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Echoes Across Time

Author: Tim Levy

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In a world racing toward artificial intelligence and digital immortality, what does it truly mean to be remembered?

Hosted by Tim Levy, serial entrepreneur and founder of Twyn, Echoes Across Time explores how our lives, choices, and creations leave traces that outlast us. Through intimate, story-driven conversations with artists, innovators, philosophers, and pioneers, Tim invites guests to reflect on what legacy means in an age when technology can preserve everything — except the essence of who we are.

Echoes Across Time is more than a podcast. It’s an inquiry into memory, meaning, and the art of leaving something that endures.
8 Episodes
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In this conversation, Tim Levy sits with Peter Drewett, international rugby coach and high-performance leadership expert, to explore resilience, identity, and the experiences that shape how people perform under pressure. Across more than three decades in elite sport, Peter has helped prepare teams for over 350 internationals and 18 Rugby World Cups. From leading England U21s to their first ever Six Nations Grand Slam to helping build the high-performance culture that later powered Exeter Chiefs’ Premiership success, his career has focused on understanding what allows individuals and teams to thrive when the stakes are highest. But Peter’s story begins long before professional sport. After spending his earliest years in Ghana, his childhood was shaped by loss. His mother died when he was seven, his father remained in Africa, and Peter grew up moving between families — learning early how to adapt, persevere, and move forward without seeing himself as a victim. Together, Tim and Peter reflect on childhood resilience, emotional armor, faith, and the mentors who shape our path. They explore how great teams are built through culture, trust, honest feedback, and shared values — and why the strongest performers are often those who remain humble enough to keep learning. This episode is not only about sport or leadership. It is about resilience, the quiet strength forged through uncertainty, and how early adversity can shape a life dedicated to helping others achieve the extraordinary. To learn more about Peter’s work in leadership development and high-performance teams through PERFORM2XL, visit www.perform2xl.com. If this conversation stayed with you, follow Echoes Across Time wherever you listen to podcasts, and join us as we continue exploring what truly lasts.
In this episode of Echoes Across Time, Tim Levy sits with Rupert Elderkin, a former senior trial attorney with the United Nations International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals. For nearly two decades, Rupert worked on the prosecution of some of the gravest crimes of the modern era — from war crimes cases at The Hague to the long aftermath of the Rwandan genocide. But this conversation moves far beyond the courtroom. Rupert reflects on the deeper human questions that emerge when you spend years confronting the worst humanity can do to itself. Raised in Cambridge by parents shaped by the Second World War, Rupert grew up surrounded by quiet stories of resilience, sacrifice, and moral responsibility — influences that would later shape his own path. Tim and Rupert explore what it means to pursue justice across decades, what sustains people who do this work, and how survivors of unimaginable violence often reveal the greatest strength of human character. Along the way, Rupert shares reflections on courage, humility, moral responsibility, and the tension between humanity’s darkest acts and its quiet capacity for compassion. This conversation asks a profound question: When we look honestly at both the worst and the best of humanity — what does it teach us about who we are? If this conversation stayed with you, follow Echoes Across Time wherever you listen to podcasts and join us as we continue exploring what truly lasts. Connect with Rupert Elderkin: Social media: www.linkedin.com/in/rupert-elderkin
In this conversation, Tim Levy sits with Dr. Kameel Khan, former UK Tax Court judge, lawyer, academic, and lifelong advocate for rehabilitation and second chances, to explore identity, belonging, and the quiet forces that shape who we become. Born in Trinidad and Tobago and educated across the UK, Canada, and the United States, Kameel’s life has moved between worlds — law and compassion, structure and nonconformity, authority and humility. He served for 18 years as a judge in the UK Tax Court, taught law at multiple universities, and was a DCI Fellow and Visiting Scholar at Stanford University, experiences that deeply shaped his thinking about justice, responsibility, and human potential. Beyond the courtroom, he is the founder of Project Remake, an initiative that supports ex-offenders in rebuilding their lives through entrepreneurship, dignity, and purpose. Together, Tim and Kameel reflect on what it means to grow up feeling like an outsider, how early experiences of displacement and difference shape a lifelong inner world, and why compassion, curiosity, and self-reliance often emerge from uncertainty. They explore anger and calm, faith and doubt, ego and humility — and the ways people change when they are finally seen as human rather than defined by their worst moments. This episode is not about status or achievement. It’s about understanding who you are beneath the roles you’ve played — and what is worth carrying forward. If this conversation stayed with you, follow Echoes Across Time wherever you listen to podcasts, and join us as we continue exploring what truly lasts. Learn more about Kameel’s work with Project Remake at https://www.project-remake.org.uk/.
In this conversation, Tim Levy sits with Daniel Gestetner, an entrepreneur who has spent more than three decades at the crossroads of technology, retail, and consumer brands — long before “digital disruption” was a buzzword. From the early days of Web 1.0 to building modern direct-to-consumer businesses, Daniel has consistently seen where consumer behavior is heading and built there early. In 2017, he joined the founding team of Byte, a direct-to-consumer dental aligner company that reimagined how healthcare products could be sold online. Three years later, the business exited for $1.04 billion. In 2025, he’s doing it again — this time alongside his son — co-founding Orion Sleep, built on a simple idea: sleep is the cornerstone of longevity. Orion has launched a smart mattress cover that regulates body temperature through the night and has already raised $17.5 million in seed funding. Daniel also advises a $55 billion private equity fund, has represented the UK government internationally, and is a long-time member of Young Presidents Organization. But this conversation isn’t about credentials or exits. Together, Tim and Daniel explore what stays constant beneath success and failure: emotional steadiness, optimism, decisive leadership, and the choice to build without stepping on others. They reflect on family, faith, philanthropy, risk, reinvention, and what it means to live expansively — prioritizing presence, values, and relationships over ego or accumulation. This episode is not about winning at all costs. It’s about building a life expansive enough to hold success, humility, and meaning at the same time. If this conversation stayed with you, follow Echoes Across Time wherever you listen to podcasts, and join us as we continue exploring what truly lasts.
In this conversation, Tim Levy sits with Dave Pearce, former Royal Marine Commando, world-class mountaineer, and expedition leader, to explore what a life lived at the edge of experience teaches us about leadership, judgment, and trust. After 26 years serving in some of the most complex and hostile environments in the world — from Northern Ireland and the former Yugoslavia to Afghanistan, Everest, Antarctica, and the Northwest Passage — Dave has learned that resilience isn’t built through accolades, but through the quiet moments where responsibility, loyalty, and self-discipline are tested. Together, Tim and Dave reflect on extreme environments and what they strip away: ego, comfort, and illusion. They explore why Dave is drawn to hardship, how trust is forged when nature becomes the final authority, and why leadership begins with leading yourself before leading others. This episode is not about proving toughness. It’s about understanding what remains when comfort disappears. If this conversation stayed with you, follow Echoes Across Time wherever you listen to podcasts, and join us as we continue exploring what truly lasts. To learn more about causes close to Dave’s heart, including his ongoing involvement with 65 Degrees North, which supports UK armed forces veterans through rehabilitation by adventure, visit https://www.65degreesnorth.org/. You can also learn more about the Royal Marines Charity, which directly supports UK Commando veterans through difficult times, at https://rma-trmc.org/.
In this conversation, Tim Levy sits with coach and performance strategist Alessandro Sciaraffa to explore a question that lives beneath achievement, ambition, and success: Who are we when the story we’ve been living no longer defines us? After more than a decade working with elite athletes, leaders, and creators, Alessandro has come to see that our greatest limits are rarely physical or strategic. They are inherited. Formed early. Quietly shaping how we relate to pressure, possibility, and ourselves. He calls them mental containers — the unseen narratives that influence our confidence, relationships, and sense of what is possible. Together, Tim and Alessandro reflect on childhood conditioning, vulnerability, presence, and the difference between effort and liberation. They explore how performance naturally evolves when we stop trying to outrun old stories — and instead learn to see ourselves with honesty and compassion. This episode is not about becoming more. It’s about remembering what was already there. If this conversation stayed with you, follow Echoes Across Time wherever you listen to podcasts, and join us as we continue exploring what truly lasts. Learn more about Alessandro’s work at https://alessandro-y6oh1nyb.scoreapp.com/.
In the first episode of Echoes Across Time, host Tim Levy asks a simple but profound question: When everything material fades, what truly remains of us? Tim reflects on his own journey — from his Jamaican roots to founding 22 companies — and introduces the idea of the non-material estate: the stories, values, and moments that outlive achievement. He shares powerful lessons from early Twyn recordings, where people discovered that the legacy they wanted to leave had little to do with success, and everything to do with meaning. This episode sets the foundation for the show’s mission: to explore what survives us, what shapes us, and what we pass on. In This Episode: • What people really remember at the end • Why the stories we tell often differ from the ones we hope endure • How Tim’s personal history shaped his view of legacy • The deeper inspiration behind Twin •The introduction of “legacy segments” from future guests If this conversation resonates with you, subscribe or follow the show, share it with someone you love, and send Tim a question you’d like explored on future episodes — about meaning, memory, identity, or what truly lasts.
This preview offers a glimpse into the heart of Echoes Across Time, a podcast exploring the legacies we build beyond titles, wealth, and achievement. Host Tim Levy draws from his experience founding more than twenty companies and investing in over eighty startups to reflect on a powerful truth: what matters most in life can’t be measured — it’s remembered. With curiosity, depth, and a focus on the “non-material estate” we leave behind, Tim introduces the themes and intentions that will guide the show. Each week, listeners will join conversations that move past success and into significance, uncovering the stories, values, and human moments that echo long after we’re gone. Subscribe to Echoes Across Time wherever you listen to podcasts.
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