We all present versions of ourselves. The person you are at work is not the same person you are at home. The face we present in our most intimate relationships is not the face we present to the world.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Whether at work, at home or in public, we have been trained to believe that who we are at the core of our being is often unacceptable. As a result, we work diligently to live up to - and sometimes down to - what others have made us out to be, whether or not it is an accurate reflection of who we are.
Faces are the ledgers of our experience.
We all show facets, to your mother, or to your boyfriend, or a friend. You're always a bit different.
We all have our ambassador that we send forward into the world. We all have people we are varying degrees of real with. There's a public face we all wear. As I get older and more comfortable in my skin, I am trying to combine the two so the real me is there all the time.
My face is distinct. It's hard to confuse me with anyone else.
It is only at the first encounter that a face makes its full impression on us.
My face is my career.
It sometimes feels like the workplace is immune from social upheaval. We go to work and do the best we can, and at the end of the day, we return to our lives. We don't abandon who we are, however, when we begin and end our workday. Who we are shapes how we are perceived in the workplace and, in turn, how we perform in the workplace.
I think I'd say that my whole body of work is a reflection of who I am, but not any one specific thing.
I don't put myself out there, so people aren't necessarily familiar with me or my face.
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