The Blue Collar Buddha Podcast

Episode 49 | Trigger Warning — You Are Responsible For Your Own Choices (Yes, Even That One)

17 min · 15. heinä 2026
jakson Episode 49 | Trigger Warning — You Are Responsible For Your Own Choices (Yes, Even That One) kansikuva

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Here's your trigger warning. I didn't get a fucking “trigger warning” the morning  I found my son Malachi’s lifeless body on July 31st, 1999. There was no one there standing with their hands up and asking if I was “ready” or offering me “warning” that what I was about to experience was going to so fundamentally change me that even now, in 2026, I would not ever understand. Trigger. Warning. My son Malachi was born May 20th, 1999. He was dead July 31st, 1999. He was 2.5 months old.  I'm the one who found him. And I can promise you, again, as I said — no one walked in beforehand and said to me, with that warm look that says “this shit is gonna hurt. Bad.” No, “hey, this might be difficult.” Trigger. Warning. So when I hear about trigger warnings on university campuses, in classrooms, before conversations that might be uncomfortable — I have some thoughts. Not because pain isn't real. It is. Not because difficult experiences don't leave marks. They do. But because somewhere along the way we decided that other people are responsible for managing our emotional responses to information — and that decision has cost us something. This episode is about that cost.  About the difference between what happened to you and what you're doing with it right now. About the fact that your father, your ex, your childhood, the person who called you a name — none of them are in the room with you right now. What's in the room is your thinking about them. And that part is yours. You participated in every single thing you've ever experienced. That's not blame.  That's the most liberating thing I know how to say. Also: a hawk flew by at the end of this recording.  Make of that what you will. This is from the archive. 2023.  Malachi would have been almost 24. He’s still dead in 2026. No almost 27. Trigger. Warning.

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jakson Episode 49 | Trigger Warning — You Are Responsible For Your Own Choices (Yes, Even That One) kansikuva

Episode 49 | Trigger Warning — You Are Responsible For Your Own Choices (Yes, Even That One)

Here's your trigger warning. I didn't get a fucking “trigger warning” the morning  I found my son Malachi’s lifeless body on July 31st, 1999. There was no one there standing with their hands up and asking if I was “ready” or offering me “warning” that what I was about to experience was going to so fundamentally change me that even now, in 2026, I would not ever understand. Trigger. Warning. My son Malachi was born May 20th, 1999. He was dead July 31st, 1999. He was 2.5 months old.  I'm the one who found him. And I can promise you, again, as I said — no one walked in beforehand and said to me, with that warm look that says “this shit is gonna hurt. Bad.” No, “hey, this might be difficult.” Trigger. Warning. So when I hear about trigger warnings on university campuses, in classrooms, before conversations that might be uncomfortable — I have some thoughts. Not because pain isn't real. It is. Not because difficult experiences don't leave marks. They do. But because somewhere along the way we decided that other people are responsible for managing our emotional responses to information — and that decision has cost us something. This episode is about that cost.  About the difference between what happened to you and what you're doing with it right now. About the fact that your father, your ex, your childhood, the person who called you a name — none of them are in the room with you right now. What's in the room is your thinking about them. And that part is yours. You participated in every single thing you've ever experienced. That's not blame.  That's the most liberating thing I know how to say. Also: a hawk flew by at the end of this recording.  Make of that what you will. This is from the archive. 2023.  Malachi would have been almost 24. He’s still dead in 2026. No almost 27. Trigger. Warning.

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jakson Episode 48 | Sourcing — Why Knowing Where The Cow Came From Won't Make The Steak Taste Better kansikuva

Episode 48 | Sourcing — Why Knowing Where The Cow Came From Won't Make The Steak Taste Better

This is an archive episode that was originally created on April 28, 2023 at 7:48 AM, and when you hear different details within the episode, that's why. So much has "changed" over the years since I first began making the episodes.... ______________ I want you to imagine your favorite meal at your favorite restaurant. You already know what you want. You put in your order. And then — do you ask where they sourced the beef? Whether the cow was grass-fed or industrially farmed? Whether the chef went to the right school? Whether the pipes carrying the natural gas have been recently inspected? You don't. You just eat the steak. This episode is about why we apply a completely different standard to our own lives — why we've been convinced that we need to know the full sourcing history of our pain before we're allowed to enjoy the present. That if we could just go back and identify the exact moment that broke something, we could fix it, and then finally be happy. The steak hasn't changed. Only your perception of it has. And your perception changed the moment you started thinking about the supply chain instead of the meal in front of you. There is no separation between your nows. The only moment you have is this one. And the source of your father's rage, the origin of your self-concept wounds, the history of every relationship that didn't work — knowing all of it is not what changes how you feel about yourself right now. What changes how you feel about yourself right now is what you're thinking and feeling right now. That's the whole thing. That's the episode.

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jakson Episode 47 | The Biggest Lie You Tell Yourself Every Day — And It's Not What You Think kansikuva

Episode 47 | The Biggest Lie You Tell Yourself Every Day — And It's Not What You Think

I lied my ass off as a kid. Not because I was a bad person. Because I was trying not to get beaten. When the truth was going to get you hurt, you learned fast that whatever kept you safe was worth saying — evidence be damned. That's where it started. But it didn't stay there. By the time I was dating, I was telling a woman I was thinking about becoming a vegetarian. I was not thinking about becoming a vegetarian. I was thinking about getting in her underwear. But the lie came out before I could stop it because somewhere in my self-concept was a belief that who I actually was — a steak-eating, imperfect, complicated man — wasn't going to be enough. That's the lie this episode is really about. Not the ones we tell other people. The one we tell ourselves every single day: that we're not lovable. That we don't measure up. That if people really knew who we were — the imaginary friends we had as kids, the marriages we failed, the standards we couldn't meet — they'd leave. We've been building that case for decades. Exhibit A: you didn't meet your parents' standard. Exhibit B: you didn't meet the relationship standard. Exhibit C: you didn't meet the cultural standard. The list goes on until the verdict feels inevitable. But here's the thing nobody says out loud: if you can lie to yourself that you're unlovable, you can lie to yourself that you're not. You're already doing it. The question is just which direction you're pointing it. This is from the archive. The foundation of everything that came after.

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jakson Sunday Stroll 07 | Let Me Clear A Few Things Up kansikuva

Sunday Stroll 07 | Let Me Clear A Few Things Up

This is Sunday Stroll 07. I've been getting emails. Some of you think I'm anti-religion. Some of you think I'm telling you to leave your marriage. Some of you think I'm saying the people who hurt you don't matter. None of that is what I said. So let's clear it up. If you're Muslim, Christian, Mormon, atheist, or crystal-gazing — I genuinely don't care, and I mean that in the best possible way. What I care about is whether it's working for you. If it is, stay in it fully and thrive. If it isn't, maybe something here is useful. That's the whole offer. On relationships: I'm not telling you to stay or go. What I'm saying is that the other person is not actually the variable you have access to. You are. That's not dismissing what they did or how it hurt. It's pointing to the only place where anything can actually change — which is you, your awareness, your internal conversation with yourself about what you're actually feeling and why. And yes — I actually cannot make you feel anything. Neither can the person who hurt you, not in the way we've been taught to think about it. They can be a catalyst. They can be a very real variable. But the feeling itself is yours. Always has been. This is about you being in a place emotionally to learn, perhaps, another way to speak to and with yourself in a way that allows you to feel your way to you. And a reminder that nothing I've ever said here was designed to hurt you — even when it lands that way.

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jakson Episode 46 | Dating, The Club, And The Ritual That Never Actually Worked — Here's Why kansikuva

Episode 46 | Dating, The Club, And The Ritual That Never Actually Worked — Here's Why

You know the ritual. Pre-drinks at home. The outfit deliberation. The cologne decision. The mirror check. The mental rehearsal of how the night is going to go. The absolute certainty that this Friday is the Friday. I did all of it. Multiple times. For years. And here's what nobody said out loud while I was doing it: the person who told me to go to the club didn't have what I was looking for either. I was taking advice from someone just as single, just as lost, just as convinced that the next venue was going to be the one. This episode is about dating — not as a generational conversation, because ghosting isn't new and neither is loneliness — but as a self-concept conversation. About the compulsive external search for something that lives internally. The club, the church, the workplace, the mall, the app — I tried all of them. Kept changing the location. Kept getting the same result. Because the location was never the variable. I was. And nobody sat me down and asked the question that would have saved me years of searching: what do you actually want, and why are you looking for it the way you're looking for it? I didn't know the answer. I didn't even know how to ask it. And so I kept going back out on Saturday, convincing myself that this time would be different. It wasn't. Until I finally stopped looking out there and started asking in here.

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