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Passion Struck with John R. Miles

How to Make Your Struggles Meaningful | John R. Miles - EP 774

29 May 2026

Transcription

Transcript generated automatically by AI and may contain errors.

Chapter 1: What are the challenges of personal transformation in a hyper-optimized culture?

2.461 - 23.673 John R. Miles

You know what's frustrating? Going out to dinner, excited for the meal, and then spending the next few hours regretting it. For a long time, I thought certain foods just didn't agree with me anymore. Garlic, onions, pasta, even healthy foods like beans. It always felt like a trade-off. Then I found Fodzyne, a tasteless powder you sprinkle right onto your food.

0

24.234 - 44.503 John R. Miles

It helps break down FODMAPs, the hard-to-digest components in foods that can cause bloating, gas, and pain before they cause discomfort. Think of it like lactaid, but for garlic, onions, wheat, beans, cheese, and other common foods. It mixes right into your food, comes in portable packets, and honestly just makes eating feel enjoyable again.

0

45.224 - 72.107 John R. Miles

And it was created by Harvard-trained scientists and has been clinically studied. We're so excited to partner with Fodzime and offer you 30% off your first order when you go to icaneatagain.com slash passionstruck. That's icaneatagain.com slash passionstruck for 30% off your first order. Finally, you can enjoy your favorite foods without the pain. Just go to icaneatagain.com slash passionstruck.

0

75.682 - 91.993 John R. Miles

Starting something new can be terrifying. I still remember launching PassionStruck and thinking, what if nobody listens? What if this completely fails? When you build something that matters to you, there's always the moment of doubt before you hit publish. But sometimes the biggest breakthroughs in your life start with betting on yourself.

0

92.554 - 110.561 John R. Miles

And if you're building a business today, having the right platform behind you makes all the difference. That's where Shopify comes in. Shopify powers millions of businesses around the world and gives you everything in one place. From beautifully designed online storefronts to AI tools that help you write product descriptions, improve images and streamline your workflow.

111.062 - 139.09 John R. Miles

And when it comes to marketing, Shopify helps you create email and social campaigns so you can actually find your audience. It's time to turn those what-ifs into cha-ching with Shopify today. Sign up for your $1 per month trial at shopify.com slash passionstruck. Go to shopify.com slash passionstruck. That's shopify.com slash passionstruck. Cha-ching! Starting something new can be terrifying.

Chapter 2: How did Andy Dufresne use small actions to create change in Shawshank?

139.411 - 153.097 John R. Miles

I still remember launching PassionStruck and thinking, what if nobody listens? What if this completely fails? When you build something that matters to you, there's always the moment of doubt before you hit publish. But sometimes the biggest breakthroughs in your life start with betting on yourself.

0

153.658 - 171.666 John R. Miles

And if you're building a business today, having the right platform behind you makes all the difference. That's where Shopify comes in. Shopify powers millions of businesses around the world and gives you everything in one place. From beautifully designed online storefronts to AI tools that help you write product descriptions, improve images and streamline your workflow.

0

172.166 - 194.856 John R. Miles

And when it comes to marketing, Shopify helps you create email and social campaigns so you can actually find your audience. It's time to turn those what-ifs into cha-ching with Shopify today. Sign up for your $1 per month trial at shopify.com slash passionstruck. Go to shopify.com slash passionstruck. That's shopify.com slash passionstruck. Cha-ching!

0

196.051 - 217.435 John R. Miles

Coming up next on Passion Struck, if you look closely at that quiet scene in the prison office, you see a man slowly rolling a single sheet of paper into a typewriter. Outside his window are the cold stone walls of Shawshank State Penitentiary. He's been stripped of everything, his career as a banker, his freedom, his identity.

0

217.634 - 243.249 John R. Miles

Yet instead of planning a loud rebellion, he spends his energy typing a simple letter to the state legislature asking for a small donation of books, books he might never live to see. It makes you wonder why someone fighting for his own survival would spend his limited energy on something that looks so small to the world around him. It's because Andy Dufresne understood something we often miss.

243.81 - 263.934 John R. Miles

True transformation doesn't stop at saving yourself. Our deepest struggles were never meant to be private secrets. They are the exact place where our lives learn to turn outward, moving from individual survival to a quiet shared significance. Welcome to Passion Struck. I'm your host, John Miles.

264.615 - 286.369 John R. 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.

286.349 - 313.715 John R. Miles

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. Hello friends, and welcome back to Episode 774 of Passion Struck.

Chapter 3: What are the three major chapters of human development?

314.176 - 333.674 John R. Miles

We're closing out our month-long Forged in Adversity series. Over the past three weeks, we've traced what happens when life breaks us open. We started on that isolated shoreline, watching our external identities get washed away. We examined the armor we build for protection. and how it can slowly become its own kind of prison.

0

334.196 - 355.409 John R. Miles

Last week, we stepped into the alchemical fire and explored the difference between simply patching up the old self and allow something deeper to take shape. This final episode in the series is about where the journey ultimately leads. Contribution. The moment when what we've gained in the darkness begins to move outward and touch other people.

0

355.89 - 373.041 John R. Miles

Earlier this week, I spoke with Eric Zimmer, host of The One You Feed. Eric shared the quiet power of small, consistent actions and how they compound without burning us out. I also sat down with Walter Green, former CEO and founder of the Say It Now movement.

0

373.061 - 391.609 John R. Miles

Walter spoke with real honesty about the three chapters of a meaningful life and why we so often wait until it's too late to tell people how much they matter. Both conversations carried the same quiet message. Significance isn't something we hold onto for ourselves. It's something we learn to pass along.

0

392.15 - 407.836 John R. Miles

In today's episode, we'll explore how that shift happens through small, steady steps, even in difficult places, through the natural seasons of a life, through the simple but powerful act of telling people, while they're still here, exactly how they made a difference.

407.856 - 424.083 John R. Miles

To understand this, we're going to look directly at the narrative of the prison library, the biology of why our minds resist massive changes, and how we can use the power of quiet specificity to break through the isolation that lines our daily lives. Now let's get into it.

424.223 - 446.741 John R. Miles

Thank you for choosing PassionStruck and choosing me to be your host and guide on your journey to creating an intentional life that matters. Now, let that journey begin. You know what's frustrating? Going out to dinner, excited for the meal, and then spending the next few hours regretting it. For a long time, I thought certain foods just didn't agree with me anymore.

447.422 - 457.077 John R. Miles

Garlic, onions, pasta, even healthy foods like beans. It always felt like a trade-off. Then I found Fodzyne, a tasteless powder you sprinkle right onto your food.

Chapter 4: Why do many high achievers feel isolated and lonely?

457.617 - 477.926 John R. Miles

It helps break down FODMAPs, the hard-to-digest components in foods that can cause bloating, gas, and pain before they cause discomfort. Think of it like lactaid, but for garlic, onions, wheat, beans, cheese, and other common foods. It mixes right into your food, comes in portable packets, and honestly just makes eating feel enjoyable again.

0

478.607 - 505.558 John R. Miles

And it was created by Harvard-trained scientists and has been clinically studied. We're so excited to partner with Fodzime and offer you 30% off your first order when you go to icaneatagain.com slash passionstruck. That's icaneatagain.com slash passionstruck for 30% off your first order. Finally, you can enjoy your favorite foods without the pain. Just go to icaneatagain.com slash passionstruck.

0

511.394 - 535.408 John R. Miles

There's a quiet trap many of us fall into when we finally feel ready to grow or give something back. We've been raised in a world that celebrates big, dramatic change. We wait for the perfect moment, the cleared calendar, the financial cushion, for the feeling that we finally arrived. Only then we tell ourselves, will we start showing up more fully for our community or the people we care about?

0

535.969 - 560.913 John R. Miles

So we attempt these massive overhauls and then wonder why we burn out so quickly and find ourselves starting over again. Andy Dufresne faced an environment built almost entirely on resistance. No budget for books. a warden who didn't care, a system designed to slowly crush hope. He could have staged some dramatic protest or demanded sweeping change. Instead, he did something much simpler.

0

561.514 - 584.489 John R. Miles

He wrote one single letter each week to the state legislature asking for a small donation of books. Eric Zimmer helped me see why this approach is so wise. Our brains are wired to conserve energy and protect us from anything that feels like sudden overwhelming demand. When we push for huge shifts all at once, our minds treat it as a threat and start shutting down.

585.07 - 598.146 John R. Miles

That exhaustion we feel isn't usually a lack of discipline. It's a natural response to too much friction. What Andy understood was the power of choosing something small enough that resistance couldn't easily stop it.

598.746 - 621.013 John R. Miles

One letter a week didn't require heroic effort, but week after week, month after month, through the long stretch where nothing visible seemed to be happening, those letters kept going out. Eventually, the legislature sent a small check and a few boxes of books just to make him stop writing. And what did Andy do? He immediately started writing two letters a week.

Chapter 5: How can we practice gratitude before it's too late?

621.493 - 643.47 John R. Miles

That is how quiet contribution often grows. not through grand gestures, but through small steady actions repeated in the same direction over time. To understand where all those small steady steps are ultimately meant to lead, it helps us to look at the longer journey of a life. Walter Green described it as three chapters most of us move through.

0

643.911 - 669.769 John R. Miles

Knowing yourself, making yourself, and becoming yourself. The first chapter, knowing yourself, is often messy and uncertain. It's the time of youth and adolescence when you're trying to figure out who you are while carrying early wounds, family moves, and losses that never got properly named. Walter lived this deeply. He lost his father at 17. His family moved through 13 different cities.

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669.749 - 693.686 John R. Miles

And he grew up in a home where emotions were kept quiet to protect everyone's fragile health. The second chapter, Making Yourself, is where many of us spend the majority of our adult years. This is the season of building, proving, and climbing. You focus on career, financial security, titles, and results. Before prison, Andy Dufresne lived fully in this chapter.

0

694.268 - 719.245 John R. Miles

As a vice president at a major bank, he measured his days by professional scoreboards and external success. The difficulty is that a lot of people never leave this making chapter. They reach positions of real achievement, yet still feel strangely empty. Walter knew this feeling well. He built and ran a large national company with over a thousand employees.

0

719.926 - 739.81 John R. Miles

From the outside, it looked like the pinnacle of success. but he came to see how lonely the top can actually be. The third chapter, Becoming Yourself, asks something different of us. It's the quiet turning point where you step off the constant scoreboard. You realize your worth isn't measured by what you produce or how useful you are.

739.83 - 759.198 John R. Miles

Instead, you begin taking the wisdom, resources, and perspective you've gathered and start directing them outward. You use what you've learned to help other people feel seen, supported, and reminded that they matter. This is exactly the pivot Andy Dufresne made in Shawshank.

Chapter 6: What is the difference between generic compliments and specific appreciation?

759.779 - 776.344 John R. Miles

He stopped using his skills just to survive or protect himself. He began building something for others. He turned part of the library into a schoolroom. He spent years mentoring a young inmate named Tommy, helping him earn his GED.

0

776.944 - 799.843 John R. Miles

And in one of the most memorable moments, he locked the guards out of the office so he could play a Mozart record over the prison loudspeakers, giving every man in the yard a brief reminder of beauty and humanity. In that hard place, Andy took his own hard-won freedom and began offering it to the men around him.

0

799.863 - 824.864 John R. Miles

To truly step into that third chapter of becoming yourself, we have to face one of the quieter tragedies in how we relate to each other. to the last funeral you attended. Remember the death of emotion in the room, the stories people shared, the way tears flowed as they finally spoke about how much that person had meant to them. Our culture has taught us to save those words for the eulogy.

0

825.365 - 849.948 John R. Miles

We wait until someone is gone before we express the full weight of their impact on our lives. We leave our deepest gratitude unspoken while they're still here, locked away like a gift we never quite deliver. Walter Green's Say It Now movement grew directly out of this realization. It's a gentle but powerful push to shine a light on our relationships while people can still feel the warmth of it.

0

850.929 - 873.713 John R. Miles

There's a real difference between a general kind word and something much more specific. Saying I love you or you're a great friend carries warmth but it doesn't land with the same force. What truly reaches someone is when you get specific. When you take the time to name the exact moments, the particular advice, or the quiet acts of support that made a difference.

873.733 - 894.926 John R. Miles

When I spoke with Walter, it stayed with me. It made me think about Keith, a teammate from high school. Keith was a very gifted runner, a state champion, I went on to become a collegiate All-American. I was a sophomore at the time, just going through the motions and carrying a lot of self-doubt. Keith took me under his wing. He didn't just push me to run faster.

895.547 - 914.187 John R. Miles

He showed me what real effort and pride looked like. He taught me about discipline, about caring deeply, and about believing I could become a better version of myself. For years, I carried the memory of what he gave me, but I never picked up the phone to tell him exactly how much his presence had shaped me.

Chapter 7: How can you tell someone they matter in a meaningful way?

915.078 - 936.968 John R. Miles

When you sit down and offer that kind of specific appreciation, you're handing the other person a clear mirror. You're showing them moments where their life mattered, often moments they themselves may have long forgotten. It costs us almost nothing, takes very little time, yet it can change the emotional landscape for both of you in ways that linger.

0

937.429 - 960.112 John R. Miles

So that begs the question, how do we actually begin moving from refinement to contribution in our everyday lives? The simple truth is you don't need a big platform, perfect timing, or a grand mission. You start small and close to home. Here are three simple shifts that can help you turn outward in a way that feels sustainable. First, begin with one person.

0

960.693 - 983.898 John R. Miles

The temptation is to wait until you have more time, more energy, or a clearer plan. But waiting usually means doing nothing. Pick just one person whose presence once made a real difference in your life. It might be a mentor, a friend, a teacher, or a family member. Keep it to one. Don't overcomplicate it. Give yourself 30 minutes to sit down and write or prepare what you want to say.

0

984.479 - 1007.577 John R. Miles

That small boundary keeps resistance low and makes the action feel doable. Second, speak with real specificity. This is where the power lives. Skip the general compliments. Instead of saying, you're great, or thanks for everything, tell them exactly what happened. Describe where you were at the time, what season of life you were struggling through.

0

1008.498 - 1024.465 John R. Miles

Share the specific thing they did or said, and then explain how that moment stayed with you and shaped who you became. When I thought about Keith after my conversation with Walter, that's what stood out. It wasn't enough to say he was a good teammate.

1024.445 - 1051.037 John R. Miles

I needed to tell him how lost I felt as a sophomore, how he took time with me anyway, and how the way he carried himself still influences how I show up today. That level of detail turns a nice sentiment into something the other person can actually feel. It hands them a clear mirror of their own impact. Third, let go of needing a particular response. This part can be the hardest.

1051.778 - 1053.439 John R. Miles

Some people will be deeply moved.

Chapter 8: Why is it important to let go of needing a specific response when giving?

1053.96 - 1071.294 John R. Miles

Others might feel awkward, stay silent, or respond briefly because they don't know what to do with that kind of honesty. And that's OK. The value isn't in collecting validation back. The victory is in the act of giving it. It strengthens your own sense of meaning and self-trust.

0

1071.875 - 1094.409 John R. Miles

And if life gets busy and you drift away from this practice for a while, Eric Zimmer's approach offers a kind way to return. Instead of criticizing yourself, simply notice what happened without turning it into a story of failure. Look at the context. What was pulling your attention or energy? Meet yourself with compassion. Then pick one small next step and begin again.

0

1094.969 - 1120.865 John R. Miles

Progress doesn't require perfection. It only asks for gentleness and consistency. This is what Andy Dufresne did so beautifully at the end of his journey. He didn't just escape for his own freedom. He left read a single specific letter hidden under a black volcanic rock in a hayfield in Buxton. No pressure, no expectations, just honest hope and a clear invitation.

0

1121.365 - 1147.468 John R. Miles

That one quiet act became the lifeline that helped pull Red out of his own isolation and gave him the courage to keep going. The truth about your past is that it cannot be rewritten. You cannot optimize it away or outrun it through performance alone. The seasons of isolation, the sudden collapses, the long nights in your own versions of confinement. That is the only material you truly have.

0

1147.989 - 1168.761 John R. Miles

But you get to decide what it means. You can keep polishing old armor, mistaking rigidity for discipline and distance for strength. Or you can let the heat of what you've lived through melt those protections. freeing the energy to move outward into contribution, into real connection, into something that serves more than just yourself.

1169.302 - 1194.7 John R. Miles

This is where the Forged in Adversity journey finds its completion. Not when you feel perfectly healed, but when you began turning what you carried into something that helps others get less alone. One small letter, one honest conversation, one specific word of gratitude at a time. The fire was never there to destroy you. It was there to refine you so what emerges can be passed along.

1195.76 - 1217.515 John R. Miles

Next month, we begin a brand new series here on PassionStruck, The Connection Crisis. We're going to explore why so many of us feel profoundly disconnected from ourselves, from our health, and from each other, and how we find our way back to something real. To launch the series, I'll be sitting down with Eric Rice, bestselling author of The Lean Startup and the new book, Incorruptible.

1217.495 - 1232.51 John R. Miles

why good companies go bad and how great companies stay great. Eric is going to break down how even well-intentioned organizations slowly lose their soul as they succeed and what it takes to build companies and systems that stay true to their original mission.

1233.111 - 1250.653 Eric Rice

Most organizations, frankly, are lying about what they're all about. They have a mission statement that sounds very lofty. But if you read their legal documents, they have a legal purpose that is something different. Quite often they have a lofty purpose. Like I tell the story of Silicon Valley Bank. That was my bank before it collapsed.

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