Oct. 10, 2023

Keeping Your Seat at the Table | RR227

Keeping Your Seat at the Table | RR227

When Nori & I met, we connected immediately. I was fascinated with her story and how she wove that into her book Keeping Your Seat at the Table. Her book is a testament to resilience - offering practical insights into navigating midlife challenges, as a woman, with grace and determination.

With her warm presence, she takes us into her story of flipping the narrative from merely having a seat at a corporate table to creating her own table. Nori also shares her insights on the importance of staying relevant in an ever-changing world, and fostering connections with younger generations. Be inspired to curate your own table and embrace the squiggly lines of your journey with Nori’s wisdom and warmth.

Learn more about Nori:

Websites: https://www.keepingyourseat.com/

https://norijabba.com/

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nori-jabba/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/norijabba

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/njabba

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bnjabba/

Email her at: norijabba@gmail.com

A little about me:

I began my career as a teacher, was a corporate trainer for many years, and then found my niche training & supporting business owners, entrepreneurs & sales professionals to network at a world-class level. My passion is working with motivated people, who are coachable and who want to build their businesses through relationship marketing and networking (online & offline). I help my clients create retention strategies, grow through referrals, and create loyal customers by staying connected.


In appreciation for being here, I have a couple of gifts for you.

A LinkedIn Checklist for setting up your fully optimized Profile: https://www.janiceporter.com/linkedin-training.html

An opportunity to test drive the Follow Up system I recommend by sending a FREE greeting card (on me): www.sendacardeverytime.com


Connect with me:

http://JanicePorter.com

https://www.linkedin.com/in/janiceporter/

https://www.facebook.com/JanicePorterBiz

https://twitter.com/janiceporter


Join our Relationships Rule community on FB here:

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Transcript
Janice Porter:

Hi everyone and welcome to this week's episode

Janice Porter:

of relationships rule. My guest this week is coming to us from

Janice Porter:

Northern California and I'm so excited to talk to her. You

Janice Porter:

know, it's it's unbelievable actually how many things have

Janice Porter:

happened in common with us since we met. Her name is Nori, Java.

Janice Porter:

Please welcome me. welcome her to the show with me. Welcome

Janice Porter:

nori. Nice to have you on the show.

Nori Jabba:

Thank you so much. I'm delighted to be here.

Janice Porter:

Well, it started, it all really started with me

Janice Porter:

getting a message from Norreys publicist because she's just

Janice Porter:

become a best selling author. She's written a book. And we're

Janice Porter:

going to dig in and talk about that today. But what's so

Janice Porter:

strange is I said, Well, I don't know if I will have nori on my

Janice Porter:

podcast, I have to talk to her first because I like to meet

Janice Porter:

people before. It feels like it's the right thing to do. And,

Janice Porter:

of course, Norreys publicist said, of course, she'd be happy

Janice Porter:

to meet with you. Well, we never stopped talking, did we, from

Janice Porter:

the minute we we started and there were so many things that

Janice Porter:

came up for us that were I didn't know similar or the fact

Janice Porter:

that you know, Vancouver was like, so exciting to me that

Janice Porter:

you've called it your second home.

Nori Jabba:

This my second home and my favorite place on earth.

Janice Porter:

Well, so right away, how could I not have you

Janice Porter:

on my podcast, right, it was just it was a given, but we just

Janice Porter:

hit it off right away. And so I'm very excited to share nori

Janice Porter:

with my audience here. So nori wrote this book called Keeping

Janice Porter:

your seat at the table, which is really part memoir, and part

Janice Porter:

guidebook, and I love the style that that you write in nori and

Janice Porter:

that you you actually you're sharing a lot of you in this

Janice Porter:

book. And so I can see where it's like, it's your journey to

Janice Porter:

where you are, but it's also a lot of food for thought around

Janice Porter:

women, middle, middle age, women really 40 plus women not, I

Janice Porter:

won't say middle aged, I'll say 40 Plus, and the things that

Janice Porter:

have that we experienced that we weren't expecting. So I'd like

Janice Porter:

to ask you first, you know, how did you come to, to write this

Janice Porter:

book, because it's really quite interesting, the way it's

Janice Porter:

written and what it's about.

Nori Jabba:

Thank you. So I wrote it, kind of us therapy,

Nori Jabba:

printing and as an outlet for my frustration in dealing with job

Nori Jabba:

hunting as a middle aged woman, and the books really designed

Nori Jabba:

for women over 40, even though I'm over 50. But I learned that

Nori Jabba:

women in their 40s face this just as much as women in their

Nori Jabba:

50s. And I really started facing it in my 40s. And it just gets

Nori Jabba:

worse and worse and worse as we age. And I just, I just couldn't

Nori Jabba:

put up with it anymore. And I had to stop job hunting, I

Nori Jabba:

actually just gave it up and decided to write a book about my

Nori Jabba:

journey. And then I decided well, enough for this, I'm going

Nori Jabba:

to start my own company if nobody's going to hire me. So I

Nori Jabba:

started this had this concept to start this company and joined an

Nori Jabba:

incubator program and a coaching program to help me get motivated

Nori Jabba:

to do that, while writing the book. And I thought, Oh, this

Nori Jabba:

will be great. I'll write this book, keeping your seat at the

Nori Jabba:

table about a woman who wasn't hired and started her own

Nori Jabba:

company and did amazing things. And during the process, I

Nori Jabba:

decided not to start the company table bad idea, if you will,

Nori Jabba:

decided to just focus on writing the book. And lo and behold, in

Nori Jabba:

writing the book, I did get a job. And I'm very happy with

Nori Jabba:

that. Now I'm actually on my second job since I started

Nori Jabba:

writing a book I was stolen by another company.

Janice Porter:

I away I think is your dream job, right?

Nori Jabba:

I love it. I'm so happy. And you know, there's so

Nori Jabba:

much more to unpack with that too. But yeah, I just got fed

Nori Jabba:

up. And I it started depleting my self esteem. I wasn't feeling

Nori Jabba:

good about myself, which everybody knows, you know, if

Nori Jabba:

you're not feeling good about yourself, you're not going to

Nori Jabba:

come across well in an interview. And I just needed to

Nori Jabba:

take a step back. But I also wanted to research what was

Nori Jabba:

happening. So I decided to make this a project and do some

Nori Jabba:

interviewing and some research on why it's so hard for middle

Nori Jabba:

aged women to get jobs. So I interviewed an HR director at

Nori Jabba:

one of the companies that declined to hire me. And she

Nori Jabba:

said yes, and we had coffee and I asked her why is it so hard

Nori Jabba:

for white middle aged women and she just completely opened up

Nori Jabba:

with me in the most honest, transparent way. And it was

Nori Jabba:

really brave of her to do that because that were kind of

Nori Jabba:

uncomfortable, and I'm grateful to her for that, and it really

Nori Jabba:

started me on this journey of learning more and more and more.

Nori Jabba:

So

Janice Porter:

can you share just like maybe in an overview

Janice Porter:

of of what the gist of it was? Yes. So putting anything or

Janice Porter:

doing something, a

Nori Jabba:

couple of things that I learned from her, she

Nori Jabba:

said, you know, middle aged women don't listen. And that was

Nori Jabba:

really a hard pill to swallow, because I didn't want to listen

Nori Jabba:

to what she was telling me. I was really taken aback and a

Nori Jabba:

little offended. And thank goodness, she was a middle aged

Nori Jabba:

woman herself, or it probably would have gotten the table. But

Nori Jabba:

I decided to sit up straight, lean in, and listen to what she

Nori Jabba:

had to say, because Am I guilty of this? You know, I actually

Nori Jabba:

felt like I was doing exactly what she said, that middle aged

Nori Jabba:

women do, because I didn't want to hear what she had to say. But

Nori Jabba:

I listened and said, you know, please tell me more. And it goes

Nori Jabba:

both ways. You know, young people sometimes don't listen to

Nori Jabba:

older people. But what she really explained to me was that

Nori Jabba:

sometimes we women have to fight so hard to get our place at the

Nori Jabba:

table. And especially when we are older and experienced and

Nori Jabba:

have that wisdom, and we have so much to share that we do more

Nori Jabba:

sharing than absorbing. And so it really, I stepped back. And

Nori Jabba:

but yeah, I am totally guilty of that. And especially I started

Nori Jabba:

thinking about an incident. And I shared in the book, where I

Nori Jabba:

was sitting at a table with a very important meeting with a

Nori Jabba:

bunch of man, I was either one one other woman or maybe two at

Nori Jabba:

most. And I instead of listening because I kept being dismissed,

Nori Jabba:

every time I opened my mouth or talked over, that I was looking

Nori Jabba:

for opportunities to jump in, and not listening to what was

Nori Jabba:

being said, but jumping in and using it to my advantage to just

Nori Jabba:

be heard. So, and yet, it was a really important meeting. And

Nori Jabba:

there were some valuable things that people were sharing. But I

Nori Jabba:

think so often as women, we are put in that position unfairly.

Nori Jabba:

And we have to wait to be heard, and not be dismissed. And so we

Nori Jabba:

have to, we have to stop listening as a way to get

Nori Jabba:

ourselves heard. And so I really thought about that. But I need

Nori Jabba:

to become a better listener. And you know, I'm guilty of

Nori Jabba:

interrupting and pushing my way in because we have to be kind of

Nori Jabba:

forceful. So after that moment, I decided I'm going to really

Nori Jabba:

focus on being a better listener. And I am still

Nori Jabba:

actively working on that. And it's a lifelong journey. Right?

Nori Jabba:

I appreciated what she said, Because I am a better listener

Nori Jabba:

because of it. Interesting.

Janice Porter:

That's so interesting. Because yes, we

Janice Porter:

have to we have to fight to be heard, then. It it's such a

Janice Porter:

there's so much emotion, especially women female. Yeah,

Janice Porter:

that's right. It's all consuming when that it does affect that

Janice Porter:

and does it also it made me think when you were talking does

Janice Porter:

it also, do you think she meant at all about the fact that if a

Janice Porter:

middle aged woman gets hired into a situation where the

Janice Porter:

younger men or women are managing them that that is the

Janice Porter:

that's where the issue comes?

Nori Jabba:

Absolutely. No, everybody can take from that

Nori Jabba:

message, what works for them, because there's so many nuances

Nori Jabba:

to it. But for me, I have been told, you know, stop

Nori Jabba:

interrupting it's listen a little bit more, you talk too

Nori Jabba:

much or whatever. So for me, that's how I used it to better

Nori Jabba:

myself interested in others, there might be something else.

Nori Jabba:

So the other thing that's also related to that is that older

Nori Jabba:

women, she told me, and I really think older men are in this

Nori Jabba:

category too. Don't listen to young people. And there's a

Nori Jabba:

dismissiveness of those who are starting out in their careers.

Nori Jabba:

And I think young people are guilty of that too. You know,

Nori Jabba:

the hate rumor and all of that dismissing middle aged people

Nori Jabba:

and my kids have done that too. With me like give me your phone,

Nori Jabba:

I'll teach you right and I've learned so much from them. But I

Nori Jabba:

also from that really took it upon myself to actively embrace

Nori Jabba:

being mentored by younger people, not just mentoring

Nori Jabba:

younger people but trying to learn from them. And I'll tell

Nori Jabba:

you that was so important to go through that journey because now

Nori Jabba:

in my job that I have now but I love my boss is I'm much younger

Nori Jabba:

than I am decades. And I don't think I could have dealt with

Nori Jabba:

that effectively before I'd gone through this journey. So, you

Nori Jabba:

know, could you have a really young boss? I, it's, it's an

Nori Jabba:

interesting question. And when you get to a certain age,

Nori Jabba:

everybody is younger than you in the work.

Janice Porter:

And I'm unemployable anyway. So like I

Janice Porter:

had a long time ago, I learned, you know, I used to be a

Janice Porter:

teacher, and I loved teaching in my first life, but it didn't

Janice Porter:

like the bureaucracy around it. And I was very young at the

Janice Porter:

time. And, and then I realized when I left teaching, I still

Janice Porter:

wanted to teach, right, so I then I did corporate training.

Janice Porter:

And that's just another version of teaching kids because the

Janice Porter:

same characters appear right when

Nori Jabba:

I love corporate training, I love teaching.

Janice Porter:

Yeah, yeah, exactly. So but I did it as a

Janice Porter:

contractor, because I didn't want to be locked into

Janice Porter:

something. But then I had a lot to learn about business. So you

Janice Porter:

know, I've come different ways I've learned from younger

Janice Porter:

people, too. And I, I'm actually inspired by the bright, young

Janice Porter:

people that they've come from a completely different beginning.

Janice Porter:

And what they're doing with the world, in some, in some cases is

Janice Porter:

amazing. So, you know, there's a lot to learn from them, too. But

Janice Porter:

so there's a there's a central theme in your book. And this is

Janice Porter:

a question that that has come up that I know, it sort of comes up

Janice Porter:

in your book, as a secondary theme as the importance of

Janice Porter:

relationships with others at the table? And why is it so

Janice Porter:

important to have them? And how does one go about building such

Janice Porter:

a network? Because I know you have like, specific people at

Janice Porter:

your table that are your people, right? Is it like having your

Janice Porter:

own board of directors or just

Nori Jabba:

Yeah, okay, that's pretty much what it is. So the

Nori Jabba:

book is all about, you know, flipping the table, building

Nori Jabba:

your own, you already have a seat at the table, you're at the

Nori Jabba:

head, and developing these strategic partnerships with

Nori Jabba:

others who sit at your table that you choose who's there, so

Nori Jabba:

you're not invited to the table, you're inviting others to your

Nori Jabba:

table. And so it's really shifting your view of success.

Nori Jabba:

But one of the things I learned in my journey is, I'm an

Nori Jabba:

extrovert, I have a lot of great connections, I worked in public

Nori Jabba:

affairs and community relations. And so I know a lot of people

Nori Jabba:

and have some really solid relationships. And I thought,

Nori Jabba:

oh, all of these connections will help me in my job hunt.

Nori Jabba:

Well, guess what? It didn't, it didn't didn't matter, that I had

Nori Jabba:

a congress person on my reference list and know his cell

Nori Jabba:

phone number and could call him at any time, it just didn't

Nori Jabba:

matter. So what was really kind of a shock to me was that my

Nori Jabba:

networking wasn't effective for me, and I know what this is your

Nori Jabba:

job is to help him help people with their networking on

Nori Jabba:

LinkedIn. And so you know, had all these great connections, but

Nori Jabba:

I had to rethink them, and develop new connections that

Nori Jabba:

were strategically designed to help me at this new table for

Nori Jabba:

myself, this board of directors, if you will, that I was

Nori Jabba:

creating.

Janice Porter:

Okay, so back to the when you were looking for

Janice Porter:

the job, and you had all these connections. You know, my

Janice Porter:

daughter just went through this process of looking for a new

Janice Porter:

job. And she's had to do it a couple of times, and she's not

Janice Porter:

an extrovert, and she doesn't have a big network of people.

Janice Porter:

I'm the one with the network. I'm the one with all the

Janice Porter:

connections, but she wouldn't even listen to me, you know, so

Janice Porter:

that didn't even count. But in the end, what happened, she had

Janice Porter:

maybe 200 to two parts of this, she had like 200 applications

Janice Porter:

that she had put in for a job. And, you know, had a few

Janice Porter:

interviews. And in the end, she got a job Finally, after three

Janice Porter:

months or something. And it turned out that the guy that she

Janice Porter:

went through a first interview with this company, and then the

Janice Porter:

second interview was with this, her manager, her boss, who it

Janice Porter:

turned out she had worked for the same company as him several

Janice Porter:

years ago. They never worked together, but they knew some of

Janice Porter:

the same people. So, okay, she got that job over 200

Janice Porter:

applicants. I don't believe she was the best person for the job.

Janice Porter:

But I believe the fact that he had connection with her made a

Janice Porter:

difference. And I always say to people, it's not what you know,

Janice Porter:

it's who you know. So what you're saying is kind of

Janice Porter:

interesting to me, because in your case, it didn't really help

Janice Porter:

you.

Nori Jabba:

So it could have and, you know, ultimately when I

Nori Jabba:

look back at the job that I did get during the process because I

Nori Jabba:

knew that the executive director, okay, so that's,

Janice Porter:

that's yes. But I

Nori Jabba:

reached out to her to tell her, Hey, I am job

Nori Jabba:

hunting, please hire me, it was because we had this organic

Nori Jabba:

relationship that we've had for 15 years. And she realized a

Nori Jabba:

need for her company. And she reached out to me. And then the

Nori Jabba:

job that I have now I got because of my relationships with

Nori Jabba:

the people that I was working with in my job. So the

Nori Jabba:

connections do help. But I guess the ones that I bought, that I

Nori Jabba:

could rely on to really open doors for me, that wasn't okay.

Nori Jabba:

So I think your story about your daughter is so important too,

Nori Jabba:

because you sometimes aren't aware of how these connections

Nori Jabba:

are going to help you. Right? Right. So so making sure that

Nori Jabba:

you really just think about all of these connections, and

Nori Jabba:

understand that it's great to get the word out that you're job

Nori Jabba:

hunting, you know. But, but rethinking how you use your

Nori Jabba:

contacts. And that, yeah, we can do for them, too, you know, one

Nori Jabba:

of your interviews that I listened to, with Sam, I forget

Nori Jabba:

his last name, um, Jacobs, Jacobs is is stop thinking of it

Nori Jabba:

as a transaction, these relationships, you know, what

Nori Jabba:

can you do for me? What can I do for you, and if you start

Nori Jabba:

looking at it as, what can I do for you, this genuine suddenlink

Nori Jabba:

people will, other people will do things for you.

Janice Porter:

So, and that's an and just to build on that I, I

Janice Porter:

believe that. And it's also though, it's the law of

Janice Porter:

reciprocity. And it's not necessarily, you know, I do

Janice Porter:

something for you, and you do something for me, I do something

Janice Porter:

for you, out of the kindness of my heart, and somebody else out

Janice Porter:

there does something for me, because that's how it works. It

Janice Porter:

doesn't necessarily come back from where it was in the first

Janice Porter:

place. And, and I think that gets misconstrued sometimes. But

Janice Porter:

also, was I gonna say, oh, that, I think it's important with the

Janice Porter:

connections that we have, and the relationships that we build,

Janice Porter:

we have to protect our relationships. And be careful

Janice Porter:

how we use them, right not to take advantage of them. And

Janice Porter:

right, so for example, if I'm introducing you, the new, my new

Janice Porter:

friend, to someone I've known for a long time, I would want to

Janice Porter:

make sure that this person in my connection base or community

Janice Porter:

would be okay with me, bringing someone to them. So I always

Janice Porter:

want to make sure that that happens, I happen to know in

Janice Porter:

these two cases, it'll be fine that we you and I talked about

Janice Porter:

before. But that's kind of to me, it's about protecting your

Janice Porter:

relationships with people so that they end loving on them

Janice Porter:

every once in a while right to keep them to keep them in your

Janice Porter:

circle. So yeah, it's all to me, it's always about people. So

Janice Porter:

that's, that's where I'm coming from there. So there's, I am

Janice Porter:

curious about this. This was one of the questions you had on your

Janice Porter:

sheet, but it's not why I'm asking it. It's because when I

Janice Porter:

was reading your book, and each chapter begins with 100, word

Janice Porter:

summary. Now, I was tempted

Nori Jabba:

to count the words, I have to tell you about them.

Nori Jabba:

They are exactly I

Janice Porter:

didn't because I thought no, that's wasted my

Janice Porter:

time. But okay, so there you go. It is 100 words. Why did you do

Janice Porter:

that? I just love that whole thing.

Nori Jabba:

It's so much fun. So this really came to me through a

Nori Jabba:

friend of mine from college. His name is Grant Faulkner. And he

Nori Jabba:

is executive director of NaNoWriMo, which stands for

Nori Jabba:

National Novel Writing Month, which is an it's actually an

Nori Jabba:

international organization where you challenge yourself to write

Nori Jabba:

a novel in one month, in it's held in the month of November,

Nori Jabba:

and then they have other challenges throughout the year.

Nori Jabba:

But it's this challenge. And he also is the editor of the 100

Nori Jabba:

word story, which is a book that comes out every year, and

Nori Jabba:

everybody submits their 100 word story. And I talked to him about

Nori Jabba:

this. And I just started doing this as an exercise for fun.

Nori Jabba:

It's almost like writing a poem or trying to write a short story

Nori Jabba:

or if you're if you're a journal or you can try to capture your

Nori Jabba:

thoughts. And I also would help my kids edit their papers after

Nori Jabba:

they've written them because they had a twin A 500 word maths

Nori Jabba:

or whatever it was trying to get it down under the limit. So I

Nori Jabba:

was an English major and just enjoy the word cutting, I guess

Nori Jabba:

I'm quite nervous. So I started doing these 100 word summaries

Nori Jabba:

as a way to really capture each the essence of what I was trying

Nori Jabba:

to show and share with every single chapter. And it's, it's a

Nori Jabba:

fun game, it's a fun challenge. And it makes you realize how

Nori Jabba:

important every single word really is. And so I use this

Nori Jabba:

method a lot in my writing to try to wait, you know, if I'm

Nori Jabba:

writing a policy, what am I trying to say? Captured in 100

Nori Jabba:

words? And then you do, you can do with less than 100 words, but

Nori Jabba:

I prefer to do exactly what, okay, there you go, just for the

Nori Jabba:

fun of it, because it is such a challenge to capture the essence

Nori Jabba:

in exactly 100 words. So there's a summary of each, at the

Nori Jabba:

beginning of each chapter, count them, they are exactly 100

Nori Jabba:

words.

Janice Porter:

I love it. And then I am also curious as to how

Janice Porter:

you came up with the, you know, the metaphor of the table,

Janice Porter:

because as, as it's shown throughout the story, there's so

Janice Porter:

many different places and ways to use it. But I'm curious how

Janice Porter:

you came up with that.

Nori Jabba:

So I was actually at a women's leadership conference,

Nori Jabba:

it was a one day conference, and one of the speakers was talking

Nori Jabba:

about keeping your seat at the table or getting your seat at

Nori Jabba:

the table and how women need to have that seat at the table. And

Nori Jabba:

I just started brainstorming about how fun that word is, and

Nori Jabba:

how we use it. And there's just so much you can do with that.

Nori Jabba:

And my chapters in the book are all about, you know, the

Nori Jabba:

metaphor of the table, and how we use it, you know, don't get

Nori Jabba:

pulled under the table, on the table. And, and I think it's

Nori Jabba:

time to think of it in a broader way. And when I was doing my job

Nori Jabba:

hunt, that was the message that came through to me loud and

Nori Jabba:

clear with my journey is that the table was so much more than

Nori Jabba:

just having a seat at the corporate table of success and

Nori Jabba:

what's image we have the table. And you know, it's it's

Nori Jabba:

essential to humanity. The table is where we love where we learn,

Nori Jabba:

where we ask hard questions, and have tough conversations where

Nori Jabba:

we socialize and nourish ourselves and our souls. And so

Nori Jabba:

why am I just so stuck on having a seat at this corporate table?

Nori Jabba:

So I really use the journey to re to shift my view of success

Nori Jabba:

and view of the table to be much more about life fulfillment,

Nori Jabba:

rather than just a corporate seat at the table and feeling

Nori Jabba:

like I'd made it.

Janice Porter:

Yeah, that's awesome. You and you share a lot

Janice Porter:

of things in this book about, you know, being a mom and, and

Janice Porter:

dealing with clutter and seeing that have come from, from your

Janice Porter:

family and things like that. One of the chapters is called Don't

Janice Porter:

table yourself, chapter five, and it's about staying relevant.

Janice Porter:

And and we talked just briefly earlier about, you know, older

Janice Porter:

women, perhaps not listening well, and things like that, but

Janice Porter:

we need to stay relevant. How are you staying relevant?

Nori Jabba:

Well, so in writing this book, I realized I have so

Nori Jabba:

much I need to learn. And we have to stay on top of things,

Nori Jabba:

you have to know the current technology. And as we get older,

Nori Jabba:

it's more and more overwhelmed. There's more. And you know, we

Nori Jabba:

weren't born with AI, with watches on our risks that lead

Nori Jabba:

us to the world. We were born in a different time. And I watched

Nori Jabba:

my mom, and seniors who are literally left behind and

Nori Jabba:

isolated because they can't use a smartphone to call an Uber. Or

Nori Jabba:

it's just, it's just too hard for them to do it. And sometimes

Nori Jabba:

I've been in meetings and I've heard an older person say, Oh,

Nori Jabba:

I'm way too old for that. And I realized, yes, you are. So I am

Nori Jabba:

not going to be that person. I need to stay on top of it all

Nori Jabba:

and learn everything and not be intimidated or overwhelmed by

Nori Jabba:

it. And so you know, I rely on younger people to help me learn

Nori Jabba:

that and make sure that I know all the current technology that

Nori Jabba:

that is relevant for my job, you know, just being able to say I'm

Nori Jabba:

going to take that course or I'm going to learn about go on

Nori Jabba:

LinkedIn learning. LinkedIn learning is incredible what they

Nori Jabba:

have all these courses that you can take. And as part of the

Nori Jabba:

book, I did research on resources for learning new

Nori Jabba:

skills. And I went to nobleworks, which is the job

Nori Jabba:

training center in our metropolitan area here. But

Nori Jabba:

every in the US and probably in Canada, too. All of the

Nori Jabba:

metropolitans have these job training centers, and they're

Nori Jabba:

free, and you can go and they will help you assess your

Nori Jabba:

skills, and figure out what you need to learn. And they will

Nori Jabba:

help you get those skills. So as an older woman in the workplace,

Nori Jabba:

middle aged, I don't like to be called older, but know this for

Nori Jabba:

sure. We need to make sure we stay on top and learn all these

Nori Jabba:

new things. So always staying open to learning new things, and

Nori Jabba:

not being intimidated is really, really important. And that's why

Nori Jabba:

having younger people at your table is important too, because

Nori Jabba:

they show you the way or teach you a new thing. How often have

Nori Jabba:

I been at work, and somebody needed help with Excel? And I

Nori Jabba:

said, Oh, you just do it this way. And I'd sit down and show

Nori Jabba:

them or they would do the same for me. I learned how to how to

Nori Jabba:

change these page breaks that I couldn't get rid of in Word by

Nori Jabba:

watching a YouTube video on it.

Janice Porter:

Yeah. My 12 year old, right.

Nori Jabba:

You've just got to keep learning to stay.

Janice Porter:

Well, yeah, it's so true. But it's funny, you

Janice Porter:

know, when you said old were, you know, I'm older than you.

Janice Porter:

But I don't consider myself old. Anyone just getting started?

Janice Porter:

Yeah, so but when I see, like, over the last couple of days on

Janice Porter:

CNN, two very smart, very old people kind of lose it on in

Janice Porter:

front of, you know, the the world. That's scary, because

Janice Porter:

they didn't know when to stop and move away. I think

Janice Porter:

especially Dianne Feinstein, that was pretty scary. Yeah. And

Janice Porter:

well, and Mitch McConnell, but, you know, you just, I mean,

Janice Porter:

they're brilliant people, but they've gone past, you know,

Janice Porter:

they're, well, we won't get into politics, because I know there's

Janice Porter:

more to that story as well. Right?

Nori Jabba:

When you know, as we age, and if you are going to be

Nori Jabba:

working into your 80s like those two, you better know what's

Nori Jabba:

going on in the world and know the new technology, and be able

Nori Jabba:

to use the communication systems that people use in this day and

Nori Jabba:

age. You know, I, I don't want to tweet, but I am learning now.

Nori Jabba:

It's called x. Learning how to do it and trying to embrace it

Nori Jabba:

because that's what authors use. Okay, my daughter told me, Mom,

Nori Jabba:

you got to do a video on tick tock, tick tock has this book

Nori Jabba:

talk channel. All the authors are using so I am learning how

Nori Jabba:

to do that. Isn't

Janice Porter:

that interesting? Because that I didn't know. So.

Janice Porter:

So how did your daughter know that? Like, is she into the same

Janice Porter:

world as you? I know, she's into Tik Tok, obviously, but how did

Janice Porter:

she

Nori Jabba:

not at all I mean, every young person in there, I

Nori Jabba:

have three daughters in their 20s. And they know all of this.

Nori Jabba:

It's just you're born with it. But no, I, this particular

Nori Jabba:

daughter works in launching people in their music careers.

Nori Jabba:

So she knows how to do that. Sure, of course, is of course

Nori Jabba:

very important, or asking her for years. Yeah, definitely.

Nori Jabba:

Interesting. So we discovered

Janice Porter:

something about this. But I want to ask you

Janice Porter:

about this, your career path has been what you described as

Janice Porter:

squiggly lines instead of an upward arrow pointing to

Janice Porter:

success, and you express how important it is to make peace

Janice Porter:

with your journey. So we discovered that that term was

Janice Porter:

something I recognized was someone who had been a guest on

Janice Porter:

my podcast a few years ago, actually. But so what did that

Janice Porter:

mean to you? And can you tell us a little bit more about that?

Janice Porter:

First, I

Nori Jabba:

can't wait to read her book. Angela, can Lyons book

Nori Jabba:

your soul sisters? For sure. Yeah, I mean, I, I got a

Nori Jabba:

master's degree two years out of undergrad and had this had this

Nori Jabba:

path for myself mapped out and it was an arrow going straight

Nori Jabba:

up. You know, I moved up quickly and had this wonderful job. And

Nori Jabba:

I really thought I was going to be in the C suite. That's what I

Nori Jabba:

had envisioned for myself. And it didn't have that. And it's

Nori Jabba:

okay. It's okay. But it took me until now, to make peace with

Nori Jabba:

the fact that it didn't happen. And I made the conscious choice

Nori Jabba:

not to make it happen when I tabled the job, the company that

Nori Jabba:

I was going to start, and you know, I've had my consulting

Nori Jabba:

business and been called myself president for 10 years or more.

Nori Jabba:

And so I've had that but it's not the same as Starting a

Nori Jabba:

company of large company, but having a squiggly lines career

Nori Jabba:

has given me a richness and opportunities and opened new

Nori Jabba:

doors for me that I never would have had, if I just kept on that

Nori Jabba:

arrow and continued on my corporate career path. And I

Nori Jabba:

didn't, because I wanted to be home with my kids. And it was,

Nori Jabba:

frankly, just too hard. I had an hour and 20 minutes each way

Nori Jabba:

commute. And with two babies, yeah, that is really, really

Nori Jabba:

hard. And you know, kids get ear infections. And you have to, we

Nori Jabba:

would have 3am conversations with quotes, more like fights

Nori Jabba:

over whose job was more important and who we could not,

Nori Jabba:

who could miss work the next day to stay home with kid and that

Nori Jabba:

was before remote work was really a possibility. And so

Nori Jabba:

thank goodness, the worlds has adjusted. And we can be parents

Nori Jabba:

and deal with aging parents. And you know, now I have to take my

Nori Jabba:

mom to the doctor a lot and take time off to do that. But the

Nori Jabba:

world has changed. But the squiggly lines, it was really

Nori Jabba:

hard for me to accept that I didn't do what I set out to do

Nori Jabba:

when I was in my 20s. And is it too late? And so the book is

Nori Jabba:

really about shifting my view of success and really making peace

Nori Jabba:

with those wonderfully squiggly lines with squiggly line, a

Nori Jabba:

curvy line is so much more interesting than a straight

Nori Jabba:

line. Yes, of course, of course,

Janice Porter:

I think to have launched three daughters who I

Janice Porter:

know had busy, high school careers and in sports and music

Janice Porter:

or whatever. Like there's always there was always one going

Janice Porter:

somewhere, right? Or three are all going in three different

Janice Porter:

directions. So to be able to say, hey, you know, they turned

Janice Porter:

out okay, I think is they turned out any wonderful.

Nori Jabba:

Yeah. So because of all of them. And yeah, but those

Nori Jabba:

squiggly lines for me. And I'm still making peace with it.

Nori Jabba:

Don't get me wrong. I've made peace. But it's a it's an

Nori Jabba:

ongoing process. But yeah, it's okay. It's okay to have squiggly

Nori Jabba:

lines.

Janice Porter:

I agree. I you know, because mine didn't go the

Janice Porter:

way it was meant I thought it would go either, but it's all

Janice Porter:

good. Okay, so coming, we're coming close to the end. And,

Janice Porter:

and I wanted to share that I saw in here that you were an avid

Janice Porter:

reader, and that you fell off the wagon a little bit because

Janice Porter:

other things get in the way as they do. And I know I shared

Janice Porter:

with you before we went on air that, you know, I love to read

Janice Porter:

to and I'm always buying books, but they sit in a pile because,

Janice Porter:

you know, I sit and watch something on Netflix at night

Janice Porter:

and said, because I've been in front of a screen all day. And

Janice Porter:

now my eyes really hurt. And I don't want to look at a book.

Janice Porter:

But I don't want to look at it on the Kindle either. I don't

Janice Porter:

like that. I would rather have the book. And so you have in one

Janice Porter:

of these chapters that you that you like audiobooks, but what I

Janice Porter:

wanted to get to was your book

Nori Jabba:

bucket list. Oh, book bucket last year? Yes. Yes,

Nori Jabba:

it's a long list. And there's pressure because you know, how

Nori Jabba:

am I going to read all of those books, but so I went to a

Nori Jabba:

liberal arts college and read for four years straight need

Nori Jabba:

glasses, because I read so much during that time. But after

Nori Jabba:

college, I couldn't touch a book for a long time. And I think

Nori Jabba:

that's very typical. We work hard in school, and we need a

Nori Jabba:

break. And if you've done anything with a lot of reading

Nori Jabba:

and college, you do need a break. And so I started reading

Nori Jabba:

again in my late 20s and 30s. But then I had kids and you know

Nori Jabba:

who has time to read when you're working and juggling a family?

Nori Jabba:

There's no way so I discovered audiobooks. And I can multitask

Nori Jabba:

and walk while I or exercise while I'm listening to podcasts

Nori Jabba:

to audiobooks and I just love it. And I started doing this

Nori Jabba:

during COVID. And I would find that I would be excited and

Nori Jabba:

couldn't wait to get out on my walk because I couldn't put the

Nori Jabba:

book down. My very first audio book was Trevor Noah was born a

Nori Jabba:

crime. I love listening to audiobooks that are narrated by

Nori Jabba:

the author and my book is narrated by citing

Janice Porter:

your version now.

Nori Jabba:

But audiobooks are a wonderful way to help. Check off

Nori Jabba:

those bucket list books. And I can't wait to continue. You

Nori Jabba:

know, I'd love to get out of my walks because what's the last

Nori Jabba:

one

Janice Porter:

that you listen to?

Nori Jabba:

Oh my goodness. I have listened to so many will

Nori Jabba:

and my Maya So, you'll laugh my last one was how to give a TED

Nori Jabba:

talk. Oh, wow. Okay. And that was fabulous. Fabulous. And I

Nori Jabba:

also recently listened to Jay Shetty his book. love science.

Nori Jabba:

That was a really good one to do when

Janice Porter:

you wrote this book you had you were just going

Janice Porter:

to read. I love the titles. I mean, the cleverness, losing my

Janice Porter:

virginity and finding my virginity, Richard Branson,

Nori Jabba:

right, and those who read hardcopy, okay. And he

Nori Jabba:

didn't narrate them. They do. They are actually on my list to

Nori Jabba:

do the audiobook, because those two books were probably two of

Nori Jabba:

the most inspiring books I have ever read. And Richard is just

Nori Jabba:

he is my hero. He is at my table. I hope I can meet him

Nori Jabba:

someday. Oh, wow. I really, really do. And I met these two

Nori Jabba:

women who worked for him. And they worked as misuses for him

Nori Jabba:

on Necker Island, when he went cold retreats. And they were

Nori Jabba:

they were the people that did the massage or everybody. Were

Nori Jabba:

taking breaks in their corporate retreat. I don't know what it

Nori Jabba:

was. But anyway, I felt like oh, my gosh, you, you know him. So I

Nori Jabba:

helped this connection to Richard, but I have a deep

Nori Jabba:

connection with him. I quote his, his talk with his granny

Nori Jabba:

book, and because his granny was 99. And she said, you know, the

Nori Jabba:

best years of my life. I've been in my 90s. And what a wonderful

Nori Jabba:

way to look back on your life that now as an adult woman, she

Nori Jabba:

is happier than she's ever been. I shared that with my mother.

Nori Jabba:

And she burst out laughing. I said, No, not the experience

Nori Jabba:

she's had.

Janice Porter:

So I heard someone else say that Carol

Janice Porter:

Burnett. Oh, yeah.

Nori Jabba:

Yeah. So I asked, I aspire to be that kind of woman

Nori Jabba:

that looks at my later years as the best years of my life. So

Nori Jabba:

that was Richard who inspired me so

Janice Porter:

so you know, I have a connection to him to Zoo.

Janice Porter:

Yes. So a good friend of mine, Jordan Adler, who is an

Janice Porter:

affiliate with a company I'm with, he's an amazing network

Janice Porter:

marketer and speaker and author. And he is on the list that he

Janice Porter:

paid money to go to space with Richard Branson. Okay, so he's

Janice Porter:

already gone to Necker Island a couple of times with the group

Janice Porter:

of people that are going on this mission, when when their time

Janice Porter:

comes, because the first one went up with, with all the, you

Janice Porter:

know, just Richard. And so they're getting ready. So yeah,

Janice Porter:

so he's, and he speaks, he shares experiences at the, at

Janice Porter:

the, at Richard's home with us about it, and it's free. It's

Janice Porter:

fast.

Nori Jabba:

It's an amazing man. And anybody who has ever seen

Nori Jabba:

those books knows what a commitment that is, because they

Nori Jabba:

are not short books, they are very fat 150 500 pages. But

Nori Jabba:

really, highly recommend them. But you know, what he taught me

Nori Jabba:

is that anything's possible. It just his journey of starting

Nori Jabba:

Virgin Records and how it all came together. There was no

Nori Jabba:

plan. It was just, it just happened. And he, he is the kind

Nori Jabba:

of person that just jumps in an opportunity when it presents

Nori Jabba:

itself. And nothing's impossible to him.

Janice Porter:

Right? Doesn't he say? Doesn't he say say yes, and

Janice Porter:

then figure it out?

Nori Jabba:

Exactly. Well, this has been

Janice Porter:

wonderful talking to you. And I'm so excited

Janice Porter:

because your book is fairly new. Yes, it's quite new. And you're

Janice Porter:

getting out there talking to people about it. And I'm sharing

Janice Porter:

it with people by doing this, I hope that you'll get some more

Janice Porter:

people listening and and reading your book. And I feel so blessed

Janice Porter:

to have met you. So thank you so much for being on the podcast.

Janice Porter:

And maybe if you have one last pearls of wisdom for my

Janice Porter:

audience, that would be awesome.

Nori Jabba:

So if you want a seat at the table, remember that

Nori Jabba:

you already have it, you just helped to build out your table.

Nori Jabba:

Thank you.

Janice Porter:

Thank you, and thank you to my audience, for

Janice Porter:

being here. And if you liked what you heard, please leave a

Janice Porter:

review Oh, and in the shownotes I will put the information for

Janice Porter:

where you can find Nori and find her book so that you can read it

Janice Porter:

too. And

Nori Jabba:

I have a website for the book. It's called Keeping

Nori Jabba:

your seat.com books on Amazon as well. And I'm on LinkedIn, Nori,

Nori Jabba:

Java and the only one in the world. And I hope to hear from

Nori Jabba:

some of your listeners. Amazing thank you so much. Thank you

Nori Jabba:

ever to to stay connected and be remembered