AlignedLife with Justin Castelli

The Five: Something Left To Notice

26 min · 9. Juni 2026
Episode The Five: Something Left To Notice Cover

Beschreibung

Every week on The Five, we find one headline and one deeper idea across all five pillars of aligned living — Spirit, Mind, Body, Money, and Creativity — and ask what they mean for the life you're actually trying to build. This week, one question ran through all five pillars: what are you still keeping for yourself? Not dramatically. Not as a manifesto. Just as an honest look at how many small handoffs we make every day — our decisions, our attention, our spiritual search, our sense of what our money is for — and what accumulates when we stop asking who's actually in charge. In Spirit, we look at what happens when technology quietly absorbs the functions religion used to serve — and what gets lost in the substitution. In Mind, we get into new data on AI and decision-making, and the philosophical argument that judgment isn't just useful, it's constitutive — you can't fully delegate it without losing something about who you are. In Body, we look at the longevity movement and the uncomfortable finding hiding inside it: the strongest predictors of a long, healthy life aren't cellular. They're purpose and connection. In Money, we sit with the gap between what people say they value and where their money actually goes — and make the case that the antidote isn't discipline, it's clarity. And in Creativity, Rick Rubin's The Creative Act makes the argument that creativity begins with noticing — and that in a world engineered to capture your attention, protecting the capacity to notice is its own kind of practice. Five pillars. Five Conversations. This is The Five.

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Episode The Five: Something Left To Notice Cover

The Five: Something Left To Notice

Every week on The Five, we find one headline and one deeper idea across all five pillars of aligned living — Spirit, Mind, Body, Money, and Creativity — and ask what they mean for the life you're actually trying to build. This week, one question ran through all five pillars: what are you still keeping for yourself? Not dramatically. Not as a manifesto. Just as an honest look at how many small handoffs we make every day — our decisions, our attention, our spiritual search, our sense of what our money is for — and what accumulates when we stop asking who's actually in charge. In Spirit, we look at what happens when technology quietly absorbs the functions religion used to serve — and what gets lost in the substitution. In Mind, we get into new data on AI and decision-making, and the philosophical argument that judgment isn't just useful, it's constitutive — you can't fully delegate it without losing something about who you are. In Body, we look at the longevity movement and the uncomfortable finding hiding inside it: the strongest predictors of a long, healthy life aren't cellular. They're purpose and connection. In Money, we sit with the gap between what people say they value and where their money actually goes — and make the case that the antidote isn't discipline, it's clarity. And in Creativity, Rick Rubin's The Creative Act makes the argument that creativity begins with noticing — and that in a world engineered to capture your attention, protecting the capacity to notice is its own kind of practice. Five pillars. Five Conversations. This is The Five.

9. Juni 202626 min
Episode The Five: The Hidden Cost Of The Perfect Self Cover

The Five: The Hidden Cost Of The Perfect Self

Every week on The Five, we find one headline and one deeper idea across all five pillars of aligned living — Spirit, Mind, Body, Money, and Creativity — and ask what they mean for the life you're actually trying to build. This week, a clip went viral that most people laughed at. Steven Bartlett — host of one of the world's most listened-to podcasts — said that three glasses of wine "ruined three days of his life." The internet mocked him. Brad Stulberg wrote about it. And we decided to use it as a mirror. Because the real question isn't whether wine is bad for you. It's what it means when the pursuit of your best self makes you so brittle that one disruption breaks three days. And whether that story — in some form — is living in you too. In Spirit, we look at what the Global Wellness Summit is calling the over-optimization backlash — and what it says about the inner life hiding behind all the metrics. In Mind, we sit with Brad Stulberg's identity fragility framework and the question no sleep score can answer: who are you when you're not performing well? In Body, we give the physiology its due — and then ask whether there's a difference between listening to your body and managing it. In Money, we get into the economy built on optimization anxiety — and then break down the headlines actually moving markets right now, from the Moody's credit downgrade to the Fed freeze to what rising bond yields mean for your financial plan. And in Creativity, we make the case for the one thing optimization can't produce: looseness. Five pillars. Five Conversations. This is The Five.

1. Juni 202639 min
Episode The Five: "The Constraint Is The Point" Cover

The Five: "The Constraint Is The Point"

Every week on The Five, we find one headline and one deeper idea across all five pillars of aligned living — Spirit, Mind, Body, Money, and Creativity — and ask what they mean for the life you're actually trying to build. This week, one thread ran through every single pillar before we even went looking for it: friction. Deliberate, chosen friction. There's an ancient case for silence that a noisy culture keeps trying to drown out — and it turns out the doorway to your inner life may be quieter than you think. Research is finally putting a clinical name to the loop that keeps running in your head, and the distinction it draws between rumination and reflection changes everything. Scientists keep confirming what our ancestors knew: the human body was built to move through nature, not around a track. A growing movement of Americans is choosing to close their wallets on purpose — and what they're discovering isn't deprivation. It's something closer to enough. And a generation raised on infinite digital photos is choosing film cameras with 27 frames and no delete button — because it turns out the constraint is the point. Five pillars. Five Conversations. This is The Five. Intro music by Dylan Sitts, "Dying Daylight" For all of the show notes for today's episode:

18. Mai 202632 min
Episode The Five: "You Can't Think Your Way Through This" Cover

The Five: "You Can't Think Your Way Through This"

Most of us are trying to think our way through things that can only be lived through. This week on The Five — new research out of a leading journal reframes the entire relationship between faith and belief, and the finding might surprise you. Neuroscientists are finally giving us a better map for one of the most universal human experiences — one that the five stages model got wrong for decades. We look at the one recovery tool that outperforms every supplement, every protocol, and every performance hack — and that most of us are chronically underusing. Economic uncertainty is showing up not just in receipts and savings accounts, but in the life decisions people are quietly putting on hold — and what that's really costing them. And we make the case for a form of creativity that doesn't care about followers, platforms, or output — and why it might be the most honest thing you do all week. Five pillars. Five Conversations. This is The Five. Intro music by Dylan Sitts, "Dying Daylight" For all of the show notes for today's episode:

11. Mai 202629 min
Episode The Five: "What You Actually Stand On Cover

The Five: "What You Actually Stand On

Every week on The Five, we find one headline and one deeper idea across all five pillars of aligned living — Spirit, Mind, Body, Money, and Creativity — and ask what they mean for the life you're actually trying to build. This week, one question surfaced across all five pillars without us looking for it: what do you actually stand on? A generation of young men is quietly walking back into churches — not because someone told them to, but because the secular alternatives stopped working. New research suggests that nearly half of your mental health outcomes may come down to a single variable that has nothing to do with your circumstances. The GLP-1 revolution is reshaping millions of bodies faster than we've had time to figure out what we actually believe about them. Economic anxiety is forcing Americans to make spending decisions They haven't had to make in years — and what people choose to protect when money gets tight reveals more about their values than any budget ever could. And across the country, people are putting down their phones and picking up yarn, paintbrushes, and craft kits — and gathering around tables to make things together. Five pillars. Five Conversations. This is The Five. Intro music by Dylan Sitts, "Dying Daylight" For all of the show notes for today's episode:

4. Mai 202626 min