The Rare On Purpose Podcast with Jay Floyd

Most People Do Not Need More Hype. They Need More Honesty.

15 min · 19 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio Most People Do Not Need More Hype. They Need More Honesty.

Descripción

This episode marks the official launch of The Rare On Purpose Podcast. Jay Floyd opens this new chapter by naming a problem a lot of capable people are living with: a life that looks strong from the outside but feels disconnected on the inside. In this episode, he breaks down why so many people are performing instead of becoming, why clarity matters more than hype, and why leadership gets shaky when identity is borrowed instead of owned. This is not a conversation about image. It is a conversation about alignment. If you have been building, achieving, producing, and showing up for everyone else while quietly feeling off-center, this episode is for you. Jay lays out the mission of the podcast and the standard behind it: identity before image, clarity before noise, ownership before excuses, and leadership that starts within before it ever shows up in a title. Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy [https://ausha.co/privacy-policy] for more information.

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63 episodios

episode A Polished Life Can Still Be a Borrowed One artwork

A Polished Life Can Still Be a Borrowed One

In this episode of The Rare On Purpose Podcast, Jay Floyd breaks down a tension a lot of capable people are living with but rarely name: a life that looks strong, stable, and successful on the outside while feeling disconnected on the inside. This conversation is about what happens when adaptation starts masquerading as identity. When being useful, impressive, dependable, sharp, or high-performing gets rewarded for so long that you stop asking whether that version of you is actually rooted. Jay explores how borrowed identity forms, why it often gets mistaken for maturity, and how it quietly shapes leadership, peace, decision-making, and self-trust. Inside this episode: * Why a borrowed life usually begins with adaptation, not deception * Why the most dangerous misalignment is often the kind that still gets compliments * How borrowed identity shows up in leadership through overexplaining, approval-seeking, overfunctioning, and unstable presence * Why performance can produce results but never produce rootedness * What honest inventory looks like when it is time to stop managing the performance of a life If you have ever felt strangely absent from your own success, this episode will give language to that tension and challenge you to confront what is polished but not rooted. Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy [https://ausha.co/privacy-policy] for more information.

26 de mar de 202617 min
episode Most People Do Not Need More Hype. They Need More Honesty. artwork

Most People Do Not Need More Hype. They Need More Honesty.

This episode marks the official launch of The Rare On Purpose Podcast. Jay Floyd opens this new chapter by naming a problem a lot of capable people are living with: a life that looks strong from the outside but feels disconnected on the inside. In this episode, he breaks down why so many people are performing instead of becoming, why clarity matters more than hype, and why leadership gets shaky when identity is borrowed instead of owned. This is not a conversation about image. It is a conversation about alignment. If you have been building, achieving, producing, and showing up for everyone else while quietly feeling off-center, this episode is for you. Jay lays out the mission of the podcast and the standard behind it: identity before image, clarity before noise, ownership before excuses, and leadership that starts within before it ever shows up in a title. Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy [https://ausha.co/privacy-policy] for more information.

19 de mar de 202615 min
episode Stop Naming What You Don’t Want: Attention Economics 101 artwork

Stop Naming What You Don’t Want: Attention Economics 101

Most people think they’re being “realistic” when they lead with what they don’t want. They’re not. They’re paying attention to the wrong thing, and attention is a currency. You spend it with repetition. In this episode I break down a simple truth using two everyday scenes. First, the coffee shop example where people talk more about what they do not want than what they actually want. Then I anchor it in a personal story from my childhood: I asked my brother to bring me a seafood and crab sub from Subway, changed my mind at the last minute, and he still brought the original. Not out of spite, but because I made myself synonymous with it. Let me be clear. I am not talking manifestation. This is not magic. This is mechanics. What you name and rehearse becomes what your mind searches for, what your mouth amplifies, and what your behavior builds around. Then I widen it to society and politics. Criticism can be necessary, but if all you do is criticize, you become an amplifier. I make the case for becoming the antipattern instead of just calling out the pattern. Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy [https://ausha.co/privacy-policy] for more information.

11 de ene de 202619 min