FIRST MOVERS - In Conversation
Trigger Warning: This episode includes discussion of childhood trauma. Please take care while listening. Before the Matildas rose to global recognition…Before tailored uniforms and sold-out stadiums…There was a young girl carrying pain she didn’t choose. In this powerful episode of the First Movers Podcast in partnership with Dina Uniform Group, Trae McGovern shares how childhood trauma shaped her resilience, her creativity, and ultimately her life’s purpose. Football wasn’t just a sport. It was belonging. It was structure. It was oxygen. Trae takes us through the early days of women’s football when funding was thin, visibility thinner, and belief often had to be self-generated. She reflects on the power of family support, the importance of representation, and why the right uniform can transform how an athlete moves through the world. We talk cultural shifts. Sisterhood. Male allies. The courage it takes to speak your story aloud. And the responsibility of legacy. This is a conversation about healing through movement. About becoming a first mover not because it’s easy, but because someone has to go first. And about building pathways wide enough for the next generation to run through. Trae’s early trauma did not define her limits. It sharpened her self-awareness and deepened her empathy. Football became a container for growth, healing, and identity. When women are visible in sport, systems shift. Media coverage, funding, uniforms, and storytelling are not extras. They are levers of change. Trae stands on the shoulders of women who played without resources. Now she builds ladders for those coming next. First movers don’t just break barriers. They reinforce the doorway behind them. 🎯 3 Key Takeaways 1️⃣ Pain Can Become Purpose 2️⃣ Representation Builds Pathways 3️⃣ Legacy Is Collective
21 episodios
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