Becoming Power

Valerie Black

What is power? Well, that's complicated. We've learned to associate power with money, influence, position, fame, politics, and even certain bodies. Becoming Power is a podcast about a different perspective on power. Host Valerie Black highlights how true power emerges from the practices that help us transform and evolve as humans and serve as a foundation for our work in the world. She talks with leaders, executives, athletes, and activists about how they nurture their own inner power. Valerie analyzes their insights and turns them into meditations, visualizations, and bite-sized experiments for you to integrate into your own life. Whether you're looking for a greater sense of power at work, a deeper relationship with yourself, or ideas for developing your own powerful practices, Becoming Power is for you.

  1. APR 28

    EP 2.08 - Arriving in Your Power with Brooke Edwards

    Do you know what it would feel like to arrive in your power? We talk about power like it's a destination but I don't think that that's true. I mean, I have had clear, undeniable moments that I can point to and say, yes, that was me. I was lightning. But much more often, it's so much subtler than that. It's a reaching. A getting a little closer than last time. It's the moment after, when I'm not sure if I lived up to my own high standards and someone who loves me says, “Did you see what you just did?” And because they know me really well, I can go, “Okay, yeah, that was pretty rad.”  Brooke Edwards has spent 30 years guiding people through some of the most remote wildernesses on earth, keeping people alive in places that do not forgive mistakes. This year she walked into a completely different kind of challenge that required all of her accumulated skill and presence.  I want you to listen for the moment when she stops wondering if she's the right person and she knows, I am the medicine. This is one of the clearest examples I've ever witnessed of someone arriving fully in their power. This is a conversation about nervous systems, about trauma, about whimsy as rebellion, and about what it means to return to a place that once hurt you, and not just survive it, but bring healing back with you.  It's also a conversation about what happens after you arrive in your power. Listen to the full episode to hear: How Brooke learned to truly rest and heal her nervous system after years of 24/7 situational vigilance as a wilderness guideWhy putting on her “five-year-old helmet” and adding whimsy into her day are essential practices in Brooke’s ability to be a change-makerHow Brooke’s system unexpectedly rebelled after her experience of stepping into her powerWhy we need guides and mirrors in our communities The moment Brooke fully owned that she could be a uniquely powerful servant and ally to her communityWhy the return from the summit and pausing to integrate what we’ve learned are essential parts of the journeyLearn more about Brooke Edwards: Wild World WanderingsFacebook: @brooke.edwards.1253Instagram: @wildworldwanderingsConnect on LinkedInSubstack: @shinybrookieLearn more about Valerie Black: The Change AgencyBecoming Power NewsletterCoachingResources: Buried, Ken Wylie

    1h 8m
  2. APR 14

    EP 2.07 - Seen, Known, and Valued: Sarabeth Bickerton on Naming Your Uniqueness

    It was two and a half years ago, but I can still taste it—that mix of confusion, grief, fear, and exasperation from the job hunt after a layoff. I kept hearing the same things: “You’re overqualified.”“You don’t quite fit this role.”“Your resume doesn’t really make sense.” Externally, I wanted to push back. But internally, I ingested a more dangerous thought: Maybe I don’t make sense. After months of searching, I wasn’t just frustrated. I was starting to question whether I had ever even had the value I thought I did. And I don’t think this is just my story. We are living in a deeply strange moment in the world of work. And understatement, I know. We have more ways than ever to describe ourselves, and somehow, we’re becoming harder to see. The systems we’re operating in were never designed to hold the full complexity of a human being. So they flatten us. They reward what can be easily categorized. And they pass over what can’t fit neatly into boxes. Over time, that oversimplification shapes who gets seen, who gets valued, and who gets to access power. Today’s guest has been working on this exact problem for years. Dr. Sarabeth Berk Bickerton is a professional identity researcher and the leading expert on what she calls hybrid professionals—people whose careers don’t fit neatly into a single box. In this conversation, we explore a radical and deeply hopeful idea: That your power doesn’t come from fitting into the system. It comes from naming yourself. We talk about professional identity, belonging, the hidden cost of trying to “fit,” and what it means to be seen, known, and valued in a world that keeps trying to simplify you. Listen to the full episode to hear: How her personal pain point with feeling stuck in a box evolved into over a decade of research and a unique way of solving the problemWhy naming our unique professional identity is essential for owning your power and standing out against AIWhy we need to get clear on the language for the intersection of our skills, abilities, talentsThe three levels of belonging and how they impact how we feel seen and valued at workUnderstanding the three core identities and how they help us name who we are and how we can excel at workWhy it’s essential to have a real, embodied connection with the words you choose to describe your professional identityLearn more about Dr. Sarabeth Berk Bickerton: More Than My TitleConnect on LinkedInInstagram: @morethanmytitleSubstack: @sarabethberkbickertonLearn more about Valerie Black: The Change AgencyBecoming Power NewsletterCoachingResources: More Than My Title: The Power of Hybrid Professionals in a Workforce of Experts and GeneralistsSeen, Known, Valued: How to Achieve Career Belonging in a Workforce Obsessed with Fit

    1h 5m
  3. MAR 24

    EP 2.06 - Walking Each Other Home: Power, Elderhood, and Belonging with Shirley Showalter

    There are times in the world and in our lives when hope feels abstract. Maybe there’s a little ironic detachment. Maybe it’s more of a passive wish than taking action.  And there’s nothing wrong with wishing. But what I’m craving, and what I believe we need more than ever, is the kind of hope that gets its hands dirty. The kind that shows up–at community kitchens and school board meetings and in living rooms with our neighbors–that does not wait for the world to get better before jumping in. The kind of hope that asks, what is mine to do here? My guest today embodies that question in a way that stopped me in my tracks when we met last summer. Shirley Showalter’s life has taken a path from her childhood in a buttoned-down Mennonite community to earning a PhD and becoming a distinguished professor of English, a liberal arts college president, and serving as vice president of the Fetzer Institute, where she spent years in conversation with some of the most thoughtful spiritual leaders in the world. And now, in what she calls her elderhood, she is still asking the question, what does it mean to belong to something larger than myself? In this conversation, Shirley and I talked about activism, elderhood, spiritual practice, what makes us blush, and the particular, peculiar, and unpredictable journey of becoming powerful and staying powerful across a lifetime. Listen to the full episode to hear: The deep joy and sense of belonging that Shirley found in nature as a child that she has carried and sought out throughout her lifeHow Shirley got involved in her hometown’s school board and invited other community elders and educators to join herHow being an educator, servant leader, and activist has kept Shirley connected to the “barefoot feeling” of her childhoodThe mission statement that is guiding Shirley through her elderhoodThe practices Shirley engages with to connect a lifetime of experiences as she walks herself and others home Learn more about Shirley Showalter: WebsiteFacebook: @ShirleyHersheyShowalterBlush: A Mennonite Girl Meets a Glittering World Learn more about Valerie Black: The Change AgencyBecoming Power NewsletterCoaching Resources: "We Are All Just Walking Each Other Home," Blue Ridge Threshold ChoirLyrics by Ram Dass, originally by RumiMusic by Kate MungerModern Elder AcademyThe Fetzer InstituteI attended the Moms for Liberty summit. What I heard was an erosion of one of democracy's most important principles.Grandmas for LoveBill MoyersKrista TippettBlue Ridge Threshold Choir

    48 min
  4. MAR 10

    EP 2.05 - Incomplete Power: Keeping Your Wisdom Online

    This morning, I was halfway through my meditation when it finally clicked. Not in a big, ah-ha way. More like a little sigh. Yup. I’m scared. I didn’t know that’s what it was at first. I thought it was just the news, the state of the world, other people’s incompetence making me feel so off. (Yup it’s such a judgy thought! Stay with me…) But as I tracked my breath, I tuned into my personal signals that I’m overtired, overexposed, and under-resourced. Why am I talking about fear when this season is supposed to be about hope and imagination? Because I’m willing to bet you’ve been feeling scared too.  But here’s the thing. Hope doesn’t ask us to feel better first. It asks us to stay engaged. Hands-dirty hope is what happens when we refuse to give up our imagination — even when the world feels fractured, even when fear is loud. Fear is tricky. When we’re in crisis and overwhelmed, it wears a lot of disguises. Today, I want to bring you in close to look at one way that fear frequently rears its head: the need for control. Because in 25 years of coaching and teaching, I have never met a single human who doesn’t reach for this at least some of the time when they are feeling overwhelmed.  So let’s talk about how overwhelm cascades into fear and seeking control, how to turn to our fear with compassion before taking action, and finally, I’ll share a simple exercise that has been enormously helpful in redirecting the chaotic energy that gets kicked up when we are in a fear response. If you’ve been looking for a hand in the dark, I hope you’ll keep listening. Listen to the full episode to hear: How too many inputs cause a chain reaction from chaos to fear to trying to exert control on something, anythingWhy compassion and care for the part of us that is scared has to come before actionA simple exercise for parsing out where you can bring your energy to actually effect changeWhy tending to your fear is necessary to maintain our capacity for nuanced thinking, empathy, and creative problem-solving Learn more about Valerie Black: The Change AgencyBecoming Power NewsletterCoaching

    18 min
  5. 11/25/2025

    EP 2.04 - Creating Containers: From Field Kitchens to Yoga Studios with Fiona Donovan

    Picture two spaces.  In one, a field kitchen bubbles over with life. Under a makeshift tent, pots clatter, onions hiss on a portable hot plate, and someone’s calling out, “We need more rice!” A neighbor who's just lost everything ladles soup for another who’s just walked miles through mud. In the second space, a yoga studio, breath slows, shoulders drop, the air smells faintly of lavender, bodies move in a quiet synchronicity, finding flow after a day that was herky jerky at best. Some people can build both kinds of spaces. I’ve always been fascinated by what it takes to steady yourself when the world around you is in chaos. My guest today, Fiona Donovan, Vice President of Response Administration for World Central Kitchen, has built her career as a student of that very question. WCK, a nonprofit founded by chef José Andrés, is famous for being first to the frontlines in times of crisis–hurricanes, wildfires, earthquakes, war zones–anywhere people are hungry and hurting. Their teams set up field kitchens that serve fresh, hot meals with dignity and heart. Fiona leads those teams. She oversees global relief operations, coordinating thousands of volunteers, local chefs, and community partners to deliver nourishing food to people quickly. Before joining WCK, she worked in international development and taught in the Peace Corps. She knows what it means to be in the field, boots muddy, adrenaline high, trying to make things better fast. In our conversation, Fiona and I trace the thread between field kitchens and yoga studios, between cooking for hundreds and centering yourself for one slow breath. We talk about how to lead with listening, how to design trust before structure, and how to tell when your body’s in reactive mode versus responsive mode. And maybe most beautifully, how to come down from long seasons of urgency without losing your purpose. Fiona’s story is what it looks like when compassion gets operationalized. So take a breath, soften your shoulders, and maybe imagine the smell of something delicious cooking. Listen to the full episode to hear: The practices and hobbies that Fiona has cultivated to ground herself as she transitions out of the fieldHow the work of creating welcoming, safe spaces at WCK has translated into how Fiona approaches teaching yogaWhy it’s so important for WCK to partner closely with communities when they’re responding to a disasterHow Fiona approaches being responsive instead of reactive, for herself and her teams, even under immense pressureHow WCK empowers its field leaders to make decisions during a crisis without getting hung up by perfectionismA simple, shared practice of what we’re currently grateful for Learn more about Fiona Donovan: World Central Kitchen Learn more about Valerie Black: The Change AgencyBecoming Power NewsletterCoaching Resources: The Great Work of Your Life: A Guide for the Journey to Your True Calling, Stephen Cope

    56 min
  6. 11/11/2025

    EP 2.03 - The Practice of Caring Out Loud with Samara Bay

    I was a shy and intense kid. The kind who always wants to sit at the grownups table instead of running around with the other kids. But I noticed early on that my intensity could confuse or overwhelm others, so I learned how to be me more quietly. I poured my caring into outlets that wanted me there, like theater, writing, and my horse, who always understood me. As an adult–at podiums, in boardrooms, and even alone on my yoga mat–I would feel words pressing at my ribs. There were things I wanted to say, wanted to ask about, to try articulating, but my earnestness got buttoned up under a well-honed, cool girl armor.  What if I showed my full self and it wasn't received? What if my passion made people uncomfortable?  I learned to modulate, because people love passion, just not when it's too much. And that voice–the good girl, the good boss, the earnest striver–worked. Until it felt like a compression vest. Eventually, I realized that power that doesn't include caring for everyone in the room is not power I want. The bravest thing I could do wasn't to hold it all together. It was to let myself be seen caring.  Today, my guest, Samara Bay, and I imagine what a future could look like if more of us cared out loud. And because she is a coach and behavior geek like me, Samara offers us a delicious exercise that we can apply to our daily lives. Samara Bay is a speech coach, author, and revolutionary voice in every sense of the word. If you haven't read her New York Times bestselling book, Permission to Speak, you're going to want to by the time our conversation is done. Samara is helping us reimagine what authority can sound like, what power can feel like, and how we can bring that into our daily practices. Samara reminds us that giving ourselves permission to speak is not a surface level change, it's cultural transformation. We are quite literally changing the sound of power. Listen to the full episode to hear: How internalized risk management patterns keep us from connecting and making a real impactHow permission to speak creates paradigm-shifting opportunities for what power sounds likeHow rewriting the internal narrative about your audience changes how you show upWhy we need to consistently practice speaking from connection instead of protectionWhy making our care and effort obvious matters for ourselves and our communitiesThree questions to ask yourself whenever you have an opportunity to speak Learn more about Samara Bay: Permission Inc.Instagram: @samarabayConnect on LinkedIn Learn more about Valerie Black: The Change AgencyBecoming Power NewsletterCoaching Resources: BoyMom: Reimagining Boyhood in the Age of Impossible Masculinity, Ruth WhippmanTalk to Your Boys: 16 Conversations to Help Tweens and Teens Grow Into Confident, Caring Young Men, Joanna Schroeder, Christopher Pepper Building Joyful Reflective Practices with Sara Lawson

    1 hr
  7. 10/21/2025

    EP 2.02 - Raising Your Hand: Finding Power in the Full Light of Day with Kriste Peoples

    There are moments in life–many moments if we’re lucky–when we outgrow an old form. What once felt right starts to feel too small. Something inside insists: there’s more than this. So the seed cracks. The old form gives way. And in that small rupture, something wild, something true begins to reach for the sun. This episode is about those moments that pop us out of our own confines. The moments when the stories we’ve internalized–be helpful, hold it together, stay in the background–can no longer contain who we’re becoming. My guest, Kriste Peoples, is a Boulder-based trail runner, writer, mindfulness teacher, and the Executive Director of Women’s Wilderness, where she helps women, girls, and nonbinary folks rediscover agency and belonging in nature. I’m so excited for you to hear Kriste’s story about raising her hand to become Executive Director and what that moment stirred in her. In our conversation, she reminds us that becoming powerful isn’t about pushing harder; it’s about grounding deeper. And she offers some truly delicious wisdom about how to do just that. Let’s learn what it means to shed what no longer fits so we can finally meet the sun. Listen to the full episode to hear: Why Kriste had to learn to protect breaks in her schedule herself and not rely on staff to do it for herHow she called BS on her story of sticking to support roles and raised her hand for the role of Executive DirectorHow a memory of literally jumping into the deep end helped Kriste recognize where she was bumping into internalized fears and limitationsHow Women’s Wilderness creates spaces for participants to meet their own personal edges without comparison or competitionHow Kriste is meeting her edges and modeling the culture and experience she wants to have at Women’s Wilderness  Learn more about Kriste Peoples: Women's WildernessKriste's WebsiteInstagram: @kristepeoples Learn more about Valerie Black: The Change AgencyBecoming Power NewsletterCoaching

    48 min
  8. 10/07/2025

    EP 2.01 - The Stories We Need Right Now: Hands-Dirty Hope

    We are living in a world that currently feels unsettled, to say the least. At best, people seem confused. At worst, frozen, or acting out. There is so much anger and uncertainty in the air. One way I’m coping is by returning to art and story. Because here is what I know: Stories are more than entertainment. They can be bids for understanding. They can be tests to see if you understand or even agree with another person. And for times like these, they can also be compasses that orient us when the world feels unmoored. Since January, I’ve noticed myself reaching for historical fiction and speculative fiction as if story itself is a lifeline. That’s what this first episode of season two is about: How story can hold us and help us make sense when the world we live in feels fractured. I’ll share a few of the narratives that are nourishing me right now, and give you an exercise I use with clients when they’re ready to write a new story for their own lives. This is also an introduction to our theme for season two: imagination. Over the coming weeks, you’ll hear from living sages, authors, educators, artists, and activists—people imagining new ways of being, and offering us tools to step into our own power. Listen to the full episode to hear: Three narratives of agency, creativity, and community that offer fierce hope in the face of oppression and adversityA six-sentence exercise to write your own story of muscular hopeHow Emma Cote’s Pixar Story Spine can help us practice, and then live, with hopeTo download the Story Spine Worksheet, click here. Learn more about Valerie Black: The Change AgencyBecoming Power NewsletterCoaching Resources: Parable of the Sower, Octavia E ButlerThe Japanese Lover, Isabel AllendeHarlem Rhapsody, Victoria Christopher MurrayThe Mars House, Natasha Pulley

    15 min
5
out of 5
15 Ratings

About

What is power? Well, that's complicated. We've learned to associate power with money, influence, position, fame, politics, and even certain bodies. Becoming Power is a podcast about a different perspective on power. Host Valerie Black highlights how true power emerges from the practices that help us transform and evolve as humans and serve as a foundation for our work in the world. She talks with leaders, executives, athletes, and activists about how they nurture their own inner power. Valerie analyzes their insights and turns them into meditations, visualizations, and bite-sized experiments for you to integrate into your own life. Whether you're looking for a greater sense of power at work, a deeper relationship with yourself, or ideas for developing your own powerful practices, Becoming Power is for you.

You Might Also Like