Log in

goodpods headphones icon

To access all our features

Open the Goodpods app
Close icon
headphones
Emotional Inclusion

Emotional Inclusion

Mollie Jean De Dieu

Hello everyone, I’m Mollie Jean De Dieu and this is the Emotional Inclusion podcast. In my one and a half decade long career in the fashion industry and through listening to hundreds of stories of people who have navigated work whilst facing the ‘perfect storm’ on a personal level, I realized the urgent need to advocate a safe platform in the business world where, with a trained professional onboard, emotions could be heard, recognized and dealt with, for an enhanced business productivity. Building a better corporate ecosystem starts here. In the 21st century world in which we live in, companies are still forgetting that the emotional health of our employees is the very foundation of their success. What are we doing to reintegrate our employees into the workforce when they are experiencing hardships? Why are we still not taking care of our employees when we know that they are our greatest asset? Please join me in sharing conversations with leaders, culture changers, creatives, founders and CEO’s, scientists and doctors, in breaking down archaic corporate stereotypes and building a mindset and culture of Emotional Inclusion in the workforce.
Share icon

All episodes

Best episodes

Top 10 Emotional Inclusion Episodes

Goodpods has curated a list of the 10 best Emotional Inclusion episodes, ranked by the number of listens and likes each episode have garnered from our listeners. If you are listening to Emotional Inclusion for the first time, there's no better place to start than with one of these standout episodes. If you are a fan of the show, vote for your favorite Emotional Inclusion episode by adding your comments to the episode page.

Emotional Inclusion - Ei x Sephora

Ei x Sephora

Emotional Inclusion

play

06/29/23 • 38 min

Deborah Yeh

Deborah Yeh is the Global Chief Purpose Officer for Sephora. In this newly created global role,

Deborah works across all teams to define Sephora’s Purpose and the resulting sustainability

and social impact priorities. Since joining Sephora in 2012, she has been instrumental in

building Sephora’s reputation with a strong sense of purpose, and she is passionate about

bringing Sephora’s values to life in a meaningful and authentic way for all stakeholders.

Recognized for her steadfast and fearless leadership across notable industry awards such as

Business Insider’s Most Innovative CMOs and Gold House’s A100 for her work in the Asian

American community, Deborah has helped transform Sephora into an inspiring, inclusive and

educational beauty destination. In 2019, Deborah led the launch of Sephora America’s award-

winning “We Belong to Something Beautiful” brand campaign, and she has demonstrated

relentless commitment to actions in favor of greater diversity and equity in beauty, including

Sephora’s first-of-its-kind national Racial Bias in Retail Study, which was designed to measure

the issue of racially biased experiences in U.S. retail and identify solutions to end unfair

treatments.

Prior to joining Sephora, Deborah led marketing strategy and planning for leading brands and

retailers, most notably for Old Navy and Target, and she currently sits on the board of L.L.

Bean. Deborah attended Harvard University, majoring in Psychology. She currently lives in

Paris with her husband, two children and two cats.

Insights from this episode:

  • Company purpose & Personal purpose
  • Organizational and employee wellness
  • Challenges in the retail industry
  • Wellness and mental health through a medical lens
  • Medicalized care and safety and emotional attention
  • Empathetic and great leadership
  • Culture of care and belonging

Quotes from the show:

  • “Our best assets in almost every company are the intellect and passion of our employees.” - Deborah Yeh
  • “I think if we could nurture these bonds on a more authentic platform, surely enough our companies would truly benefit from it on a macro scale.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu
  • “Emotional inclusion is such a powerful accelerant to more fulfilling and productive relationships including in the workplace.” - Deborah Yeh
  • “Inclusion is an action.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu
  • “Belonging is actually a powerful unlock because that is where you get the feelings. That is where you get the feeling of connectedness. That connectedness is anchored in support and acceptance in psychological safety that comes from belonging.” - Deborah Yeh
  • “There can be no connection and thus belonging if there is no emotional inclusion or psychological safety.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu
  • “A full practice has to think about belonging and has to be thinking about emotional inclusion.” - Deborah Yeh
  • “What you’re challenging us to do is to think about a broader set of forces that we can bring into our practices as leaders. Forces like caring, empathy, support, motivation. All these things are really powerful forms of fuel as a leader to open up and enable others to be successful.” - Deborah Yeh
  • “When you open up to the world, the world opens up to you.” - Deborah Yeh
  • “What I think is so powerful about the concept of emotional inclusion is that it reinvigorates the power of the individual to make a difference.” - Deborah Yeh
  • “We’re all born leaders, paving the way for a better future for all and hopefully a better now for everyone.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu
  • “I think it's very illuminating and freeing to admit that there is no uncomfortableness in admitting our pain and our humanity in the workplace.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu

Stay connected:

Deborah Yeh

LinkedIn

https://www.linkedin.com/in/deborahyeh/

Emotional inclusion

https://www.emotionalinclusion.com/
https://www.instagram.com/emotional_inclusion/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/emotional-inclusion/

bookmark
plus icon
share episode
Emotional Inclusion - Ei x Alignment with Hortense Le Gentil
play

04/26/23 • 45 min

Hortense Le Gentil

Hortense is a global executive leadership coach and the author of the widely applauded “Aligned: Connecting Your True Self with the Leader You’re Meant to Be.” She works with CEOs and other senior executives around the world to help them lead with authenticity and close the gap between the leader they are and the leader they want to be. She is a certified Marshall Goldsmith Stakeholder CenteredTM coach and part of MG100 Coaches. Hortense’s executive coaching is informed by her 30 years in business, working across a number of industries—including media consulting, advertising, and entrepreneurship. She has been working on and delivering executive leadership programs at various Fortune 500 companies and for CEO Perspectives. She is ranked #5 on the Global Gurus list by World Management Global Gurus and was a 2021 nominee of the Thinkers 50 Coaching and Mentoring Awards. She is a contributor to Harvard Business Review and ThriveGlobal.com. Her thought-leadership has been featured in Forbes, Fast Company, Inc. and Business Insider.

Insights from this episode:

  • Workplace cultural differences
  • Being aligned and connected with oneself
  • Different roles as a leader
  • Fears within the workplace
  • Limitations and mind traps
  • Improving connection with your team
  • Leadership vs Management

Quotes from the show:

  • “How you can get aligned is to take the time to reflect, and to think about what is important for you; what drives you, what gives you energy, how you want to be remembered as a leader.” - Hortense Le Gentil
  • “We have gained the awareness that breathing more humanity within our workplace is direly needed, and that has of course shifted how leaders themselves lead as a consequence.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu
  • “The concept of alignment and unlocking yourself is really to free yourself from what’s holding you back to be who you are and the leader you really can be.” - Hortense Le Gentil
  • “Emotions are really the gateway to each other’s humanness in so many ways.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu
  • “In fact emotion, empathy, it’s really the way to connect with people.” - Hortense Le Gentil
  • “Showcasing our humanness, our emotional realms if you will, doesn’t mean being on full display talking about and verbalizing every single emotion. But it’s about showing up as our true authentic selves and saying “It’s okay to be human. It’s safe to be human.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu
  • “Everything begins with you. With your emotions, with who you are, who you want to be, how you want to show up, how you want to be remembered.” - Hortense Le Gentil

Stay connected:

Hortense Le Gentil

https://hortenselegentil.com/

Emotional inclusion

https://www.emotionalinclusion.com/

https://www.instagram.com/emotional_inclusion/

https://www.linkedin.com/company/emotional-inclusion/

bookmark
plus icon
share episode
Emotional Inclusion - Ei x Shell: Emotional Inclusion In Action
play

01/26/23 • 53 min

Lyn Lee

Lynn is the first global Asian female Chief Diversity, Equity and Inclusion officer to execute her job out of Asia for Shell. In terms of DE&I, Shell has a bold goal to become one of the most diverse and inclusive organizations in the world. With 20 years and counting at Shell, Lyn champions the DE&I priorities, focusing very much on accelerating the progress of gender balance in senior leadership and stem roles, ethnicity and local national representation.

Lyn is passionate and committed to driving workplace inclusion of people with disabilities, LGBTQIA+, and promoting care and destigmatizing mental illness. She represents Shell as a company which embraces a diverse global workforce to build a strong culture of inclusion, respect and high performance.

Insights from this episode:

  • DE&I
  • Differentiation of Emotional Inclusion and Psychological Safety
  • Stories and human connection
  • Mental Illness and seeking professional help
  • Respect and empathy
  • Emotionally inclusive leadership
  • Mental health illnesses and medical care and treatment
  • Leadership tips
  • Shell’s “I’m Not OK” initiative (to promote open and honest conversations about mental health)

Quotes from the show:

  • “Inclusion, I think for me it’s really feeling that you are part of that ecosystem, that when I go to work I know that I will be supported. It’s about knowing that I’ll be valued for my contributions and that I’ll be valued for the person that I am. So when I go to work I feel safe. And being able to be myself, I can thrive.” - Lyn Lee
  • “Emotional inclusion for me would mean that no matter who I am that day, whether I'm having a good or bad time, that I can feel almost that the people that I work with have my back.” - Lyn Lee
  • “Psychological safety is really being in an arena that allows you to be safe whilst Emotional inclusion really is about the ability to bring your full self at work with the emotionality component that we all have ingrained within all of us.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu
  • “All of us have a story and when we share that, we connect people because we all have at some fundamental level, we all need that connection; the ability to hear other people’s stories so that it gives us a voice as well to tell our stories.” - Lyn Lee
  • “People really need to hear that navigating or going through difficulty is not an end-all and be-all and that we can survive it all, and we can also still be able to have a career.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu
  • “You have all these vented emotions that you are carrying, worries that you are carrying, and all of these add to an emotional burden and that burden is heavy. It’s heavy unless you share it, unless someone is able to give you feedback. And that’s actually what’s needed in a major crisis like that in terms of dealing with mental health challenges.” - Lyn Lee
  • “Company leadership plays such an important role in creating an environment where employees have the chance to take time off to care for themselves and where worker well-being is really emphasized.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu
  • “For companies to truly put mental health at the centerfold of their agendas, really understanding the full scope of our employees’ humanity both the physical and the mental, and really looking at insurances too or allocated budget, to care for our employees mental welfare because as we know mind and body are so interconnected.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu
  • “The first thing that is the most difficult is having the ability to talk about this [mental health]. This is the most important. This is the start to recovery, the start to being better, the start to gaining back yourself.” - Lyn Lee

Stay connected:

Lyn Lee

https://www.linkedin.com/in/lyn-lee-981ba03/

Emotional inclusion

https://www.emotionalinclusion.com/
https://www.instagram.com/emotional_inclusion/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/emotional-inclusion/

bookmark
plus icon
share episode
Emotional Inclusion - Ei x AXA : Mental Health & Insurances with Gordon Watson
play

10/14/22 • 47 min

Gordon Watson

He is the CEO for AXA Asia, an experienced and energetic leader with a strong track record of delivering results. He is also a member of the group’s management committee. Gordon’s career in the insurance industry spans more than 30 years, including as regional CEO for AIA, as well as leading the group’s corporate solutions, partnership distribution, and AIA Vitality businesses from 2011 to 2017; he was also regional president for AIG Life in Japan and Korea from 2008 to 2010. He has held many key senior roles based out of London, New York, Nairobi, Dubai, Tokyo, Seoul, and Hong Kong. Gordon holds an MBA from the University of Hull in the UK and is a fellow of the UK’s Chartered Insurance Institute and the Society of Marketing. He is also the founding chair of Shared Value Project (SVP) in Hong Kong, where he works with private companies to tackle social issues.

Insights from this episode:

  • Mental health visibility
  • Ethisphere Institute & One Mind
  • Mental health Index of best practices for companies’ self assessment
  • Creating mental health culture in companies
  • Leaders’ role and responsibility in mental health company practices
  • Sustainability of mental health practices in companies
  • Inclusion of mental health in Insurances

Quotes from the show:

  • “Each person, to be all you can be in a company needs to come in, needs to bring the best of themselves to work and be able to thrive there.” - Gordon Watson
  • “For me as a CEO, we want high performance, but people need to come in and they need to feel comfortable that they can thrive.” - Gordon Watson
  • “If you really get mental health culture right, it should be robust and strong enough for everyone.” - Gordon Watson
  • “How can we create an overall robust mental health culture that really allows employees to bring the best of themselves to work everyday no matter who they are and really have a meritocracy and a team that supports each other?” - Gordon Watson
  • “We really have the moral obligation to look beyond and exercise deep awareness in that realm because a lot can be hidden behind a smile.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu
  • “Emotional inclusion, it’s really all about the doing because inclusion is an action.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu
  • “There is such a stigma behind mental health but we need to be walking our talk in making ripples of change and allowing there to be a work landscape for the generations to come where they can truly bring their full selves at work.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu
  • “Unless we see employee mental well-being through a medical lens, it cannot be sustainable.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu
  • “If you look after the mental health of your employees it’s going to affect your business in a very positive way; morale, engagement, etc.” - Gordon Watson

Stay connected:

Gordon Watson
https://www.linkedin.com/in/gordontwatson/

Emotional inclusion

https://www.emotionalinclusion.com/

https://www.instagram.com/emotional_inclusion/

https://www.linkedin.com/company/emotional-inclusion/

bookmark
plus icon
share episode

Amy Edmondson

Amy is the Novartis Professor of Leadership and Management at the Harvard Business School, a chair established to support the study of human interactions that lead to the creation of successful enterprises. Best known for her groundbreaking work on psychological safety in the workplace, Amy has written a fantastic book called “The Fearless Organization, creating psychological safety in the workplace for learning, innovation and growth.” She is the author of seven books in total and more than 75 articles and case studies. Amy has been named in 2021, The #1 Management thinker in the World by Thinkers50 for her pioneering ideas on psychological safety in the workplace and transforming how companies operate, innovate and collaborate. She was also named the Most Influential International Thinker in Human Resources by HR Magazine in 2019.

Insights from this episode:

  • Psychological safety
  • Speaking up and being heard
  • Cultural differences in workplace dynamics
  • Purpose and fulfillment in work
  • Spectrum of Mental Health illnesses
  • Value creation
  • Curiosity, Humility, and Empathy

Quotes from the show:

  • “It’s great to have psychological safety and feel like you can speak up, but it matters even more if you feel like someone’s listening.” - Amy Edmondson
  • “Healthy organization of the future would be one where the purpose is front and center is people’s minds, where the culture is healthy, inclusive.” - Amy Edmondson
  • “We all want to be a part of something larger than ourselves.” - Amy Edmondson
  • “The first thing that companies need to do is truly differentiate and help identify people who are having medical mental health challenges and get them the help they need. Nothing could be more important than that. “ - Amy Edmondson
  • “Psychological safety is simply permission for candor.” - Amy Edmondson
  • “Curiosity is the twin sister of humility.” - Amy Edmondson
  • “Emotional inclusion is really a calling on companies to seriously invest in the mental health of their employees inside their organization, and really through a medical lens to see sustainable results because that’s effectively what we’re all after.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu
  • “Make sure that our employees feel valued and cared for, and that they have a sense of meaning within their organizations.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu

Stay connected:

Amy Edmondson
LinkedIn

https://www.linkedin.com/in/amedmondson/

Emotional inclusion

https://www.emotionalinclusion.com/
https://www.instagram.com/emotional_inclusion/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/emotional-inclusion/

bookmark
plus icon
share episode
Emotional Inclusion - Ei x Golin: “Going All In” With Mental Health
play

06/30/22 • 41 min

Darren Burns
President of Golin Asia, Darren is a seasoned regional communications leader who has spent over two decades leading agencies in Taipei and Shanghai before relocating to Singapore in early 2019. His proven track record on evolving and implementing world class client service that drives real impact is unequivocal. Darren is also a lecturer, a speaker and a fellow podcaster.
Jane Morgan
is the Managing Director at Golin / Head of Client Services APAC. Jane joined Golin at HK in 2016 after senior roles at Ketchum and Edelman. Her record as an innovator in the region around talent, DEI and mental health, and her ability to create high performing teams is undeniable. Jane is passionate, driven, kind and always such a joy to speak to in our sharing of the mission.

Insights from this episode:

  • Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion
  • Identifying and accepting mental health struggles
  • Asia for Asia - local level support
  • Therapist support in the company
  • Leaders creating an environment allowing vulnerability and openness
  • Normalizing mental health discussions
  • Mental health spectrum
  • Covid as an accelerant for mental health importance and discussion

Quotes from the show:

  • “Go all in.” - Golin
  • “Fix it before it breaks.” - Golin
  • “Listen first, act, test and learn, and move things forward because together we can really create change and it has to be driven from the top.” - Darren Burns
  • Healthy emotions play a fundamental and participatory role in success and actually failing to recognize this is not just stigma, but it’s denial.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu
  • “The moment you start to act then the trust builds. Then you’ll find that people will open up and will start speaking a little bit more openly because they trust that you're listening to them and making the changes that they require.” - Jane Morgan
  • 5 things to humanize the workplace:
    • Listen
    • Act
    • Show your human side
    • Make the phrase “it’s always been done that way” outlawed
    • Be agile with your decision making and constantly evolve
  • Jane Morgan
  • “Having this open discussion, collaboration, but led from the top with bottom up feedback, has definitely been a game changer for us.” - Darren Burns
  • “It’s life saving, and it’s life changing in so many ways to have that one person listen to you and what you have to say.” - Mollie Jean De Dieu
  • “We take care of our people, and that essentially takes care of the business.” Mollie Jean De Dieu

Stay connected:

Golin
Linkedin

https://www.linkedin.com/company/golin/

Darren Burns
Linkedin
https://www.linkedin.com/in/darren-burns-21a08a4/

Jane Morgan
Linkedin
https://www.linkedin.com/in/janemorgan01/

Emotional inclusion

https://www.emotionalinclusion.com/

https://www.instagram.com/emotional_inclusion/

bookmark
plus icon
share episode
Emotional Inclusion - Ei x Chester Elton: How Do We Manage Anxiety At Work?
play

02/24/22 • 43 min

Chester Elton

has spent 2 decades helping clients engage their employees and organizational strategy, vision, and values. In his inspiring and always entertaining talks, Chester provides real solutions for leaders looking to build culture, manage change, and drive innovation. Chester is the co-founder of The Culture Works, a global training company, and author of multiple award-winning, number 1 New York Times, USA today, and Wall Street Journal best-sellers; which have been translated into 30 languages and sold more than 1.5 million copies. These books are: “All In: How the Best Managers Create a Culture of Belief and Drive Big Results”, “The Carrot Principle: How the Best Managers Use Recognition to Engage Their Employees, Retain Talent, and Drive Performance”, “The Best Team Wins: The New Science of High Performance”, and his latest book, “Anxiety at Work: 8 Strategies to Help Teams Build Resilience, Handle Uncertainty, and Get Stuff Done”.

His books have been called “fascinating” by Fortune magazine, and “creative and refreshing” by The New York Times. Chester has appeared on NBC’s Today Show, CBS News’ 60 Minutes, and is often quoted in Fast Company, Newsweek, and The Wall Street Journal. In 2020, Global Guru’s research organization ranked Chester #4 amongst the world’s top leadership experts, and #2 amongst the world’s top organizational culture experts. He recently ranked #9 in the top 200 biggest voices in leadership to watch for in 2022.

Insights from this episode:

  • Duck Syndrome
  • Workplace anxiety
  • Mental health issues increase in younger generation
  • Healthy workplace communication language
  • Trust and emotional safety in leaders and the workplace
  • Importance of making it safe to make mistakes, failures, and asking for help
  • Worker overload and burnout vs job security
  • Sympathy vs Empathy
  • Gratitude

Quotes from the show:

  • “There is only one attribute to a leader that matters, and that is - empathy. If you are not empathetic, if people don’t believe that you care about them, none of the other stuff matters.”
  • “Even in the hard times, there are things we can be grateful for. Change that mindset, reduce your anxiety. “
  • “The 8th strategy is gratitude. Treat yourself and treat those around you with a little bit of gratitude - it lifts them up, and it lifts you up.”
  • “Gratitude is an extremely effective way to lead your teams in business. If you lead with gratitude, you’ll have more engaged, happier employees. If you’re happy at work, you’ll be 150% more likely to be happy in your personal life. “
  • “We’ve got responsibilities as leaders to send our people home happy, virtually or physically. It’s a great way to lead. It’s a great way to run a business. It’s an even better way to just live. “
  • “Trust me on this one. That when you live a life of gratitude, you’re more relaxed, you’re more aware, you’re a better support to your spouse, your partner, your kids, your family, your community. “
  • “When you put gratitude at the center of your life, it’s just a better way to live.”
  • “The bravest thing you can do is ask for help.”
  • “Having anxiety is a normal human behavior for us all to have and it’s okay to normalize it and to not to frown upon it in this flawless corporate landscape today.”

Stay connected:

Chester Elton
Linkedin
https://www.linkedin.com/in/chesterelton/

The Culture Works
https://thecultureworks.com/

Podcast: Anxiety at Work with Adrian Gostick & Chester Elton
https://apple.co/3H5tqoV

Emotional inclusion
https://www.emotionalinclusion.com/
https://www.instagram.com/emotional_inclusion/

bookmark
plus icon
share episode

Dr. Kathy Pike

Dr. Kathy Pike is the founder and past director of the WHO Center for Global Mental Health and professor of psychology at Columbia University. She is also the CEO of One Mind. Dr. Pike has international experience in global mental health discussion. She has published over 100 articles and book chapters on eating disorders, culture, psychopathology, global mental health, and mental health in the workplace. A long-time advocate for increasing access to mental health services, Dr. Pike has provided consultation on mental health policy to Japanese parliamentary representatives and to the United States Mental Health Policy Organizations.

She’s also committed to supporting workplaces in their efforts to address mental health in the workplace. As such, she consults with global corporations with the aim of integrating best practices to reduce the burden of mental illness and enhance mental health and wellbeing in today’s rapidly changing workplace.

Insights from this episode:

  • Challenges in addressing the complexity of issues that need to change regarding mental health in the workplace
  • Changing cultures and transformation through structural and systemic changes
  • Mental Health at Work Index for Leaders and Organizations
  • 3 Ps Framework: Protection, Promotion, Provision
  • Strategies at One Mind at Work
  • AI as an aid for Mental Health Professionals

Quotes from the show:

  • “Taking care of our mental health is, it’s a verb. It’s not a noun. It's dynamic and it’s changing. And so this idea of emotional inclusion that you’ve put forward, I think is one that’s really powerful because it means it’s an invitation.” - Dr. Kathy Pike
  • “We have this false dichotomy that what’s good for business is not good for mental health and what’s good for mental health is not good for business. And that’s just flat out wrong. Data is overwhelmingly clear that when we take care of our people, when you take care of people’s mental health and wellbeing, it’s good for the people, it’s good for their teams, it’s good for their families, it’s good for the community, it’s good for the workplace.” - Dr. Kathy Pike
  • “Mental health and wellbeing and focusing on these issues in the workplace, you have to continuously demonstrate that it matters. You have to prove and continue to promote buy-in within the organizations. So you need to be able to demonstrate that what you’re doing is having an impact on what you’re aiming to impact.” - Dr. Kathy Pike
  • “Emotional intelligence is all about knowing how to navigate our emotions and the emotions of the people we interact with. Whilst emotional inclusion on the other hand, puts emotional intelligence into action.” - Mollie Rogers Jean De Dieu
  • “Inclusion is a verb and being inclusive of each other’s emotional realm, as you and I are so aligned with, is something that we need to do.” - Mollie Rogers Jean De Dieu
  • “Nothing will replace who we are as human beings but how AI can bring in additional insights and broaden our perspectives based on the humanity that resides within all of us is going to be fascinating.” - Mollie Rogers Jean De Dieu
  • “Emotional intelligence versus emotional inclusion, it’s one thing for leaders to know, it’s another for leaders to do. And leaders are really building capacity around mental health and wellbeing at the most progressive organizations.” - Dr. Kathy Pike

Stay connected:

Dr. Kathy Pike

LinkedIn

https://www.linkedin.com/in/kathleenmpike/

Mental Health at Work Index

https://mentalhealthindex.org/

Emotional inclusion

https://www.emotionalinclusion.com/

https://www.instagram.com/emotional_inclusion/

https://www.linkedin.com/company/emotional-inclusion/

bookmark
plus icon
share episode
Emotional Inclusion - Let's be Emotionally inclusive
play

01/31/22 • 8 min

Insights from this episode:

  • What we learned from the past 2 years
  • Mental health programs
  • Changing working conditions
  • Global health systems
  • Mental health resources in companies

Quotes from the show:

  • “The bottom line here is: employee mental health is and will continue to be the nucleus to building healthy work environments.”
  • “Emotional expression should not be a bias in hindering positive office culture.”
  • “There is no health without mental health.”
  • “Yes, vision is easy but execution takes work and that’s exactly what we set out to do at Emotional inclusion.”

Stay connected:

Emotional inclusion

https://www.emotionalinclusion.com/
https://www.instagram.com/emotional_inclusion/

bookmark
plus icon
share episode
Emotional Inclusion - Stigma: An Excerpt from the NEW BOOK
play

10/18/23 • 24 min

In this episode, Mollie Jean De Dieu, the founder of Emotional Inclusion, offers us a glimpse into her latest book, "Emotional Inclusion: A Humanizing Revolution at Work". She recounts real-life workplace stories that illustrate the challenges people face and how fostering emotional inclusion can lead to improvements in the workplace for everyone.
Insights from this episode:

  • Stigma in the workplace
  • Effects of workplace experience on performance
  • Fears and struggles from expectations
  • Anxiety in work influencing personal life
  • Pressure from societal norms
  • Importance of seeking help
  • Power of authenticity and vulnerability

Quotes from the show:

  • “Emotional inclusion invites others to look into our humanness. Being emotionally inclusive means being emotionally and mutually accepting of one another.”
  • “The mind-body connection is undeniable when it comes to discussing mental health or emotional wellness holistically.”
  • “There is an urgency to look at stigma as a gateway to creating emotionally inclusive workplace cultures.”
  • “Emotional inclusion invites us to change the core of our discriminating attitude and false assumptions when labeling each other's humanity.”
  • “There is no question that emotionally inclusive companies communicate tools and strategies to address and spot anxiety, depression, stress, and mental illness overall.”
  • “The stigma of mental illness is one of the top reasons that people do not receive care.”
  • “Emotional inclusion puts emotional intelligence into action in a medicalized, confidential, and purpose driven way.”
  • “Whichever way we choose to tackle emotional inclusion, the pull is just greater than us at this stage.”
  • “Emotional inclusion calls for the dialogue to be deepened, and the stigma to be weakened.”

Stay connected:

Emotional inclusion

https://www.emotionalinclusion.com/

https://www.instagram.com/emotional_inclusion/

https://www.linkedin.com/company/emotional-inclusion/
Get your copy of the book:
https://amzn.to/402BNgj
"Emotional Inclusion: A Humanizing Revolution at Work" is published by Penguin Random House

bookmark
plus icon
share episode

Show more best episodes

Toggle view more icon

FAQ

How many episodes does Emotional Inclusion have?

Emotional Inclusion currently has 26 episodes available.

What topics does Emotional Inclusion cover?

The podcast is about Health & Fitness, Management, Mental Health, Podcasts, Business and Emotions.

What is the most popular episode on Emotional Inclusion?

The episode title 'Ei x Sephora' is the most popular.

What is the average episode length on Emotional Inclusion?

The average episode length on Emotional Inclusion is 38 minutes.

How often are episodes of Emotional Inclusion released?

Episodes of Emotional Inclusion are typically released every 29 days.

When was the first episode of Emotional Inclusion?

The first episode of Emotional Inclusion was released on Jun 12, 2020.

Show more FAQ

Toggle view more icon

Comments