Your Calling is Calling? Are you on mute? | DFS 396
Destined For SuccessApril 27, 2026x
396
36:5650.71 MB

Your Calling is Calling? Are you on mute? | DFS 396

Get all the inside secrets and tools you need to help you develop your intuitive and leadership skills so you are on the path to the highest level of success with ease. Strong communication skills—especially in public speaking—are built through early practice, emotional expression, and the courage to use your voice in meaningful ways. Jackie Bailey shares valuable information!

In this episode you will learn:

  • Early exposure builds lifelong confidence
  • Unexpressed emotions can impact communication and health
  • Your voice is a skill that can be developed

About Jackie:

Jackie Bailey is The International Conversation Coach. She inspires clients to speak with significance, triumph over trauma, and champion their challenges.

Jackie is:

• Founder and executive director of The Speak Feed Lead Project

• Cohost of In the Groove with Todd and Jackie podcast

• Author/contributor of 7 books on topics ranging from leadership, healing, communication, and parenting.

• A TEDx speaker, has been featured on SPEAK in New York, and a 2015 semi-finalist in The World Championship of Public Speaking putting her in the top 98 of 33,000 competitors.

• An international award-winning team-builder, educator, leader, and coach.

Contact Jackie:

You can find her at www.JackieBailey360.com

Social Media Links

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jackie.bailey2

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/speakfeedlead/?hl=en

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jackie-bailey-4532287/

X: https://x.com/SELFishBowl

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-UK77I3lt7K2X64e6UXX0g

TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@jackiespeakfeedle?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc

If you are ready to start reaching your goals instead of simply dreaming about it, start today with 12minutegift.com!

Grab your FREE meditation: Reduce Your Anxiety MEDITATION

Are you ready to tiptoe into your intuition and tap into your soul’s message? Let’s talk

Listen in as Jennifer Takagi, founder of Takagi Consulting, Certified High Performance Coach, 5X time Amazon.Com Best Selling-Author, Certified Soul Care Coach, Certified Jack Canfield Success Principle Trainer, Certified Professional Behavioral Analyst and Facilitator of the DISC Behavioral Profiles, Certified Change Style Indicator Facilitator, Law of Attraction Practitioner, and Certified Coaching Specialist - leadership entrepreneur, speaker and trainer, shares the lessons she’s learned along the way. Each episode is designed to give you the tools, ideas, and inspiration to lead with integrity. Humor is a big part of Jennifer’s life, so expect a few puns and possibly some sarcasm. Tune in for a motivational guest, a story or tips to take you even closer to that success you’ve been coveting. Please share the episodes that inspired you the most and be sure to leave a comment.

Official Website: http://www.jennifertakagi.com

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jennifertakagi/

Facebook: facebook.com/takagiconsulting

I look forward to connecting with you soon,

Jennifer Takagi

Speaker, Trainer, Author, Energy Healer

PS: We would love to hear from you! For questions, coaching, or to book interviews, please email my team at Jennifer@takagiconsulting.com

Unknown:

Welcome to Destin for success. I'm your host, Jennifer

Unknown:

Takagi, and today you have a pleasure of meeting my friend

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Jackie Bailey. And Jackie and I originally met in person, I

Unknown:

believe it was at a speaker's Playhouse live event, and then

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we've met at various events over the years and online quite a

Unknown:

bit. Jackie, thanks for being here today.

Jackie Bailey:

Hey, Jennifer, it's great to be here with you.

Jackie Bailey:

And I think we met in Dallas. Is that? Does that sound right? I

Jackie Bailey:

think that might be right. I think it

Unknown:

was Dallas, yeah. And then did we meet New Orleans

Unknown:

too?

Jackie Bailey:

We might have Yeah, probably

Unknown:

New Orleans also, yeah. So hey, if you pay attention,

Unknown:

you can go places

Jackie Bailey:

and meet cool people. That's right, as I have

Jackie Bailey:

done many times.

Unknown:

It's so fun. So Jackie, you've got multiple things going

Unknown:

on. The one thing I love is your speak lead feed, where a lot of

Unknown:

your attention goes to helping young people speak. And I want

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to talk about that a little bit, and I want to talk about your

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upcoming challenge. But three of my great nieces went to a public

Unknown:

school here in Oklahoma, but it's fairly small in comparison.

Unknown:

And starting in pre K, I think it's once a week, they have the

Unknown:

corral, and all the kids come to the auditorium, and every week,

Unknown:

a grade gets up and they do something on the stage in front

Unknown:

of the whole school. Wow. And then as they age, then they

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rotate around which kid takes the mic, but at some point,

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every single child in that school has stood on the stage in

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front of the whole school and taken the mic. And I thought

Unknown:

that was spectacular, because, as we both know, public speaking

Unknown:

is one of the biggest fears people have death, public

Unknown:

speaking and moving, building a house, I think are like the top

Unknown:

three, and it doesn't have to be that hard and that scary. And I

Unknown:

love the fact that my three great nieces, like grew up

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having to take the stage. Then they all were cheerleaders and

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in dance, and in dance, you're taking the stage. So I love the

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fact that they had this big experience. Fast Forward, one of

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my nephews called one day and said, I have to give a

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presentation at work, and it's going to be at the owner manager

Unknown:

meeting, and I'm really scared. And it was how I turned my store

Unknown:

around. And so I don't know what to do. Will you help me? And I

Unknown:

only have, I have 15 minutes to tell my story, and I'm really

Unknown:

scared about it. I don't know what to do. I don't public

Unknown:

speak, but you do. And I said, Well, I'm traveling a lot. I'm

Unknown:

not going to be able to help you. Let me find somebody who

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can. But if you can get your little talk put together, and I

Unknown:

say little because of the time, not the importance, but the

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direction, if you can get that put together, you can practice

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it enough that you feel pretty confident when you take the

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stage, but the confidence comes from knowing the material and

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what you want to say in what order, and you'll be fine. So I

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found him a three day workshop that the company would pay for.

Unknown:

I found him a two day workshop, and I found him somebody locally

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who charged something minimal, like $50 an hour to help you put

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your presentation together and practice it. And he said they'll

Unknown:

pay for whatever. So I got all the information together,

Unknown:

because that was the best I could do, and got him all the

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information.

Jackie Bailey:

Guess what? Hand? Let me guess he didn't follow

Jackie Bailey:

through or do anything about it,

Unknown:

and he quit his job so he didn't have to go give the

Unknown:

talk.

Jackie Bailey:

Oh my gosh, wow. Is that really the reason he

Jackie Bailey:

quit?

Unknown:

I'm sure he threw something else in there, but on

Unknown:

the list, he didn't tell them that, but he did tell me that I

Unknown:

couldn't do it, and so I I don't say that to shame him, because I

Unknown:

you know, y'all probably aren't going to guess who it is. But I

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say that because public speaking is part of our lives, and we

Unknown:

have various formats and ways of doing it. And I hear people

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complain about zoom, and I'm like, Oh my gosh, I've made some

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really great connections on Zoom, and it was just a matter

Unknown:

of time till we could meet in person. And it doesn't bother me

Unknown:

at all. I am an extreme extrovert, but I can sit in my

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house in this camera for days on end. I don't even go get the

Unknown:

mail like, it's like, oh, that's just too much trouble. Right

Unknown:

walk to the end of the driveway. I don't even have a. Large

Unknown:

driveway, but you do, and some people are scared to get on

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camera, on Zoom or to speak, so the fact that you have an

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emphasis, probably not your only emphasis, but an emphasis on

Unknown:

children or younger people, and getting them talking and

Unknown:

speaking is amazing. So kudos to you for that.

Jackie Bailey:

Thanks, Jennifer. And I'm excited to know that

Jackie Bailey:

there are schools in Oklahoma that are getting these kids,

Jackie Bailey:

kids on stages really early. I mean, you said pre K, that's

Jackie Bailey:

that's really cool, because what I have learned is kids are

Jackie Bailey:

inadvertently told to be quiet or to not speak up. I think, you

Jackie Bailey:

know, parents are doing the best they can, but we do say things

Jackie Bailey:

to our kids sometimes that make them less comfortable to speak

Jackie Bailey:

up. And so when they get opportunity to do it and learn

Jackie Bailey:

to be comfortable doing it, that's a big deal, because we

Jackie Bailey:

want our kids to feel comfortable sharing what they're

Jackie Bailey:

feeling or sharing that they're uncomfortable with a person that

Jackie Bailey:

maybe they see every day, or we want them to be able to come to

Jackie Bailey:

us when they're making a big decision about something that

Jackie Bailey:

could be detrimental for them. And so if we on purpose or by

Jackie Bailey:

accident, make them not want to come to us, not want to speak up

Jackie Bailey:

when they need to. It's it could be a bad thing, and I think

Jackie Bailey:

that's where that fear comes from, is in somebody's past,

Jackie Bailey:

they've been judged or ridiculed by something they've said, and

Jackie Bailey:

it's just now too scary to actually speak up, and they'd

Jackie Bailey:

rather just not say anything. And then, and then we have our

Jackie Bailey:

devices today that have not done us any favors when it comes to

Jackie Bailey:

learning how to communicate better, because everything's,

Jackie Bailey:

you know, everything's texting. In fact, I asked one of my young

Jackie Bailey:

students, when she's 14 at the time, I think I asked her to

Jackie Bailey:

tell me what her greatest fear was at this time in her life, at

Jackie Bailey:

the age of 14, and she said, it's having to talk on the

Jackie Bailey:

phone. And I said that was her biggest fear. And she was

Jackie Bailey:

serious. She said, Yeah, I had to call. I put my skis into a

Jackie Bailey:

repair shop to be repaired for me, and I had to call them back

Jackie Bailey:

to check on the progress, and I just couldn't do it. It was just

Jackie Bailey:

so scary. It's a big deal for kids, and so I am delighted.

Unknown:

First doctor's appointment. I can't remember

Unknown:

who says their mom was like, make your own doctor's

Unknown:

appointment.

Jackie Bailey:

I know, yeah, that would that would just be

Jackie Bailey:

too frightening for most of the kids today to even consider.

Jackie Bailey:

That's just too much.

Unknown:

It's too much. Well, I was shocked. I had to make a

Unknown:

doctor's appointment. I was like, a senior in high school,

Unknown:

maybe. And I was like, Mom, we don't even have a doctor who we

Unknown:

didn't go to the doctor who did we go to? And she gave me the

Unknown:

name, and I went, and I had a job, and I had a checkbook, and

Unknown:

they said it'll be X amount of dollars for the visit and the

Unknown:

treatment. I had a wart on my hand. I needed burned off. And

Unknown:

years later, I found out I was on their insurance, their health

Unknown:

insurance, all the way through college, and I didn't even know.

Unknown:

My mom was like, Well, you're in charge of that. Take care of

Unknown:

yours. I mean, I don't think she did it, like, intentionally. Oh,

Unknown:

I'm not going to tell her. I think it just didn't, well, make

Unknown:

your own doctor's appointment, do your thing. So, very

Unknown:

different approaches, but technology is technology,

Unknown:

whether it's talking on a telephone or a zoom or, you

Unknown:

know, however that a microphone, you know, somebody hand you the

Unknown:

mic, you say yes, kind of thing, but you have to practice, you

Unknown:

have to learn it. And I love that you work with people and

Unknown:

help guide them to being able to do it better. And I've been at

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events where you were one of the coaches giving feedback, and

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it's always spot on, clear, concise, direct, and you know,

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we need that, and they need to be able to to speak and

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articulate what's going on. I had a conversation with somebody

Unknown:

and they have a loved one or a friend, a friend's loved one has

Unknown:

cancer, and they said, Oh, I don't think the doctors are

Unknown:

doing very well, and I don't think they're taking good care

Unknown:

of this person. And I said, The problem is, if somebody's given

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bad news, sometimes their brain just shuts off and they don't

Unknown:

hear the rest of it. So do they really have a bad doctor, or did

Unknown:

they just hear part of the information? Because I've

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watched that in my own life, and I'm like, Wait, that's not what

Unknown:

they said. I was there. So it's that whole community.

Unknown:

Communication piece, whether you're a listener receiving the

Unknown:

information or the speaker sharing the information, right?

Jackie Bailey:

Well? And it could be that the doctor doesn't

Jackie Bailey:

communicate very well. I exactly it could be. It could be

Jackie Bailey:

happening in both situations, there both sides of the

Jackie Bailey:

situation, but, yeah, I mean, if we can't communicate with

Jackie Bailey:

someone comfortably, we're in big trouble, because our voice

Jackie Bailey:

really is that mechanical part of our system that allows us to

Jackie Bailey:

share what we need to share, whether it's information,

Jackie Bailey:

whether it's feelings, you know, whether we're protecting

Jackie Bailey:

somebody else. I mean, we have to be able to speak up.

Jackie Bailey:

Communication is not optional. No matter what language you

Jackie Bailey:

speak, you have to be able to share. And so when we are sort

Jackie Bailey:

of shut down or quieted or silenced, or something like

Jackie Bailey:

that. It can, at least for me, it can change us

Jackie Bailey:

physiologically, who we are. It makes us doubt that we have

Jackie Bailey:

anything important to say, and literally, can make us sick. I

Jackie Bailey:

know a lot of people who have voiced the idea that they

Jackie Bailey:

started developing problems with their throat or with their voice

Jackie Bailey:

or even their stomach when they were holding things in because

Jackie Bailey:

they were afraid to say it. In fact, it was years ago. Bernie

Jackie Bailey:

Mindel. Bernie Mindel, he's an MD. He wrote a book called Love

Jackie Bailey:

medicine, miracles. I don't Bernie Siegel. Bernie Siegel,

Jackie Bailey:

that was his name. He wrote a he wrote a book Love medicine and

Jackie Bailey:

miracles, and he talked about cancer. He was, he was treating

Jackie Bailey:

people with cancer, and in almost all of these cases, it

Jackie Bailey:

was because they were holding on to something and it was

Jackie Bailey:

affecting an organ in their body because of what was needed to

Jackie Bailey:

say. And one example was a man with stomach cancer, and he was

Jackie Bailey:

on his deathbed, and Dr Siegel just said, You know what you

Jackie Bailey:

need to tell your family how you feel about them, because you're

Jackie Bailey:

this is the last chance to communicate. And when he did,

Jackie Bailey:

when he was able to have each of his children come in the room

Jackie Bailey:

and vocalize to them that he was proud of them, that he loved

Jackie Bailey:

them, and and even share some secrets that he'd never told

Jackie Bailey:

them He healed the cancer actually went away. And so it

Jackie Bailey:

was living proof that when we hold things in and we don't

Jackie Bailey:

communicate, it can literally make us sick. So communication

Jackie Bailey:

is absolutely, ultimately important for our health as

Jackie Bailey:

well. So well

Unknown:

it is, and we share that information like you say,

Unknown:

sometimes the doctor doesn't have, you know, the best

Unknown:

communication skills. Sometimes we don't ask the right

Unknown:

questions. Like, oh, a friend of mine's dad had been ill, and she

Unknown:

and I talked multiple times on Wait, what about this? What

Unknown:

about this? What about this? We had all the questions, but is

Unknown:

her parents were of the generation that you don't

Unknown:

question the medical profession. They're the experts. They were

Unknown:

not. They did a terrible job in that particular case. So it was

Unknown:

a matter of communication. They didn't feel comfortable asking

Unknown:

those questions and bringing up the information. But to

Unknown:

backtrack a little bit, how did you become so passionate about

Unknown:

this? Because I love that this is your arena and area. But how,

Unknown:

how did you end up in this? I mean, like I ended up in my

Unknown:

stuff, just by happenstance, and one thing led to another. I

Unknown:

didn't just like, wake up and say, oh, I want to have a

Unknown:

podcast one day. I just right,

Jackie Bailey:

well, it really came from speaking actually, you

Jackie Bailey:

know, I'm I'm a I grew up in an abusive household, and there

Jackie Bailey:

were family members who abused me, as well as friends of family

Jackie Bailey:

and even some religious leaders, and I just never said anything.

Jackie Bailey:

I didn't really have anybody to tell. My parents were not in a

Jackie Bailey:

happy marriage, and then they got divorced, and both

Jackie Bailey:

remarried, and then another divorce. And I mean, it was just

Jackie Bailey:

there was no one I could really tell. And as I said, it's

Jackie Bailey:

changed me. I mean, I was a really vivacious, kind of silly

Jackie Bailey:

young girl, but that changed as a teenager. I was really quiet.

Jackie Bailey:

I was I wouldn't say, I was withdrawn, but I didn't speak

Jackie Bailey:

first, because I was always afraid I might tell something I

Jackie Bailey:

was told not to tell and it so in 2014 ish, I started preparing

Jackie Bailey:

for a contest, a speech contest with international speak speech

Jackie Bailey:

contest, and I started to share a little of my healing journey.

Jackie Bailey:

Me from my childhood abuse in a speech, and I started winning at

Jackie Bailey:

all these different levels as I shared my story. And what was on

Jackie Bailey:

the side of that impactful is that every time I shared my

Jackie Bailey:

story, someone would approach me in the audience who'd heard it

Jackie Bailey:

and said, Thank you for sharing that I didn't know what to call

Jackie Bailey:

that, or I didn't know how to define it, or I need to forgive

Jackie Bailey:

my mom, and thank you for telling me that that's how you

Jackie Bailey:

healed, and all those kinds of things. And so I realized that

Jackie Bailey:

when people were hearing what I was sharing, they were receiving

Jackie Bailey:

it and being encouraged to take some action in their own lives

Jackie Bailey:

from it. And that was pretty cool. So I became I won, like

Jackie Bailey:

six out of eight levels of this competition, and I was getting

Jackie Bailey:

ready to go to the next level, which was the semi finals, and

Jackie Bailey:

it would have been in Las Vegas, Nevada, in 2015 and there was

Jackie Bailey:

about six weeks between when I won the local level, the state

Jackie Bailey:

of Washington level, and going on to the international level.

Jackie Bailey:

And so I was kind of this little bit of a celebrity around here.

Jackie Bailey:

Now, I had a for profit business. I was a dental

Jackie Bailey:

management consultant. And so I was kind of working full time at

Jackie Bailey:

that, but in this six week period, as I became this

Jackie Bailey:

celebrity, of this local speaker going to this international

Jackie Bailey:

competition, there was a group of homeschool parents. They

Jackie Bailey:

contacted me and said, you know, we we have this Co Op, we teach

Jackie Bailey:

our kids at home, and we always like to enhance their stuff. And

Jackie Bailey:

so we want to know if you could give them some public speak, a

Jackie Bailey:

public speaking class. And I was like, oh, that sounds cool.

Jackie Bailey:

Yeah, I could do that. Can I do that? Yeah. And so these were,

Jackie Bailey:

like, middle school kids of 1415, 1314, 15 years old. And

Jackie Bailey:

like, that was a there was nine of them. And so I developed

Jackie Bailey:

this, I think it was a nine week course. And then when that was

Jackie Bailey:

done, I started, they wanted me to do it again. And then there

Jackie Bailey:

was a couple of schools nearby this place where I was teaching

Jackie Bailey:

this, and they said, we want to send some kids over after

Jackie Bailey:

school, if you'll do another class for them. And it just

Jackie Bailey:

started to grow and and at the same time, I started to realize

Jackie Bailey:

how impactful this was for the kids. I mean, just after two or

Jackie Bailey:

three sessions, when one kid would come in on the first day

Jackie Bailey:

and barely look me in the eye, by that third week of class,

Jackie Bailey:

they were standing up in front of everybody, you know, with

Jackie Bailey:

their chest puffed out, and they were saying things they never

Jackie Bailey:

told anybody before, and I started to realize, Wow, this is

Jackie Bailey:

kind of cool. And so that just kind of blossomed. And I started

Jackie Bailey:

developing more and more curriculum, and then I was

Jackie Bailey:

holding classes more and more, and they were getting filled up,

Jackie Bailey:

and I was trying to find all these places that I could teach

Jackie Bailey:

courses, whether it was a conference room at a business

Jackie Bailey:

park or or a community room, you know, some at a center or

Jackie Bailey:

something like that, anywhere I could find a place to teach

Jackie Bailey:

these workshops, and I was doing it, and then I found a brick and

Jackie Bailey:

mortar location In 2019

Jackie Bailey:

which would have allowed me to just, kind of, instead of

Jackie Bailey:

driving everywhere to all these different places, I could just

Jackie Bailey:

have the kids come to me. So that opened up in the September

Jackie Bailey:

of 2019, and I had a full house, and it was like a 100 year old

Jackie Bailey:

house that I that was speaking, was teaching from that I'd kind

Jackie Bailey:

of refurbished and made this classroom out of and that kind

Jackie Bailey:

of stuff. So that started September 2019, and things were

Jackie Bailey:

going great. And then, as we all know, the pandemic hit after

Jackie Bailey:

that, and I became a nonprofit in that time too. So I took the

Jackie Bailey:

in for the stuff that I had created for with the for profit

Jackie Bailey:

business, and now I was using it with the nonprofit business to

Jackie Bailey:

continue teaching this curriculum that I had developed.

Jackie Bailey:

And so anyway, it's I just started to realize how valuable

Jackie Bailey:

this was for the kids, how much they needed it, and how much

Jackie Bailey:

parents wanted their kids to have access to this kind of

Jackie Bailey:

stuff, so it it basically grew from there. And I really didn't

Jackie Bailey:

do much with my management consulting firm anymore. I was

Jackie Bailey:

teaching kids full time, even during the pandemic. It was,

Jackie Bailey:

let's get on Zoom. Let's continue with these courses. And

Jackie Bailey:

you know, it was a little bit teetering on the edge of success

Jackie Bailey:

or failure during that period of time because, you know, obvious

Jackie Bailey:

reasons,

Unknown:

the covid, yeah.

Jackie Bailey:

But we've survived that. We survived that.

Jackie Bailey:

And what I have found lately is that I get my greatest joy, not

Jackie Bailey:

necessarily in teaching public speaking, but. And really

Jackie Bailey:

supporting through coaching kids that that aspire to something

Jackie Bailey:

big. They they know they have something really valuable to

Jackie Bailey:

say. They don't have a clue as to how to start saying it or who

Jackie Bailey:

to say it to. And you know, a lot of these kids will say, I

Jackie Bailey:

want to be I want to give a TEDx talk. I have a chronic disease,

Jackie Bailey:

and I've learned how to manage it myself. So I want to be able

Jackie Bailey:

to share that with someone, or someone come to me and said, you

Jackie Bailey:

know, my family immigrated from one country to the United

Jackie Bailey:

States, and gosh, it was culture shock in so many ways, and I

Jackie Bailey:

found a way to get over that and to become involved with my new

Jackie Bailey:

culture and my new community. And I want to be able to share

Jackie Bailey:

some ideas. So those are the types of kids I love to work

Jackie Bailey:

with now. They aspire to something, and I love to be able

Jackie Bailey:

to help them get there and then get them a stage to talk about

Jackie Bailey:

it. So I don't do very many classes anymore. It's it's

Jackie Bailey:

mostly one to one coaching, and that's what breaks me, my

Jackie Bailey:

greatest joy. So that was a long answer to how I ended up with

Jackie Bailey:

that, but it was kind of by accident in that I started to

Jackie Bailey:

share my story and share my healing journey by using my

Jackie Bailey:

voice when I broke the silence of my abuse. And that's it's

Jackie Bailey:

just kind of happened from there that now I help other people to

Jackie Bailey:

share their voice.

Unknown:

I love that. And as you were talking, I was thinking

Unknown:

about that little I don't know if it was a meme or just a

Unknown:

saying of parents teach their kids the first two years how to

Unknown:

walk and talk and the next 20 how to sit down and shut up. And

Unknown:

there's a lot of truth to that. And so it's like finding and

Unknown:

learning as a person, from a little person on up, that there

Unknown:

are appropriate times to speak up. Appropriate times not but

Unknown:

often, as we know, what happens is when it's not the appropriate

Unknown:

time to speak up, they decide that every time is inappropriate

Unknown:

to speak up so that that's like that, that balancing act. But I

Unknown:

know I took my first speech class in seventh grade, seventh,

Unknown:

eighth and ninth grade. I was in speech class and did speech

Unknown:

competitions, and I liked it. I was actually tongue tied as a

Unknown:

kid, and I didn't speak at all till I was almost three. And my

Unknown:

mom said, Is there something wrong with her? She's the

Unknown:

youngest and she doesn't speak at all. Is like, is she okay?

Unknown:

Mentally, intellectually, intellectually. And the doctor

Unknown:

goes, she's probably the smartest one you got. She's

Unknown:

gotten whatever she wanted for three years now without ever

Unknown:

saying a word. So my dad would say, we clipped Jennifer's

Unknown:

tongue, and she had never spoken a word, and then she never shut

Unknown:

up. And first grade, my report card, Jennifer's a great

Unknown:

student, but she talks too much in class. And so second grade,

Unknown:

I'm not going to talk so much in class. I couldn't do it like, I

Unknown:

lasted like, I don't know, 15 minutes or something. I'm just,

Unknown:

you know, Yeah, Dad, you're right. You were right. May you

Unknown:

rest in peace, but you're right. I never shut after that, but

Unknown:

going to those beach competitions and stuff, I have a

Unknown:

girlfriend now, and she's like, I was driving to Tulsa, which is

Unknown:

about a two hour drive, and the next day, I was giving the

Unknown:

opening keynote talk at a conference. And she was like, Oh

Unknown:

my gosh. Are you ready? Are you scared to death? And I was like,

Unknown:

No, I'm kind of excited. And it's kind of odd that I'm going

Unknown:

to be speaking to CPAs, but I think like, I'm typically, yeah,

Unknown:

it'll be fine. And she was like, I just want to throw up for you,

Jackie Bailey:

you go ahead and do that,

Unknown:

but you know, I didn't really realize as an adult how

Unknown:

much doing that at 1213, 1415, years old molded how it was

Unknown:

easier as I got older. So if you're not introduced to it, if

Unknown:

you're not getting any type of training or guidance whatsoever,

Unknown:

it, it makes it much harder to do, and then you can't share

Unknown:

that story, and you can't share, Oh, I did this and I was healed,

Unknown:

or I did this and this was my journey. Or I remember talking

Unknown:

to a girlfriend and and in our circle of friends, I'm going to

Unknown:

say super loose circle, a couple that, like projected themselves

Unknown:

as the perfect family. Of course there was a breakdown, because

Unknown:

there's always a breakdown because there is no such thing

Unknown:

as a perfect family. I hate to be the one to spoil it for some

Unknown:

of you, but there's always a crack somewhere, if you didn't

Unknown:

know. And my friend said, Oh my gosh, all these years, I thought

Unknown:

they just had the perfect life. And I looked at her, I went, Oh,

Unknown:

girlfriend, nobody does like, like we we all do the best we

Unknown:

can and have the best time doing it that we can. But there's no

Unknown:

such thing as perfect. So I. Uh, that was like a big opening

Unknown:

moment for her, which, if again, communication, if it hadn't come

Unknown:

out that, Oh, everybody has a little chink in their armor, she

Unknown:

was going to continue feeling less than right. And she's not

Unknown:

less than right. None of us are. We're all. We all have our

Unknown:

superpowers. Yours are just different than

Unknown:

mine, right?

Unknown:

Yeah, I love Go ahead, yeah.

Jackie Bailey:

I mean, and we know what we just we, as I

Jackie Bailey:

mentioned before, sometimes we as parents or or aunts and

Jackie Bailey:

uncles, cousins, whatever, when we have children in our

Jackie Bailey:

stewardship, we often silence them. And I do remember during

Jackie Bailey:

the pandemic, many of my students would had told me I

Jackie Bailey:

can't share with my parents the fear and the concern and the

Jackie Bailey:

uncertainty that I feel, because I know they're stressed out.

Jackie Bailey:

They're worried about their jobs, they're worried about

Jackie Bailey:

grandma and grandma getting sick, and I can't add to the

Jackie Bailey:

burden or the weight of the family by sharing how I feel.

Jackie Bailey:

And that broke my heart, because I know the parents weren't

Jackie Bailey:

trying to do that, but by not sitting down with their kids and

Jackie Bailey:

saying, Hey, look, These are trying times. These are some of

Jackie Bailey:

the things you know, we're worried about, and it's okay to

Jackie Bailey:

have that worry. It's okay to have that fear. As a family,

Jackie Bailey:

though we're going to do everything we can to get through

Jackie Bailey:

this together and make sure everybody comes out okay, but

Jackie Bailey:

don't worry about what mom and dad are worried about, because,

Jackie Bailey:

you know, as adults, we got bigger things to worry about,

Jackie Bailey:

but don't be afraid to share with us how you're feeling about

Jackie Bailey:

things that would have been that would have made such a

Jackie Bailey:

difference for the kids that told me that they just had to

Jackie Bailey:

just swallow it. And what happened then during a pandemic

Jackie Bailey:

is a lot of those kids took their own lives because they

Jackie Bailey:

didn't have a way, not my kids, but other kids, they didn't have

Jackie Bailey:

a way to share it. They didn't feel like they had anything to

Jackie Bailey:

contribute to what was happening at that time, and without life

Jackie Bailey:

experience to understand we're going to get through this, life

Jackie Bailey:

might look a little bit different on the other side, but

Jackie Bailey:

it's going to be okay without knowing that they couldn't see

Jackie Bailey:

an end to it, this was their darkest of days, and it was just

Jackie Bailey:

best to to walk away from it. And unfortunately, it happened a

Jackie Bailey:

lot during the pandemic. And you and you

Unknown:

had the the lack of connection with other people,

Unknown:

and you talk about the devices, which can be problematic, but

Unknown:

they also lost the ability to run and play and do things with

Unknown:

their kids, and so the you know time is going to tell of of the

Unknown:

overall recovery of it. But as you and I both know we have a

Unknown:

choice once we become an adult. As a kid somewhat, but as an

Unknown:

adult, as we see more things and get more experiences. We have a

Unknown:

choice, like, I want to heal from this. I want to move on

Unknown:

from this. And, you know, we can, like, do that, but when

Unknown:

you're dealing with the kid like, they don't see that, they

Unknown:

don't see a possibility, I remember my mom would always

Unknown:

say, This too shall pass. And I believed her, and I heard it my

Unknown:

whole life, and there was an extremely devastating period of

Unknown:

time. And she said, Jennifer, this too shall pass. And I

Unknown:

looked at her with tears running down my face, and I'm not much

Unknown:

of a crier, so if I cry, it's like a big deal. You need to

Unknown:

stop pay attention. I had tears running down my face, and I

Unknown:

went, it is going to pass, mom, but not today. Like it's not

Unknown:

going to pass today, but I know that it will, so I still had

Unknown:

that hope, but it was like, give me a little bit of space, it'd

Unknown:

be not okay today, but that being able to have that

Unknown:

conversation, because there was probably a time when I would

Unknown:

have never said that to my mother, right? I was an adult

Unknown:

when this was going on, but even as a kid, I probably would not

Unknown:

have shared that or said that to my mom, so that open

Unknown:

communication in so many ways. I had a conversation with someone

Unknown:

this week, and it was a business type situation, and I hang out

Unknown:

with the phone, and I thought, Wow, I'm just really proud of

Unknown:

myself for being able to give her solid guidance on how to

Unknown:

handle a very difficult conversation. And later, I got a

Unknown:

text message, and it was like, wow, that was so helpful. Like,

Unknown:

you have no idea how helpful that was. It was like, yay.

Unknown:

Like, all of this is for a reason. I'm so glad it's helpful

Unknown:

with that. But again, you got to have that continuous learning

Unknown:

going on and being able to communicate and share, which, I

Unknown:

mean, that's one of my favorite things, is to share what I just

Unknown:

learned. Like, Oh, guess what I just found out. Let me tell you

Unknown:

all,

Jackie Bailey:

yeah, yeah, no, that's great. You are a

Jackie Bailey:

wonderful. Communicator. Jennifer, you have a special

Jackie Bailey:

sense about people and when they need you to either just give

Jackie Bailey:

them a pound of back or a hug or a compliment. You have a great

Jackie Bailey:

sense for that, and we need more people like you, because many

Jackie Bailey:

times if, someone feels a sense of some something's a little off

Jackie Bailey:

about that person, they ignore it instead of give them a hug or

Jackie Bailey:

just say, Hey, you're awesome. Thanks. Thanks for being you.

Jackie Bailey:

You know, sometimes just a smile or simple things like that

Jackie Bailey:

changes the trajectory of someone's day, and that can make

Jackie Bailey:

a big difference. So you're the kind of person that I know would

Jackie Bailey:

never shut anybody out, and so that is your your superpower,

Jackie Bailey:

and I appreciate that in you very much.

Unknown:

Oh, thanks. Thanks for sharing that. I appreciate that

Unknown:

very much. Oh, what is it? Thank you. I received that. Let me

Unknown:

breathe that in. That's right. So you have a challenge coming

Unknown:

up. Tell us challenge? I'm kind of excitable about this.

Jackie Bailey:

Yeah, in May, we're going to do our 30 days to

Jackie Bailey:

unmute your voice challenge. And so every day of May, the people

Jackie Bailey:

doing the challenge, which can be join. You can join that

Jackie Bailey:

through my Facebook page. They will be given a tip or a trick

Jackie Bailey:

or some way to shift the way they think about speaking and

Jackie Bailey:

sharing their voice and how they might say it in a more powerful

Jackie Bailey:

way. So there'll be 30 days of that, there'll be short little

Jackie Bailey:

clips that you can learn from every day with sometimes a

Jackie Bailey:

little bit of a encouraged challenge to take on that day,

Jackie Bailey:

to do something, but mostly just shifting the way you think about

Jackie Bailey:

your communication and how to say things, not necessarily

Jackie Bailey:

better, but with more impact to the person who's receiving it.

Jackie Bailey:

So you can find out more about that if you join our Facebook

Jackie Bailey:

page, the Speak feed, Lead Project Facebook page, and that

Jackie Bailey:

will start on May 1, and the end result will that will be that

Jackie Bailey:

they get to be in a workshop with me to dive a little bit

Jackie Bailey:

deeper into putting all of those tips and tricks into play and

Jackie Bailey:

actually thinking about what would be their signature talk,

Jackie Bailey:

which in my definition, is, what is it that you are uniquely here

Jackie Bailey:

to say that the world needs to hear, because it's a way that

Jackie Bailey:

You can contribute to the betterment of the planet, and

Jackie Bailey:

that's a signature talk. And even if you never plan on

Jackie Bailey:

getting on a stage to as a speaker, a speaker, knowing what

Jackie Bailey:

your signature talk would be, knowing what you would say if

Jackie Bailey:

you had five minutes to say, the most important thing you know

Jackie Bailey:

that keeps you grounded. It keeps you in alignment with your

Jackie Bailey:

purpose and who you are, and gives you that added confidence

Jackie Bailey:

you need to say, hey, I can, I can contribute to things.

Jackie Bailey:

Because I, I do have something that I could share, something to

Jackie Bailey:

say. So anyway, that will be the result of it is some some time

Jackie Bailey:

with me.

Unknown:

Oh my gosh, I love that. I'm I'm going to be out of

Unknown:

town a bit in May, but you better believe I'm going to be

Unknown:

hopping over there and signing up for this too, because the

Unknown:

probably the biggest thing that I've learned in my years on this

Unknown:

earth is that there's always room for improvement. If you're

Unknown:

not learning you're dying, you've got two choices, and that

Unknown:

is a choice you can learn more or not, and being able to share

Unknown:

what you want to share in a in a positive way, even if it's a

Unknown:

difficult conversation, you don't have to destroy the other

Unknown:

person in that conversation, or building somebody up as

Unknown:

beautifully as you just built me up. Jackie, that was so sweet. I

Unknown:

appreciate you being here today. How fun. Thank you.

Jackie Bailey:

Yeah, we were we ended up on a same meeting

Jackie Bailey:

together coincidentally. And it was like, hey, Jennifer, I

Jackie Bailey:

haven't seen you in a bit, so it was great to reconnect with you

Jackie Bailey:

after at least a little while. I know that we sometimes end up

Jackie Bailey:

and say meetings together, but we don't actually get to chat

Jackie Bailey:

during those meetings. But this, on this particular occasion, we

Jackie Bailey:

did.

Unknown:

So we did and I was recently on your podcast. What's

Unknown:

your podcast? Tell our people about your podcast.

Jackie Bailey:

It is in the groove with Todd and Jackie and

Jackie Bailey:

so I co host that with my husband, and you can find us on

Jackie Bailey:

Spotify, on Apple podcasts, all the platforms, YouTube, you name

Jackie Bailey:

it. So we're all out there, and we talked to wonderful people

Jackie Bailey:

like Jennifer,

Unknown:

wait, I've been on your podcast. You have it on my son?

Unknown:

Look, we made it happen. Yeah, absolutely. Well. Well, thanks

Unknown:

again for being here. Jackie, do you have any last words for our

Unknown:

audience before we hang up?

Jackie Bailey:

I would just say, say something today that you're

Jackie Bailey:

afraid to say, don't, you know, just tell go to someone that is

Jackie Bailey:

likely going to be good to hear it. You know that they won't

Jackie Bailey:

ridicule you or judge you and say something, say something

Jackie Bailey:

that you've been holding back. Say it today. That's my advice.

Unknown:

Yeah, that's great. Thanks for being here. Jackie,

Unknown:

thank you. I'm Jennifer Takagi with destin for success, and I

Unknown:

look forward to connecting with you soon. Bye.