Episode 142: Personal Growth in the Age of AI: Identity, Transformation & Awakening with Adele Wang

In this episode of the F*ck Saving Face podcast, host Judy Tsuei and Adele Wang explore the complexities of personal development, cultural identity, and the impact of AI on our lives.

They discuss shared experiences within diverse communities, the challenges of navigating personal growth amidst societal chaos, and the importance of embracing complexity in understanding one's identity. Adele shares insights on the awakening process many individuals experience in their late 20s and late 40s, and how these moments can lead to significant personal transformation. The discussion also highlights the role of AI in enhancing personal and professional development, emphasizing the need for curiosity and advanced prompt engineering to leverage AI effectively. Ultimately, the conversation encourages listeners to embrace their unique experiences and find fulfillment beyond traditional measures of success.

More about Adele Wang:

Adele specializes in helping professionals struggling with stress and overwhelm connect with their calling so they can attract more of what they want and live lives of more purpose, connection and presence. With her skills as a coach and AI consultant, she has helped hundreds of clients reduce anxiety and develop a stronger awareness of their purpose so they can create fulfilling livelihoods and relationships. She is a frequent speaker and facilitator, and also mentors spiritual entrepreneurs in developing theirpractices. Adele works with clients all over the world on the Zoom phone and in her office in Atlanta, GA. For more information, visit www.adelewang.com. She has a MS in Industrial Relations and a BA in Economics from the University of Wisconsin. She lives in Atlanta, Georgia with her family and two cats.

Sound Bites

"How can we do that with hope rather than fear?"

"We are meant to be interconnected beings."

"Everything's connected to everything else."

"Be more curious than you are."

"Get better results, faster, easier, and cheaper."


Takeaways

  • Empowerment comes from addressing taboo topics in mental health.

  • AI has the potential to enhance personal and professional growth.

  • Cultural identity plays a significant role in shaping individual experiences.

  • The interconnectedness of human beings is essential for personal development.

  • Knowledge acquisition alone does not guarantee happiness or security.

  • Self-discovery is a journey that requires letting go of past beliefs.

  • AI can serve as a supportive tool in navigating life's complexities.

  • Authenticity is crucial in breaking societal expectations and taboos.

  • Embracing one's true self leads to a more fulfilling life.


Episode Highlights

00:00 Empowering Voices: The Purpose of the Podcast

02:55 Navigating AI: Opportunities and Challenges

06:13 Cultural Reflections: The Impact of Environment on Identity

18:13 AI as a Tool: Enhancing Human Experience

24:13 The Importance of Authenticity: Breaking Taboos


Links Mentioned: 


 

Order an early copy of the book: bit.ly/shamelessbook

 

Transcript:

Judy (00:02.668)

Welcome to the F*ck Saving Face podcast where we're empowering mental and emotional health for Asian Americans and voices of color by breaking through taboo topics. Life may not always be pretty, but it is indeed beautiful. Make your story beautiful today. Are you a parent who's wondering what the heck is happening with the world and how can I prepare my child to be a healthy functioning human being for a world that we don't even know what it's going to look like yet?

And I'm talking about that from all levels, from the climate to social, emotional, to the political. And in this episode, we're going to be talking about AI. So I interviewed Adele Wong. I'm so excited that you'll get an opportunity to hear from her because not only is she someone who specializes in helping professionals who are dealing with kind of the stress and overwhelm to create more of that purpose and connection and presence.

She is also an AI consultant and a coach, and she's really diving in to figuring out how to use these language learning models because we're only at the very beginning points of how in-depth and how supportive AI can actually be. Now, there's a PR person who I know who posted something that he had seen on Reddit, and it was this prompt that you could ask ChatGBT. It was actually a series of prompts and ChatGBT would then tell you all about yourself. And it's especially effective if you use ChatGBT regularly in terms of your business or your life or whatever it is. And so I tried that prompt and then I shared it in my newsletter and then I shared it in a few of the other entrepreneurial networks that I'm in. And the amount of people who reached out to me with, what the fuck was that? It was like distilling all of this therapy down into these crystallized bits that you could take and utilize and apply to your life. And so that is the direction that so much of the world is heading in. And how can we do that with hope rather than fear? How can we continue to advance ourselves in the ways that help us as a humanity and help us in terms of navigating this world that

Judy (02:25.61)

We don't know what it's going to look like. So Adele has been a speaker and a facilitator. She mentors spiritual entrepreneurs in developing their practices. She is in Atlanta, Georgia and loves her family and her two cats. So without further ado, I'm going to turn it over to our interview and I hope that you get as much out of it as I did. So Adele Wong is joining us today. And before we even hopped on, we were just talking about all of you listeners and viewers since this is also on video, just how dynamic this entire audience is. And so many of us have shared experiences. For example, Adele lives in Atlanta. I live in San Diego. We live in predominantly white dominant communities. And so many of us have grown up in those environments. But there's also a lot of intergenerational, religious, different things. When I tell people that the book that I'm writing is called How to Disappoint Your Parents in 10 Shameless Steps the subtitle is A Modern Asian American Guide, but so many people have told me like, I'm not Asian American and I fully understand what you're talking about. You know, I grew up in a very religious household, for example, or I grew up and I came out as bisexual or gay and like, just there's so many things that are a shared experience, but not specifically the same. But before we get into all of these topics that the book explores and what Adele is here to talk about, I'm just gonna turn it over to you for you to share about your story and your work.

Adele (04:53.298)

It's such a pleasure to be here. Thank you, Judy. Hello out there. I'm so excited to connect with you. I'm Adele Wang. I am a coach in the Atlanta, Georgia area, and I'm working a lot with professionals in the world of the inner business of running a business and AI is coming in. So that's creating some interesting things. But my personal journey has always been one of trying to figure myself out. I never set out to be doing this. I no desire to be a coach, but I was a colossal mess inside, high functioning. So if you're out there doing good on the outside and feeling crappy on the inside, come on in. This is a conversation I understand very well. So Judy, it's a privilege to be on this show and I'm so excited to connect with you all. So if you're out there feeling depressed, anxious, lonely, invisible, unsexy, unbeautiful, not seen, especially in this latest election cycle, has everybody all worked up in many ways. I get it.

I think we're in a time where as much individual personal development you can do to be real, are also very impacted by our ecosystem, like what's around us. I mean, we'd be a fool to say, none of that matters. It's just me, myself, and I. And so if you're out there thinking, well, I should just be able to pull this off with enough meditation, with enough self-help books. What's wrong with me? I create my own reality and all that. I'm here to say,

Let's just open up the conversation that things are more complicated in terms of what's going on. And we're all impacted by what's going on. We're impacted by our history, our culture, our generation, and the chaos at large right now, if you're in the United States. So with that, I'm happy to be here.

Judy

Awesome. Thank you so much. you you brought up a really great point that other people have been asking about that I'm in all of these different communities, especially entrepreneurial communities for women of color. And the question has come up of like, what's going to happen to DEI now? What is happening? And even in my Goldman Sachs program, the business advisor was like, well, you have to take into consideration the political climate and what does that mean for your business? And I've always operated from a place of I create my own reality. And I think that the

The type of work that you and I do of helping people navigate their inner worlds, that's only getting increasingly stronger. Like that demand is there because of, as you said, the development of AI. I just had this AI prompt that I emailed because I discovered it from a PR person I know. And when you ask these questions in chat GBT, is like bonkers, the things that it can reflect back to you based on what it's learned about you. If you're using these for work, for example, or anything like that.

But I think I'm curious because when it was asked to me by Misa Chen, who's the founder of The Authentic Asian, I said, you know, historically we've seen all of these times in history where we've met a backlash or there's been a backslide in progress and then it creates an even greater demand. And then there's more vocalization of the need as we move forward.

Judy (07:08.44)

For so many of us, we get stuck in this moment, what this moment looks like, or even just looking at the near future. And it's rare that we pull back and look at it from a very broad lens. I think when we do that, it helps to make us feel a bit better. I know that there's this book by, I think it was one of the Google CEOs or whatever. And he was just saying, if you look at even what Steve Jobs created with Apple, it's such a tiny blip.

in this whole entire fabric of the universe and the timeline that we're on. And if that person who fundamentally shifted so many of the ways that we behave and how we engage and interact is like this tiny little blip and like the problems and the things that we experience, they're also like so minute in this large scheme of things. But I would love to hear your take on where we are now culturally, politically, like in current events.

Yeah. And I love these conversations because I think it'll help everyone know they're not crazy. Yeah. Because if we only stay in the realm of me, myself, and I, and my personal development, inevitably, I mean, no matter how much work you do, you're going to run into things that have nothing to do with you. And I think it's good to just know, oh, this has nothing to do with me, no matter how much I was doing my groovy stuff. Yes, I create my reality and we're in a larger ecosystem.

Because if we don't at least acknowledge the huge chaos, we have never been at a point like this in history. I mean, this is unprecedented, right? So if we just turn that off, we can end up shaming ourselves for why things aren't going to plan or what we like. But if we can hold both without one being better or worse than the other, then everyone can relax. In my work with clients, I spent a lot of time helping clients lose the shame that

They couldn't just make it all happen through their own brute force and their intellectual prowess. And like, we are meant to be interconnected beings. If we weren't, we wouldn't be on a population with how many billions of people. Like we would just be on Mars by ourselves, right? Like if we take a look at like from the divine, if we were really meant to just be able to create everything all by ourselves, we'd be on a moon of Jupiter or something. I mean, there are a lot of other places we could have incarnated. But we incarnated on the planet with a billion, how many billions of people, we're up rubbing against the edges. We are meant biologically to be social creatures. not all just up here. We're also down here in the world of emotion and pain and money and health and sex and all these things that are part of the human experience. you asked where we are. We have never been in this kind of situation.

Adele (09:27.424)

I spend half of my days working with clients, leadership, the inner business of running a business, entrepreneur. The other half is all this AI stuff. So somehow I got sucked into the AI conversation, getting a certification, which is all wonderful. But what I am most interested in is how these worlds are starting to connect. And I think that's going to be the growth edge for everybody, that these tools can help you or they can be a real pain in the butt, but they might help you live a happier life, so you can be more human. And what I love about this for at least some of the Asian Americans I've worked with is it's going to encourage people to get out of the mind because depending on your background, you may have maybe been raised to believe that if you know more stuff, you will be more successful, more recognized, safer.

So the degrees that you get orhow much you know about programming, all this stuff, that would be my ticket to security. And I'm here to say, there might be another way to feel more secure in life because all that stuff, what you know, AI is coming, but they let the bots do all that. So you can discover more of who you are as a human. And that is not typical to many of the Asian American communities I've worked with because depending on your history, your family background,

It might be white knuckling into knowledge, intellectual Ivy league, all this stuff. I mean, I've been there. I understand all that. And the world is shifting that it's great if you know stuff and you have one life. How about we find ways to have you be happier as well. That was a turning point for me. So everything that comes out of my mouth, I have lived it the hard and painful way. And if I can save somebody else a few agonizing years.

Adele (11:47.276)

I'm all for it. So that's why I'm really excited with what you're doing on this podcast. We can share ideas because what I've learned is everything's connected to everything else and that consciousness is related to sex. Sex is related to concept of beauty. We have these weird concepts, right? That is related to how you date. Like everything is sort of, so we might as be here for all of it. And we're Asian Americans. We have some uniquenesses layered on top of the other chaotic experiences that everyone else is experiencing. So we are all that and we have this extra layer on top. Don't know that makes any sense.

That you're talking about this idea of knowledge acquisition and how it doesn't actually provide safety or the kind of joy that I think that we were sold into believing. Like we have been taught if you get all the straight A's and the A pluses, that's going to mean something somehow. And one of the things that a therapist had told me is at this point where I'm 46 now and I'm looking in the doors ahead are fewer than the doors that have closed behind me. Like the amount of opportunities and all of that isn't the same as when we were younger. And so lately I've been becoming aware that I have this feeling of sadness. And I was like, what is this that's like coming up? What is this thing? Because on the outside, like you said, the surface I've accomplished a lot, even at the start of our conversation, you said, congratulations on all of these things. And I was like, yeah, they're great. And I'm like, what's happening on the inside of me? And like love this. Like, yeah, it's a type of grief, I think. And for me, I think it was a realization that the values that I thought would work don't. And it's a little bit like being sold something. then buyers remorse or realizing, and there can be a lot of rage with like, with my clients, I've noticed there are two windows where people this rage really comes up. And it's different with different people, you know, it's not like set in stone.

Adele (13:50.784)

But the first awakening or quickening seems to happen around 28 to 31 years of age. There's this big, you know, all my problems of relating to men or relating to my boss or feeling lonely in the crowd have to do with how I was raised. It's mom. That's fault. Damn it. You know, and I'm really pissed. Like if you had been there for me, if you had been more emotionally mature, I would be a better human. Like there's that.

And there's some truth to that. Like, I would never argue with that. If that's your reality of the realization of the cost you are paying because your family came from a, let's say a competitive immigrant background where there was never enough and just having a job, you should be grateful, like all that. So there's this opening of, my God. And then another opening seems to happen around 48. Now, of course it's different people.

You know, everybody's sliding scale, but that's when there's another opening that I'm seeing. And then of course everybody's in between. when you start to rewrite how you want to live your life, first, you have to let go of what you thought was the way. And, oh yeah, there's a lot of pain. There's a lot of shame, right? And if only my mom was more well adjusted, I would have a better relationship with myself. I wouldn't be so anxious around friends. I was there. And it took a while.

I had to work with some people doing what I do now. I don't even like to say let it go because that can sound really trite. Just let it go. Honestly, if someone's in pain and you tell them to let something go, they're going to want to slap you. It's not helpful. I also think that some of our personal development and leadership training that we see in the West, there's a hole there. It's overly individualized. I think sometimes Asian Americans have justbought that hook, line, sinker. We're reading the same self-help books as everybody else. We're listening to the same, except for your podcast, the same podcast as everybody else. And then there's a sense of, you know, the Western way of healing is a little bit dysfunctional, right? There's no sense of community. Like the African-American community, they are more aware of this. They have not lost that. Asian Americans, depending, sometimes it's me, myself, and I in this white environment, and I'm almost white. And I'm like, yes gosh.

Adele (16:15.275)

I've encountered that a lot with my high performing Asian American clients. It's almost like, well, I'm white practically like, yes, but that's proximity, right? I married a white man, all this stuff. And then there's everybody else in between. So I would never pitch in hope, but I've in my work, as I'm sure with you, we get to see different flavors of the Asian American experience. There's not just

There's probably about 50. And so the media does not help. Asian Americans voted overwhelmingly blah blah. And I'm like, well, who are you talking to? Right? And I can go down to the Chamber of Commerce and be around Asian American business owners and know they have a certain way of thinking and then go down to the Board of Education and be around Asian American parents and go get the very different perspective. So it's all fine. So I guess the name of the game at this point for success, Bye!

Adele (17:13.225)

Absorb and embrace complexity. And I know everybody wants a simple answer, but they wouldn't be listening to your podcast, Judy, if they wanted a simple answer, would they?

No, yeah, think embrace complexity, like no one simplified and set it in that way. And I think that that is so key, because I think that that is like, we have bought into the understanding of like, well, if I do all these things, and it's going to be fulfilling, right? And then all of a sudden, you're doing all the things and you're like, okay, then something's off. But then what?

Yeah, and it's unfortunate because if you go to Asia, I lived in Japan and Taiwan for a bit, I would not want to raise a child there. I mean, it's pretty brutal. And in terms of the competitiveness, cram schools and all this stuff. And there was a reason how and why that evolved. Then those parents move over here and they're doing the same thing to their child. And then 20 years later, that child is now my client. Depression, shame, anxiety. And so I've had to...somehow invite them into the concept if you're a spiritual person, which I think you are, if you were meant to live in the Japanese way of academic success to get to university or whatever or Taiwan, you would have been born in Japan or Taiwan. But for some reason, you wound up in the US. means maybe karmically, you're given a chance to do something very differently. Otherwise,

Karma would have put you over the, like, you know, like if you believe that everything's happening as it should be, then if you still want that competitive depression, you would have been born in Asia. It would have been normal, but you're given the opportunity to do things really differently here. And so when I phrase it that way, that kind of go, like if you are supposed to be like an Indian girl from the Indian continent, because I have Indian clients too, they're torn, right? Between the expectations of the family.

Adele (19:10.926)

The independence of the US and that rub is difficult. And I see that with some of my Chinese and Japanese clients as well. And I just say, well, you know, isn't it possible that there's a reason why you incarnated or are living here? And would it be a shame for you to not tap into that? I mean, you could always just immigrate back if you wanted to, but you're here. Isn't that cool? And just so they don't feel like they're doing something wrong. They’re path setters, are pathfinders. And there's not just one. mean, your podcast is one of them. You've chosen a path that is unique. And that is not typical of if you were still living in Taipei or Beijing. yeah. You know, yeah.

Judy

And I love what you were saying earlier, because I think that in the beginning, as AI was starting to like have all this like hubbub about it, there was a lot of fear around it. And especially like if you're in the crypto space and you're following all these people who are really advancing technology and like the things that they're afraid of when it comes to language learning models and like how intelligent this technology can be. And then there's the adoption of it. Okay, well, it's not going away. It's going to get exponentially smarter and stronger. So how do we use that? And I found in my business, having a branding and marketing agency, working as a coach, that it's been a really effective, almost teammate or employee, like let's say, and I've been able to have these really high level conversations to draw out the information that I want and to distill information that.

Adele 1 (20:44.654)

That is such a gift. If we could get out of the lower level noise and be able to focus, because right now people cannot focus. Their attention span, like these things, have not helped at all. Being able to just offload some of the noise, so sit down go, what kind of experience would I like to create for my clients? Who am I in the world? That is deep level work that needs uninterrupted time. I think AI is...

going to be invaluable for that. use it constantly with my clients in terms of their businesses and stuff like that. But I'm always saying it has to support the human. because they're not used to using AI for their personal world. Like, I AI was for my ads and my social media. like, let's play with some prompts that might draw more of the essence of you out. I don't think AI is enough to replace a brand developer like yourself. mean, but it gives people a start.

You know, so that when they're in conversation with you or a brand marketer, like, who do you serve? Like the standard questions, they at least have a sum of the stuff kind of figured out. Then you can do deeper work.

Yes, and I think that that's that deeper work that is so fascinating to me. It's also like this is where our lived experience makes a difference because the questions that you ask AI give you the output, the quality of the output. So if you're having like shitty input, you're going to get shitty output. And so you want to make sure that like you're taking that expertise and knowing how to access it, knowing how to dive in and then it will provide you that feedback back.

Absolutely. I'm now doing a lot of advanced prompt engineering. By now, people can use chat for a little bit, but the power, oh my gosh. With advanced prompt engineering, it's really shocking what can happen. You're absolutely right, asking in the right way. Hey folks, on average, I read a stat that businesses using AI grow 37 % more. It's going to be your next competitive advantage.

Adele (22:47.694)

Be curious. have some basic trainings on prompt engineering. doing a lot of stuff just because people have no idea what's even possible. And then they get overwhelmed. Like, my God, I can do video, can do audio. And then there's this freeze response. I'm like, I'm here to make this simple, give you clarity. And by the way, let's keep you as a happy human. Yeah. You know, while we do this, because why are you doing this? Hopefully it's to be a happier human.

work a little bit less. Yeah. And be able to be a human out in the world that makes a difference, not just making money.

Judy

Yes. And I'm so curious for so you're you were saying that you were getting certified and in this advanced prompt engineering. So what are some of the key takeaways? Because I think that this is a conversation we haven't had here on the podcast. And, you know, I'd be so curious as to is there anything that you can offer listeners to be able to just kind of play around and see and just to start to open up their minds of what's possible?

The one thing I will say is be more curious than you are. There are so many, like I can think of a dozen different ways to structure prompts that would blow your mind. Like they literally, I tell everyone get set for Disney World because that's the challenge. People think this is an incremental thing. It's like if someone's never seen the color purple and then they say, well, is it like orange? Is it like green? And you're like, no, no, no, I need to show you.

And then they're like, so it's very difficult to describe. It's easier to demo. So, mean, at a high level, there are probably 12 different types of advanced prompt engineering that take what you know already to the 10th exponential degree. But I'm just delighted that people start at the beginning.

Adele (24:41.006)

You know, who am I? What result am I trying to get? Add some context, put it in fifth grade language in 500 words or less with a tone that sounds like Harvey, know, whoever, you know, and make it a funny tone and generate an image off of mid journey. That's a lovely start. And then from there, be more curious. can do everything from totally revamping. can do a whole creating an agent for your business, co-pilots, all this stuff. So it's kind of hard to explain in just a few words, but I would just, my number one suggestion to everyone is be even more curious.

Hmm. Because the worst thing that can happen, and I'm already starting to see it now when I'm out networking, people go, yeah, I use chat for, and I can listen and go, my gosh, is there, there, look and that's a start. But my job is to say, come on, come on, let's go. You know, now that you're in kindergarten, let's go to first grade, you know, all the way at the PhD level. Cause the PhD people, they're the ones that are going to just clean up the business world. So become better at prompt engineering than your competitor.

That's amazing. Don't get overwhelmed. Just better than everybody else and better because the standard is raising. Right now, I would say most people have played around with a little bit, but the worst thing is they go, it's all right.

Yeah.

I'm like, my goodness. So that would be my suggestion if that makes any sense. Because short of opening up my browser and showing you stuff, and that'd be boring to the podcast people, but be better at it than everyone else. Get better results, faster, easier, and cheaper. That's my spiel.

Judy (25:58.9)

Ugh, I love that. Love it. So there's just so much that I would love for people to follow up with you about. Before we close the podcast, I would love to ask you the question I ask everyone, which is if you could say f*ck saving face about something, what would you say f*ck saving face about?

Adele

F*ck saving face. I would say f*ck saving face about what it means to be human. And that includes your sexuality, especially for the Asian community. sort of are squirming about that, right? But it's such a source of shame. And I would like to invite men, especially, and women, because I think a lot of Asian men feel a little invisible. I'm like, dude, we need to turn on that mojo.

You're just as gorgeous as everybody else. But given the standards of aesthetics, a lot of Asian men really feel gross about it. And it can be a sense of such fulfillment. Same thing with women. Women have especially, well, I'm going to speak for East Asian women. Okay, so we have these weird things layered on. I can't speak to the Indian continent. That's not my lane as much, but I can say the shame is still there based on the clients that I work with. Black women have a different.

It's all different. It's all different varieties and garden varieties of shame. Okay. So I don't like to just say there's one, I have to listen in, you know, what's going on there. But that would be where I would say, fuck saving face too, because no AI will ever replace your mojo. Hang onto it. Cause your mojo will power everything else, including your heart, the way you show up. It's not just being a kind person that will, it's not strong enough.

You know, you have a rotten day, someone treats you like crap and the light goes out. But your mojo is built for longevity and power. I don't know that makes any sense, but that would be what I would suggest.

Judy

My gosh, love it so much. And if people want to follow up with you, where can they follow up with you?

Adele

Adelewang.com or you can find me on TikTok or Instagram, LinkedIn. I'm on all the channels, YouTube. I'll definitely be sharing our interview on YouTube. I would like to get your podcast out there, but would love to talk to anyone who is really curious about this new world to be happier and not in the classical working on my limiting beliefs. Oh my God, if hear that one more time, I'm to slap somebody. There's another way. There's another way, right?

Let's have a conversation. don't know if I can help you or not. If I can't, I'll let you know and maybe refer you. If I can, I might bug you with some questions. yeah. And yeah, I just love talking to people. So thank you so much for having me. Thank you. It is an honor to be here.

Judy (28:04.163)

Thank so much. Gosh, thank you. If any of this resonated with you and you're looking for more support, I highly encourage you to go to my website, judytswei.com. You can see all of the different ways in which we can engage together and I can help you with a bit of this spiritual guidance, this mindset breakthroughs. I have to tell you that one of my friends came, she's one of my closest friends. I wrote about her in a recent newsletter as well.

And we've been through so much over the last eight years, individually and together. And she just looked at me one day as we were driving to lunch and said, you've changed. What have you been doing? You're not as frenetic and, you know, just hustle and grind as you were before. And that meant so much coming from this person who's seen me move across the country, then across the world. She's seen me get divorced. She's seen me rebuild my life from scratch. She's also a mom and she knows me.

Judy (29:48.958)

She definitely knows me at a deeper level because we're cut from the same cloth in a lot of ways. So to hear that really indicated to me that I've made so much progress and change and all these fundamental levels, and I would love to help you get there too. So if that speaks to you, feel free to check out my website, judytsuei.com. And if you're in support of personal branding, because you really want to elevate your message and your purpose, you can check out nice tiger.co. That's my branding and marketing agency. We will see you in the next episode.

Judy (30:21.614)

Thank you so much for listening to today's episode. If you'd like to support me and this show, please go to iTunes and leave your review. It means so much to me and it'll help others find this podcast. I'll catch you in the next episode. And if you'd like to stay in touch between now and then, please visit wildheartedwords.com and sign up for my weekly newsletter. I've had people share with me that it's the best thing to arrive in their inbox all week. Aloha.


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Keywords: AI, mental health, Asian American, emotional health, personal development, cultural identity, self-discovery, prompt engineering, authenticity, community

Judy Tsuei

Brand Story Strategist for health, wellness, and innovative tech brands.

http://www.wildheartedwords.com
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Episode 141: The Art of Story Telling & Selling with Kendall Cherry