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The art of knowing when to hold your tongue. This is commentary from James Brown.
¶ The Nature of Discourse
I like to argue. I can't help it. It's part of who I am. When I feel strongly about something, it hurts not to speak up. I'm hyper opinionated and I've learned to love the sound of my own voice. You know what? I suggest you embrace yours, too. You only got one, after all. But as I've gotten older, I've realized something I'm grateful for.
¶ The Art of Silence
Sometimes you should just keep quiet at work and at home, especially around the holidays. I'm fortunate enough to keep mixed companies, different races, different politics, different religions. And the truth is, not everyone is up for a debate all the time or debate they won't win. So if you've shared a holiday dinner with me in recent years, you'd notice I'm quiet, even about topics I could discuss for literal hours. It's not because I don't care, because, oh, I care. I'm just careful.
¶ The Kenny Rogers Lesson
I call it the Kenny Rogers lesson. You know the one? Sometimes you got to know when to hold them, know when to fold them, know when to walk away, know when to run. You never count your money when you're sitting at the table. There'll be a time enough for counting when the dealing's done. Why?
¶ Reflections on Family and Loss
Well, I come from a huge family and I've watched it shrink for a lot of reasons. Some bad luck, others just dumb. And I haven't had a big Thanksgiving or holiday celebration since I was in single digits, largely because of that dumb stuff. I'd rather keep those I'm knitting together than lose them over something neither of us can control. When the dealing's done, you got to know when to hold up. What about you? What do you think?
Do you think it's better to speak to your mind or hold your peace during the holidays?
¶ Navigating Holiday Conversations
Let me know in the comments and support my work@jamesbrowntv.subsec.com on that note, I'm James Brown and as always, be well.
