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Good Company (Issue 3): The Money Issue
Di Grace Bonney
Azioni libro
Inizia a leggere- Editore:
- Workman eBooks
- Pubblicato:
- May 14, 2019
- ISBN:
- 9781579659301
- Formato:
- Libro
Descrizione
This third issue continues Good Company’s mission to provide an energetic and highly stimulating place to connect, learn, grow, and work through the challenges that women across the spectrum experience in pursuing their passions and dreams.
Informazioni sul libro
Good Company (Issue 3): The Money Issue
Di Grace Bonney
Descrizione
This third issue continues Good Company’s mission to provide an energetic and highly stimulating place to connect, learn, grow, and work through the challenges that women across the spectrum experience in pursuing their passions and dreams.
- Editore:
- Workman eBooks
- Pubblicato:
- May 14, 2019
- ISBN:
- 9781579659301
- Formato:
- Libro
Informazioni sull'autore
Correlati a Good Company (Issue 3)
Anteprima del libro
Good Company (Issue 3) - Grace Bonney
@annalynnwatt
Left to right: Cora Harrington, Dr. Taj Anwar Baoll, Walda Laurenceau & Belinda Becker
Why Is Money a Dirty Word?
Group Q & A with Belinda Becker, Cora Harrington, Walda Laurenceau & Dr. Taj Anwar Baoll
By Natalie Pattillo & Kelli Hart Kehler
Illustration by Louisa Bertman
Money—everyone wants it, needs it, makes it, spends it, and thinks about it. But for as dominant (and often unavoidable) of a force in daily life as money is, actually talking about it is an entirely different story.
Talking about money—and what we feel we’re worth—out loud and to other people can feel taboo, or uncomfortable, especially for women, people of color, and other marginalized communities. The reasons behind this are plenty: In some cultures, as Jamaican-raised DJ Belinda Becker has experienced, it is more or less forbidden for women to discuss money. Others, like The Lingerie Addict founder Cora Harrington, recognize this notion is instilled in many of us from a very early age; we’re told when we’re young that it’s rude or impolite to talk about money, salary, and so on.
Oftentimes, when we finally get past that block and start talking about money, we reduce our worth for fear that it will be rejected—by a client, an employer, or our industry. Walda Laurenceau, a licensed acupuncturist and wellness expert, suggests identifying your relationship with money and your distinct skill set to bolster your confidence in commanding your specific rate.
But above all, it’s important to talk about money, implores holistic business owner and motivational speaker Dr. Taj Anwar Baoll, and empower ourselves to change the way we look at needing money from a viewpoint of lacking something. And since the first step to breaking a taboo norm is making it commonplace, these four moneymaking women are here to dispel the myth that money
is a dirty
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