Redefining Success with Laura Gassner Otting
<p>Do you ever feel like you’re chasing success, but once you get “there,” the finish line moves again? </p><p>If you’re nodding along, then this episode is for you.</p><p>This week, we’re getting deep, real, and hilarious with bestselling author and keynote speaker <a href="https://lauragassnerotting.com/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Laura Gassner Otting</a> (LGO)—a woman who has done it all, from working in the White House to writing books that change lives. But here’s the twist: even she has struggled with self-worth, impostor syndrome, and figuring out what success actually means.</p><p>What if success isn’t about more money, more titles, or even more standing ovations?</p><p>What if success is about feeling aligned with your values and choices—no matter what anyone else thinks?</p><p>That’s the conversation we’re diving into today. It’s a mix of wisdom, humor, and real talk (plus a detour into drag queens, rage rooms, and why Malala might just be the best at avoiding awkward small talk).</p><h2>Topics We’re Breaking Down</h2><ul><li>Success: Who Defines It? – Laura turns the traditional definition of success on its head. Spoiler alert: It’s not about a corner office, a million-dollar paycheck, or someone else’s approval.</li><li>Why We Suck at Receiving Compliments – Laura’s personal struggle with praise, her therapist’s game-changing advice, and how you can actually accept a compliment without feeling weird.</li><li>The Different Versions of Ourselves – Ever feel like you have a work-self, a home-self, and a totally different karaoke-self? Laura shares how she balances “LGO the speaker” with just being Laura, the introvert who loves bad reality TV.</li><li>Success Does Not Equal Happiness – If money and power automatically made people happy, billionaires wouldn’t get divorced and celebrities wouldn’t have meltdowns. We get real about why external success is often a trap.</li><li>The Everest Analogy – What climbing a mountain taught Laura about life, ambition, and why getting to the top isn’t actually the goal.</li></ul><br>