Remain Authentic & Vulnerable
Your Vibe Attracts Your Tribe
For the past couple days, I have been seeing social media posts about Ayesha Curry and her comments on Red Table Talk. If you haven’t watched the episode, I encourage you to watch it here.
As an influencer (Yes, I am finally embracing this title), I try to remain abreast of what is currently trending. I miss so many things because they simply do not interest me. This story, however, has caused me to write and delete more comments than I care to admit. I’ve wanted to scream there was so much more to the show than ONE person’s statements. There was a whole table of women sharing their truth, yet people are harping on one person. I’ve wanted to defend Ayesha’s statements. I’ve wanted to explain how it was all taken out of context. I’ve wanted to applaud her, not for what she said, but the fact that she said it! (More on this in a second.) I’ve wanted to tell a few narrow-minded people a few things that would not have been beneficial or fruitful. That is MY truth.
My first thought while listening to Ayesha’s comment was, what a beautiful moment of vulnerable authenticity from a woman who is comfortable sharing her own truth. My next thoughts immediately went to how many other wives and mamas have similar feelings but somehow feel guilty about them, so they hide their truth and suffer in silence. I was grateful Ayesha spoke to the wife who just needed someone to give words to what she was feeling. I knew someone would be helped by her words. I also knew the gossip sites and rumor mills would have a field day creating their own interpretation of what she said.
Last night I asked my husband for a male perspective of the conversation. He seemed to enjoy the episode and did not respond in the slightest when she made the remarks. In fact, I only heard Ayesha’s comments because my husband was watching the show. I wasn’t even paying attention until the conversation moved to the now infamous snippet. When the show was over, we each went back to what we were doing, so I wasn’t sure of his take on the remarks. When we discussed it last night, he was oblivious to what the big fuss was about. He heard and understood what Ayesha was saying, but the debate didn’t make sense to him. That’s when I knew, I needed to shift my focus. I needed to speak about something deeper than a “Is she right or wrong” debate.
You see, Ayesha Curry doesn’t need me or anyone else debating her comments. She’s living her life authentically. In my experience, living authentically brings its own rewards and struggles. What Ayesha has done is what so many other influencers strive to do every day… live in a way that encourages someone else to keep going even when the task at hand feel insurmountable.
What has stopped me from getting into a war of comments with people who will probably NEVER see my point of view was my own recognition that my point of view did not matter. Ayesha Curry didn’t have her beautiful moment for people to get on social media to debate it. She was simply speaking her truth. The people who were meant to connect with it did. The people who were meant to feel a solidarity with her did. That’s the point of all of this. This is why people with a platform even bother opening up about the things they experience in private. It’s not to attract ridicule, criticism, or even to urge their supporters to stand up for them. Ayesha Curry doesn’t need me or you to defend or condemn her.
Instead of hopping in on the “Do you agree or disagree with Ayesha” debate, or making one of my usual social media posts about it, I decided to use this opportunity to speak to the importance of living your own truth and using your platform however YOU feel is best. The only way you are going to be effective is if you show up authentically.

You’ve probably heard the saying, “Your vibe attracts your tribe.” It simply means the way you do life attracts those who are intended to do life with you. At the end of the day, people are drawn to those who speak their language... people who “look” like them. It’s not about the way you look on the outside. It's about the internal stuff that makes us all human. It's the way your heart bleeds for causes you are passionate about. People are looking to connect with individuals who “get it” even when they haven’t spoken a word. What connects your audience to you isn’t just your knowledge in your area of expertise. It isn’t how much education you have or how talented you are. The truth is there will always be someone who knows more or someone who does it faster for a lower rate. Your followers have choices! They choose to follow you because you speak their language. You get it. You make them feel seen and heard. You give voice to the nagging feeling they can’t quite put into words. They follow you because you vocalize what they are feeling, but you manage to say it in a way that makes them stand just a little taller. Your authenticity and vulnerability are the secret weapons to your success. They are the greatest currency you will ever have.
Be careful not to let the backlash and social uproar surrounding Ayesha’s beautiful moment cause you to run back to the shadows of obscurity. Keep showing up as the purest, most authentic version of yourself. Keep sharing YOUR truth regardless of how many people may disagree. You don’t share your truth to get likes. You don't share it to feed the journalistic vultures looking for the next click bait headline. You share it to inspire someone else to keep living in theirs. In a day where the pressure to feel perfect is thicker than ever, be the one who colors outside the lines on purpose. Be the person who wears black to an all white party. You may look like a rebel to some, but the truth is your “flow” is way too heavy to risk wearing white! If that’s you, just know there’s someone somewhere grateful you chose to wear black because next time they’ll have the courage to do the same.
Remain Authentic... Remain Vulnerable... Remain True to Yourself








