“Who Are You?”
I used to flatten my voice so it wouldn’t echo in boardrooms built by men.
I exchanged boardrooms for my own agency.
Through perfectionism, people-pleasing, and second-guessing, I silenced myself.
“Who are you?”
That question followed me everywhere… behind podiums, in staff meetings, inside the mirror when the makeup went on and the mask came up.
Professionalism, I was told, would protect me.
But it didn’t. It trained me.
Professionalism, with its spine made of Nice Girl Training, taught me that my value was in how I made other people feel. I became addicted to the hit:
Get on stage → applause. I want more of that.
Make a trendy video → more views. I want more of that.
Earn another certificate → congratulations. I want more of that.
Perfectionism is about control, but the control is in someone else’s hands. I made things “perfect” to the satisfaction of my boss, my client, my audience… never to my own truth.
People-pleasing is the same.
So is second-guessing.
So is “professionalism.”
Because professionalism isn’t neutral.
It’s a set of written and unwritten rules about how a person should behave to be seen as “credible.”
There’s the official handbook… and the water-cooler to fill in the gaps:
how to dress, how to talk, how loud you can be, what lipstick is acceptable, which after-work drinks signal you belong.
We call it professionalism.
But it’s really trauma wrapped in a button-up blazer.
When I gave my first presentation in my own business, I made a PowerPoint. My passion turned into a PowerPoint. Professional? Yes. Powerful? The power behind it was lackluster at best.
The lie of professionalism is that acting professional makes you more desirable or powerful. The problem is, you can dress up an asshole and still not give them presence.
Presence isn’t performed; it’s remembered.
You know that person who walks into a room still catching their breath from a jog, but every head turns anyway?
That’s presence. It’s not polish. It’s being undeniable.
Professional excellence was the costume that won me applause and cost me oxygen.
I stopped being “professional” the day I started being powerful.
That day, I could finally breathe.
Breathing my excellence.
Being my excellence.
Sharing my excellence.
“Who are you?”
I’m the woman who stopped asking permission to sound like herself.
If you’ve ever traded your breath for applause, ask yourself where that training came from, and who it still serves.
Freedom isn’t in being perfect.
It’s in being witnessed.
👋 Deidre Beacham – keynote speaker, Visibility Catalyst, and creator of The Medusa Effect™.
I mentor extraordinary women to lead visible and unapologetic: earning what they’re worth, building businesses, claiming power, and dismantling the systems that fear us most.

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