Out Loud with Jante

Flaws and All… or Are They Even Flaws at All?

5 min · 14 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Flaws and All… or Are They Even Flaws at All?

Descripción

Flaws and All… or Are They Even Flaws at All? is a deeply personal reflection about the things many of us were taught to see as flaws simply because they made us different. In this piece, I explore the quiet ways comparison, criticism, societal expectations, and other people’s projections shaped how I saw myself for years. From learning to hide my smile because of the gap in my teeth to unpacking the lasting impact of comments made about my body, I reflect on how insecurities are often planted long before we realize they are growing. I also confront generational conversations surrounding Black women, hair texture, skin tone, body image, and identity, while acknowledging the painful reality that division and hurt can exist both outside of and within our own communities. With honesty and vulnerability, I examine the ways many of us learned to measure ourselves against standards we never created. At its core, this reflection asks an important question:What if the things we call flaws were never flaws at all? What if we have simply been conditioned to believe that anything different is defective? “Flaws and All” is ultimately a reflection on healing, self-acceptance, identity, and returning to myself without shame attached. It is about learning to look in the mirror and no longer seeing a list of things to fix, but instead realizing that uniqueness was never the burden—comparison was.

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Portada del episodio Flaws and All… or Are They Even Flaws at All?

Flaws and All… or Are They Even Flaws at All?

Flaws and All… or Are They Even Flaws at All? is a deeply personal reflection about the things many of us were taught to see as flaws simply because they made us different. In this piece, I explore the quiet ways comparison, criticism, societal expectations, and other people’s projections shaped how I saw myself for years. From learning to hide my smile because of the gap in my teeth to unpacking the lasting impact of comments made about my body, I reflect on how insecurities are often planted long before we realize they are growing. I also confront generational conversations surrounding Black women, hair texture, skin tone, body image, and identity, while acknowledging the painful reality that division and hurt can exist both outside of and within our own communities. With honesty and vulnerability, I examine the ways many of us learned to measure ourselves against standards we never created. At its core, this reflection asks an important question:What if the things we call flaws were never flaws at all? What if we have simply been conditioned to believe that anything different is defective? “Flaws and All” is ultimately a reflection on healing, self-acceptance, identity, and returning to myself without shame attached. It is about learning to look in the mirror and no longer seeing a list of things to fix, but instead realizing that uniqueness was never the burden—comparison was.

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