The Pressures of Privilege

Ep35 Ashley D. Varnado—How to Break the Proving Cycle When Achievement Has Become Your Trap

1 h 12 min · 19. touko 2026
jakson Ep35 Ashley D. Varnado—How to Break the Proving Cycle When Achievement Has Become Your Trap kansikuva

Kuvaus

What do you do with a legacy you didn't build in a family that expects you to carry it? In this episode of Pressures of Privilege, host Diana Oehrli sits down with Ashley D. Varnado, former managing director at Bank of America's private bank, where she oversaw $25 billion in assets across 18 markets and became one of the youngest African American female managing directors at the firm. She stepped away from all of it last year, after three strokes at the height of her career. Ashley brings two decades of experience inside the rooms where generational wealth actually gets built and protected. She has sat with families who lost their legacies in a generation by bringing their children into the conversation too late and with inheritors carrying quiet shame for something they never chose. She also lived her own version of that trap, an ambition so relentless it kept moving the finish line until her body stopped her. Together, Diana and Ashley show you how to tell the difference between ambition that builds you and the kind that quietly dismantles you and why the families who get generational wealth right treat it like a second language, starting at the dinner table when children are still small. If you've ever carried the quiet pressure of proving you belong or inherited wealth that feels more like a weight than a gift, this episode was made for you.

Kommentit

0

Ole ensimmäinen kommentoija

Rekisteröidy nyt ja liity The Pressures of Privilege-yhteisöön!

Aloita maksutta

14 vrk ilmainen kokeilu

Kokeilun jälkeen 7,99 € / kuukausi. · Peru milloin tahansa.

  • Podimon podcastit
  • 20 kuunteluaikaa / kuukausi
  • Lataa offline-käyttöön

Kaikki jaksot

91 jaksot

jakson Ep39 Deborah Delaney—How to Answer "Is This It?" When You Already Have Everything You Were Supposed to Want kansikuva

Ep39 Deborah Delaney—How to Answer "Is This It?" When You Already Have Everything You Were Supposed to Want

What do you do with the rest of your life once you already have everything you were taught to want? In this episode of The Pressures of Privilege, host Diana Oehrli sits down with Deborah Delaney, a woman who spent 16 years as a London broker before she woke up one morning, looked out at the beautiful home, the six Arabian horses, the successful business, and the family she had built, and asked herself one quiet question: Is this it for the next 30 years? What followed was an 18-month unwinding of that life and two decades of building an entirely different one, from a hillside in Phuket to a seaside cottage in Wales. Deborah is the founder of Arc Vitae and the philosophy she calls intelligent longevity: living well, with wonder, curiosity, dignity, and emotional vitality intact, for however many years you get. She came to it the hard way. Broking nearly killed her. Her hair was falling out, her skin was breaking down, and a doctor in Singapore gave her an 87% chance of a heart attack. She rebuilt her health studying with a 93rd-generation Thai herbalist, created a detox program that sold into Six Senses, Soneva, and Four Seasons spas for 17 years, and then came home when her mother's Alzheimer's reshaped everything she thought she understood about aging and dignity. Together, Diana and Deborah show you how to build what Deborah calls certainty of self, knowing your own biology, psychology, and identity well enough that when everything around you changes, you still have ground to stand on. They get into why community is the deepest lesson of the Blue Zones, why it can be better to die at 80 and happy than at 100 and miserable, and the piece of advice Deborah's 93-year-old aunt gave her that may be the most practical longevity principle there is: always have something to look forward to, no matter how small. If you have ever stood inside a life that looks complete from the outside and quietly wondered why a part of you keeps asking what now... this episode was made for you.

14. kesä 20261 h 0 min
jakson ”You're American” kansikuva

”You're American”

Where do you belong when every answer feels only partly true? In this solo episode of The Pressures of Privilege, host Diana Oehrli explores the world of adult third culture kids, or ATCKs: people who grew up between their parents' culture and the culture of the country where they lived and formed a third culture of their own. Diana shares what happened when she moved to Gstaad in 2002 and her neighbors called her American, even though her father was Swiss and she grew up steeped in Swiss tradition. Belonging in the valley, she learned, was based on lived experience rather than blood or passport. Even other Swiss people were foreigners there. She also responds to a video warning Black Americans that moving to an African country may not deliver the sense of home they expect and explains why that pull toward somewhere else is so familiar to her from recovery, where it's called "pulling a geographical." You'll learn how to recognize when you're hoping a new place will solve an internal problem and how to build what Stephen Covey called a changeless core: the one thing that crosses every border intact. If you've ever felt like you belong everywhere and nowhere at once, this episode was made for you.

10. kesä 20264 min
jakson Ep38 Araminta Jonsson—How to Stay Faithful to Your Mission When Growth Asks You to Forget Why You Started kansikuva

Ep38 Araminta Jonsson—How to Stay Faithful to Your Mission When Growth Asks You to Forget Why You Started

What happens when the most important healing knowledge in the world stays locked in the rooms of the people who already know it? In this episode of The Pressures of Privilege, host Diana Oehrli sits down with Araminta Jonsson, CEO of Mint Partnership, Executive Director of the Trauma Research Foundation, and the force behind Transform Trauma Oxford, Europe's largest trauma conference, for a conversation about mission, credibility, and what it actually takes to build something that keeps growing without losing what made it worth building in the first place. Araminta came to this work from the inside out. Her own journey through trauma and addiction recovery is what pulled her toward the mental health field, and everything she has built since, from helping thought leaders like Bessel van der Kolk and Gabor Maté carry their research past the conference room door to growing a trauma conference from 750 attendees in year one to thousands gathering in Oxford each autumn, carries that origin inside it. She and Diana dig into the rupture-and-repair principle at the heart of Transform Trauma Oxford's growth, an idea grounded in Ed Tronick's still face experiment: trust is forged through how honestly and how fully you face your mistakes. Together, they show you how to ask the one question that keeps your credibility intact no matter how large your platform grows and what it actually means to find belonging when you've spent your life feeling isolated by something you couldn't name. If you've ever carried the weight of a position that came with strings you didn't choose, or felt the quiet loneliness of building something that looks right from every angle while wondering whether it still belongs to the reason you started it... this episode was made for you.

7. kesä 202650 min
jakson We count the cookware, not the cooking kansikuva

We count the cookware, not the cooking

What if the work that holds your family together has been deliberately erased from the official record? In this solo episode of The Pressures of Privilege, host Diana Oehrli follows a thread from Forbes cast iron sales data to a conversation with her 80-year-old friend Henry in his garden, where seeds and soil count as consumer spending while the labor he puts in every day vanishes from any ledger that matters. Drawing on feminist economics and the trad wife cultural moment, Diana shows you how our systems of value are built on a sustained erasure of domestic and caregiving labor and what it costs when nobody accounts for the work that keeps families whole. You'll come away with language for what has been left off the ledger and a clearer sense of what it would look like for a society to finally start counting right. If you've ever felt that what you actually carry doesn't show up anywhere that matters... this episode was made for you.

2. kesä 20268 min
jakson Ep37 Tyler Osborne—How to Build a Legacy That Lasts When Money Came Without a Roadmap kansikuva

Ep37 Tyler Osborne—How to Build a Legacy That Lasts When Money Came Without a Roadmap

What happens when wealth passes from one generation to the next, but the wisdom doesn't come with it? In this episode of The Pressures of Privilege, host Diana Oehrli sits down with Tyler Osborne, financial educator, podcast host of Money Master, and self-described hope dealer who grew up sleeping on a couch in East San Jose and went on to work at JPMorgan before walking away to build something of his own. Tyler talks about money the way Diana talks about stewardship: like it's a calling, not just a number. And what he's found inside the homes of wealthy families is striking. Not ignorance. Silence. Diana and Tyler trace one of the starkest examples in American financial history: why the Vanderbilts lost everything while the Rockefellers grew richer than they started. The answer starts with a single structural decision most families never make. Together, they show you how to structure generational wealth so it actually survives the transition, and how to build stipulations into trusts that shape the next generation rather than just fund them. If you've ever sat with the quiet fear that the wealth you inherited might not outlast you, or might not reach your children with its meaning intact, this episode was made for you.

1. kesä 202651 min