Listening to shame | Brené Brown | TED
Shame operates as a silent barrier to innovation, connection, and courageous action in business and life.
Overview
Brené Brown extends her vulnerability research to focus on shame — how it differs from guilt, how it splits along gender lines, and why it blocks the creative and collaborative risks that organizations need. She argues that vulnerability is not weakness but the precise measure of courage, and that shame, left unnamed, quietly sabotages innovation, leadership, and human connection.
Key takeaways
Vulnerability is not weakness; it is the birthplace of innovation, creativity, and meaningful organizational change.
Shame and guilt are distinct: guilt targets a behavior ("I did something bad"), shame attacks identity ("I am bad").
Shame correlates strongly with addiction, depression, aggression, and burnout, while guilt correlates inversely with those outcomes.
Shame is gendered: women face a web of competing expectations, men face one mandate — never show weakness.
Empathy is the direct antidote to shame; secrecy and silence accelerate it, open acknowledgment stops its growth.
Worth quoting
"Vulnerability is not weakness. I define vulnerability as emotional risk, exposure, uncertainty. It fuels our daily lives."
"Shame is the swampland of the soul."
"If we can find our way back to each other, vulnerability will be that path."
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