The Call to Harmony
In this episode, Stan and Tucker sit down with Madeline Hale — a fourth-generation member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, born just outside Glasgow and now running a hair salon in London. Madeline traces her spiritual life all the way back to childhood: from the time she was, in her words, "a wee tiny girl," she was taught she could speak directly with God and that she was known, wanted, and sent here on purpose. That early, unshakeable sense of belonging settled into her before she had any language for it, and it quietly carried her through decades of everyday emotions. Madeline doesn't shy away from her reputation, though: she's got a famously quick temper — "every stereotype you know about a Scottish person," as she puts it — and for years that fire showed up as real resentment toward her faith community: sharp words, short patience, not much listening. Then came a pandemic-era turning point that changed things. Madeline describes a shift so total that her whole world became purely spirituality for a while, and how that season reshaped her relationship to God, to herself, and to the people around her. She introduces the idea of "transmission" — her word for a wordless, almost cellular sense of connection that passes between people without anyone saying a thing. She and the hosts also dig into Stan's framework of the three foundational relationships (to self, to the divine, and to others), and what happens when one of them breaks and takes the other two down with it. What's most refreshing is what didn't change: Madeline is upfront that people still irritate her plenty — the fire's still there. What's different is the space between the spark and the response, and the fierce love that's underneath it now. The episode closes with a short heart-centered practice led by Tucker.
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