WEBVTT
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When you think about the medal being yourself, your best, self right you will undergo the training that you need to go through.
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And the problem with a lot of us, myself included, sometimes we don't see ourselves as that prized medal right and so we don't put ourselves in those tough situations.
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But I think if we practice that, you know, then we will, you know.
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I think self-deceit is the worst kind of deceit.
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It's one thing other people lying to you, but lying to yourself is the worst kind.
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Welcome everyone to the latest edition of the you Unleashed podcast.
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I'm your host, femi Akinyemi, the podcast where we're all about just giving you great coaching, great insights that can help you unleash and unlock the highest performance and your best self and achieve everything you want to be.
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This week, I got a special, special guest with me and her name is Eniye Oshunbiyi, and she's an executive coach, she's a supervisor, and she brings a wealth of experience and expertise to support coaches, leaders, and her specialty is really around becoming is to create a trusted and supportive environment where individuals and organizations can explore their goals, overcome challenges and unleash their full potential.
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And one of her niche areas that she really focuses on is emotional intelligence and self-awareness, and these are things that have become very underrated.
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Some people talk about it and you don't really know what it means.
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Yeah, people talk about EQ, eq, a lot, and self-awareness.
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So I thought it would be great for us to bring someone in who can come in and give us the real truth about it, and I'll be asking the questions.
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You wish you were here.
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You would ask if you were here as well.
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So, with that said, welcome, enie.
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Thank you for coming onto the show.
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Thank you so much, Femi, for having me.
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It's a pleasure to be here.
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So right, let's get into it.
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Okay, I guess let's start with this.
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If, by the end of this podcast, what would you kind of like the thing people to take away from this session to say, I get it now, if we were leaving, what's the one thing you would like people to be able to take away from it to feel like, yes, they get EQ self-aware everything.
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That's a great question.
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That's a great question.
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I think I would really want people to go away asking the question who am I really?
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What drives me?
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Why do I do what I do?
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What are my triggers?
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Why do I show up the way I show up, professionally and personally or in my relationships?
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I really would want people to go away feeling more curious about themselves.
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Yeah, what drives them and why they have the outlook in life that they do I love that and I think what I'm getting from that answer, then, is that for a lot of us, we are working on almost like autopilots absolutely we.
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And what you're saying is you're challenging us, you're asking us to wake up, like, wake up and be aware.
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I think there's that thing where they always say a lot of us I think I've heard this saying somewhere where a lot of people, by the time we're 30 years old or something, we're dead, but we're just kind of, I mean, and we're just walking around till we're 80, and I think what they were I forgot exactly what the person was trying to say was a lot of us, we just don don't live, we don't, we just kind of coast through life, and I guess that's what I wanted to get to.
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So you've kind of said it now, which is like wake up.
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So what does self-awareness mean to you, I guess, and why is it so important?
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Yeah.
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So I guess, speaking to what you just said, it's about practicing the pause, right, as you said, where we live in a busy world and busyness is glorified and we don't stop to really think, we don't stop to take stock.
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So I think it's about practicing the pause.
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And so, for me, what does self-awareness mean?
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To me, it means an insight into my own personality.
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It means just asking myself, knowing what are my strengths, what are my weaknesses, what are my triggers, as well as what are the things that have shaped me in my life, right, and what drives me, what are the potential pitfalls and why do those things show up the way they show up in my profession, in my relationships.
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It's about understanding why I am the way I am in all the different segments of my life and as human beings we're so complex.
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We really are, and so I think knowing our likes and dislikes and, yeah, just knowing our whys is really important, because then, when you show up and you know why you up, fully right, you're not, you're not, you're not moving under any kind of cultural or societal conditioning, and I think that's why self-awareness and and eq is really important to me.
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we have a lot to unpack there.
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That one I get the feeling that you're challenging all of us that.
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Do you even know?
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Know your life story?
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Do you?
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Have you taken a step back, pause and let's talk long pause?
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Have you taken a long pause to look at yourself from the moment you were born, where you were born, who you were born to, the family that you were born into, or the guardians or wherever you were born into, how they operated, how that has hardwired into your own way of behaving, whether it's with money, whether it's with relationships, whether it's with your work ethic, whether it's with discipline, whether it's with the way you were raised and the way you raise your own children?
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What is your life story?
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Because that's what's kind of the triggers that help you behave the way you behave.
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So I get this feeling, like you're saying, we should understand our own life story and that helps us understand our own triggers, our own whys and why we then automatically do the things we do without thinking about it, and it's something we have to unpack, right.
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Oh, absolutely, and I think you've hit the nail on the head.
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It really is about.
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You know we don't understand that we have imprints.
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One of my favorite quotes with the work that I do is a quote by Carl Jung until you make the unconscious conscious, it will rule your life and you will call it fate.
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Some of us just accept that's just the way I am.
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Can you say that again?
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please Can you say that again Even when I read it and I sat down there for a long time going oh my God, can you say that again please?
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So until you make the unconscious conscious, it will rule your life and you will call it fate.
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So let's bring this to your life Until.
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Until you realize, say, growing up, you grew up in a family where they were very, very money conscious, so they really held on to money and they wouldn't make investments or take risks and they would save.
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You would grow up one day and you'd realize that you never quite got into investments, you were never big into investments.
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Every money you have, you save it under your mattress, not even the bank.
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And you go around and you start telling people that I just never come, I just never came across an investment opportunity.
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Right, that's just my fit, that's just my life.
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And you realize that there's a trigger that's making you give that away Absolutely.
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It's called childhood imprints.
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You know we all have imprints and if we don't take the time to understand it, it shapes us.
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You know how most of us, the older we get, we say oh why am I behaving just like my parent?
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That thing that used to irk you, that used to trigger you.
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But you realize that you've become that person.
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You're becoming your father, you're becoming your mother and you wonder why.
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But again, when you look at, if you go generations back, you realize that they're just operating on a conditioning that they received or didn't receive from them.
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So it's about, in a way I use this term loosely breaking generational curses, if you like.
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It's real.
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You know, citing it stops with me.
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It stops with me and this is where, and if you're a person of faith, you hear where in churches they talk about you need to break generational curses.
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And sure, there is a faith and faith and the spiritual part, but there's also a lot of and that's why a lot of the really, really good people I know, the good pastors, male and female, are the ones that kind of give it spiritual but then help you understand the practical, which is you have to go back into your life and go back and think through everything and then identify the things that you need to break.
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And then that's where the faith, with the courage and the strength to power through and trust in the power of god to help you overcome those things coming.
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But you can't fight a battle you don't know what you're fighting.
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Exactly, exactly.
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You have to know your enemy right, and for a lot of us the enemy is us, is within ourselves.
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But sometimes what happens is we are too afraid to look within Because you know what you look within, and it's not always pleasant, it's not always nice, and so avoidance becomes a technique.
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You know that we use in life, but it we wonder why Sometimes we point the finger, we blame other people, but we have to start looking with it deep within.
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We are like onions.
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We have layers and layers, or like an iceberg, when you see what's on top, but actually I mean, it's what was beneath the iceberg that sank the Titanic, right?
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And I'm guessing that that means and we talk, and we might be talking trauma as well here now.
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So there might even be things where, as a coping mechanism, you're even behaving as if these things never happened completely.
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I mean that sure that that's something that you can remember, but a lot of us don't want to dig in because it's traumatizing, it's hard to remember and you just don't want to go there.
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So a certain extent you've almost blacked out like this did not happen the way I forgot, and I know there's some psychological phenomenas, there's some explanation around the way, some deep trauma.
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You literally just black it up, or you create a new frame, a new framing around it.
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You give, you give it a positive framing and that all of a sudden makes it go, does it?
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And the last thing is, for a lot of us we don't want to do work because ultimately it puts a responsibility on us to change.
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Ultimately it becomes Femi, this is on you, it's not on your wife, it's not on your kids, it's not on your kids, it's not on your mom, your dad, your friends.
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This is a you problem, right?
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Absolutely.
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We have to take responsibility.
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That's part of growing up.
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You know adulthood is hard, but that's part of what we need to do.
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And, speaking to what you were just referring to, you know we create these false paradigms.
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I think that to what you were just referring to.
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You know we create these false paradigms.
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I think that's what you're trying.
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We create false paradigms.
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We tell ourselves a story that we begin to believe and we really believe that story.
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But then when somebody comes whether it's in the workplace or a friend or a spouse or whatever gives you feedback, people blow up and they're like how dare you know?
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It touches a wound, but even that is enough data to tell you that there's something there.
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Stop and explore.
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Why are you triggered?
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Because that person said that there's something there, but you blocked it out.
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You don't want to go there, and self-awareness is all about going there in order to heal.
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It's all about going there in order to become this wholesome person that we were all designed to be.
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Yeah, I love that because if you're not self-aware, then you're not being wholesome, because you're obviously working around with some on deltrid parts of your life, which means you are not being everything you are created to be, because you're damaged but you're incomplete absolutely, absolutely.
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we can never be our authentic selves and I know that word is used a lot, but actually we have to be intentional about working towards authenticity.
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Who am I accepting?
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The good, the bad and the ugly of ourselves, because that is what our stories is, what shapes us, is what forms us, is what dictates how we relate to other people and how we relate to ourselves.
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So we have to go there.
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It can be overwhelming, though, because sometimes I mean, I use myself as an example.
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Conversations like this help me understand, because it's partly what I do.
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It's what I do as well, and I talk to others.
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You also want to understand and appreciate how far I am from the highest functioning I can be Now.
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Number one I probably need to be gracious to myself to understand that there is nobody that is completely highest functioning, because we're all dealing with something, so don't worry, fear me about being your absolute, perfect self.
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What you need to be is self-aware and get better.
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But also, though, sometimes I look at all the areas of my life that I know I can do better.
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And number one I probably forget to appreciate the things I do well because I'm focused on that problem.
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And the second one it's just overwhelming.
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It's just overwhelming, like how am I going to get better at saying no to people?
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How am I going to get better about my people's expectations?
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How am I going to get better at being able to hold myself accountable and just go?
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Just being who I am is just.
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It's an easy part for me.
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Let me just be me and the person that loves me, accepts me, the person that doesn't please, yeah yeah, yeah, absolutely, and you're you're right, it is overwhelming.
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It is overwhelming, but I think this is where we recognize that we all need support.
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We're not designed to do it alone.
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We're designed as human beings to live in community.
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We're not meant to be isolated.
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One of the greatest joys of my work as a self-awareness coach is holding that space for people.
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It's like every day I hear people come, but in that safe space they can unpack, they can understand themselves, they don't feel judged, and I have those spaces where I go.
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It's like even in therapy, a therapist needs their own therapist because you need to go and release and unpack and process, and so I think it's really, really important that we can't do that and we need the support and that's how we get through it.
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We need those meaningful spaces where we can go and we can share who we are and we can get perspective.
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But each person needs to be willing to do the work.
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The work still falls down to us to do the work, but we can do it in manageable chunks, in ways that are conducive for our own learning styles and our own growth and development styles, because everyone's different, right.
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There's many different ways that we can do it.
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Fabulous Thanks for that.
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So let's bring you back on track now.
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So I guess for you, because it's an interesting area you help people grow on.
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So is there a crucial moment in your own life that kind of significantly that helped you understand self-awareness and significantly enhanced your own self-awareness, and that kind of shift, your journey, what was your own come to Jesus.
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Moments when we talk about self-awareness.
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I love that.
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So I think for me there are three main areas that have really forced me to look within.
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I mean first, my faith.
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I think, as an adult, the first time I questioned why do I even believe what I believe Like, why do I, why do I do this, what does this say?
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And I realized that a lot of it was just kind of borrowed.
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It was borrowed faith, it was borrowed beliefs.
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And until I started to look for myself, question and dispel the things that I thought there's nowhere where this, what, what, that was a.
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That was a huge moment for me.
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Marriage and parenting is another one.
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A huge moment for me.
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Marriage and parenting is another one, I think, huge, huge, huge.
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You get married and all of a sudden there's someone that you're sharing your space with, your life with, and they tell you things and it's almost like you have this constant mirror following you around either in how you respond to things, and you wonder, oh, and they're like why did you respond that way?
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And my husband's very deep, so he likes to ask a lot of questions, and I realized that I grew up in a family where we didn't go that deep, right, we didn't have a lot of in-depth conversations, whereas my husband I mean his father was a barrister.
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He'd sit them around the table and he's like state your case.
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So of course, yeah, from the oldest to the youngest.
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And so you get married to someone like that and they're saying state your case.
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And you're thinking, no, everything is in my head.
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I don't state what, what like what, what are you talking about?
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So I think that brought up a lot for me.
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It made me see myself for who I truly was.
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And, of course, you know when you are.
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I was raised very differently African parents and Nigerian parents and then you have your children in a completely different society, where they're taught to question, they're taught to challenge.
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And all of a sudden you're like what?
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And all these triggers flying everywhere and you're thinking, okay, what is this about?
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So it made me look back at my own upbringing.
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I thought I'm raising my children in a completely different context.
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So, of course, what I'm getting from them but again, all of that is data.
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Why am I responding this way?
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Why are my emotions responding this way?
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Why do I think this way?
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Why do I go into my shell?
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Why do I hide?
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Why do I not want it?
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Everything, everything from embarrassment, shame, guilt, you know, fear of just being just voicing, finding my own voice.
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I think all of these three areas have been really significant in just bringing that side out of me.
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And it's still a journey and I think it won't be a journey for the rest of my life.
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I am not there.
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I'm still learning every day, and every day something new is revealed.
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That's so powerful because, especially like a lot of us and a lot of listeners on the podcast who are in relationships or our parents, our parents or our relationships and sometimes, sometimes when you're younger, the relationship is all about the vibes, the love and everything.
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So those deep conversations maybe don't need to happen because you kind of just on emotional energy.
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You've got loads of emotional energy and physical energy so you can just ride everything.
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But as you start to get older, you just become like your tolerance levels are a bit less and you all need that, that we need to be on the same page.
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Conversation needs to happen and if you're not someone that, if you're from a home that open conversations is a thing and everyone just communication is a strength, yeah.
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But if you're from someone that's from a home that don't really do talking, if I tell you that, fine, but you're fine, but you're fine.
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And that can lead to a lot of because they, and then for a lot of us, we find ourselves snapping our children.
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But it's like I'm like you, I'm, I'm, I'm having raising my children in, in, in in the west, not unlike some of our counterparts, we raise them so and, to be honest, it doesn't even matter whether it's children raised in Nigeria, and the children are just different.
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Now, absolutely, social media, everything, there are a lot more willing to just challenge you and go why?
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Why?
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In our own days, when they say it's how dare you?
00:19:20.114 --> 00:19:24.592
It's like that, or just follow, do you question me?
00:19:24.592 --> 00:19:25.314
You said what?
00:19:25.314 --> 00:19:40.384
Yeah, now we're having to learn a new way of engaging, communicating, relating, and we're having to confront our own hardwirings and our own childhood imprints, as you said Yep, absolutely, you are absolutely right.
00:19:40.464 --> 00:19:52.718
I think you know we grew up in a culture where children are kind of seen, not necessarily heard, and these days children want to be seen and they want to be heard, and they want to be right.
00:19:53.385 --> 00:19:54.269
And they don't want to hear you.
00:19:54.269 --> 00:19:56.551
They don't want to hear you, but they want to be heard.
00:19:59.006 --> 00:19:59.829
You do get that?
00:19:59.829 --> 00:20:04.707
Yes, Absolutely, Absolutely, and I think yeah.
00:20:04.707 --> 00:20:17.259
So that creates conflicts and if we again are not emotionally intelligent enough to manage what these things are bringing up, it will impact our families, it will impact our relationships.
00:20:17.259 --> 00:20:23.287
So emotional intelligence in that area is really crucial to foster that understanding, to foster that understanding.
00:20:23.366 --> 00:20:27.273
So I guess the question then becomes what are some of the barriers?
00:20:27.273 --> 00:20:35.265
I mean, we've kind of said it because it's subconscious, but what are some of the common barriers to self-awareness and how can we overcome them?
00:20:35.265 --> 00:20:42.534
And I guess this links in quite nicely to, if you need, to the tools, what tools, techniques we can use.
00:20:42.534 --> 00:20:53.008
And I guess the very first question is how do we, without coming to someone like you because I'm sure you'll share later on how we can see someone like you how do we self, can we self-diagnose?
00:20:53.008 --> 00:20:57.106
And just, is there anything we can do to self-diagnose, to at least be aware that?
00:20:57.106 --> 00:21:00.496
Okay, femi Ene, there's a problem here.
00:21:00.496 --> 00:21:01.885
You need to, it's not a problem but, this is who you are.
00:21:01.905 --> 00:21:02.826
Yeah, yeah, you need it all.
00:21:02.826 --> 00:21:04.028
It's not a problem, but this is who you are.
00:21:04.667 --> 00:21:06.450
Yeah, yeah, absolutely I think.
00:21:06.450 --> 00:21:09.992
Speaking to your very first question, what are some of the common barriers?
00:21:09.992 --> 00:21:13.996
We just talked about cultural conditioning, right, social conditioning.
00:21:13.996 --> 00:21:17.499
We go with the flow, we go with the status quo.
00:21:17.499 --> 00:21:21.362
I mean, we can never discover ourselves if we're just trying to be like everybody else.
00:21:21.362 --> 00:21:23.185
There's only one, you right.
00:21:23.185 --> 00:21:24.648
So you need to discover that uniqueness about you.
00:21:24.648 --> 00:21:26.192
So that's one of the barriers.
00:21:26.192 --> 00:21:28.916
I think there are other barriers Life is busy.
00:21:28.916 --> 00:21:30.326
We talked about that earlier.
00:21:30.326 --> 00:21:31.588
Lack of self-reflection.
00:21:31.588 --> 00:21:39.534
People don't pause enough where everyone's hustling, everyone's rushing from one thing to the other, so there's no time to really stop and think.
00:21:39.534 --> 00:21:46.857
In some contexts, pride, ego, shame, guilt stops people from going there, from really looking in the mirror.
00:21:46.857 --> 00:21:53.858
Emotional immaturity, just not having the capacity to look within ignorance.
00:21:54.345 --> 00:21:55.912
You just don't know what you don't know.
00:21:56.445 --> 00:22:00.511
You don't know what you don't know, fear of change I mean I could go on.
00:22:00.511 --> 00:22:03.311
Lack of feedback, seeking external validation.
00:22:03.311 --> 00:22:08.307
All of those things are huge barriers and I think you talked about.
00:22:08.307 --> 00:22:10.151
You asked about tools, or I think.
00:22:10.151 --> 00:22:18.056
Yeah, I think when I work with my clients, one of the first things that I love to do with them is some form of assessment.
00:22:18.056 --> 00:22:26.887
Depending on the individual and where they're at, there are a range of assessment tools or personality profiles that are really good in helping us to understand.
00:22:26.887 --> 00:22:34.855
I mean, these things have been developed with psychology in mind and I think there are so many different types of frameworks to use to understand.