Brown commencement app download
Get the latest articles, photos and videos directly from the Browns, including live radio and press conference streams. Access your Browns mobile tickets by logging in with your Ticketmaster account. You can quickly view and manage your tickets, transfer them or post for resale through Account Manager.
Mobile tickets are required at all Cleveland Browns games and there are important log-in changes for to keep your account safer than ever. The first time you sign in you will be asked to reset your password and verify your phone and email address. This can be done in the app or on the Browns Account Manager website. Browns Mobile App. And I went to community college. A year later, I had taken 27 hours of transferable credit, I had a 4.
I was puffy and proud and ready. And there used to be a convenience station there. They said no. I think it was probably illegally parked. And it was filled to the very top of the ceiling of that car. Because I had packed all my belongings. This was it. This was my time. I called my mom times during those two days. But I registered at ACC. I stayed in Austin. I transferred to the Pappadeaux on And I made the grades and I went back and I thought to myself the same thing I still think to myself today when things are hard, and when I fall, because I still fall.
Get back up, begin again. I kept waiting tables. I did an internship at the state hospital and another internship at child protective services. And I graduated. I went straight into my MSW. Steve and I ended up in Houston. I started my PhD program at the University of Houston. I was 32 or 33 at the time.
We were ready to have a baby. I got pregnant. I remember coming to school and letting people know, and some people were happy for me.
I got out and graduated with my PhD. I wrote a book and I was really excited about it. It was rejected from every single person. I could wallpaper [inaudible ] with rejection letters. Borrowed money from my parents. The self-published book was a big hit. Penguin, big, proper publisher bought it. That book failed. This is the rhythm of my life. And these are the seasons of every single person I know who has actually changed the world.
The world will not ready itself for our plans. Come on. You knew it was coming. Getting back up and beginning again are risky. They both require courage and curiosity and courage and curiosity are born of vulnerability. The definition of vulnerability is simple.
It is not. It is actually the most accurate way to measure courage. One example of courage in your life or in the life of someone else that did not require vulnerability. A single example of courage that did not require uncertainty, risk, and emotional exposure. One day I found myself on base, military base in the Midwest talking to troops. People buried their head in their hands. There is no courage without vulnerability. We have to be brave and curious and to dig into the feelings of a fall.
Self-awareness is power. It gives you power. You own the emotions or they own you. You own your hurt or your hurt owns you and you end up working it out on other people, or you take it out on your own self-worth. But beginning again also takes curiosity and courage. What have I learned from this fall that I can take with me as I begin again? Yeah, it does. Nothing wasted, muscles built. What I feared would be a shaming return home to Houston to go to community college, turned out to be an incredible opportunity to reconnect with my family.
It was that Hill Country residential treatment facility that I worked in while I was working my way through UT, where I learned about the concept of shame. That defined my career. My falls have taught me a hundred times more about who I am than any of my achievements ever have, ever could, or ever will. I owe a hundred percent of my accomplishments to taking smart risks and trusting myself. Not a minute of that time was wasted. Not a minute.
I learned more about the issues that are important to me like inclusion and diversity and leadership, living into those principles at a job that I never in a million years was a part of my plan. That was tough. How did you handle it? What did you do that summer for those six months after graduation?
But it taught me about the importance of resetting. It taught me how to get back up and begin again.
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