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Summary

of

Jada Pinkett Smith's Memoir

Worthy

Daniel Cleverly
1

Copyright ©2023 by [Daniel Cleverly]


All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced or
transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic
or mechanical, including photocopying, recording
or by any information storage and retrieval system
without written permission from the publisher.
2

DISCLAIMER
This is a Brief summary of Jada Pinkett Smith's
book 'worthy'. This Summary book written by
Daniel Cleverly is not meant to replace the
original book in any way, but rather to serve as a
comprehensive summary of the original book. It
acts as a summary to help the reader understand
the original text better.
Again, the goal of this summary book is to serve as a
study aid for readers to enhance comprehension
and persuade them to buy the original book for a
more in-depth knowledge.

Copyright © [Daniel Cleverly] 2023


All rights reserved
3

Table of content

OVERVIEW
Chapter One Summary
Chapter Two Summary
Chapter Three Summary
Chapter Four Summary
Chapter Five Summary
Chapter Six Summary
Chapter Six Summary
Chapter Seven Summary
Chapter Eight Summary
Chapter Nine Summary
Conclusion
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OVERVIEW

Readers looking for celebrity gossip will be pleased


with Jada Pinkett Smith's memoir, Worthy. This is
a book about brokenness, loss, and mending what
was broken early on.

When Jada was born, Adrienne Banfield was 17


years old and a functioning heroin addict. Father
Robsol Pinkett battled drug and alcohol addiction
for much of his life. Pinkett Smith is candid about
having anxiety attacks that were terrible, being
depressed, and having suicide thoughts. She is as
perceptive about the societal problems that affect
underprivileged communities as she is about
friendships, especially the one she had with Tupac
Shakur.

Worthy teaches us about Jada and how to accept


our most genuine, loveable selves.

Unfortunately, most people's major concern


regarding Jada Pinkett Smith's memoir, "Worthy,"
will be whether there are any new disclosures about
5

her relationship with her husband, Will Smith.


Perhaps she understands this because she takes her
time getting there, leaving breadcrumbs to indicate
how he appeared on the outskirts of her life before
they met.

In Worthy, Smith strips herself of all the labels and


storylines that others have imposed on her and
reclaims her story with radical self-love. She
recounts her journey to accepting her authority as a
woman, as well as her realization that a strong
sense of self is every woman's right and saving
grace.
6

Chapter One Summary


"Worthy" appears to have been composed with a
film adaptation in mind. The narrative begins with
a woman considering suicide by driving off
Mulholland Drive. She worries about what would
happen if she succeeds and how her children will
react if she fails, believing that being crippled or
disfigured would be worse for them than her death.
She eventually travels on to a three-day retreat with
a "medicine woman" who conducts her through an
ayahuasca excursion.

Then we travel back in time to her childhood, a


literary version of "yep, that's me." "I'm sure you're
wondering how I got here."
Jada devotes a lot of time to her background in
Baltimore. She paints a moving portrait of her
maternal grandparents, particularly her
grandmother. As she describes negotiating the
problems of her mother's heroin addiction, it is
clear that she still values what she learnt in her
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grandmother's home. Her father suffers from


addiction as well, and Jada notices a trend when
she gets to know her paternal grandmother, who
believes her weekend binge drinking is not a
problem because it occurs only on weekends.

"One of the biggest lessons I've learned, which is


the main reason I wrote this book," she said, "is
how important it is to share our journeys of
self-worth."

Here's some of what we learn along the way.

How she got the name Jada:

Adrienne named her only kid after a soap


performer, Jada Rowland, "who starred for two
decades on The Secret Storm." Jada's character
debuted on the show as a teenager and grew up in
real time. So, in a way, my mother had grown up
with her, even though Jada Rowland is white and
has little in common with Adrienne or me. Still, you
might argue that my mother's decision to name me
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after an actress was either prophetic or wishful


thinking.

Jada Pinkett Smith's grandparents taught


her important life lessons:

Jada and single mother Adrienne found refuge in


the care of her maternal grandparents. Their
middle-class Baltimore house and her
grandmother's garden provided Smith with a safe
refuge while also serving as a metaphor for personal
development. "Everything grows," she says. "If I
had learned anything from my grandmother's
gardening lessons, it was this one truth." Every
stage is critical in caring for and nourishing what
we hope will grow and thrive."

Her father, Robsol Pinkett, was an addict,


an autodidact, and a poet: Robsol Pinkett
married Adrienne Banfield because she was
pregnant. The couple had been married for a little
over a year. Throughout his life, he struggled with
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alcohol and drug addiction. Although Robsol wasn't


much of a father to Pinkett Smith, she admired her
father's brilliance and flair and included one of his
poems, which contains the refrain she's liked since
she was a child, "nobody gets out of life alive..."
10

Chapter Two Summary

She recounts how she first met — and kissed —


Tupac Shakur.

Jada shared a close bond with rapper Tupac


Shakur.

The two met in high school and stayed close


throughout his life (despite several heated fights),
and their friendship is featured throughout the
narrative. He called her Square.. She called him
Pac.. And, while they realized early on that their
love was not romantic, it was profound, she writes.
So deep that he proposed to her once.

When Pinkett Smith first laid eyes on Tupac, aged


15, at the Baltimore School of the Arts, she felt a
"immediate connection." They were inseparable
soon, and their friendship "would impact my life
forever."
11

At the time, Mother was a "full-blown,


high-functioning heroin addict." Her father was not
present, and her stepfather was alienated from her.

Tupac and Jada Pinkett Smith recognized that they


lacked romantic chemistry, yet he would come to
play an important part in her life.

"Pac made up for the lack of male protection and


care I sought," she writes in her memoir. She also
assisted with his upkeep, purchasing clothes and
shoes at a time when the aspiring rapper couldn't
always afford three meals a day.

They later made a music video together in an


amusement park, lip-syncing to the Fresh Prince,
with whom "I would become, um, very well
acquainted." Call it a foreboding.
12

Chapter Three Summary


Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith's first meeting
was not quite auspicious.

Pinkett Smith had auditioned for a guest spot on


The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. She ran into Will
Smith, the show's star, outside the office. They had
never met before. "What's up?" Will Smith
inquired, a bright grin on his face. "'What up?" I
asked in answer, not giving him the time of day,
and kept moving."

A chance meeting at her 21st birthday celebration


proved prophetic: "...at one point, I brushed up
against Will, who was leaning against the wall, and
he wished me a happy birthday." "'Thank you,
Will.'"That's all there was to it. Pinkett was not
being coy.

It just took her a while to realize that "Will Smith is


actually intriguing and captivating," as she writes
13

later. Who knew?" And they only started dating


after he and his wife, Sheree, filed for divorce.

If managing a three-decade marriage in public isn't


easy, neither is breaking it.

Pinkett Smith made headlines recently when she


revealed that she and Will Smith, 55, have been
living "separate lives" since 2016.
"I'd always pledged to myself that if we were truly
going to end our marriage, we would do so with an
amicable partnership to keep together the family we
both valued," she says in the book. We'd have to
work together as a team. There had to be a way to
uncouple gently without being scrutinized by the
rest of the world.
In other words, we would want to divorce without
actually divorcing.

"That is, to split up, to separate on our own terms,


without legal interference," she says in her book. At
that point in time, "Will and I looked each other in
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the eyes and decided to separate in every way


except legally. ... We would remain family-strong,
not lose our friendship, and maintain our policy of
complete transparency — i.e., no secrets about what
we were doing and whom we were doing it with."

Jada first mistook Will Smith slapping Chris Rock


at the 2022 Oscars for a skit.

Pinkett Smith originally mistook the encounter for


a pre-planned sketch from her seat in the Dolby
Theatre. "I saw professional fighters knocked out in
the boxing ring by the force of Will's hands."
Several times. This has to be acted out. "How else
could Chris be up and about like nothing
happened?" she asks. "It's not until Will yells back
up at Chris from his seat... that I realize the gravity
of the situation." Nonetheless, I'm not sure why
Will is so furious. We were there as family, not as
husband and wife, because we had been living
separate lives. But when I hear Will exclaim 'wife' in
15

the middle of the mayhem, I have an internal shift


of oh… shit I'm his wife! happens instantly."
16

Chapter Four Summary


From her odd background in Baltimore to a
relatively uncommon marriage to one of the world's
most renowned men, Jada Pinkett Smith has never
been one to follow the crowd.

There is a brief mention of a high school trip to


New York involving actor Josh Charles, who was
reared in Baltimore, as well as the account of how
Jada and rapper Tupac Shakur became friends. It's
a classic story at this point, emphasizing the
possibilities of finding platonic soulmates of the
opposite sex.

But her concern for this narrative and her love for
him are palpable. "What I didn't expect, even with
the uniqueness of his vibe," she writes in an email,
"was that this young man and I would create a bond
that would impact my life forever."

Finally, we get to her Hollywood career. If you're


looking for behind-the-scenes footage from "A
17

Different World," "Menace II Society," "Set It Off,"


or any of her other career-launching films, you'll be
disappointed. She flits between the various sets,
lavishing praise on her co-stars when appropriate,
and then returns to contemplating the trajectory of
her life.

She enjoys the blessings of youth, beauty, and


celebrity a little too much, as friends like MC Lyte
occasionally have to make sure she gets home
safely. Then, one day, her world comes crashing
down around her as a mental health crisis forces
her to return home to Baltimore to rehabilitate.
During her stay, she meets the Fresh Prince, a.k.a.
Will, after a mutual acquaintance invites them out
together. Will is still married at the moment, and
Jada's mother advises her not to do anything. When
Will is divorcing his first wife a year later, he
phones her and announces himself her man in so
many words, and the rest is history.
18

What a history it is. Jada details their courtship, her


unexpected pregnancy, her apprehension about
marriage, his proposal, her refusal to sign a
prenuptial agreement, and their wedding. Their
relationship is sometimes pleasant, and sometimes
full of "dislike." She tells a funny story about a fall
she had while running with Cesar Millan and her
dog. Her ankle was swollen and discolored by the
time she arrived home. Concerned, she asked Will if
she should have it checked out, but he only glanced
at it before stating she was fine. She found out the
next day that her ankle had been shattered. The
episode taught her that if she did not communicate
her pain appropriately, she would be ignored and
forced to fight it out.
It was a lesson they had both learned as children,
and it was equally damaging in a marriage.
We have confirmation that they share "a
relationship of transparency, which is different
from a 'open' relationship." Jada confesses that
19

accepting the term "open" is simpler than delving


into the specifics of their relationship, but none of
this is new or shocking. Rumors about their dating
status have swirled for decades. Many new
revelations have emerged as a result of Will's
memoir and the 2020 "entanglement" issue.
However, it may surprise some to learn that the two
have been separated since 2016. Even though Jada
purchased her own home in 2021, there is no
official separation. She emphasizes they are still a
“family.”
However, the Oscars event in 2022 appeared to
usher in a new chapter in their life together. Will's
invitation to the Academy Awards caught Jada off
guard, and she braced herself for the worst when
she learned Chris Rock would be hosting. Will and
Chris have had a feud since the late 1980s, and
Chris, who Jada claims once asked her out on a date
when he assumed she was separated from Will, has
made it a point to annoy her in the past.
When the slap occurred, Jada, like many others
watching at home, wondered whether it was a joke.
20

She couldn't tell if Will had made eye contact from


where she was sitting. When Will uttered the
now-famous words "keep my wife's name out your
f---ing mouth,” Will referring to Jada as his wife
seemed to have taken Jada by surprise. Will's story
of the incident was his own, she concluded, but she
knew that there was more going on than his defense
of her, and she needed to assist him through his
own difficult period.
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Chapter Five Summary


There is a reflection with lines from Carl Jung,
Ntozake Shange, Jada's notebooks, and other
sources between each chapter. Almost every
thought concludes with questions for the reader to
consider in order to acquire clarity about their lives.
The questions make Jada sound like a therapist,
despite her warning that she is not one and is not
offering advice. However, there is an undeniable
self-help component to this memoir: Jada discusses
all of the spiritual practices she has tried, including
Scientology classes, reading Buddhist texts, visiting
Thich Nhat Hanh, a Buddhist monk, in Vietnam,
and drinking ayahuasca, a drink made from
psychedelic plants.

Consuming ayahuasca is an indigenous practice,


and it is fair to question the extent of appropriation
involved here, especially when Jada continues to
take it and exposes it to close relatives and friends,
including Will. And now she's introducing it to her
22

readers. She does not give an exact prescription, but


she emphasizes how beneficial it has been to her
healing journey and her relationships. There may
be an ethical dilemma here about whether it is her
place to encourage the practice, or perhaps it all
indicates to how far Jada has come from the
Baltimore tomboy who once skipped school for New
York adventures.

"Worthy" highlights that every aspect of a life is


worthwhile to consider, to live, and to honor. Jada
may undoubtedly respond to all inquiries about
herself, but she typically only goes over the surface.
Readers cannot help but observe how the use of
therapy-speak and spiritual platitudes distances her
from her audience even if she does not owe anyone
more than she is ready to provide.
23

One of Jada Pinkett Smith's most "surreal"


experiences was the Oscar slap. She cannot,
however, deny having foreseen it.

In 2016, during the #OscarsSoWhite controversy,


Pinkett Smith expressed "disappointment" with the
lack of diversity among acting nominees and
questioned whether people of color should attend.
During Rock's opening monologue as host, he
joked, "Jada boycotting the Oscars is like me
boycotting Rihanna's panties. I wasn't invited."So,
when she gave the world's most famous eye-roll at
the 2022 Oscars after Rock made light of her
baldness, a symptom of alopecia, by comparing her
to the movie character G.I. Jane, it wasn't just a
reaction to a poor joke, but a recognition that her
intuition had come true. "Just like I'd thought,
[Rock] wasn't able to help himself." Although she
admits that it was "indeed a very light joke," she
says that it wasn't about her: "My heart broke for
the many [with alopecia] who live in shame, the
children who have committed suicide after being
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teased." And now, in all its political correctness, the


Oscars are telling the world that it's alright to make
jokes about a woman with alopecia?" In terms of
the slap, she initially mistook it for a "skit," and
only knew Smith had made contact when their
publicists informed them Rock would not seek
charges. "Press charges — for what?" she'd
enquired. Looking back, it was "disturbing" to see
"conflict of that nature displayed between two Black
men on a 'white' stage... as was watching a Black
man insult a Black woman on a 'white' stage," she
writes. "Yet again."

The incident marked the end of "decades of


disrespect between Will and Chris." But it was only
one of many intense experiences she detailed in her
book, which will be released on October 17. The
truth about her unusual marriage, suicidal
thoughts, a kiss with Tupac, and the joys of
ayahuasca are just a few of the most worthy
disclosures from "Worthy."
25

Chapter Six Summary

The Oscars slap was not the only premonition that


came true for Pinkett Smith. She claims she knew
"the second" they conceived during a late-summer
visit in Cabo San Lucas with then-boyfriend Will
Smith, turning to Will in bed to declare, "I'm
pregnant."It seemed like she was "inside a bank
vault," she says. "There's a lock that resembles a
large round steering wheel." It locks with a CLICK
when you turn it. That's how it felt in my womb."

Will Smith stood up and told her to "jump up and


down" and "stand on your head." He then called a
friend to chuckle about her notion that a baby was
on the way, before "the little ones have even
stopped swimming." Will smiled, and Jada sobbed
"all night long."Two weeks later, she took five
positive pregnancy tests. Jaden Smith was born the
following July.
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She was 'scared as hell' to marry Will Smith.

Will proposed to Pinkett Smith when she was trying


to rest from "all-day" pregnancy sickness. She
recalls him insisting there was "no way" he'd have a
child without marrying her.

"All I could do was cry" throughout the proposal.


"[It] was beautiful and sincere, but I was scared as
hell." Part of it was because she didn't think
marriage was for her. The next day in Beverly Hills,
she bought her own engagement ring to try
persuade herself to "get with the program."

She was "straight-up bawling" as she walked down


the aisle on New Year's Eve, 1997, feeling "happy
and sad... triumphant and uncertain."

She once leaped out of a car to escape her enraged


boyfriend.
27

Lance is the name given by Pinkett Smith to a


former "Hollywood-type" romantic partner. They
were set up in the fall of 1994 by their publicists and
managers. Lance had an "explosive reaction" and
slammed his fist on the dashboard while driving in
New York after drinking. She was afraid she'd be
next.

She "threw the car door open and jumped out in my


flat sandals and skirt" before scurrying to Lance's
home and equipping herself with a kitchen knife.
She fled on a plane to Los Angeles the following day
after a friend assisted them in defusing the
argument. "I never saw Lance again—alone, that is."

For the sake of her children, she intended to make


her suicide appear to be an accident.

Pinkett Smith opens up about her history of suicide


thoughts, which began when she was 21 and
thriving in Hollywood. I felt increasingly scared
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that I would actually slash my wrist the more I tried


to get the thought out of my head.

Pinkett Smith, who was experiencing a "tidal wave


of sadness," pleaded with her mother to book a
flight to Los Angeles right away because she was
about to commit herself. She tried therapy on the
advice of her mother, which she believes saved her
life.

However, suicidal ideas reappeared at age 40. She


was still dealing with her PTSD and was miserable
in her marriage, so she "wanted to be on this earth
less and less." Pinkett Smith frequently avoided a
turn on Mulholland Drive by stopping and thinking
about staging a "fatal accident that wouldn't look
intentional — for the sake of my kids."She was
mainly concerned "that I might not die."
29

But she was determined to find a cliff high enough


to ensure her death. "The world had become less
heavy now that I had a solution, a plan for my own
exit, and I was resolved."
30

Chapter Six Summary

Why "the slap" is still relevant a year later:

The Oscars last year were marred by Will Smith


slapping Chris Rock in front of millions of people.
Why it's still important is explained.

Jada Pinkett Smith has been vocal about


her hair loss and struggles with alopecia

She admits it was "indeed a very light joke," but she


clarifies that it wasn't about her: "My heart ached
for the numerous people [with alopecia] who live in
shame, the kids who have killed themselves after
receiving cruel taunts. And the Oscars, with all their
political correctness, were telling the world it was
acceptable to make jokes about a woman with
alopecia?She initially mistook the slap for a "skit,"
and she didn't understand Smith had gotten in
touch with her until their publicists informed them
31

Rock would not file a complaint. She had


questioned, "Press charges — for what?"

Observing "conflict of that nature displayed


between two Black men on a 'white' stage" in
retrospect was "disturbing," she says, "as was
watching a Black man insult a Black woman on a
‘white’ stage. Once again.”

For seven years, she and Will have been living


separately.

"Keep my wife's name out of your f— mouth", as


Will Smith famously yelled at Rock, was both an
honest outburst of wrath and a small fabrication.
When asked if she is still his wife, Pinkett Smith
admits that she hasn't been for seven years. They
separated in 2016, even though they are still legally
married.
32

It was one of the reasons she was perplexed by his


strong reaction to Rock's joke. "I [was] unclear on
the reason why Will [was] so upset," she tells me.
"We had been living separate lives and were there
as family, not as husband and wife."
33

Chapter Seven Summary

The 'magical' hallucinogenic ayahuasca saved her.

Her son Jaden and his adolescent friends, whom


she considers surrogate children, introduced her to
ayahuasca "in our living room, no less" and her life
took a wonderful turn.

Mateo, 15, and Moises, 17, described their father's


supposed life-changing drug encounter. Pinkett
Smith began to feel upbeat.

"All I could think was, 'What do I have to lose?'"


The mission was accomplished even if I died as a
result. If not, thank God."

When she tried it, she heard voices yelling, "Your


kids will be better off without you." All they need is
Will. "All that is required is Will." But after her first
journey, she realized she was worthy of love and
34

deserved "the gift of being alive... Never again


would I contemplate suicide."

She sold drugs in Baltimore when it "seemed


practical." For a time, Pinkett Smith juggled being a
student and a heroin dealer, she writes, supporting
herself while living in a roach-infested house with
her mother.She claims it didn't seem extreme in her
violent surroundings, where "one of my homeboys
was shot multiple times and left dead in the middle
of the street" for hours.

When she was 22, she imagined herself as a "bona


fide queen pin." "I just kept on stepping, deeper and
deeper, into the s— that I believed was going to be
my way out of it all."
35

Chapter Eight Summary

Will's fame destroyed her marriage.

Navigating stardom was a source of contention in


her marriage with Smith. "[He] wanted to be one of
the biggest names in Hollywood and was always
surprised that I didn't."

As Smith rode his success, their "most profound


difference" widened, resulting in a "clash in our
visions of what happiness looked like." Will was
living his dream, which meant I must be living mine
via him. He couldn't understand why I was so
frequently sad."

She came up with a "solution" - an open marriage —


out of her concern that Smith would be seduced by
the attractive women around him and because she
"wanted to be aligned with that which I deemed
inevitable."
36

Because they are themselves the children of divorce,


she explains why they haven't filed for divorce: "We
realized the obstacles to the family unit that almost
invariably occur when marriages are split. You can
also throw in some issues with desertion for both of
us.

She talks of getting involved in "an entanglement"


after she and Will split up, which is probably a
reference to her romance with singer-songwriter
August Alsina, who is 21 years her junior.

Additionally, she wants to clarify a few points. For


the record, my co-conspirator in the scheme was
not my son's best buddy, despite what would
frequently be reported. As she assisted her
"entanglee" through despair and bereavement, they
grew close. Eventually, she claims, "very
unexpectedly, [it] turned romantic." He cut off
contact with her in 2018 after having "ran its
course".
37

Chapter Nine Summary

The serious reflection on one's own value that Jada


Smith offers in "Worthy" is a recurrent theme. She
emphasizes how important it is to love and accept
oneself as she shares her realization that one can
only find true worth within oneself. As a result of
social pressures and individual worries, she
discusses how people frequently look to others for
approval, highlighting the need to break these
habits.

In this book, Jada goes into great detail about her


experiences as a wife, mother, sister, and daughter.
Her analysis of the complexities of family ties takes
into account both the challenges and benefits that
come with these duties.
38

Jada's candor regarding her union to actor Will


Smith and how they came to have a fulfilling and
loving relationship is one of the book's most notable
aspects. In the context of relationships, she
emphasizes the importance of self-awareness and
communication. Jada Smith places a strong
emphasis on the need of being vulnerable and on
self-improvement and empowerment. She talks
about how admitting vulnerability helped her get
over emotional hurdles in her own life. Her point is
crystal clear: being open to vulnerability may really
be a source of connection and strength rather than
a weakness.
39

Jada's addresses traumatic events, ranging from a


difficult upbringing to difficult personal
relationships. She emphasizes the importance of
healing and self-care as she discusses her journey to
recovery through therapy, faith, and introspection.
Jada recommends people to prioritize self-care and
work on healing their emotional wounds.

The book discusses societal expectations, especially


those placed on women, and the effect they have on
self-esteem.

Jada talks about her own problems with


self-acceptance and how she overcame societal
pressures to embrace her true self. Her
self-acceptance journey becomes an uplifting
message for readers.

Jada Smith challenges commonly held beliefs about


what makes success. She emphasizes the
importance of following one's passions and living a
moral life. The book encourages readers to consider
40

society's expectations critically and to chart their


own paths to happiness.

The book discusses the significance of surrounding


oneself with like-minded individuals and building a
supportive network. She emphasizes the value of
cultivating relationships that uplift and empower
others, as well as the power of sisterhood. The
importance of finding communal assistance during
difficult times is a recurring theme in the novel.

She also reflects on her parenting path and the


lessons her children have taught her. She discusses
the joys and challenges of parenting, emphasizing
the importance of allowing her children to be
themselves. Her perspectives on motherhood are
intelligent and genuine.
41

Finally, Jada Pinkett Smith conveys her belief that


everyone has boundless potential. She encourages
people to work on their own development and
discover their inner strength. She emphasizes the
importance of resilience and persistence in
overcoming obstacles and achieving one's goals.
42

Conclusion
Jada Pinkett Smith's memoir "Worthy" is
both compelling and intriguing as it covers
the road of self-discovery and self-worth.
Throughout the book, Jada Pinkett Smith
reveals her personal experiences, setbacks,
and achievements, imparting useful wisdom
to readers. Her candor, honesty, and
knowledge makes this book a wonderful
resource for anybody seeking personal
growth and self-empowerment.

Jada Pinkett Smith's life exemplifies the


importance of self-acceptance, self-love, and
the strength of vulnerability. "Worthy" is a
memoir as well as a guide on embracing
one's true self, following one's passions, and
redefining success according to one's own
standards. It urges readers to prioritize
self-care, seek healing, and form supportive
groups.
43

"Worthy" serves as a reminder that in a


world that usually imposes external demands
and unattainable expectations, true value
can only be found within. Jada Pinkett Smith
speaks from the heart and lays out a route
for everyone seeking to uncover their own
potential and live a really noble life.

For better vision and understanding of the


memoir, Daniel Cleverly advises readers to
purchase the original book written by Jada
Pinkett Smith.
44

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