Episode

Emma Gilbert: The Artist Who Heard "You're Not Done Yet" at 9 Years Old

Podcast
Innerspace: Deep, Meaningful Conversations with Brett Kaufman
Published
Jun 15, 2026
Duration seconds
3753
Processing state
not_requested
Canonical source
https://joininnerspace.com/
Audio
https://audio4.redcircle.com/episodes/16bca86d-4cc4-4bfd-8e66-dc402150ba49/stream.mp3
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Markdown
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Summary

Emma Gilbert was nine years old when she found herself under her bed, in the depths of a depression no kid should have to carry. That is when she heard a voice, loud and clear: "You're not done yet. You have so much more to do." It snapped her out of the spiral, and she carried it with her. Even at nine, ten, eleven, she kept telling herself she had to keep creating. She grew up in Alabaster, Alabama, about the smallest town you could get, with no art scene and no one around to show her that a life in art was even possible. Teachers told her to have a realistic career. Her own feelings rarely landed at home, where attention came when she created and words or tears got waved off with "you're fine." Art became the one place she was actually heard. This conversation explores the relationship between childhood pain and creativity, what it does to a kid to grow up unheard, and how a family can change when someone finally speaks up. Emma talks about the depression that still shows up today and still fuels her work, the parents who later apologized and learned to listen, and the long road from selling her first painting at twelve to building a real business around her art. Now she travels the country painting large-scale murals, works with a team of ten contractors, and is building toward the day she gets to be just the talent. This one is about turning what nearly broke you into the thing that defines you, and why the voice that saves you can become the work of your life.