Actress Tina Lifford is known for the more than 100 characters she’s played on TV and in movies over the course of 36 years, including her current role playing Aunt Vi on Oprah Winfrey and Ava DuVernay’s hit show “Queen Sugar.” But Lifford, who has starred alongside the likes of Clint Eastwood, Jennifer Lopez, Sidney Poitier, and Bruce Willis, almost didn’t have her turn in the spotlight.
“I initially was getting sucked into the path of just making sure that the bills were paid,” Lifford recently told Know Your Value. She watched as her creative friends took on jobs outside of the arts in order to make money and recounted many of them never found their way back toward pursuing their dreams.
For her own part, Lifford even went to stenography school to be a court reporter, just so she could support herself.
“That career would have actually been death to my spirit,” Lifford said. “And so there’s a part of me that knew my value very early and knew that it was important to me to follow the yearnings of my soul.”
While she considered herself the only person who could safeguard her dream, she had encouragement from her parents — and took a cue from her family’s widely-held entrepreneurial spirit. She considers her father’s advice on pursuing acting to be the best she ever received.
“‘If this is what you want to do, then you’re going have to be strategic about it so that the problems that are inherent in pursuing something as nebulous as becoming an actress … don’t wind up making you unhappy,’” she remembered him saying. She took his advice to heart and got involved in flipping properties to earn money, which also gave her the flexibility to pursue her dreams.
“Acknowledging our desires, acknowledging the areas where we want growth, or freedom, or support — there’s a mythical connection between that and then the ways in which answers and resources and ‘aha’ moments show up that can actually serve us in obtaining that desire,” Lifford said.
She’s sharing her hard-won life lessons and strategies in her new book, “The Little Book of Big Lies: A Journey into Inner Fitness,” which she hopes will help readers chart their own path toward feeling their best by taking charge of their internal world. It’s built on the foundation of her online platform called The Inner Fitness Project, which she started in 2011.
“I want inner fitness to be as familiar, well-understood, accessible, and actionable as physical fitness is,” Lifford said.
Her message is well-suited for the holiday season, as year-end to-do lists pile on to the daily grind, family responsibilities take center stage and caring for oneself can come last.
“What I want for women is to have a new and deeper experience of what it means to acknowledge oneself, acknowledge one’s value and worth,” Lifford said. “That’s what we mean by self care: acknowledging your value, acknowledging your work … Women realize that to be the greatest asset to their family and even to those aspirations around career, you must put yourself first.”









