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Stories are powerful, and narrative drives all human behavior. But how do we as leaders, creators, entrepreneurs, or just humans searching for meaning leverage that power for good? The storyOS Podcast dives deep into that question, so you can increase your narrative intelligence, grow your influence, live with purpose, and build a better future for yourself and the world you live in.
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In this season finale, Harris, Kate and Michael reflect on STORY 2025, and the transformative experience of storytelling events, emphasizing the importance of environment and creativity in engaging audiences. The discussion highlights how changes in format and atmosphere can lead to moments of awe and wonder, creating lasting impressions on attendees.In their reflective conversation, they cover topics like:The experience of storytelling can be profoundly transformative.Environment plays a crucial role in shaping audience engagement.Creativity in format can lead to unexpected and delightful experiences.Moments of awe can significantly enhance the storytelling experience.Collaboration with creative individuals can elevate the overall atmosphere.The impact of storytelling is often felt through shared community experiences.Visual elements can create a sense of wonder and engagement.Tweaking traditional formats can lead to innovative storytelling.Audience reactions can be a powerful indicator of success.Creating memorable experiences requires attention to detail and creativity.Get on the STORY 2025 waitlist by visiting: https://story2026.comLearn more about Istoria by visiting: https://istoria.com
In this episode of the Story OS Podcast, hosts Michael McRay and Harris III discuss the importance of leadership within the family unit, emphasizing the need for intentionality and proactive engagement. They explore how family dynamics can mirror organizational leadership, the role of children in shaping family vision, and the integration of work and family life. The conversation also touches on the American dream and its implications for modern family structures, ultimately advocating for a more unified approach to leadership that includes all family members. In this conversation, we cover some key takeaways such as:Leadership starts at home and is essential for family dynamics.Intentionality is key in maintaining healthy family relationships.Children can provide valuable insights and wisdom in family decisions.Proactive leadership in families can lead to better outcomes.Integrating work and family life is more effective than balancing them.Storytelling is a powerful tool in leadership and family engagement.Vision casting helps families align on shared goals and values.The American dream may not serve modern family needs effectively.Including children in decision-making fosters a sense of belonging.Leadership and creativity are intertwined, driving positive change.Coming Up SoonLiving Room Leadership Summit - November 13 (virtual event from 10am-5pm EST, with a special family session at 8pm EST)Register today at livingroomleadershipsummit.com !Resources MentionedGet Living Room Leadership by Brittany and Geoff Anderson (available now!)
Tune in this week as Michael McRay welcomes Brittany and Geoff Anderson, co-authors of brand new book Living Room Leadership and founders of Renala, for a conversation about why world-changing leadership begins at home. The Andersons share their powerful story of a marriage that nearly ended in 2019 during Geoff's time as an Air Force One pilot, and how coaching - not traditional therapy - helped them challenge the stories they were telling themselves and rebuild their relationship. Rather than letting that fracture define their future, they discovered that family is the most vital leadership training ground and created a coaching program that helps families co-create vision, values, and rhythms using research-backed tools and playful practices. Their approach focuses on the entire family system - not just individuals or couples. Renala helps parents and children understand their unique strengths, build shared mission and vision statements, and practice saying yes to each other. In this episode, they also discuss:Why 98% of children test as creative geniuses but only 2% of adults retain that geniusHow understanding that weaknesses are often just overused strengths can transform family dynamics and build compassion for each otherWhy play activates up to 80% of the brain compared to just 15% for talking aloneHow creating a family mission and vision statement provides the same clarity and direction that thrives in business and military environmentsComing Up SoonLiving Room Leadership Summit - November 13 (virtual event from 10am-5pm EST, with a special family session at 8pm EST)Register today at livingroomleadershipsummit.com !Resources MentionedGet Living Room Leadership by Brittany and Geoff Anderson (available now!)Renala Clifton StrengthsFinder assessment
In this week's episode, Michael McRay sets the table for next week's conversation with Brittany and Geoff Anderson, authors of Living Room Leadership. After his divorce, Michael crafted a framed set of commitments that define how he and his son show up together. This episode explores the radical but simple claim that world-changing leadership begins at home, and that the tools we treat as normal at work - vision, mission, values - matter even more in our living rooms. Michael introduces key themes from next week's conversation: moving from deficit to strength-based family culture, understanding families as systems rather than just individuals, and reclaiming play as a leadership technology that accelerates learning and disarms defensiveness. In this episode, Michael also shares:How to shift from organizing family life around what's wrong to organizing around what's already strongWhy individual growth isn't enough if the family system doesn't change with youHow excavating your story requires gentle patience, slowly uncovering what pain and shame have buried beneath the surfaceWhy the person you are at home is the person you areComing Up SoonJoin us for next week's episode as Brittany and Geoff Anderson talk on their new book, Living Room LeadershipOrder Living Room Leadership for yourself - available now!
S08 E26: The Wild Way

S08 E26: The Wild Way

2025-10-2116:21

Michael McRay welcomes listeners into a different kind of episode - a celebration of his fifth book, The Wild Way: Navigating the Space Between the Old Story and the New, releasing today. Tune in for an intimate invitation into the heart of a project years in the making, born from more than a decade of coaching conversations, story facilitation, and personal notes from the dark forest. Michael reads from the opening pages of the book, sharing the concept of the wild twin - the exiled, instinctual part of ourselves that knows the way into the woods, the part we sent away for being too much, too loud, too alive. In this episode, Michael also shares:The inspiration behind the title The Wild WayHow the book's dispatches function as reports from someone who's been in the thick of it, and found paths throughWhat the "worthy if wanted" narrative is and how it keeps us chasing validation by tying our worth to whether others choose usWhy your story needs patience while carefully uncovering truths buried beneath pain and shameResources MentionedMichael's new book The Wild Way: Navigating the Space Between the Old Story and the New is available now! Get your copy today! 
This week, Michael McRay and Harris III gather for a raw, timely conversation about what it means to treat story as sacred in a world that has reduced it to formulas and frameworks. Reflecting on last week's interview with Kaitlin Curtice and her new book Everything is a Story, they explore why their conference is simply called "STORY" - a deliberate choice to reclaim storytelling from the creative class and awaken everyone to their inherent creativity and narrative power. The conversation confronts the cultural moment we're living in: a world where rage has replaced nuance, where social media algorithms feed us dopamine hits of outrage, and where we've lost the ability to sit at tables with people who think differently. In this episode, they also discuss:Why we must resist the urge to "master" storytelling and instead, approach it with the humility and care we would give any sacred thingHow single stories strip away nuance and dehumanize, while wise stories hold paradox and complexityWhy leaders must audit their vocabulary and choose words carefully to avoid weaponizing languageWhy choosing narrative agency over apathy is how we stop the descent of disagreement to demonizationComing Up: Michael's new book The Wild Way: Navigating the Space Between the Old Story and the New is available October 21st - order now for over $500 in pre-order bonuses!Resources Mentioned:Kaitlin Curtice's new book Everything is a StoryThe Danger of a Single Story by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
This week, Michael McRay welcomes award-winning author and poet Kaitlin Curtice to celebrate the launch of her new book, Everything is a Story. Curtice, an enrolled citizen of the Potawatomi Nation, explores how narrative drives all human behavior and shapes our identities, beliefs, and relationships. The conversation weaves through Indigenous wisdom, spirituality, and the profound recognition that stories aren't just things we tell - they are living beings that we participate with and that fundamentally shape how we experience the world. Curtice shares her journey through health challenges leading up to the book launch, the vulnerability of putting creative work into the world, and why she chose the metaphor of an oak tree's life cycle to structure her exploration of storytelling. In this episode, they also discuss:How oral storytelling traditions differ from written narratives and why stories should be understood as living beings with their own essenceWhy Curtice categorizes stories as liminal, loving, or lethal, and how to recognize which stories we're livingHow linear versus cyclical storytelling reflects different worldviews, particularly between Western and Indigenous approaches to narrativeWhy the practice of "mastering" storytelling misses the point—we need humility and care in our relationship with stories, not dominanceResources Mentioned:Get Kaitlin Curtice's new book Everything is a StoryJoin The CirclePreorder Michael McRay's new book The Wild Way
Michael McRay prepares listeners for his upcoming conversation with Kaitlin Curtice, award-winning author and Potawatomi Nation citizen, whose new book Everything is a Story explores how stories root in our bodies, beliefs, and behaviors. Michael reflects on Kaitlin's framework of stories as lethal, loving, or liminal - categories that he argues aren't separate buckets but overlapping truths within the same narrative. Michael demonstrates how a single story can simultaneously hold hope and futility, love and obedience, connection and violence. Michael challenges the notion that we lose stories we didn't choose, examining how narratives handed down through family, church, and culture take root before we even recognize them as stories. He introduces the parable of the man building a house in a field who trapped insects inside by adding windows - a metaphor for how stories get locked into our forming brains during childhood and require intentional work to shift. In this episode, he also discusses:How Kaitlin's book structure mirrors a tree's growth cycle from seed to mature tree to seed again, reflecting story's circular natureWhy the transformative work of story requires spiritual slowness and presence rather than rushing toward resolutionHow narrative intelligence means holding complexity and recognizing stories aren't tidy but textured, tangled, and true in layersComing Up:Tune in for Michael's conversation with Kaitlin Curtice next weekLOW TICKET ALERT - less than 25 tickets available! STORY 2025 - October 9th and 10th in Nashville, TN at the Schermerhorn (use code PODCAST100 for $100 your ticket!)Michael's book The Wild Way: Navigating the Space Between the Old Story and the New releasing in October - preorder today!Becoming Restoried
Tune in as Michael McRay and Harris III explore the complex relationship between emotions and storytelling, diving into whether we're primarily emotional beings who tell stories, or story beings who experience emotions. Harris shares how his childhood survival mechanism of entertaining others to manage their emotional states shaped his career path, while Michael reflects on his "emotions epiphany" through Karla McLaren's work. They challenge the common phrase "story follows state," arguing instead for a circular relationship where stories create emotional states and emotional states influence the stories we tell ourselves. Their conversation examines how both emotions and imagination remain active throughout our lives, even when redirected toward anxiety and catastrophizing rather than creative expression. In this episode, they also discuss:How the Irish language recognizes emotions as temporary states ("there is sadness on me") rather than permanent identities ("I am sad")Why understanding emotions as intelligent messengers rather than problems to solve transforms our relationship with difficult feelingsHow worry represents a misuse of imaginationWhy anxious people possess valuable scenario-planning superpowers for creative problem-solvingComing Up SoonLOW TICKET ALERT! STORY 2025 - October 9th and 10th in Nashville, TN at the Schermerhorn (use code PODCAST100 for $100 your ticket!)Experiential Narrative Practice certification training - October 6th-8thConversation with Kaitlin CurticeMichael's book "The Wild Way: Navigating the Space Between the Old Story and the New" releasing in OctoberResources MentionedKarla McLarenDon't Believe Everything You ThinkEnjoying these conversations? Join The Circle!
Join Michael McRay as he continues his conversation with emotional researcher Karla McLaren, diving deeper into how emotions serve as guides rather than problems to solve. Karla explains that when emotions feel overwhelming, it's often about our lack of skills to work with them rather than the intensity itself. She reframes depression as an intelligent system that removes energy to redirect us from destructive paths. Their conversation reveals how toxic positivity isolates those experiencing intense emotions, while slightly depressed people often see reality more clearly than eternally optimistic ones. Karla introduces "narrative completion"—how witnessing recovery and resolution is essential for healing, from trauma workers to personal relationships. In this episode, they also discuss:How to distinguish healthy internal shame from toxic external shaming messagesWhy intense emotions often indicate disconnection from parts of ourselves that need healingHow narrative completion helps heal trauma and unfinished emotional businessWhy we're drawn to serial stories during times of cultural uncertaintyComing Up SoonLOW TICKET ALERT! STORY 2025 - October 9th and 10th in Nashville, TN at the Schermerhorn (use code PODCAST100 for $100 your ticket!)Experiential Narrative Practice certification training - October 6th-8thMichael's book "The Wild Way: Navigating the Space Between the Old Story and the New" releasing in OctoberResources MentionedKarla McLarenEmbracing Anxiety, The Art of Empathy and The Language of EmotionsEmpathy AcademyEnjoying these conversations? Join The Circle!If you or your loved one is experiencing suicidal ideation, please contact a mental health professional as soon as possible and seek help. You are not alone. If you are experiencing a mental health, suicide, or substance use crisis, or any other emotional distress, call or text 988 or chat online at 988lifeline.org/chat. 
Michael McRay welcomes Karla McLaren, award-winning author and emotional researcher whose work has fundamentally reshaped how many understand inner life and emotional intelligence. Karla shares how her journey into emotions began not as academic pursuit but as survival. When severe childhood abuse left her with intense emotions that no one around her would acknowledge or discuss, Karla was forced to decode the language of emotions on her own. This conversation challenges fundamental assumptions about emotions, particularly the myth of "positive" versus "negative" feelings. They explore how gender stereotypes allow men anger but punish them for it, while women can express sadness but face consequences for that too. The discussion reveals how most people can instantly recall emotion-shaming messages but struggle to remember any emotion-welcoming ones, highlighting our culture's fundamental discomfort with feelings. In this episode, they also discuss:How Karla learned to study emotions like a language, observing patterns across humans and animals to understand what triggers each emotion and how beings respondWhy the categories of "positive" and "negative" emotions miss the pointThe critical distinction between healthy shame that arises internally to maintain our values versus toxic shame imposed from outside that creates impossible standardsHow anxiety combines with panic in "panxiety" during high-stress situationsComing Up SoonPart two with Karla McLaren, researcher and author of "The Art of Empathy" and "The Language of Emotions"STORY 2025 - October 9th and 10th in Nashville, TN at the Schermerhorn (use code PODCAST100 for $100 your ticket)Experiential Narrative Practice certification training - October 6th-8thMichael's book "The Wild Way: Navigating the Space Between the Old Story and the New" releasing in OctoberResources MentionedKarla McLarenEmbracing Anxiety, The Art of Empathy and The Language of EmotionsEmpathy AcademyEnjoying these conversations? Join The Circle!
In preparation for his upcoming two-part conversation with emotional researcher and author Karla McLaren, Michael McRay explores why emotions are the fundamental architecture of all storytelling. Drawing from his work with David Hutchins in the Storytelling Leader program, Michael addresses the common pitfall of leaders who shy away from emotion in their stories, mistakenly believing that emotional storytelling means crying in front of their teams. Michael shares how Karla's work revolutionized his understanding that every emotion exists because we need it - fear as a signal, sadness as a release, anger as an alarm, and shame as an alignment check. He challenges the common emotional trinity of "happy, mad, and sad" and advocates for emotional fluency as both a survival skill and essential component of narrative intelligence. In this episode, he also discusses:How emotion serves as the GPS of narrative, telling us where we are in a story and what matters mostThe revolutionary concept that there are no positive or negative emotionsWhy viewing emotions as trustworthy guides instead of obstacles to overcome changes how we navigate the narratives of our livesHow emotional language reveals the invisible threads that connect events into stories we can feel and relate toComing Up SoonA two-part conversation with Karla McLaren, researcher and author of "The Art of Empathy" and "The Language of Emotions"STORY 2025 - October 9th and 10th in Nashville, TN at the Schermerhorn (use code PODCAST100 for $100 your ticket)Experiential Narrative Practice certification training - October 6th-8thMichael's book "The Wild Way: Navigating the Space Between the Old Story and the New" releasing in OctoberResources MentionedThe Storytelling LeaderJoin The Circle
In today's episode, Michael McRay and Harris III dive deep into how we define success and failure, exploring whether our culture's focus on mental health has inadvertently reduced our resilience. Their conversation examines the pendulum swing from necessary trauma awareness to potentially over-labeling every difficulty as trauma, and how this impacts our ability to navigate the inevitable failures that come with building a business or pursuing meaningful goals. Harris shares insights from his work with purpose-driven entrepreneurs who often struggle when their well-intentioned efforts don't yield immediate results, while Michael reflects on Jordan Geary's concept of "failure as origin story." Drawing from Michael's upcoming book "The Wild Way," they explore how success might be better defined as "any action in service of the story you want to live" rather than arrival at predetermined destinations. In this episode, they also discuss:Why increased mental health awareness may be unintentionally reducing our capacity to navigate ordinary challenges and setbacksHow redefining success as maintaining "integrity of direction" rather than perfect arrival can transform our relationship with both achievement and setbacksWhy the journey toward goals creates the character and capacity needed to handle the responsibility that comes with achieving themThe distinction between nurturing children and affirming everything they think or feelComing Up SoonSTORY 2025 - Oct. 9th and 10th in Nashville, TN at the Schermerhorn (use code PODCAST100 for $100 your ticket)Experiential Narrative Practice certification training - October 6th-8thMichael's book "The Wild Way: Navigating the Space Between the Old Story and the New" releasing in OctoberResources MentionedJordan Geary@TheJordanGeary on YouTube and InstagramBecoming RestoriedJoin The Circle
This week, Michael McRay sits down with Jordan Geary, Emmy Award-winning creative producer and executive at Sesame Workshop who has spent over 20 years crafting stories for children and families through beloved shows like Sesame Street's Mecha Builders, Ghostwriter, and Helpsters. After ten years at Sesame, Jordan has discovered his new mission: helping people shift their perspective from feeling like extras in their own lives to recognizing themselves as the heroes of their personal stories. This conversation explores how children's content teaches us about the power of personal stakes in storytelling, why kids are far smarter than adults give them credit for, and how the future of media will continue moving toward giving audiences more agency and curation. In this episode, they also discuss:How the best stories focus on personal stakes rather than world-ending scenariosWhy the most anticipated achievements often matter less than the relationships and people who witness them with usHow rejection and failure can reveal what we must accomplish in our lives versus what we simply want to achieveHow simple acts of play can restore the creative joy that adult seriousness often suppressesComing Up SoonSTORY 2025 - Oct. 9th and 10th in Nashville, TN at the Schermerhorn (use code PODCAST100 for $100 your ticket)Resources MentionedJordan Geary@TheJordanGeary on YouTube and InstagramBecoming RestoriedJoin The Circle
Michael McRay reflects on the profound idea that "self-authorship is a sacred act" and explores what it means to move from simply telling stories to becoming better stories. Drawing from his own experience growing up in the church, Michael examines how so many of us have lived inside stories written by others - whether by religious institutions, cultural systems, or societal expectations. He shares his personal journey of recognizing that his sensitivity wasn't a weakness but a signal that the internalized stories weren't the whole truth. This solo episode is preparation for his upcoming conversation with Emmy-winning producer Jordan Geary, who has spent decades creating transformative stories for children and families through shows like Sesame Street. Michael introduces his framework of four limiting stories - self-doubt, victim, self-defeating, and avoidance - and explains how the goal isn't to delete painful narratives but to integrate them into a fifth story that transforms pain into purpose. In this episode, he also discusses:Why recovering from systems that diminish voices requires redefining our understanding of wisdom and worthThe distinction between becoming better storytellers versus becoming better stories ourselvesHow sensitivity and being "too much" can serve as signals that we're living someone else's script rather than our own authentic narrativeWhy storytelling becomes one of the most radical acts of emotional resilience when we claim our pain through narrationComing Up SoonConversation with Jordan Geary, Emmy-winning creative producerSTORY 2025 - Oct. 9th and 10th in Nashville, TN at the Schermerhorn (use code PODCAST100 for $100 your ticket)Resources MentionedBecoming RestoriedJoin The CircleApplied Narrative Intelligence Certification
Michael McRay reconnects with Harris III to unpack the conversation with Pádraig Ó Tuama and explore the broader implications of moving from an information age to a wisdom based economy. They dive into how artificial intelligence is making information abundant and cheap, while wisdom becomes increasingly rare and valuable. Harris argues that as AI makes it harder to trust anything we see on screens, people will crave authentic, in-person human experiences - exactly the kind that storytelling provides. Their conversation examines empathy as a crucial component of narrative intelligence, but they also explore its shadow side, questioning whether our culture's elevation of emotions above all else might actually hinder productive action. In this episode, they also discuss:How the shift from knowledge-based to wisdom-based economies makes storytelling an essential future-proofing skillWhy artificial intelligence will increase demand for authentic human connection and face-to-face storytelling experiencesThe distinction between emotions being "true" but not always "real"How empathy can become a way to bypass our own emotional experiences rather than enhance our capacity for genuine connectionComing Up SoonSTORY 2025 - Oct. 9th and 10th in Nashville, TN at the Schermerhorn (use code PODCAST100 for $100 your ticket)Resources MentionedPádraig Ó TuamaTenx9 Storytelling CommunityJoin The CircleApplied Narrative Intelligence Certification
Michael McRay sits down with his longtime friend Pádraig Ó Tuama, the Irish poet, theologian, conflict mediator, and storyteller who has profoundly shaped Michael's approach to narrative intelligence over their decade-long friendship. Their rich conversation explores the delicate balance between fostering empathy through story while recognizing that mandatory empathy rarely works. Pádraig shares how his work in communities with people from both sides of the Irish border taught him that storytelling isn't inherently good - it's power that can either liberate or control. He also reflects on his years leading Ireland's oldest peace and reconciliation organization, and discusses the origins of Tenx9, the community storytelling night he co-founded in Belfast. In this episode, they also discuss:How stories reveal hidden layers and deeper truths when we resist the urge to explain their meaningWhy "some people's theories are other people's traumas" serves as a reminder that our ideas always land somewhere on someone's bodyThe recognition that most people do what seems reasonable to them at the time, and how this perspective can foster empathyHow "the author of the story cannot control a story's power to reveal" Terrence TilleyComing Up SoonSTORY 2025 - Oct. 9th and 10th in Nashville, TN at the Schermerhorn (use code PODCAST100 for $100 your ticket!)Resources MentionedPádraig Ó TuamaSpecifically mentioned In the Shelter: Finding a Home in the WorldPoetry Unbound Podcast (with On Being Studios)Tenx9 Storytelling CommunityJoin The CircleApplied Narrative Intelligence Certification
This week, Michael McRay prepares listeners for his upcoming conversation with Pádraig Ó Tuama, the Irish poet, theologian, conflict mediator, and storyteller who has profoundly shaped Michael's approach to story work over their long friendship. This episode introduces the concept of narrative humility - the practice of remembering that no matter how good a story is (even your own) it doesn't tell the whole truth. Michael explores how our impulse to quickly moralize stories or force neat conclusions actually limits their transformative power. Through examples ranging from a retreat participant's mountain rescue story to the tragic tale of physician Ignaz Semmelweis, Michael demonstrates how our attachment to certain narratives can blind us to deeper truths and alternative perspectives. In this episode, he also discusses:How narrative humility differs from narrative intelligence, and why both are essential for transformative storytellingThe power of asking "what must the story be that would make this behavior feel reasonable?" when facing conflict or confusionWhy treating stories as windows rather than weapons allows them to do their deepest work of transformationHow letting stories breathe without interpretation allows them to uncover riches we never saw beforeComing Up SoonTune in next week as Pádraig Ó Tuama joins the storyOS podcastSTORY 2025 - Oct. 9th and 10th in Nashville, TN at the Schermerhorn (use code PODCAST100 for $100 your ticket!)Resources MentionedBecoming RestoriedJoin The CircleApplied Narrative Intelligence CertificationTenx9 Storytelling Community
To unpack the incredible conversation with researcher Ben Rogers about his groundbreaking research on the hero's journey framework, Harris III rejoins Michael McRay. They explore how understanding our lives as unfolding stories, rather than just random events, has implications for reducing anxiety, increasing contentment, and building resilience. Michael and Harris examine about how Ben's research validates what they've long believed: that the stories we tell ourselves fundamentally shape our physiology, our choices, and our capacity for growth. In this episode, they also discuss:How redemptive versus contaminated narratives determine our capacity for leadership, meaningful relationships, and overall flourishingWhy narrative agency is always an option, even when life feels completely out of controlThe connection between cynicism and fearHow simple language shifts like adding "yet" to our self-talk can transform contaminated narratives into redemptive onesComing Up SoonSTORY 2025 - Oct. 9th and 10th in Nashville, TN at the SchermerhornResources MentionedDr. Ben Rogers: Hero's Journey AssessmentBecoming RestoriedJoin The CircleApplied Narrative Intelligence Certification
Michael McRay sits down with Dr. Ben Rogers, a researcher at Boston College, to explore his groundbreaking research proving that people who view their lives through the hero's journey framework experience measurably greater meaning, resilience, and life satisfaction. They explore how growth mindset is really just a story we tell ourselves about our capacity to change. Dr. Rogers shares how his personal experiences shifted from finance to studying what makes life meaningful. Their conversation reveals how the narratives we tell ourselves about everything from workplace challenges to personal setbacks directly shape our well-being. In this episode, they also discuss:How people who naturally see their lives as hero's journeys score higher on meaning, resilience, and life satisfactionWhy growth mindset versus fixed mindset are competing narratives about human potentialThe seven research-backed elements of the hero's journey: protagonist, shift, quest, allies, challenge, transformation, and legacyHow a simple intervention can help people reframe their story and experience measurable benefits to well-beingComing SoonSTORY 2025: October 9-10 in Nashville, Tennessee at the Schermerhorn Symphony Center (use code PODCAST100)Resources MentionedDr. Ben Rogers: Hero's Journey AssessmentBecoming RestoriedWhat to expand your narrative intelligence? Join The Circle!Istoria Collective
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