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resilience, Entrepreneurship, wellness Lisane Basquiat resilience, Entrepreneurship, wellness Lisane Basquiat

The Grind Before the Glory | Why discipline beats talent every time

In this feature article for Shaping Freedom, Lisane Basquiat breaks down the three patterns behind Autumn Rowe's journey from the South Bronx to a Grammy win. Autumn is a Grammy Award-winning songwriter and producer who has written for Dua Lipa, Diana Ross, and Jon Batiste. She spent ten years between a shoe store and late-night studios before the world caught up to what she was building.

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resilience, Entrepreneurship, wellness Lisane Basquiat resilience, Entrepreneurship, wellness Lisane Basquiat

The 15-Second Revolution | Why it's time to stop waiting for the right moment

4:00 PM

In this feature article for Shaping Freedom, Lisane Basquiat breaks down the three patterns behind Taylor Cassidy's journey from a classroom that didn't see her to a platform that reaches millions. Taylor is the creator of Fast Black History, a series that teaches Black history in under 60 seconds, and the author of Black History Is Your History. She's been named to Forbes' 30 Under 30, Teen Vogue's 21 Under 21, and the Time 100 list of influential creators. It started with a 15-second video about Percy Julian, filmed on her bedroom floor. Three patterns surfaced: why confidence is something you build before you walk into the room, why everything you need to start is already in your possession, and why imagination is the infrastructure most people treat as optional.

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resilience, Entrepreneurship, wellness Lisane Basquiat resilience, Entrepreneurship, wellness Lisane Basquiat

The Identity You Outgrow | What happens when the role that defined you disappears

Malcolm Regisford grew up an athlete playing baseball, basketball, and football. But basketball was the one he kept coming back to. Over time, the game stopped being something Malcolm did and became who he was. The plan was clear: Division I first, then the pros. It would take years of work, but he was clear about the direction. Before long, the plan and his identity were the same. Malcolm didn’t just play basketball. He was a ballplayer.

Then came the injury. The surgery. The slow dissolution of his role, his status on the roster, his relationship with his coaches. All of it happening at once, with no clear way through. The map was gone. And without it, Malcolm had to figure out who he actually was.

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