Personal Stories: Hearing Impairment, Microagressions and More

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Personal Stories: Hearing Impairment, Microagressions and More

In Pt. 3 of Personal Stories, the panel continues as Joe Vasquez, Co-Director at Runway Incubator shares his stories and lessons of struggle with microaggressions as a hearing impaired Latino in the mainstream and corporate world.  He discusses the importance of the variety of accessible gateways of expression, including art, and how they allowed him to fully reveal his perspectives to others. Through his experiences, Joe has developed a passion for helping entrepreneurs and corporations to innovate more support, love, and value in the workplace.  Despite his hearing impairment, Joe has also learned how to be a male ally.

Joe Vasquez:

So I just want to start off by saying that to most people I personify as the dominant archetype. Outwardly, I look like a white male, but there's a lot more nuances to my story that I wanted to share.  My name is Joe Vasquez and I am Co-Director at Runway Incubator in San Francisco.  My early childhood was marked with a lot of different types of struggles that most people don't generally have to go through.  I lost all of my hearing, well most of my hearing when I was about one years old.  In my left ear I can't hear at all.  In my right ear I have about twenty percent of my hearing.  I went to an all deaf school where I first learned sign language.  My father being a traditional male Latino wasn't exactly fond with the idea that I was gonna be in a non mainstream school.  I was put in a mainstream school where I was constantly singled out, I felt like I didn't have a place within that community.  I was always the deaf person.  I didn't really know how to speak the same language, even though we were speaking the same language.  My father passed away when I was fourteen. Most people in my family struggle with addiction.  Being Latino was not part of my everyday life because I didn't feel like I could own and live with.....but also I'm blessed.  

WE'RE ALL HUMAN

One of the great things about going through struggle and adversity when you're growing up is the ability to develop a sense of empathy, awareness that anybody, regardless of what they look like, have struggles large and small but at the end of the day it's important to realize that we're all human.

PEOPLE WITH DIFFERENT ABILITIES HAVE SO MANY UNIQUE IDEAS AND WE NEED TO GIVE THEM THE MEDIUM, THE NEW CANVAS, THE DIFFERENT WAYS TO EXPRESS THOSE IDEAS

Being deaf I thought I was going to be a singer growing up until people started complaining about it.  I still sing in the office and people still complain about it, it's a little bit of a problem.  But with that being said, I really fell in love with the cameras.  I love painting, drawing, expressing my ideas through visual mediums.  A unique view of the world....the perspective that I had that allowed me to express my ideas in very unique ways, which translates in a little bit, to my work in entrepreneurship.  But one thing that I took away from that is, people with different abilities have so many unique ideas and we need to give them the medium, the new canvas, the different ways to express those ideas, whether it's visual or orally, there's so many different ways to express it and give them the space and the opportunities, like some of our amazing panelists have said so far.  Increasingly, I saw the idea that art could connect so many unique ideas in powerful ways which later has translated into creativity and entrepreneurship in what I do today.  

Currently I work for Runway Incubator based in San Francisco.  We are a co-working space with about seventy five companies, a corporate innovation facility where we work with global two thousand companies to help them innovate, work with startups, and find the next generation technology and a social impact fund where we invest in cutting-edge social impact technologies.  I have been able to work with a wide-range of amazing entrepreneurs.  But to me entrepreneurship marries the realities of the world with your interpretation of the possibilities, something where meritocracy is an everyday reality, but sometimes it's not.  And I'm working with some of the greatest people to help make entrepreneurship a true meritocracy, because at the end of the day there's a block that's holding back some of the best and the most promising entrepreneurs from being the most successful.

One of the great things about entrepreneurship is that is requires empathy, it requires passion, perseverance.  Some of the true hallmarks are some of the people who have gone through the most adversity growing up.  We've seen time and time again the most promising entrepreneurs come from the most underrepresented backgrounds, which is why we’re placing all of our money in the entrepreneurs who understand the stories and the problems of the people that we're trying to help the most.

SIX OF TEN EMPLOYEES TODAY QUIT DUE TO A LACK OF EMOTIONAL SAFETY, OFTENTIMES CAUSED BY MICROAGGRESSIONS

I set out to connect different ideas to create a new reality...one that solved the most serious problems in the world.  So one of the things that we talked about so far ... I've seen time and time again, microaggressions.  Now some of you may know what microaggressions are. Microaggressions are subtle, sometimes inadvertent, subconscious aggressions or behaviors that make people feel like they don't have a safe place to express and fully be who they are.  Six of ten employees today quit due to a lack of emotional safety, oftentimes caused by these, so said, microaggressions.

Examples of microaggressions that I've seen:  Lack of accessible options for team dialogues and activities.   I've been in conversations where we're talking about strategy for two years, three years, four years..a group of six, seven, eight people....I feel completely lost even though I'm in the middle of that group because I can't hear.  Often times, what we don't work with, or understand the people that we are working with, it's hard to accommodate for them and it's hard for some people to speak out, like myself.  I never spoke out until now.  Sometimes investors and myself included, I've been guilty of this many times, have used coded language that said that some people are from a certain subset, maybe don't have the same level of promise, skills, expertise to be successful as entrepreneurs later on.  So as investors, I'm trying to hold everyone accountable for the language and the tone that we use with founders coming up.  Being that, you know, one of the things that I believe you alluded to before is this, "get your work dying type mentality and don't cause too many ripples in the pond."  Sometimes I have had white or dominant co-workers say, "Speak up, Speak out!",  which is almost forcing this idea of aggressive personality or dominant personality in the workplace.  Sometimes culture is unique to who we are, where we come from, and it's important to appreciate and realize that.

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WE ALL NEED A HAND UP, WE ALL NEED SOMEONE TO WORK WITH WHO WILL WORK, SUPPORT, LOVE, VALUE and CHERISH US

So what are some ways that I have been actively working on that you could potentially learn from?  Realize this, we're all human.  It's important to be humble, we're going to make mistakes in this work but everyone wants to feel safe and valued at the end of the day.  Be self-aware and aware when microaggressions are happening, say something.  Learn the different between mentorship and sponsorship because they're two very different things.  Create a culture oriented environment with feedback to be given in many different ways, which I believe was alluded before. It can be anonymous feedback, it could be blunt in your face feedback, where sometimes it's a little bit hard to hear.  Listen and avoid being defensive when someone speaks up about a comment construed as a microaggression.  And finally, create an accessible environment, for people like myself,  for people who you might work with in the future, because at the end of the day, we all need a hand up, we all need someone to work with who will work, support, love, value, and cherish us in the workplace.  So thank you for all the work that you do, I'm very excited to be here and have a great day.

Crowd applauds

- TO BE CONTINUED - 

Special Note:

The #MeToo movement and stories have inspired people to share stories of and have brought new awareness to just how rampant sexual assault is.  Hearing stories helps those seemingly unaffected or those who aren’t aware of the issues at hand become aware, compassionate, empathetic and/or use their privilege to help make positive change.  It is in this spirit that we invited 4 individuals to engage in #storypower by sharing their stories of inequity and/or lack of inclusion at the Better Man Conference earlier this year for a panel entitled, Sharing Our Truths: Intersectional Stories and Perspectives.  The transcript and recording above is an excerpt from that Sharing Our Truths panel that was hosted by Sumayyah Emeh- Edu, Gender Leadership Group's Diversity and Inclusion Strategist.   


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CALL TO SPEAKERS!

BETTER MAN CONFERENCE 2018: CALL TO SPEAKERS, PANELISTS, AND MORE

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We invite business professionals, concerned citizens, expert practitioners and allies to share their voices for the 3rd annual Better Man Conference. We are securing dates and locations soon, but looking forward to these

  • BMC San Francisco- October 26, 2018 (Application deadline August 15th, 2018)
  • BMC New York- November 6, 2018 (Application deadline August 15th, 2018)

We expect 200 people in NYC and 500+ in SF. Previous registrants were 60/40 Men/Women and included:

  • Executives, Leaders, Emerging Leaders, Change Makers.
  • Human Resources, Diversity Staff and Council Leaders.
  • Learners and Leaders seeking workforce inclusion.

The conference theme, STAND UP. SPEAK UP. IT’S TIME. is intended to educate, inspire and move male allies into action in support of women and target groups. Given the context of the #MeToo and #TimesUp movements, the focus of The Better Man Conference is on galvanizing men inside organizations by providing them with the tools to support partnership and the role that healthy masculinity plays.  Learn more or apply here.


THANK YOU to 2017 BETTER MAN CONFERENCE SPONSORS

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CONTACT [email protected] TO EXPLORE SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES FOR THE 2018 BETTER MAN CONFERENCE