which is when you're significant, that means that there are some other people who would say, not only did they do well for themselves, but they did well for other people too. They helped other people, they supported their communities. When they're gone, people will miss them because they did some great things.
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06:06
+CLUB Live Session: Belonging at Rutger's B-Star Bootcamp
Kim Singleton, +Club instructor and author, facilitates a student discussion on managing differences and fostering a sense of belonging. In this unfiltered and real-time session, prompted by Eric Pennington's introspection on his high school years and personal choices, the dialogue dives into the nuances of acceptance and the quest for belonging in diverse environments. Through candid reflections and shared experiences, the conversation explores the profound impact of individual decisions on our sense of inclusion and offers insights into navigating differences to cultivate a deeper sense of belonging.
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05:45
+CLUB Playbook: Highlights with Eric Pennington
+CLUB's Live Zoom Session with students from Grow with Google. Hosted by content creator, poet and author, Kim Singleton with special guest Eric Pennington, Business Administrator for the city of Newark.
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01:33
+CLUB Spring Program Students
West Side High Schools Spring 2025 Student Group
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01:14
+CLUB Experience
A brief view into the experience at the +CLUB Rutgers University Boot Camp in the Fall of 2023. See the program in action and hear reflections on the experience in this +CLUB program trailer. The +CLUB is Powered by Intelligent Money™.
+CLUB Role Models: Mayor Keisha Lance Bo...
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02:36
The Main Thing with Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms
Transcript: The main thing for me is what is the priority for today? What do I need to accomplish today? And it may not be that I can get it all done in a week, a month or 24 hours, but what is it that I can accomplish today? What is my priority for today? And for me, I trust that tomorrow I'll have grace for tomorrow and I'll be able to figure out the priority for tomorrow. Because sometimes if you look too far ahead, the main thing seems unattainable, it's overwhelming. And I often think of this quote, how do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time. The longest journey starts with the first step. So if I'm thinking of eating an elephant, I'm looking at this elephant and I'm completely overwhelmed by the size of the elephant, but if I say I'm going to start at the tail or whatever the thing may be, I try and take life in bite-sized chunks. And then you look up and the main thing has been accomplished. And also recognizing you can't do it all at the same time. You've got to prioritize what can I accomplish today? And for me, I even think about when I was mayor of Atlanta, I had a whole scheduling team. It was an entire office focused on my scheduling. So when I look at my schedule now and I'm overwhelmed, remind myself, there used to be five people who did this for you, now you're one. And for me, whatever that main thing is, whether it's trying to schedule something or trying to accomplish something, I give myself grace. The world is going to beat me up. Why should I beat myself up? I'm going to do the very best that I can when I can however I can. And as long as I do the best I can, I may not accomplish and fulfill the main thing today, but maybe by next week I'll get there.
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01:54
Comfortable Being Uncomfortable with Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms
Transcript: Being uncomfortable is necessary for progress. When I ran for office the very first time I lost and I was devastated. The next year my city council person decided the week of qualifying where everybody signs up to run, he wasn't running again. And I thought, what would I do if I weren't afraid to fail? I didn't want to be embarrassed. I didn't want to run the risk of losing again. I didn't want everybody talking about me. And I kept asking, what would you do if you weren't afraid to fail? And I was so afraid of failure. But had I not gotten past that, had I not been willing to be uncomfortable, I would not have run for city council. I won. I served eight years on city council, I ran for mayor, I won, and then I went to the White House. So this entire extraordinary career as an elected official would not have happened had I settled on being comfortable. I was comfortable in not running for office again because I was afraid of failure. And I just reminded myself, it's okay to be uncomfortable. It's okay to be afraid to fail. Was it But the Nike slogan, just do it anyway. And I did it and it changed my entire life.
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01:50
Advice to Younger Self with Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms
Transcript: I would look back to my younger self and I'd say Relax. I was so uptight and I was very rigid on what I had to do by this state and then this. And I didn't live in a gray area. Everything was black and white and there was so much internal pressure that I imposed on myself and this search for perfection, it was very unhealthy. And I look back and I'm like, oh gosh, youth is wasted on the young. It's just not that serious. There are serious things that happen life, but you've got the rest of your life to figure it out. And I thought I had to have it all figured out when I was in high school. And I would say the other thing would be that boys really not that cute. He doesn't deserve your attention, insert name. And I graduated from high school at 17 and I wish that I had just taken more time to relax and just not be so stressed about getting on to adulthood. I am graduating high school at 17, got to graduate college at 21, then I'm going to go to law school and finish at 24 and it was boom, boom, boom, boom. And I didn't take the time just to be.
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02:13
Improved Decision Making with Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms
Transcript: I try not make decisions when I'm too emotional. And for me it often means that I gather information, I try and sit on things. I may talk with someone else, a trusted friend or a family member, I pray about it and I have, there are times when I'm not quite ready to make a decision, but the clock is ticking. So for me it is twofold, resisting the urge to be impulsive, which for me sometimes can be driven by emotion, which is not always healthy, but also making a decision when I'm not yet comfortable with that decision, if that makes sense. So I think you have to figure out that balance. And sometimes, and I'm a big believer in intuition, all the things may line up and they may look right when you make a decision, but still something's just not settled within you. And for a very long time when I was mayor of Atlanta, I would push things to side thinking intuition was too emotional, that that was somehow weakness and I came to learn. It really was a superpower that sometimes there are things that you can just pick up on that may not always be apparent, but that inner voice is like, something's not quite right here. So I would say just figure out what that balance is. Somewhere between being impulsive and procrastinating somewhere in between is the right balance.
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03:06
Selecting Friends with Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms
Transcript: I have learned that my mother used to tell me, you can be friendly with a lot of people, but everybody's not your friend. Doesn't mean that you can't be cordial. I think a lot of young people, at least for me, I felt like I had to have this big group of friends. And the reality is the people I really consider my closest friends are less than a handful. There are a lot of people who I'm friendly with, we have a good time together, but I don't share every secret with them. I don't share everything that's in my heart and on my mind. And then the other thing I would just say, it takes you have to be a friend to get a friend, be a good friend. If you want people to be a good friend to you, be a good friend to them. And also there's some friends you have for certain occasions. There may be friends that you enjoy doing sports with or performing or whatever the thing may be. Then there may be another set of friends that you enjoy something else with. And also when people disappoint you, that's just a part of life. It's not the end of life. There'll be lots of disappointments in life. You'll disappoint some folk in life, but just be the best friend that you can be. And then I recently apologized to someone who told me I had done something that offended her five years ago. I had no idea. She never told me. And I said to her, I said, I apologize if I was not a good friend to you. I said, it was not my intention. I didn't know you were so deeply wounded by that. I didn't mean to hurt your feelings, but I apologize for that. I remember several years ago, someone who I've been friends with for years, I said something to another friend, joking, not ever thinking she would repeat it to this friend. She repeated it to this friend and the friend confronted me, I heard that you said X, Y, Z. And I said, I was wrong. I said, I never thought that she would repeat that to you. I said, but at the end of the day, I shouldn't have said it and I apologize. So all of that to say there'll be people who disappoint you, you may be the person who disappoints someone else. All you can do is acknowledge it on it and do better the next time.
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02:32
Priorities with Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms
Transcript: I am finding myself asking myself a lot, is this a priority for me or is this a priority for someone else? And I am freely say yes to a lot of things, but when the joy is lost, I think maybe I should have said no to that. So I asked myself, what does this mean to me? And it's not in a selfish way, it's just that if I say yes to everything or if I say no to nothing, I will never get an opportunity to fulfill those things that are important to me. For me, it can be challenging, reconciling, wanting to be a giver and give of my time and give of whatever it is I have to give to someone. But if I'm constantly giving, if I'm never saying no, how am I going to fulfill my purpose on this earth? So there's nothing wrong in saying no for me. Now this personal whlist, is this important to me? Does this fulfill something that interests me? Is this for someone else to be able to deliver me to someone else or is this something that interests me? So for example, even in getting the invitation to speak with you today, this is of interest to me because I like pouring into young people and this is something that I am passionate about. So you got a yes. But there are other things that don't interest me, that I'm not passionate about. Not that they're not good and worthy causes, but they just not the no is the best answer that I can sometimes give for both of us.
Project me
3 P's (Perspective, Passion, Plans)
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00:59
Proper Mindset: Michael Ojo
I would say just continue to push and do what you feel is best for you to do. Find what really makes you excited, find what really makes you driven, do things that you normally wouldn't do. Push yourself to your limit, whatever that limit is, and really go for it. And don't ever think that there's a limitation in how great you can be or what you can be, or how wealthy you can be, and what you can do in life or where you can be in life. Anything and everything is possible. First it comes to your mindset. Make sure you tell yourself this and you believe it. And once you do that, the sky is only the starting point. You can exceed far past it, but you have to have confidence. You have to invest in yourself, take yourself seriously, and anything you want to do, you can do and will do.
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00:57
Project Me: Kim Singleton
I think it's a good idea to have long-term project management because for a lot of things that you want to do long-term, you really need to start now. You never know what's going to happen. When you're ready to buy a house, you never know what the housing market is going to be like. So, you may need to start a little house fund over here on the side. But I think that's a good idea. I think everybody needs a short-term, the action list, but also a long-term list too. I've heard this phrase before where somebody who is up in age wants to go back to school and they're like, oh, by the time I finish school I'll be 55. And they ask, well, how old will you be if you don't go to school? So, put those things in your long-term plan and think about what you want to accomplish. And you can always add, you could change, you can edit depending on what's going on in your life.
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00:44
Don't Deselect: Eric Pennington
I think one of the most important things that I've learned is don't take yourself out of the running. Don't deselect. If you want something and you see something and you think it's interesting to you, pursue it. Even if people tell you that you don't have the background for that, you haven't met the prerequisites, I don't really think that's a good fit for you. But if you believe that's something you can do, let somebody else tell you no, give it a shot. See if you can achieve it and pursue, and you might surprise yourself. Oftentimes through my life, I've learned that people who had more confidence in me than I had in myself were right that they knew that I could do something that even I didn't think I could do, but I knew I wanted to do it.
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02:12
No Limits: LeAnn Elder
At some point, life is going to drop you in the deep end of a swimming pool. It is going to happen. And at some point you only have two choices because even Michael Phelps can't tread forever, right? You can't just sit there and tread. You are either going to sink and drown and die, or you're going to swim. That's it. You really only have two choices. So you have to choose to swim. And way too often people think that they can just tread and they can stay here, and we're just going to keep our head above water and we're going to stay status quo. But eventually you will get tired, you will not go anywhere. So you either have to make a decision, that I'm going to give up and I'm not going to try, and in which case I am going to sink and that's going to be it for me, or I'm going to swim.
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01:47
World of Possibilities: Michael Ojo
The biggest lesson, to keep it brief, is life is extremely short and you want to take the time to enjoy as much of it as possible. You want to also take the time to remind yourself to enjoy everything you do and it should be with pleasure. It's not going to be with ease. There's always going to be challenges, but if you find what you love to do in every day, continue to do it. I think when we're younger, we don't have the responsibilities of paying bills or having to make money per se. We just like to wake up and play video games or do sports or hang out with friends or go to the movies or the mall. Those are the simple pleasures of life. As we get older, we now have responsibilities, so we now have to push away some of those pleasures when we're younger. And also those pleasures change as we get older, but in our lives, we should always make sure that whatever we're doing, we enjoy doing it. There's a saying that says, if you enjoy what you do, you never work a day in your life. I didn't know what that meant because I've had many a jobs where I've worked many days in my life, but now that I became an entrepreneur and I am chasing my goals and my dreams to do what I want to do every day when I wake up, I feel like I haven't worked a day and I enjoy it. And some days are tougher than others, but as long as you have pleasure and you really enjoy what you're doing, and you take the notion that life is short and that you have to enjoy the time that you have today because we don't know if we're promised tomorrow, you'll really do the most and have the most fun and enjoy life.
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01:28
Success: Vaughn Crowe
I've had an interesting journey from growing up in Newark, New Jersey, to attending public school and venturing off to Colgate. And the bulk of the success that I've experienced, having journeyed from Newark to Colgate to Newark Venture Partners, et cetera, is just about taking risk and having a fundamental belief in myself. Confidence oftentimes is overrated and often underrated, but it's absolutely necessary to traverse life and take on obstacles as you go through various challenges, whether it was playing football in college, to starting my career at Chubb Insurance Company, to meeting a fellow Newarker and philanthropist in Ray Chambers. That level of confidence, that was probably instilled in me from my parents and then growing up in Newark, et cetera, was probably one of the most single determining factors that has helped me achieve some of the outcomes to date that I'm really proud of. Fortunately, I'm still young and the book is yet to be written, but to date a high level of confidence and conviction around strong beliefs and having a strong belief system has been somewhat of a guiding light for me as I've created some success for myself and for my family.
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00:50
Different Perspective: Eric Pennington
One of the ways to get to a bigger perspective is by having an open mind. You have to be willing to learn more information. You have to be willing to take in information that you may not even agree with. But just because you don't agree with the information it doesn't mean that it's information that you shouldn't have as part of what's in your toolkit. All of that information is important to be able to move forward, make good decisions, and to have the impact on life that you want to have. To have this big perspective, you have to have a lot of information. You have to be open, you have to be willing to learn, and you have to be willing to allow some of the thoughts and hypotheses that you may have had before be challenged and you find out that maybe it wasn't quite what you thought it was, and it helps you get to a better place.
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01:05
Intention: Michael Ojo
Intent for me came from finding out what I want in life, which can take a while to realize. I'm almost 35 and I'm still figuring it out, but I think I've gotten closer throughout this journey of life up until this point. I write a lot of things down. I wake up and I say, what do I really want to do with my life? How do I want to live my days? How do I want to live today, tomorrow? And I write that down. That's intention in itself because you're putting it down, you're breathing it into life, and now you have to create it. So, when you do things to meet that aspiration, that's with intent. And so I think the starting point is to figure out what it is that you want to do. Write those things down, continuously look at those things and understand what those things are, and then build upon the intent to get those things achieved. And that's where intention really falls in line for me.
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01:13
Managing Time: Kim Singleton
I think it goes back to being intentional. I think you’re never too young to think about what you want to do. And once you think about, and that can change, but when you think about what you want to do, I think it's important to look at how do you want to get there? And then when you decide how you want to get there, it's like, well, how much time do I want to spend to get to that point? If you are doing things that waste time, it's going to take you longer to accomplish your goals and get to the point where you want to be. If you have a day, you should always relax. I believe that for me, although some people don't like this approach. I like to have a schedule. I have to have a schedule because if I don't, I may sleep all day. But one of the things I struggle with is trying to work out regularly because sometimes I'm so busy I just lay down. But I had to be intentional about that. I get up in the morning, I'll do some sort of exercise and then I'll go on with my day. So, for me, I think a schedule is good and then you can really kind of tick off each day what you've accomplished to get you closer to that goal.
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Challenging Situations: Uncertainties an...
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01:21
Uncertainty: Eric Pennington
I think the one thing about life is it's all uncertain that we never know where we’re going to end up or what's going to happen. Let me share a personal experience. I was one of five children raised by a single mother, and there was a period in our life as a youngster where we were homeless and we lived here in Newark, in a station wagon for some period of time. And at that time, without question, I had no idea what the next day was going to hold, whether we want to make it to the next day or not. But I knew that we wanted to get to a better place and the only way to do that was to survive to the next day, stick together, help each other and make it through that experience. Although I would not wish that on anybody it was certainly a life altering experience that let me know that you can almost get through anything and that humans are very resilient people. We can make it through difficult times, and hopefully you can use those experiences as a foundation to do something so much better because you know that whatever is facing you now can't possibly be as difficult as what you've gone through before and you can succeed.
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02:04
Uncertainty: LeAnn Elder
I think you have to expect uncertainty. You have to understand that it is coming. No one has all the answers and there you will be thrown curve balls and you have to be okay with the potential outcomes and prepare for them. But you have to; uncertainty is very difficult for a lot of people. Certainty is one of those basic human needs that drives a lot of people. When they feel like they don't have it, that's where you can get out of control and be very anxious and you can allow yourself to succumb in a very negative way. If you don't learn how to handle the fact that uncertainty is just a part of life, I do believe you have to have a lot of faith, right? You have to have a lot of faith that, in the end, it won't always be like this. In the end, this is fixable. In the end, I can rise above the difficulties that are in front of me and sometimes you don't know how you're going to get through it, and you are very uncertain about the future. And it does make you nervous in your approach in dealing with life. But you really don't have a choice. Like you can't, you're never going to get. But so far in life, if you think you're going to be confident and certain and secure about everything going on around you - it doesn't work that way. So, I can't look to have constant certainty in my life. I can only develop, make sure I work on myself from within, so that I'm strong enough to face the uncertainty and figure out what I can do to either fix it or deal with it and adjust my own mindset about it.
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01:31
Uncertainty: Vaughn Crowe
As you move through life, obstacles, adversity, and challenges will arrive. The unfortunate part of where we are in the world today is we think that success is here to there. In reality, success is here to the bottom. It takes you up, it brings you back to level. And we need to become more comfortable with the level of discomfort that we will experience on this journey towards economic success, family success, academic and educational success. I don't think that success, the word alone, should be described as only positive. Without failure, there is no success. Without discomfort, there aren't happy outcomes. So by embracing it, accepting it, taking action against it, and learning from it, are the ways in which you can bring joy and happiness first and foremost to your life. And then secondly, it'll just adequately prepare you for discomfort and the constant of uncertainty that you will with certainty experience over a lifetime of living on this earth.
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00:56
Comfortable Being Uncomfortable: LeAnn Elder
Well, you have to be uncomfortable sometimes because how else are you going to grow? How else are you going learn? If we only did everything that made us comfortable, then we would never go anywhere because we would never be able to step outside of that comfort zone and expand our mind and realize what we're truly made of. Because it's those uncomfortable moments that help define us and shape us and allows us to grow as individuals to be able to achieve things. I mean in life, there are going to be so many uncomfortable moments or scary moments. So that's the other thing. Comfortable, scary things that produce anxiety. You don't avoid. You're unsure about something and you have to be able to do them anyway.
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01:35
Comfortable Being Uncomfortable: Professor Jeffrey Robinson
Everybody has a comfort zone. Everybody has a place where they feel like, this is where I belong, this is how I feel the best. This is where I feel the most comfortable. And frankly, the question you got to ask yourself is, is that all there is? You can't get to grow as a person without sometimes being uncomfortable. So anybody who wants to grow has to feel comfortable with being uncomfortable. Eventually it gets much easier to do. The more you do it, the more you realize that the uncomfortable feeling is not a bad thing. It's a good thing. It's okay to be there and then you can push through that to actually learn and grow and become a better person. But sometimes it's very easy to just do the same things we've been doing all the time, playing this video game after school instead of challenging yourself to read this book or to learn something new or to go to this club. Nobody I know goes to that club. I'll have to meet new people. Well, that's okay. What's the club about? Is the club teaching you something new? Introducing you to some new people, some new ways of doing things that may help you in the future? All the people that I know, and I've talked to a lot of people that have been very successful, all talk about that moment where they got out of their comfort zone and got into that growth zone that helps them to become a better person.
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01:56
Uncertainty: Michael Ojo
Yeah, uncertainty is tough. One thing I learned from therapy in the first couple of sessions was you can only control what you can control. And we all need to realize that there's certain things we cannot control. If we are having a bad day and maybe we want to go for a walk, but it's raining outside, it's torrential downpour, we can't control turning the rain off so there's no use of being aggravated about it. But what we can do is we can find somewhere quiet to sit down and just realize that I am in a very stressful state of mind. Let me find some peace and do something that will make me positive and happy and something that will make me progressive. That's really what you can control. So you just try to work on yourself in ways you can. I think the best way to do that is just kind of really understand who you are. (28:32): That takes time, but when you really know who you are, you believe in yourself. Again, it goes to confidence. Even during these uncertain times, you'll prevail. You'll get yourself out of it. And I've been there and even recently I've been there. And when I think about those times, I think about times where I've been there previously and I'm like, oh, well, I remember that time where I felt this same way, but guess what? That was a year ago and I got out of that situation. I'm in a better place today. So now that I feel like I'm in another uncertain situation, I've got to remember that if I keep on being positive and proactive, I can get out of this situation and in months, days, years from now, I'll be in a better place. So it's positivity, positive reinforcement in the mindset.(29:26): So this isn't confession, but maybe it's always been, Kim kind of suggested this to me. If you could say one thing that you've made a mistake on, I'm not trying to make it say you did that you not regret, but you may have done over and then what you learned from it because life is up and down or it could be something where you were down, something happened and then you kind of recovered from it.
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01:19
Adverse Situations: Kim Singleton
For me, I've learned that dealing with it directly, calling it out to people when it happens is the best way to deal with it. Like I said, a lot of times some people may not understand what they're saying or doing to you and how it's affecting you. If they're good people, they'll try to correct it. There will be those people who are mean-spirited. And it took me later on in life to realize that. Some people who you think are nice don't really have your best interests at heart. But I believe in being honest and confronting it and just saying to that person, listen, when you said that or you did that, this is how I interpreted it and this is how you’re making me feel, and I'm having this dialogue with you so we can understand each other. So, I know really what's going on. And with the people who really didn't mean it, there's usually a good outcome. The people who really meant to do something, they either shied away, stayed away from me, or tried to do things underhanded, behind your back. They reveal themselves. So, my advice is sometimes it's just about approaching the person and just saying, listen, this is the situation. This is how I feel. Let's have a discussion about it. And their true intentions will be revealed.
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01:32
Confidence: Vaughn Crowe
The way in which confidence comes about, you're oftentimes born with it, and I was not, but it gets further developed as you win and as you lose. And so, you learn a lot of lessons in both scenarios and out of those scenarios, you gain confidence to continue to take on various tasks. There's no better feeling than winning. I can attest to it having won a lot, but equally as important and equally as helpful in building a career and trying to become a better son, a better community member. It's the lessons that you learn in the losses that matter. You have to look yourself in the mirror and you say, Hey, are we going to stand up and are we going to go forward or are we not? And oftentimes if you are honest with yourself and you're willing to say, I'm willing to go forward, there is the first step in developing confidence and adversity and challenge during duress. As you're walking to school and things happen, what do you do? You have to look up and you have to look at yourself in the mirror and find a way to go forward. That is a form of confidence. Confidence shouldn't be conflated with arrogance or self-fulfillment. It's about having the will to go forward. That's how I think about confidence.
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02:37
Belonging: Vaughn Crowe
You will go through life in moments. In moments where you will feel like an outsider. You will feel like you're the only one in the room with short hair or no hair. You may be the only black person in the room. And the reality is the level of confidence necessary to even take the first step to be in that room, you should acknowledge you’re a winner because that is somewhat of the first step in being comfortable and having folks gravitate to you. There is this concept, that I fully embrace right now, that we'll see if it works, but I want to be the uncommon amongst the uncommon. And that comes with recognizing that, hey, I'm different but I'm stronger because I am different. And the more people in the room who don't look like me, who don't talk like me, who don't have the same haircut as I do, it only emboldens me to go out and continue to compete, to strive to be excellent. Because ultimately the work that I produce, the product that I generate, they will all gravitate to excellence and so long that I am striving to be excellent. I might be alone for a moment. I might be uncomfortable, but as I produce, the world will gravitate to me. And that's somewhat of the mindset that's confident, not necessarily arrogant, not gloating, but it's this idea that because I am different, I am great, I desire to be uncommon amongst the uncommon, that's where I thrive. So, if you can find the courage to embrace that, I walk into many rooms where I am the only person who's black. And then you couple that with being from Newark, you're like, this is a double whammy. But you know what? I embrace it and you will come to me and you'll learn how good I am, how great I am. You'll also learn how great we can be together. That's what I would encourage when you're thinking about how do I fit in, how do I become more comfortable? I would figure out how to remain uncommon amongst the uncommon.
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Healthy Relationships
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01:14
Own Your Narrative: Eric Pennington
I do think it's extremely important to own yourself, to own your life story, and to not look at any particular part of your life and let it define you. You are a collection of all of your life's work, and some of that may be bad, and most of it we hope is good, but I don't embrace this notion that any of it is “bad”. I think that as we move forward, there are parts of our lives that are less desirable than others, but it makes us who we are. We have to own that and embrace it and use it as a catalyst to help us move forward and understand where we don't want to go. Sometimes it will help us remind us that going down that path wasn't such a good idea. So when that opportunity to go down a similar path is presented in front of us, perhaps it's best to go a different way, but you have to own all those prior mistakes, stumbles, failures, falls, and know that those are all opportunities to help make us a better person, to make this world a better place and just help us succeed
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01:09
Healthy Relationships: Kim Singleton
I think relationships are important. I think they influence some of the actions that we take. I think when you think about who you want to surround yourself with, it should be people who are like-minded in terms of wanting to accomplish the same thing that you do. Because when you're around people that don't have the same goals and aspirations, there are going to be conflicts. Some people aren't happy for you. You heard that term haters. So, who's for you and who's not for you? And you have to surround yourself with those people so you can encourage each other. I have a tight group of friends. We encourage each other and we elevate each other. And I think that goes across the board. Whatever kind of relationship you want to have, you want to be with people who make you feel good. Number one, don't talk down to youreself. If you're around someone and that every time you're around them, they make you feel bad about yourself, that is not a good relationship. So be around people who make you feel good. Life is short. There is so much fun to have out there. Make the choice to have fun and be around people who want to have the same kind of fun that you have.
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02:11
Healthy Relationships: Vaughn Crowe
I grew up in what I would call an ecosystem of love. And it wasn't a world where I was constantly told that I was less than others. It wasn't a world that I was constantly, psychologically tortured. I was reminded on a regular basis of how great I am and how much better I could become. And so those all were relationships and mentors and professionals and people who poured into me. And because of that experience, despite the challenges in the world that we experience, I fundamentally believe that the human species is good. And so therefore over these years, and it remains part of who I am, this thirst to learn more about people and to be in the presence of people, to ultimately develop relationships with no outcome necessarily tied to building a relationship. But because I fundamentally believe that people are good, the human species is good, I hope that I have an expectation that my fellow humans would think the same of me. Therefore, we can live not necessarily in harmony, but we can live in acceptance together, with a level of respect and dignity, so long that we are moving towards something that's positive. And so therefore, relationships for me is part of the reason why I do what I do. It’s part of the reason why I have a handful of really close friends and I value them. I would encourage young people to utilize the power of relationships to learn to advance relationships and also to help you avoid failure. It also helps. They help you embrace failure. So they're important.
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01:44
Life Lessons Kindness: Kim Singleton
I think the most important thing life has taught me is to be kind to people. I find that there's this covenant that we sing in church that be slow to take offense. I think a lot of the conflicts that we have with people, I think 90% of the time it's because we misunderstand what they're saying or we don't understand what they're going through. And any act of aggression, sometimes it's not about us. It may be about what they're going through. So always try to be kind to people and give people the benefit of the doubt. Now, there are that 10% who are mean and nasty, and you have to deal with them according to your personality. But the people that I've come across for the most part have been nice people. And I do try to give them the benefit of the doubt. And I try to be kind to people even in situations when they weren't kind to me. But that's my personality. But I can't say that me being kind to people has created opportunities for me later on. You heard the term, don't burn your bridges. I didn't burn my bridges and the opportunities came back to me. It doesn't mean that you let somebody walk over you or disrespect you. You can handle it in a way that's appropriate, but for the most part, everybody's just trying to get along like everybody else. So why not be kind to each other? And kindness is contagious. So that's why I love doing it. I love saying hello to someone or saying something or doing something to someone that makes them feel good. That makes me feel good. So, it's just very contagious. So that's what I learned in life. Just enjoy each other when we can.
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02:37
Belonging: Vaughn Crowe
You will go through life in moments. In moments where you will feel like an outsider. You will feel like you're the only one in the room with short hair or no hair. You may be the only black person in the room. And the reality is the level of confidence necessary to even take the first step to be in that room, you should acknowledge you’re a winner because that is somewhat of the first step in being comfortable and having folks gravitate to you. There is this concept, that I fully embrace right now, that we'll see if it works, but I want to be the uncommon amongst the uncommon. And that comes with recognizing that, hey, I'm different but I'm stronger because I am different. And the more people in the room who don't look like me, who don't talk like me, who don't have the same haircut as I do, it only emboldens me to go out and continue to compete, to strive to be excellent. Because ultimately the work that I produce, the product that I generate, they will all gravitate to excellence and so long that I am striving to be excellent. I might be alone for a moment. I might be uncomfortable, but as I produce, the world will gravitate to me. And that's somewhat of the mindset that's confident, not necessarily arrogant, not gloating, but it's this idea that because I am different, I am great, I desire to be uncommon amongst the uncommon, that's where I thrive. So, if you can find the courage to embrace that, I walk into many rooms where I am the only person who's black. And then you couple that with being from Newark, you're like, this is a double whammy. But you know what? I embrace it and you will come to me and you'll learn how good I am, how great I am. You'll also learn how great we can be together. That's what I would encourage when you're thinking about how do I fit in, how do I become more comfortable? I would figure out how to remain uncommon amongst the uncommon.
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02:17
Advice to Teenage Self: Vaughn Crowe
I recently learned this in my adult life such that it is so applicable to what I experienced as a young person in high school. And there were three elements that I recently learned from a very successful business person, and it was know your craft and know it well. So whatever it is that you think you're good at, lean in to that experience. If you're a math student and you love algebra and you're not as good at English, maybe lean in to being a great math student. So know your craft and know it well. Be humble. So as you are excelling in various tasks, if you are the best math student, there's no need to gloat and tell the world that you're great. Let your work speak for yourself, and that's a form of being humble. And then the third component of that life lesson is to make friends. And making friends is about building relationships, accepting people for who they are and what they are. And so, if you kind of go through life, and this is something that I've learned over the last five years from a really good friend of mine, which is to know your craft and know it well. So you study and you attempt to excel at everything that you do. And secondly, be humble because you will make mistakes. But going through life with a level of humility gets you close to kind of a higher form of life. And then lastly, make friends. We cannot survive as a human species without having a companion, a friend, a partner in some form. And so, those life lessons that I've learned in my life more recently are more apparent than ever. When I think about my childhood as a student at Weequahic High School as a student at Hawthorne Avenue Elementary School and even as a student at Colgate, those are three things that had I learned earlier would've been an added bonus to my life as I began to progress in my career.
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01:02
Selecting Friends: Michael Ojo
Friendship is special. I've realized that as I got older, I know a lot of people are very friendly. I talk to a lot of people, but using the word friend is a serious word because these are people you can count on with your life and you may only have one, two, or three or a handful of them that you can really say are true friends. Other people are great acquaintances and that's always great to have as well. But friends are key to your life to make sure that you live a very high quality and high caliber life because they are the ones who can basically are looking at you from an outward position. We can't see ourself from the same position they can, and they're the ones who are going to guide you if you're misstepping and kind of encourage you when you're trying to grow. So I would say I've been fortunate to have a good group of friends that have been able to help me and guide me throughout my career. And without them, I don't think I'd be where I am today.
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03:06
Belonging: Eric Pennington
Belonging is a bit of an elusive concept sometimes. A lot of your ability to belong is based on where you've been in your life. And if you come from an environment that is different than mainstream America, it's kind of tough immediately to feel like you belong. You have to feel like you have to prove yourself almost every day. I'll go back to another experience in my life where I didn't feel like I belonged, and I think I may have made at that time the wrong choice, but it turned out to be another one of the experiences in life that helps you do better. As a senior in high school, I was invited to meet with the dean of Yale to see whether or not they would accept me and admit me into the school. It turns out that I was going to be admitted to the school and was invited up for a final visit to spend the night with some students at Yale, and then the next day to meet with the Dean and essentially sign an acceptance letter to go. Well, I went to Yale and they paid for my bus ticket. I went there. I got into New Haven, got off the bus and walked to the campus. And when I got to the campus, the area around the campus was very similar to my environment here in Essex County, it was very urban. There were stores on the corner, bodegas similar to what we had here, but then when I reached the campus and there were literally these ivy walls and these big gates with these big stone structures. And I walked through that gate and immediately felt like I did not belong. I did stay overnight and the next morning I got up and I did not go to the Dean's office. I went back home because I felt so out of place and so much like I could never belong in a place like that. That was one of the times where I deselected. And at that moment I thought that was the best thing for me to do. I have learned since that that was probably not the best idea in the world. They wrote me later to find out what happened and to see if I wanted to come back, and I did not.
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01:21
Comfortable Being Uncomfortable: Eric Pennington
Challenges in life, I think are opportunities for us to grow and oftentimes when you're faced with something you haven't experienced before that raises your discomfort level because you just don't know how things are going to go. But this relates back to probably a theme that I've had in my life all along, is that it is difficult. I'll change that. I don't want to say it's difficult that when you face things in life that are different or challenging and it raises your discomfort level, but you have to keep your eye on what the objective is, where you want to go. And as long as you know ultimately where you're trying to get to and you're faced with challenges along the way, just relying on your past experiences and recognizing that you have been through some difficult times, it's highly likely that you'll be able to get through whatever that challenge is. And when you come out on the other side, you'll have a new experience, a new idea of what it is you can accomplish and what you can achieve. And so you just have to keep moving forward to get through whatever that obstacle is.
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01:32
Confidence: Vaughn Crowe
The way in which confidence comes about, you're oftentimes born with it, and I was not, but it gets further developed as you win and as you lose. And so, you learn a lot of lessons in both scenarios and out of those scenarios, you gain confidence to continue to take on various tasks. There's no better feeling than winning. I can attest to it having won a lot, but equally as important and equally as helpful in building a career and trying to become a better son, a better community member. It's the lessons that you learn in the losses that matter. You have to look yourself in the mirror and you say, Hey, are we going to stand up and are we going to go forward or are we not? And oftentimes if you are honest with yourself and you're willing to say, I'm willing to go forward, there is the first step in developing confidence and adversity and challenge during duress. As you're walking to school and things happen, what do you do? You have to look up and you have to look at yourself in the mirror and find a way to go forward. That is a form of confidence. Confidence shouldn't be conflated with arrogance or self-fulfillment. It's about having the will to go forward. That's how I think about confidence.
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03:29
One Body One Mind: Michael Ojo
When I was younger I didn't do that I realized I do now. I probably should have done more of this when I was younger, a lot of my elders told me this was the way to live and I didn't want to listen. Two things, one with the body, is how you eat. I was always an active kid. So that's one of the things that for the body is very good. Moving around, getting active. Now, people have wearables where they can track their steps and track how much they're moving a day. It's important to do that. As a kid, we'd run around, bicycle, swim, play basketball, football, and have races. So the activeness of keeping your body moving is key. And especially, if can, if you're fortunate enough to have the mobility, if all the functions are working in your body, it's a blessing in itself and you should utilize that as much as possible. But what I ate, I loved all of the junk food you can imagine, all the chips, soda, fast food, pizza. Pizza Hut was one of my favorites as well as Chuck E Cheese Pizza. Things that are considered processed foods. And now, because I do take a lot more care of myself as I age, I realize that processed food was not good and conducive to a good, healthy lifestyle. So I reduced it to almost none now. But if I would've, I think I should have done everything in moderation. So, if you do want to enjoy the food, of course it's great, it tastes great, but it's not nutritionally great for us, so it should be done in moderation. That's for the body. And then the body links to the mind. We're all interconnected in that way. So, when you're eating processed food, it affects the way you think. It affects the way you act. Of course, it affects the way you move. So you want to be mindful of those things, try to eat more healthy and whole as they say, things that come from the earth that haven't been ridden with chemicals or other kind of manipulation. And then with the mind, reading is key. My parents always try to get me to read as much as possible. I hated to do it then. I love to read now and it's almost like because I'm busy with work and other things, I can't find enough time to read. And I have books just piled up that I can't wait to just sit somewhere quietly for hours and read. And I think with time I got more interested in books, but the key for me was to find books that caught my interest. And it could be whatever you like to read. For me it's biographies and business books. But if you like nonfiction, sci-fi action books, just find and do the research to find a book that you like. It could be 20, 30, 40, 50 pages. It could be a hundred, 200, 300 pages, but start to get there because reading really stimulates the mind in a great way and it really connects the mindfulness and the body connection and really makes you feel good.
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01:41
Confidence: Michael Ojo
For me, finding that internal confidence is positive thinking and positive affirmations. Very simply think and say to yourself, I think I can. I know I can. I will do it. And this can be at your lowest points, this could be at your highest points. You always want to be able to reflect and repeat that. I think I can. I know I can, I will, and I can achieve it. When you put that into your mind, you'll start to act on it, and when you act on it, you'll start to see things changing for the better. Even if it takes time, it's not going to happen right away, but you just need to have encouragement. There's a lot of shadows of darkness that can come and clouds that can come and rain on your parade. They oftentimes happen to me as well, but I always know that there's a glimmer of shine and hope and a ray of sunshine that's right on the other side of the clouds. And I'm always trying to - even if I can't see it - think about it. Just the sheer thought alone is key. So it's all in the mindset. Keeping a positive attitude at all times is extremely helpful, and that's one of the things I've learned with time as I've grown. So if there's something I could share with all the students today it is to just stay positive even in those bad times. And those times when you don't know what's going to happen, or things are going really bad and you don't want to give up, you don't want to believe that greatness can come. Keep on believing in yourself.
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01:06
Confidence: Eric Pennington
When you live in a urban environment, often it is difficult to have the confidence to plan a year ahead, two years ahead because you have to make it from day to day, you have to make it from Monday to Tuesday, and sometimes that is really difficult. So you have to focus on that, and part of that process is getting through what I call inner city PTSD. It's almost like a post-traumatic stress disorder that we go through every single day, and that's debilitating in many respects. But on a positive side, for me, it let me know when I look back that I could achieve anything. I could make it through all the traumas of getting through the day-to-day experience in a difficult urban environment. Everything else in life is really simple if you compare it to that, and it helps me build the confidence that I needed to do the things in my life to get to this level of success that I have.
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01:02
One Body One Mind: Eric Pennington
Well, now I'm 64 years old and I think about it. If I had known that I was going to live to be 60, 70 years old, I certainly would've taken better care of my body as a youngster. So I guess the advice, and it's hard I think to consume that advice when you're 17, 18, 19 years old, but it really is important that you recognize that the vessel that is the body you have now, it will be yours forever, and you're going to need that body and that mind to achieve all the things that you want to do. If you do find a passion, oftentimes it takes years to perfect that passion to get to a point where you feel like you're successful, but you've got to be around long enough to have that happen, and you have to have a mind that's sharp enough to carry it through as best you can. So you have to nurture it, you have to feed it with good food, you have to feed it with good information, and you have to treat it with respect and dignity, and that'll take you a long way.
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02:15
Mind and Body: Vaughn Crowe
So, I am the son of Vernon and Darris Crowe and grew up in a very religious family where there was often the adage of your body is your temple and what you put in it is very important. And as you go through life, we kind of lose the idea that what you pour into your mind, what you pour into your gut, is significant. But the research is that what you pour into your mind, resting your mind, taking care of your body, eating healthy as best you can, it's hard nowadays, but eating as best you can, the output from that will lead to higher performance. So here I am 42 years old, I've had three knee surgeries, back surgery, my body has taken a toll. And what I've learned again over the years is that the mind and body are very much connected. So I do meditate and in the form of meditation. It's just sitting quietly and acknowledging my thoughts, nothing more, nothing less. Sit quiet, young people, and just let the thoughts come. And then here I am training for the Chicago Marathon. When everyone's told me, oh, Vaughn, you're too old. You've had too many surgeries, you've broken too many bones. And if you take care of the body and you push yourself, what you realize is that you control your outcomes to a degree. So I've been eating healthier, reducing the junk food, and the chips, et cetera. And by the time I arrive at this marathon, I'm overweight, challenged physically because I've adequately trained both my mind and my body. I have a bridling confidence that I will run 26.2 miles. It'll probably be my last one, but it'll be one of the biggest physical and mental accomplishments that I've achieved in my life. And that includes having played division one football.
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01:24
Critical Thinking: LeAnn Elder
Critical thinking is key. Thinking logically, rationally, thinking ahead, planning for the next steps is key. Thinking about how everything you do now affects what comes later. That is really, really important. Think about your actions while you're in high school; sometimes we think that they don't matter, but they do. They can open doors for us in the future or they can close them. So, we have to be smart about the things that we do now, because it really affects everything in the future. Another one is problem solving - knowing how to see something that first seems complex or that seems difficult and attack it and how to approach it and how to work towards solutions instead of complaining that the problem is too hard or that it can't be solved. If you look at things as things that are fixable or that are doable or things that I can actually fix, you are going to be able to solve them. If you look at something and say, I can't do that, I can't solve it, it's impossible. You're not going to be able to solve it.
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00:54
Balancing Risk and Return: Professor Jeffrey Robinson
Well, every decision probably has upsides and downsides. The question is how severe are the downsides and what will it do to impact you in the future? And really what that requires is someone who can think about the different scenarios of what would happen, for the different decisions. That's a skill that everybody needs to develop to think forward. What happens when I make this decision? What happens when I make this choice? Let me play it out. What's going to happen to me? The negatives of all those things are the downside. Sometimes they're there, but your next question is, well, how do I avoid that downside? Or is there some way for me to make that less of a downside? And again, that's where sometimes having some good people around you to help you make some decisions would be of really helpful.
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01:29
Decision Making: Professor Jeffrey Robinson
For the biggest decisions that you're going to make, it's good to talk to some other people like mentors, teachers, people who may have a little more experience than you and who can give you some advice. And I'm talking about the big decisions, like what am I going to do after high school? What's my career path? I'm thinking about these different things, which might be a good path. Get some other people involved in what you're thinking about. Ask them some questions about how they might make a decision that way or what they think about different options because those people who've had a little more experience than you might have some insight about not only what the decision could be, but how you might go about thinking about it. If you can keep that kind of skillset going or maybe choices of people that you might want to bring into that circle of who's going to help you and give you advice that's going to help you later on. That's one of the things that's helped me. I've always had some people who were mentors, people who were a little older, a little further advanced than me who could give me good advice. And now years later, those are some of the people that I thank God for because they were the people who helped me to really make some critical decisions in my life.
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02:02
Money: Michael Ojo
Money is a very interesting thing. I think when we look at money, it is powerful because there's no one in this world who can, at least in America where we are, who can function without it. And it doesn't mean you must aspire to be wealthy or rich or anything, but you still need money to live a life, to feed yourself, to keep the lights on, to have somewhere to go to at night safely. So, I would say to students to understand money and the concept of money. It is literally a tool just like a hammer, a nail, a screwdriver. They're all tools to get about living our life. And so what I would tell students about money is that there's two ways you can earn money. Something you do well within a job, or maybe you create a business or a company and you provide a service or a product. That's your value and that's how you earn money In exchange for your value, you'll earn some odd dollars or you can make money. And making money is the creation, what I call finding a way to take a dollar to multiply that dollar into multiple dollars. And that could be via investing or creating a really cool value proposition or startup or a business that now sells for a lot of money that is now being made and not just earned income. So, I would say money is a tool. Everyone should learn how to use it as such because that is all it is for us and it's just the means.
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01:19
Live Within Your Means: Eric Pennington
Living within your means is important. I've read over and over again that one of the best ways to have financial success is to save money, and the only way to save money is to spend less than you bring in. I agree with that as a general principle, but I also believe that it is important to reward yourself along the way. I do think it's important to have nice things to help you. It's a motivator. It helps motivate you to keep going, to hopefully make more money and to have a better financial balance in your life so that you can live within your means as you move forward. But I don't think that means be a pauper. I don't think that means not treating yourself. It doesn't mean not going to the movies and not having an ice cream or doing some of those things. I think those things are also important to do, but again, you have to do it with your ultimate goal in mind, and that is having financial stability, making sure that you are saving money and spending less than you bring in. But I don't think you should do so to the detriment of your own health and feeling good about yourself.
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01:32
Living Within Means: Kim Singleton
Let's just say with money, I feel like over my lifetime I haven't saved as much as I should have. But the other side of that is I've had fun with that. But you could still have fun and be a little more disciplined about it. Maybe not take three trips in a quarter, maybe take just one trip in a quarter and save. Because at the same time, while I'm recommending that people be intentional about what they want to accomplish, I have to do that myself. I have to say to myself, okay, where do I want to be financially at the end of the year? And if I'm serious about it, I have to sacrifice some things. And sometimes I haven't sacrificed because I give into peer pressure too. There may be a big event going on in Arub. Oh, I have to be there! Kim, you don't have to be there, but you've been Aruba like five times! Why are you going now? But those are the challenges that we have in life. And sometimes you have to just take a step back and have a conversation with yourself. I'm a big believer of mantras. I get up in the morning and I give myself a mantra every day. It's like, Kim, you will not waste time today, Kim, you will be productive today, Kim. You will accomplish that. I say that to myself, and when I start veering off the path, I come back to my mantra and then it's just like this little joke I have with myself that like, okay, let’s stay away from that. Let's get back on track.
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00:52
Success: Michael Ojo
I think I'm humble, so I don't necessarily say I'm successful much, but I'll say I've had success in achieving goals and one of the many reasons is because I really believe in myself, and that is key. Without having confidence in yourself, there's nothing you can do. But if you have all confidence in yourself, you may still fail at achieving goals, but you'll get back up and you'll continue to push and drive until you see those results. So confidence is key and it's everything. And I've invested a lot in making sure I stay confident and making sure I feel good mentally, spiritually, physically, just giving myself the encouragement even when no one else is around to keep pushing.
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01:44
Money: Kim Singleton
I think it's never too early to have budgets. There's an old saying, when I was coming up, pay yourself first. So whatever job you had, you would always take out some money and put it aside for you first, and then you either use it as discretionary funds or paid your bills, et cetera. But I think it's important, and it all kind of ties into being intentional about what you want to accomplish. You may want to buy a house, you may want to get a higher education, you may want to invest. There's a lot of things that you want to do, but it's not going to come automatically. Everything takes planning and it's never too early to budget. And if you don't have a lot of money, think of the saying that I said before, pay yourself first You may get $10, so you take a dollar, you put it aside. If you did that every day for a year, that's $365. You could take that and put it someplace else, but if you just pay yourself first as you go on, then you'll have money as a young person and you can take this concept and when you get a job, make sure, see what kind of retirement plans your company has, such as a 401k. I know so many people who are retiring because they got into their company investment plan or 401k and just kept pushing everything into it and it would come out of their paycheck. They didn't even miss it. And then it was time to retire. They turned around and looked and they had all this money. So budgeting is always good, but make sure you pay yourself first. You take a piece of that, you put it to the side, and then you decide how you want to invest that because you'll have it.
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02:41
Creating Wealth: Vaughn Crowe
I grew up in Newark, New Jersey. In the south section of the city on a small street called Clinton Place in Hawthorne Avenue. And at 16, maybe 17 years old, my father got diagnosed with kidney failure and he was the primary breadwinner, as my mom spent a good chunk of her life raising her or their six children. And that was my first brush with poverty as I knew it. Up until then, we lived a good life. I had food, I had clothes, et cetera. But then the income stopped once he was diagnosed. And that was a turning point for me to recognize that there has to be a differentiated way for me to create economic opportunity for myself and for my family in the long run. And that took me down a path of being curious, not a woe is me story, not a, oh my God, look at this kid. (00:20:49): It just took me down the path of being curious around how wealth was created in this country. And so I became curious about Wall Street, about medicine, about law, and what I realized is that I really liked business. I was good at math, I was good at numbers then. And this idea of putting $1 in to something and figuring out how to extract five, it's the very basic tenant of business. There's a lot of jargon and language around business, but the reality is in our old neighborhood, we would say, how do you make a dollar out of 15 cents? So, there is this notion of how do you make a dollar out of 15 cents? And that's just the basic tenant of business. And once I realized that there was opportunity for me to learn how to extract value, whether it's investing a dollar or getting a return on my labor, that encouraged me to go down the path to figure out how to become a successful business person. And it stemmed from this idea that the money dried up in my home at 16 or 17 years old. Things got better. But that was the flip of the switch in the room for me that said, I need to become more curious about ways in which I can create real wealth for myself and my family.
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02:18
Power of Investing: Vaughn Crowe
I was a sophomore in high school at Weequahic High School in Newark, New Jersey. And I had this history teacher; his name was Professor Strom. Mr. Strom. And it was a history class, American history, but we would start every class with a lesson around the markets, particularly the stock market. And at that time we were learning about IBM and Coca-Cola. What drives value? The stock price is here today. The stock price is there tomorrow. And if you had some money, what companies would you invest in? Who has a great brand, who has a great product? Can you afford the stock? And if I was a bit more aggressive, a bit more entrepreneurial, as I think you each have the capabilities to be, I was working summer jobs, I had extra cash in my pocket and I would spend it on clothes and shoes and all the trappings, all the things that you would normally do as a 16-year-old. But I should have taken from Mr. Strom, my history teacher, and I should have applied some of my earnings from my summer job and tested what he was teaching by opening an account and putting some money in the market, watching it grow, watching it come down because in that would've been life lessons for me to understand how money works, how equity builds. But it was a great lesson that Mr. Strom taught us, my first introduction to Wall Street technically, but I wish at 16 I had taken some of those summer camp paychecks and put a hundred dollars, $50, into the market. If I were to compound that, it'd probably be worth a lot more today. But I'll let you figure that out for me. Had I put $500 in the market in 1996, what would it be worth today? (00:43:45): Path to Success(00:45:37): I was an average student with an above average work ethic. I was an okay reader, but I understood how to read. I was a good student, but I was not Einstein. But I would never let a person outwork me. And it sounds simple because oftentimes you look at the person who's made it and you think that that person is brilliant. You think that there was some secret sauce. I'm telling you, the reality is I just worked at it. I invested in myself. I was curious, wasn't afraid to fail. When I failed, yeah, I cried. I was angry, I was upset, but I got back up, looked myself in the mirror and tried to go through my high school days ferociously aggressive with the tenacity to compete and win. And that's not rocket science, that's just finding within yourself kind of a will to win. You've made your mind up that you're not going to quit. We go through life as a young person without completing tasks. And I think it's important that you complete tasks. It's fulfilling, it's gratifying. If you just worked at it and you complete the task, you might fail. If you do it again, you might win. What did you learn? Complete the task. And that's probably one of the things that I didn't do enough of when I was 17 years old. But what I'm telling you today is not rocket science. I wasn't a straight A student. I didn't do great on the SATs, but you will not outwork me and I will complete the task. And I think that if you work hard, you identify the problem, you identify the challenge, and you go from A to Z and just focus on completing the task, your outcomes will be more positive than not.
LeAnn Elder
LeAnn Elder Collection
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01:24
Critical Thinking: LeAnn Elder
Critical thinking is key. Thinking logically, rationally, thinking ahead, planning for the next steps is key. Thinking about how everything you do now affects what comes later. That is really, really important. Think about your actions while you're in high school; sometimes we think that they don't matter, but they do. They can open doors for us in the future or they can close them. So, we have to be smart about the things that we do now, because it really affects everything in the future. Another one is problem solving - knowing how to see something that first seems complex or that seems difficult and attack it and how to approach it and how to work towards solutions instead of complaining that the problem is too hard or that it can't be solved. If you look at things as things that are fixable or that are doable or things that I can actually fix, you are going to be able to solve them. If you look at something and say, I can't do that, I can't solve it, it's impossible. You're not going to be able to solve it.
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02:12
No Limits: LeAnn Elder
At some point, life is going to drop you in the deep end of a swimming pool. It is going to happen. And at some point you only have two choices because even Michael Phelps can't tread forever, right? You can't just sit there and tread. You are either going to sink and drown and die, or you're going to swim. That's it. You really only have two choices. So you have to choose to swim. And way too often people think that they can just tread and they can stay here, and we're just going to keep our head above water and we're going to stay status quo. But eventually you will get tired, you will not go anywhere. So you either have to make a decision, that I'm going to give up and I'm not going to try, and in which case I am going to sink and that's going to be it for me, or I'm going to swim.
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00:56
Comfortable Being Uncomfortable: LeAnn Elder
Well, you have to be uncomfortable sometimes because how else are you going to grow? How else are you going learn? If we only did everything that made us comfortable, then we would never go anywhere because we would never be able to step outside of that comfort zone and expand our mind and realize what we're truly made of. Because it's those uncomfortable moments that help define us and shape us and allows us to grow as individuals to be able to achieve things. I mean in life, there are going to be so many uncomfortable moments or scary moments. So that's the other thing. Comfortable, scary things that produce anxiety. You don't avoid. You're unsure about something and you have to be able to do them anyway.
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00:50
Grit and Resilliancy: LeAnn Elder
At some point, life is going to drop you in the deep end of a swimming pool. It is going to happen. And at some point you only have two choices because even Michael Phelps can't tread forever, right? You can't just sit there and tread. You are either going to sink and drown and die, or you're going to swim. That's it. You really only have two choices. So you have to choose to swim. And way too often people think that they can just tread and they can stay here, and we're just going to keep our head above water and we're going to stay status quo. But eventually you will get tired, you will not go anywhere. So you either have to make a decision, that I'm going to give up and I'm not going to try, and in which case I am going to sink and that's going to be it for me, or I'm going to swim.
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02:43
Selecting Friends: LeAnn Elder
Choosing your friends is very, very important. And you don't have to have a lot of them. You don't, it's not about running in a big posse and big groups because all those people are not your friends. They just aren't . If you could go through and have one or two people that truly have your back, that are truly happy for you, people who can tell you what you need to hear, not just what you want to hear, because you're not going to get everything right. You're going to make mistakes. You're going to make poor choices. And a true friend is going to tell you, you're making poor choices. As a true friend is not going to sit back and watch you make poor choices and watch you fail. They're going to say, no, you need to keep your head up. You need to do this. You need to do things differently. That's a true friend. And when you find people like that, you need to hold on to them. Choosing friends that model where you should be. Because even if you aren't that person, but you surround yourself by people who are. So, if you want to be a good student, even if you're not a good student, choose friends who are . Choose ones that are spending their time wisely and that are studying and putting forth that effort because they're going to be a better influence on you than the ones who are just going to encourage you to go out and drink or smoke or do other things - party on the weekends who aren't going to put any emphasis on school. So that becomes very, very important because it's very easy for kids to fall to the lowest common denominator. It's very, very easy. And, and it's one of the reasons why it's unfortunate, when you get stuck., I can speak as a mom, even I know that my boys have fallen into that trap many times, especially my youngest son because yes, he is social and you know, he wants to have fun and you know, you want to be liked and all of those other things. But if I put him in a class with people with behavior issues, he was going to fall into the behavior issues category too. He would sink to the least common denominator. But as long as I kept him in honors and AP classes and students that had a certain standard, he was going to rise to the occasion, he was going to do everything he could to be on that level, because of course, he's not going to want to be the only one that isn't doing what he's supposed to do. It's important to surround yourself with what you want for yourself, even if that is not where you are.
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02:04
Uncertainty: LeAnn Elder
I think you have to expect uncertainty. You have to understand that it is coming. No one has all the answers and there you will be thrown curve balls and you have to be okay with the potential outcomes and prepare for them. But you have to; uncertainty is very difficult for a lot of people. Certainty is one of those basic human needs that drives a lot of people. When they feel like they don't have it, that's where you can get out of control and be very anxious and you can allow yourself to succumb in a very negative way. If you don't learn how to handle the fact that uncertainty is just a part of life, I do believe you have to have a lot of faith, right? You have to have a lot of faith that, in the end, it won't always be like this. In the end, this is fixable. In the end, I can rise above the difficulties that are in front of me and sometimes you don't know how you're going to get through it, and you are very uncertain about the future. And it does make you nervous in your approach in dealing with life. But you really don't have a choice. Like you can't, you're never going to get. But so far in life, if you think you're going to be confident and certain and secure about everything going on around you - it doesn't work that way. So, I can't look to have constant certainty in my life. I can only develop, make sure I work on myself from within, so that I'm strong enough to face the uncertainty and figure out what I can do to either fix it or deal with it and adjust my own mindset about it.
Eric Pennington
+CLUB Eric Pennington Series
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03:07
+CLUB Eric Pennington Series: Belonging
Transcript: Belonging is a bit of an elusive concept sometimes. A lot of your ability to belong is based on where you've been in your life. And if you come from an environment that is different than mainstream America, it's kind of tough immediately to feel like you belong. You have to feel like you have to prove yourself almost every day. I'll go back to another experience in my life where I didn't feel like I belonged, and I think I may have made at that time the wrong choice, but it turned out to be another one of the experiences in life that helps you do better. As a senior in high school, I was invited to meet with the dean of Yale to see whether or not they would accept me and admit me into the school. It turns out that I was going to be admitted to the school and was invited up for a final visit to spend the night with some students at Yale, and then the next day to meet with the Dean and essentially sign an acceptance letter to go. Well, I went to Yale and they paid for my bus ticket. I went there. I got into New Haven, got off the bus and walked to the campus. And when I got to the campus, the area around the campus was very similar to my environment here in Essex County, it was very urban. There were stores on the corner, bodegas similar to what we had here, but then when I reached the campus and there were literally these ivy walls and these big gates with these big stone structures. And I walked through that gate and immediately felt like I did not belong. I did stay overnight and the next morning I got up and I did not go to the Dean's office. I went back home because I felt so out of place and so much like I could never belong in a place like that. That was one of the times where I deselected. And at that moment I thought that was the best thing for me to do. I have learned since that that was probably not the best idea in the world. They wrote me later to find out what happened and to see if I wanted to come back, and I did not.
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01:22
+CLUB Eric Pennington Series: Uncertainty
Transcript: I think the one thing about life is it's all uncertain that we never know where we’re going to end up or what's going to happen. Let me share a personal experience. I was one of five children raised by a single mother, and there was a period in our life as a youngster where we were homeless and we lived here in Newark, in a station wagon for some period of time. And at that time, without question, I had no idea what the next day was going to hold, whether we want to make it to the next day or not. But I knew that we wanted to get to a better place and the only way to do that was to survive to the next day, stick together, help each other and make it through that experience. Although I would not wish that on anybody it was certainly a life altering experience that let me know that you can almost get through anything and that humans are very resilient people. We can make it through difficult times, and hopefully you can use those experiences as a foundation to do something so much better because you know that whatever is facing you now can't possibly be as difficult as what you've gone through before and you can succeed.
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01:20
+CLUB Eric Pennington Series: Live Within Your Means
Transcript: Living within your means is important. I've read over and over again that one of the best ways to have financial success is to save money, and the only way to save money is to spend less than you bring in. I agree with that as a general principle, but I also believe that it is important to reward yourself along the way. I do think it's important to have nice things to help you. It's a motivator. It helps motivate you to keep going, to hopefully make more money and to have a better financial balance in your life so that you can live within your means as you move forward. But I don't think that means be a pauper. I don't think that means not treating yourself. It doesn't mean not going to the movies and not having an ice cream or doing some of those things. I think those things are also important to do, but again, you have to do it with your ultimate goal in mind, and that is having financial stability, making sure that you are saving money and spending less than you bring in. But I don't think you should do so to the detriment of your own health and feeling good about yourself.
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01:07
+CLUB Eric Pennington Series: Inner Confidence
Transcript: When you live in a urban environment, often it is difficult to have the confidence to plan a year ahead, two years ahead because you have to make it from day to day, you have to make it from Monday to Tuesday, and sometimes that is really difficult. So you have to focus on that, and part of that process is getting through what I call inner city PTSD. It's almost like a post-traumatic stress disorder that we go through every single day, and that's debilitating in many respects. But on a positive side, for me, it let me know when I look back that I could achieve anything. I could make it through all the traumas of getting through the day-to-day experience in a difficult urban environment. Everything else in life is really simple if you compare it to that, and it helps me build the confidence that I needed to do the things in my life to get to this level of success that I have.
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01:22
+CLUB Eric Pennington Series: Comfortable Being Uncomfortable
Transcript: Challenges in life, I think are opportunities for us to grow and oftentimes when you're faced with something you haven't experienced before that raises your discomfort level because you just don't know how things are going to go. But this relates back to probably a theme that I've had in my life all along, is that it is difficult. I'll change that. I don't want to say it's difficult that when you face things in life that are different or challenging and it raises your discomfort level, but you have to keep your eye on what the objective is, where you want to go. And as long as you know ultimately where you're trying to get to and you're faced with challenges along the way, just relying on your past experiences and recognizing that you have been through some difficult times, it's highly likely that you'll be able to get through whatever that challenge is. And when you come out on the other side, you'll have a new experience, a new idea of what it is you can accomplish and what you can achieve. And so you just have to keep moving forward to get through whatever that obstacle is.
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01:07
+CLUB Eric Pennington Series: Improved Decision Making
Transcript: Well, I think when making a decision, it's important to have as many facts as possible, and that just doesn't mean some numerical calculation of whether two plus two equals four. You need to look at the environment to figure out what the impact is going to be, have the outcome that you want. Once you identify the outcome that you're looking for, there can be several ways to get there and it's important that you have a sense of what is the best path for you to achieve that outcome and that objective. And while you're on that path, keep in mind what it is you want to accomplish. So you'll know if you have a decision, you may have some decision matrix and you can go left or right, and if you go left, it's not going to get you to where you want to be. It may have some immediate gratification, but it is going to slow you down from getting to where you want to be. But you have to take the path on the right, go to the path on the right to get to where you want to be, to ultimately reach that goal and objective. And for the most part, that'll be the best course that you can take throughout life.
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01:21
+CLUB Eric Pennington Series: Life Lessons
Transcript: Life has taught me generally that expect the unexpected and embrace opportunities that come your way that you did not expect. Be happy with the opportunities that you're faced with in life that may look like challenges at some point, because they give you a much better perspective on where you've been, where you can go, and where you are at the moment. Life is exciting. Life is a journey. Again, when we talk about stumbling and failing, that's not an end point. That's a way point along the way to ultimately where you want to be and what your life will be. We’ll embrace the stumbles and setbacks, because it's all part of making you the better person that you are and getting you to ultimately achieve the things that you want, the financial successes that you want to have, the human successes, the opportunity to impact people's lives while you impact your own life. It has taught me that there are lots and lots of opportunities out there that you just will never see if you don't keep moving forward and take advantage of everything that's put in front of you.
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01:02
+CLUB Eric Pennington Series: Healthy Relationships
Transcript: I think one of the things that I've learned throughout my life in developing good relationships is being open and honest and being vulnerable, allowing people to see you, allowing people to see who you really are. And that's risky because oftentimes when you expose a portion of yourself that you think may not be as wonderful as other people might be, it gives people an opportunity to use that against you. But you have to be confident enough in yourself and hope that you've picked the people who are around you, who are going to be beneficial to you, that it's okay to expose yourself because when you do, they get to see the real you and you get to let people know who you really are. That gives you an opportunity to expand your horizons, get access to things in life that you may not otherwise have had access to, and find areas of your life that you didn't even know that you were quite as interested in.
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00:43
+CLUB Eric Pennington Series: Grit & Resiliency
Transcript: Whenever you have a setback or a stumble and you make it through, it lets you know that whatever that obstacle was, you can overcome that. And oftentimes you're going to run into other obstacles down the road where you may think, how in the world am I going to get through this? And you think about it, you've made it through many, many other obstacles, failures, stumbles, setbacks, and you survived and you'll continue to survive. And you use those experiences when you had something go the way that you didn't want it to go, to let you know that you can survive that and you can survive lots of other things that are going to be put in your way and you just keep pushing forward and have that goal, that objective, that dream that you want to achieve.
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+CLUB Vaughn Crowe Series
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02:18
+CLUB Vaughn Crowe Series: Advice to Teenage Self
Transcript: I recently learned this in my adult life such that it is so applicable to what I experienced as a young person in high school. And there were three elements that I recently learned from a very successful business person, and it was know your craft and know it well. So whatever it is that you think you're good at, lean in to that experience. If you're a math student and you love algebra and you're not as good at English, maybe lean in to being a great math student. So know your craft and know it well. Be humble. So as you are excelling in various tasks, if you are the best math student, there's no need to gloat and tell the world that you're great. Let your work speak for yourself, and that's a form of being humble. And then the third component of that life lesson is to make friends. And making friends is about building relationships, accepting people for who they are and what they are. And so, if you kind of go through life, and this is something that I've learned over the last five years from a really good friend of mine, which is to know your craft and know it well. So you study and you attempt to excel at everything that you do. And secondly, be humble because you will make mistakes. But going through life with a level of humility gets you close to kind of a higher form of life. And then lastly, make friends. We cannot survive as a human species without having a companion, a friend, a partner in some form. And so, those life lessons that I've learned in my life more recently are more apparent than ever. When I think about my childhood as a student at Weequahic High School as a student at Hawthorne Avenue Elementary School and even as a student at Colgate, those are three things that had I learned earlier would've been an added bonus to my life as I began to progress in my career.
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01:26
+CLUB Vaughn Crowe Series: Action List
Transcript: I grew up with this idea that to-do lists were very important and it's very prevalent in business. There've been companies built around workflow and helping you become more efficient by building to-do lists. But what I learned as a professional is as I built these to-do list, I would come back the next day and there would be the same things on my to-do list. And I would have to ask myself, Vaughn, when are you going to do it? And so I changed the paradigm for myself and I created an action items list. When will I take action? Am I going to take action? And so therefore it was a psychological, let's call it trick, to hold me a bit more accountable because now instead of saying I have things on my to-do list, I'm now asking myself, did I take action against these items? And you don't want to tell yourself, no, I didn't take action. But it's very easy to a degree to just have things on a post-it note or have things on your phone. And that to-do list just grows and grows. What we want to do is we want to take action against the items on that old to-do list such that it becomes an action item list.
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02:38
+CLUB Vaughn Crowe Series: Belonging
Transcript: You will go through life in moments. In moments where you will feel like an outsider. You will feel like you're the only one in the room with short hair or no hair. You may be the only black person in the room. And the reality is the level of confidence necessary to even take the first step to be in that room, you should acknowledge you’re a winner because that is somewhat of the first step in being comfortable and having folks gravitate to you. There is this concept, that I fully embrace right now, that we'll see if it works, but I want to be the uncommon amongst the uncommon. And that comes with recognizing that, hey, I'm different but I'm stronger because I am different. And the more people in the room who don't look like me, who don't talk like me, who don't have the same haircut as I do, it only emboldens me to go out and continue to compete, to strive to be excellent. Because ultimately the work that I produce, the product that I generate, they will all gravitate to excellence and so long that I am striving to be excellent. I might be alone for a moment. I might be uncomfortable, but as I produce, the world will gravitate to me. And that's somewhat of the mindset that's confident, not necessarily arrogant, not gloating, but it's this idea that because I am different, I am great, I desire to be uncommon amongst the uncommon, that's where I thrive. So, if you can find the courage to embrace that, I walk into many rooms where I am the only person who's black. And then you couple that with being from Newark, you're like, this is a double whammy. But you know what? I embrace it and you will come to me and you'll learn how good I am, how great I am. You'll also learn how great we can be together. That's what I would encourage when you're thinking about how do I fit in, how do I become more comfortable? I would figure out how to remain uncommon amongst the uncommon.
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02:21
+CLUB Vaughn Crowe Series: Career Choices
Transcript: At 17 years old, you're on this journey likely to progress to college or to apply for a job, or both. And it all starts with research. You've got to learn a little bit more about yourself. You got to really fundamentally trust what you're good at and lean into the positive attributes of who you are. You also have to recognize the areas in need of development. I don't tend to call them weaknesses or challenges because we all have areas in need of development, where we're trying to get better. But you have to understand what you're great at and where you need some work. Conduct some research, put the time in to figure out what college is it that's the right fit for me, what's the right job opportunity? Where will I have the highest likelihood to thrive? And the beauty of technology nowadays, whether it is ChatGPT, whether it is some of the other tools out there, you have what's necessary to conduct the research to really create a narrower funnel to help you make better decisions. You're going to go through life, for as long as you're here, on a daily basis making decisions. You'll make good ones, you'll make bad ones, but you're going to make decisions based on the information that you have. So as you're trying to enter the job market, or you're planning to enter college, or once you're in an organization, you are making decisions quickly, but you're doing it with the information that you have at the time of the decisive point. So, I would encourage you now, as you're thinking about the next step in your career, to do the research. Take the time to learn and listen and call friends and call peers and really pour into the opportunities in front of you to learn so that you can make the best decision that you can at the time that's necessary.
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01:33
+CLUB Vaughn Crowe Series: Confidence
Transcript: The way in which confidence comes about, you're oftentimes born with it, and I was not, but it gets further developed as you win and as you lose. And so, you learn a lot of lessons in both scenarios and out of those scenarios, you gain confidence to continue to take on various tasks. There's no better feeling than winning. I can attest to it having won a lot, but equally as important and equally as helpful in building a career and trying to become a better son, a better community member. It's the lessons that you learn in the losses that matter. You have to look yourself in the mirror and you say, Hey, are we going to stand up and are we going to go forward or are we not? And oftentimes if you are honest with yourself and you're willing to say, I'm willing to go forward, there is the first step in developing confidence and adversity and challenge during duress. As you're walking to school and things happen, what do you do? You have to look up and you have to look at yourself in the mirror and find a way to go forward. That is a form of confidence. Confidence shouldn't be conflated with arrogance or self-fulfillment. It's about having the will to go forward. That's how I think about confidence.
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02:25
+CLUB Vaughn Crowe Series: Defining Moments
Transcript: Life is not always certain. And we talked about that before and you're learning that as a young person. In 2006 I met a gentleman by the name of Ray Chambers, a notable businessman and philanthropist from my home city who learned that I had a desire to advance my career, beyond where I was at that point in time, and unknowing what my skills were, unknowing what value I would bring, and I was not knowledgeable about the world in which he really worked in. He said, Vaughn, come work for me and do it for a year. And my question to Ray was, well, what will I do? And the response was, I don't know, but you have some skills that I think we could use. And almost on the spot I left what was a really good career to go and utilize some skills that someone could use. And I took a little bit of risk and that was a defining moment for me because that one-year opportunity turned into 15, which then led me to run a venture capital firm and have established relationships with some of the greatest men and women on earth. And that was done over a peppermint tea in New York City almost 17 years ago. So from a career point of view, I talk about knowing your craft and know it well. Be humble and make friends. In that case, I made a friend who took a risk on me and I embraced the challenge. And again, the story of my life as a business person, as a community professional, is not over yet. Hopefully I'm just getting started. But, so far, that was what you call a breakpoint. That was a really important moment in my life and I'll keep you posted on how it turns out.
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02:12
+CLUB Vaughn Crowe Series: Healthy Relationships
Transcript: I grew up in what I would call an ecosystem of love. And it wasn't a world where I was constantly told that I was less than others. It wasn't a world that I was constantly, psychologically tortured. I was reminded on a regular basis of how great I am and how much better I could become. And so those all were relationships and mentors and professionals and people who poured into me. And because of that experience, despite the challenges in the world that we experience, I fundamentally believe that the human species is good. And so therefore over these years, and it remains part of who I am, this thirst to learn more about people and to be in the presence of people, to ultimately develop relationships with no outcome necessarily tied to building a relationship. But because I fundamentally believe that people are good, the human species is good, I hope that I have an expectation that my fellow humans would think the same of me. Therefore, we can live not necessarily in harmony, but we can live in acceptance together, with a level of respect and dignity, so long that we are moving towards something that's positive. And so therefore, relationships for me is part of the reason why I do what I do. It’s part of the reason why I have a handful of really close friends and I value them. I would encourage young people to utilize the power of relationships to learn to advance relationships and also to help you avoid failure. It also helps. They help you embrace failure. So they're important.
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01:39
+CLUB Vaughn Crowe Series: Life Lessons
Transcript: I've worked in three different organizations, been to college, and have a whole life ahead of me to live, But the reality that I've learned over these 42 years on earth is that life is hard and unfair. You're more alone than you're not, which forces you to require relationships. And at the same time, it's all gratifying. And so there is just a world that we live in that sends your emotions in so many different ways because it's hard and you are often alone, but you're together and it's so gratifying. Those are just the three things that I take with me, which requires me to be more self-reliant. At the same, I thirst for relationships. I embrace the difficulty of life, the unfairness and all the challenges that are probably apparent. But at the same time, I love to win and I love to compete. And that's what this life has also offered me. And so there's a, as my mom would say, a mashup of things that create some harsh realities, but at the same time, boy, if you can live it, it's fun.
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02:15
+CLUB Vaughn Crowe Series: Mind and Body
Transcript: So, I am the son of Vernon and Darris Crowe and grew up in a very religious family where there was often the adage of your body is your temple and what you put in it is very important. And as you go through life, we kind of lose the idea that what you pour into your mind, what you pour into your gut, is significant. But the research is that what you pour into your mind, resting your mind, taking care of your body, eating healthy as best you can, it's hard nowadays, but eating as best you can, the output from that will lead to higher performance. So here I am 42 years old, I've had three knee surgeries, back surgery, my body has taken a toll. And what I've learned again over the years is that the mind and body are very much connected. So I do meditate and in the form of meditation. It's just sitting quietly and acknowledging my thoughts, nothing more, nothing less. Sit quiet, young people, and just let the thoughts come. And then here I am training for the Chicago Marathon. When everyone's told me, oh, Vaughn, you're too old. You've had too many surgeries, you've broken too many bones. And if you take care of the body and you push yourself, what you realize is that you control your outcomes to a degree. So I've been eating healthier, reducing the junk food, and the chips, et cetera. And by the time I arrive at this marathon, I'm overweight, challenged physically because I've adequately trained both my mind and my body. I have a bridling confidence that I will run 26.2 miles. It'll probably be my last one, but it'll be one of the biggest physical and mental accomplishments that I've achieved in my life. And that includes having played division one football.
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Vaughn Croew
Michael Ojo Seires
+CLUB Michael Ojo Series
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01:00
+CLUB Michael Ojo Series: Proper Mindset
I would say just continue to push and do what you feel is best for you to do. Find what really makes you excited, find what really makes you driven, do things that you normally wouldn't do. Push yourself to your limit, whatever that limit is, and really go for it. And don't ever think that there's a limitation in how great you can be or what you can be, or how wealthy you can be, and what you can do in life or where you can be in life. Anything and everything is possible. First it comes to your mindset. Make sure you tell yourself this and you believe it. And once you do that, the sky is only the starting point. You can exceed far past it, but you have to have confidence. You have to invest in yourself, take yourself seriously, and anything you want to do, you can do and will do.
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01:47
+CLUB Michael Ojo Series: World of Possibilities
Transcript: The biggest lesson, to keep it brief, is life is extremely short and you want to take the time to enjoy as much of it as possible. You want to also take the time to remind yourself to enjoy everything you do and it should be with pleasure. It's not going to be with ease. There's always going to be challenges, but if you find what you love to do in every day, continue to do it. I think when we're younger, we don't have the responsibilities of paying bills or having to make money per se. We just like to wake up and play video games or do sports or hang out with friends or go to the movies or the mall. Those are the simple pleasures of life. As we get older, we now have responsibilities, so we now have to push away some of those pleasures when we're younger. And also those pleasures change as we get older, but in our lives, we should always make sure that whatever we're doing, we enjoy doing it. There's a saying that says, if you enjoy what you do, you never work a day in your life. I didn't know what that meant because I've had many a jobs where I've worked many days in my life, but now that I became an entrepreneur and I am chasing my goals and my dreams to do what I want to do every day when I wake up, I feel like I haven't worked a day and I enjoy it. And some days are tougher than others, but as long as you have pleasure and you really enjoy what you're doing, and you take the notion that life is short and that you have to enjoy the time that you have today because we don't know if we're promised tomorrow, you'll really do the most and have the most fun and enjoy life.
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01:26
+CLUB Michael Ojo Series: Belonging
Transcript: Confidence, again, is key. I've been fortunate enough to not really be affected by not belonging. I've sfelt like I didn't belong there when I was younger. Now it doesn't matter where I am. I believe I am where I'm supposed to be when I'm there. And that's confidence. And that's the key. I golf a lot and I get invited to golf at very prestigious country clubs. And in fact, the other week I was at a country club, a lot of people were there, and I might have been the only person of color there. I didn't feel any way about it because in my mind I was supposed to be there and that's why I was there and I had a heck of a good time because I didn't let that stop me from enjoying myself. In fact, it made me feel good because when I go to these kind of places, I tell myself, I'm going to bring my friends here too, and I'm going to be a member here too one day. And my friends are diverse, so they're people of color, whites, all types of people, and they're all going to be welcomed here if I'm welcomed here and that’s how I look at it. So, I stay positive, but I also stay very confident that whenever I walk into somewhere, I'm supposed to be there and I'm happy to be there regardless if I'm the only one of color there.
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03:30
+CLUB Michael Ojo Series: One Body, One Mind
When I was younger I didn't do that I realized I do now. I probably should have done more of this when I was younger, a lot of my elders told me this was the way to live and I didn't want to listen. Two things, one with the body, is how you eat. I was always an active kid. So that's one of the things that for the body is very good. Moving around, getting active. Now, people have wearables where they can track their steps and track how much they're moving a day. It's important to do that. As a kid, we'd run around, bicycle, swim, play basketball, football, and have races. So the activeness of keeping your body moving is key. And especially, if can, if you're fortunate enough to have the mobility, if all the functions are working in your body, it's a blessing in itself and you should utilize that as much as possible. But what I ate, I loved all of the junk food you can imagine, all the chips, soda, fast food, pizza. Pizza Hut was one of my favorites as well as Chuck E Cheese Pizza. Things that are considered processed foods. And now, because I do take a lot more care of myself as I age, I realize that processed food was not good and conducive to a good, healthy lifestyle. So I reduced it to almost none now. But if I would've, I think I should have done everything in moderation. So, if you do want to enjoy the food, of course it's great, it tastes great, but it's not nutritionally great for us, so it should be done in moderation. That's for the body. And then the body links to the mind. We're all interconnected in that way. So, when you're eating processed food, it affects the way you think. It affects the way you act. Of course, it affects the way you move. So you want to be mindful of those things, try to eat more healthy and whole as they say, things that come from the earth that haven't been ridden with chemicals or other kind of manipulation. And then with the mind, reading is key. My parents always try to get me to read as much as possible. I hated to do it then. I love to read now and it's almost like because I'm busy with work and other things, I can't find enough time to read. And I have books just piled up that I can't wait to just sit somewhere quietly for hours and read. And I think with time I got more interested in books, but the key for me was to find books that caught my interest. And it could be whatever you like to read. For me it's biographies and business books. But if you like nonfiction, sci-fi action books, just find and do the research to find a book that you like. It could be 20, 30, 40, 50 pages. It could be a hundred, 200, 300 pages, but start to get there because reading really stimulates the mind in a great way and it really connects the mindfulness and the body connection and really makes you feel good.
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00:47
+CLUB Michael Ojo Series: No Limits
Transcript: I think that's the beautiful thing about us in living in America is that there's so many opportunities in front of us. It's almost as if you can wake up any day and be anything you want to be. If you really put your mind to it and just set some goals and really accomplish and put yourself in the right place at the right time, there's nothing that we cannot achieve. And I think that’s the exciting part about waking up every day. Don't suppress yourself. Allow yourself to dream. Allow yourself to think that you can be bigger than you have ever been. Then, you can now make your way towards those things. It's possible. I’ve seen it happen with many people and it can happen with us too.
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02:03
+CLUB Michael Ojo Series: Money
Transcript: Money is a very interesting thing. I think when we look at money, it is powerful because there's no one in this world who can, at least in America where we are, who can function without it. And it doesn't mean you must aspire to be wealthy or rich or anything, but you still need money to live a life, to feed yourself, to keep the lights on, to have somewhere to go to at night safely. So, I would say to students to understand money and the concept of money. It is literally a tool just like a hammer, a nail, a screwdriver. They're all tools to get about living our life. And so what I would tell students about money is that there's two ways you can earn money. Something you do well within a job, or maybe you create a business or a company and you provide a service or a product. That's your value and that's how you earn money In exchange for your value, you'll earn some odd dollars or you can make money. And making money is the creation, what I call finding a way to take a dollar to multiply that dollar into multiple dollars. And that could be via investing or creating a really cool value proposition or startup or a business that now sells for a lot of money that is now being made and not just earned income. So, I would say money is a tool. Everyone should learn how to use it as such because that is all it is for us and it's just the means.
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00:53
+CLUB Michael Ojo Series: Success
Transcript: I think I'm humble, so I don't necessarily say I'm successful much, but I'll say I've had success in achieving goals and one of the many reasons is because I really believe in myself, and that is key. Without having confidence in yourself, there's nothing you can do. But if you have all confidence in yourself, you may still fail at achieving goals, but you'll get back up and you'll continue to push and drive until you see those results. So confidence is key and it's everything. And I've invested a lot in making sure I stay confident and making sure I feel good mentally, spiritually, physically, just giving myself the encouragement even when no one else is around to keep pushing.
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01:06
+CLUB Michael Ojo Series: Intention
Transcript: Intent for me came from finding out what I want in life, which can take a while to realize. I'm almost 35 and I'm still figuring it out, but I think I've gotten closer throughout this journey of life up until this point. I write a lot of things down. I wake up and I say, what do I really want to do with my life? How do I want to live my days? How do I want to live today, tomorrow? And I write that down. That's intention in itself because you're putting it down, you're breathing it into life, and now you have to create it. So, when you do things to meet that aspiration, that's with intent. And so I think the starting point is to figure out what it is that you want to do. Write those things down, continuously look at those things and understand what those things are, and then build upon the intent to get those things achieved. And that's where intention really falls in line for me.
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00:46
+CLUB Michael Ojo Series: Communication
Transcript: I've had times where I've failed in communicating. It's something I've had to work on with time and communication is key. So especially in personal life and in business, in the business world. So I had a lack of communicating exactly what the objective is or what we're aiming to do. And it has cost me time, money, and maybe opportunity. And now I'm more cognizant of making sure that I'm very clear, very communicative and overly communicative when I can be to make sure that we're getting things done the right way. But it has set me back many a times and now it's something that I'm working on getting better.
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+CLUB Kim Singleton Series
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01:10
+CLUB Kim Singleton Series: Healthy Relationships
Transcript: I think relationships are important. I think they influence some of the actions that we take. I think when you think about who you want to surround yourself with, it should be people who are like-minded in terms of wanting to accomplish the same thing that you do. Because when you're around people that don't have the same goals and aspirations, there are going to be conflicts. Some people aren't happy for you. You heard that term haters. So, who's for you and who's not for you? And you have to surround yourself with those people so you can encourage each other. I have a tight group of friends. We encourage each other and we elevate each other. And I think that goes across the board. Whatever kind of relationship you want to have, you want to be with people who make you feel good. Number one, don't talk down to youreself. If you're around someone and that every time you're around them, they make you feel bad about yourself, that is not a good relationship. So be around people who make you feel good. Life is short. There is so much fun to have out there. Make the choice to have fun and be around people who want to have the same kind of fun that you have.
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01:25
+CLUB Kim Singleton Series: Action List
Transcript: Well, I personally, I love to do a “slash action list” because I feel like I can check off what I've accomplished. And when I give people advice about it, they're like, oh, I put things on my list. I never get around to it. And I always tell them this, because you're putting the list together, you make the pieces too big and it overwhelms you. If I say I want to build a rocket ship, I'm not going to say tomorrow I'm going to build a rocket ship tomorrow. I'm going to say step one - I'm going to call somebody who knows how to build a rocket ship. Step two, I'm going to ask that person, what do I need to build a rocket ship? It could be something just as simple. It could be something on your to-do list or your action list as I'm going to call this person and they can be small segments that eventually make up the whole. So then that you're not overwhelmed. And I do that because I tend to be really busy, so I can't have an action list that requires large chunks of time, so I had to put it in smaller units. But if you do something like that every day, at the end of the year, you would have accomplished 365 things. So, I definitely believe in action lists, things that you need to do, but put them in units that are reasonable so that you can achieve those goals. And if you are consistent about it, you're going to turn around and say, you know what? I really did a lot of stuff.
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01:20
+CLUB Kim Singleton Series: Adverse Situations
Transcript: For me, I've learned that dealing with it directly, calling it out to people when it happens is the best way to deal with it. Like I said, a lot of times some people may not understand what they're saying or doing to you and how it's affecting you. If they're good people, they'll try to correct it. There will be those people who are mean-spirited. And it took me later on in life to realize that. Some people who you think are nice don't really have your best interests at heart. But I believe in being honest and confronting it and just saying to that person, listen, when you said that or you did that, this is how I interpreted it and this is how you’re making me feel, and I'm having this dialogue with you so we can understand each other. So, I know really what's going on. And with the people who really didn't mean it, there's usually a good outcome. The people who really meant to do something, they either shied away, stayed away from me, or tried to do things underhanded, behind your back. They reveal themselves. So, my advice is sometimes it's just about approaching the person and just saying, listen, this is the situation. This is how I feel. Let's have a discussion about it. And their true intentions will be revealed.
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01:45
+CLUB Kim Singleton Series: Life Lessons Kindness
Transcript: I think the most important thing life has taught me is to be kind to people. I find that there's this covenant that we sing in church that be slow to take offense. I think a lot of the conflicts that we have with people, I think 90% of the time it's because we misunderstand what they're saying or we don't understand what they're going through. And any act of aggression, sometimes it's not about us. It may be about what they're going through. So always try to be kind to people and give people the benefit of the doubt. Now, there are that 10% who are mean and nasty, and you have to deal with them according to your personality. But the people that I've come across for the most part have been nice people. And I do try to give them the benefit of the doubt. And I try to be kind to people even in situations when they weren't kind to me. But that's my personality. But I can't say that me being kind to people has created opportunities for me later on. You heard the term, don't burn your bridges. I didn't burn my bridges and the opportunities came back to me. It doesn't mean that you let somebody walk over you or disrespect you. You can handle it in a way that's appropriate, but for the most part, everybody's just trying to get along like everybody else. So why not be kind to each other? And kindness is contagious. So that's why I love doing it. I love saying hello to someone or saying something or doing something to someone that makes them feel good. That makes me feel good. So, it's just very contagious. So that's what I learned in life. Just enjoy each other when we can.
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01:45
+CLUB Kim Singleton Series: Money
Transcript: I think it's never too early to have budgets. There's an old saying, when I was coming up, pay yourself first. So whatever job you had, you would always take out some money and put it aside for you first, and then you either use it as discretionary funds or paid your bills, et cetera. But I think it's important, and it all kind of ties into being intentional about what you want to accomplish. You may want to buy a house, you may want to get a higher education, you may want to invest. There's a lot of things that you want to do, but it's not going to come automatically. Everything takes planning and it's never too early to budget. And if you don't have a lot of money, think of the saying that I said before, pay yourself first You may get $10, so you take a dollar, you put it aside. If you did that every day for a year, that's $365. You could take that and put it someplace else, but if you just pay yourself first as you go on, then you'll have money as a young person and you can take this concept and when you get a job, make sure, see what kind of retirement plans your company has, such as a 401k. I know so many people who are retiring because they got into their company investment plan or 401k and just kept pushing everything into it and it would come out of their paycheck. They didn't even miss it. And then it was time to retire. They turned around and looked and they had all this money. So budgeting is always good, but make sure you pay yourself first. You take a piece of that, you put it to the side, and then you decide how you want to invest that because you'll have it.
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01:33
+CLUB Kim Singleton: Living Within Your Means
Transcript: Let's just say with money, I feel like over my lifetime I haven't saved as much as I should have. But the other side of that is I've had fun with that. But you could still have fun and be a little more disciplined about it. Maybe not take three trips in a quarter, maybe take just one trip in a quarter and save. Because at the same time, while I'm recommending that people be intentional about what they want to accomplish, I have to do that myself. I have to say to myself, okay, where do I want to be financially at the end of the year? And if I'm serious about it, I have to sacrifice some things. And sometimes I haven't sacrificed because I give into peer pressure too. There may be a big event going on in Arub. Oh, I have to be there! Kim, you don't have to be there, but you've been Aruba like five times! Why are you going now? But those are the challenges that we have in life. And sometimes you have to just take a step back and have a conversation with yourself. I'm a big believer of mantras. I get up in the morning and I give myself a mantra every day. It's like, Kim, you will not waste time today, Kim, you will be productive today, Kim. You will accomplish that. I say that to myself, and when I start veering off the path, I come back to my mantra and then it's just like this little joke I have with myself that like, okay, let’s stay away from that. Let's get back on track.
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01:13
+CLUB Kim Singleton Series: Managing Time
Transcript: I think it goes back to being intentional. I think you’re never too young to think about what you want to do. And once you think about, and that can change, but when you think about what you want to do, I think it's important to look at how do you want to get there? And then when you decide how you want to get there, it's like, well, how much time do I want to spend to get to that point? If you are doing things that waste time, it's going to take you longer to accomplish your goals and get to the point where you want to be. If you have a day, you should always relax. I believe that for me, although some people don't like this approach. I like to have a schedule. I have to have a schedule because if I don't, I may sleep all day. But one of the things I struggle with is trying to work out regularly because sometimes I'm so busy I just lay down. But I had to be intentional about that. I get up in the morning, I'll do some sort of exercise and then I'll go on with my day. So, for me, I think a schedule is good and then you can really kind of tick off each day what you've accomplished to get you closer to that goal.
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00:54
+CLUB Kim Singleton Series: Role Models
Transcript: I think for role models -the two types - the ones that are in your life that you can actually touch, and then there's the ones on social media that you can't touch. I would say take that with a grain of salt. I think that can be a benchmark. If you see something that you really want to do, you really want to go after it. You can't take it for face value based on what you see from people you don't know. That's when you have to do your research in terms of role models that fit within your circle. Look in your circle to see who does what you want to do and don't be ashamed to approach them. Ask them for advice. Most people are open to it. The advice I do give though is don't approach it as you're being a user. Approach it as I'm looking to learn and this is what I could provide for you.
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01:48
+CLUB Kim Singleton Series: Belonging
Transcript: A lot of people don't know that I'm very shy and I always feel out of place when I go places because sometimes I don't know exactly what to say or exactly what to do. Do I sound smart enough or will they look at me funny? I've been in places where I'm the only person of color many times, but I find for me, you have to be confident in yourself. And I've learned that being true to who you are kind of gives everybody else a comfort level. You don't have to mold yourself to someone else, especially if you're a good person. Just be that good person and everybody has to go along with it. I think with part of the concept of belonging, people feel uncomfortable in certain situations. You have to ask yourself, why am I uncomfortable? I think once you identify why you're uncomfortable, then you can address the problem. I'll go into a room and I'll say, well, why am I uncomfortable? Because I'm the only person of color in the room? Why is that? Does that make you uncomfortable? So, I’ll make myself go talk to someone and then there's a commonality between me and that person. And so now I don't feel like I don't belong. You may think that everybody else knows something that you don't know, but you just take the attitude, I'm going to go in, I'm going to learn from these people. I'm going to ask questions. So, I think you need to identify why do you feel like you don't belong? Why do you feel like you're uncomfortable and address that particular issue, but more importantly, move forward because you're only going to get comfortable when you're more and more in that particular environment. Don't shy away from it.
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Jeffrey Robison
+CLUB Jeffery Robinson Series
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00:43
+CLUB Jeffrey Robinson Series: Life Lessons
What has life taught me? Life's taught me that there are good people everywhere. And one of the challenges is trying to find those good people who are going to be supportive of you and what you're about. Sometimes we can categorize people, you can say all those people aren't going to be helpful, but you'd be surprised you're going to find some allies sometimes in places where you would not expect it. Sometimes you got to give people a chance, let them express themselves and talk to you, and you'll find out that sometimes the least likely people will be the people who will be your champion and in your corner.
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01:12
+CLUB Jeffrey Robinson Series: Career Advice
Transcript: When you're in high school, the easy route is to just do the things that get you by. That's the easy route. You don't try new things. You go through your high school experience and you're just trying to make it through to the other side. But the people who really do well later on in life are the people who try some new things, try to find out what things they're good at, try to find the things that they like to do because those things, the things that'll help them to determine what they should study in college, what kind of trade school they should go to, what kind of additional training they should do. And then eventually that'll also help them to figure out what they might go into as a career or profession or whatever is going to take them the rest of their life. So my best advice is to try some things new, especially in high school, go to different clubs, meet some people, do some different experiences. When somebody says, I want you to try something and you're kind of resistant to it out of your comfort zone, get through that fear and get to the part that helps you to grow because that's the kind of stuff that's going to help you out.
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01:59
+CLUB Jeffrey Robinson Series: Grit & Resiliency
Transcript: You don't always get the things that you want and sometimes the things that you go for, you apply for something, you don't get it. So those are the disappointments in life. As you get older, maybe you wanted to get a certain job and you didn't get that job. So part of me always remembers that there'll be lots of opportunities. Sometimes it looks like it's the only one in front of you and that's the one you want. And if you don't get that, it must mean that you're not a good person. No, that's not true. It just may not be your time to do it. I remember I was applying for this prestigious fellowship and I wanted to get it. I thought I got it. I got to the final round and I didn't get it. There were I guess 30 of us and they picked 15 and I wasn't in the 15. Yeah, it hurt. It stung a little bit. I thought I was qualified. I thought I was the one, but it really wasn't the right time. When I look back at it, I kind of got to take the long view and look at the big picture. Sometimes the things that you think you want right now, it isn't necessarily the right time for it. And there are other things that you can throw your energy behind. And I think that's how you got to think about things, that it's not just a one-time event. Sometimes you got to come back again the next year with what you learned and apply again or try again. And sometimes you realize that the path would've taken you a completely different direction than maybe where you ended up. So if that happens a couple of times in your life, and it has for me, you realize that the path you're on is the path you're supposed to be on. So don't think about that disappointing moment as the only moment in your life. There'll be other moments where you triumph, where you do well, and you get over those disappointments pretty quickly.
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02:13
+CLUB Jeffrey Robinson Series: Belonging
Transcript: Belonging is a really big word because it goes beyond just being in a place where are other people are saying to you, well, we don't know you, but we're going to include you. Inclusion is what other people do to make you feel like you're supposed to be there, but belonging is how you feel and how you feel about being there. And so that's different. It's not what other people are doing, it's how you feel at that moment. So, what I hope that people experience is not only inclusive environments where people are trying to include them, but that you feel that you belong in that place when you don't feel that that's off-putting, that's where you wonder, am I supposed to be here? My college roommate and I, his name's Randall Pinkett, Dr. Pinkett and I wrote a couple of books, and the one book we talk about the experience of being the only one in the room. And the question is, what do you do in that situation? It's not the most comfortable, it doesn't feel good, but some of the things we talk about in that book and the book is called Black Faces in White Places. And what we talk about in that book is that you need to have a cohort of people who are there to advise you and support you and to help you. You need to have some people. You need to sort of push yourself out there and network with people who maybe aren't like you and find out where you have some commonalities. And at some point you need to also extend yourself to work with people who are definitely for you, people who are your allies. And those folks are the ones who I'd say are the ones who are really trying to help you to belong. Whether that's a school or a corporation organization or a community. There's always somebody who realizes that maybe you feel a little uncomfortable there, but they're going to be the ones trying to pull you into what the conversation is and support you.
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00:55
+CLUB Jeffrey Robinson Series: Balancing Risk & Return
Well, every decision probably has upsides and downsides. The question is how severe are the downsides and what will it do to impact you in the future? And really what that requires is someone who can think about the different scenarios of what would happen, for the different decisions. That's a skill that everybody needs to develop to think forward. What happens when I make this decision? What happens when I make this choice? Let me play it out. What's going to happen to me? The negatives of all those things are the downside. Sometimes they're there, but your next question is, well, how do I avoid that downside? Or is there some way for me to make that less of a downside? And again, that's where sometimes having some good people around you to help you make some decisions would be of really helpful.
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01:22
+CLUB Jeffrey Robinson Series: Action List
What has life taught me? Life's taught me that there are good people everywhere. And one of the challenges is trying to find those good people who are going to be supportive of you and what you're about. Sometimes we can categorize people, you can say all those people aren't going to be helpful, but you'd be surprised you're going to find some allies sometimes in places where you would not expect it. Sometimes you got to give people a chance, let them express themselves and talk to you, and you'll find out that sometimes the least likely people will be the people who will be your champion and in your corner.
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01:30
+CLUB Jeffrey Robinson Series: Decision Making
Transcript: For the biggest decisions that you're going to make, it's good to talk to some other people like mentors, teachers, people who may have a little more experience than you and who can give you some advice. And I'm talking about the big decisions, like what am I going to do after high school? What's my career path? I'm thinking about these different things, which might be a good path. Get some other people involved in what you're thinking about. Ask them some questions about how they might make a decision that way or what they think about different options because those people who've had a little more experience than you might have some insight about not only what the decision could be, but how you might go about thinking about it. If you can keep that kind of skillset going or maybe choices of people that you might want to bring into that circle of who's going to help you and give you advice that's going to help you later on. That's one of the things that's helped me. I've always had some people who were mentors, people who were a little older, a little further advanced than me who could give me good advice. And now years later, those are some of the people that I thank God for because they were the people who helped me to really make some critical decisions in my life.
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01:15
+CLUB Jeffrey Robinson Series: Managing Stress
Transcript: Stress is a challenge. For adults it's a challenge. So for teens and young adults, it's a challenge too. Maybe more so because we are bombarded by all these different things that happen at the same time in a world that's really complex. So a couple of things might help relieve the stress. You got to have some healthy way to deal with stress. Some people use exercise or they go to a place where they cannot feel all that stress. Some people like to go to a park or go to a specific location where they can kind of get away from the everyday stuff. Some people are binge watchers of TV shows. I can disconnect from the world by watching a TV show if that's what works for you. Eventually we all got to come back from that. But sometimes getting away from the things that are stressing us out is a good strategy. Remember I said healthy things? Try to figure out what are the healthy things that'll help you to de-stress. Those things are going to be really helpful to you going forward.
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00:51
+CLUB Jeffrey Robinson Series: Healthy Relationships
Transcript: Listening is really important. A lot of times we get mad, we get upset, we get ticked off by somebody who is talking to you, and we don't listen to what they have to say. And it is sometimes more difficult for us to do that, especially when people who are closest to us, we think we know what they're going to say. But listening is really important. It is the thing that will separate the people who are the most immature from the people who have some maturity. And sometimes, again, it's hard to learn that when we're young, but if you live a little longer, you realize that if I just listen to some people sometimes, can we hear what they got to say? We can come up with a solution that maybe solves the problem that we haven't solved.
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02:36
The Main Thing with Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms
Transcript: The main thing for me is what is the priority for today? What do I need to accomplish today? And it may not be that I can get it all done in a week, a month or 24 hours, but what is it that I can accomplish today? What is my priority for today? And for me, I trust that tomorrow I'll have grace for tomorrow and I'll be able to figure out the priority for tomorrow. Because sometimes if you look too far ahead, the main thing seems unattainable, it's overwhelming. And I often think of this quote, how do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time. The longest journey starts with the first step. So if I'm thinking of eating an elephant, I'm looking at this elephant and I'm completely overwhelmed by the size of the elephant, but if I say I'm going to start at the tail or whatever the thing may be, I try and take life in bite-sized chunks. And then you look up and the main thing has been accomplished. And also recognizing you can't do it all at the same time. You've got to prioritize what can I accomplish today? And for me, I even think about when I was mayor of Atlanta, I had a whole scheduling team. It was an entire office focused on my scheduling. So when I look at my schedule now and I'm overwhelmed, remind myself, there used to be five people who did this for you, now you're one. And for me, whatever that main thing is, whether it's trying to schedule something or trying to accomplish something, I give myself grace. The world is going to beat me up. Why should I beat myself up? I'm going to do the very best that I can when I can however I can. And as long as I do the best I can, I may not accomplish and fulfill the main thing today, but maybe by next week I'll get there.
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08:23
The Belonging Compilation
By revealing his own personal journey, Eric Pennington sets the context for a thoughtful and insightful discussion on the challenges of belonging. Kim Singleton, +Club instructor and author, facilitates a student discussion on managing differences and fostering a sense of belonging. In this unfiltered and real-time session, prompted by Eric Pennington's introspection on his high school years and personal choices, the dialogue dives into the nuances of acceptance and the quest for belonging in diverse environments. Through candid reflections and shared experiences, the conversation explores the profound impact of individual decisions on our sense of inclusion and offers insights into navigating differences to cultivate a deeper sense of belonging.
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06:05
+Club Experience: Belonging
Kim Singleton, +Club instructor and author, facilitates a student discussion on managing differences and fostering a sense of belonging. In this unfiltered and real-time session, prompted by Eric Pennington's introspection on his high school years and personal choices, the dialogue dives into the nuances of acceptance and the quest for belonging in diverse environments. Through candid reflections and shared experiences, the conversation explores the profound impact of individual decisions on our sense of inclusion and offers insights into navigating differences to cultivate a deeper sense of belonging.
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06:05
+Club Experience: Belonging with Rutgers B-Star
The +Club is a Financial Literacy and Life Skills multimedia platform targeted for underserved communities. The program offers a foundational educational experience for students in an engaging and edutainment manner to help prepare them for life in the modern economy. The initiative aims to foster good financial habits and behaviors, putting them on the long-term path to building wealth and, ultimately, financial independence.
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01:28
Time Management: Professor Jeffrey Robinson
Time management is really key. The older you get, the more important it is because you got all these things that are happening at the same time. You got to prioritize. You got to think about what are the things that are important to me and how does it relate to the other things that are asking for my time? People always want to have fun and I think there's time for fun, but when it comes down to should I study for this test, which is going to help me in school or help me get into college or what have you, or should I go have some more fun, hang out with my friends, go do these other things. You can do both. If you schedule it, if you think about it in terms of what's important, sometimes you can do one of the more important things that you need to do, like study, and then make time for the fun things right after that. And those are big choices. I work with a lot of college students and college students will tell you all the time that once you get into college, time management is really critical because you've got more than one class, you got clubs, you've got friends, you've got all these other things that you want to do. And the question that they all have to ask themselves is, if I'm going to be successful in this class, how do I prioritize my time? Putting the important things first.
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01:17
Success and Significance: Professor Jeffrey Robinson
Success is very interesting term because people think about success in lots of different ways. Let me tell you how I think about it and why. I also think about another word called significance. For me to be successful, it's about you and your personal achievement, getting things done, achieving certain things that you want to in your life, but significance is what you do for others. And so I would say that not only have I tried to be successful, but I've also tried to be significant in the lives of others. You grow up, you do well in school, you find those things that are really interesting to you and that you're really good at, and people start to pay you for those kinds of things. That would be sort of the great story of anybody's life. If they can do what they love and do what they're good at and people pay them for it. But I think there's another part, which is when you're significant, that means that there are some other people who would say, not only did they do well for themselves, but they did well for other people too. They helped other people, they supported their communities. When they're gone, people will miss them because they did some great things.
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01:14
Stress: Professor Jeffrey Robinson
Stress is a challenge. For adults it's a challenge. So for teens and young adults, it's a challenge too. Maybe more so because we are bombarded by all these different things that happen at the same time in a world that's really complex. So a couple of things might help relieve the stress. You got to have some healthy way to deal with stress. Some people use exercise or they go to a place where they cannot feel all that stress. Some people like to go to a park or go to a specific location where they can kind of get away from the everyday stuff. Some people are binge watchers of TV shows. I can disconnect from the world by watching a TV show if that's what works for you. Eventually we all got to come back from that. But sometimes getting away from the things that are stressing us out is a good strategy. Remember I said healthy things? Try to figure out what are the healthy things that'll help you to de-stress. Those things are going to be really helpful to you going forward.
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01:59
Mind: ProfessorJeffrey Robinson
Your brain's like a muscle. So, one of the things that you got to do is exercise that muscle. And the way that you exercise that muscle is you learn new things and you use those new things to learn newer things, so that it builds on one another. And you can't do that if you're only sort of feeding yourself the same mental diet. You got to be careful about what you feed yourself. So you got to be careful what you put in your mind too. If all of the things that you put into your mind or into your brain are your negative ideas, negative things that aren't going to amount to anything, then what else do you think your brain's going to be thinking about? It's going to be thinking about those negative things. Fill your brain with positive thoughts. Then your mind starts to work on those positive things. If you read a book that takes you to an imagination that maybe you hadn't thought about before or introduces you to new ideas or describes a history or perspective, that's not the one that you have, then that muscle gets used. And one of the challenges of our modern era is we often use the little screen of your phone as the way to escape and go and do things in other places. But before we had all of that, we had books. Books are still a wrap, but how many have you read lately? Where are you challenging yourself to think about these things? So, you want to develop your mind. You got to get beyond thinking about things that are the mundane and the things that are negative. You got to get beyond that. So yes, read books. Yes, listen to some different perspectives that empower you, not just things that take you down.
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00:42
Life Lessons: Professor Jeffrey Robinson
What has life taught me? Life's taught me that there are good people everywhere. And one of the challenges is trying to find those good people who are going to be supportive of you and what you're about. Sometimes we can categorize people, you can say all those people aren't going to be helpful, but you'd be surprised you're going to find some allies sometimes in places where you would not expect it. Sometimes you got to give people a chance, let them express themselves and talk to you, and you'll find out that sometimes the least likely people will be the people who will be your champion and in your corner.
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Charles Brown
+Club Charles A. Brown Series
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00:40
+Club Charles Brown Series: Perspective
In terms of changing a perspective, I would need to change a perspective because I've developed a perspective. So it's almost like backward design. I need to now work with the end in mind. So it's like once we know or think we know about the conclusion of a matter, it's hard to imagine it any other way. So when I think about changing perspective, one of the first things that I would tell a student is, you don't know how this is going to end. You don't know. You have no idea how it's going to end. Remain open. Remain open to possibilities. If you remain open to possibilities, you can remain open to opportunity.
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01:14
+Club Charles Brown Series: Managing Risk
You've probably heard this quote by Michael Jordan a million times. It says you miss a hundred percent of the shots you don't take. And I think that has been a quote that's helped to kind of govern any risks that I need to take in my life. I think knowledge, and I think I mentioned this before, just having for me kind of a constitution, an internal constitution, what are some of the laws of success? And for me, gaining knowledge, and then I think it's the decisions that we make, putting those two together. I think those things help to shape perspective. So if I could create an equation, it would be knowledge, it would be decisions, and then it would equal some of those perspectives that we have. If we're talking about risk, I think you can take educated risk. It just doesn't have to be a shot in the dark, taking as much information as possible and then make your decision, it's going to be a risk. I think either way. I think having the mindset of knowing that, you know what, if I don't try, if I don't give it a shot, I've already failed. And if I give it a shot and I fail, I still can learn from the experience. There's something, there's a lesson to be taught from the experience.
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01:08
+Club Charles Brown Series: Decision making
You have to begin with the end in mind. Begin with the end in mind. Life is about your decisions. There's a scripture that says you sow the wind and you reap the whirlwind. So every decision that you're making has ramifications, every misstep or every success, it's like a ripple in a pond. It has expanded consequences, and that's what I would share with young people. Nothing is for nothing. Nothing is coincidence. Nothing is of no consequence. Everything matters. Every decision that you make matters. So protect your decisions. It's like your credit. Once you mess up your credit, sometimes it's really difficult to repair. You make the wrong decision and it could change the trajectory of the rest of your life, protect your decision making ability, seek wise counsel before making any decision. I would share that. I wish I knew that when I was just a preteen going into being a teenager, just to the ability to protect my decision-making ability and to seek out wise counsel because we don't know everything
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01:10
+Club Charles Brown Series: Time Management
I don't know where this quote comes from, but I believe it, and I've lived by it time being the great equalizer. Someone may have more resources than me. Someone may have greater networks than I have or access networks. But what I have that Oprah has, that LeBron James has, that Steph Curry has, that Magic Johnson has. We all have 24 hours in our day. And if you develop, I think a mindset of hard work, you'll be hard pressed to find someone that's going to outwork me. So I'm going to use that time as that great equalizer. So I think for me, that creates a sense of equity. It kind of levels the playing field a bit. Yes, these individuals still might have other resources, but what am I doing with my time? It helps me not to waste time as well. I recognize time is precious. It's a commodity. And I think as I've gotten older, I recognize that it is something that when you get older and you've lost family members, you've lost close loved ones. You recognize that time is more valuable than money. It's more valuable than money. So how we spend our time is really, really important.
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00:56
+Club Charles Brown Series: Uncertainty
I would say to a student who is struggling with uncertainty or even disappointment, I'm a realist. Life is not easy. It's not easy. But anything worth having is worth working hard for. Someone told me this years ago, if you succeed and you don't suffer, then someone suffered before you. But if you suffer and you don't succeed, someone is going to succeed after you. Life is not meant to. The journey is never meant to be very, very simple. But I think we come across our greatest successes by some of those failures that we have and turning those failures. It's really about perspective. And I think if there's one thing that I would just preach to our young people, it's really about having the right perspective about anything, because life can deal you some major blows.
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01:09
+Club Charles Brown Series: Priorities
This might be antithetical to maybe some faculty at the business school, but life is bigger than dollars. I think life is much bigger than dollars and cents. It really comes down to service the people that you're able to serve. I forget who said it. Our services, the rent we pay for being here on earth. How can we serve our fellow woman, our fellow man? How can we serve individuals? I think if we can put our focus there, big picture, I think we'll be a lot better off. Again, I think my wife, she'll joke with me sometimes she'll call it, you're morbid. But I think many times about the end of my life, and I've always thought about this just because I've been acquainted, I think with loss and death for a great part of my life, I think about what do you want people to say about you when it's all over, when it's all, if you could attend your own services, what do you want to hear? I think about that a lot. And I don't want people to talk about the money that I've made. I want people to talk about the lives that I've touched.
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01:24
+Club Charles Brown Series: Backward Design
It's an academic concept as it relates to college course design called Backward design and how we develop learning goals and we develop our syllabi and things like that. Our summative and formative assessments is backward design, and I just kind of take that framework and I apply it to apply it to life. In the end, what do I want to have under my achievement column? What do you want to have there? Yes, you want to make enough money to be able to support your family. Absolutely. But what else? There's more to life. So for me, I'm thinking, what is it about my life that I want shared? What is that epitaph? I look many times when you look at the date someone is born, the date that they pass, and there's that little hyphen in the middle, what do you want your dash to be? What's going to be in that dash for you? I think about that because this is also why I don't mind sitting through long memorial services because how can you encapsulate the life and breadth of an individual within an hour or so? I don't mind sitting there because it's about that dash. They lived, they were born and then they passed. But inside of that dash was a lifetime of memories, a lifetime of loving, a lifetime of caring experiences.
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