AlignedLife with Justin Castelli

The Five: Something Left To Notice

26 min · 9. juni 2026
episode The Five: Something Left To Notice cover

Beskrivelse

Every week on The Five, we find one headline and one deeper idea across all five pillars of aligned living — Spirit, Mind, Body, Money, and Creativity — and ask what they mean for the life you're actually trying to build. This week, one question ran through all five pillars: what are you still keeping for yourself? Not dramatically. Not as a manifesto. Just as an honest look at how many small handoffs we make every day — our decisions, our attention, our spiritual search, our sense of what our money is for — and what accumulates when we stop asking who's actually in charge. In Spirit, we look at what happens when technology quietly absorbs the functions religion used to serve — and what gets lost in the substitution. In Mind, we get into new data on AI and decision-making, and the philosophical argument that judgment isn't just useful, it's constitutive — you can't fully delegate it without losing something about who you are. In Body, we look at the longevity movement and the uncomfortable finding hiding inside it: the strongest predictors of a long, healthy life aren't cellular. They're purpose and connection. In Money, we sit with the gap between what people say they value and where their money actually goes — and make the case that the antidote isn't discipline, it's clarity. And in Creativity, Rick Rubin's The Creative Act makes the argument that creativity begins with noticing — and that in a world engineered to capture your attention, protecting the capacity to notice is its own kind of practice. Five pillars. Five Conversations. This is The Five.

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299 Episoder

episode The Five: "Before You Knew Better' cover

The Five: "Before You Knew Better'

Every week on The Five, we find one headline and one deeper idea across all five pillars of aligned living — Spirit, Mind, Body, Money, and Creativity — and ask what they mean for the life you're actually trying to build. This week, one thread ran through every pillar before we went looking for it: the things you gave up in the process of becoming competent. In Spirit, the science of awe — why the emotion that makes you feel small might be one of the most important things you can regularly experience, and what happens when you stop letting yourself be stopped. In Mind, the case for boredom — new research confirms that the idle hour isn't wasted time, it's where your best thinking actually happens, and most of us have engineered it out of our lives. In Body, we get into Zone 2 cardio — the slow, unglamorous training that fitness culture ignores and the longevity science says you can't skip. In Money, the financial shame loop — why anxiety about money is rarely a math problem, and how avoidance makes it worse — plus the latest on the Fed's rate decision under Warsh, May CPI, the jobs report, and where the market stands. And in Creativity, we look at the research on adult play — what Dr. Stuart Brown found across 6,000 life histories, why the opposite of play is depression, and what your eight-year-old self might still be trying to tell you. Five pillars. Five conversations. This is The Five.

29. juni 202626 min
episode The Five: "Loosen Your Grip" cover

The Five: "Loosen Your Grip"

Every week on The Five, we find one headline and one deeper idea across all five pillars of aligned living — Spirit, Mind, Body, Money, and Creativity — and ask what they mean for the life you're actually trying to build. This week, one thread ran through every pillar before we went looking for it: what you're holding too tight. In Spirit, new research across 22 countries confirms what the theologians and the neuroscientists are finally agreeing on — forgiveness isn't a gift you give someone else, it's a weight you put down yourself. In Mind, we look at what it actually means that the average on-screen attention span is now 47 seconds — not just for productivity, but for your capacity to think, to believe, to know what you actually want. In Body, we get into VO2 max and the dementia data, and why your cardiovascular fitness right now is a record of everything you've done with your body for years — not a summary of last week. In Money, we make the case that your bank statement is a self-portrait — and most of us haven't looked at it that way. And in Creativity, we look at what the research says about boredom: that the empty hour isn't nothing. It's where your thinking actually happens. Five pillars. Five conversations. This is The Five. This week's sponsor: AlignedLife Community https://www.alignedlife.community/

23. juni 202626 min
episode The Five: "Show Up Anyway" cover

The Five: "Show Up Anyway"

Every week on The Five, we find one headline and one deeper idea across all five pillars of aligned living—Spirit, Mind, Body, Money, and Creativity—and ask what they mean for the life you're actually trying to build. This week, one thread ran through every pillar before we went looking for it: showing up. Not dramatically. Not as a resolution. Just the ordinary, recurring act of being present — to a practice, a community, a conversation, a physical discipline, a room full of people making something together—on the weeks when it would be just as easy not to. In Spirit, we look at new research suggesting that consistent communal practice predicts happiness more than wealth—and ask what your version of that practice actually is. In Mind, we get into what researchers call cognitive offloading—the way AI dependence quietly erodes the critical-thinking muscle when you stop using it. In Body, the longevity data keeps pointing at the same variable: not intensity, but consistency—and what it actually takes to keep showing up to the physical work. In Money, we look at why families avoid inheritance and wealth transfer conversations, and what it costs the people you love when you keep deferring the ones that need to happen. And in Creativity, we explore why community choir research is now informing NHS mental health programs—and what it says about the kind of making that can only happen when everyone's in the room at the same time. Five pillars. Five conversations. This is The Five. This show's sponsor: the AlignedLife Community https://www.alignedlife.community/

15. juni 202623 min
episode The Five: Something Left To Notice cover

The Five: Something Left To Notice

Every week on The Five, we find one headline and one deeper idea across all five pillars of aligned living — Spirit, Mind, Body, Money, and Creativity — and ask what they mean for the life you're actually trying to build. This week, one question ran through all five pillars: what are you still keeping for yourself? Not dramatically. Not as a manifesto. Just as an honest look at how many small handoffs we make every day — our decisions, our attention, our spiritual search, our sense of what our money is for — and what accumulates when we stop asking who's actually in charge. In Spirit, we look at what happens when technology quietly absorbs the functions religion used to serve — and what gets lost in the substitution. In Mind, we get into new data on AI and decision-making, and the philosophical argument that judgment isn't just useful, it's constitutive — you can't fully delegate it without losing something about who you are. In Body, we look at the longevity movement and the uncomfortable finding hiding inside it: the strongest predictors of a long, healthy life aren't cellular. They're purpose and connection. In Money, we sit with the gap between what people say they value and where their money actually goes — and make the case that the antidote isn't discipline, it's clarity. And in Creativity, Rick Rubin's The Creative Act makes the argument that creativity begins with noticing — and that in a world engineered to capture your attention, protecting the capacity to notice is its own kind of practice. Five pillars. Five Conversations. This is The Five.

9. juni 202626 min
episode The Five: The Hidden Cost Of The Perfect Self cover

The Five: The Hidden Cost Of The Perfect Self

Every week on The Five, we find one headline and one deeper idea across all five pillars of aligned living — Spirit, Mind, Body, Money, and Creativity — and ask what they mean for the life you're actually trying to build. This week, a clip went viral that most people laughed at. Steven Bartlett — host of one of the world's most listened-to podcasts — said that three glasses of wine "ruined three days of his life." The internet mocked him. Brad Stulberg wrote about it. And we decided to use it as a mirror. Because the real question isn't whether wine is bad for you. It's what it means when the pursuit of your best self makes you so brittle that one disruption breaks three days. And whether that story — in some form — is living in you too. In Spirit, we look at what the Global Wellness Summit is calling the over-optimization backlash — and what it says about the inner life hiding behind all the metrics. In Mind, we sit with Brad Stulberg's identity fragility framework and the question no sleep score can answer: who are you when you're not performing well? In Body, we give the physiology its due — and then ask whether there's a difference between listening to your body and managing it. In Money, we get into the economy built on optimization anxiety — and then break down the headlines actually moving markets right now, from the Moody's credit downgrade to the Fed freeze to what rising bond yields mean for your financial plan. And in Creativity, we make the case for the one thing optimization can't produce: looseness. Five pillars. Five Conversations. This is The Five.

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