Let's Be Honest takes uncomfortable or taboo topics and gives people a chance to be honest about them. Some stuff is serious, some stuff is silly. All of it matters because we are talking about it.
Patrick Donnelly is a gem of a human. Years ago, I was lucky enough to meet him through this little-known website called Twitter. He was leaving a company I was just starting at and we bonded over our mutual disdain for the place. How most friendships start, right? From that very moment, he has been my biggest cheerleader. We've been on double dates -- his wife Kris is a spitfire with a heart of gold -- and his youngest daughter attends a summer theatre camp run by my sister and brother-in-law (that was a total accident and he only realized it when he met my sister at afternoon pick-up). In April, Patrick opened up about his own battle with mental illness. Depression. Anxiety. Something he has dealt with his entire life but didn't fully accept until shortly after the birth of his first daughter. He wrote an incredibly honest, blunt piece, 'Why men like me should talk openly about depression'. We sat down over beers on a gorgeous summer night to just talk. About his experience, about his decision to 'air his dirty laundry', what happened afterward.
So you procrastinate. Now what? Months ago -- APRIL -- I caught James Clear on CBS This Morning, talking about productivity and self-improvement. James is an author and speaker who uses science-based tips to address human potential. His newsletter reaches more than 400,000 people and he has a new book coming out in October. He is a must-follow for anyone who acknowledges they could be doing better but don't know where to start.
Everyone procrastinates, but not everyone is a procrastinator. I happen to be a procrastinator and I've been wanting to make a podcast for so long. But for a string of reasons, I didn't. Until now. So what a perfect way to kick it off -- talking about procrastination. Why we do it, what it means and how we get over it. Dr. Joseph Ferrari has studied procrastinators for his entire career and offered up some incredible insight that really hit home for me.