Moment 108 - This Powerful Tool Can Change Your Life: Africa Brooke
Speaking of controversial topics, one of the things that's become surprisingly controversial
over the last couple of years is, and probably for a little while longer since the 17th century,
is this idea of accountability, which to me seems like much of the antidote to self-sabotage
is like taking personal responsibility for your life and your situation.
I've heard you talk about this.
I actually think this was the first, one of your first videos that caught my attention
was you talking about taking responsibility in a really, you know, a fairly direct way.
So tell me how taking responsibility, what that means to you, but how that helped you
to rise out of that phase you had from 14 to 24.
Yeah, oh, it was huge.
It was huge and it had to be one of the first things that I did.
Actually, as I think about this and sort of speak out loud, I think what allowed me to
get and stay sober that eighth and final time was taking personal responsibility.
I think all of the other times I had wanted to place blame on a lot of things outside
of me.
So my dad would have been the easiest person because he was an alcoholic and because of
his abuse and because of everything we experienced and because of the instability, because of
coming to a new country, moving to a part of the UK where just me, my sister and Curtis
are the only black kids, the adversity I experienced from that.
So I think there were so many ways that I could externalize, right?
But I think the moment that I was able to say, okay, well, Africa, what part did you
have to play in this?
So you've experienced all of this adversity.
What now?
What fucking now?
No one else can do it for you.
And I think that helped me so much.
And another thing that I had to do, which is a part of that responsibility and accountability
was making amends.
So people that have followed the 12 step program, for example, will know that making amends
is a huge part of it.
I didn't follow the 12 step program.
I what's the 12 step program?
So 12 step is a essentially alcoholics anonymous.
You go through a process, a 12 step process of accountability, essentially.
And one of those steps is making amends, reaching out to the people that you've harmed
and making amends.
And that's what I had to do.
And I really did that.
And there was a lot of shame.
There was a lot of guilt.
There were a lot of people that didn't want to hear it.
But there were a lot of people that were very grateful that even after all of these
years I'm coming to them and acknowledging something that I did or played a part in.
And only then could I actually move forward with my sobriety knowing that I am responsible.
Yes, I've experienced a lot of adversity, but I am the one that gets to decide what
now.
So fast forward to finding ourselves in a culture where even just conversations around personal
responsibility have been politicized because I've noticed they're labeled as right wing.
The moment you, isn't that weird?
It's mad.
It's mad.
Isn't that crazy?
The moment you say you do realize there is a lot in your life that you can control.
You're called a bigot.
I'm a puppet and I'm a victim.
And there's nothing I can control.
And it's that political party that did this.
Yeah.
So just.
And that is unfollowed.
It's fucking crazy.
It's mad.
And I think I've, I speak to my family and my friends about all of these things quite
a lot actually.
And because I'm still very much in touch with everyone back home in Zimbabwe.
And because I have that perspective, when I compare to that part of the world to the
Western world, it, this just seems like a completely different world, like some kind
of show it can't be real that people can get upset to know that there are things in
your life that you can control.
Yes, you might have experienced X, Y and Z, but you are responsible for how you move
forward.
Yes, there might be other components.
Maybe it is the system.
Maybe it is your familial environment, whatever the details might be, but there are also things
within your control.
The fact that people can label that as being bigoted the moment you say, I just.
Wouldn't you want that to be the case?
Wouldn't you want to have things that you can control?
The thought of being powerless to my circumstances is the most terrifying thing in the world.
You know, being a being a big, that's why I refer to it as a puppet that someone else
is pulling these strings.
Right.
And I have, I'm powerless to my situation.
So I think it's, I find it empowering and liberating to say, do you know, there is a
lot of things I can control.
Yes, I'm, I'm broke.
Yes, I'm in this situation, but there are, there's something that I can do.
Yeah.
And I have to also express the nuance that you did, which is there are a lot of people
that are, that are disabled.
There are a lot of people that have found themselves in horrifically unfortunate circumstances
through no fault of their own.
Yes.
But I find it really important for my sanity of mind and my optimism for the future.
To know that there is something, often there is something that I can do to change my situation.
Absolutely.
That's a controversial idea.
Imagine that.
Would you have to avoid that?
I can be the people typing out at you.
I can't ask you.
Easy for you to say.
Yeah.
Rich motherfucking with his car.
What, what, what is it though?
Do you, do you think you know what that is?
Yeah, because it holds a mirror up to you.
It makes you feel like for some people, and I think it was for me at some point as well,
holding that mirror up and saying, do you know what, I might have had part to play in
this, and I'm actually, I can have a part in getting out of the situation.
For some people, is the evidence of their inadequacy that they just don't have the self-esteem to
confront.
So it's easier to blame.
Blame is a nice, a nice shield.
It's a nice way to deflect the attack against my already fragile self-esteem.
I would do that.
Of course, when I was younger and someone might point at something, blame was a way for you
not to hit me in the self-esteem.
It was a way of saying, no, no, no, no.
That's not because I'm inadequate or because I'm not capable or I'm not smart or because
I'm not working hard.
It's because of this other thing.
And so leave me alone, Africa, blocked.
Yes.
It's like, do you know what I mean?
That's my analysis a bit often.
For some people, it's, it's look, it's a, it feels like evidence of their inadequacy.
Yes.
And why would someone not like that?
Well, because it makes you feel like shit.
Yeah.
And I think because we're also being encouraged, especially the younger generation who I really
now more than ever want to make more of an effort to really speak directly to them is
because I think we're, we're sort of training each other to not prioritize emotional resilience
because along with personal responsibility, resilience is also another controversial word.
So this, this idea that you can build a strong foundation within yourself, that even if something
happens externally outside of you, you are able to deal with it.
You don't have to go into that deep, dark place and think that is it full stop.
So I think because most people are not emotionally resilient and are not nurturing and sort of
cultivating that within themselves, it continues that cycle where you just end up in perpetual
victimhood and then we are in a culture that rewards victims, you know, and I think self-correction
there actually, and I want to make this very clear that there is a very real difference
between being a victim, someone who has genuinely been victimized and making victimhood an identity.
There's a, there's a huge difference between the two.
But I think when you start to make victimhood an identity for anything and everything, that's
when it might be time to actually hold a mirror up to yourself.
On that word, resilience.
I think the reason why resilience is in part at least why it's a controversial topic is
because it kind of starts to merge into the lane of like a mental health and resilient
people when they think of resilience, they think of like shut up and deal with it.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
And then that, that acts in conflict to the narrative of like express yourself, feel your
emotions.
Yes.
It's okay to be not okay.
Yeah.
Talk to me about the distinction you make between those two things and your relationship
with both.
You know what?
I guess this is where I would bring it back around to holding those multiple truths because
why do we think that we have to choose between one or the other?
Why can't you be both emotionally resilient as an individual, as a being and allow yourself
to express yourself and allow yourself to be vulnerable and allow yourself to have those
real low moments that we all do?
And I think both can coexist.
It's really not one or the other.
So what is the opposite of resilience then?
Hmm.
The word weakness comes to mind, but I don't know if that's accurate.
I don't know if that's accurate to what I'm not sure.
But it's interesting because the word weakness comes to mind and maybe a part of me or even
for someone listening, we think associating the word weak to yourself means there's something
wrong with you, that it's a bad word.
I think there's this idea that it's bad to be weak or it's not acceptable to be weak.
But I think we all have moments of weakness.
But I don't know if that would be the opposite of resilience.
What do you think?
So if we're talking about emotional resilience, maybe the opposite is emotional, maybe fragility.
Maybe I don't know.
It's something within that realm, right?
Yeah.
And the reason I'm basically playing Dell was an advocate with myself to see if it is two
truths.
We were describing earlier about being expressive and being in touch with your emotions.
Is that being emotionally fragile?
Or is that something else?
I wonder if, in other words, that's coming to mind, if some reason soft, I think it's
both possible to be soft and whatever you would consider hard because just in very simple
language, when I hear the word resilience, you have to be hard.
There's something sort of, it's not necessarily stoic, but it's sort of that kind of language
where you're really fully grounded in yourself, you're back and straight, you're internally
up.
Whereas the other side of that is maybe there is an element of fragility, which is fine.
I don't think it's a bad thing, allowing yourself to be soft, allowing yourself to be,
to not be as strong all of the time.
So I think...
It's interesting, isn't it?
Because on one hand you're saying be resilient, but then also be the opposite of resilience.
Yes, yeah.
But it can be...
You can be...
They can also be context, right?
Yeah.
It can be context-specific behaviour.
So you can be resilient in the sense that when someone pelts abuse at you in your Instagram
DMs, you have the resilience to not internalise that, not let it destroy your day or your mood
and to move on.
But then you can be, I guess, emotionally...
Then your dog might die, I've got a lovely dog running around somewhere here.
My dog might die, and that is real cause for emotional expression and to be emotionally
to be soft and to be open and to feel.
Yes.
And maybe it's context-specific behaviour.
Yes, I think so.
I think so.
But again, I think they can both coexist.
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