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Coming up next, I'm Passion Struck. It's the moment we all chase. The conversation finally happens.
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The legacy is named. The words are spoken, but as the path ends, the lake glints, the fading light,
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strange quiet realization sets in, you had the talk, but the real meaning wasn't
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and what was said. You had the sentences. They felt loose, unanchored. This is the silent transmission.
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It's what happens when we try to capture meaning with words alone, while ignoring the invisible
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bond that carries it in the spaces between them. Today, we're going back to one final walk by the
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water. Find what's missing. We're going to discover why the things we fight hardest to say
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are often the things that leave us empty and why true meaning isn't found in the words we speak,
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but in the silence we share between them. Welcome to Passion Struck. I'm your host John Miles.
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This is the show where we explore the art of human flourishing and what it truly means to live
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like it matters. Each week I sit down with change makers, creators, scientists, and everyday heroes
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to decode the human experience and uncover the tools that help us lead with meaning,
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heal what hurts and pursue the fullest expression of who we're capable of becoming.
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Whether you're designing your future, developing as a leader or seeking deeper alignment in your life,
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this show is your invitation to grow with purpose and act with intention. Because the secret
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to a life of deep purpose, connection, and impact is choosing to live like you matter.
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Hello friends. Welcome to episode 720 of Passion Struck. We're deep in our series The Meaning
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Makers. Earlier this week we explored the raw materials, the human bond, with two extraordinary voices.
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On Tuesday, Shauna Pearson joined us to unpack visible ADHD in women. The hidden cost of being
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unseen, the emotional chaos that confiantly erode our sense of worth, and how reclaiming visibility
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and support restores interstability. Then on Thursday, Robin Castleowitz brought us into post-traumatic
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parenting, breaking cycles of inherited pain, creating emotional safety,
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and forging belonging for our children, and our inner child through intentional presence and repair.
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Together, they point to a profound truth. Significance is the architecture we reveal in silence.
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But meaning is the binding agent we apply together, often without ever saying a word.
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We often think of meaning as something we declare. We talk about the weight of our responsibilities.
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Solid nature of our intentions, the massive legacy we're trying to leave. We spend years
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shaping these words, rehearsing them, speaking them out loud, thinking that if we can just name
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them clearly enough, we'll finally feel angry. But if you look closely at the quiet moments of
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history, and at the quiet moments of many modern lives, you'll see that it's rarely the words
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that fail. It's the silence between them. Without the bond, string the most beautiful sentences in
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the world. It's just a string. It drifts. It's vulnerable. In our own lives, we call that feeling
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quiet disconnection, a haunting suspicion that when we have said all the right things,
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we are still one unspoken moment, way from it all coming undone. Today, we move from the words
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silence between them. We move from the meaning we try to speak, the meaning that speaks itself
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through presence. Before we dive in, a quick note on a project that mirrors these themes of significance
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and belonging. We often spend our adult lives trying to rediscover the value we should have been
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anchored in as children. My new children's book, UMatter Luma, which is coming out on February 24,
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is a bridge to that truth. A reminder that your significance isn't earned by performance,
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it's a fact of your existence. You can pre-order it now at Barnes & Noble for UMatterLuma.com.
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If this episode resonates, please share it with someone navigating a similar season.
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And if you haven't yet, a five-star rating or review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify helps these
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conversations reach the people who need them most. Thank you for choosing PassionStruck
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and choosing me to be your host and guide on your journey to creating an intentional life.
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Now, let that journey begin.
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Picture this, who was a clear day in Austin, Texas. The kind where the sun glints off the lake,
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and the live oaks cast long protective shadows over the path. My sister Carolyn and I were walking
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with my mom, just moving forward together step by step. She was talking about her son, my nephew.
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There was a quiet urgency in her voice as she spoke about weaving a web of belonging around him,
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keeping him tied to his parental grandparents, wrapping him in the love she had fought so hard
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to cultivate. As she spoke, her eyes drifted toward the water, and every so often, her hand would
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brush mine. That simple touch felt like everything. I had no idea. None of us did,
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that this would be one of our last walks together. She died three days later. In that moment,
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the words were just the surface. The real inheritance was happening underneath the rhythm of our
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footsteps and the stillness of the lake was a transfer of meaning that didn't need a dictionary.
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She passed on belonging, inheritance, and love through the simple fact of being there together.
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It was a knowing soaked into the body and the silence between sentences, the lake, the path,
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brushing hand. These things acted as the glue holding it all. The words were the surface.
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The real passant happened underneath. That walk showed a basic truth.
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Strongest meaning often comes without words. It adjusts itself through being present,
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through relationship, through the quiet spots, where words fade. Something deeper connects
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right to us. Carolyn's attention to my nephew was a living example of making sure
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I, the last long after she was gone. The meaning steadyed itself in the sense of
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ongoing care. The unspoken promise that someone would keep going. What mattered?
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This is what Dr. Lisa Miller calls the awakened brain. When I interviewed her in episode 532,
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she spoke about her FMRI research at Columbia University, where she discovered that we have a
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built-in sensing system of significance. When we are in that state of deep connection,
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like that walk by the lake, our brain bypasses the narrow paths of regular language,
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and activates a higher power neural circuit. Handle stress loop differently.
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When this link turns on, the system handles stress in a new way. Hope holds steady during tough times.
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A life feels full of purpose, even without words to back it up. Two people can do the same thing,
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yet feel totally different levels of purpose. Based on whether the sensing path stays clear,
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gets blocked by clutter. The reset starts purposely cutting back that clutter.
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When presence does the passing, when the silence between sentences holds what words by themselves
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can't keep up, meaning studies the whole setup from the inside. That kind of quiet,
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wordless passing shows up every day life more than we think. Lisa's work points to why it happens.
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Our brains have this built-in way to pick up on connection and purpose,
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often completely outside of language. When it kicks in, stress eases up. Hope holds steady,
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and life starts feeling like it matters. Even on tough days, the same situation can feel empty
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to one person, and full of meaning to another. It comes down to whether that inner channel
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is clear or blocked. The brain is wired to notice threats first. That's what kept our ancestors
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alive. So it tends to amplify negatives and let positives slide by. That default setting
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creates a lot of inner noise, endless thinking, comparing, worrying. The noise drowns out the subtle
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signals of belonging and care. That's when quiet disconnection sets in. The sense that everything
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looks fine on the outside, but inside, it feels unsteady. Caroline's walk is a perfect example of
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the opposite. She was sharing care for my nephew in her last days, and that care came through in her
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tone, her look, her nearness. No big explanation needed. The meaning landed because the channel was
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open. The silence between her sentences, but the real transmission happened. We can open that
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channel more often than we think. It starts with small things, like slowing down to notice what's
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around you, really being with someone in a moment, taking a second at the end of the day to
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remember one thing that felt meaningful. These habits cut the noise and let the deeper sense of
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purpose come through. Before we continue, I want to pause for a moment. Conversations like this
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offer insight, reflections turn insight into integration. Inside the ignited life are
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substacked. Each episode in the meaning maker series is paired with guided prompts and tools
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designed to help you notice the quiet spaces open to presence and let meaning settle in without
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forcing it through words. You can join us at the ignitedlife.net. Now, quick break for our sponsors.
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Thank you for supporting those who support the show.
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You're listening to PassionStruck on the PassionStruck network. Now, back to our conversation.
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Stories like Carolyn show up in ordinary life all the time. There's a classic one about three
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brick layers working on the same wall. Someone asked the first guy, what he's doing? And he says,
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I'm laying bricks to earn a paycheck and put food on the table. For him, it's just a job,
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something to get through. The second worker says, I'm building a wall. It's good work,
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it's getting me ahead. She sees it as a career step. But the third worker looks up and says,
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I'm building a cathedral. This place will stand for centuries, giving people shelter and hope
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long after I'm gone. Same bricks, same wall, same daily grind. But for the third brick layer,
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the meaning is completely different. They see their work as part of something much bigger,
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something that at last them. No one has to give them a speech or hand them a mission statement.
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The shift happens outside them. They just felt the work in a new light and suddenly it felt
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connected to something lasting. That's so close to what Carolyn was doing in the last days. She was
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talking about the things that she cared about the most and loved long after she was gone. She didn't
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need to explain why it mattered. She lived. The care came through her voice, her look, the way
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we walked together. She was building something that would last, even if she wouldn't be there to
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see it. The meaning settled quietly. The way it did for that third brick layer. We see this in small
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ways every day. A mom changing diapers might feel tired, but somewhere inside she knows she's
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helping raise someone who make a difference. A nurse cleaning a room. No, she's making space for
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healing. A quick smile or nod in the hallway can remind someone they're seeing. These moments
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don't need big explanation. They just happen. And something inside them registers. This matters.
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The key is that meaning doesn't come from the task itself. It comes from how we see the task.
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When we let ourselves feel the connection to something bigger, whether it's family healing,
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we're just helping one person feel less alone. The whole thing changes. The noise quiets. The
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channel opens. And purpose starts to feel real again. So how do we make that shift more often?
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That's where the simple, everyday practice comes in. That's where the real power lies.
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In letting meaning find us instead of always trying to chase it with words. The good news is you
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can practice this. You don't need big changes or complicated routines. Just a few small,
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repeatable things that quiet the noise and open the door. It's already there. One simple place
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start is what I call a presence pause. Take two or three minutes a day. Just stop. Put your phone
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down. Notice what's around you. The feel of your chair. Sound of your breath. The light coming
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through the window. Don't try to think about anything. Just be there. Let your mind settle.
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Carolyn and I did this about knowing it on the walk. Moving step by step, letting the lake
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the path hold the moment. Those pauses help you notice what's already present. They cut the
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chatter so the quiet signals of connection and care come through. Another easy step is one
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small act of connection each day. It doesn't have to be big. Hold the door for someone.
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Really look at them. Give a quick smile or nod to a co-work.
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Touch a loved one's arm when they say hello. These moments send a signal. You matter to me.
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They're like the brushing of Carolyn's hand against mine. Small, wordless, but they carry
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along. When you do this regularly, the brain starts to register it as real. The inner channel stays
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open and meaning builds quietly. At the end of the day, take one minute to remember something that
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felt meaningful. Even if it was tiny, maybe it was a laugh you shared. A kind word you heard
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were just the way the light looked at sunset. Write it down or say it to yourself. Don't judge
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it. Just notice it. This is what reflection does. It helps the brain hold on to the good signals
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instead of letting them slide away. Over time, these little deposits strengthen the sense that life
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matters. The same way Carolyn's care for my nephew left, lasting mark, even though she's gone.
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These steps aren't about forcing meaning. They're about clearing space so it can settle
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in naturally. The more you practice, the less the mental noise runs the show. The more the
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quiet parts, the presence, the connections, the small reflections get to do their work. That's how
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meaning grows without words. It starts in moments like the walk with Carolyn, ordinary human,
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deeply real, and it keeps growing, say it again, and it keeps going every time we slow down, show up,
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let the silence speak. I'll wrap up with a few final thoughts and a way to carry this forward
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in your life. We began today with a quiet walk by Lake Austin, one of the last with Carolyn,
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where words about legacy and care flowed, but the real meaning settled in the silence between them.
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The footsteps, the brushing hand, the lake holding the sky. That day wasn't about declarations
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or perfect sentences. Who's about showing up walking side by side, sharing care for my nephew,
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the time she had left. The words matter, but the belonging lived in her voice, her gaze,
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simple nearness. That's where love asks forward, without needing to be explained. That's the truth
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we've been circling today, meaning doesn't always arrive through language. It comes through presence,
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through relationship, through the small, wordless moments, that remind us of connected to
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something bigger, a shared step, a lingering look, quiet act of care. These things keep continuity
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and purpose and ways words sometimes can't touch. And so we end today with a simple invitation,
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a commitment to the silence, a commitment to make space for what's already present. Quiet the
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chatter, show up fully, let the quiet moments do their work. This isn't about saying more,
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it's about listening more, right? Where the words of your life are already spoken. If you're
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listening right now, you feel like you've been filling every silence with noise. Where if the
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quiet space is in your days, feel a little empty. Through this, you are one small pause away,
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letting meaning settle in. Tonight, tomorrow, this week, take one quiet step, slow down for a
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presence pause. Reach out with a simple toucher look. Remember one wordless moment that felt real,
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that's how meaning rebuilds, an ordinary, felt connection at a time. You can head over to the
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UnitedLife.net and grab the free companion workbook for this episode. We'll guide you step by step
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for noticing the silence, opening to presence and letting meaning land at the words. If you know
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someone who needs to hear today's message, please share it with a friend, a worker, a family man.
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Next week, I'm joined by Jim Murphy, author of the number one bestselling book,
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Inter Excellence for a conversation on interstability, self-mastery, and sustaining performance
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under pressure. We'll explore the inner tools that keep you steady when the world pulls hard,
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how to build focus and calm without chasing external winds. Why true excellence starts
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quiet center who you are? Because meaning isn't just learned in silence. It's sustained there
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even when the pressure builds. Fear is where you're in self-protection, you're concerned with
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people thinking and will I fail. And that lifetime in this is saying, look, the default is if you don't
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do anything, you're going to go towards fear. That's human nature. You're going to start thinking
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about yourself. You're going to think about everything you want, but can't control. You're going to
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start comparing yourself to others. Your subconscious mind is going to remind you of all your failures
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and you're going to move towards anxiety in fear. So you need a clear intentional plan and path
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to live an extraordinary life. And that path is based on the three most powerful resources I believe
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in the universe's love wisdom and courage. Until next time, let the silent speak presence
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hold, live like the white spaces where you're roaming in the waves. I'm John Miles, you've been
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passion-struck. Until next time.