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The Rich Roll Podcast

Shaka Senghor On Righting Wrongs & Why Your Worst Deeds Don’t Define You

The Rich Roll Podcast

Rich Roll

Health & Fitness, Education, Self-improvement, Society & Culture

4.812.9K Ratings

🗓️ 3 July 2017

⏱️ 99 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

“That's the thing about hope. In the moment it can feel foolish or sentimental or disconnected from reality. But hope knows that people change on a timeline that we can't predict. We can never know the power that a word of kindness and or an act of forgiveness will have on the person who needs it most.” Shaka Senghor Imagine yourself growing up around the wrong people. Because it's easy, you fall into the wrong crowd. Blink, and you’re in. Deep. A victim of impossible circumstances, it’s not long before you're in the wrong place at the wrong time. In the reflexive moment — impulsively and without thought – you do the wrong thing. A thing so terrible, it forever alters the trajectory of your life. A thing so unimaginably horrible, you dedicate the rest of your life in service to atonement. This is the story of Shaka Senghor. At the age of 19, Shaka shot and killed a man. Convicted of second-degree murder, Shaka would spend the next 19 years in different prisons, seven of which were spent in solitary confinement. While inside, Shaka made a decision. A decision to fully own his circumstances. A decision to transcend victimhood, understand his past, free his mind and expand his thinking. When he wasn't voraciously reading, he wrote. And it was through this relentless commitment to knowledge, self-understanding and compassion that he ultimately pulled himself out of the anger that led to his incarceration and prevented him from reaching his full potential. Released in 2010, Shaka did not return to a life of violence. Instead, he committed himself to one singular idea: that our worst deeds don’t define who we are, nor do they prohibit our contribution to a better world. Fidelity to this ideal transformed Shaka's utterly broken life into one of meaning, purpose and advocacy. Now a leading voice in prison reform, he is a powerful public speaker, a Senior Fellow with the Dream Corps, a 2014 TED Prize finalist, a former MIT Media Lab Director’s Fellow, a former University of Michigan lecturer, a current Fellow in the inaugural class of the W.K. Kellogg Foundation’s Community Leadership Network and the founder of The Atonement Project. In addition, he recently launched Mind Blown Media, a new media company that aims to create high-impact content focused on the criminal justice system and mass incarceration. Shaka’s memoir, Writing My Wrongs: Life, Death and Redemption in an American Prison* debuted on The New York Times Best Seller List as well as The Washington Post Best Seller List. He has been interviewed by Oprah and his TED Talk, which received a standing ovation, has been viewed more than 1.4 million times and was featured by TED as one of the most powerful TED Talks of 2014. Shaka has appeared on CNN, CBS This Morning, The Daily Show with Trevor Noah, Good Day New York, and he has been a guest on numerous radio programs, including NPR’s All Things Considered. And if all that isn't impressive enough, Shaka is the recipient of numerous awards, including the 2016 EBONY Power100, the 2016 Ford Man of Courage, the 2016 NAACP Great Expectations Award, the 2015 Manchester University Innovator of the Year, and the 2012 Black Male Engagement Leadership Award. I’m honored to share Shaka’s powerful story with you today. Enjoy! Rich Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript

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0:00.0

The absolute worst prison is the one we erect in our own minds.

0:06.0

And we live in a culture that's constantly trying to lock us into unhealthy ideas about who we are, what we're capable of, who we aren't.

0:16.0

And I think that the more we mentally free ourselves, and the visually the more work we can do collectively.

0:25.0

We have to learn how to wrap our arms around our brothers and sisters. We have to have those conversations that are uncomfortable.

0:31.0

We have to really think about how our actions impact other people.

0:39.0

That's Shaka Sengor, and this is the Rich Roll Podcast.

0:44.0

The Rich Roll Podcast.

0:56.0

Greetings, everybody. How are you guys doing? What's happening? My name is Rich Roll. Welcome to my podcast.

1:02.0

I got a great show for you guys today. I think it's an important show. It's a heavy show. Very, very heavy.

1:10.0

One I think is likely to haunt you. Perhaps stick with you, make you think, but also hopefully inspire you.

1:18.0

But before we dig in, let's get the business end of this thing done.

1:22.0

Alright, today's episode. So I want you to imagine, imagine yourself growing up around the wrong people, falling into a crowd.

1:40.0

You know you shouldn't be hanging out with one thing leads to another, and then you're in, you're in deep.

1:46.0

Like so many who find themselves in impossible circumstances, it's really not long before you find yourself in the wrong place at the wrong time.

1:55.0

And then without even thinking impulsively, you do the wrong thing. The worst thing you can imagine.

2:01.0

A thing that changes the trajectory of your life forever. I think so unspeakably horrible. You dedicate the rest of your life to trying to atone for it.

2:12.0

Well, this is the story of Shaka's Angore. In the summer of 1991, at the age of just 19, Shaka shot and killed a man after which he spent 19 years in different prisons, seven of which were spent in solitary confinement.

2:27.0

And while he was inside, he made this decision, a decision to understand his past to free his mind and expand his thinking. He read, he wrote.

2:39.0

And ultimately he was able to pull himself out of the anger that led to his incarceration and prevented him from reaching his full potential.

2:48.0

And when he was released in 2010, he didn't return to a life of crime. Instead, Shaka has done the remarkable resurrecting his utterly broken life into a life of service.

3:00.0

A life devoted to atonement, prison reform, nonviolent conflict resolution, community activism, literature, and really inspiring others to transcend their circumstances.

3:13.0

This idea that our worst deeds don't define who we are and nor do they prohibit our contribution to a better world.

...

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