Dare to be Fabulous

Thursday, July 13, 2006

Share Your DTBF Pictures!

Let’s share our DTBF photos! If you have a photo of yourself in a DTBF moment, we’d love for you to submit it for our consideration to place on the website. DTBF moments are highly personal, of course, so we ask that you submit it with a caption telling us why this was DTBF for you. We’ll start posting some photos on the site soon!

Just to give you examples to get started, some of Johanna's photos might include: skydiving; speaking at a soyfoods industry conference; sitting with her friend Madhu in India when she was eight years old; or eating a veggie dog at a MLB ballpark where she made that possible. :)

So send one to us! Write “DTBF Photo” in the subject heading and make sure you include that caption, along with your name (first only is fine if you prefer not to share your last name), and location where it was taken. And if you like, you may also include where you are from, so we can see how far around the globe we all are Daring To Be Fabulous!

Send your photo to: info@daretobefabulous.com (Please send only one photo per submission. Thanks!)


DTBF!

Johanna and Patti

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1 Comments:

Anonymous annie said...

Ingrid Newkirk's story of talking to the man with the dead deer t-shirt reminds me of a conversation I was just having with a good friend. She is working on a political campaign and told me that she's bashful about wearing the pins and giving out bumper stickers and talking to strangers about her candidate. I recalled that when I've worked on campaigns, or volunteered for causes, I have relished the opportunity to stick literature in peoples' hands, recruit strangers to volunteer, engage them in a conversation about the state of our country and our politics.
I had to think on why it was so easy and I realized that for me, it's a breeze, a privelege even, to advocate on behalf of something I truly believe in. Not only that, it feels like a duty to spread the word and get people thinking. But I empathized with my friend's shyness because I am surely the same way when it comes to advocating for ... myself. Right now I am trying to start my own business. I need to talk to strangers, to recruit them to my point of view, and engage them in a conversation about how I can help them be more effective in communicating about their own causes.
Ingrid's work on behalf of animals is a lot more urgent than getting my business going, but I have decided to take the lesson that being bashful is never an option when it comes to things you believe in. The trick is this: to believe in my own cause same as I've believed in other peoples'.

July 31, 2006 8:52 PM  

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Patricia Howard and Johanna McCloy, DTBF!