Passion Struck with John R. Miles
Finding Meaning After Success: The Blueprint of Belonging | John R. Miles - EP 717
16 Jan 2026
Chapter 1: What does success feel like when it lacks meaning?
Coming up next on Passion Struck, it's the moment we all chase. The gavel falls. The contract is signed. The win is finally yours. But as the adrenaline fades and the room goes quiet, a strange, cold realization sets in. You have the prize, but you don't feel the peace. You have the stone of success, but it feels loose, unconnected. This is the hollow high.
It's the result of building a life out of massive achievements while ignoring the invisible bond that was supposed to hold them together. Today, we're going back to the dawn of architecture to find what's missing.
Chapter 2: How can we identify the invisible bonds in our lives?
We're going to discover why the things we fight hardest to win are often the things that weaken us. and why true meaning isn't found in the stones we stack, but in the mortar we mix between them. Welcome to Passion Struck. I'm your host, John Miles. This is the show where we explore the art of human flourishing and what it truly means to live like it matters.
Each week, I sit down with changemakers, creators, scientists, and everyday heroes to decode the human experience and uncover the tools that help us lead with meaning, heal what hurts, and pursue the fullest expression of who we're capable of becoming.
Whether you're designing your future, developing as a leader, or seeking deeper alignment in your life, this show is your invitation to grow with purpose and act with intention. Because the secret to a life of deep purpose, connection, and impact... is choosing to live like you matter. Hey, friends, welcome to Episode 718 of Passion Struck. We're continuing our series, The Meaning Makers.
Last week in my solo episode, I discussed the architecture of significance, and we uncovered the structure that emerges when the noise of achievement fades. Earlier this week, we explored the raw materials of the human bond with two of the most insightful minds in their fields. On Tuesday, Dr. Steven Sloman joined us to unpack collective intelligence.
how meaning isn't something we create in a vacuum, but something we find in the between-us space of shared beliefs and sacred values.
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Chapter 3: What is the 'Hollow High' and how does it affect us?
Then yesterday, Alex Emus dove into the psychology of trade-offs and a phenomenon called the winner's curse, helping us understand why the things we fight hardest to win are often the very things that weaken our internal structure. Together, they help us see a profound truth, significance, is the architecture we reveal in silence, but meaning is the binding agent we apply together.
We often think of our lives as a collection of heavy things. We talk about the weight of our responsibilities, the solid nature of our achievements, and the massive goals we're trying to move. We spend years cutting these stones, shaping them, and hauling them into place. thinking that if we just stack enough of them high enough, we will finally have built something that lasts.
But if you look closely at the ruins of history, and at the ruins of many modern lives, you'll see that it's rarely the stones that fail, it's the space between them. Without a bond, a pile of the most expensive limestone in the world is still just a pile. It's shifting, it's vulnerable. In our own lives, we call that feeling quiet disorientation.
It's that haunting suspicion that while we have all the right pieces in place, we are still one heavy wind away from it all coming down.
we are moving from the stones to the space between them we're moving from the architecture we build in private to the mortar we apply together before we dive in a quick note on a project that mirrors these themes of significance we often spend our adult lives trying to rediscover the value we should have been anchored in as children my new children's book you matter luma is a bridge to that truth a reminder that your significance isn't earned by your performance it is a fact of your existence
You can pre-order it now in Barnes & Noble or go to youmatterluma.com. If this episode resonates, please share it with someone navigating a similar season. And if you haven't yet, a five-star rating or review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify helps these conversations reach the people who need them most. Now, let's get on to episode 718.
Thank you for choosing PassionStruck and choosing me to be your host and guide on your journey to creating an intentional life. Now, let that journey begin. Imagine a single worker at dawn on the Giza Plateau.
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Chapter 4: What is the significance of collective intelligence in building connections?
The sun is just rising over the Nile, turning the sand gold. In front of him sits a shallow pit. He pours in lime, white and fine as bone dust. Then sand, rough and golden. Finally, water from the river. carried in a cracked clay jar. With a wooden paddle, he begins to stir. At first, the ingredients resist. Dry clumps float. Water pools separately. Sand sinks. Nothing wants to become one thing.
This resistance is exactly what we feel when our deepest values clash with our ambitions, when individual drive pushes against the pull of shared life. It's not a sign the mix is failing. It's the signal that alchemy is beginning. The worker keeps turning the paddle, slow and steady. The mixture thickens. Colors blend. Air bubbles rise and disappear. What was separate becomes something new.
Mortar. A humble paste that will hold stones weighing tons. That will seal the pyramid against time itself. But here's the truth. The worker isn't mixing just for himself. He knows the mortar only works... when it fills the space between the stones. In our lives, meaning lives in that same space between us.
It is the inner subjective bond, our collective intelligence that turns a pile of rocks into a sanctuary. That worker understood what we often forget. True endurance starts in the mix. not in the grand stones already cut and waiting, but in the quiet, invisible blending of elements.
Last week, I revealed the architecture of significance, the foundation of quiet recognition, where inherent worth stands solid, the pillars of circulation, where giving flows outward and returns, The windows of attentional maturity, opening us to see deeply. The roof of shelter, where presence becomes a safe place for others. Those elements are powerful.
They are real, but in a world flooded with choices, they can remain separate, strong in isolation, but vulnerable when the winds come. Without this mix, the structure isn't just quiet, it's structurally unsound. unable to hold across time or weather life's real pressures.
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Chapter 5: How do sacred values act as the grit in our connections?
So we begin here with the mix. We shift from stacking stones and solo ambition to blending them in communal harmony. The ingredients in our lives are our experiences, relationships, convictions, and daily decisions. Lime represents the sharp binding conviction of personal values. Sand is the grounding texture of shared beliefs and collective wisdom.
Water is the flow of choices that brings everything together. The alchemy happens when we honor the proportions. allowing collective intelligence to guide the blend, sacred values to add the necessary grit, and trade-offs to decide what stays and what must be set aside.
Because if we don't, if we ignore the proportions and just chase every shiny object, we fall into what Alex Emus and I discussed yesterday, the winner's curse. We overpay for elements that actually weaken the whole. We think we're building a legacy, but we're actually just collecting a pile of expensive, unbonded stones.
To avoid the curse, we have to stop theorizing about the mix and start the work of the join. That's why, back on the Giza Plateau, the worker at dawn finishes his stir. He doesn't have time to marvel at the alchemy in the pit because he knows the clock is ticking. In that pit, the transformation is complete. The mortar sits thick and ready. It's no longer a collection of separate ingredients.
It's become a single living substance. But here is the tension. The mortar is at its most potent right now. Yet, it is also at its most vulnerable. If it stays in the pit, it hardens into a useless lump. Its entire purpose is to be used, to be spread, and to be pressed between the weight of something heavy. Meaning, like mortar, is not a state of being. It's an act of application.
In our lives, this application phase is where so many of us falter. We have the ingredients. We have the sacred values we heard from Stephen Sloman on Tuesday. We have the relationships and we have the goals, but we hesitate to apply them with conviction. We keep our mix in the pit of someday, or maybe never quite willing to let it set.
The worker scoops a generous portion onto his wooden trowel. You can almost hear the wet, heavy thwack as it hits the wood. He approaches the first massive limestone block, already positioned on the growing foundation we discussed last week. With steady, practiced hands, he begins the application. He spreads the mortar across the stone surface.
thick enough to fill every jagged gap and hidden fissure, yet thin enough to allow for perfect alignment. He isn't just putting goop on a rock. He is creating the interface where two separate entities will become a single structure. He lifts the next block, a stone that weighs as much as a man, and he presses it down firmly. This is the moment of truth.
The mortar squeezes out slightly at the edges. bleeding into the light, and then it sets into the joint. In that specific moment of pressure and release, the two stones become one. The bond is made. But notice what it took. It required force, it required intention, and it required a total willingness to commit. even when the stones resist, even when the work is back-breakingly heavy.
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Chapter 6: What is the winner's curse and how can we avoid it?
And friends, this is exactly where so many of us are stuck. We have done the work of the mix. We have the values. We have the relationships. We have the ingredients of a significant life sitting right in front of us. but we are terrified to scoop it up and apply it. We are afraid that if we commit to a specific join, we might lose our flexibility.
This is where conviction enters our own architecture. This is exactly what Steve Sloman helped us understand on Tuesday, that meaning doesn't happen in the center of the stone. It happens in the intersubjective space, the space between the stones. It is the bond that exists between us. We have mixed the elements, our experiences, our relationships, our daily decisions.
Now comes the harder part, applying them with a level of commitment that makes them non-negotiable. We spread the mortar generously across the joins of our lives, between our private values and the shared beliefs of those around us. between our solo ambitions and the collective wisdom that tempers them. But here's the catch. The cost of conviction is real.
Applying this mortar means saying no to the easy compromises that would weaken the bond. It means holding sacred values as anchors, even when they polarize the room or demand a sacrifice of your comfort. Solomon's research shows that a community or life is only as strong as its sacred values, the things it refuses to trade away. That is the grit in your mortar.
If your life is made of utility mortar, where everything is up for negotiation, where you'll trade your integrity for a win or your time for a status symbol, your mortar is just smooth, slippery mud. It will wash away the moment the weather turns. You need the friction. You need the grit. You need the willingness to press firmly. In ancient quarries, builders knew a secret.
Skimpy application leads to cracks that time only widens. A thin, hesitant layer of mortar might look fine today, but in 50 years, the weight of the structure will cause it to fail. However, a generous, committed spreading creates joins that endure for dynasties. In our lives, the same principle holds. We apply meaning when we show up fully in our relationships.
not just when it's convenient, but when it's hard. We apply it when we mentor others without needing the credit. We apply it when we circulate our presence and our resources with the specific intention of making the whole stronger, not just our own stone. We apply it when we honor the sacred, those deep, unshakable rights and wrongs that define the core of our architecture of significance.
even if it costs us our flexibility, our speed, or our comfort. The cost of conviction is the grit in the mortar. Without it, connections crumble under pressure, but with it, meaning seals the architecture against isolation's erosion. This application is what finally bridges the individual to the collective. It turns the me of solo ambition into the we of shared strength.
It prepares your structure for what comes next, the setting where your choices finally harden these bonds into permanence. Ask yourself right now, where in your life are you skimping on the mortar? Where are you trying to keep your stones loose because you're afraid of the pressure of commitment?
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Chapter 7: Why is the setting process crucial in our personal architecture?
We help you map your own architecture of significance by asking the questions the noise usually drowns out. What stones am I chasing just because the crowd is bidding on them? Is my mortar strong enough to hold my values under pressure or is it just drying into dust?
Inside the Ignited Life, you'll find weekly prompts tied to my interviews along with identity and agency practices to help you move from a hollow high into true unity. Because significance isn't a destination you reach. It's a structure you inhabit one choice at a time. You can join us at theignitedlife.net. Now, a quick break for our sponsors. Thank you for supporting those who support the show.
You're listening to Passion Struck on the Passion Struck Network. Welcome back. Before the break, we were standing in the pit, mixing the mortar of our lives with the grit of our sacred values. We looked at how we apply those convictions to the joints of our relationships. But as any builder will tell you, the application is only half the battle. If we don't understand how a structure sets,
If we don't recognize the traps that can ruin the bond before it even cures, we risk overpaying for a life that won't hold. And that brings us to the third element of our architecture, the setting. In the world of ancient masonry, this is the point of no return. You can nudge a stone for a few minutes after it's laid, but eventually the moisture leaves the mix.
The minerals lock together, and the position of that stone is no longer a suggestion. It's a permanent decision. In our lives, the setting represents the choices that lock our architecture into place. We often live as if our decisions are infinitely reversible, as if we can keep bidding on new lives, new careers, and new identities forever. But as we heard from Alex Emus yesterday,
The reality of a life of significance is that it requires the courage to let things set. It requires us to move from the fluid maybe of our 20s and 30s to the solid, uncompromising, this is who I am of an intentional life. But right here in the middle of the setting process, we encounter a psychological trap that ruins more structures than we care to admit.
It's the concept Alex and I dove into, the winner's curse. Imagine you're standing on the floor of a high-stakes auction. The item up for bid is something you've wanted for years. A stone you believe will finally complete your wall. You've done your research, but the moment the bidding starts, the atmosphere changes. The energy in the room spikes. You see your peers raising their paddles.
You feel the heat of competition. Suddenly, the goal shifts. You're no longer trying to acquire something of value. You are simply trying to win. When the gavel finally falls and the room goes quiet, you feel that surge of adrenaline. You won. But as Alex explained, in a world of uncertainty, the winner is almost always the person who made the largest estimation error.
You didn't win because you knew more. You won because you were willing to overpay more than anyone else. often more than the prize is actually worth. We do this with our lives every single day.
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Chapter 8: How can we transform our individual efforts into a collective legacy?
Think back one last time to that worker on the Giza Plateau. The sun is high now. The heat is intense. He wipes the sweat from his brow and looks back at the wall he has spent the day building. To an outsider, it's just a line of stone and mortar. But he knows better. He knows that the invisible bond he mixed this morning is now the only thing standing between those stones.
and the weight of the desert winds. He packs up his paddle. He walks away knowing that his individual effort has been swallowed up by a structure that will outlast his name. He didn't just build a wall. He participated in a unity. Thank you for spending this time with me today. My friends, let's bring this home.
We began today with a truth hidden in the dust of the plateau, that a life of significance isn't built of stones alone. It's built in the mix. It's found in the between us space where your drive meets our collective strength. We felt the grit of application, the realization that meaning isn't a trophy won at auction, but the cost of conviction.
It's the sacred values you refuse to trade away, even when the winner's curse tempted you to overpay for a life that didn't fit. We watched the architecture set and cure, proving that we don't need to be the same to be whole. We just need a bond strong enough to weather the storm.
And so we end with a vow, not a demand for perfection, but a commitment to the mortar, a commitment to fill the spaces between us with integrity, with presence, and with a love that actually holds. This isn't about winning more. It's about being more, right where the stones of your life are already laid.
If you're listening right now and you feel like you've been chasing the wrong wind, or if your architecture feels a little shaky, a little unbonded, hear this. You're not out of chances to strengthen the join. You're one intentional choice away. Tonight, tomorrow, this week, cast one small vote for the we. Put the phone down. Honor a sacred value. Stay long enough for the bond to actually set.
That's how significance is rebuilt. One ordinary chosen application at a time. Now head over to theunitedlife.net and grab the free companion workbook for this episode. It will guide you step-by-step through identifying your sacred grit and avoiding the winner's curse in your daily decisions.
If you know someone who needs to hear today's message, please share it with a friend, coworker, or family member. Next week, I'm sitting down with Shanna Pearson, author of the ADHD Manual for Women. For many of us, a struggle to set the mortar and stay focused on what is sacred is complicated by the internal noise of neurodiversity.
If you've ever felt like your internal architecture was a chaotic worksite, Shanna's work is a guide for all of us who struggle silently with the unique challenges of ADHD. We'll explore the why behind the struggle and the how of moving forward, and how to build a life of focus in a world designed for distraction. Because becoming isn't just about the strength of the stones.
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