Nothing Is Small
Episode 4: In this episode, the conversation centers around how small actions and seemingly insignificant moments can have a lasting impact on our lives. The group explores the idea of the "butterfly effect," sharing personal stories about kindness, taking risks, and unexpected opportunities that shaped their paths. From simple acts like inviting someone to sit at lunch or offering encouragement, to saying yes to new experiences, each story highlights how meaningful change often starts small. The discussion also touches on cultural differences, personal growth, and the balance between technology and human connection. Throughout the dialogue, the speakers emphasize the importance of being present, following your instincts, and supporting others. They reflect on how kindness and connection build confidence and community over time. Ultimately, the episode reinforces that nothing we do is truly small when it comes to impacting others.
Episode Transcript
Lydia:
It's kind of ridiculous how the smallest things stick with you. Not the big problems, the tiny stuff: someone's tone, a friend taking forever to text back, or that one random comment that wasn't even meant to be deep but your brain is like, "Great, let's replay that all day." Those can hurt and be confusing.
But what about those little moments that turn into something else? A realization, a decision or the sense that you need to do something differently. It can feel like a quiet nudge to take back control. These are the small moments that can end up shaping how you think, what you care about, and the choices you make next.
In today's episode we'll explore these questions. What if you don't need more time, more confidence or more permission? What if it doesn't matter where you live or whether you're a girl? What if starting something small is actually the point? What if that's how real change begins? It's someone deciding they're not too young, not too small, and not powerless, after all.
Justine:
You're listening to the By Her Hands Podcast, A space where young women figure things out together, who we are, what we want, and the power we already carry. It's brought to you by WaterStep, a global leader in safe water innovation. Learn more about how women and girls are shaping healthier futures, each by her own hands, at WaterStep.org.
Lydia:
Lexi, do you know what the "butterfly effect" is?
Lexi:
Isn't it the thing where everything happens for a reason?
Lydia:
Kind of. So, the butterfly effect is the idea that I very firmly believe in where every little thing you do has some sort of effect on your life. And there's an episode of my favorite TV show where all he does is save a butterfly and the entire town sets on fire. Every little action leads to some sort of, it changes your life and your life trajectory. I'm a firm believer in the butterfly effect. My mom doesn't believe it as much. I tell her in the mornings, I have a tardy problem. Let's be real. I'm a senior. Senioritis is bad. I've had senioritis since sophomore year. The minute, you know what? The minute I walked into my high school freshman year, I had senioritis. But let me tell you my attendance, I figured out the system, but they still get me sometimes. But I tried to tell my mom, it's okay. It's the butterfly effect.
If I had left the house on time, maybe I would've gotten in a car accident on the way to school, maybe, I don't know. Something could have caught on fire. Maybe the dog would've gotten out. I don't know. You have no idea. And I mean, it's not like I'm wrong, so you should be grateful that I even just made it to school at all. I also got voted worst driver of my senior class, so she really should be grateful that I made it to school at all. I've got a bad record, so I really don't understand why she doesn't see it the way I do that at least I made it and my decision to be late could have saved my life. What do you think?
Lexi:
Yeah, absolutely. I mean I think no, truly, I think everything happens for a reason. I mean, even me being here at WaterStep, it all started with the fifth-grade project. I mean, I was so young. They told us, it was called our exhibition project and they told us pick a United Nations school and then pick a nonprofit organization and try to create some sort of partnership with them and create a project. And so I was like, okay. And so I got recommended WaterStep next day. I know I'm on a Zoom call with Mark Hogg, the CEO.
Lydia:
What a guy.
Lexi:
Yeah, I am like fifth-grade on this Zoom call trying to act professional and everything.
Lydia:
I'm sure that Zoom call was like four hours long.
Lexi:
Oh, it was, but I love him. He was very, very inspiring and really taught me about the whole safe water crisis. And I, to be honest at this point, had probably no knowledge about it. And then I did a shoe drive because that's how they made a lot of their funding. And then he was like, you want to join the Teen Board? And I was like, all right, sure. The power of saying yes right there. And then since then I have been on the Teen Board and am now co-presidents with Lydia. We are loving it. We are walking it. We just did a 5K, but I don't know, it was crazy how such a small moment and I was just so young and didn't really even know what I was getting myself into as turned into what it has now and really developed my passion for safe water, and for women and girls specifically. So I think it is so awesome how something so small turned into something so impactful on my life.
Justine:
We're really happy to welcome a new guest today. Z, would you like to introduce yourself?
Z:
Hi, my name is Zainab. I prefer to go by Z and I'm a sophomore.
Lexi:
Z, do you have a story to share or something small that had an impact on you like that?
Z:
Yes, so I'll start with what happened to me back in my country. It's really such a memory.
Justine:
When you say your country, what do you mean?
Z:
I mean Ghana.
Justine:
Okay.
Z:
Back at home in Ghana, there's this one phone policy that we have here in Jefferson County, obviously, but I want to hit the point that it's really amazing how I have moved from not being cool with phone to being cool with phone now, although I'm not very comfortable with it still now. So back in my country we have this, you'll not see a kid with phone holding phone just texting or Instagram or anything. You'll not see that. It's not common in my country, especially being in middle school. It's not at all common.
But when I came here to the USA, it's really blown my mind to expecting how I see in the hallway, students holding phones, everyone busy with phones, using AI and all that. It was mostly going with traditional way. You were either paper or pen or paper and pencil. You cannot get away with coming to school with a phone. No, no one even liked bringing their phone to school. You have, even if you had a phone and I just got my phone. I think that was this freshman year. Yeah, I just got my phone, my first phone, which I'm using.
Lydia:
Congratulations. Thank you. It's a big step. I mean, yeah, and it's funny you say that because I'm picturing the four year olds I see in restaurants with the giant iPads and that's every day here. That is my sister. That's how you raise kids.
Lexi:
That's my sister. Actually, I have a four-year little sister and she loves her big iPad watching shows all the time. So…
Z:
My 14-year-old sister still doesn't have a phone. My dad is like, if you pass your eighth-grade year, you're going to get a phone.
Lydia:
Yeah, I got one eighth-grade year and I was actually the last person in my grade to get a phone was being in eighth-grade. I had a Kindle fire before then, which is still technically technology, but I got ice cream in the charger port, so it doesn't really count because once it died it was dead. So I kind of had a phone.
Justine:
This is so interesting. I'm thinking I'm listening to you, Z, and I'm thinking, okay, wow, something so small a phone, right? That's already in everybody's life for you. A year ago you were already were very surprised by that. What was the difference for you coming from an environment in Ghana where you didn't have a phone to now being with your phone every day, even at school, what was the impact? How do you see it now and is there anything, would you wish for it to change back in your home country or would you rather have that aspect of your experience in Ghana coming back here? I'm curious to know.
Z:
That's a really good question though. So a really big difference that's hitting me right now is being able to, that transformation was really quick. I feel like it's really quick and I thought is there environment that I'm in that's changing me? And the negative impact will probably be right now I feel like I'm obsessed with my phone too much.
Lexi:
Yes. We all relate.
Z:
Yeah, especially with those apps. Instagram and TikTok, although I don't use TikTok, but I feel like maybe we got to take a step back and think about it. We're still kids. We're growing up. It's good that we have technology, there's positive and negatives towards that, but as I'm looking at it, I feel like there's more positive towards it. You going traditional way, you think about it, back in the olden days, they didn't have phones, didn't come until later on they were using paper and pencil. Look at how many inventions they've made that we're able to use now. But looking at now, okay, there are some inventions that some people are making, but it's not too much. You got to take a step back, go back to your traditional way, use your brain, step away from AI, try to, yeah…
Justine:
She said AI.
Lydia:
No, I'm really proud to have never used AI on an assignment that is my big flex and the big 2026 as a senior in high school never AI'd an assignment. Well, okay, okay. So if I get stuck on a math problem, I might take a picture of it and be like, so what's going on here Google? And sometimes you know what? Google gets calc wrong. So yeah, AI isn't perfect. Let me tell you.
Justine:
The other thing I like about it is that as you were talking, I was thinking, okay, well we don't have phones. There is more connection. Maybe we are more sensitive to listening to seeing people around us and being more aware of some impacts that we have. What do you think, Lexi, thinking about your story with how you started with a small project in fifth-grade and then now you end up in being part of improving the world with WaterStep, did you think that just being part of that or having a discussion could have impacted you in a way where you feel like you're making positive changes around you?
Lexi:
Yeah, I mean I feel like could have, I mean never imagined that this is to the point it would bring me, but I definitely over time and as I got older, I saw the importance of just saying yes, having those conversations, meeting those people, building your network. It all adds up and you never know where it's going to get you. And most of the time you're going to be surprised and you're going to look back and be like, wow, I'm really, really glad I did that. And WaterStep is most definitely one of those big moments for me, but started as something so small. So I am absolutely grateful for that.
Justine:
Before we continue with our episode, let me take a minute to remind you that By Her Hands is a global program empowering women and girls through safe-water access, menstrual health management and economic opportunity. The program and this podcast are brought to you by WaterStep. Together, we believe that when a young woman can protect her own health, she leads, when she leads her family thrives and when her family thrives, her whole community grows stronger. Learn more about how women and girls are shaping healthier futures, each by her own hands, at WaterStep.org.
Lydia:
And I get that because back in our first episode [https://youtu.be/BwwolhpQRMs?si=_0Qm3eWTzDyKTITj] I talked to, we talked about purpose and I talked about how I felt like my purpose was kind of to serve and I found that through, Z this is fun for you to hear, I found that through a very messy, not even messy, I was just an emotional 15-year-old and I was going through a breakup and that's it. That's the whole story. My whole tragic tale is a boy broke up with me.
Lexi:
It's why she's at WaterStep.
Lydia:
And then I got sad and I was like, I need something to fill my time. And so I ended up doing WaterStep and now I'm sitting here across the table from some awesome people and next to some awesome people too. Justine, don't worry, I did not leave you out even though you're not across from me.
Justine:
Thank you.
Lydia:
I'm currently padding her on the arm, because I have to give audio descriptions. But anyway, and another funny thing is because I did my WaterStep shoe drive, I became friends with my school counselor who does all sorts of nonprofit things in my area. And he got me on the Youth Philanthropy Council and I've done a whole bunch of things to them and I've met the LYPC and Z, you're part of the LYPC. And so everybody's connected, I feel. And just that small thing has changed so much. But when I heard that the topic was something, Nothing Is Small, I wanted to talk about just I feel like what comes to my mind is kindness. No act of kindness is small. And I remember I went from a private school to a public school. My grade was 24 and it is now 404. So pretty big culture shock I would say.
And I remember being terrified of making friends and dead set on, I can't, I'm not going to, I have only have friends at this school because I've known them all since I was four. And going into this new school, everyone's going to have their own groups. I'm never going to talk to anybody. And this girl just came up to me and was so sweet. She was just so sweet and grace, she invited me to sit at her lunch table and to hang out with her and go to the games with her. She told me about all her drama. She told me about her friends, the advice of the kids in our grade, all of everything I needed to know. I didn't go to middle school with any of them. And to this day we are still best friends and I go to visit her at her job and me and everybody at her job are best friends too.
And I really owe, I think my high school success to her because she just came up to me and was so kind. And she was so confident in her kindness. She wasn't sitting there thinking, well, do I really want to talk to her? She came up and all smiles and just lovely and it changed. I'm naturally an extrovert. I'm sure you all can tell from how I talk. I'm not a very shy person. But going into that new school, I was terrified. Terrified and dead silent. And I was like, I have to be prim and proper and wear makeup and not move or say anything or have any opinions. And this girl just opened my shell. And I really think that nothing is small and no act of kindness is small and can just change somebody's life like that. Have you all experienced anything like that?
Z:
Yeah, I have experienced something very, very similar to that. But mine started with when I first moved from Ghana to here, my first middle school, which was my first middle school. So I entered the hallway, the teacher, she took me to the hallway. I was like, wow, what the what?
Lydia:
Because I say I'm complaining about going from Catholic school to public and you're going from Ghana to the United States. That's a big difference.
Z:
I also went to a private school before I moved to here.
So I was in the hallway as I said, what the what? So I just stood there, a big, very big hallway. I was like, never seen something like this before. Class went by, everything went by until gym class. Gym class. We get to gym two girls, this one guy, he still goes to school with me. He's standing there. He was playing this one game and then these two girls, they're making fun of him. I was like, what? If you are in my state coming from a whole different country, you're going to, exactly. You see them in movies. That's what I see. Yeah, I see them first I think bully. So after gym class, he was going my way the same way I was going. So I was like, don't listen to whatever they say, just be yourself. And that moment, because I have seen those things in movies, I didn't really believe in that. I was like, what did I just do?
Lydia:
You were the hero.
Z:
Exactly. I didn't even think of that until I went. And then I saw him this high school, I just saw him. He was like, thank you for what you did. I was like, wow. That act of kindness that I showed, which I thought was nothing to them has been carried away through all those years to him. And now he's thanking me. I was like, wow.
Lydia:
That's incredible.
Z:
Yeah.
Justine:
That's incredible. Absolutely. And what I love about that is that you are staying true to yourself and also Lydia, the story you were sharing with us, it's about following your instincts. It's about knowing that something better could be done and doing it. And it's just powerful for me. Lexi, do you have anything like that? Any story that you want to share?
Lexi:
Yeah, I would say going into high school, I played field hockey and it was picture day, so we're in our uniforms and everything and I'm on the freshman team and I have an older brother, he's two years older. And so these older girls come up to me and they're like, oh, do you want to get a picture? We love your brother. And so it was as simple as them talking to me, making that interaction, taking that picture. It made me feel seen and special and I don't know, just included. And so, from there it clicked that even these girls that were two years older than me in high school and they could have easily brushed me off and not said anything, showed me kindness. And it's truly that simple. And it really did change my whole day and whole outlook on that team. So it was really a positive experience.
Lydia:
My experience my junior year. Okay, this isn't as like, I don't know, this changed me. Let me let me tell you. Junior year I'm feeling great. Sixth-period I'm like, oh my gosh, I feel terrible. I'm going to throw up. I'm like, I feel horrible and I'm going to throw up, run in the hallway, throw up in a trash can in the hallway. I had never thrown up in school ever. And I was real proud of it. I was always the kid who was like, I don't feel well. I'm going to go home. And the minute I get home, I throw up, I hold it in. So I'm throwing up in the hallway and I am disgusted with myself. I can't believe it. It's in a trash can. Let's be clear here. This random girl comes up and starts patting my back. I've never talked to this girl, but she pulls back my hair and she's like, it's okay.
And I'm tearing up. I hate throwing up. Nobody likes it. But when I was little and we didn't know I was gluten-free, I used to throw up all the time and we had no idea why. So I have PTSD when I started knowing I'm going to throw up, but yeah, she just pulled back my hair and rubbed my back and she went in the bathroom and got me a little wet rag to wipe off my vomit-mouth. And it was just so sweet. If I saw someone thrown up in the hallway, I would've thrown up. I would've been like, no, no, I got to get out of here. I can't do it because sensitive like that, you know what, it's vomit. And that's really gross. And I think it's fair for me to want to run away if someone's throwing up. I don't think that's crazy.
But yeah, she just came up to me, never seen or talked to this girl and would just pat my back and helped me out. And at the bell she kind of walked me out and turns out I was very sick and I got real weak and lightheaded and had to be picked up, because I usually drive to school. But yeah, I haven't talked to her since. I never caught her name. But anytime I see her, I just give her the biggest smile and I want to salute her. And if I'm valedictorian by some miracle, which is not happening, it's too late in senior year, then my speech will be to the girl who held my hair when I threw up in AP US history, thank you. Thank you very much. Wow. I thought about that story on my way here and I was like, I'm not going to tell that that's gross. And then I just had to I'm sorry. Sorry if anybody's sensitive to vomit.
Lexi:
We are good. We're good. I'm glad.
Justine:
But that also shows how impactful it was for you, right? Because even though you plan on not telling us the story, you ended up telling us the story, but you still thought about it. But for me listening to all the stories, when you guys are in high school, you are already building your relationships, you are building your experience and you're discovering who you are. It just reminds me of the time where I set up a woman group in my workplace. I was the leader there and there was always that distance between the other women, co-workers and myself. So we ended up chatting and I ended up just being in a habit of visiting the teams and just pulling all the women aside.
And one time one of them came to me and she looked at me, she said, Justine, you have no idea what you're doing because you're up there. We're looking at you. We just expect you to just give us instructions and what to do in our job. But then, you came up to us as women just sharing the same concerns and worries. And it made a big difference because then we realize that the struggle that we are going through, mainly between balancing your work life, your work and your life, it's not something that is just because you're not a leader, it's just something that you carry with you. And having that opportunity to share those concerns with all the other women, it just gives us that confidence and the sense of being part of a group where we can with one word, just address something that happened to you or to any of us in any day. And listening to you guys, I realize that everywhere we are, whether it's in our family at school, at work, or just stopping by to look at someone who's dealing or going through something, I just feel like it's important. It's always important to get up in the morning and realize that it doesn't matter what is happening around me. If I can be kind, I would be doing something small that is actually not small for anyone around me. What about you, Z? Is there anything small that is making your day around you?
Z:
Anything small? I mean this is not small, but it's making up my day since you told me last, the first time you told me about this, it just made my whole entire month because I've never done a podcast. And being able to sit here and speak out what I've been keeping to myself speaking that out, you never know who it could inspire. You're inspiring everyone every time. And that comes to that quote that my teacher always says, every time when we're about to get out of class, he always says, you are worth it and you matter. It is such like some few words, he's like six words you can write on a paper just quick. But looking at it, it has such this deep meaning where if you keep it, you really know what you're going to do and you can figure out who you are. I myself, I've never had a teacher tell me such a thing every time, every day, just, "Goodbye. Have a good day." Okay, yeah, that's good. But having someone care about you saying you are worth it, you matter. It's like they just gave you themselves. It's like a father looking out to this kid every single time they're sleeping. Is this feeling that gives you motivation every single time, every single period, every single second is really wonderful. And I like to pass it on. So anyone listening, you are worth it and you matter, in every second.
Lydia:
That's beautiful.
Z:
Yes.
Lydia:
That was beautiful. I think it's such a simple quote, but I mean if it impacts you, that's why he says it's somebody needs to hear that.
Lexi:
My school actually says a very similar thing. I mean they have it quoted somewhere, but it is along the same lines of you matter, you are more than enough, you are loved. And they say it to us every single Friday, my principal normally says it, and it's really, really impactful if you just stop and take a second.
Lydia:
I mean, I had a sub who said, stay frosty. Does that count? She would bring penguin stuffed animals into class and be like, stay frosty guys. That comes from my love of penguins. I miss her man. Yeah. Does that count? Yeah, it stay frosty. Everybody stay frosty.
Z:
I actually just did a project in that same class about frosty.
Lydia:
Seriously? Yeah. She would bring this penguin, she's like, this is frosty. And she would write on the board, stay frosty. And I mean, I love this woman and she had pink and blue hair. It was great. It was just great.
Z:
So some takeaways I'll say will be probably knowing that you always have people to look up to you, to look out for. So this really stands out to me because I'm someone who's very private. Every small thing, I'm like, no, we're not sharing this. Anything that happens even if it's big. I'm like, no, we're not sharing this. Even to my parents. I think that's just in my blood, I guess. So I think just saying, I need help. Going straight to someone you feel comfortable with. There's always some people there. Yeah, there's some people you don't feel comfortable with, but there's always just one person who stays by you every time. Pats your back. It's okay to just go up to them. I'm not okay. I need this. I think that's just one thing everyone needs that one friend that everyone needs.
Lexi:
I think that's absolutely true. I mean, I think you always have a community, even though you might not feel your school is your community, your home, your friends, there's always going to be somebody that you can turn to. And it's just so weird how something so small can make such an impact on someone. I mean, something that I try to always keep in the back of my mind is the power of saying yes, of being kind to that person of saying yes to get involved. Just those small moments, you never know what they're going to turn out to mean to somebody else.
Lydia:
And I really liked your story. I mean, I shared stories about my friend who helped me transition into school and throwing up. So I told these kind of sillier stories, but I loved yours of being the kind person. Whereas mine was acts of kindness for me. And that just reminded me to be that nice person who someone else talks about on a podcast and that I hope that I can be that person for someone. That's my big takeaway.
Justine:
I love everything you're saying. And for me also, it's that especially as women or young girls, we tend to be shy to shy away from speaking up because we probably want to come and land a hand to someone else.
Or as you said Z, we are shy because we don't want to tell people we're not okay. But from everything that I heard today, it's important to follow your instincts. For me, it's like follow your guts, follow what you're feeling. It's important because we always have something kind. We can change someone's day for the better or just speaking up will allow someone else to help us. And that's very important. You want to say yes to all the opportunities because hearing also Lexi's story is like she said, yes. And today she's part of something bigger, something that is inspiring you and that is making people's lives better. And then listening to you, Lydia. I think you don't know where that kind word, that kind act, that small thing will make you feel better and just change the whole, how you see life in general because you're coming from your PTSD to wow. Just her being there for me just made it a whole different experience and I just love it. There's nothing small, basically. Right? Everything we do has a purpose. Everything we do has an impact. And coming back to your question at the beginning, now I know exactly what the butterfly effect is.
Lydia:
The butterfly effect.
Justine:
Is all about. Yes.
Lydia:
Yeah.
Justine:
You've been listening to the By Her Hands podcast, brought to you by WaterStep. Around the world, girls carry so much responsibility, hope, and the work of caring for their families. WaterStep equips them with tools and training that help them protect their own health, support their schools, and lead change in their communities. When girls have the tools they need, their power isn't something they search for, it is something they carry. Learn more about how girls everywhere are shaping their futures each by her own hands. And if you want to explore more about how the smallest moments can change things for the better for women and girls around the world, visit out WaterStep.org.
Lydia:
Thanks for joining us on the By Her Hands podcast, today. If something small is sticking with you, we hope you pay attention to it. It might be where change starts. Remember, you already carry more power than you think.
Disclaimer:
Listeners are reminded that the ideas, opinions, and information expressed on the By Her Hands podcast, belong solely to the guests and do not necessarily reflect the views, policies, or positions of WaterStep, its staff, partners, donors, or affiliates. This podcast is provided for informational and educational purposes only and is not intended as professional advice of any kind. WaterStep assumes no responsibility for actions taken based on the information provided.
For more information about WaterStep
Website: www.WaterStep.org [http://www.waterstep.org/]