Barbara believes dyslexia sharpened her intuition, empathy, and ability to size people up quickly. It also made her a great talker and fueled her desire to prove herself, turning her perceived weaknesses into strengths.
She wrote a curt but impactful letter to Mark Burnett, the show's producer, arguing that she was the better choice and detailing her history of success after failure. Her persistence earned her a spot on the show.
She advises parents to let their children fail and focus on building their confidence. She believes that resilience and the ability to get back up are more important than excelling in school.
She believes persistence and the willingness to out-try anyone are key. She emphasizes that trying, even if you don't win, builds self-confidence and resilience.
She held a mock funeral for herself, complete with a casket, priests, and nuns. She lay in the casket while her friends and family gathered to toast her life, and then she surprised them by jumping out and dancing the tango.
For Barbara, success means helping others, being liked for the right reasons, and feeling that you've done the right things in life. It's about the genuine impact you make on others, not the material rewards.
The pitches shown on TV are often heavily edited. In reality, they can last up to an hour and a half, giving the Sharks more time to assess the entrepreneurs and their businesses.
She prefers to use the money saved on coach tickets to fund vacations for her family and others. She feels more satisfied knowing she's helping others travel than indulging in first-class comfort.
Her priority is her grandchildren, followed by staying close to her children and living life to the fullest. She enjoys seeing her loved ones enjoy her homes and other resources.
She views feelings of unworthiness as a misconception that can be replaced with new habits of trying and persistence. She believes that as long as you keep trying, you build self-confidence and undo those feelings.
Get ready for some life changing wisdom and lessons she's never shared before. It's Shark Tank's Barbara Corcoran. I am so excited to share with you part two of this incredible conversation.
I will out-try anyone, anyone in the universe and try harder than anybody else and I'll win because of it. And I sat down and write a very curt but impactful text to Mark Burnett himself saying he had made a mistake and everything in my life happened on the heels of failure and I'd like to have him invite me out to compete with the other lone female shark and let the best woman win. I could walk through my sales staff
At any given office we had like maybe 300 desks. I was seeing people and I could feel the vibe of someone who was failing. I know it's like a witch's instinct.
Oh, no, no, no. Getting rejection or rejected doesn't mean you're not going to crush it in that role. It's no indication you're not going to make it. Absolutely. And it's like how we handle rejection. Have you ever been a mean girl? Have you ever been like competitive? I didn't have the confidence to be a mean girl. Ah. I did not know this, and I connected with you on such a soul level when I learned this. But I love that I did a few deals. I know I can't share details. We did a deal together. Yes, we did.
Right now in your life, do you ever have moments where you feel unworthy? I think the danger to feeling unworthy is to believe it. Just to believe it is so damaging. Just think of it as an old tape that's got to be replaced. For your 70th birthday, you held a mock funeral. Yes, I did. They were shocked to see me dead.
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Empowered women empower women. And today we've got an empowered woman who's gonna empower you on the show. You've heard her say, you've got a deal on ABC's hit show Shark Tank for 16 seasons.
Barbara Corcoran is an Emmy Award-winning shark and executive producer on the show. She's the founder of The Corcoran Group, and her journey to this moment we're all sharing together right now is nothing short of remarkable. Barbara is one of 10 kids raised in a two-bedroom home. She struggled with dyslexia, got straight Ds in school, and had 20 jobs by the time she turned 23.
She then borrowed $1,000 and quit her job as a waitress to start a small real estate company in New York City. She grew the Corcoran Group into the largest and best-known brand in the brokerage business, and Barbara became one of the most successful entrepreneurs in the country, from a $1,000 loan to a billion-dollar business, and now she's invested in more than 100 businesses to date, and
She's also so sharp, quick-witted, and so, so funny. Plus, there's something she did to me behind the scenes on Shark Tank that I'm going to share with you that made my jaw hit the floor and made my soul explode like a giant heart emoji. I am so excited for this conversation. Barbara Corcoran, welcome.
Welcome to the Jamie Kernley Michelle. I've been looking forward to it so much. Thank you so much. I'm so excited and I just love you and thank you for being here. This show is going to be, I already know it, such a blessing and so inspiring to so many people.
You've shared a lot about sort of the pain growing up of being teased at school, like dyslexia. Oh, yeah. Because a lot of people right now, whatever age they are, they're carrying around labels, right? For me, I carried around the label, I'm not enough, most of my life until I realized, oh, my gosh. Because who gave you that label? It comes from somewhere. Yeah, I think for me...
me, I mean, I had loving parents. I would not change a thing. They worked a lot. So I always kind of felt like I had to, you know, yeah. And like do something great for them to show up. So I have, you have nothing to worry about. Um, and so, but now I recognize, oh, wow, that label. And I would take, and so, and so, you know,
For people right now listening or watching that maybe have a child with a learning disability or dyslexia, what's your advice for them right now? Well, I have deep thoughts about dyslexia, the pluses and the minuses, et cetera. I've come to believe, well, in my life, it's proven pluses.
but I also have two dyslexic children that I was a parent to, and I was tailor-made for them. I had two clunkers when I got my second daughter and found out she had extreme learning disabilities. I thought, "Ah, another clunker? Gosh." But I was perfectly made for them to bring out the best of each of those children, and they're phenomenally successful already, and they're very well balanced and very secure. That's all you want with kids, to make them secure.
Unfortunately, dyslexia battles comfort in a child.
It's a way of judging a child when they're too young, get the label too young, and it makes them feel, like you said, less than. And so for dyslexia, for me, I was a dunce in the class because I couldn't read until seventh grade. So I got that label early that I was a dunce. And when Sister Zelda Marie, the nun from hell, actually told me I was always going to be stupid in second grade because I could never learn to read or write.
I believed it because the kids believe this stuff. But thank God for my mother. She told me I was a genius and I'd learned to fill in all the blanks. And she was right. I became a bullshitter of the best way, you know. Are you allowed to say bullshit on your show? Sure. Okay. I don't want to say it to you in any way. I haven't got her mouth a little bit, you know. All right. And that skill set sure paid off. Let me tell you, without dyslexia, I would not be nearly as successful as I am. Dyslexic kids have gifts.
true gifts that other kids don't have. They're very intuitive because they've gone through the pain of being looked down upon. It,
sharpens your intuition very much so, your empathy, it definitely does. You can size people up faster than the other kid in the town, however you can size up a book, you know, but what's more important? Sizing up people, getting along with people. Very often people who are severely dyslexic are great talkers. I'm a great talker. I can't read, but I sure can talk, okay? And most importantly, when you put down as a kid, you want to get even. If you have any gumption, you want to get even.
And my whole life has been one long attempt to prove to everybody that I'm not stupid. Isn't that stupid that I would still be worried about that? But I'm always worried about not having the answer or being called on and stuttering and all the painful things being made to read out loud. That's how it looked to me at board meetings. Could you read this report? No, I pass on to the next person. I'm not getting caught in that again. You know, but...
I think because you're coming out of a hole, you have more fervor. And interesting enough, on all the businesses I've invested in, Shark Tank, by far my most successful are all owned by dyslexic people. Now, maybe because I picked them on purpose, but know this, they're not book smart, but they're street smart.
And I think that just is not an accident. But as long as you have a great parent who makes you believe in yourself. I mean, I had that in my mother. If she didn't tell me I was a genius all the time, she didn't tell me all the time I had a wonderful imagination. If she didn't put me in situations to demonstrate my wonderful imagination, who cared about that except she cared? That's where I got my confidence from. And where do I get my work ethic? College.
from really is knowing I had a liability and I had to work harder than everybody else. But I got used to working hard. I'm a great worker. No problem. What was terrible as a kid became my assets as I became older. And then to be a parent to two kids with dyslexia. Oh, they're great. Yeah. I kept my eye on one ball raising Tommy and Kate.
Self-confidence. That's all I want to do. If I keep that confidence there, it's a home run. Don't worry about anything. It's a home run. And I also learned from my mother with all children, not just children that struggle in school, with all children, I think you have to let them fail. We are in a culture that you don't want to let a kid fail, get a special tutor, blah, blah, blah, talk to the teacher, whatever. My mother was a believer in letting us fail because she wanted to nurture our gene of getting back up, and she certainly did.
She always said getting back up is where it's at, not excelling. I'm surprised I even tried to excel because she made getting back up sound so good, you know? Yeah. Do you think, Barbara, like, do you believe our setbacks or hardships are happening for us in the sense of,
of like when you look at what you've gone through in the case of dyslexia and then the skillset that you built, and then now you are a parent and probably have such insight into doing that. Do you believe in that? Do you believe like our steps are divinely ordered? Is there a role faith plays in your life? How else could you explain things? There are so many things that are startling in life and you don't know how you got there. Bad things that happen that turn into the best things in your life. I mean, thank God Ray married my secretary.
He's still on 51% of my company. He wasn't really doing anything in the company, you know. Thank God it was dyslexic to learn the skills to deal with feeling like a loser, being a loser and having the empathy to turn that into great management skill because that's exactly what it did. I could walk through my sales staff at any given office. We had like maybe 300 desks.
a sea of people. And I could stand there and I could feel the vibe of someone who was failing. I know I was like a witch's instinct. I walk up eight desks down, put my hand on the shoulder of the person, say, hey, how you doing? And they were all set to quit.
They always told me that. I was just thinking that. I could feel that. It wasn't like they looked sad. I could just feel the vibe. You don't get that unless you have an acute sense of harm in your own body of something that happened. My harm came from, don't call on me. Don't have me.
It was my idea of hell on earth. I mean, so painful as a kid. But I had my great mother after 3.30 that I could go to her and be wonderful in front of her. Well, we all get to watch you use that skill set in the tank. And I was shocked to learn this. I did not know this. And I connected with you on such a soul level when I learned this, that you initially...
We're going to be a Shark on Shark Tank season one. Yes. And then all of a sudden they said, you're out. You're not. It was essentially a rejection. Of course it was. From Shark Tank. You were out. Yes. And most people learning, oh, they didn't pick me anymore. Yeah, that was hard. Would have went and cried, would have whatever. But will you share what you did when you got word that they're not picking you for season one? You know, I hadn't already signed the contract, but it's one way. I didn't think about that.
I had already told my friends and family I was going to Hollywood. They were, whoa, Hollywood? Yeah, I had already bought my real leather luggage, so I looked like I belonged there. I'd done all that in my head. And when they told me a week before my flight that they had picked someone else, there was only room for one woman, and they had chosen another woman, I was shocked.
I did what everybody does, I think, when you are met with hardship. I felt sorry for myself. I was also thinking, what am I going to tell my family, friends, how embarrassing? I tasted it. I could see it. When I could see things, they always come true for me. And I thought, this is the first time it's not coming true. How could that be? How could that... I mean, why would they pick another woman? Why didn't they tell me sooner? Why didn't they... And then I got control of myself. And I just...
got angry and that's also a trait of mine and i sat down and write a very curt but impactful
to Mark Burnett himself, saying he had made a mistake and everything in my life happened on the heels of failure and I'd like to have him invite me out to compete with the other lone female shark and let the best woman win, which is a little aggressive, I realize. And I gave him my reasons why I was so good when my back was against the wall, including the Trump story, including Sister Stella Marie, including the old boy network who wouldn't let me into their club until I became the number one rival. I put it all out there, short story.
rewrote it and send it. And the next day I was called and told to come out and compete. Let me tell you, you know what it's like out of Shark Tank because you've been a shark. You know how they put your name in the gold star on the trailer so you know you have your own gold star in a trailer even though they're dumpy and all. But when they took the other lady's gold star off at lunchtime, I was like...
Wow. But the lesson there was I was doing what I always do well. When the chips are down, I know how to come back. I had formed a habit of trying hard. And...
Was it a great day? You put your, I just. Feeling sorry is just terrible. So worse hindrance than anyone. A victim role. Yeah. A victim role is like giving away your full power. Yeah. For anything. I'm a victim. Take my power. You know? No way. So in that moment, like you competed for your spot. You got that spot.
season one. Now, 16 seasons later, we're sitting here talking about it. And the lesson there, I just connected with so profoundly because I hear from so many people. They're like, oh, things aren't going my way. They said no again. I'm like, oh, no, no, no. Getting rejection or rejected doesn't mean you're not going to crush it in that role. It's no indication
You're not going to make it. And it's like how we handle rejection, right? Our relationship with rejection, the meaning we assign to it. Yeah, and look what you did. You were like, okay, I just got rejected. Instead of just going away, I'm going to write Mark Burnett a letter. Well, I didn't do it so fast. Remember, my first thought was, what's wrong with me? Right, right, right, right. That was my first thought. Oh, gosh, I guess I'm not good enough. I guess I'm not blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And how much time between that feeling and then you deciding to write the letter? Well, I gave myself a good 10 minutes to be sorry for myself. I figured I might as well enjoy it for a little while. It feels good to be sorry for yourself, you know? Poor
And rejection sucks. I mean, I still feel hurt when I get it and I reframe it right away, but I don't take it personally. Nope. Don't take it personally. Don't you take it personally initially? I always go to that. Sometimes I'm getting more and I feel like the more we put in the reps in life. Well, your money in the bank helps you. Yeah. Yeah. And
enough times where kind of like what we were talking about earlier, I look back, I'm like, thank God that dude broke up with me because that would have been a disaster. Or thank God that investor didn't think women would buy makeup from, you know, people that had my body type. I mean, I've had every type of rejection, but I look back and it's like, okay, now, you know, it's all happening for me. And now 16 seasons later, have you ever, you know, have you ever had a fight with another shark?
that lasted beyond the set? No, it lasts about three minutes. You know, it's a competitive set, you know. Yeah. Sometimes I can't get my word in because I have a smaller voice than Lori and all the men, actually. Yeah. So it's very hard for me to break in. You almost have to be rude and just charge in, which is not my nature. So I've learned to be more rude, actually, on Shark Tank.
But no, the minute you have a drink at the end of the day, if you have a drink by yourself or with the Sharks, it's gone. There's no reason. You're in a foxhole together for, what is it, 16 years? No, we're brothers, sisters. Come on. Doing deals together, all of it. I had the best time, and I know I can't share what deals I did yet, but I love that I did a few deals. I know I can't share details. Wait, we did a deal together. Yes, we did. How's it going? Yes, we did.
Good. Great. Yeah. Everything's great. I just was so grateful how welcoming you are. You're easy to welcome. You know, and also like, listen, you, you, you know, we, everybody, everyone has seen and felt welcome.
Yeah.
um, you know, I'm really securing my power and I'm going to pour into another woman. And that's why I think it was so, uh, I almost got emotional before the show started because for you to walk in up to me, for you to, for you to give me a cheat sheet, to help me with questions, if I needed it, for you to raise me up that way. Um, I just felt like you, like your intention, um,
was just to multiply my impact. And that felt really, really good and really special. Have you ever, have you always been that way? Or have you ever been, have you ever been a mean girl? Have you ever been like competitive? I didn't have the confidence to be a mean girl. You have to be, whether it be true or not, you have to be securing your seat, I think, to be a mean girl. No, I think I'm more of the cut of cloth like my mom. If she had a neighbor in our small town that was obnoxious, she made her point clear.
Too much so, actually. It was almost hard to watch to really understand the lady and invite her in for tea. And I was like, what's she doing here? But I think she paid it forward. You know, she did to others, well, what the Christians always say, do for others what you want them to do to you. She was very good in that way. I just did for you what I wish somebody had done for me on my first day on the set. Because suppose Kevin O'Leary and Robert Herjavec had had three years of practice in
Canada, and they didn't tell Damon and I. Laurie was not yet there. They didn't tell us that these sharks that were stuck on the set on day one had this vast background. They were like machine guns firing those questions, and Damon and I just sat there. Ah!
It took us a while to even get a question down. So I was just paying it forward, so to speak. You know, it pays off. It makes the world a friendly place. Yeah. And I believe that through and through. I believe, you know, we get back what we give. And sometimes it's not immediately, but it always happens. It always happens. A golden rule. I believe that. Well, sometimes I go too far. Yesterday I decided I was going to say hello to every single person in the street that I met in the four blocks to my office. Let me tell you. Wow.
Just to be friendly and smile, especially older people that probably never had anyone talk to them. I travel those four blocks. I probably said hello in the city blocks, probably 80, 90 people. Three said hello back. Wow. And I decided I'm not going to do this anymore. I feel badly now. Only three people were friendly today. You're trying to put it out. It is New York. I know. It is New York. I have to think of something else. If you said good morning-
Come visit me in California. People will say hi back to you, I promise. Yes, they do. I know that. We can go to the Midwest together. We're going to get hugs back. The South, forget about it. They'll say hello to us 10 times. Yes, yes. That's the best. That's really cool that you... No more hellos for me in the morning. You know, I'm obsessed with self-worth. I wrote a book called Worthy. You should be because it's all... What a one there. Yeah. Do you feel right now in your life, do you ever have moments where you feel unworthy?
There's so much more coming up in this episode. You are not going to want to miss it. But first, I wanted to share this with you. In life, you don't soar to the level of your hopes and dreams. You stay stuck at the level of your self-worth. When you build your self-worth, you change your entire life. And that's exactly why I wrote my new book, Worthy, How to Believe You Are Enough and Transform Your Life for You.
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Overcome limiting beliefs and imposter syndrome. Achieve your hopes and dreams by believing you are worthy of them and so much more. Are you ready to unleash your greatness and step into the person you were born to be? Imagine a life with zero self-doubt and unshakable self-worth.
Get your copy of Worthy, plus some amazing thank you bonus gifts for you at worthybook.com or the link in the show notes below. Imagine what you'd do if you fully believed in you. It's time to find out with Worthy.
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And now more of this incredible conversation together. Do you feel right now in your life, do you ever have moments where you feel unworthy? All the time. All the time. I've never been anyone who was worthwhile who didn't feel unworthy. I mean, people who label unworthy as something that's real, all it is is a misconception because you haven't filled your potential yet.
Where do you feel your potential? You'll see how unworthy you are and you're very worthy the minute you get what you want. I think the danger to feeling unworthy is to believe it. Just to believe it is so damaging. Just think of it as an old tape that's got to be replaced. I mean, I say it
cavalier in a way, but I so have practiced it and believed it. So I'm not just blowing smoke here. It's everything. It's really your self-worth is everything. But people think that kids even, I'm asked all the time by parents, how do you teach your children self-confidence, especially if they have a disability in learning in any kind? And I always say the same old thing because I really believe it teach them to try.
Don't teach them to win. Say you're not going to win. You probably won't even do well, but you got to go out there and try. You got to try. I will out try anyone, anyone in the universe and try harder than anybody else. And I'll win because of it.
But while you're feeling unworthy, you don't feel like you have the right to try. You form a new habit of yourself if you just try. The reason I'm confident is because I know I'll out-try anybody. I know I'll always show up. I know I'll get back up. That's what teaches me self-confidence. But still, there are times when you feel unworthy, intimidating. And as long as it doesn't happen all the time,
Keeps you honest. But I think it's a trait you have to learn to undo and replace with something else by trying, just trying. Yeah. That's so good. Yeah. I've always kind of felt, at least for me so far, it's like a lifelong journey, you know, because I still have those feelings almost every day. I'm happy to hear that. Are you? Yes, I am. I'm happy. Misery loves company. Oh.
I know, right? But it's good. I think sometimes people feel like they're doomed if they feel it. It's like, no, no, no, we all feel it. And then here's what we do about it. Here's what we do about it in real time. As long as you do something about it, I think that's key. Right. Not well in it.
For your 70th birthday, you held a mock funeral. Yes, I did. Can you share? It was fun. A lot of fun. Can you share your thoughts and intentions behind that? It was well thought out. Yeah. Tell me about it. Tell me about it. It was a lot of work to begin with, but I heard that my friends were going to give me a surprise 70th birthday party. I didn't want to be 70, and I sure as heck didn't want a surprise that I wasn't in charge of.
So I decided to let them plan their little party, get the date, and surprise them. So they thought they were coming to a black-tie surprise party for me, and I was going to walk in, surprise! But I surprised them because I went downstairs in my apartment. It's a duplex. And I set up the whole living room as a funeral parlor with a casket, nuns praying,
priests praying, everybody was praying, and I was laying out in a casket, an open casket, and I was dead. I wore a beautiful gown. I looked better than most dead people, and I had my makeup perfectly done, so I didn't mind showing off myself, and I...
In the casket, you're like, good. So when the time came, once I was in the casket and they were waiting upstairs for me to arrive from a business trip to shout surprise, my brother said, quick, she's coming downstairs, everybody downstairs. And everybody rushed down the stairs, probably 150 or so people rushed down the stairs and went to my living room. And as they turned the corner, I heard what I had hoped to hear, a gasp. As they saw a dead barber. It was so much fun.
They were shocked to see me dead. And then they realized, how could I really be dead? And little by little, they nervously started laughing. And they toasted me and said what they liked about me, what was wrong about me. And I had a rabbi give a talk. I had a priest monsignor dressed up as a talker. Were you still in the casket at this point? I'm still in the casket. How many times can you hear what people will say about you after you're dead? I heard it all.
I know who likes me, what they think, what I did wrong. I know it all. Even my kids talked about me. But then after everything was done and the blessing was done, I jumped out of the casket and I did the tango because I had secretly been taking lessons in my beautiful red gown. I felt so young and vital, and we had a blast of a party. But my doorman told me the next morning that with all the guests going in, he had looked up online and I was declared dead. What's a...
site where they give your life and where you went to school and the most common site that everybody looks at to find out about somebody. To read the obituaries and stuff. Yeah, to read them. And I was an obituary and they changed it the next day. How they thought I was dead, I don't know. That
That is wild. It was fun. That is wild. But I can never give another birthday party because I can't think of a better one. How are you going to do a better one than that? I'm not going to do one. They're always pushing me, my friends, my family. Come on, we need a great party. And you know how to give them. I give great parties, but I can't think of anything better. If you come up with an idea, send it my way. I will do it. Why didn't you want to turn 70?
Um, because 70 to me sounded like an old lady, whereas 60, I convinced myself wasn't an old lady. So just that one year and I had accomplished everything in my life that I should, but more and more people started asking me when I was going to retire, which wasn't good. Yeah.
No, I don't think I'm going to retire. I just felt like all the signals I was misinterpreting around me, misinterpreting really, saw them through my new slanted eyes, 70, 70, 70. And I didn't want to go there. Once you pass your birthday, then you're 71, then 72. Easy. You don't mind at all. 75 didn't even hurt. Now I'm 76. What are your priorities in life now? And do you see them changing the next decade?
They are changing because unlike you, I have older children. They're 30 and 19. Kate is 19. And my son is married with two children. So my priority is, I hate to admit it, are my grandchildren. I didn't think I'd be that kind of an older lady where I live for my grandchildren, but they're so darn cute and they love you so much you can't help yourself. So that's my first priority. My kids are my second priority, to stay close to them. And then my third priority is...
is to live life to the fullest so that I don't go to sleep on it. That's all. Whatever that might entail. Yeah. Yeah. Do people ask you about that a lot, about retiring? All the time. You never get your never. When are you going to retire? Why? Why would I want to retire? I love my work. I love what I'm doing. Do I look that old? No.
No, not really. Just wondering because everyone I have as a friend now, even the younger friends are all retired. And that's amazing to me. I mean, they're keeping busy and having a great life and they're more free to travel when they want than I am. And sometimes I get envious and I think, why? If I didn't have my work, what I would do tomorrow morning? What, read the paper an extra time or two? No, I don't think so. Yeah. Not worth it to me. What does success mean to you? Being successful? Mm-hmm.
I think it's, well, for me, maybe I'm too needy, but it's really being able to look at yourself or your life and think that people really like you for the right reasons, that you've helped people. Not that I'm a Pollyanna, but I do help a lot of people through Shark Tank, without a doubt.
I get people to believe in themselves. I've helped all the people I employed over the years to sort of really have the satisfaction of feeling like you did something worthwhile. I think it's feeling like you did the right things in life. Yeah. Yeah. To help other people. It's never the stuff you get. It's never the false feedback you get. It's always a genuine...
Somebody saying thanks or not saying thanks and you know they were really helped by you. Yeah. Yeah. I don't even expect to thank you anymore for anything. It's just in detail. It's what you feel about it yourself that counts. Just the offering you put out there. Yeah, definitely. Yeah. Well, you have helped so many. Oh, my gosh.
entrepreneurs and the ripple effect of all that. And also, you know, I remember when you and I did the press junket for Shark Tank and I remember learning that people would be surprised to know that you only fly coach on airplanes. Do you know what a first class ticket costs? You probably do, right? You probably don't look. Yeah. I look. Yeah. Listen, the way I figured it is a coach ticket is about 25% of a first class ticket. I get the free miles. I can give them away.
I have everybody in my family flying on my free miles. What's more important, that everybody gets vacations or that I'm comfortable in first class? I guess I could afford to do both, but I won't because I'll be in coach feeling really smug because I know I have three plane tickets that could take somebody somewhere. It could take somebody somewhere. It accumulates, you know? I love just sharing this with the world. I know people can know this or guess it or assume it, but
But your generosity, and when you talk about your homes, right? You said the one thing you love is homes. Yeah. Yet you have a scheduling system where people that you know and love are always staying at all your different homes. So they're all being used all the time. There's not a single bed in any of my homes that's ever empty. How amazing.
amazing is that? Can I tell you what is more satisfying than someone saying, thank you, we had a blast. You don't even know who the we is, extended family, their family, whatever. We had a blast. And people have a blast in my ski chalet. It's big. It fits a lot of people. They go to my beach house. I don't mean to brag about how many houses. They come to New York City, wherever I live.
Never an empty bed. And boy, is that satisfying. I mean, what really happens, the more money you have, the less you use your homes. That's the truth. You sleep there very few nights and they go to waste. What a shame. I wouldn't keep them if they went to it. And you have not an empty bed. You never. Well, once in a while someone cancels, but I don't take to it well because someone else could have used that bed if they had told me sooner. Just like three other people could have had a seat on this plane. You got it. Yeah. Yeah.
What is something that people would be shocked to know about Shark Tank and don't know? Oh, about Shark Tank. Mm-hmm. I think a lot of people don't know that when you see at home a Shark Tank pitch, it's usually about eight minutes, sometimes 12 minutes long. And you know yourself from being on Shark Tank as a guest shark that the pitches can run an hour and a half long at times, an hour typically, 45 minutes.
So it's all edited down. So I think what I hear from so many people is, how do you decide so fast? We had an hour, hour and a half to decide. We didn't have the eight minutes that you think you saw on Shark Tank. So I think people are surprised at how long the taping actually is. And you know how tedious those days are. How many hours are they? 12-hour days between makeup and appearing and getting off the set? It's like 12-hour days day after day.
But we get to learn a lot about the entrepreneur that the person at home does not know about. Yeah. Yeah. Well, I have to say it's an honor for me to get to know you behind the scenes, to know that you're as amazing, even more amazing behind the scenes as on air. Oh, you're easy. Come on. You're an easy one.
No, it's really, it's beautiful. I feel Barbara in my life now. I feel blessed to have met a lot of people that I think are wonderful. And you don't always see that congruency when you meet them in real life. Oh, between a publication. Yeah. Oh, really? You're just like your heart and your generosity. And you're such a badass that's crushed it in business that...
doesn't take, you know what, from anybody. And yet you're also an empowered woman who empowers other women. You care about other people. You're so generous. The ripple effect of everything you continue to do and will continue to do for a long time. The ripple effect just happens, honestly. It just happens. But the one that I was always interested in was winning, honestly. The ripple just came because I won. I'm very happy I won. Yeah, yeah. I'm not sure I'd be so generous. And you've won a lot. You've won a lot. I have.
You've won a lot. Continue to win. And I continue to lose. What else is there? Makes it interesting. Well, thank you for being so welcoming, so loving, so inspiring for me. I'm grateful that I... I'm happy you came to my hometown. Yeah, yeah. And I'm grateful my Shark Tank experience was alongside of you. I'm sure you'll be back because the producer loved you. I'm sure he'll be back. Make sure you ask for the order.
Because the crowded field asked me back. Asked me back. Through someone else. So you don't have to hear a potential rejection. Just get them to keep asking. That's what I do. Yeah. It's so funny. I'm like, I think you and I are similar this way. I'm so fearless about rejection now. Oh, you are? I've just had it so many times that it does not phase me. Yeah.
But yeah, but thank you for that. You told me that you said, ask me back right away. So I will officially ask to be back on the tank. I did love it, but you were a big part of that too. And I just want to honor you and just say thank you for the incredible woman, icon, legend, business boss, badass.
and amazing grandma that you are. And I'm just excited to celebrate you for decades to come and all that you continue to win at. All that you continue to win at. I can feel the energy on my side here. Yes, it is. If you loved today's episode, my only ask is that you please click the follow or subscribe button for this show on your app and give it a rating or review and then share this episode with everyone you believe in.
Share it with another person in your life who could benefit from it. Post it and share it with others online or in your community who just might need the words and tools and lessons in this episode today. You never know whose life you're meant to change today by sharing this episode. Thank you so much for joining me today. Before you go, I want to share some words with you that couldn't be more true.
You, right now, exactly as you are, are enough and fully worthy. You're worthy of your greatest hopes, your wildest dreams, and all the unconditional love in the world. And it's an honor to welcome you to each and every episode of The Jamie Kern Lima Show. Here, I hope you'll come as you are and heal where you need.
Blossom what you choose. Journey toward your calling and stay as long as you'd like because you belong here. You are worthy. You are loved. You are love. I love you. And I cannot wait to join you on the next episode of the Jamie Kern Lima Show. Do you struggle with negative self-talk?
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And it's a free how-to guide to overcome that negative self-talk to build confidence and develop unshakable self-love so that you can dream big and keep going in the pursuit of your goals. Don't let self-sabotaging thoughts hinder your progress any longer. It's time to rewrite the script of your life when filled with self-love, resilience, and unwavering belief.
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It's such an honor to share this podcast together with you. And please note, I'm not a licensed therapist and this podcast is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional.
If you love this incredible episode with Barbara Corcoran, I promise you, you are going to also love this life-changing episode of the Jamie Kern Lima Show with Oprah, where we talk about how to hear your intuition, tap into your purpose, and ignite your best life. It's up next, just for you.