Be a Star in Your Private Life
by Patricia Fripp, CSP, CPAE
It's okay to be a star in public, but the most important
role you'll ever play is in your private life.
When superstar speaker and author Scott McKain was an
entertainment reporter in Indianapolis, one evening he and
his wife Sherry were waiting for friends to join them for
dinner. The friends arrived twenty minutes late, apologizing
and giggling. They had been at K-Mart and seen a woman who
looked so much like Meryl Streep that they couldn't resist
watching her shop from a discreet distance.
A week later, Scott was in Hollywood interviewing Meryl
Streep about her then new movie "River Wild." He told her
how his friends had mistaken a stranger for her at K-mart in
Indianapolis. "Is that the store on 39th next to Kroger's?"
she asked.
Meryl explained that she and her husband wanted their
children to have a more normal upbringing, so they lived in
Connecticut. The previous week they had been visiting her
mother-in-law in Indianapolis. "If people see you in a store
in Los Angeles," she commented, "they say, 'Oh, there's
Meryl Streep.' But if they see you in a store in
Indianapolis, they say, 'Gosh, doesn't she look like Meryl
Streep?"
Meryl Streep raises her kids out of the spotlight. So do
many other stars. That's their private space. The stars who
maintain maximum mental health are those who realize the
most important role they can play is not on the screen, but
in their private life.
(255 Words)
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Patricia Fripp is an executive speech coach, sales presentation skills trainer, and award-winning keynote speaker.
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