The Books That Shaped Me

The Books That Shaped Me Featuring Anne Grady

36 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio The Books That Shaped Me Featuring Anne Grady

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Ep. 8 | Anne Grady: Evolvability, the Inner Critic, and Why Your Brain Would Rather Be Predictably Unhappy What happens when the life you planned falls completely apart — and you end up more yourself than you ever would have been otherwise? Anne Grady is a bestselling author, keynote speaker, and resilience expert who has spent two decades learning — the hard way — how to not just survive tough circumstances but actually grow through them. Her son Evan was born with autism, mental illness, and developmental delays, and navigating his world as a single mom became the unlikely foundation for everything she now teaches. In this conversation, Anne and Angie cover a lot of ground: why uncertainty is neurologically threatening, the 15-second trick that rewires your brain, what it means to use your values as a decision filter when the choice feels impossible, and why your resume and your eulogy really shouldn't be the same thing. Anne also unpacks her brand new book Evolvability — and the difference between resilience (surviving) and evolvability (actually growing forward). This episode is packed with neuroscience that doesn't feel like neuroscience, real talk about mental health stigma, and more than a few lines you'll want to write down. Books mentioned: 📚 Evolvability by Anne Grady 📚 Self-Compassion by Kristin Neff 📚 Anchored, Aligned, Accountable by Ayo Bethia 📚 Joyful Prayerful Thankful by Kevin Karschnik Connect with Anne: Website: AnneGradyGroup.com [http://AnneGradyGroup.com] Free adaptability assessment: evolvability.com [http://evolvability.com] Social: @AnneGradyGroup

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8 episodios

episode The Books That Shaped Me Featuring Anne Grady artwork

The Books That Shaped Me Featuring Anne Grady

Ep. 8 | Anne Grady: Evolvability, the Inner Critic, and Why Your Brain Would Rather Be Predictably Unhappy What happens when the life you planned falls completely apart — and you end up more yourself than you ever would have been otherwise? Anne Grady is a bestselling author, keynote speaker, and resilience expert who has spent two decades learning — the hard way — how to not just survive tough circumstances but actually grow through them. Her son Evan was born with autism, mental illness, and developmental delays, and navigating his world as a single mom became the unlikely foundation for everything she now teaches. In this conversation, Anne and Angie cover a lot of ground: why uncertainty is neurologically threatening, the 15-second trick that rewires your brain, what it means to use your values as a decision filter when the choice feels impossible, and why your resume and your eulogy really shouldn't be the same thing. Anne also unpacks her brand new book Evolvability — and the difference between resilience (surviving) and evolvability (actually growing forward). This episode is packed with neuroscience that doesn't feel like neuroscience, real talk about mental health stigma, and more than a few lines you'll want to write down. Books mentioned: 📚 Evolvability by Anne Grady 📚 Self-Compassion by Kristin Neff 📚 Anchored, Aligned, Accountable by Ayo Bethia 📚 Joyful Prayerful Thankful by Kevin Karschnik Connect with Anne: Website: AnneGradyGroup.com [http://AnneGradyGroup.com] Free adaptability assessment: evolvability.com [http://evolvability.com] Social: @AnneGradyGroup

Ayer36 min
episode The Books That Shaped Me featuring Kathy Wetzel artwork

The Books That Shaped Me featuring Kathy Wetzel

Kathy Wetzel is a tech executive, long-time SIM leader, and one of those people who has quietly shaped rooms full of leaders for decades. Armed with both an accounting and computer science degree, her career took her from Honeywell to Great Clips to TASB, the Texas Association of School Board Services, with a few wild pivots in between. This conversation is packed with real leadership wisdom. Kathy breaks down why change management is a people problem first and a technology problem second, why you need to stop chasing the naysayers and win the people in the middle, and why your HR person should be on your speed dial before you ever have a crisis. She also talks about building a personal board of directors, succession planning as a leadership essential, and the books that kept showing up for her at every stage of life and career. Books cited are Don't Sweat the Small Stuff to Crucial Conversations to Who Moved My Cheese, She closes with a perspective on AI that is grounded and hopeful. She has watched every major tech cycle arrive and create more than it displaced. Her take on the jobs that do not exist yet is worth the listen alone. This one is for every leader navigating change they did not sign up for.

19 de jun de 202644 min
episode The Books That Shaped Me featuring Melinda Kay Quiroz artwork

The Books That Shaped Me featuring Melinda Kay Quiroz

What do you do when everything you built — suddenly disappears overnight? That's the real conversation in Episode 6 of The Books That Shaped Me. Melinda Quiroz spent 11 years building a massive insurance book of business. Then, on March 17th, 2026, that chapter ended — without warning, without a choice. She calls it her "captive to called" season. And what she says next stopped me in my tracks: "I truly would have never seen what my true worth was... until I lost it all." If you've ever poured your whole self into something — your job, your business, your title — and then had it taken away, this episode is for you. We talk about: * Why your gaping hole might actually be cleared space * The "upper limit problem" from The Big Leap by Gay Hendricks * Ella Langley's Dandelion album and why Melinda says it was made for this season * What it means to rebuild — and why rebuilding is NOT failure

12 de jun de 202643 min