GRL Pep Talks: Real Conversations for Real Growth

Real talk for every woman who is rising, leading, or figuring out who she is becoming — at any age, in any season of life.

Not sure where to start? Here's how it works.

GRL Pep Talks are honest, research-backed pieces written by Dr. Lauren Young — educator, athletic leader, and founder of The GRL Initiative. Each one is designed to meet you where you are, whether that's figuring out who you are, leading under pressure, parenting a kid who's hard to figure out, or just trying to stop shrinking in rooms that weren't built for you.

Inside each Pep Talk you'll find personal essays, journal prompts and worksheets, deep dives into equity and belonging, and quizzes to help you reflect on who you're becoming.

Find your entry point: Browse the four collections below and pick the one that matches your season. Or scroll the full feed and let a title stop you — they're written to be honest about what's inside. Once you're in a post, click any category tag to find more pieces on that topic.

Choose Your Pep Talk Collection:

Find the words you need for the season you’re in.

Identity & Belonging

For the moments you’re figuring out who you are, where you fit, and how to grow into yourself — without shrinking to belong.

Mental Health & Burnout

For when life feels heavy, loud, overwhelming, or exhausting — and you need permission to be human, not perfect.

Girls in Sports & Equity

For athletes, advocates, and leaders working to build better systems, stronger pathways, and real access for girls.

Motherhood & Real-Life Leadership

For the women leading teams, families, careers, and chaos — learning that leadership is lived, not just performed.

How Couples Actually Build Connection

How Couples Actually Build Connection

Five years after living through the pandemic together, many couples are realizing that connection hasn’t gotten easier—life has only gotten louder. In this reflective, honest look at partnership, I explore what it actually takes to stay connected when you’re tired, stretched thin, and operating at different speeds. From tiny daily rituals to shared moments, nervous-system-friendly activities, and naming what we miss, this is the real roadmap to choosing each other—long after survival mode ends.

Read More
The Ultimate Eco-Conscious & Outdoorsy Gift Guide (From Someone Who Just Cleaned Out Her Closet)

The Ultimate Eco-Conscious & Outdoorsy Gift Guide (From Someone Who Just Cleaned Out Her Closet)

Cleaning out my closet reminded me how much we’re surrounded by excess—and how many gifts end up forgotten instead of loved. As someone who prefers adventure over clutter, I created this intentional gift guide for outdoorsy and eco-conscious people. From experience-based ideas to local gems, campfire kits, pet-friendly gear, and “pay it forward” giving, here’s how to choose gifts that truly see the person you love.

Read More
FINDING BELONGING WHEN YOU’RE THE MINORITY

FINDING BELONGING WHEN YOU’RE THE MINORITY

Belonging becomes more complex when you’re the minority in the room. This article explores why fitting in feels exhausting, why belonging shifts with identity, and how adults—especially women in leadership—can create spaces where they can breathe, show up authentically, and feel understood.

Read More
Why Belonging Matters More Than Skill in Youth Sports

Why Belonging Matters More Than Skill in Youth Sports

Belonging—not talent—is the real engine of youth sports. Research from Project Play, the Women’s Sports Foundation, and the CDC shows that girls stay in sports when they feel connected, supported, and socially safe. Skill matters, but belonging matters more. This GRL Initiative guide explains why, and how parents and coaches can build teams where girls thrive.

Read More
What Coaches Need to Know About Playing Kids Up

What Coaches Need to Know About Playing Kids Up

Playing kids up isn’t always the advantage it appears to be. Research from Project Play, the Developmental Model of Sport Participation, and the Women’s Sports Foundation shows that social belonging, emotional readiness, and age-appropriate challenge matter more than talent alone. This guide outlines what coaches need to know before moving an athlete to an older team—and how to create an environment that protects confidence, safety, and long-term development.

Read More
Why Kids Quit Sports: The Big 7 Reasons (and How to Prevent It)

Why Kids Quit Sports: The Big 7 Reasons (and How to Prevent It)

Kids don’t quit sports because they’re soft — they quit because the environment stops serving them. Research from Project Play, JAMA Pediatrics, and the Women’s Sports Foundation shows the top reasons kids, especially girls, walk away from sports: loss of belonging, stress, harsh coaching, burnout, comparison, and decreased confidence. This guide breaks down the seven biggest reasons and offers solutions to help kids stay confident, connected, and excited to play.

Read More
When Your Child Plays Up: How to Support Them Emotionally & Socially

When Your Child Plays Up: How to Support Them Emotionally & Socially

If your child was moved up to an older team and is struggling with confidence, belonging, or playing time, you’re not alone. Many girls experience stress, identity shifts, and a loss of joy when playing up. This research-backed guide helps parents support their child emotionally, socially, and developmentally—while protecting long-term confidence and love for the game.

Read More
It’s My Birthday — And Here’s the Truth About Why This One Feels Different

It’s My Birthday — And Here’s the Truth About Why This One Feels Different

This birthday feels different. At 42, I’ve spent a year doing the hard internal work — exploring my identity, redefining connections, setting boundaries, and beginning the long journey toward true belonging. I’m not there yet, but I’m growing, stretching, and becoming in ways I’m finally proud of.

Read More
Parent’s Guide: How to Know If a Youth Sports Program Is Right for Your Child

Parent’s Guide: How to Know If a Youth Sports Program Is Right for Your Child

Parents have choices when it comes to youth sports, but how do you know if a program is truly right for your child? This guide offers a clear, research-informed checklist to assess belonging, coaching, playing time, communication, and overall culture—so you can choose a space where your child feels safe, supported, and excited to grow.

Read More
The GRL Initiative: Youth Sports Culture Audit: Is Your Program Built for Kids or Competition?

The GRL Initiative: Youth Sports Culture Audit: Is Your Program Built for Kids or Competition?

This checklist is designed to help coaches, parents, leagues, and youth programs evaluate whether their environment is truly built for kids — not just competition. Use it to reflect honestly on your team culture, coaching practices, parent behavior, and overall developmental approach. Check every item that applies to your program. The goal isn’t perfection — it’s awareness. Once you know where your strengths and gaps are, you can make thoughtful changes that help every child feel safe, included, and excited to keep showing up.

Read More
Worksheet: Understand what makes your team work well during calm seasons, to help protect with drama hits.

Worksheet: Understand what makes your team work well during calm seasons, to help protect with drama hits.

Strong teams aren’t built during conflict—they’re built during the calm moments. This post helps student-athletes understand what makes a high-functioning team work, what strengths to notice, and how to protect positive team culture before drama shows up.

Read More