What if grief could be a compass that points you back to a life you actually want to live? Mark opens up about losing his father, a dear friend nearing the end of life, and the moments that cracked him open to Dharma teachings that changed the tone of his mind. This is not a tidy set of hacks. It’s a raw, steadying invitation to face impermanence, name the inner critic, and choose action over perfection while there’s still time on the clock.
We move from Stoic reminders—memento mori and the urgency of a single day—to practical, humane tools that make a difference when the mind turns against itself. You’ll learn how to spot the critic’s script and defuse it with humor, how to make the activity the reward so outcomes stop owning you, and how simple practices like meditation, journaling, and honest conversation create room to breathe. Along the way, we explore why love and service sit beneath so much of our striving, and how asking for help is adult courage, not a confession of failure.
Anchored by Oliver Sacks’s luminous words on gratitude and uniqueness, the conversation returns, again and again, to a fierce kind of encouragement: stop waiting. Write the page. Call the friend. Sit with your feelings without making them enemies. Open like a flower rather than bracing against the wind. Doubt won’t vanish, but authenticity grows when you act with a softer inner voice and a clearer sense of time’s value. If this resonates, subscribe, share with someone who needs it, and leave a review so others can find the show. Then tell us: what will you start before sunset?
If you’re tired of doing this work alone, I offer a free conversation to help you get clear on your next steps. Apply Here when you’re ready.