Episodios

  • I have a wonderful guest on today and I'm very excited to share this conversation with you. In thinking about the message of today's conversation I was reminded of a comment I recently heard Jack Kornfield make when he was interviewed by Tim Ferriss. They were talking about Tim's recent silent meditation retreat and the benefits of them, and seeking out master teacher to help with your practice. I'll admit, taking a few days for silent retreat, even a few weeks, months maybe, sounds pretty good to me. But I do see my desire for that experience as an example of looking for answers or solutions that are somewhere else, outside my current state or experience in life. But as Jack says, we have the wisdom that we are seeking within ourselves. And while I might feel like I'm missing out by not having time in life for a retreat, it's important to remember that there is a reason I can't. He said for instance if you have kids, and they take up all of your time and energy, then your kids are your practice. And while I really know this to be true, it was refreshing to hear him says this. As he said you can't get a zen master who's going to be more demanding than an infant with colic or your teenager. You've basically hired the best teacher you can to help you cultivate your practice.

    And this goes a long way to saying that the life in front of us, the joy and pain of our own lives, are the best teachers. What else is there? And that does bring me back to my guest today, Yael Shy, who by the way is just about to bring a second "teacher" into her house. Some of you holdovers from the Meditate This! Podcast might remember Yael was a guest on our show way back in episodes 17 and 18, when Jay and I spent a couple hours grilling her on meditation practice. Yael the senior director of the Center for Global Spiritual Life at New York University and is the founder and director of Mindful NYU, the largest campus-wide meditation initiative in the country, which was also co-founded by my absolute best friend and legendary podcast co-cost Jason Hollander...should probably have him on the show someday.

    But the idea that the circumstances and even perceived weaknesses of our own lives can be the best teachers, really jumped out at me when I read Yael's recently published first book called What Now?. She learned that many of the things that created uncertainty, insecurity or even shame in her life, turned out to be the greatest gifts, helping her find ways to make meaningful differences in the world. And I guarantee, I just know it, that we all have these things about ourselves that make us unsure, we may even be annoyed by ourselves, and we will do anything to avoid or cover up or ignore them. But these traits, what we might think of as character flaws, are really the keys to making us whole and guiding us to greater meaning and purpose in life.

    And I also know this, that understanding doesn't come until you let go, become open, honest, and vulnerable to them. That is exactly what you find in Yael's latest book, which is really an autobiographical teaching of meditation and mindfulness. She is tender hearted, very honest, but also very powerful in her message. I love the book and I love this conversation. So please welcome my guest today, Yael Shy.

    Thanks for listening,

    PF

    www.DeepSitPodcast.com

  • Today on the show we are going to hit mindfulness head on and talk about how we might be getting tripped up by the practice, and how, according to my guest, we might be doing it wrong. Now don't interpret that as a judgement or criticism, but more like permission to take some of the pressure off. I know that over the years of practicing sitting meditation, I've had times where I get a little caught up in the practice, looking for it to do something for me, or I'm watching my meditation streak of days in a row. Then there are these great apps and tools and podcasts to equip us with instructions and tracking and timekeeping and on and on. Not so say these things aren't useful, but I am quite human and have desire, craving, attachment, striving, wanting to do well, wanting to improve my life...and mindfulness just starts to look like one more tool to get what I want. Or to even change to world around me. And to even say I've been getting better at it, by not striving, and not tracking, well that sounds like striving all over again. So what am I to do?

    Quite fortunately I found my guest today, Daron Larson, to be someone who cares deeply about this issue. Daron is a mindfulness coach who specializes in something he calls Attentional Fitness Training. And here we are training the key element, and maybe only element that matters, awareness, which isn't really about striving or attaining anything. It's just paying attention, becoming intimately familiar with yourself, as you are right now, in real time. Not what you were, what you're going to be, or what you want to be. This is what Daron refers to as your narrative or being in storytelling mode.

    So we start off with how Daron brought mindfulness into his life, and then we get into a variety of issues related to the practice itself. Two areas I ask about is whether mindfulness can open us to living a more meaningful life, and also why I personally get hung up on something called loving-kindness meditation, which has been very difficult practice for me. It's not so much that I sense resistance, but it feels kind of empty when I practice on the cushion, so to speak. That's counter to what I've heard about the experience for others, but Daron gives me some ideas for more real life, or real time methods of practicing.

    So let's get started, but first I want to say that during our conversation I really felt that not only is Daron passionate and deeply interested in his work, but he really cares for the people he is helping. I actually felt he really cared for me, with all my questions. And in the weeks, now months since we had this conversation, I've received several emails from Daron with a short note and often an attachment to an article he thought I would personally find interesting. And he was spot on each time. So somewhere in our conversation, kind of without me knowing it, he read me pretty well and followed up with meaningful contact. I've loved following him on Instagram, where he goes by Daron Larson, as you might guess, and posts some wonderful and thought provoking photography of scenes from his own life. At the end of our conversation, Daron talks about how he identified or felt this caring and sensitive side within him early in life.

    A wonderfully kind, positive, and thoughtful person. Please welcome my guest today, Daron Larson.

    Thanks for listening,

    PF

    www.DeepSitPodcast.com

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  • Congratulations, you made it to part 5, the final segment of my epic interview with Atz Kilcher. And while each episode stands on its own, it makes sense to start from the beginning to hear it in sequence to get a full understanding of his journey and the range of wisdom you can glean from his life experience.

    This episode is a great wrapper for everything we've talked about. I called it "Getting on With It" because for one, that's how Atz ends this segment, but also because for every hardship, every bend in the road, every moment of despair, even every moment of triumph, when you start your day you need to put the doubt back to sleep, put the pain back to sleep. As Atz says you need to grow up, get over it, and get on with it. Acknowledge who you are, be open and honest with who you’ve been, but ultimately take ownership and responsibility over your life and get on with life. There's only one person on the planet who can make that decision for you, and that's you. Atz is a living testament to the power of that decision.

    We talk about morning routines in this segment, Atz sings for us, and the real treat was we get to hear him yodel. At the very end we have a little bonus footage where I play a word association with him. His answers were perfect, and I think it was a wonderful way to put some final thoughts on some of the most important concepts and people in his life.

    So I can guarantee this is not the last you'll hear from Atz. He's a trailblazer and there will be many people who join up with him on their own journeys through life. For me, I stumbled onto Kilcher Trail a couple years ago when I met Ryan Wolfington, who asked me to interview Jewel, which also led to interviewing Atz. Having met these three pillars of light, I consider myself one lucky man, they each had a profound impact on me and I'd just like to thank each of them for seeing the light in me to bring their message to you all.

    So here we go, please welcome one last time, my guest Atz Kilcher.

    Thanks for listening,

    PF

    Visit www.DeepSitPodcast.com

  • Today is Part 4 of my interview with Atz Kilcher, and after 3 hours of digging deep into the conflict and trauma that Atz has work so hard to overcome in his life, we finally find his Mother, Ruth. I found it interesting that it took us this long to talk about her, but even more interesting when Atz told me he originally intended to write his new memoir, Son of a Midnight Land, about her. But maybe just as it took us 3 hours to finally talk about her, he needs more time to dig into the complexity mystery of his Mom. Surprisingly, it looks like the whole dream of homesteading may have originated with Ruth and not Yule. Atz tells us all about it in this segment, but we discover also that his Mom played the tragic figure of the victim, perhaps unwittingly. And in listening back, I think this issue deserves a lot more attention than what we were able to give it here.

    I think feeling victimized, or even playing the victim, is one of the most stealth ways to undermine one's ability to thrive. It is the ultimate excuse and method of sabotage for not taking responsibility for one's actions, or even worse, inactions. Looking from the outside, Ruth did everything right, what she was even supposed to do, by tending to the homestead and raising the family while Yule was so often away. But unable to standup to constant abuse, she became emotionally dependent on her own children, and even developed physical ailments that mirrored her helplessness. This had a profound, but mostly undetectable impact on Atz, until he realized how it framed relationships he had with several wives.

    I really hope Atz writes that next book that dives into the complexity of his Mom and the role of the victim. We need to differentiate how feeling victimized is different from being vulnerable and open, how one robs the power you have in your life, and the other restores it. But that is definitely for another time, and I hope I can have that conversation with Atz when he's ready to go deeper. Maybe the podcast will be called Deeper Sit by then.

    We finish this episode with a great story of resolution, one instance in particular when Yule and Ruth engage in a nostalgic gift exchange that captivates the family at a reunion. They had been separated for quite a long time by then, but this resolution was deeply healing for Atz and his siblings. We tie out the story of the Kilcher family here, before getting to our last segment where we talk about morning routines, dealing with anxiety, and a wonderful word association game I played with Atz.

    So, let's get started. Please welcome, my guest and friend Atz Kilcher.

    PF

    Please visit www.DeepSitPodcast.com

  • We've made it to the half way point in my interview with Atz Kilcher, and after two and a half hours you might expect we'd be getting close to wrapping up, possibly running out of things to talk about. Not the case here, everything up until this point was really just a warm up. As we enter hour three of our conversation we address PTSD, a debilitating mental and emotional disorder that has gone by many names in history, but is perhaps just now getting the attention it deserves in society. This is a topic very near and dear to Atz as he has dealt with several types of trauma throughout his life having been the victim of and witness to abuse growing up, and of course he is a veteran of the Vietnam war.

    For my part, I wanted to get a better understanding of this disorder, what is it, how does it develop, can people suffer from PTSD but be totally unaware of it, and perhaps most importantly, how do you deal with it? Something I interpreted during this conversation is that according to Atz, managing his PTSD is very similar to, if not the same as, a mindfulness practice. It's trying to separate yourself from a triggering event long enough to notice how it makes you feel and how your knee jerk reaction is unreasonable if not unacceptable. But it's hard because you are so tied up and locked in from the toll that previous trauma has taken on the wiring in your brain. If you're fortunate enough to make the observation yourself, that's a big step. But also be aware of what others see in you and how their reactions can clue you in to your irregular behavior. Only then, when you distance yourself, and observe, do you have a chance to make a change.

    Atz has a beautiful exercise for someone suffering from PTSD, something he again expresses through storytelling and a song. It's really an exercise in time travel, going back to an age of innocence, to the unconditioned mind of the child we used to be. Atz tells us the story of a man nicknamed Froggie, a Vietnam Veteren who was attending a PTSD meeting where Atz was speaking. When Atz sang his song entitled PTSD, Froggie had a breakthrough moment after years of being locked up by the trauma he suffered in Vietnam. He touched that youthful spirit that was buried long ago, and became free to reclaim what Atz calls his inner champion.

    So let's get to it. A very special segment today that I think goes right to the heart of how Atz can help so many people. Please welcome Atz Kilcher.

    PF

    Please visit www.DeepSitPodcast.com

    Please rate, review, and subscribe on iTunes (or I guess it's called Apple Podcasts now)

  • Today I continue my interview with Atz Kilcher. This is Part 2 and is where Atz really started to help me personally. I don't know if I mentioned this in the intro to Part 1, but my experience sitting with Atz for a day was life changing, and I don’t say that lightly.

    I don't do this podcast to report the news, or simply deliver someone else's message. My main objective when I sit down with someone is to learn and find the guiding wisdom that I can integrate into my own life. It sounds quite selfish when I put it that way, but when I present this podcast, you are hearing it from a beginner's mind, someone who is genuinely curious and wants to learn.

    This next hour is when I really started to understand how Atz can help people. The beauty of his delivery is that is isn't masked or diffused by what you might called new agey, hippy-dippy words, or even done in a dry academic manner. This is straight talk, and it's on the ground floor of everyday life that we all experience. Within the first 20 minutes of meeting each other, Atz had me figured out, and that comes up in this segment where we talk about generosity and rejection.

    Why is it hard for us to give, or even more interesting, why is it hard for us to receive. What does that say about us? These are not mutually exclusive, and our ability to give and receive without conditions is perhaps a reflection of our own self-worth, our own sense of value, and our willingness to do for others what we would like them to do for us.

    So rather than try to distill this any further, I'll let Atz take it from here. Of course he does it skillfully with song and a story of man named Dell. You will enjoy this segment. It's where the lights went on for me and I hopped on the Atz train.

    Thanks for listening,

    PF

    www.DeepSitPodcast.com

  • Part 1 - Hard Work:

    Today I'm kicking off my interview series with Atz Kilcher. I felt like I sat down with someone, who at the age of 70, with perhaps nothing left to prove, is on the brink of discovering the true or perhaps ultimate meaning and purpose of his life.

    Atz is the son of Alaskan homesteaders, gaining unexpected fame late in life on reality TV on the series Alaska: The Last Frontier, and of course he is father to Jewel Kilcher, one of the greatest singer-songwriters of our time. But amazingly, Atz might just now be hitting his stride in a way that is probably unimaginable to him.

    I don't need to go through his life story in the intro of course, that's pretty well-covered in the interview. But before we jump in, you have to know that much if not most of Atz's adult life has been spent peeling back layers shame, regret, guilt, fear, anger, and anxiety. These layers were constructed by years of mental and emotional trauma, not to mention physically demanding life of growing up on the family homestead in Alaska. We spend a considerable amount of time talking about the relationship between Atz and his father Yule Kilcher, a remarkably complex man who made the solo voyage from Switzerland to Alaska. But this relationships was not only to be the source of tremendous pain and trauma for Atz, but also became the model of a relentless pioneering spirit of discovery.

    And Atz makes this clear by noting how fortunate he is to be guided by two amazing pioneers. On the one hand he has his father who went out on foot, in search of a better life, and now his daughter Jewel who has embarked on a life-altering journey into the inner-realm, sharing her wisdom and experience with growing audience that extends well beyond her success as a musician. Atz learned early in life how to persevere, persist, and fight through difficult times and now he is on the relentless pursuit to discover who he is by tapping into the inner wisdom, guiding him to peace and happiness in everyday life.

    But make no mistake, it's hard work finding that peace and happiness. It isn't for the faint of heart. You have to be prepared every day when you wake up, and the essential tools of vulnerability and gratitude are some of the hardest he has ever learned to use.

    Prior to spending the day with Atz, I read his new book called Son of a Midnight Land. I absorbed it in about 48 hours, riveted by the depth of his experiences but also emotionally touched in a way I would never have expected. I told Atz several times that day that our upbringings and lives couldn't be more different, yet as a son, a father, a husband, basically as a human being, I found so much in common when it comes to life. And as Atz is discovering, his journey is touching a lot of people because he has spent a lifetime acutely struggling with emotions that many of us have but may only be vaguely aware of until something pricks us and reveals some underlying pain.

    I discovered talking to Atz, this isn't a story all about pain and suffering. It's about the joy and peace that life has to offer once we learn to accept and manage our struggles, no matter how difficult or even unjust they might seem. So I believe is a Chinese proverb that I'm going to attempt to recite here, "it's better to be a warrior in a garden, than a gardener in a war". Well, interpret that how you want, but I agree with Jewel, Atz is a true warrior. He has the battle wounds to show for it. He has stood up to every challenge, learned how to take responsibility for everything in his life, but now, perhaps most importantly, he is learning to use the tools of vulnerability, compassion, and gratitude to cultivate a life of peace and contentment. This interview is in 5 parts, and is perhaps the most honest and revealing I've ever done. It is amplified by the genuine and skillful use of music, as Atz stops on multiple occasions to deliver his message through song. He can't help but become emotional as he reveals the scars of a hard life. There are many on these moments as he talks about his Mom, Dad, the work he has done to mend relationships with his own children, the touching moments when he talks about working with men who experience PTSD and other emotional struggles. So let’s get started, and be sure to listen all the way through the end of this segment as we finish with Take Time to Find Your Song, what I would consider the theme song of this interview.

    So please welcome, my guest, Atz Kilcher.

    Thanks for listening,

    PF

    Please visit www.DeepSitPodcast.com

  • Arrive Where You Started - Part 2

    Today I have someone very special on the show, one of the most respected and well-known teachers of mindfulness and meditation. His name is Shinzen Young, and his recent book, The Science of Enlightenment, immediately caught my attention because I've never thought of enlightenment in scientific terms before, and of course what really turned me on to meditation was how neuroscience has captured what happens in the brain. Given that the word enlightenment is even hard for some people to say without feeling they've gone full on new-aged hippy, talking about it more practically, like an everyday occurrence, that can even be measured, well...sign me up!

    Shinzen is an intriguing guy, and I wanted to know what makes him tick. Taking this path took root early in life, but also required a powerful sense of curiosity and determination. Come to find out, for Shinzen it also involved feeling a little miserable and anxious trying to fit in to the conventional aspirations of our Western society.

    So in this two-part interview, we spend a considerable amount of time exploring the motivations and events that led Shinzen down this path. It is a very personal, honest, and revealing account of his pain, endurance, and the eventual peace of mind he experienced in becoming a Buddhist monk.

    We discuss enlightenment, what it means, whether it's important for us to strive for, and how it just might be at the core of our very being. We also dive into meditation techniques we can employ not just in seeking enlightenment, but also to feel a little better in our day to day lives. Shinzen even takes time to evaluate and coach me in part 2 on my own practice, and it sounds like I'm doing pretty well. So enlightenment must be right around the corner!!

    To summarize, not only am I speaking with a master-teacher of mindfulness and meditation, I'm talking to someone who feels meaning and purpose in every ounce of his body. When he discovered this path at the young age of 14, he never looked back and knew, without a shred of doubt, this was what he would dedicate his life too. So there's plenty to learn here about life, meaning, purpose and of course, enlightenment that only a master of his trade can teach.

    Please welcome my guest today, Shinzen Young.

    Thanks for listening,

    PF

    www.DeepSitPodcast.com

  • Arrive Where You Started - Part 1

    Today I have someone very special on the show, one of the most respected and well-known teachers of mindfulness and meditation. His name is Shinzen Young, and his recent book, The Science of Enlightenment, immediately caught my attention because I've never thought of enlightenment in scientific terms before, and of course what really turned me on to meditation was how neuroscience has captured what happens in the brain. Given that the word enlightenment is even hard for some people to say without feeling they've gone full on new-aged hippy, talking about it more practically, like an everyday occurrence, that can even be measured, well...sign me up!

    Shinzen is an intriguing guy, and I wanted to know what makes him tick. Taking this path took root early in life, but also required a powerful sense of curiosity and determination. Come to find out, for Shinzen it also involved feeling a little miserable and anxious trying to fit in to the conventional aspirations of our Western society.

    So in this two-part interview, we spend a considerable amount of time exploring the motivations and events that led Shinzen down this path. It is a very personal, honest, and revealing account of his pain, endurance, and the eventual peace of mind he experienced in becoming a Buddhist monk.

    We discuss enlightenment, what it means, whether it's important for us to strive for, and how it just might be at the core of our very being. We also dive into meditation techniques we can employ not just in seeking enlightenment, but also to feel a little better in our day to day lives. Shinzen even takes time to evaluate and coach me in part 2 on my own practice, and it sounds like I'm doing pretty well. So enlightenment must be right around the corner!!

    To summarize, not only am I speaking with a master-teacher of mindfulness and meditation, I'm talking to someone who feels meaning and purpose in every ounce of his body. When he discovered this path at the young age of 14, he never looked back and knew, without a shred of doubt, this was what he would dedicate his life too. So there's plenty to learn here about life, meaning, purpose and of course, enlightenment that only a master of his trade can teach.

    Please welcome my guest today, Shinzen Young.

    Thanks for listening,

    PF

    www.DeepSitPodcast.com

  • From the moment we sat down for this conversation, my guest today gave me a sense of genuine inspiration to be a better person, to be a more authentic person, living with gratitude, acceptance, and grace. Her name is Pilar Gerasimo, and many of you know her as the founder of Experience Life Magazine, which she ran for 15 years. But now she has embarked on some new ventures including a wonderful podcast called The Living Experimentwith her co-host Dallas Hartwig, she has developed a concept called The Healthy Deviant which forms the basis for an upcoming book. We will get into all of that in this conversation, and her perspective on how to approach health and wellness is very exciting, but what endeared me to Pilar is that she created her life from the ground up, in complete alignment and respect to her upbringing.

    She grew up on a communal organic farm in western Wisconsin, which is where she now calls home and where we met for this interview. She was the daughter of a sociologist father whose main interest was understanding why we live the way we live, and a mother who was a back-to-the-land farmer, an early environmentalist who started this organic commune with her friends to grow their own food and live a more natural life. But for Pilar growing up, this wasn't necessarily ideal and she had the same cravings, desires, and struggles with self-esteem and body image that afflict so many teenagers and young adults. But the roots of her family heritage and upbringing gave her the confidence to trust her instincts, and when nothing in the popular media gave her the answers to her health and fitness questions, she went ahead and found her own answers.

    We start off this conversation talking about her upbringing and the difficult but often beautiful appearance of living off the land, that I think so many of us crave in a world of complexity and technology. Pilar was a gracious host, spending almost two hours on the mic with me after a tour of the farm, and I left there realizing that this conversation was about a person living with a distinct sense of meaning and purpose. She has been living life of curiosity and acceptance, looking to help others live better and healthier lives by first charting her own course to discovering what works. Experience Life Magazine, Healthy Deviant, the Living Experiment, in their titles, embody the spirit of how Pilar has lived her life.

    Ok, let's get started with my guest today, Pilar Gerasimo.

    Thanks for listening,

    PF

    Please visit: www.DeepSitPodcast.com

  • This is the first interview in a special series spotlighting the Inspiring Children Foundation. I'm starting off the series with co-founder Ryan Wolfington. Ryan and I met during a social hour of the Mindful Leadership Summit in Washington DC where I was doing interviews for the Meditate This! Podcast. I'm standing at my table just cleaning up and putting away my mic, and this lone wolf appears out of the crowd and asks what I'm up to, and the next thing you know we've been standing there talking for about an hour and half. I found a lot in common with Ryan, certainly a passion for meditation and mindfulness, eating plant based, but something about him seemed a little off. You know different from most people I've met. As I talked to him over the next couple days of the summit, it became apparent that Ryan operates completely on intuition, doing what he feels is right, with little or no agenda. Quite honestly, until I sat down with him for this interview two months after that initial meeting, he was a total enigma. But then I learned that Ryan used to be a much different person, perhaps more "normal" if you will.

    He grew up in Philadelphia, part of a big Irish Catholic family, and from a young age he and his twin brother Sean were a on a path to greatness, full of ambition. Ryan aspired to be a titan in business, but something got in the way if his aspirations. That something was what you might call the abyss, a feeling of nothingness, emptiness, or meaninglessness in life. He was a 26 year old, president of a company making almost a half million dollars on track to achieve everything he ever dreamed of and then found himself lying in bed one day, feeling like he was dying crying out to god for help. After an event you'll hear about in this interview, Ryan examined his life with a deep heartfelt sadness and honesty. He eventually harnessed the same energy he had once used on his way to becoming powerful in business, to becoming a complete human being, living by intuition only and with deep sense of meaning. He underwent a personal transformation that has led him to living with peace, happiness, and joy.

    Meaningful relationships are important to Ryan, and we start off this interview talking about the earliest and most meaningful relationship in his life with his twin brother Sean. In Part 1 we cover his personal transformation and then continue in Part 2 discussing the start of the Foundation and the challenges along the way. There is a lot in here, a lot of insight, wisdom, emotion, and honesty. And by the end you will see clearly why the Foundation has positively affected the lives of so many children. Something they often say in the Foundation is if you do right you feel right. It's as simple as that. And nothing sums up the message of this interview better than that. So please welcome, Ryan Wolfington, co-founder of Inspiring Children Foundation.

    Thanks for listening,

    PF

    www.DeepSitPodcast.com

  • This is the first interview in a special series spotlighting the Inspiring Children Foundation. I'm starting off the series with co-founder Ryan Wolfington. Ryan and I met during a social hour of the Mindful Leadership Summit in Washington DC where I was doing interviews for the Meditate This! Podcast. I'm standing at my table just cleaning up and putting away my mic, and this lone wolf appears out of the crowd and asks what I'm up to, and the next thing you know we've been standing there talking for about an hour and half. I found a lot in common with Ryan, certainly a passion for meditation and mindfulness, eating plant based, but something about him seemed a little off. You know different from most people I've met. As I talked to him over the next couple days of the summit, it became apparent that Ryan operates completely on intuition, doing what he feels is right, with little or no agenda. Quite honestly, until I sat down with him for this interview two months after that initial meeting, he was a total enigma. But then I learned that Ryan used to be a much different person, perhaps more "normal" if you will.

    He grew up in Philadelphia, part of a big Irish Catholic family, and from a young age he and his twin brother Sean were a on a path to greatness, full of ambition. Ryan aspired to be a titan in business, but something got in the way if his aspirations. That something was what you might call the abyss, a feeling of nothingness, emptiness, or meaninglessness in life. He was a 26 year old, president of a company making almost a half million dollars on track to achieve everything he ever dreamed of and then found himself lying in bed one day, feeling like he was dying crying out to god for help. After an event you'll hear about in this interview, Ryan examined his life with a deep heartfelt sadness and honesty. He eventually harnessed the same energy he had once used on his way to becoming powerful in business, to becoming a complete human being, living by intuition only and with deep sense of meaning. He underwent a personal transformation that has led him to living with peace, happiness, and joy.

    Meaningful relationships are important to Ryan, and we start off this interview talking about the earliest and most meaningful relationship in his life with his twin brother Sean. In Part 1 we cover his personal transformation and then continue in Part 2 discussing the start of the Foundation and the challenges along the way. There is a lot in here, a lot of insight, wisdom, emotion, and honesty. And by the end you will see clearly why the Foundation has positively affected the lives of so many children. Something they often say in the Foundation is if you do right you feel right. It's as simple as that. And nothing sums up the message of this interview better than that. So please welcome, Ryan Wolfington, co-founder of Inspiring Children Foundation.

    Thanks for listening,

    PF

    www.DeepSitPodcast.com

  • In Their Own Words - An Introduction to the Inspiring Children Foundation

    Today we are kicking off a series of interviews spotlighting an amazing organization called the Inspiring Children Foundation. You are going to hear from a group of inspiring individuals, many of whom are just teenagers. But let me be the first to tell you that these "kids" have wisdom beyond their years.

    The Foundation was started by Ryan Wolfington and renowned Las Vegas tennis coach Marty Hennessy, and is designed to provide children, many of whom come from difficult and disadvantaged life situations, the tools necessary to become their very best in academics, athletics, interpersonal skills, and leadership positions. They are becoming professionals in life. It is done using a variety of tools including mentoring, project-driven learning, entrepreneurship, a focus on education and athletics, and a special emphasis on mindfulness and self-awareness.

    It started about 16 years ago, with the simple goal of helping one child make the right life choice of staying in school and staying out of trouble. There was no Foundation or even a vision of what was to come. It was simply Marty and Ryan showing interest in a child who was taking tennis lessons, a young teenager named Frideric, who they saw as extremely vulnerable to peer pressure and potentially making some poor life choices.

    Since those early days, the impact from the Foundation is nothing short of amazing.

    Thousands of kids have been served by the Foundation. There is a select group of children chosen for the what's called the Leadership Program. Ninety-Five percent of them have earned academic and athletic scholarships to colleges such as: Stanford, Princeton, Oxford, Yale, Georgetown University, Harvard, University of Pennsylvania-Wharton School of Business, Vanderbilt, United States Air Force Academy, The Citadel, Villanova, Williams, Vassar and many others.

    The Foundation is funded through donation, but I know first hand from being there that it thrives on volunteering and sweat equity, if you will, on the part of parents, the children, and community supporters. They operate a very tight budget and the return on donation is high.

    From the $3 million donated to the foundation over the years, over $18 MILLION IN COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIPS have been earned by the youth.

    What you are going to pick up immediately is the clarity with which these kids see life. They have learned to trust in themselves, and have become leaders among their friends, families, and communities.

    It makes me think about a growing concern that the education system in this country is broken, and kids are not well prepared for the life ahead of them, much less able to handle the moral and ethical challenges they will confront in high school and college. But after several visits and spending time with these kids, my hope is renewed that the blueprint drawn up by the Foundation can set a new standard for educating and preparing youth to be whole humans, capable of deep and meaningful relationships, living with mindful awareness, in the pursuit of wisdom. And to that end, the Fuller Graduate School of Psychology is in the process of documenting the foundation's success and creating a curriculum that can scale even further. Currently the Foundation's program is being duplicated by 22 organizations around the world.

    You may have noticed that the music behind the opening montage and the one you will hear as we head out is by the singer-songwriter Jewel, who took notice of the Foundation and how they align with the principles she personally developed to navigate a very challenging early life of her own. She started a non-profit organization called Jewel Never Broken to teach these lessons and has now partnered with Inspiring Children to provide online resources for mindfulness, emotional intelligence, and wellness, through her site, JewelNeverBroken.com.

    So I'll let some of the kids take us out on this episode with their thoughts on the Foundation and how it has affected their lives. Then tune in for my conversation with co-founder Ryan Wolfington, whose fascinating and insightful story of personal transformation is where this all got started. Thanks for joining me on Deep Sit and I hope you enjoy my interview series spotlighting the Inspiring Children Foundation.

    Thanks for listening,

    PF

    All interviews will be available on www.DeepSitPodcast.com

  • Today on the show I bring you someone who is bound to put a smile on your face because of his positive attitude and terrific sense of humor, but he will also challenge you to consider your relationship to what is perhaps one of the most uncomfortable and perplexing problems we face across the globe. Mark Horvath isn't just an advocate for homeless people, he was that homeless guy, and he's now well-known for starting a non-profit media company called Invisible People, which through video offerings on it's website, YouTube, and social media channels, gets up close and personal with people living on the street.

    His videos are raw and unedited, giving full transparency by focusing his lens, and our attention, on people who most of us will walk or drive past just about every day. What he did for me with his videos was give me an opportunity to hear the answers to questions I'm basically too afraid to ask when I see a homeless person – what happened, how did you get here, and how can I help? And he isn't trying to paint any pictures here or even make you feel bad or guilty for their situation. He's bringing awareness to a condition that he believes can be solved, but unfortunately sees as getting much worse unless we take start taking action

    The first reason I wanted to talk to Mark was to understand what drives him to do this work. He is someone who lives with a clear sense of purpose and in his own words he has never felt closer to a destiny in his life, than he does right now. How many of us can say that? And what would it take for us to find such an acute awareness of our purpose or meaning in life.

    We kick off the conversation with Mark's take on mindfulness and meditation how pain can drive people to introspection. You see, Mark doesn't believe he was called to do this work, but that he was forced. And as uncomfortable as that might sound, it's what gets him out of bed each day to live a fulfilling life. We talk about his life story, his personal experience with being homeless, some of the solutions and ideas he has for ending it, but also what worries him. We get into how someone struggling with homelessness possibly finds purpose or meaning in life. And you won't want to miss how he describes the meaning in his life.

    It won't take long for you to recognize how Mark is spilling over with passion for his work and the energy he brings to this interview just about obliterated the outline I had prepared in doing my research. I had intended to start out right away with his backstory and become familiar with his life up until becoming homeless. But in our pre-interview banter we started talking about his take on mindfulness and meditation. And I'm glad I captured it because this provided a philosophical framework and baseline that shows up as we progress through his life and his life's work. But a little randomness is what makes this conversation so good....he is genuine, honest, and very fun to talk to. So please welcome Mark Horvath, founder of Invisible People.

    Thanks for listening,

    PF

    www.DeepSitPodcast.com

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  • My guest today is Emily Esfahani Smith, author of the book The Power of Meaning. As a matter of fact, Emily was the first person I invited as a guest on this podcast and this interview really sets up the perfect framework for what's to come. Pay special attention here as the pillars that support a meaningful life, as Emily defines them, come up time and again in the guest interviews that follow.

    I spend quite a bit of time talking to Emily about self-transcendence, which I saw as a common thread throughout her book. It seems that people find the most meaning in life, when they focus outside themselves. Whether it's serving other people, or becoming absorbed in a specific task, not thinking or even being aware of yourself is highly correlated to sense of meaning, purpose, and ultimately enduring happiness. We also talk about self-awareness and meditation as places to begin the search for meaning, and I ask Emily about the pros and cons of belief and ideology, and how they can fill us with meaning, but can often be harmful to ourselves or even the world around us.

    Emily has a masters from the University of Pennsylvania in applied positive psychology, and in addition to her career as a journalist and author, she is an editor at the Stanford University's Hoover Institution.

    She's written for many publications including the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, and the Atlantic. And as you hear right at the beginning, she has been connected with this question of how we find meaning in life, from a very young age.

    So, let's get to it. I bring you Emily Esfahani Smith

    Thanks for listening!

    For more please visit www.DeepSitPodcast.com