TEDx Youth Manchester

"Whether you realise it yet or not, you have a an amazing gift to offer the world. The gift of you."

Just moments after finishing my talk for TEDxBristol I was kindly asked if I would like to speak at TEDxYouth Manchester in January. Naturally I jumped at the opportunity to continue the conversation about what it is like to be vulnerable and how to connect authentically with others. The audience this time was made up of 16 to 18 year olds.

David and I spent a wonderful time at The Fallibroome Academy where the TEDxYouth was hosted and we were very well looked after there. The Head, Mr Peter Rubery has a great team and they are definitely doing amazing stuff with the youth of Macclesfield.

I hope you like it and if there is anyone who you think could benefit from hearing this talk - please share the link with them.


TEDx Bristol

“When we fail to relate authentically it is because one of us is choosing to value protection over connection…”

In November 2013 I gave my first TEDx talk at the Colston Hall, Bristol in front of a live audience of about 1000 people. I was pretty terrified but it was a fantastic experience and a privilege to get to talk about our failure to relate authentically.

Have you ever wondered about the impression you have on people when they first meet you? Find out the impact that my introduction had on the audience and what happened next...

If this is a message you think more people need to hear then please do share the link with your friends. And if you haven't heard it yet, please have a look at my other TEDx talk which carries on this theme of connecting authentically. 

But how are you really?

On the surface, “How are you?” seems a very simple question, so why do most of us struggle to answer it with anything resembling the truth? Don’t we really believe that the other person wants to hear it or are we worried about what will happen to them (or us) if we start to unravel our true feelings?

I was 25 before I realised that the answer to, “How are you?” didn’t automatically have to be “Fine, and you?”. I’d recently met a friend called Amanda who was very suspicious of anyone who replied “fine”.  She wanted the truth not some polite fob off. “No, how are you really?”, she would probe and then wait expectantly for a proper answer.

What she suspected and what I soon came to realise, was that I was emotionally illiterate. She knew I clearly wasn’t “fine” because I was going through a difficult patch with my boyfriend at the time and I was also struggling with an unreasonable boss. “Upset,” “annoyed”, or “angry” maybe - but not “fine”.

Some people don’t want to reveal how they are really feeling because they can’t or don’t trust the person asking. That wasn’t so much the case for me. I couldn’t or wouldn’t speak about how I was feeling because I actually didn’t know myself.

I didn’t know because my feelings were squashed so far down that I could barely feel their pulse let alone summarise them into a few coherent sentences to satisfy Amanda’s appetite for emotional intimacy. Maybe it was because I had spent too many years at boarding school learning that my survival was dependent on keeping negative emotions under wraps. Or maybe it was more to do with the after-shock of my elder brother’s death when I was 21.

Whatever the reason things were about to change. Over the following months Amanda helped coach me in the language of feelings. Like learning any language it took time and effort but gradually I could attempt a few sentences beginning with “I feel…”. If I got stuck she would offer a prompt like: “If I had a boyfriend who flirted with someone else in front of me I would feel furious and embarrassed. Don’t you feel either of those?”

Twenty years later and her hard work and my practising have paid off.  I’m by no means fluent in emotions but I’ve certainly reached a good conversational standard.

Now, if people ask me “How are you?”, I am quite prepared to answer truthfully. The question I ask myself first though is: do they actually want to know how I am or is “fine, and you?” all that is required in this instance?