TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

It’s time to say the quiet part out loud

15m 46s2,381 mots373 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPTION COMPLÈTE

0:00

I want to try to prove to you that

0:02

embracing vulnerability is true

0:04

strength. Joe Hudson's got this great

0:06

definition of vulnerability. He says

0:07

vulnerability is speaking your truth

0:10

even when it's scary. So a question to

0:12

ask, who is truly the braver person? The

0:16

one who lets themselves feel or the one

0:19

who flees the second an emotion gets too

0:21

close? the one strong enough to carry

0:25

the full weight of their experience

0:27

emotionally or the one so fragile that

0:30

they have to suppress it. Bnee Brown has

0:33

got this line, without vulnerability,

0:34

there is no courage. If there's no

0:36

uncertainty, no risk, no exposure.

0:38

You're not being that brave because

0:41

there's nothing on the line. We are so

0:45

quick to praise suppression as strength.

0:48

We call it control. We call it

0:50

discipline. We pretend emotional

0:53

detachment is a sign of maturity. But

0:56

fully living your life means actually

1:00

feeling what [ __ ] happens. Not just

1:03

performing composure while something

1:06

inside of you quietly breaks. The enemy

1:09

here, as far as I can see, is toxic

1:12

stoicism. Not the grounded, reflective

1:16

Ryan Holiday kind.

1:18

instead the hollowed out kind. The kind

1:22

that rewards shutdown. That teaches you

1:25

to be proud of how little you feel as

1:28

though restraint were the same thing as

1:31

resilience.

1:34

As far as I can see, fearing

1:36

vulnerability turns your inner world

1:39

into a minefield. It teaches you to

1:42

treat emotions like threats. So you

1:45

tiptoe carefully through your life

1:48

trying to not set anything off. Proud of

1:51

your control but slowly growing more

1:54

disconnected from life around you. This

1:58

isn't strength.

2:01

It's avoidance rebranded.

2:06

Resilience is not what most people think

2:09

it is. It's not about not feeling the

2:12

pain or being impervious to challenges

2:14

or setbacks. It isn't about people who

2:17

suppress or ignore their feelings. It's

2:19

also not about people who are delusional

2:22

and think they don't have feelings.

2:25

Resilience is about people who feel

2:27

their feelings deeply but are able to

2:30

act despite them in their best

2:32

interests. It's a slamming insight from

2:35

Mark Manson. This common mistake

2:39

especially among high functioning high

2:41

achieving people is believing that

2:43

vulnerability is weakness. But

2:46

vulnerability is being scared of

2:48

speaking your truth and doing it anyway.

2:51

It's choosing presence before

2:54

protection. It's the willingness to be

2:56

seen even when visible isn't tidy or

3:00

filtered or finished.

3:03

Imagine,

3:05

picture in your mind two people

3:07

receiving bad news. One's hands shake as

3:11

tears come, the other's face goes blank,

3:14

jaw locked, and later that night,

3:16

they're three drinks deep, scrolling

3:17

their phone, feeling nothing.

3:20

Which one is really stronger? The one

3:23

who can show their emotions

3:25

or the one who has to run from them? As

3:28

far as I can see, weakness is pretending

3:31

you don't feel.

3:33

Strength is feeling deeply

3:36

and staying open. Anyway, we call it

3:39

coping, but often it's just abstaining

3:42

from reality. The executive who prides

3:46

herself on being unflapable while

3:48

quietly burning out. She calls it

3:50

professionalism, but it's really a fear

3:53

of having her true self rejected. the

3:55

partner who insists I don't do drama

3:58

when what they mean is I can't tolerate

4:01

intimacy. Every deep discussion becomes

4:04

an emotional threat. So they fake calm

4:08

at the cost of closeness. The person who

4:11

posts about the value of vulnerability

4:13

online while being emotionally

4:15

unavailable offline. They are fluent in

4:18

the language of openness

4:20

but allergic to the practice of it. The

4:24

society obsessed with authenticity but

4:27

terrified of sincerity. Rewarding

4:29

shallow confessions that trend while

4:32

punishing the real ones that linger. The

4:35

children who learn that silence equals

4:37

safety growing into adults who apologize

4:40

for their needs before they've even

4:42

voiced them. The influencer culture that

4:46

sells performative rawness as a brand,

4:49

monetizing emotion while sterilizing its

4:52

reality. Different symptoms from the

4:55

same disease. People who are so afraid

4:58

of being broken by their feelings that

5:01

they never let themselves be shaped by

5:03

them. The real fear isn't just the

5:05

emotion itself.

5:08

It's also what the emotion might not

5:09

receive. We're not afraid of sadness.

5:13

We're afraid of being sad in front of

5:14

someone who shrugs. We're not afraid of

5:17

grief. We're afraid of grieving and

5:20

being judged for doing so. That's the

5:23

abandonment we're trying to avoid. Even

5:26

if we know that feeling our feelings is

5:29

braver than denying them, the people

5:31

around us still might think less of us

5:34

for opening up.

5:36

So, we keep things hidden. Not because

5:38

we want to, but because we don't want to

5:40

feel alone in the sharing. Men, as far

5:43

as I can see, have this hardest still.

5:46

As almost all definitions of masculinity

5:49

have some version of emotional control

5:52

as a core tenant, which makes feeling

5:55

pride in showing emotions as a man even

5:58

tougher.

6:00

But you cannot connect with the world or

6:06

anyone in it if you never truly show

6:09

yourself. Intimacy only exists to the

6:13

degree that you reveal yourself, your

6:15

sadness, anger, joy, desires,

6:17

boundaries, everything. When when you

6:21

hide your flaws or your feelings out of

6:24

fear of shame, you block intimacy and

6:27

authenticity. The more that you expose,

6:31

the closer you are. The less you show,

6:33

the more distant you become.

6:36

Which do you want to choose?

6:38

Vulnerability isn't weakness. It's

6:40

rebellion.

6:42

It's not how little you feel that makes

6:44

you strong. It's how much you can face

6:46

and stay open. It is saying, "I'll go

6:50

first. I'll be honest, even when it's

6:53

scary.

6:55

Not because I'm fragile, but because I'm

6:58

brave enough to be fully seen.

7:01

I think this is so [ __ ] cool. I think

7:03

this is like so on the money around what

7:07

openness really means and the fact that

7:11

what is it that

7:14

so many people look for in parasocial

7:17

relationships with their favorite

7:18

content creator or or writer or thinker

7:22

or TV personality or whatever. They want

7:25

authenticity.

7:27

But society is obsessed with

7:29

authenticity and terrified of sincerity.

7:33

Like those the fact that that is so

7:35

[ __ ] true

7:37

then creates a world of performative

7:39

authenticity. Like the stripped back

7:43

behind the scenes I don't need no makeup

7:46

or no script. But then you find out that

7:48

what this person's actually doing is

7:50

some [ __ ] five-dimensional jiu-jitsu

7:52

chess where they've managed to flip you

7:54

into believing that what they were

7:55

actually doing was naturalistic when

7:57

really it was super super contrived.

8:02

I think we like the idea of authenticity

8:05

and sincerity, but when it comes into

8:07

land, when it actually makes

8:10

the rubber meets the road, it feels

8:12

really uncomfortable because there is

8:14

nohere to hide from someone who is truly

8:17

truly showing their emotions. someone

8:20

who really opens up, who says like,

8:22

"This is a flag that I'm planting in the

8:24

ground, and this is something I really

8:25

[ __ ] care about, and it's gonna I'm

8:27

gonna shout and scream in excitement, or

8:29

I'm going to cry and whimper in like

8:33

pain at what this thing has caused me to

8:36

feel." Like, that is big. It's a very

8:39

big situation to be in. You we like,

8:41

think about the Overton window, the

8:43

Overton window of acceptable speech,

8:45

right? These are all of the words that

8:46

you can say and within that is a bracket

8:48

of words that you're allowed to say.

8:51

It's kind of the same with emotional

8:54

depth that there is a whole breadth of

8:57

emotions that people can feel and

9:00

despite the fact that we say what we

DÉBLOQUER PLUS

Inscrivez-vous gratuitement pour accéder aux fonctionnalités premium

VISUALISEUR INTERACTIF

Regardez la vidéo avec des sous-titres synchronisés, une superposition réglable et un contrôle total de la lecture.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

RÉSUMÉ IA

Obtenez un résumé instantané généré par l'IA du contenu de la vidéo, des points clés et des principaux enseignements.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

TRADUIRE

Traduisez la transcription dans plus de 100 langues en un seul clic. Téléchargez dans n'importe quel format.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

CARTE MENTALE

Visualisez la transcription sous forme de carte mentale interactive. Comprenez la structure en un coup d'œil.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

DISCUTER AVEC LA TRANSCRIPTION

Posez des questions sur le contenu de la vidéo. Obtenez des réponses alimentées par l'IA directement à partir de la transcription.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

TIREZ LE MEILLEUR PARTI DE VOS TRANSCRIPTIONS

Inscrivez-vous gratuitement et débloquez la visionneuse interactive, les résumés IA, les traductions, les cartes mentales, et plus encore. Aucune carte de crédit requise.

    It’s time to sa… - Transcription Complète | YouTubeTranscript.dev