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Create a 10-word scroll-stopping headline for: Grace Ueng: What stayed with me from my 35th Harvard Business School reunion :: WRAL.com | Vibe NC

Create a 10-word scroll-stopping headline for: Grace Ueng: What stayed with me from my 35th Harvard Business School reunion :: WRAL.com | Vibe NC
  • PublishedJuly 7, 2026

Acting as a professional North Carolina local blogger for Vibe NC, write an engaging article based on the following content:

Editor’s Note:  Grace Ueng, performance coach and founder of Savvy Growth,
is the author of The Work of Happiness, she teaches audiences
12 keys to experiencing more happiness to perform better @ work and in
life. In this week’s column, she shares what
stayed with her after her 35th reunion—and the leadership lesson she didn’t
expect to learn.

Prefer to listen? Click play below.

Listen Link: https://app.fusebox.fm/embed/player/track/9qg4ZNLWen/11

I’ve attended all seven of my Harvard
Business School reunions since graduating in 1991.

This one stayed with me longer than any
of the others.

Maybe it’s because I realized I may have
more reunions behind me than ahead of me. Maybe it’s because I finally had the
opportunity to teach in an HBS classroom — something I never could have imagined
as a nervous 23-year-old first-year student scared to even speak in
class. Or maybe it’s because some of the things I’ve helped build over the past
few years, including a women’s community within our class and HappinessWorks,
are beginning to take on a life of their own.

Whatever the reason, I came home thinking
not about accomplishments and more about connection.

Revealing: My new favorite professor

One of the highlights of the weekend was
hearing my new favorite HBS Professor Leslie John discuss her new book, Revealing.
As a behavioral scientist, she studies something that fascinates me as both a
coach and a student of happiness: why we often hold back parts of ourselves
that could actually help us connect more deeply with others.

Her research challenges the assumption
that vulnerability is risky. In study after study, she found that appropriately
sharing personal experiences builds trust, strengthens relationships, and often
creates better outcomes than carefully guarding every thought and feeling.

As I listened, I found myself thinking
about my coaching clients.

Many of the executives….
1. Create a catchy, human-sounding title based on Grace Ueng: What stayed with me from my 35th Harvard Business School reunion :: WRAL.com.
2. Write a 3-paragraph blog post that summarizes the news and explains why it matters to North Carolinians.
3. Use a conversational and helpful tone.
4. Use proper HTML formatting (h3 for headers, p for paragraphs).
5. End with a call to action asking readers for their opinions.
Do not mention being an AI.

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cvonwall@gmail.com