Passion Struck with John R. Miles - Close the Identity Gap: Finding Yourself When You Feel Lost | John R. Miles EP 741
Episode Date: March 13, 2026There is a moment most people never name.It’s not a dramatic collapse or a sudden crisis. From the outside, your life looks flawless—the routine is steady, the success is visible, and the... applause is frequent. But inside, a silent shift has occurred. The wins that used to ignite you now feel borrowed, and the applause begins to echo in a hollow room. You’ve realized the old script of your life hasn’t broken; it has simply finished serving the person you used to be.In this profound solo deep dive, John R. Miles kicks off the Life Beyond the Script series by deconstructing the "identity gap"—the terrifying, sacred space between the life you’ve outgrown and the one you haven't yet built. Drawing on the hauntingly resilient story of Carrington Smith (Episode 162), John explores why our "ego containers" must crack to allow our souls to expand.Check the full show notes here: Companion Reflection & Integration ResourcesInside The Ignited Life, each episode in the Life Beyond the Script series is paired with companion articles and guided reflections designed to help you examine what chapter you are in and what is changing beneath the surface. Explore the community: https://TheIgnitedLife.netConnect with the EcosystemPreorder The Mattering Effect: https://matteringeffect.com/Order You Matter, Luma: https://youmatterluma.com/ Follow John on Social Media: @John_RMiles Watch on YouTube: Search for Passion Struck with John R. Mileshttps://linktr.ee/John_R_MilesIn This Episode, You Will LearnThe Anatomy of the Identity Gap: Why the space between versions of yourself feels like a "void" and why you shouldn't run from it.The James Hollis Perspective: Understanding the "ego container" and why the identity gap is a sign of expansion, not failure.The Locus of Knowing vs. Showing: How to stop relying on external validation (titles, likes, applause) and start trusting your internal authority.The Fragmentation Gap (EP 657): How to handle the exhaustion of "identity maintenance" when you are living in two worlds at once.The Fulfillment Gap (EP 654): Why high achievers often reach the summit only to realize they are on the wrong mountain.Navigating the Liminal Space: Practical steps to "stop the sprint" and allow the old version of yourself to die so the new can be born.Thank You to Our SponsorsCaraway: Their non-toxic, ceramic-coated cookware set can save you up to $190. Visit carawayhome.com/PASSIONSTRUCK for an additional 10% off your next purchase.DisclaimerThe Passion Struck podcast is for educational and entertainment purposes only. This podcast is not a substitute for professional advice, diagnosis, or treatment from a licensed physician, therapist, or other qualified professional.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Coming up next on Passion Struck, there's a period in every significant transformation that most people try to skip.
It's the space between who you are and who you're becoming.
You've realized the old script no longer makes sense.
Maybe you've even walked away from it, but the new version of you hasn't arrived yet.
You're in the gap.
It feels like falling.
It feels like fragmentation.
It feels like you've lost your coordinates and you're suddenly a ghost in your own life.
Most people try to sprint through the space because the silence is deafening.
They try to fill it with noise, new titles, or old habits.
But what if the void isn't the enemy?
What if this identity gap is actually the forge where your truest self is being made?
Stay with me.
Today, we're going into that gap.
Welcome to Passionstruck.
I'm your host, John Miles.
This is the show where we explore the art of human flourishing.
and what it truly means to live like it matters.
Each week, I sit down with change makers, creators, scientists, and everyday heroes to decode the human experience
and uncover the tools that help us lead with meaning, heal what hurts, and pursue the fullest expression of who we're capable of becoming.
Whether you're designing your future, developing as a leader, or seeking deeper alignment in your life,
this show is your invitation to grow with purpose and act with intention.
because the secret to a life of deep purpose, connection, and impact is choosing to live like
you matter.
Hey friends, and welcome back to episode 741 of Passionstruck.
Before we dive into today's deep exploration, I have something really special to share.
For the past decade, I've been on a mission to understand a wound so many of us carry,
even at the top of our game, that deep feeling of being fundamental of.
unseen. I'm thrilled to announce that my new book, The Mattering Effect, Creating a Life of Meaning
and Worth, is now officially available for pre-order. I wrote this because for years, I had lived
what looked like a success story, but in reality it was really a slow study in disappearing,
decades as a sea level executive, valued for what I could produce, but unseen for who I truly was.
I came to see how our systems have value-engineered human worth right out of the equation.
We don't just need to diagnose why we feel this way.
We need a blueprint to reclaim it.
The mattering effect is that blueprint, built around the matter framework to help you restore
your significance and stop disappearing.
You can pre-order your copy today at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Bookshop.org, Target, or your favorite
bookseller.
Links are in the show notes.
Today's episode is a direct companion to that journey.
We're deep in our series Life Beyond the Script.
Last week, we talked about that jarring moment when the script, the rules, the rules,
the expectations you followed simply stops making sense.
But once the script cracks, you don't just step forward, you enter something often more terrifying,
the identity gap.
I want to share something from my own path.
For years, I defined myself by those corporate heights.
The Fortune 500 title, the billions of dollars of scope I oversaw.
I thought my value lived in the size of the ego container I was building.
When I left that world, it wasn't just a job I lost.
It was my coordinates.
I found myself performing an old version of John Miles that no longer existed,
while the version speaking to you now was still a quiet whisper inside.
I felt that fragmentation, a split between who I was supposed to be
and who I was becoming.
I tried to sprint through the silence,
fill it with noise, new projects, anything.
What I learned the hard way,
the more you run from the gap,
the wider it grows.
We think the void is the enemy,
but as we're going to explore today,
the void is actually the forge.
In this episode, we'll unpack
the young end view of the ego container
and why it has to crack for real growth.
Carrington Smith's story from our conversation
back in episode 162 and how she navigated her own shattering and the three gaps you might be standing in
right now, the identity gap, the fragmentation gap, and the fulfillment gap. Grab a notebook if you can,
take a deep breath. Let's begin. Thank you for choosing passion struck and choosing me to be your
host and guide on your journey to creating an intentional life that matters. Now, let that journey
begin. We have all been conditioned to see life as a series of mountain peaks. You climb one,
plant your flag, catch your breath, and immediately scan the horizon for the next summit to conquer.
But what happens when you're down in the valley between those peaks? Most of us treat those
transitions like a sprint. A career ends, a relationship dissolves, a long-held dream,
quietly shifts shape. Our first instinct rush through the discomfort. Get from the old me to the new me
as fast as humanly possible. Because that space in the middle, it feels like falling. We feel this
urgent pressure to fill the void. Grab a new title, a new partner, a new packed schedule,
anything to stop the free fall. But here's the truth I've come to see, and I suspect
you felt it too. You cannot hustle your way out of a soul-level transition. The middle isn't a waste
of time. It's not a detour. It's where the actual transformation happens. If you sprint through the
gap, you just drag the old baggage, the old script right into whatever comes next. That valley,
that is what I call the identity gap. It's that disorienting space where your extollary
script, the roles you've played for years, the titles you've worn like armor, the expectation
others, and often we ourselves have placed on you no longer lines up with your internal soul.
It's a fundamental misalignment between what I call your locus of knowing, that quiet
internal truth, and your locus of showing the performance you put on for the world.
This place has a name in psychology too.
Young-an analyst, James Hollis, calls it the liminal space.
Lemon in Latin means threshold.
You're standing in the doorway.
You're no longer fully in the room you just left, but you haven't yet stepped into the one ahead.
You're suspended.
To understand why this gap feels so terrifying, we have to look at how we actually build our lives.
James Hollis says that the first half of life is dedicated to building what we might call the ego container.
we spend decades constructing those walls, made of professional achievements, social status, family
roles, all the things that help us feel safe, competent, and belonging in the world.
We do it because we need to. It's how we adapt, survive, find our place. But eventually,
that container starts to crack. And here's the key. That crack is not a sign of failure.
It's a sign of expansion.
You aren't breaking down, you're breaking through.
The quiet disorientation you're feeling,
it's simply the old version of you making room,
reluctantly, painfully, for the person you're becoming.
And when that container finally shatters,
like it did for the woman whose story will walk through next,
that's when the real possibility begins.
To really understand how deeply we can get stuck in that gap,
we have to go back to the very beginning.
The script we were handed long before, we could even read it ourselves.
Back on July 13, 2022, in episode 162, I had one of the most profound conversations of my career with Carrington Smith.
Carrington's life is one of the clearest, most moving illustrations I have ever encountered of what happens when your entire ego container is built on external validation and what happens when it shatters.
Carrington grew up in a family where value was measured by two narrow pillars, athleticism and beauty.
Her father was a professional tennis player, and in that household, your worth was tied directly to how you performed on the court.
But at just five years old, the same age when I suffered my own traumatic brain injury,
Carrington experienced a massive eye injury.
In an instant, she couldn't see the ball anymore.
She couldn't play the game of tennis.
And because she could no longer fulfill the athlete's script,
she was treated as disposable,
pushed to the edges of her own family,
no longer fitting the role they'd written for her.
When the athlete's script collapsed,
she leaned hard into the other one, beauty.
But even there, validation was withheld.
Her father told her outright,
she wasn't the pretty one,
a comment that carved which she could,
calls a deep soul wound. This is where the identity gap so often begins for so many of us.
We spend years, decades even, trying to patch or outrun cracks in a container someone else
designed for us. Carrington pushed forward, law school, high achievement, the whole
external success track, trying to finally prove she was enough. Performing the version of herself
she thought would earn her belonging.
But the container couldn't hold forever.
The true liminal shattering came during law school
when she survived a horrific assault.
In the aftermath, the people meant to be her anchors.
Her family responded with silence and disappointment instead of support.
That was the moment it didn't just crack.
It shattered completely.
In our conversation, Carrington described standing in front of the mirror
and seeing a monster.
Not just the physical changes from the trauma and its scars.
She was seeing the death of the compliant daughter,
the perfect law student, the girl who spent her life trying to fit the script.
She lived in that in-between for years.
No longer the daughter, her father approved of,
but not yet the woman she was destined to become.
On the outside, she kept going through the motions.
That's the fragmentation.
gap I've written about so much. She was a ghost in her own life performing an old role while the real
self was still forming in the shadows. It took six long years of sitting in that silence,
deprogramming the locus of showing, the addiction to being pretty, perfect, athletic,
approved, and slowly turning into her locus of knowing. And here's the beautiful part.
Carrington didn't escape by adopting a brand new script handed to her.
She became the author of her own story.
She realized her scrappiness, her sharp wit, even the trauma itself.
These weren't flaws to hide.
They were facets of a far more resilient, authentic identity.
She stopped trying to glue the shattered pieces together.
Instead, she asked the deeper question, what is my soul actually meant to hold?
If her story resonates, and I know,
it will for many of you, I highly recommend going back to that full, raw conversation in episode 162.
It's powerful. But today, as we reflect on Carrington's journey, we see three distinct gaps she had
to navigate. You might recognize yourself in one of them right now. In the next section,
I'm going to break them down, the identity gap, the fragmentation gap, and the fulfillment gap.
so you can name exactly where you are in your own transition and start to see your way through.
But before we continue, I want to pause for just a moment.
One of the core ideas running through this whole series is this.
You don't move through life just once.
You move through it in chapters.
And most of us, we rarely stop to really look at where we are right now or who we're
quietly becoming in the next one.
That's exactly why alongside this series I'm building something a little deep.
over on the ignitedlife.net.
There on publishing companion reflections,
articles, and guided prompts tied to each episode
designed to help you pause
and examine your own life with intention.
What chapter are you in?
What's shifting beneath the surface?
And what might it look like to step forward
not by default, but on purpose?
If this conversation is stirring something in you
and you want to go deeper into the work,
head over to the ignitedlife.net.
Explore the reflections, join the community.
It's all there for you.
And I want to say a heartfelt thank you to our sponsors.
Their support is what makes this show and these honest, so-level conversations possible.
When you support the brands that support us, you keep Passion Struck growing and reaching more people who need these ideas.
Now, a quick break for our sponsors.
You're listening to Passion Struck right here on the Passion Struck network.
Let's dive back in.
Now that we've seen the shattered container through Carrington's eyes, let's name the three gaps she navigated and that you might be navigating too.
When you find yourself in that liminal space between versions of yourself, it usually isn't
just one vague feeling of being lost.
It sharpens.
It falls into one of three categories.
Naming which gap you're standing in, that's often the first real step toward reconnecting
your internal locus of knowing, the quiet voice that already knows the truth.
First, the identity gap, your soul versus your role.
This is the fundamental misalignment we've been exploring.
It's the crack between your deep internal soul and the external script you've been handed or built.
Think back to Carrington Smith.
Her soul was scrappy, resilient, full of sharp wit, but the script demanded she'd be the pretty athlete or the compliant law student.
When you're in this gap, you feel like an imposter in your own life.
You're checking all the boxes, career moves, relationships, expectations.
but the person checking them, it doesn't feel like you anymore.
Have you ever looked around at your day and thought, this is working, but me?
Second, the fragmentation gap.
This one creeps in when you're trying to live in two or more worlds at once.
I dove deep into this in episode 657, where we explored how we perform the old version of ourselves
for friends, family, colleagues because we're afraid.
Afraid that showing the emerging new you might mean they won't recognize you or worse,
they'll reject you.
So you end up divided.
One self in the boardroom or at the family table, another self alone with your thoughts
at night.
It's exhausting.
It takes massive energy, constant identity maintenance.
You become a ghost in both worlds.
Carrington lived this for years, going through the motions on the outside while the real self
was still forming quietly in the shadows. Does that divided feeling? That energy drain ring true
for you right now. Third, the fulfillment gap. This might be the sneakiest and most common
for high achievers like so many of us listening. I dedicated episode 654 to it. You've climbed
the mountain for 10, 20, 30 years. You have the title, a solid salary, external validation stacked
high. You reach the summit. You plant the flag and you look around and it's empty. The script
promised that success equals happiness. But the math doesn't add up. You've outgrown the ego
container of pure achievement. Now you're standing in a gap where those old metrics no longer
feed your soul. Ever hit a big milestone? Smiled for the photos, then felt that quiet dread.
This is it? Why does it feel so hollow? The real danger in these gaps isn't the discomfort.
They're meant to unsettle us. The danger is rushing to fill them with the wrong things.
More hustle for the identity gap. More people pleasing for fragmentation. More consumption or status
for fulfillment. But as James Hollis reminds us so clearly, these gaps are actually invitations,
not breakdowns. Your soul is saying, the old version of you is too small for the life I want to
live now. It's time to expand. So if any of this is landing, if you're in one of these gaps or maybe a
mix, take heart. Naming it is the beginning of navigation. Next, we'll shift from understanding these gaps
to actually living in them, how to stop the sprint, quiet the old noise, and start trusting that still, small voice of your internal authority.
So if you're standing in one of these gaps right now, the identity gap, the fragmentation gap, the fulfillment gap, the big question hits, what do you actually do?
How do you move from this liminal space without rushing to the wrong destination or forcing a fix that just replays the old script?
First, and this is the hardest part, stop the sprint.
Our culture screams hustle harder.
Find a new goal, a new destination, new busyness to outrun the discomfort.
But in the liminal space, movement isn't always progress.
If you're running just to escape the silence, you're probably sprinting right back into
another version of the external script.
What this space asks for is radical patience.
You have to let the old version of you fully die before the new one can be born.
This is the middle, where, as James Hollis puts it, we're invited to reauthor our lives,
not from ego's demands, but from the soul's deeper agenda.
Next, shift the locus of knowing.
Up until now, most of us have navigated by the locus of showing.
External signals, approval from bosses, likes, titles, and metrics.
In the gap, those signals go quiet.
The compass spins.
That's the invitation to develop a locus of knowing,
that internal, subjective voice of the soul.
It doesn't need a script or a performance to justify itself.
It's the quiet authority Carrington Smith discovered when she stopped chasing pretty athlete
approval and started owning her scrappy, resilient survivor self.
To hear this voice embrace the silence.
Spend time in reflection. Question the shoulds that have run your life for decades.
Journal them. Walk with them. Sit with them without fixing. The soul speaks in whispers, not shouts.
Finally, find meaning in the turbulence itself. Resilience here isn't toughing it out or white-knuckling
through. It's shifting the question. Instead of, when will this end, ask, what is the transition
trying to teach me about who I am becoming.
When you stop seeing the gap is pure fragmentation and start cherishing the different facets
emerging, your scrappiness, your death, your unscripted edges, the fear starts to ease.
You realize you're not falling apart.
You're evolving.
You're allowing the new version to emerge naturally rather than forcing a fresh mask over
an old wound.
This isn't easy.
It takes courage to stay in the middle long enough for the soul to speak.
But that's exactly where the real transformation lives.
As we close today's episode, I want you to pause and look at the gap you're standing in right now.
Whether it's the identity gap, the fragmentation gap, or the fulfillment gap, see it for what it
truly is.
It isn't a whole you've fallen into.
It's the space where the old script finally loses its power over you.
We often think the goal of life is to be whole, consistent, put together at all times.
But as we've seen through James Hollis's lens and through the live courage of Karenton Smith back in episode 162, the most profound growth happens precisely when we are in pieces.
The discomfort you feel today, those are the birth pangs of the next version of you.
If you feel like a ghost performing an old role, or if the weight of success that once lit you up now feels hollow, listen to that quiet whisper.
That is your soul asking for a larger container.
So here's what I want to leave you with. A simple prompt to sit with this week. I don't want you to
hustle through it. I want you to be still with it. The question, what part of your old script
are you still reciting? Simply because you're afraid of the silence that follows. Is it a job that no
longer fits, a way of interacting with your family that feels performative, a definition of
success you've quietly outgrown, write it down, acknowledge it, and then give yourself
permission to let it go. You don't need the new script ready yet. You just need to be brave
enough to stand in the doorway, long enough for your soul to speak. The identity gap is where
the passion-struck life is forged. It's where you stop being a character in someone else's
play and start becoming the architect of your own existence. If you're in the middle of a transition
right now, remember, you aren't lost. You are becoming. Next on Passionstruck, I'm joined by Dr.
Robert Wachter, one of the leading voices on the future of medicine. We'll explore how artificial
intelligence is transforming healthcare from faster diagnoses to reducing clinician burnout,
reshaping decisions and delivery. But it also raises big questions.
What happens to human judgment?
What role will doctors play going forward?
And how do we make sure technology enhances care without losing the compassion at its heart?
It's a timely, fascinating conversation about where medicine and we are headed.
I'm more optimistic about health care AI than I am about the AI and the rest of our lives.
Because in health care, I can't find a doctor, a nurse, or a patient who says the system's just perfect.
And we don't need to screw around with it.
It's delivering the high quality, safe, accessible care.
at an affordable price. Nobody thinks that. And I don't think we can deliver on what patients need
unless we have the assistance of a technology like AI. So it really is both the quality of the
technology and the desperate need that we have to make things better. If this episode resonated with
you, if it stirred something, please share it with someone who might need to hear it right now.
Leave a five-star rating or review on Apple Podcast or Spotify. It really helps these conversations
to reach more people and dive deeper into the reflections from this series.
at the UnitedLife.net.net. Until next time, remember, you don't have to control everything
that happens to you, but you can influence how you respond and how you move forward. I'm John
Miles, and you've been passion-struck.
