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Good Life Project

Brave, Not Perfect | Reshma Saujani

Good Life Project

Jonathan Fields / Acast

Education, Wellness, Self-improvement, Midlife, Health & Fitness, Intentional Living, Personal Growth, Living Well, How To

4.53.4K Ratings

🗓️ 15 October 2019

⏱️ 69 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Reshma Saujani is the Founder and CEO of Girls Who Code (https://girlswhocode.com/), the nonprofit organization working to close the gender gap in technology and change the image of what a computer programmer looks like and does. She is the author of three books (http://reshmasaujani.com/), including Brave, Not Perfect (https://amzn.to/33hlNbH), New York Times bestseller Girls Who Code: Learn to Code and Change the World (https://amzn.to/33f9JaT), and Women Who Don't Wait In Line. Her TED talk, "Teach girls, bravery not perfection," has more than four million views and has sparked a worldwide conversation about how we're raising our girls.

Reshma's earned broad recognition for her work as an attorney, activist, and advocate for young women, including Fortune World's Greatest Leaders; Fortune 40 Under 40; WSJ Magazine Innovator of the Year; Forbes Most Powerful Women Changing the World; Fast Company 100 Most Creative People; and Crain's New York 40 Under 40, among others.

Join us today to hear how a young, outsider Indian girl in Chicago who was expected by her family to grow into a quiet, unassuming life, now regularly battles tech giants and thinks nothing of going to the White House to speak out for the rights and opportunities denied to young women. It's a great conversation about navigating cultural and familial expectations, how things that initially appear to be devastating losses can actually lead to some truly unexpected opportunities, and the beauty of living brave, not perfect.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey there, good luck, Brasjie family. We are always looking for ways to bring you more

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of what you love and to do that, we need your help. We have created a quick survey to

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get to know your preferences better. It's all about what you want to hear, the topics

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you're interested in, the format, and how we can improve our show to serve you better.

0:18.4

So if you've got a spare minute, please check the link in the show notes. We're going to

0:22.7

tinyurl.com slash good life survey to take the survey. We value your feedback immensely

0:28.5

and it will only take a few moments of your time. Remember this is our community and

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we want to make sure that we are providing content that sparks inspiration, fuels growth,

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and makes your listening experience truly enjoyable and rewarding. Thanks for being a part

0:43.0

of our journey and we appreciate your help in making good life project even better.

0:47.4

So head on over to tinyurl.com slash good life survey or click that link in the show notes,

0:53.1

we'd love to hear from you. On to our show.

0:58.5

So my guest today is Reshma Seljani. She is the founder of the CEO of Girls Who Code, which

1:08.2

is a really cool nonprofit that works really to close the gender gap in technology and

1:13.6

completely change the image of what a computer programmer looks like and does. She's the

1:18.7

author of three books including the latest Brave Not Perfect and along with her TED Talk,

1:24.5

she's really sparked this worldwide conversation about how we're raising girls. Funny enough

1:30.6

similar to me, Reshma actually began her career as an attorney, then she really moved

1:36.4

into a very activist place in 2010 actually. She kind of surged onto the political scene

1:42.5

as the first Indian American woman to run for US Congress and it was that experience that

1:48.8

really awakened her to the gender gap in computing and in classes firsthand when she saw

1:55.8

that in New York City schools, that led her to start girls who code, which is this seven

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