The No Apology, Not Sorry Challenge

I am from the Midwest, and now live in New York. In the Midwest, one is generally very polite. Very nice. To not be nice is like, the worst thing one could do. But what does “nice” mean? Usually it means avoiding discomfort. It means smiling at all costs. It means apologizing a lot. For example: if you are walking down the sidewalk, and somebody cuts you off out of nowhere, causing you to collide into them, you would apologize to them. If somebody bumps you, you apologize to them.

I began noticing this after I lived in New York for 15 years. Being “nice” and smiling at people for no reason had the opposite effect. New Yorkers grew uncomfortable and suspicious if I smiled at them to say hello. In fact, the more smiley and friendly I was, the more I seemed to get in trouble by those around me. The psychology behind that discovery is for another article, but it is through my thickening skin that I learned that I did not have to apologize anymore for things I didn’t do, or discomfortable words I had to speak. It didn’t matter - my making someone more comfortable at my own expense. it was liberating. Empowering even.

It was this year in 2022 when I stepped up to the plate to undertake a major personal change in my life, that I also challenged myself to stop apologizing. There were no rules as to how many times I could apologize. I apologized all of the time for any kind of reason. This needed to change. So I mainly cut out all apologies.

The No Apology, Not Sorry Challenge

The No Apology, Not Sorry Challenge started around the time when I began to say “sorry not sorry” in that snarky way. And then I wondered why I was wasting my breath even saying that. The more I made moves that prompted me to say “sorry not sorry,” I realized that those moves just needed to become a way of life for me.

In Midwestern fashion, I must give the disclaimer that to not be or say sorry does not mean you are going to say something meanly. Or be a mean person. It just means that you are doing what you are doing, or you are who you are, and you’re not sorry for it. If the other person is discomfortable, then that’s on them.

A female friend of mine who is an executive in the beauty industry knew I was writing this article. She sent me an example of a recent time she did not apologize, as she felt empowered and respected. She was voting in this last election, had gone with her husband. and was calmly taking her time.

The interaction went like this: ”My husband was done with his circles like 10 seconds before me, because you know I like to make sure I read everything thoroughly. But the volunteer dude at the booth was like: ‘You with her? Want to see if she needs help?’ And my husband was like ‘Nope, she’s her own person and I don’t have to tell her what to do.’ Then I walk over to post my ballot and he chuckled at me and asked: ‘Is this your first time voting? Need help?’ So audacious!”

Good gracious. This is why we need the No Apology, Not Sorry Challenge.

How To Start: Step 1: Walk In A Straight Line. Don’t Give Up The Sidewalk

The first step to accepting the No Apology, Not Sorry Challenge is to not yield to another person who is walking toward you on the sidewalk. If you are both walking from opposite directions, in the same path, then one of you will need to move. Usually, I was the one to move. I’ve been known to move around trees, or hop into the street. I’ll do this now to move around people as I speed passed them on the sidewalk (I’m a fast walker), but I’m less likely to do it for an oncoming person.

As a woman, this is especially satisfying when not apologizing or moving for a man on the sidewalk. If a woman is oncoming, I’ll still not move, unless she has a stroller or is walking with children. If it is a group of people - like a group of five friends or a couple of two people - I’ll not move again. I am one person on the sidewalk, they are multiple, and can fall back to take up less space for others.

More Examples Of When To Not Apologize

The thing is, the person you are apologizing to most likely was not expecting you to apologize at all. The person may simply be preparing something nice for you, and wants you in a happy place.

When on the No Apology, Not Sorry Challenge, you don’t tell the person that you are not sorry. You simply don’t say anything at all, and you proceed with what you are doing.

Examples include (these are examples for simply going forward in your day - not moments of snark).

“I am not sorry for saying no to you.”
You need to say “no” to people for various reasons. If saying “no” to someone causes a tiff between you, then consider your tone. Maybe you were too snappish. But. No need to apologize for that either. Just note it, and make an effort to say it differently next time. Remember, we don’t need to be so nice all of the time. Especially if you have said no five times already to this question.

Practice this in the grocery store when a sales person selling solar panels or a newspaper subscription tries to stop you in order to sell to you. They are chatty and won’t stop. Instead of ignoring them, simply say “no thank you” and keep walking. Don’t engage or respond in any second attempts.*

*Sorry sales-people! You are getting paid to do this, and that’s great, but we have to keep moving. Also, yes, everyone should subscribe to the newspaper, so do say “yes” to those people and no to everything else they sell you. Oh - I forgot - I’m not sorry!

“I’m not sorry about the price I gave you for this job or the product I sell.”
This usually comes after a potential client gets angry about a price you gave them. I have heard this from a number of service professionals, where current or potential new clients get mad, which makes pricing future jobs difficult. If a client gets mad, you just saved yourself a hassle, and they are not a fit for you. Continue to price as you need to.

“I’m not sorry for following up about when you are going to pay your invoice.”
Tin Shingle likes you to get paid up front so that you can avoid this uncomfortable moment.

“I am not sorry to step away from this family gathering at this annual holiday to do some work.”
You know when I’m really not sorry about this? When the men step out to do their work, and me as a woman steps out to do mine, and I get hand-slapped for not spending time with my young children when there is childcare all around and I just stated that I was going to step away from X amount of time to work.

As business owners, our boundaries are not clear. We have no bosses we hate. We are our own bosses, and we love ourselves. But we have employees to pay, answer to and respect. We have clients we need to be there for and respect. Our boundaries are difficult to enforce, and we are the only ones who can do it.

“I’m not sorry to call you out on something you just said. I will say it in a nice, matter of fact way. And you may be offended. But what you just said was totally offensive, and I am not sorry to point that out to you.”
You are not going to say all that part - you are just stating the calling-them-out part. Not in a mean way of course. But of course! Staying silent on these outlandish statements is too costly, and paves the way for future snuffing out.

“I’m not sorry to speak directly to you. In a voice that is not my happy voice”
This one comes from a place of motherhood, when we parents need to use our “mom-voices” to get something done by our children. A small child may ask in response to this tone: “Mommy, why are you speaking madly? Why are you mad?” And that is a good question. A good answer is: “I am not mad. I am speaking this way because it is the only way you hear me as I help you get ready to get out the door and into the car. I am not mad. I am simply moving forward.”

This only works if you are in fact not yelling. But are speaking firmly. Also, it is important to acknowledge the child, as they are expressing their feelings. The child may respond: “Ok, Mommy. Because I get scared when you yell.” And that is OK. We can work together to know if we are both causing the hold-up to getting out the door, and hold us both accountable to a successful departure.

“I am not sorry to not help you while I’m in the middle of typing a sentence.”
With smartphones, we are all on them all the time. Doing really important things, or doing silly things. If a person asks us to do something for them that is not an emergency, the boundary is there to say: “I will help you after I complete this sentence.”

Key to this, however, is to fulfill the promise, and not move onto another task. Do that, and you will have an angry child or partner because they can’t trust you.

“I am not sorry to not help you while I’m eating my meal.”
Finish your meal. Unless a small child needs to use the bathroom, of course. But once they get older, you need to train yourself to stay at the table for different requests.

“I am not sorry to speak to you in the tone in which you are speaking to me.”
This is a tough one, because if you are being challenged by someone, you may respond. If you are being asked the same question for a sixth time, and that person is shouting at you from across the yard, you might shout your response back. And they might start talking over you, to negate what you are saying. You should keep talking. And when you finish your response, which is usually when they stop talking over you, they may ask you to repeat yourself. At that point, you can simply state that you already answered them, and you can walk away from the non-conversation.

“I am not sorry to tell you I love you, or to tell you my feelings.”
Sometimes saying your feelings is hard or embarrassing. You may over-think how the other person is receiving your information. Just tell them how they make you feel. Even if they get uncomfortable about feeling mushy.

Good Examples Of When To Apologize

When you are wrong, you should apologize right away. Apologizing - really apologizing for something you did that caused hurt or discomfort to someone else - comes from a deep place inside of you. You need to feel that place for your apology to be real.

When a little person hurts themselves, no matter how small the bump: “I am sorry, are you alright?”
When a little person hurts themselves, apologize to them. Even if it is not your fault and you are not the cause of their pain, you say: “I am sorry, are you alright?” This acknowledges that they are in some sort of pain, and helps them feel taken care of. Usually this makes their tears go away quickly, or not come at all. The opposite approach to this is tough love, which sounds like this: “Get up. You’re alright.” This won’t go over well.

“I am so sorry we messed that up. We are going to fix it, and make it right.”
Usually between customer/client and business. There is the saying “the customer is always right,” and that may be, but one needs to tread lightly here. Apologizing to a customer or client for an actual mistake is necessary. Apologizing to them for their dissatisfaction is different, and must be handled lightly. This is true for restaurants who are attacked by customers looking to take out their aggression for the world on the service industry. And it is true for the B2B service industry who wants to make clients happy, but should not be molded in order to keep that satisfaction high.

“I am sorry I couldn’t help.”
When you want to help someone, but cannot. Either it doesn’t fit in your schedule, or you don’t have the power to do it.

In the No Apology, Not Sorry Challenge, just start small with the sidewalk move. Feel it out, and then carry that feeling into other areas where you don’t need to apologize, you simply need to own what you are doing. Helping others feel comfortable is important. But doing so at your own expense will dim your own self.

How Lizzo’s “Phone” Is A New Analogy In Trying To Find The Self To Get Home

Lizzo’s Coconut Oil album is essential for several reasons. One is for self love and self care. The other is for self realization that you held the power for whatever you need the entire time (unless you are in extreme psychical situations like Ukraine or Yemen or Palestine or other severely oppressed places where resilience, quick thinking and hope are essential for survival).

If the word “power” intimidates or confuses you, switch that word with “ability to go home in your soul that you had the entire time but didn’t realize.” And before you dismiss this as “that can never happen for me - I am cursed - nothing works out for me,” just give this read a chance and realize that indeed things may be stacked against you, and if they are, you need to be extra lithe at navigating to find or create your way.

This is where the song “Phone” comes in. In it, Lizzo, or the character in the song, loses her phone and panics.

Where the hell my, where the hell my phone, huh?
How I’m ‘posed to get home?

While the song colors a night out that results in confusion and hurt feet, the last line reveals the truth:

Where the hell my phone?
Where the hell my, where the hell my phone, huh?
How I'm 'posed to get…

But you're holding it
Oh

That simple “Oh.” is one of the best responses. After all of that panic, a simple “Oh.”

You’re holding the phone. You never lost it. You always had the power to go home. Even though you thought you lost you.

The lyrics reveal the agony that is trying to find something. Read the lyrics in full here, and in part below:

Where the hell my phone?
Where the hell my phone?
Where the hell my, where the hell my phone, huh?
How I'm 'posed to get home?

Okay, 2:15 and the lights come on, where my phone?
Looking 'round like where my phone?
Looking where my homies went
Where the hell my homies went?
Where the hell my homies went?
How I'm 'posed to get home?
How I'm 'posed to get home?

Walking home with my feet all sore
Walking home with my feet all sore
What the hell these Louboutins for?
What the hell these Louboutins for?
Walking home and it's damn near 4
Walking home and it's damn near 4

Yeah, I was getting it, looking real cute
Up in the club, man, how do you do?
Hair ain't a don't, hair is a do
Ooh, he fine! What's up with you?
Where the hell my phone?
Where the hell my phone?

Where the hell my, where the hell my phone, huh?
How I'm 'posed to get home?
Where the hell my phone?
Where the hell my phone?
Where the hell my phone?
Where the hell my, where the hell my phone, huh?
How I'm 'posed to get…

But you're holding it
Oh

The journey home can be agonizing. Fearful. Blinded by panic and assumptions of failure. Losing the phone. All of these illusions cut off reality and even physical sensation of holding the phone.

You Had The Power All Along

The premise is in other stories as well. In The Wizard of Oz, Glenda the Good Witch Of the North tells Dorothy about the power of her ruby red slippers. “You’ve always had the power to go back to Kansas.” In Dorothy’s defense, the brainiac Scarecrow asks Glenda why she didn’t tell Dorothy before.

“Because she wouldn’t have believed me. She had to learn it for herself.”

In Lizzo’s song “Phone,” after she asks her brain where her phone is, imagining herself collapsing in failure of not getting home, she is stopped in her tracks by Siri’s voice: “But you’re holding it.”

Both Siri and Glenda give permission to believe in the self.

Believing in the self is a journey, which at the end of the day, depends on no one but the self. But supportive friends and introspection help let the light shine to reveal the truth. Your truth.

Happy Holidays this season. Trust yourself. :)


Monday Motivation: This Day Will NOT Take Me

iiiiiit’s Monday!
Feeling a little down or shaky because things are changing and it’s a Monday? A day when we get to go back to our hustle after a week of unplugged (or if you’re retail or a salon, you had a busy weekend and Monday is your coast day, which could feel a little blah or needed, depending).

It’s the end of the year, so new budgets are being set and new relationships are starting. If you’re getting shaky with new or old clients, or spiking or slumping sales, or website outages or weirdness, stay ahead of it by sticking to your list. Everything is going to be fine. Just follow these simple (yet day-altering) tips:

  • You know what you need to do. Now go do it. Slowly.

  • One step at a time.

  • Forgiveness for what you cannot complete because of other obligations you have to work or clients or children or aging parents. What you are doing on your list are big steps even if those steps occupy just 5 words on your pad of paper or digital journal. Effie’s Paper has empowering paper books.

  • Deflect mental punches. Do not beat yourself up. Know that you just smacked yourself in the face for not completing something, because you need to remind yourself that you just completed something else, and multi-tasking is a myth.

  • Get out of the house. If you work from home, you will be haunted by messes and incomplete projects. You may have a beautiful office or space, but sometimes you need to get out and clear your head. Then you can come back and “finish” a few things (that will get undone later by other people and that’s OK - just put those people to work putting those undone things back together). Join a co-work space if you need to. Tin Shingle is located in Beacon, NY, and we just joined Main Office on Main Street.

How This PItch To The "Today" Show Starts Wrong - And How To Flip It

Over in Tin Shingle’s Pitch Whisperer online forum, a business owner who is a member submitted a pitch email they wanted to send to the Today show. Right off the bat - the first sentance - was wrong. This is a good thing! Easy to fix. Suggestions are below on how to turn this pitch into one of the top televisions programs into one that might get a response.

We’ll keep their name and details of their product out of this article, as the online forum is a private space for members only. But the edit can be public for all to read and benefit from.

The edit is not actually an edit to the pitch. It is an edit to the approach, in order to attempt to shift the business owner’s mindset when pitching any media outlet. The mindset is really important, and helps you know what to write. Once that shifts, new bullet points within your media pitch will present themselves.

In the business owners pitch, they do a few things. They state that they watch the show, in the first sentence. The next part includes that the business was started in the basement. Always interesting to include, but we need more. And finally, when the business owner was submitting this pitch to the Pitch Whisperer Forum, they referred to their pitch as an "ask." That's the mindset we need to shift. A pitch isn't an "ask." It's bait on a fishing hook to catch a fish.

  • Don't start with that you watch the show. Dead giveaway that you are a newbie at pitching, and probably the business owner. Not that there's anything wrong with that, but the media moves fast, so they respond better to people who know the ebbs and flows of how they need to communicate. I've seen this opener lots of times. If it's to the Today Show, don't do it. If it's to a very small local station, maybe. Either way, the producers will be able to tell if you watch the show because of how you speak to them and what you refer to.

  • Don't make an "ask". You are telling them You are tempting them. You are asking nothing of them. They are busy in offensive mode, so they are hunting and gathering.

  • Interesting that you started in the basement. Ok. How long have you been in business now?

  • Why does the [product] work? This is an interesting concept that you have presented. But why does it work? Is it common? Include more of that in the pitch.

But Wait! If I Don’t Ask, Then How Will I Know?

You might be asking: “If I don’t ask, how will I know what opportunities they are having?” Don’t worry about this part. If you hire a publicist, the publicist may know, because he/she is on a warm email basis with some producers, so they will (or may) just know things through relationships and conversations. You should be watching the show (yay, you already are!) so you can tell the types of things they talk about. From there, you can pitch them what you think they might respond to. This always comes from a place of: what will their viewers like?

Producers are looking for trends. Anything newsworthy in the news now that they can piggy back on. Like…fitness trends, or shifts for people working from home or returning to the office, or fashion shifts into crop and how your special pants address a woman’s midriff during this crop season. Ideas like that.

You Won’t Pitch Once

You won’t pitch once. You’re going to pitch several times, with different angles/ideas.

Need help? Or a guiding light? Or someone to do this with? Tin Shingle’s Membership Program has the online Pitch Whisperer Program, where you can copy/paste your pitch into our online forum, and Tin Shingle’s creator, Katie, will submit thoughts and/or edits. Other members may as well. See our Membership details for more.

If showing your pitch to even our private membership is uncomfortable for you, you can hire Tin Shingle for private services, and we can work directly with you by phone and email to craft your pitch. See our Private Service for that. Members of Tin Shingle do get a 25% discount. Using the online forum, however, is free as it is included with membership.

Talk soon!

Podcast Production for "Working For All," The New Podcast From Dutchess County's DC Works

Various job creation initiative programs related to DC Works reached out to Brandon Lillard and Katie Hellmuth of Tha’ Max Studio and Tin Shingle to help DC Works create and produce a podcast that highlights the service agencies and businesses aligned to help people of all abilities and situations in Dutchess County get work.

It’s a complex program, and we are learning more and more about it through the podcast episodes we record for them. After recording 5 episodes to warm up and find their style, our next recording session was to hone in on their introduction, how they wanted to present themselves as co-hosts on this podcast, and how the podcast would present itself on the newly designed website of DC Works.

Working with the mission statement on their website, Tin Shingle wrote an introduction that will work in order to represent a variety of types of guests. Based on the recent rebranding of DC Works, we also came up with a title for the podcast that incorporates and highlights the all abilities community.

Tell us what you think!

Working For All
A DC Works Podcast

Working For All is the podcast of DC Works, which contributes to Dutchess County’s economic growth by supporting the needs of employers and job seekers through resources and services offered in a true One Stop environment that proudly works cooperatively with community agencies.

In this podcast, we hear directly from job seekers, businesses, community agencies, leaders, and our own team to learn first hand the experiences and needs from employers employing people with all abilities, differently employed, and those who are changing careers.

We're you're hosts, Amanda and Zoey, showing you how Dutchess County is working for all.

Episodes will be available soon, as DC Works rolls out their rebrand. We have 7 more episodes to record, which means a variety of gusts, as well as a turnaround interview on the co-hosts Amanda and Zoey that Brandon and Katie will co-host, in order to interview Amanda and Zoey about what is available at DC Works, and what makes it a one stop shop for people in Dutchess County changing careers, entering the workforce, or needing special accommodations for their abilities in order to earn a living.

To hire Tin Shingle to produce your podcast, no matter if you’re local to New York’s Hudson Valley or elsewhere in the country, see here to learn more and reach out.

The #1 Way To Kill Your Media Pitch When Trying To Get PR About Your Business

There are many ways your email to a reporter magazine or producer for a show could go wrong. The email dance is delicate, even if you do get past the initial email you wrote, to get into a second or third email chain with your intended media outlet. There are ways to mess it up then, but there is one guaranteed line you could write that will guarantee you a hard “No” from a writer you wish to write about your business.

This writing style happens all of the time. The business owner is emailing the media outlet, aka “pitching” with the big hopes that the media will write about them. The formula usually goes like this:

  • Overview about the company.

  • Why they are so special.

  • The closing statement.

The costly mistake is in the Closing Statement. It’s when you’re at your most vulnerable, stating exactly what you want. It’s when you say, in your purest voice: “Will you write about me?”

It’s hard to write to the media. So intimidating. It could be your life’s dream to be featured in this publication, or you could be pitching the media in order to save someone’s life or raise awareness about something life-altering. But when you type that last sentence: “Will you write about me?” you very well may get a response of: “Sure, buy an advertisement!” Or you may get no response at all.

Why Does This Statement Kill The Media Pitch?

The reason asking the reporter or producer to feature your business results in death is simple: you are asking the writer to work for you. Their boss says: “Will you write about XYZ.” Rather, their boss says: “Hey, go write about ABC and have it on my desk in 5 hours.”

The reporter needs to be hooked by your story. You need to include so many curious details, and include how timely it is. Like, the reporter has to write about what you pitched them because you showed them so many compelling reasons that are relevant right now.

Watch this video where Katie, who is a writer and does get pitched by different types of businesses, tells you why this is the statement won’t get you media coverage. When you ask someone to write about you, you are putting them to work. If you’re putting them to work, you need to pay them. That is why they are telling you to buy an ad :)

Katie has shared this insight before. But this time, it is with a Holiday theme. It brings the analogy of the Xmas or Hanukah list into this situation. When you ask for what you want, you don’t always get it. People may scrutinize your ask, think it not worth it, or alter it in some way. The Ask puts pressure on a person that can result in silence.

Of course, if you are 5 years old, caregivers may be scrambling to get you what you want. But as adults with big dreams, these asks may go over differently. That is why you are not going to ask to be covered ever again. You are going to tell them why what you need covered is so amazing; so compelling.

Your ask is going to be: “Should you need more information, let me know.” Meanwhile, you will have included a photo of what you are talking about; include what makes it very timely; and bullet points of why it is amazing.

Tin Shingle’s Pitch Whisperer

You don’t need to do this alone. It’s scary, and you may put it off. You may not send the email at all, or you may send the same one on repeat. Tin Shingle has a Pitch Whisperer Program, where you can copy/paste your email draft into our Community Forum, where Katie will review it (and other Tin Shingle members if they want to). The community learning aspect is good. Even if you don’t submit, if others do, then you can read the edit notes and learn from them.

This is a benefit of membership with Tin Shingle, one you can start using today.

CNN Layoffs Begin - Hitting Contributing - Who Are Not Full Time Employees But Contractors With Sometimes 6-Figure Contracts

As first reported by AdWeek, the anticipated layoffs happening at CNN are in motion. According to TVNewser, a memo was sent to staff sent on Wednesday. It is reported that CNN chairman and CEO Chris Licht wrote that the layoffs have now started. “He said the layoffs would initially focus on its paid contributors’ staff and then shift to full-time CNN staff on Thursday.

According to the AdWeek article,  Axios reported: “A source familiar with the cuts said that “a couple hundred” people in total will be impacted.”

Adweek reported that Licht said “impacted employees will learn more through an in-person meeting or via Zoom, depending on the employee’s location and receive information about notice period or any severance that would apply. All employees who are bonus eligible will still receive their 2022 bonuses, Licht said.” (The Hill)

Ugh. Terrible feeling, but perhaps better that the Twitter layoffs led by Elon Musk that came by algorithm.

Adweek noted that “contributors are not employees but are under contract to serve as talking heads or experts appearing exclusively on the network.” Adweek backed that with reporting from LA Times and Company Town “Most are kept on an annual retainer and are paid in the low six figures. Bigger names earn as much as $500,000 a year.

Wishing everyone well who either lost a job or a contract.

Tin Shingle's Office Hours: 1-2pm Today Wednesday

Office Hours

When: Wednesday, October 26th, 2022
Time: 1pm-2pm EST
Where: At your computer or on your phone.
Zoom Link: Click Here for the Zoom Link. You need to be logged into your account.
Required: Membership with Tin Shingle. Join today.

Hello!

Below is the Zoom link to access the members-only TuneUp Office Hour that happens every Wednesday unless we are having a live public TuneUp. These are small-group sessions where there could be one or five members on the call. This is a great opportunity for you to get one-on-one assistance.

Bring your questions, celebration, strategy ideas, and strategy needs for getting the word out using social and news media.

I'll be your moderator, and I look forward to meeting with you!



Activate your membership here. Be sure you're logged in, and get the Zoom link here to join the interactive session where you get to bring your media celebrations, challenges, and needs.

About TuneUp Office Hours

If you are a member of Tin Shingle, come on today's Members-Only TuneUp! These are open for members only, and and not open to the public. This is a safe space for Tin Shingle Members to come in with brainstorms to give and get feedback.

You can turn on your video camera to speak eye-to-eye, or just talk on the phone or through your computer speakers.

In this series, members of Tin Shingle with the Media Kit Membership can call in to workshop any need in their marketing campaign, including:

  • Media Pitching: What a pitch to a certain media outlet should look like, and how it should read.

  • Instagram: How to get sales and create PR opportunities from you posts.

  • Facebook: How do you increase traffic from this platform?

  • Website: The media will circle back to evaluate their website. What are they seeing, and is it clear?

  • SEO: What's your game plan? Let's get one. You don't want to miss out on all that search traffic.

Tin Shingle's Office Hours: Do This Podcast Challenge

Woo! It's been a month, and it's not even over yet. October is notoriously busy. What with events back in full swing, you may be wondering why you feel so over-scheduled. But it’s TuneUp Wednesday! Today is Office Hours from 1-2pm EST.

If you stick to your list of priorities, you will see success. If your list is on repeat, or needs a refresh, here is a challenge: Up your podcasting or audio-interview game. This challenge can involve recording services from Tin Shingle and @tha_max_studio via Brandon Lillard @randell_savage84 if you need help getting over the finish line. 🙌🏽 🎧 www.tinshingle.com/podcasting. Katie issued you a challenge today in a mini-TuneUp on IG, so go watch for some inspo. Or watch right here!



Otherwise, talk to some of you soon on Tin Shingle's Office Hours TuneUp, which is for members only. Activate your membership here. Be sure you're logged in, and get the Zoom link here to join the interactive session where you get to bring your media celebrations, challenges, and needs.

Why This Breast Cancer Survivor Thinks The Pink Razor Is Trash

October starts and it’s always Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Since 3-6 months ago, Tin Shingle has been encouraging our membership and readership to pitch the media accordingly. With “pink this” and “gift guide” that. But we know the reality is that it’s Breast Cancer Awareness Month every day of the year. It’s lot of cancer awareness month every day of the year, including ovarian cancer, colon cancer, etc.

I like the idea of this month, but it can also feel like trash.
— Jill Hilbrenner, Owner of Witch Hazel

This is why we found it so refreshing and grounding when our friend and curator Jill Hilbrenner of Witch Hazel in Beacon, NY came out with her breast cancer story, and how she was not amused by the pink.

Jill explained this in her own words in a series of Instagram Stories, which Tin Shingle captured and published below.


“Hello, Good Morning, buckle in for some unsolicited thoughts on Breast Cancer Awareness Month…

This is where pink razors (etc.) come in. When I see themed or glittery products, I want to collect them and smash them with that thing that smashed cars in Breaking Bad.
— Jill Hilbrenner, Owner of Witch Hazel

“I like the idea of this month, but it can also feel like trash.

“Back in 2019, I was diagnosed with (and went through treatment for early-stage BC. I had zero symptoms, but just happened to have good insurance that let me get screenings before the typical mammogram age.

“I’m good now, thank God. But once you know your body can do this, you can never NOT know what it feels like to feel like your body’s revolting. And, therefore, there’s always some anxiety that can pop up whenever. Thanks, therapy!

“This is where pink razors (etc.) come in. When I see themed or glittery products, I want to collect them and smash them with that thing that smashed cars in Breaking Bad.

Going through treatment, I wanted zero to do with a pink razor. You know why? You can’t even shave your skin during radiation because it’s too damaged. Like what?
— Jill Hilbrenner, Owner of Witch Hazel

“Ya wanna think that the intentions behind those initiatives are good (cough, greed, cough, show me your financials) but going through treatment, I wanted zero to do with a pink razor.

“You know why? You can’t even shave your skin during radiation because it’s too damaged. Like what?

“This novel popped off because I read an email from Violets Are Blue Skincare and I was basically nodding my head throughout.

“They’re actually founded by a BC survivor, and they consistently give money, resources, and products to people going through treatment.

“That is actual commitment vs. 31-day marketing.

“I’ll also suggest:

  1. Don’t be afraid to talk to people going through it. I had close friends totally ghost me, then reappear conveniently when my treatment was over to “catch up because it’s been so long!” Being uncomfortable is normal, but don’t disappear.

  2. Saying “the wrong thing” is better than saying nothing. Your loved one will tell you (or be silent) if they don’t want to talk about it. But I remember everyone who checked in.

  3. A good text formula is like this: “Hey, I know things are really tough, and I can’t imagine how that feels. If there’s anything specific you need (insert some ideas here), I’m here. No need to respond, but I’m thinking about you.” This shows genuine concern but leaves control of the conversation to your loved one.

“In summary because God knows you have better things to do than listen to me all day:

  1. Research if companies are actually contributing or just doing a pink-glitter cash grab. (not trying to say all initiatives are bad!)

  2. Get a mammogram and go to your annual doctor visits. (And don’t feel afraid to fight insurance if they say a necessary screening is too expensive. Sometimes your doctor’s office will help you or take it on entirely.)

  3. Consider what you can do on a personal level. Remember that this month is difficult for some people. Give or volunteer locally, and nurture personal relationships even if it means temporarily making yourself uncomfortable.

“Ok, excuse me because I forgot one thing. If you reach out to someone, please don’t say: “You’ve got this!”

“I hated when people said that. Factually, there’s no way to know if it’s true. For me personally, it also felt like forceful positivity that didn’t acknowledge the big-ness of the situation. Basically hearing “you go, girl!” when it’s like, “hi, I’m sick.”

“(I understand the intentions are positive and it’s not like someone is going to lose your number for saying that. But many people don’t like that phrase.)”