In the following clip brené brown describes the concept of trust and the marble jar.
Trust marble jar brene brown.
You only share the important stories with friends who have filled up their marble jars.
Brené brown is a professor and social scientist.
These are the people you trust beyond a doubt.
Marbles are earned through small acts moments not grand gestures.
The anatomy of trust by brené brown.
As people share stories about themselves marbles are added to their trust jar.
Designed and built by designhaus alchemy aim.
So fast forward five years and i m clear about trust and i talk about trust as the marble jar.
Trust the marble jar rumbling with vulnerability.
This speech was originally delivered at ucla s royce hall in 2015.
In brené brown s novel daring greatly she shares a story of her young daughter losing trust in her best friends and her subsequent decision to never trust anyone again.
Trust is built in the small moments and this plan will start naming the behaviors that build and break trust.
Brené uses the analogy of a marble jar to help her daughter understand how trust is built.
You could call one of these people at 2 am and he or she would come running.
Some examples of small acts moments that build trust include showing up at a loved one s funeral and asking for help from friends.
To soothe her daughter brown used the metaphor of the marble jar to signify trust trust is like a marble jar.
Marble jar friends people you trust with information that s important to you our why.
We will learn what it means to be a marble jar friend and what behaviors build trust in our classroom so we can show up for ourselves and build trust within our classroom community.
We ve got to really share our stories and our hard stuff with people.
In brené brown s concept of the marble jar these are your marble jar friends.
For every moment of trust earned one marble goes in the jar.
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Building trust in a classroom is important so students feel safe to be able to show up authentically and take risks.
The trust marble jar is a powerful metaphor and tool used to teach how psychological safety is built slowly over time and based on small actions.