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The Bed And The Bible: Raw Conversations About Love, Marriage, and Breaking Free From Religious Myths

Podcast de Raw and real — because we almost didn't make it, and someone needs to hear what the other side looks like.

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Historia y religión

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Raw Conversations About Love, Marriage, and Breaking Free From Religious Myths. 38 years married. A faith that's been tested more times than we can count. And conversations we probably should have had a long time ago. This is where Ginta and Andris sit down and just... talk. About marriage. About faith. About the things that were hard and the things that surprised us. About what we're still learning. We're not experts. We're just two people who've been through some things and figured that if it helped us to finally say it out loud — maybe it'll mean something to someone else too. Some weeks it's raw. Some weeks it's funny. Most weeks it's both. We talk about real life — the silence, the misunderstandings, the moments where everything felt too far gone. And the slow, sometimes messy, sometimes beautiful way things can change. If any of it feels familiar, you're welcome here. More of the story lives on our Substack — Darn Epic Life. darnepiclife.substack.com

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2 episodios

episode Reclaiming The Woman Who Disappeared artwork

Reclaiming The Woman Who Disappeared

The Wife Who Disappeared: Recovering the “Born-to-Be” Self Imagine a woman you might know intimately. She sits in the pew next to you on Sundays, or perhaps, if you are being entirely honest, you are her. She is the Christian wife who has done everything “right.” She’s read the pastel-covered marriage books, prayed without ceasing, submitted, and served until her bones ache. She followed the blueprint to the letter. But there is a terrifying reality: when she looks in the mirror, she feels absent from her own life. She is performing a beautifully constructed role rather than being a living, breathing human. This isn’t just physical tiredness; it is a deep, soul-level exhaustion from playing a character in a life that was supposed to be hers. The Trap of Outward Correctness The “disappeared wife” often exists in a state of outward correctness. To the pastor, the neighbors, and the family, the marriage looks healthy and devoted. However, this correctness acts as camouflage. Inside, the woman’s behavior has become a mechanism for her own erasure. We see this clearly in the story of Jinta and Andres, married for 38 years. In 1998, Jinta was writing articles about relentlessly meeting her husband’s needs, assuming his fulfillment was the ultimate metric of her spiritual success. By the year 2000, she was in New Zealand, spending two years on her knees begging God to fix her “communication.” The breakthrough came when a teacher told her: “If it has not changed, then God’s not interested in that. God wants to do something first.” The Lost Relationship to Truth A woman doesn’t disappear in her marriage first; she disappears in her identity. Voicelessness doesn’t always mean literal silence. A disappeared woman might be the loudest person in the room logistically—organizing potlucks and managing the household—but she is voiceless because she no longer knows what is true inside her own body and mind. She learns to “swallow” her true feelings to maintain peace, editing herself until her neural pathways actually adapt to the suppression. Eventually, she loses access to the original script of who she is. The House of Identity: Green vs. Dark To understand this vanishing act, we can look at the House of Identity, which consists of two competing parts: * The Green: Your original, God-given, “born-to-be” purpose. The authentic self. * The Dark: The identity shaped by external expectations, rigid rules, and trauma. Trauma creates a vacuum, and the survival mechanisms a woman adopts become a “dark” false identity—a victim identity. She begins to negotiate life from this dark self, trying to be a “better” or “more submissive” victim rather than stepping out of the role entirely. The “Right-Size” Syndrome Jinta uses the metaphor of Alice in Wonderland to describe the disorientation of this life. Like Alice, the disappeared wife is chronically “wrong-sized.” * In some rooms, she feels “too much”—her needs are too big, her voice too loud—so she drinks the potion to shrink. * In others, she feels microscopic and invisible. She is constantly recalibrating to fit the environment, never feeling settled in her true, God-given size. The Holy Refusal A major hurdle for women in religious contexts is the concept of surrender. However, there is a massive line between biblical surrender and forced self-erasure: * Biblical Surrender is a voluntary act of love offered from a place of wholeness. To lay down your life, you must first possess a life to lay down. * Self-Erasure is a reactive trauma response. God does not call people to become ghosts. Healing begins with a “Holy Refusal”—a conscious decision to stop normalizing numbness and to stop renaming trauma responses with spiritual vocabulary. It is the refusal to let a “dark” identity snuff out the “green” spark of the soul. The Path Back Recovery doesn’t have to take another 38 years. It begins with radical honesty and reclaiming agency. It requires coming clean with oneself and moving from a powerless, adapted identity back toward the “born-to-be” self—the woman you were actually created to be. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darnepiclife.substack.com [https://darnepiclife.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

5 de abr de 2026 - 36 min
episode "Pray Together, Stay Together" — The Slogan That Was Quietly Destroying Our Marriage artwork

"Pray Together, Stay Together" — The Slogan That Was Quietly Destroying Our Marriage

We believed it. 38 years together. Decades of faith. And somewhere in the middle of all that, we were sitting in bed — side by side — praying together. And we were miserable. Not because prayer is wrong. But because what was happening in that bed wasn’t prayer. It was something else entirely. Andris was praying at me. Using God as a middleman to deliver the message he couldn’t say to my face. “Lord, help her understand...” — while I lay there, walls going up, thinking that is not true. And I was fighting back the only way I knew how — with Bible verses. Holy warfare. Very spiritual. Completely destructive. We prayed together. We were emotionally disconnected. Sometimes it made things worse. Here’s what the research turned up — and it stopped us cold. “The couple that prays together, stays together” is not Scripture. It’s not ancient wisdom. It was written in 1947 by a Catholic advertising copywriter named Al Scalpone, hired to promote a rosary campaign. It was a marketing slogan. It spread through Billy Graham crusades, Christian radio, the family values movement — and by the time it reached us, everyone assumed God said it. He didn’t. And the damage that slogan does is quiet. When your marriage is falling apart despite the praying — the built-in conclusion is that you failed. You didn’t pray enough. Your heart wasn’t clean enough. You didn’t have enough faith. The mountain didn’t move because something was wrong with you. We carried that guilt. We almost divorced — more than once — and somehow the prayer formula just loaded more shame onto what was already breaking. Here’s what we actually needed, and nobody told us: ✅ Learning how to say what was really happening inside. Learning how to listen — not to respond, not to win, but to actually hear. Understanding that the truth was somewhere neither of us could fully see yet. ✅ Prayer is good. We still pray. But prayer was never meant to be a transaction — input this ritual, receive this outcome. When it becomes that, it stops being faith and starts being something closer to superstition. Or worse — a weapon. ✅ A family can pray every morning at the breakfast table and be emotionally disconnected, quietly controlled, slowly dying inside. ✅ Staying together takes more than a slogan. It always did. This is our first episode. 38 years in. A few almost-endings. And finally — honest conversation about what the church handed us and what we had to unlearn. There’s a lot more where this came from. — Ginta & Andris This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darnepiclife.substack.com [https://darnepiclife.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

9 de mar de 2026 - 21 min
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Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
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