The girl who codes founder and activist Reshma Saujani considers Failure a "privilege

The girl who codes founder and activist Reshma Saujani considers Failure a "privilege

Reshma Saujani is a lawyer and in many successful career changes, from working in politics to founding the nonprofit Girls Who Code and publishing several books on career and ambition, she has also learned to embrace failure.

Saujani, who had just launched the "My so-called middle-aged" podcast on Lemonada Media, and on the marie Claire podcast "Nice Talk," spoke about what she learned from failure and how women applied it to their lives.

She spoke to the New York Times in 2010 as she pointed out her background in technology and how she influenced her view of failure. He lost the York Democratic House primary. "In that race, I learned how to be a great communicator, a great fundraiser. I learned how to build a strong team. But if I hadn't lost that race, I wouldn't have actually been able to do it because I had to dissect it after losing," Saujani shares on the pod.

The founder describes her skills as her "hack of failure" to reflect on what went well and what went wrong.

"Women are so afraid of failure because they think it breaks them — they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, they think about it, "For me, it's like I give myself 30 days to think about it and analyze it, and then I move the fuck. I'm not sitting on it.

"That's my hack," she continues. "And I think I've learned that failure is a privilege."

She added that every person who launched the brand made a mistake, and how heavy it is to talk about it so that others don't shy away from their ambitions."I want to experience journeys, steps, stumbles, challenges, mistakes and failures.

The bestselling author also opens up about "Nice Talk" about the impostor syndrome.

"Cheater syndrome, we expect women to feel it, but when you have it, you get fed up," she says. "The best thing we can do in many ways to combat fraudster syndrome is to completely reject the premise.

In doing so, Saujani explains, women may not feel lagging behind in their careers so even higher goals even if they fail in the middle

Saujani opens up more about career transitions, embracing middle age, advocating for themselves at work, and this week's installment of the show, "I love You," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," "I love you," " "Nice story."Wherever you listen to podcasts, you have episodes.

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