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Everyday Bias, revisited: A father, a son, and the work of honoring humanity with Howard Ross

48 min · 18. mai 2026
episode Everyday Bias, revisited: A father, a son, and the work of honoring humanity with Howard Ross cover

Beskrivelse

What if belonging is not a program or slogan, but the daily discipline of honoring humanity even when the cultural winds shift against it? In this episode of I Know I Belong When, Christopher sits down with Howard J. Ross, writer, facilitator, meditation teacher, musician, and one of the most influential voices on unconscious bias and belonging alive today. Howard is the author of Everyday Bias and Our Search for Belonging, and he is co-writing the second edition of Everyday Bias with his son, Jake Ross, who joins the show next week in part two of this father-and-son series. Howard reflects on the regressive moment the field is facing, the places belonging work has missed the mark, and the patience required to sustain authentic leadership over decades. He shares the story of his grandfather Samuel Bulmash, who escaped the pogroms of Ukraine and helped found the Baltimore NAACP. He revisits the Nancy Neal moment that first taught him what a sense of belonging at work feels like, the day in Jackson, Mississippi, that reshaped how he shows up as a white practitioner, and the father-to-colleague shift with Jake that transformed both their work and relationship. If you have been searching for language for belonging, this episode is a masterclass. Must-hear insights and key moments * Why progress in inclusive culture often moves three steps forward and two steps back * What Howard learned from his grandfather about responsibility, legacy, and honoring humanity * The Nancy Neil moment that first showed Howard what workplace belonging looks like in practice * The day in Jackson, Mississippi, that changed how Howard approaches belonging work * Why the next edition of Everyday Bias had to address artificial intelligence, social media, and algorithms * How the father-to-colleague pivot with Jake shows strategic inclusion beginning at home Howard’s standout quotes * “This is going to be a long haul, and it is always going to be three steps forward, two steps back.” * “Terrible things can happen, and you have a responsibility to do something about it.” * “When we can see the humanity in each other, the difference becomes additive.” * “I am not going to relate to you in this project as my son. I am going to relate to you as my colleague.” * “Everybody needs a tribe. We have to create that bigger tent if we expect to see the change we are working on.” * “I know I belong when I can be fully myself, when I can show up without having to worry that being me is going to exclude me or make my voice not matter.” Why this episode matters Belonging is the outcome of the disciplined work of honoring humanity. In a moment when inclusive culture work faces increasing backlash, Howard offers perspective grounded in history, cognitive science, and more than fifty years of practice. Whether you are rethinking people experience strategy, navigating belonging in remote teams, or wrestling with belonging versus inclusion, this episode offers language, clarity, and direction. Who should listen This episode is for HR and people leaders, DEI practitioners, executives, founders, managers of remote and hybrid teams, educators, and storytellers committed to creating belonging at work through authentic leadership and strategic inclusion. If you have ever wondered what it takes to sustain belonging across a lifetime of practice, Howard Ross offers one of the clearest answers you will hear. An Innovation Unbiased Production https://www.iknowibelongwhen.com/about-the-show [https://www.iknowibelongwhen.com/about-the-show]

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44 Episoder

episode Accessibility never meant lowering the bar: The win-win case for inclusion with Daniel Hodges cover

Accessibility never meant lowering the bar: The win-win case for inclusion with Daniel Hodges

What if everything you have been told about accessibility, inclusion, and the so-called trade-off between doing good and doing well is wrong? In this episode of I Know I Belong When, host Christopher Bylone sits down with Daniel Hodges — lawyer by training, nonprofit founder by calling, and living proof that when someone tells you no road exists, that is simply the opening line of your comeback story. As a kid, Daniel was functionally illiterate. A so-called Blindness Professional once told him the best he could hope for was canning chairs for a living. He went on to earn multiple advanced degrees, launch the Pieces of Me Foundation while still in law school, and build a career dismantling the false paradigm that organizations must choose between accessibility and profit, inclusion and merit. Daniel lives with blindness, chronic pain, anxiety, and depression, and he refuses to let any of those define his ceiling. His story gives listeners new language for belonging — language rooted in lived experience, authentic leadership, and the conviction that strategic inclusion is not charity, it is good design. Whether you are an HR leader exploring how to create a sense of belonging at work, a manager rethinking belonging in remote teams, or an executive curious about belonging vs inclusion, this conversation delivers practical insight inside one of the most powerful comeback stories you will hear this year. Must-hear insights and key moments * The false paradigm myth: why accessibility and profit, inclusion and merit, were never meant to be opposing forces * Build with, not for: how co-designing alongside disabled people produces human-centered innovation no one expected * The professor moment: how one law professor's email redefined Daniel's understanding of inclusive culture and what it means to truly belong in a room of high standards * High standards plus human kindness: why lowering the bar is not inclusion, and what authentic leadership actually requires * Invisible disabilities and the toughness tax: how chronic pain, anxiety, and depression shaped Daniel's identity differently than blindness ever did * Calling people in, not calling them out: the mindset Daniel brings into every room that is not yet ready for him Daniel's standout quotes * "I try to help organizations find a way to break free of the false paradigm that makes them believe they have to choose between accessibility and profit, inclusion and merit." * "I do not want to succeed based on somebody's pity. I want to succeed and fail based on how I show up, based on my gifts and talents." * "Even failure is an opportunity to grow." * "We focus on calling people in rather than calling them out, and meeting people where they are." * "So often we are judged not by our own capabilities, but by other people's perceptions." * "I know I belong when I am able to compete and show up and be judged on my gifts and talents, my successes, my failures — not based on bias, not based on barriers, but based on my ability to compete on a level playing field." Why this episode matters This conversation reframes accessibility not as a cost center, not as a charitable add-on, though as the foundation of strategic inclusion and human-centered innovation. Daniel gives leaders, people practitioners, and culture-builders the language they have been searching for to talk about belonging vs inclusion — with clarity, credibility, and lived authority. For anyone serious about building belonging in workplaces and remote teams, Daniel offers a model that is sustainable, repeatable, and rooted in dignity. Who should listen This episode is for HR leaders, IDEA practitioners, people experience designers, and managers actively asking how to create a sense of belonging at work. It is for executives wrestling with the business case for accessibility. It is for disability advocates who want an honest first-person story about navigating school, work, and parenting through chronic pain and invisible disability. And it is for leaders committed to creating belonging at work that does not lower the bar — it raises everyone over it. An Innovation Unbiased Production https://www.iknowibelongwhen.com/about-the-show [https://www.iknowibelongwhen.com/about-the-show]

8. juni 202637 min
episode The authentic leader asks 'Is this it?': Choosing heart over armor with Katherine Dudtschak cover

The authentic leader asks 'Is this it?': Choosing heart over armor with Katherine Dudtschak

"What does authentic leadership look like when the person in the corner office decides that the boldest move available is telling the truth about who she is? In this episode of I Know I Belong When, host Christopher Bylone sits down with Katherine Dudtschak, former president and CEO of Home Equity Bank and former executive vice president at RBC, to explore what happens when more than thirty years of elite corporate performance meet a choice to integrate rather than fragment. Katherine is the creator of the Sincerely framework and a conscious leadership advisor who guides executives and founders from survival-based identity to essence-led leadership. She serves the leader who has the title, the resume, the followers, and is still quietly asking, "Is this it?" In this conversation, Katherine walks listeners through the moment she publicly came out as a woman in front of 80,000 colleagues while still in executive leadership, and what that decision unlocked for her, the people around her, and the culture she helped shape. She speaks plainly about command-and-control giving way to heart-centered leadership, vulnerability as strategic power, and why an inclusive culture is built from the inside of the leader outward. This is a master class in authentic leadership, workplace belonging, and the cost of leading from armor rather than essence. Must-hear insights and key moments * Why heart-centered leadership creates psychological safety that policies alone cannot deliver * The Sincerely framework explained: holding space for human stories so others find language for their own becoming * How vulnerability operates as a strategic asset for senior leaders, and what shifted when employees began trusting Katherine with their stories * The three layers of identity Katherine names: essential self, physical and inherited self, and lived experience self * Why the future of work favors regenerative leaders over performative ones, and what that means for building belonging in remote and hybrid teams * The five points Katherine wants every executive quietly fragmenting in a corner office to hear before their next decision * What it takes to bring your whole self to work, and why belonging to yourself first is the foundation for every other room you enter Katherine's standout quotes * "I'm a human being. I'm a human being first and foremost." * "Opening your heart and being vulnerable is a gift. It's not a weakness." * "It is moving forward in the face of profound, crippling fear because you're trying to be true to something deep within you." * "No human journey to wholeness happens in thirty seconds or thirty minutes or thirty days." * "There's a better world available to us. One that is truly inclusive from a place of kindness and curiosity." * "The best is yet to come." * "I know I belong when I find self-love within me." Why this episode matters This conversation gives leaders practical language for belonging in the workplace at a moment when teams are tired of performance and ready for presence. Katherine names the cost of fragmentation, the power of vulnerability, and the difference between inclusive culture as policy and inclusive culture as practice. For anyone navigating belonging vs inclusion, this is a first-person blueprint grounded in real executive experience. Who should listen CEOs and senior leaders are asking whether the title is enough. HR and people experience practitioners building strategic inclusion programs and seeking stories that land beyond the slide deck. DEI consultants, founders, and team managers are learning how to create a sense of belonging at work. Coaches and conscious leadership advisors are developing their own frameworks. If you are leading a company, a team, or yourself through a season asking more of you than you thought you had, this one is for you." An Innovation Unbiased Production https://www.iknowibelongwhen.com/about-the-show [https://www.iknowibelongwhen.com/about-the-show]

1. juni 202631 min
episode Everyday Bias, rewritten: AI, attention, and the next generation with Jake Ross cover

Everyday Bias, rewritten: AI, attention, and the next generation with Jake Ross

Last week, you met the father. This week, meet the son who did not just inherit a mission. He built his own lane inside of it. In this episode of I Know I Belong When, Christopher sits down with Jake Ross, founder and CEO of Belong Together, banjo player, former COO of an AI startup, and co-author of the second edition of Everyday Bias with his father, Howard J. Ross. Jake holds a bachelor's degree from UC Berkeley in interdisciplinary studies, a master's in applied positive psychology from the University of Pennsylvania, and a thesis called Building Belonging that reads more like a mission statement than an academic paper. In part two of this father-and-son series, Jake brings the next-generation vantage point. His chapters in the new edition of Everyday Bias take on what most belonging conversations still avoid: the attention economy, the algorithms that decide what we see, and the emotional relationships people are quietly forming with artificial intelligence. Jake describes it all honestly, as someone who has sat on both sides of the question. Jake also opens up about the recovery community that first showed him what belonging feels like when you cannot earn it, and the friends who see him so completely that his identity stays steady in any room. If last week's conversation offered a half-century of perspective, this one offers the map forward. Must-hear insights and key moments: * How a recovery community in California taught Jake what a real sense of belonging at work and in life actually feels like * Why the death of the public third place matters more now than it did when Robert Putnam first wrote about it * What the attention economy is costing us, and how algorithms quietly engineer outrage on every side of the political spectrum * The hidden cost of non-belonging inside tech teams, and why isolated builders tend to create isolating systems * Jake's father-to-colleague moment from his side of the table, and why it changed how he shows up professionally * Why the Lego collection, the banjo, and the fire dancing are not side quests; they are the practice of authentic leadership in full expression Jake's standout quotes: * "Belonging is not about being good enough to be in a group. It comes when you and those around you decide that you belong, simply because you do." * "When the people building those systems are lonely and not connected to their broader self, the influences of that loneliness get baked into the algorithms." * "Who we are paints the glasses." * "If I can help one person feel like they really matter, that is my life's work in action." * "I know I belong when the world around me celebrates my desire to be in full expression." Why this episode matters: Belonging is not a soft concept, and it is not an HR initiative. It is the infrastructure of how humans show up at work, with each other, and online. Jake offers the next-generation view on what is shifting under our feet: algorithms trained to agree with us, a tech industry building interpersonal products from inside deep isolation, and a culture slowly losing its public third places. His work bridges positive psychology research and practical human-centered innovation. If you lead a remote team, a product team, or an inclusive culture strategy, Jake names what the next five years will actually require. Who should listen: This episode is for founders and product leaders thinking seriously about bias baked into AI systems, people leaders designing inclusive culture for a hybrid and AI-augmented workplace, DEI practitioners looking for fresh language on belonging versus inclusion, positive psychology students and practitioners, HR and people experience strategists navigating belonging in remote teams, and anyone raising, mentoring, or working alongside the next generation of leaders. If last week Howard gave you the long view, this week Jake gives you the fieldwork. An Innovation Unbiased Production https://www.iknowibelongwhen.com/about-the-show [https://www.iknowibelongwhen.com/about-the-show]

25. mai 202656 min
episode Everyday Bias, revisited: A father, a son, and the work of honoring humanity with Howard Ross cover

Everyday Bias, revisited: A father, a son, and the work of honoring humanity with Howard Ross

What if belonging is not a program or slogan, but the daily discipline of honoring humanity even when the cultural winds shift against it? In this episode of I Know I Belong When, Christopher sits down with Howard J. Ross, writer, facilitator, meditation teacher, musician, and one of the most influential voices on unconscious bias and belonging alive today. Howard is the author of Everyday Bias and Our Search for Belonging, and he is co-writing the second edition of Everyday Bias with his son, Jake Ross, who joins the show next week in part two of this father-and-son series. Howard reflects on the regressive moment the field is facing, the places belonging work has missed the mark, and the patience required to sustain authentic leadership over decades. He shares the story of his grandfather Samuel Bulmash, who escaped the pogroms of Ukraine and helped found the Baltimore NAACP. He revisits the Nancy Neal moment that first taught him what a sense of belonging at work feels like, the day in Jackson, Mississippi, that reshaped how he shows up as a white practitioner, and the father-to-colleague shift with Jake that transformed both their work and relationship. If you have been searching for language for belonging, this episode is a masterclass. Must-hear insights and key moments * Why progress in inclusive culture often moves three steps forward and two steps back * What Howard learned from his grandfather about responsibility, legacy, and honoring humanity * The Nancy Neil moment that first showed Howard what workplace belonging looks like in practice * The day in Jackson, Mississippi, that changed how Howard approaches belonging work * Why the next edition of Everyday Bias had to address artificial intelligence, social media, and algorithms * How the father-to-colleague pivot with Jake shows strategic inclusion beginning at home Howard’s standout quotes * “This is going to be a long haul, and it is always going to be three steps forward, two steps back.” * “Terrible things can happen, and you have a responsibility to do something about it.” * “When we can see the humanity in each other, the difference becomes additive.” * “I am not going to relate to you in this project as my son. I am going to relate to you as my colleague.” * “Everybody needs a tribe. We have to create that bigger tent if we expect to see the change we are working on.” * “I know I belong when I can be fully myself, when I can show up without having to worry that being me is going to exclude me or make my voice not matter.” Why this episode matters Belonging is the outcome of the disciplined work of honoring humanity. In a moment when inclusive culture work faces increasing backlash, Howard offers perspective grounded in history, cognitive science, and more than fifty years of practice. Whether you are rethinking people experience strategy, navigating belonging in remote teams, or wrestling with belonging versus inclusion, this episode offers language, clarity, and direction. Who should listen This episode is for HR and people leaders, DEI practitioners, executives, founders, managers of remote and hybrid teams, educators, and storytellers committed to creating belonging at work through authentic leadership and strategic inclusion. If you have ever wondered what it takes to sustain belonging across a lifetime of practice, Howard Ross offers one of the clearest answers you will hear. An Innovation Unbiased Production https://www.iknowibelongwhen.com/about-the-show [https://www.iknowibelongwhen.com/about-the-show]

18. mai 202648 min
episode Silence is not neutral: Moral courage and inclusive leadership with Mike Davis cover

Silence is not neutral: Moral courage and inclusive leadership with Mike Davis

What does it really take to create belonging in the workplace when pressure rises, resistance shows up, and silence feels safer than speaking up? In this episode of I Know I Belong When…, host Christopher Bylone sits down with Mike Davis, a global diversity and inclusion executive with nearly three decades of experience navigating the hardest conversations organizations avoid. This is not a surface-level conversation about inclusion. It is an honest exploration of moral courage, authentic leadership, and what it means to build inclusive culture when the stakes are real. Mike brings storytelling, lived experience, and deep credibility to a topic leaders are struggling to name. Through personal reflection and professional insight, this episode gives listeners language for belonging and clarity on why silence in leadership is never neutral. From white male allyship to accountability without shame, from psychological safety to trust repair, this conversation reframes workplace belonging as the outcome of strategic inclusion, not a feel-good initiative. If you are searching for another word for belong, questioning how love and belonging needs show up at work, or wondering how to create a sense of belonging at work in uncertain times, this episode offers both language and direction. Must-Hear Insights and Key Moments * Why silence in leadership reinforces existing power structures * What white male allyship requires beyond private support * How inclusive cultures fail when moral courage disappears * The difference between performative inclusion and strategic inclusion * Why trust is the real currency of workplace belonging * How leaders can hold people accountable without public harm * What psychological safety actually looks like in practice Mike’s Standout Quotes * “Silence is not neutrality. Silence supports the system that already exists.” * “Belonging starts with feeling safe to be who you are and safe to make a mistake.” * “If leaders hesitate publicly, they lose the trust of the people who need them most.” * “This work is about culture change, not slogans or posters.” * “You cannot build trust if people believe leadership will disappear when pressure shows up.” * “Accountability without learning is punishment, not leadership.” * “Belonging is sustained through engagement, not intention.” Why This Episode Matters Organizations are searching for how to build belonging at work while navigating backlash, fatigue, and fear. This episode reframes workplace belonging as a people experience rooted in trust, courage, and consistency. Mike Davis challenges leaders to move beyond hesitation and shows why inclusive culture requires visible commitment, not quiet agreement. It offers language, clarity, and responsibility at a moment when many organizations are retreating. Who Should Listen This episode is for HR leaders, DEI practitioners, executives, people managers, and team leaders responsible for creating belonging in the workplace. It is especially relevant for those rebuilding trust after organizational harm, sustaining inclusion under pressure, or navigating belonging in remote teams. If you are looking for practical insight on authentic leadership, creating belonging at work, and building a true sense of belonging beyond policies and programs, this conversation will challenge and equip you. An Innovation Unbiased Production https://www.iknowibelongwhen.com/about-the-show [https://www.iknowibelongwhen.com/about-the-show]

11. mai 202635 min