Brie Larson.Photo: Jon Kopaloff/Getty ImagesBrie Larsonis opening up about the lasting impact of her latest project.TheCaptain Marvelactress, 32, spoke to PEOPLE Wednesday at the premiere of her Disney+ show,Growing Up, which premieres on Sept. 8.Larson, who serves as executive producer for the non-scripted series, said that being able to tell the stories of ten young people featured on the project had deeply affected her as a person.“I’m not the same,” she told PEOPLE. “I’m a better person. I’m a better partner. I’m a better human after meeting all of these incredible, incredible heroes.“They are able to articulate and talk about things that I don’t know if, at their age, I would’ve had the courage to be able to talk about, and they’re doing an incredible service to us,” she continued.Larson said the show can speak particularly to adults who have “forgotten certain things or maybe suppressing certain things that need to be said.“Brie Larson and the cast ofGrowing Up.Frank Micelotta/PictureGroup for National Geographic/Shutterstock"I’ve cried a lot through this process and it’s not just sad tears. It’s just happy tears and tears of gratitude,” Larson said. “And I feel just eternally grateful.“According to a description of the show on Disney+,Growing Upis “an innovative hybrid docuseries that explores the challenges, triumphs and complexities of adolescence through ten compelling coming of age stories.““The series uses narrative, experimental, and documentary filmmaking to follow one casted individual, ages 18-22, as they tell their story,” it continues. “They represent a wide range of lived experiences, giving audiences emotionally powerful narratives that offer an engaging look at teenage-hood and the diverse social, familial, and internal obstacles young people face on their path to self-discovery and acceptance.“Each 23-minute episode features the story of one of the 10 young people and brought together a group of directors includingYara Shahidiand Larson herself.The actor told PEOPLE that through working on the series she had learned to talk about difficult feelings in her own process of growing up, adding that she even had an epiphany about letting go of a personal feeling of shame and reframing her own experiences.“Well, it’s an ongoing process. It doesn’t mean that I’m free of shame. I catch myself in it all the time, but I feel like through this process I’ve learned that it’s okay to talk about it, and that if I’m feeling stressed or if I’m feeling anxiety about it’s okay to reach out to a safe person in a safe space and say, ‘This is what I’m feeling inside. Is it okay?,'” she said.Growing Up premieres September 8 on Disney+.
Brie Larson.Photo: Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images

Brie Larsonis opening up about the lasting impact of her latest project.TheCaptain Marvelactress, 32, spoke to PEOPLE Wednesday at the premiere of her Disney+ show,Growing Up, which premieres on Sept. 8.Larson, who serves as executive producer for the non-scripted series, said that being able to tell the stories of ten young people featured on the project had deeply affected her as a person.“I’m not the same,” she told PEOPLE. “I’m a better person. I’m a better partner. I’m a better human after meeting all of these incredible, incredible heroes.“They are able to articulate and talk about things that I don’t know if, at their age, I would’ve had the courage to be able to talk about, and they’re doing an incredible service to us,” she continued.Larson said the show can speak particularly to adults who have “forgotten certain things or maybe suppressing certain things that need to be said.“Brie Larson and the cast ofGrowing Up.Frank Micelotta/PictureGroup for National Geographic/Shutterstock"I’ve cried a lot through this process and it’s not just sad tears. It’s just happy tears and tears of gratitude,” Larson said. “And I feel just eternally grateful.“According to a description of the show on Disney+,Growing Upis “an innovative hybrid docuseries that explores the challenges, triumphs and complexities of adolescence through ten compelling coming of age stories.““The series uses narrative, experimental, and documentary filmmaking to follow one casted individual, ages 18-22, as they tell their story,” it continues. “They represent a wide range of lived experiences, giving audiences emotionally powerful narratives that offer an engaging look at teenage-hood and the diverse social, familial, and internal obstacles young people face on their path to self-discovery and acceptance.“Each 23-minute episode features the story of one of the 10 young people and brought together a group of directors includingYara Shahidiand Larson herself.The actor told PEOPLE that through working on the series she had learned to talk about difficult feelings in her own process of growing up, adding that she even had an epiphany about letting go of a personal feeling of shame and reframing her own experiences.“Well, it’s an ongoing process. It doesn’t mean that I’m free of shame. I catch myself in it all the time, but I feel like through this process I’ve learned that it’s okay to talk about it, and that if I’m feeling stressed or if I’m feeling anxiety about it’s okay to reach out to a safe person in a safe space and say, ‘This is what I’m feeling inside. Is it okay?,'” she said.Growing Up premieres September 8 on Disney+.
Brie Larsonis opening up about the lasting impact of her latest project.
TheCaptain Marvelactress, 32, spoke to PEOPLE Wednesday at the premiere of her Disney+ show,Growing Up, which premieres on Sept. 8.
Larson, who serves as executive producer for the non-scripted series, said that being able to tell the stories of ten young people featured on the project had deeply affected her as a person.
“I’m not the same,” she told PEOPLE. “I’m a better person. I’m a better partner. I’m a better human after meeting all of these incredible, incredible heroes.
“They are able to articulate and talk about things that I don’t know if, at their age, I would’ve had the courage to be able to talk about, and they’re doing an incredible service to us,” she continued.
Larson said the show can speak particularly to adults who have “forgotten certain things or maybe suppressing certain things that need to be said.”
Brie Larson and the cast ofGrowing Up.Frank Micelotta/PictureGroup for National Geographic/Shutterstock

“I’ve cried a lot through this process and it’s not just sad tears. It’s just happy tears and tears of gratitude,” Larson said. “And I feel just eternally grateful.”
According to a description of the show on Disney+,Growing Upis “an innovative hybrid docuseries that explores the challenges, triumphs and complexities of adolescence through ten compelling coming of age stories.”
“The series uses narrative, experimental, and documentary filmmaking to follow one casted individual, ages 18-22, as they tell their story,” it continues. “They represent a wide range of lived experiences, giving audiences emotionally powerful narratives that offer an engaging look at teenage-hood and the diverse social, familial, and internal obstacles young people face on their path to self-discovery and acceptance.”
Each 23-minute episode features the story of one of the 10 young people and brought together a group of directors includingYara Shahidiand Larson herself.
The actor told PEOPLE that through working on the series she had learned to talk about difficult feelings in her own process of growing up, adding that she even had an epiphany about letting go of a personal feeling of shame and reframing her own experiences.
“Well, it’s an ongoing process. It doesn’t mean that I’m free of shame. I catch myself in it all the time, but I feel like through this process I’ve learned that it’s okay to talk about it, and that if I’m feeling stressed or if I’m feeling anxiety about it’s okay to reach out to a safe person in a safe space and say, ‘This is what I’m feeling inside. Is it okay?,'” she said.
Growing Up premieres September 8 on Disney+.
source: people.com