🔥 COMMUNITY CONVERSATION — Mental Health Awareness Month | Silence The Shame
Family, today I want to step away from business frameworks, growth strategies, and execution conversations for a moment. Because none of that matters if the person behind the performance is silently falling apart. This month is Mental Health Awareness Month, but I don’t want this to become another surface-level conversation people scroll past without reflection. I want to speak honestly. A lot of high-performing people are hurting quietly. The leader everybody depends on. The entrepreneur carrying pressure they never talk about. The parent trying to stay strong for everyone else. The executive functioning publicly while emotionally exhausted privately. And because society rewards performance, many people have learned how to look “fine” while internally struggling. Let me ask you a real question: When was the last time you honestly told somebody, “I’m not okay”? Not “I’m busy.” Not “I’m just tired.” Not “I’ll figure it out.” But the truth. For many people, that feels uncomfortable because somewhere along the way we were taught that struggle equals weakness. That mindset has hurt too many people. Here’s what I’ve learned over the years: What you refuse to face eventually follows you. Into your leadership. Into your relationships. Into your decision-making. Into your peace. But when you finally accept your story instead of hiding from it, something changes. The pain may still exist. The memory may still exist. But it no longer controls you. Acceptance is not weakness. Acceptance is ownership. 📊 And the reality around us is serious: → 1 in 5 adults in America experiences a mental health condition each year → Many entrepreneurs and high achievers struggle in silence because their identity is tied to performance → Suicide and depression continue impacting leaders, founders, professionals, and families at alarming rates → Millions still avoid seeking help because of stigma, fear, shame, or cultural conditioning The silence is costing people their health, their relationships, their peace… and in some cases, their lives.