エピソード

  • The Part of You That Needs to Die (If You Want to Change Your Life)
    2026/03/24

    We all say we want to change our lives.

    A better career. A stronger relationship. A deeper sense of purpose.

    But most people never do.

    Not because they don’t want to… but because real change requires something we spend our entire lives trying to avoid.

    Letting go of who we’ve been.

    In this episode, we explore the hidden relationship between fear, identity, and transformation through the story of Josh Liles—a former high-performing real estate professional who came face to face with death during a craniosacral therapy session.

    What followed wasn’t just a shift in perspective.

    It was the collapse of everything he thought he was.

    Through Josh’s experience, we take a deeper look at:

    • Why we avoid the things that could change our lives
    • How fear shapes our identity without us realizing it
    • What happens when that identity begins to break down
    • The psychology behind near-death experiences and transformation
    • And the idea of a “quiet voice” that guides us when we stop forcing life

    This isn’t about becoming someone new.

    It’s about understanding what has to fall away before anything new can begin.

    If you’ve ever felt stuck… like you’re capable of more but can’t seem to move forward…

    This episode might help you understand why.

    __________________________________

    Music Credits:

    "Fear Not The Water" by Kyle Preston

    "Voices" by Openstate

    "Dramatic Motion" by Lars Bork Andersen

    "Pluto" by Alon Peretz

    "Vacuum" by Buddha Kid

    "Contemplative Question" by The Tennessee Pistols

    続きを読む 一部表示
    24 分
  • Who’s Really Talking in Your Head? The Hidden Beliefs Shaping Your Life
    2026/03/10

    Most of us believe we know how to think.

    But what if many of the thoughts shaping your life aren’t actually yours?

    From the moment we’re born, we start collecting words from the people around us — parents, teachers, coaches, and friends. Over time, those words become beliefs. And those beliefs quietly shape the way we see ourselves, the risks we take, the opportunities we pursue, and the limits we place on our potential.

    In this episode of Better Beliefs, Brent Kocal sits down with mental performance coach Lauren Johnson, former mental performance coach for the New York Yankees, to explore how beliefs are formed, why they can be so difficult to change, and how our brains can trap us in patterns that hold us back.

    Lauren explains why the brain is a threat detection machine, how our thoughts influence our emotions and performance, and why many high achievers unknowingly operate from beliefs they formed in childhood.

    You’ll also learn Lauren’s practical framework for changing beliefs by shifting identity and behavior — and why the actions you take today can reshape the story your brain tells about who you are.

    If you’ve ever felt like your mind is working against you… or wondered why intelligent, capable people still struggle with doubt, fear, and self-limiting beliefs — this episode will change the way you think about thinking.

    Because the voice in your head might not be the truth.

    It might just be an echo.

    Topics covered:

    • How beliefs about yourself are formed
    • Why your brain defaults to threat instead of growth
    • The psychology behind self-doubt and imposter syndrome
    • How thoughts influence emotions, physiology, and performance
    • The identity + action framework for changing beliefs
    • Why high achievers often feel stuck despite success

    -----------------------

    Music Credits:

    "Pearl" by EVOE

    "Fractal_1" by Yotam Agam

    "Altitude" by Muted

    "No More Suffering" by Dear Gravity

    "Hallow" by Stephen Keech

    "Morning Light" by DJ Taz Rishid

    "Contemplative Question" by The Tennessee Pistols

    続きを読む 一部表示
    27 分
  • The Body Keeps the Score? Where Your Memories Really Live (And Why Your Nervous System Won’t Forget)
    2026/02/19

    We all have memories.

    Some are sharp and vivid… others are fragmented and blurry.

    We assume they live in the brain — neatly stored away as stories from the past.

    But what if the story isn’t the whole memory?

    What if your body is holding onto something your mind already forgot?

    In this episode of Better Beliefs, Brent sits down with Darby to explore a powerful question:

    Do we just remember events… or does the body remember how it felt to survive them?

    From childhood instability to chronic pain, Darby shares how unresolved emotional experiences were stored not just in her thoughts — but in her nervous system. What began as a physical injury turned into a profound realization:

    The body may be carrying emotional imprints long after the event is over.

    We dive into:

    • How trauma and overwhelming experiences can get “locked” into the tissues
    • Why insight alone isn’t always enough to heal
    • The connection between chronic stress, fight-or-flight, and emotional suppression
    • How safety — not force — allows the nervous system to release what it’s been holding

    If you’ve ever said, “I thought I was over that… so why do I still react this way?” — this conversation will change the way you think about memory, healing, and the intelligence of your body.

    This episode invites you to consider:

    Maybe the brain remembers the story.
    But the body remembers the charge.

    And healing begins when we learn to listen.

    ______________________________

    Music Credits:

    "Wandering Souls" by Stanley Gurvich

    "Floating" by DaniHaDani

    "Eternal Recluse" by Kyle Preston

    "Above the Clouds" by Theater of Delays

    "Opening Up" by Master Minded

    "A Journey's Epilogue" by Yehezkel Raz

    "Contemplative Question" by The Tennessee Pistols

    続きを読む 一部表示
    24 分
  • He Survived Combat—But Nearly Lost His Life to Prescription Drugs | A Veteran’s Real Healing Story
    2026/02/03

    Combat veteran Manny Rodriguez survived an IED explosion in Iraq—but the battle that nearly cost him his life didn’t happen overseas.

    After back surgery and deployment, Manny was prescribed powerful combinations of opioids, sedatives, and stimulants that slowly pulled his body and mind out of balance. When he returned home, the prescriptions kept coming—until his health reached a breaking point and he realized the treatment meant to help him was making things worse.

    In this episode of Better Beliefs, Manny shares how he made the courageous decision to step away from the medical path he’d been told to follow, endured the brutal process of getting off medication, and discovered healing through breath work and nervous system regulation.

    This episode explores:

    • The hidden risk of opioid dependence after surgery
    • What combat actually feels like vs. how medication changed Manny’s experience
    • How mixed medications affect the brain and nervous system
    • Why breath work plays a powerful role in recovery and regulation
    • And the courage it takes to question beliefs about authority, healing, and personal agency

    This isn’t a story about rejecting medicine.
    It’s about learning to listen to your body—and finding the courage to change course when something no longer serves you.

    If you’ve ever wondered whether the path you’re on is truly helping you heal, this conversation may change the way you think about recovery.

    Learn tactical breathing with Manny at www.tacticalcalm.com

    ---------------------------

    Music Credits

    "Out of Flux" by Shutdown

    "Lost" by Lars Bork Andersen

    "Merciful" by Gruber

    "The Uprising" by Gruber

    "A Town Called Dismal" by Josh McCausland

    "Above the Clouds" by Theater of Delays

    "Pearl" by EVOE

    "Moving Forward" by The Tennessee Pistols

    続きを読む 一部表示
    26 分
  • Letting Go of What Hurts: How We Heal After the Unexpected
    2025/12/11

    When life blindsides us, we don’t just remember what happened — we remember how it felt.
    In this episode, Brent sits down with Nick, a father whose children survived the Nashville school shooting, to explore not just the event itself, but the quiet, complicated, deeply human process of healing that followed.

    This isn’t a story about giving advice.
    It’s a story about how humans process the moments we never saw coming — the big shocks and the smaller emotional bruises we collect along the way.

    Nick shares:

    • What happened the morning of the shooting
    • What his body felt before his mind could make sense of it
    • The blur that followed in the days and months afterward
    • The internal reset that saved his marriage
    • The unexpected ways his children showed strength
    • How returning to the school became part of their healing
    • And why some memories stay alive until we decide to release them

    Alongside Nick’s story, we explore the neuroscience of trauma, how the brain stores painful events, why time feels strange after something life-altering, and what it really means to “let go” of memories that no longer serve who we’re becoming.

    This episode is for anyone carrying something heavy — even if it’s not “big enough” to call trauma — and wondering why it still lives inside them.

    Healing isn’t just about moving on.
    It’s about learning which memories to keep … and which ones to finally set down.

    ________________________________

    Music Credits

    "Land" by ANBR

    "Espionage" by Solis

    "Corals Under The Sun" by Yehezekel Raz

    "Apollo" by Rotem Cinamon

    "Hallow" by Steven Keech

    "Ea" by Hans Johnson

    "Contemplative Question" by The Tennessee Pistols


    続きを読む 一部表示
    23 分
  • The Art of Letting Go: What Tibetan Monks Teach About Impermanence
    2025/11/13

    What if the things you spend your life building were never meant to last?

    In this episode of Better Beliefs, Brent Kocal sits with Tibetan monks creating a sand mandala—a sacred artwork that takes days to build and seconds to destroy. Their teaching? Everything in life is impermanent, and that truth is what makes it beautiful.

    You’ll hear how these monks view life, effort, and the purpose of creation—not as something to cling to, but as something to experience fully and release with grace. Brent explores why Western culture struggles with impermanence, our deep attachment to results and outcomes, and how we can find lasting joy in the act of creation itself.

    If you’ve ever felt like your achievements fade too fast, or your happiness depends on what you accomplish next—this conversation will shift your perspective.

    Listen now to discover:

    • Why Tibetan monks spend days building mandalas they’ll immediately destroy
    • What impermanence can teach us about freedom and fulfillment
    • How to find joy without attachment to results
    • Why letting go might be the most powerful creative act of all

    ------------------------------------

    Music Credits

    "Breath Deep" by Master Minded

    "Ea" by Hans Johnson

    "Hallow" by Stephen Keech

    "Flicker of Thought" by Eleven Tales

    "Like a Bird" by Letra

    "Moving Forward" by The Tennessee Pistols

    続きを読む 一部表示
    20 分
  • Do We Live More Than Once? What Past Life Regression Reveals About the Soul
    2025/10/29

    What if death isn’t the end—but a doorway we’ve walked through countless times before?

    In this episode of Better Beliefs, host Brent Edward explores one of humanity’s oldest and most controversial ideas: reincarnation. Through the story of a woman who experienced vivid past life regressions and readings from the Akashic Records, we ask a question that challenges everything Western culture teaches us about life and death: Do we live more than once?

    You’ll hear what she saw on the other side of death, what those memories revealed about the soul’s purpose, and why the experience gave her peace instead of fear. Along the way, we’ll look at ancient cultures that embraced reincarnation, modern psychological skepticism, and the possibility that consciousness continues long after the body stops breathing.

    If you’ve ever wondered where we go when we die—or why some lives feel connected in ways we can’t explain—this conversation might change how you see everything.

    ___________________________________

    Music Credits:

    "Duality" by Kyle Preston

    "Suspicion" by The Bows

    "Parallel Dimension" by Onyx Music

    "Pluto" by Alon Peretz

    "Hallow" by Steven Keech

    "Resonate" by Romeo

    "Lift" by Starlux

    続きを読む 一部表示
    25 分
  • Chasing Enough: Why We Seek Approval and How to Finally Let Go
    2025/10/16

    Why does it feel so good to be praised — and so painful to be criticized?

    From ancient tribes to modern timelines, our brains are wired to crave belonging. But that same wiring can trap us in a lifelong chase for validation, measuring our worth through the eyes of others.

    In this episode of Better Beliefs, former NFL player Chase Winovich opens up about reaching the top of his dream — and realizing the applause that once defined him could no longer sustain him. Together, we explore what happens when the crowd’s approval fades, why criticism cuts so deep, and how to begin crafting your own definition of enough.

    If you’ve ever wondered why external validation feels irresistible, or how to quiet the noise of others’ opinions long enough to hear your own truth — this episode will meet you there.

    🎧 Listen to learn the science behind our need for approval, the cost of chasing it, and the freedom that comes when you finally stop needing to prove yourself.

    ----------------------------------

    Music Credits

    "Feeling" by Bortex

    "Scarlett" by Dodo Danciu

    "Flight of the Inner Bird" by Yehezekle Raz

    "Above the Clouds" by Theater of Delays

    "The Gathering" by Will Van De Crommert

    "Surfing On The Milky Way" by Semo

    "Contemplative Question" by The Tennessee Pistols

    続きを読む 一部表示
    25 分