• Angela Smith Jones | Having Resilience and Empathy in Your DE&I Journey

  • Jun 1 2021
  • Length: 38 mins
  • Podcast

Angela Smith Jones | Having Resilience and Empathy in Your DE&I Journey  By  cover art

Angela Smith Jones | Having Resilience and Empathy in Your DE&I Journey

  • Summary

  • When Angela Smith Jones was Deputy Mayor of Indianapolis, she set the tone as an inclusive leader by extending a hand to people who normally don’t get one – people like herself.“I took an intern every single quarter that we were able to get interns and the people who ran the internship program knew we're going to pitch the people to Deputy Mayor Angela Smith Jones that other people might not take because I was all about access,” Angela says. “I was like … I'm going to give you access because I wanted somebody else to give me access when I was your age.’”On this episode of Human Resolve a year after the death of George Floyd, host Mark Minner speaks with Angela about how her parents raised her to appreciate diversity, and why it’s crucial to lean into uncomfortable conversations and use them as an opportunity for human connection. Although they’re far from easy, she stresses why having these discussions in the workplace are crucial and gives advice on how to navigate them. Angela also shares how her background in public policy and economic development helped prepare her for her current role as Vice President of Diversity & Inclusion at Health & Hospital Corporation of Marion County, and offers advice for individuals working on DE&I in their own office. “The business argument is it’s actually increased profitability and saving of money,” Angela says. “And then the human perspective is I want to feel welcome, too. And I want my kids and my brothers and sisters to feel welcome wherever they're going.” Featured LeaderName: Angela Smith JonesTitle: Vice President of Diversity & Inclusion Company: Health & Hospital Corporation of Marion CountyNoteworthy: Angela helped her best friend’s mother go from being an openly racist, close-minded individual to loving and accepting Angela, a Black woman, like a second daughter. Where to find Angela: LinkedInHuman Resolve Episode 12 HighlightsHighlights from the transcript.💡 Education is the foundation for all D and I initiatives [04:36] “[In school,] we were able to really live in a diverse world and out of all of our teachers, I would say maybe two teachers were American. The remaining teachers were all immigrants, born and raised in their home countries and had their original native accent. So my parents really embraced that. And we talked all the time about the value of embracing people from different cultures and backgrounds. … My parents have always said, ‘The only thing I can give you that no one can take from you is your education.’ Because if you think about historical Black America, the government could take your land, they could take your home. So even property wasn't something that you could keep, but an education is in your mind.”💡 Inclusion starts with an intention to comprehend someone different from you[09:23] “It is true that Black women, we don't like people touching our hair. … [At Miami University] one of my dorm mates was a white woman and she was watching me wash my hair and she was so curious. She was looking at me, and kind of like ‘Can I touch your hair?’ So she asks, so right there, she's winning. And I was feeling like I was winning and I linked in and I said, ‘Absolutely.’ And so I let her touch my hair. … I've had people ask me in the last 10 years about that as well, but at Miami, for me, that was an opportunity where I said, ‘You know what? This is an opportunity and occasion to educate, like what if she grows up and she marries a Black man and she has biracial babies? Now she'll understand their hair more because she and I had this conversation.’”💡 Lean into discomfort by asking difficult questions respectfully[12:43] "That little kind of nervous hitch that you get in your gut that makes you kind of like, ‘Oh, I don't know if I want to do this, I kind of feel uncomfortable’ — you gotta lean into it. And you just have to ask whatever that question is. And just know if you're being very sincere and genuine, that the person who's getting the question will more than likely respond with great kindness and great generosity. … I think having just a sincere approach like ‘I know I don't know, but I want to know. I want to understand.’ If that's your heart, from where you're coming, then it will make it easier for whomever you're engaging to continue to engage with you and say ‘I know you don't know. I know you're asking out of sincerity and it's OK. We can go on this journey together.’” 💡 Improving inclusion and diversity in the workplace starts with the heart[18:18] "It's important enough for me to understand you, understand that other person, that other culture, whatever it is, it's important enough for me to respect people and from where they come from. So if you think like that and you lean into that, you can really dig deep into your heart and soul and realize I can go a little further, I can do a little more. This journey of D and I at ...
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