The Morning Share

60. Can We Restore Our Wonder For One Another?

1 h 7 min · 5 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio 60. Can We Restore Our Wonder For One Another?

Descripción

Have you ever walked through an entire day surrounded by people—and barely noticed any of them? In this final conversation of the week, Angela and Deanna explore a question that feels more urgent than ever: Can we restore our wonder for humanity? In a world moving at the speed of efficiency, it’s easy to see people as obstacles, categories, distractions, or simply part of the background. But what if every person we encounter is carrying a story, a struggle, a hope, or a grief we cannot see? Together, they unpack what it means to truly notice people again—to make eye contact, to listen with curiosity, to resist assumptions, and to move from transactions to genuine human connection. Along the way, they wrestle with invisibility, vulnerability, dignity, and the small daily practices that can soften our hearts toward one another. What if restoring wonder doesn’t begin with changing the world—but with learning to see the person standing right in front of us? Timestamps 00:00 — Can We Restore Our Wonder for Humanity? 06:02 — Why Being Seen Changes Us 13:46 — Presence vs. Simply Being There 20:29 — From Transaction to Interaction 30:21 — The People We Make Invisible 45:50 — Who Are You Most Prone Not to See as a Gift? 55:33 — Practical Ways to Restore Wonder in Daily Life Show Music: Just Like Me by, ThruLine The Morning Share Podcast is produced, edited, and mixed by Angela Boeckman and Deanna West. Socials Website: themorningshare.com [http://themorningshare.com] Instagram: @themorningsharepod Substack: themorningshare.substack.com [http://themorningshare.substack.com]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Morning Share!

Empezar

2 meses por 1 €

Después 4,99 € / mes · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts exclusivos
  • 20 horas de audiolibros / mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

65 episodios

Portada del episodio 63. How Do We Become Good Ancestors?

63. How Do We Become Good Ancestors?

What does it mean to live as a good ancestor? In this episode, we explore the difference between leaving a legacy and becoming someone whose life makes the way easier, kinder, and more whole for those who come after. We talk about influence beyond biology, the people who shaped us without needing recognition, and the quiet gifts we inherit from teachers, mentors, elders, friends, and communities. From cathedrals built over generations to sewing machines passed down with skill and memory, this conversation invites us to think beyond quick impact and ask better questions: What have I received? What am I releasing? What am I building that might last? And maybe most importantly: how can I make life better for someone else today, even in small ways? Timestamps 00:00 – The Tree We’ll Never Sit Under 02:44 – We Are Already Ancestors 04:21 – “I Don’t Have Children…” 08:13 – Thinking Long-Haul 09:26 – IKEA vs. Cathedrals 11:00 – The Cathedral Builders 12:48 – Living Between Present and Future 14:27 – Both Ancestor and Descendant 15:25 – Legacy vs. Ancestor A powerful distinction 17:27 – The Defining Question 18:07 – Gifts That Continue Giving 19:28 – Leaving Behind the Ability to Change Your Mind 20:30 – What Are You Actually Passing On? 22:06 – Practical Ways to Begin Show Music: Just Like Me by, ThruLine The Morning Share Podcast is produced, edited, and mixed by Angela Boeckman and Deanna West. Socials Website: themorningshare.com [http://themorningshare.com] Instagram: @themorningsharepod Substack: themorningshare.substack.com [http://themorningshare.substack.com]

Ayer27 min
Portada del episodio 62. Wisdom, Wounds, and Inheritance

62. Wisdom, Wounds, and Inheritance

What have you inherited—and what are you choosing to pass on? In this episode, Angela and Deanna continue their conversation about generations, exploring the wisdom, wounds, habits, and beliefs we receive from those who came before us. Through the imagery of a forest path, they reflect on the difference between information and instruction, the importance of discernment, and how every generation has something valuable to teach the others. Together, they discuss inherited strengths, family patterns, curiosity, respect across generations, and the ongoing work of deciding what to keep, heal, release, and share. Because the goal isn’t blind preservation or total rejection—it’s thoughtful participation in a story bigger than ourselves. Timestamps 00:00 – What have you inherited? 03:00 – When information becomes instruction 05:00 – Why some paths need to be rerouted 13:00 – Personal stories of inherited wisdom 18:00 – We inherit wounds, too 23:00 – What children and youth can teach us 28:00 – Respect, disagreement, and generational growth 31:55 – Becoming editors of our inheritance Show Music: Just Like Me by, ThruLine The Morning Share Podcast is produced, edited, and mixed by Angela Boeckman and Deanna West. Socials Website: themorningshare.com [http://themorningshare.com] Instagram: @themorningsharepod Substack: themorningshare.substack.com [http://themorningshare.substack.com]

10 de jun de 202634 min
Portada del episodio 61. The Footprints of Every Generation

61. The Footprints of Every Generation

What if one of the greatest forms of wisdom isn’t found within our own generation at all? In this episode, Angela and Deanna explore the beauty, responsibility, and necessity of living intergenerationally. From the traits we inherit from those who came before us to the gifts we’re called to pass on, they reflect on how children, youth, adults, and elders each carry something essential for the whole human story. Together, they unpack the growing reality of age segregation, the hidden cost of loneliness, and why presence may be one of the most powerful gifts we can offer one another. Through stories of grandparents, grandchildren, classrooms, communities, and life around the table, this conversation reminds us that we were never meant to journey through life only with people our own age. What wisdom have you inherited? What wisdom are you carrying forward? And who might you need to learn from next? Timestamps 00:00 - New week, new glasses, and inherited traits  04:02 - Who shaped the person you’ve become?  09:27 - What younger generations teach us  15:41 - Why teenagers are often underestimated  23:37 - Adults as bridges between generations  28:24 - The rise of age segregation  32:00 - Loneliness, community, and what’s at stake  35:06 - Real-world examples of intergenerational living  41:20 - Footprints, trails, and carrying the story forward  45:00 - One human story stretched across time Show Music: Just Like Me by, ThruLine The Morning Share Podcast is produced, edited, and mixed by Angela Boeckman and Deanna West. Socials Website: themorningshare.com [http://themorningshare.com] Instagram: @themorningsharepod Substack: themorningshare.substack.com [http://themorningshare.substack.com] Resources Mentioned Project Unlonely, [https://www.artandhealing.org/book/] by Jeremy Nobel

8 de jun de 202647 min
Portada del episodio 60. Can We Restore Our Wonder For One Another?

60. Can We Restore Our Wonder For One Another?

Have you ever walked through an entire day surrounded by people—and barely noticed any of them? In this final conversation of the week, Angela and Deanna explore a question that feels more urgent than ever: Can we restore our wonder for humanity? In a world moving at the speed of efficiency, it’s easy to see people as obstacles, categories, distractions, or simply part of the background. But what if every person we encounter is carrying a story, a struggle, a hope, or a grief we cannot see? Together, they unpack what it means to truly notice people again—to make eye contact, to listen with curiosity, to resist assumptions, and to move from transactions to genuine human connection. Along the way, they wrestle with invisibility, vulnerability, dignity, and the small daily practices that can soften our hearts toward one another. What if restoring wonder doesn’t begin with changing the world—but with learning to see the person standing right in front of us? Timestamps 00:00 — Can We Restore Our Wonder for Humanity? 06:02 — Why Being Seen Changes Us 13:46 — Presence vs. Simply Being There 20:29 — From Transaction to Interaction 30:21 — The People We Make Invisible 45:50 — Who Are You Most Prone Not to See as a Gift? 55:33 — Practical Ways to Restore Wonder in Daily Life Show Music: Just Like Me by, ThruLine The Morning Share Podcast is produced, edited, and mixed by Angela Boeckman and Deanna West. Socials Website: themorningshare.com [http://themorningshare.com] Instagram: @themorningsharepod Substack: themorningshare.substack.com [http://themorningshare.substack.com]

5 de jun de 20261 h 7 min
Portada del episodio 59. Would You Still Want Me If I Stopped Being Useful?

59. Would You Still Want Me If I Stopped Being Useful?

In Episode 59, Angela and Deanna sit with the ache of disconnection and ask what happens when we start seeing people as useful, ranked, labeled, or “other” instead of sacred. With honesty, humor, and a field trip to Mend Coffee, they explore dignity, disability, belonging, and why visibility is not the same thing as connection. This conversation is an invitation to slow down, pay attention, and recover tenderness toward the people right in front of us. Timestamps 00:00 - Seeing humanity differently 01:45 - First impressions and friendship 06:10 - Eyes, heart, and compassion 08:06 - Visibility is not connection 12:36 - Usefulness, ranking, and human worth 23:36 - Why speed makes us careless 27:37 - Otherness, belonging, and dignity 29:37 - Lessons from Mend Coffee 36:25 - Why we fear difference 39:21 - Recovering tenderness Show Music: Just Like Me by, ThruLine The Morning Share Podcast is produced, edited, and mixed by Angela Boeckman and Deanna West. Socials Website: themorningshare.com [http://themorningshare.com] Instagram: @themorningsharepod Substack: themorningshare.substack.com [http://themorningshare.substack.com]

3 de jun de 202641 min