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Mind Platter: A poet on sharing your voice and feeling your feelings

Mind Platter: A poet on sharing your voice and feeling your feelings

Season 9 Episode 93 Published 7 years, 10 months ago
Description

Najwa Zebian, poet, advocate, author of the book Mind Platter and Lebanese Canadian, was recently thrown into the spotlight when her poetic #MeToo Tweet went viral via New York Times, CBS News, the Times of India.

Today, Najwa shares her life, her incredibly moving poetry and an invitation to feel our feelings, own our stories and share our voices.

SHOW NOTES:

  • John mentions this Goalcast video that shares his story.
  • John mentions hearing Najwa's story through her Goalcast video.
  • Get Najwa's books Mind Platter and The Nectar of Pain.
  • "When excluded from activities, I felt like it was my fault. This is something not only children internalize, but that adults do too."
  • "I couldn't understand what I was going through. That pushed me to find other means to express myself."
  • "Belonging is a basic human need."
  • I had good grades, good manners. I convinced myself that settling for that was enough.
  • There's no progressing in life if you don't come to terms with your story.
  • Even the strongest of us go through moments where we feel let down or taking advantage of.
  • Just to visualize it: These mountains you are carrying, you were only supposed to climb. I gives me so much power.
  • I must believe in myself before I expect anyone else to believe in me. I must raise my own voice and not expect someone to fight for me.
  • To get heard, I was the one who had to raise my voice. There wasn't anyone saying, you've been going through a hard time, is there anything I can do.
  • I can't expect anyone to lead me. I need to start paving that road.
  • If you like this podcast, you will love Live Inspired IN STUDIO. It's my membership community where like-minded friends join me via live webcast to live inspired together. Registration opens soon! Join the waitlist.

NAJWA ZEBIAN ON HOW SHE BECAME A WRITER:

  • "On my 13th birthday, I had one friend who I only saw at school because we did not live in the same village. She gave me a journal. It was the first time I wrote my feelings out on paper. It was weird at first... unfamiliar. I found myself going back to it day after day. It became the home that I was searching for because nobody was telling me that I was being too sensitive or that I shouldn't be feeling that way."
  • "They didn't want to be here, but felt like they had to be grateful. They felt out of place and made to feel that they were not good enough." Najwa said of her Libyan students in Canada. "I started to write to help them feel empowered. I thought I was writing for them, but I was writing to heal my 16 year old self. That was a pivotal moment."

If you enjoyed Najwa's story of advocacy, owning your story and using your voice, check out

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