Passion Struck with John R. Miles - Live Like You Mean It: The Compass of Congruent Connection w/ John R. Miles | EP 630
Episode Date: June 27, 2025In this powerful close to The Connected Life series, John Miles pays tribute to the late Brian Wilson—co-founder of The Beach Boys—by exploring the theme of congruence: the ofte...n invisible alignment between our inner lives and outer expression. Using Wilson’s life as both mirror and message, this episode unpacks how misalignment creates disconnection and how real connection begins with self-trust. You’ll also learn how to apply the Connection Compass—a practical framework to help you stay aligned, grounded, and emotionally present even under pressure. Click Here for the Full ShownotesAnd if that framework sparked something in you—if you're thinking, “This is exactly what I need, but I’m not sure I’ll remember it in the moment…”—I’ve got something for you.I created a free Connection Compass Guide inside The Ignition Room on Substack.It’s packed with:Real-life language to use when you’re triggeredJournaling prompts to unpack your reactionsA printable one-sheet to keep visible—on your desk, fridge, or even in your walletIf you want to train your nervous system to respond, not just react—👉 you can grab it now at theignitedlife.net.How to Connect with John:Connect with John on Twitter at @John_RMilesFollow him on Instagram at @John_R_MilesSubscribe to our main YouTube Channel and to our YouTube Clips ChannelFor more insights and resources, visit John’s websiteSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Coming up next on Passion Struck, what makes someone magnetic? Not their words, not their talent,
not even their charm. The people whom we trust the most, follow the most, feel the most drawn to
are the ones whose outside matches their inside. And when it doesn't, we feel it, even if we can't name it.
This week, we close out the Connected Life series
by talking about the final, often invisible layer
of deep connection, congruence.
And to get there, I want to take you inside the life
of someone who created some of the most honest,
heartfelt music of the last century,
while secretly battling some of the most honest, heartfelt music of the last century, while secretly battling
some of the deepest disconnection you can imagine.
Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys wasn't just a musical genius.
He was a master of harmony, externally.
Internally though, he was often at war with himself. This episode is about that war, the one between your truth and your presentation, because
you can't build real connection when you're not being real with yourself.
Welcome to Passion Struck.
Hi, I'm your host, Jon R. Miles.
And on the show, we decipher the secrets, tips, and guidance of the world's most inspiring people
and turn their wisdom into practical advice for you and those around you. Our mission is to help
you unlock the power of intentionality so that you can become the best version of yourself.
If you're new to the show, I offer advice and answer listener questions on Fridays.
We have long-form interviews the rest of the week
with guests ranging from astronauts to authors,
CEOs, creators, innovators, scientists, military leaders,
visionaries, and athletes.
Now, let's go out there and become Passion Struck.
Welcome back to Passion Struck.
I'm your host, John Miles,
and you're listening to episode 630,
the final solo episode in our series, The Connected Life.
Over the past few weeks, we've unpacked what it really means to build connection, not just
outwardly but inwardly.
And if you've been with us, you know this series hasn't been theoretical, it's been
practical, personal, and anchored in stories that stick.
In episode 621, we looked at inner awareness, how your ability to connect with others starts
with how deeply you know and lead yourself.
In 624, we explored emotional matter through the lens of Taylor Swift and how her small intentional actions
create lasting emotional connection with millions of people.
And in episode 627, I shared one of the hardest conversations that I've had this year along
with the react method for staying grounded when your nervous system wants to bolt or
blow up.
We've also been joined during the series by extraordinary guests who've helped us
illuminate this journey, including John Kabat-Zinn on presence as a radical act,
Dr. Anna Lemke on the neuroscience of craving compulsion and emotional clarity,
Suzanne Giesemann on the soul deep side of connection and intuitive intelligence. And today, we bring it all
home. Because at the core of real connection is something most people often overlook.
Congruence. The invisible alignment between what you say and how you show up. When your tone matches
your truth, when your values aren't just written down, they're lived especially
under pressure. And to bring that all into focus, we're going to reflect on the
remarkable and at times heartbreaking story of Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys.
A musical genius, yes, but also someone who spent decades at war with himself
before finding his way back to internal harmony.
This is the kind of alignment that turns presence into power and makes trust possible.
And if you want to go deeper, there's a free companion guide to this episode
waiting for you inside the Ignited Life, our substack, where the episode ends and the practice begins.
You can also find this in the show notes at passionstruck.com.
In the companion guide, you'll find journaling prompts,
congruence check-ins, and a printable tool
to help you live aligned, not just composed.
All of that is linked in the show notes
or at the ignitedlife.net.
Now, let's get into this final chapter
of the connected life.
Thank you for choosing Passion Struck and choosing me to be your host and guide on your journey
to creating an intentional life.
Now let that journey begin.
We talk a lot about connection, how to build it, how to sustain it, how to show up more
fully for the people in our lives.
But we don't talk enough about the invisible thread that holds it all together.
Not charisma, not communication, congruence.
The feeling that you get when someone is fully themselves, not polished, not perfect, but
integrated.
You felt it before.
Maybe it was someone who walked into a room and didn't need to dominate it, but still
held your attention.
Or someone who didn't have the most impressive words, but you believe them because their
energy and their message were speaking the same language.
That's congruence.
And congruence is magnetic because the world is full of performance.
Social masks, well-practiced personas that say the right thing while their eyes, their
tone, their posture say something completely
else.
We're bombarded with that type of connection all the time on social media, at work, sometimes
even in our own families.
So when someone shows up in alignment, when what they say matches who they are, it stands out. It's rare. It's
grounding. It's safe. People don't connect to your words. They connect to your
wholeness. When your tone matches your message. When your actions match your
values. When who you are inside is visible outside, especially under pressure.
That's congruence in practice.
And it's not just a philosophical idea.
It's felt at the biological level.
Your nervous system, your gut, your brain, your mirror neurons are constantly
scanning for safety.
It's primal. It's protective. your mirror neurons are constantly scanning for safety.
It's primal, it's protective.
You don't need to logically dissect someone's motives
to feel if something's off.
You just know, you sense the misalignment
and your body says something doesn't feel safe here.
That's what incongruence does.
Even if the words are right, the vibe is wrong,
and your body listens to that vibe.
Here's the truth.
You can't build meaningful connection on top of internal contradiction.
You can try.
You can read all the books, memorize all the tools, learn the scripts. But if who you say you are and who you show up as don't match, people will feel it.
And eventually so will you.
Because misalignment is exhausting.
Performing a version of yourself every day that doesn't quite match with your truth, that's a full-time job.
And it comes with a cost, anxiety, burnout, disconnection, and the non-feeling that you're
succeeding on the outside but slowly eroding on the inside. Congruence isn't about being flawless,
inside. Congruence isn't about being flawless.
It's about being honest.
It's not about always saying the perfect thing.
It's about letting your voice match your values, even when your voice shakes.
It's not about being nice.
It's about being true.
And that truth isn't always tidy.
Sometimes it sounds like setting a boundary.
Sometimes it looks like leaving a room quietly, like I talked about last week, instead of
exploding.
Sometimes it's saying, that didn't feel good, even when you're not sure how it will
end.
Here's what I've learned, personally, painfully, and with practice.
Congruence doesn't guarantee connection, but without it, connection can't last.
Because people don't stay close to who you pretend to be.
They stay close to who you really are.
And that's the foundation of everything that we've been building in this series.
Inner awareness, emotional presence,
self leadership under pressure.
None of it matters if your outer life and your inner life
don't speak the same truth.
That's why in this final solo episode of this series,
I'm bringing it all together.
Because this whole series, The Connected Life,
isn't about becoming
someone new. It's about becoming someone you trust. And congruence is how you get there.
Here's why congruence is more than just a nice idea. It's how our nervous system recognizes
safety. People don't connect through logic alone. They connect through energy,
through presence, through the micro signals we can't fake. Your brain has mirror neurons.
Cells that fire not just when you act, but when you observe someone else. That's why you flinch
when someone else stubs their toe. It's also why you feel someone's off. When
their words say one thing, but their tone, posture, or timing says another. Congruence
builds trust. Incongruence breaks it. Not because people are analyzing you, but because
their nervous system is scanning for coherence. And when that inner and outer don't match, even if your words are right, something doesn't
feel safe.
Not consciously, but biologically, emotionally.
That's what makes congruence the foundation of connection.
Not performance, not polish, presence, alignment, integrity, especially under pressure.
And today, that message feels especially close to the heart.
Because earlier this month, we lost someone whose life embodied both the beauty and the
battle of congruence.
Brian Wilson, the legendary co-founder of the Beach Boys, passed away on June 11th at
the age of 82.
His music shaped a generation.
His harmonies touched millions.
And behind that sound was a soul constantly seeking alignment between his gift and his
grief, his presence and his pain.
As we reflect on congruence in this episode,
we honor his story, not just as a lesson,
but as a tribute.
If you want to understand the cost
and the power of congruence,
you don't need a textbook.
You just need to listen to Brian Wilson,
the genius behind the legendary album, Pet Sounds.
He wasn't a perfect leader. He was deaf in one ear,
struggled with what he called stage anxiety, plagued by schizoaffective disorder, and for years
over-medicated, isolated, controlled by a doctor who claimed to help but nearly erased him.
But here's the thing, his music was never about being perfect.
It was about being true.
During the making of the album, Pet Sounds,
the one with legendary songs like,
Wouldn't it be nice?
God only knows.
And Caroline, no.
Brian worked with a lyricist named Tony Asher,
a quiet collaborator most people have never heard of.
But Brian once said,
Tony had the ability to put into words what I felt in my heart. And that, that was the magic.
His melodies matched his melancholy. His lyrics weren't performance. They were pain, longing,
wonder, and truth set to music.
He didn't wear a mask.
He made it audible.
Even when his band didn't understand.
Even when audiences were unsure.
He knew what was real, and he created from that place.
That's congruence.
But then he lost it.
The doctor, the drugs, the silence.
He stopped showing up in the studio.
He stopped trusting his voice.
He started performing a version of himself that wasn't real.
And eventually even that collapsed.
That's what incongruence does.
It doesn't just dim your light.
It disconnects you from your gift, from your people, from
yourself.
But the story doesn't end there.
Years later, Brian broke free, got support, found love, and little by little reclaimed
his voice.
He finished Smile, an album once dismissed as too much, too weird, too Brian, and released it on his own terms.
He got back on stage not to impress, not to win, but because it was true. That's what congruence
is. Not being perfect, but being whole. Letting your inner truth realign with your outer life, even after years of
silence.
And when asked about that shift, Brian said something that still gives me chills.
I'm having more fun now than I ever did as a beach boy, he said, because I'm no longer
a beach boy.
I'm Brian Wilson.
That's the work, becoming someone you trust, not someone you perform, and that's the whole
point of this series.
Brian Wilson's life and passing remind us of just how fragile and how powerful congruence
can be.
His music was a mirror for his inner harmony, his silence after decades of noise, was its
own kind of message.
And now, as we remember him, not just as an artist, but as a human being, we are invited
to ask, where do I need to come back into alignment?
Because here's the truth, alignment doesn't happen all at once. It happens in micro decisions.
One honest word, one truth told, without needing to wrap it in a bow.
And in a moment, I'm going to give you a framework.
Something powerful, something simple and practical to help you realign anytime life pulls you
off course.
But first, if you've been moved by this series,
or you're looking to help your team with more clarity,
connection, and purpose,
I'd love to speak at your next event.
Whether it's a keynote, leadership summit,
or company retreat,
I bring these concepts to life in a way that's real, actionable,
and built for impact.
So if your organization is navigating change,
building a culture, or just ready to grow, head to johnrmiles.com slash speaking, or check the link
in the show notes. Let's make your next event one that actually moves people. Now, a quick word from
our sponsor. Welcome back. Brian Wilson's story isn't just a eulogy, it's a mirror, a reminder
that alignment isn't just a trait, it's a practice. And while we might not all write harmonies or
headline stadiums, we all face the same daily question. Am I living in tune with myself or just playing along?
That's where the next tool comes in.
It's what I call the connection compass,
a simple but powerful way
to find your way back to alignment.
These four directions, they don't just point you forward,
they bring you home.
North is awareness. It's knowing what's real inside you,
emotionally, physically, mentally. This is what I explored in episode 621, where connection begins
by coming home to yourself. East is emotional regulation. It's about responding with presence, not reactivity.
That's what episode 627 was all about.
And the React method, that lives right here,
because it's not the calm that builds trust.
It's congruence under pressure.
South is for valuing others.
It's about how you make people feel seen
without the need to perform.
Remember episode 624, Taylor Swift, the art of mattering.
This direction is about noticing, not impressing.
And West, that's cultural intelligence.
It's the ability to see beyond our own lens,
to connect across difference with humility.
That's what Michael Morse, Paul Eastwood,
and Eli Finkel remind us.
Connection isn't a one size fits all approach.
It's relational, it's contextual, it's nuanced.
These four directions don't just help you connect better
with others, they bring you back to yourself.
To alignment. To integrity. To becoming someone others can trust. Because you trust yourself.
These aren't just ideas. They're invitations to check in, to adjust course, to lead from truth.
And I've had to put all four of these directions
into practice in my own life lately.
Let me be real with you.
These past few months have been heavy.
We've been remodeling our new home after the hurricane,
and it hasn't exactly gone to plan.
Last week, I told you all about the standoff
that I had with my contractor.
But that was just one moment.
What I didn't share is everything I didn't say leading up to it.
There were so many moments that left me frustrated, unsettled, and on edge.
The work wasn't right. The accountability was shaky.
The tension kept building.
But I kept quiet, not because I was scared.
I was managing pressure.
I knew if I pushed too hard, I could blow the whole thing up.
The project might stall.
He might walk.
And with everything already on a tight timeline,
I didn't have time to find a plan B.
So I held back. I kept the peace. I kept things moving.
And I told myself, this is leadership. This is what it takes. But here's what I didn't see right
away. While I was managing the project, I was losing connection with myself. I wasn't speaking the full truth,
not to the contractor, not to my wife,
not even to myself.
I was carrying the load, but pretending I wasn't.
And underneath, the pressure was compounding.
Trying to run the show, grow the company,
support my wife through her recovery from spine surgery,
keeping this podcast alive, all while managing a house
that felt like it was falling apart again and again.
And in all of that, I started to go quiet inside.
That's exactly what incongruence does.
It starts small, a silence here, a deflection there, but over time it adds up. You start to feel
off, disjointed, not because you're lying, but because you're leaving parts of your truth behind.
And when you're out of alignment like that, you don't just lose clarity with others. You lose clarity with yourself. I learned this the hard way.
You can't lead well from a place of internal disconnection. You can't give your best if
you're constantly suppressing what's real. So how do you practice congruence? You don't get
there by gritting your teeth, forcing a smile, or memorizing better scripts. You get there by
realigning. And for me, that comes down to three anchors. The first is self-honesty. What am I
actually feeling right now? Am I pretending or telling the truth? This one's simple, but it's
not easy. It requires pause. It requires presence. It requires asking, what's real inside me right now?
Not what I wish I felt, not what I should feel, but what I actually feel.
Because you can't align with what you're unwilling to name.
The second anchor I call values check.
And it's all about what matters here,
beyond ego, fear, or approval.
This is where you get clear,
not on what's the loudest,
but on what's the deepest.
The moment when you ask,
what would integrity do,
not insecurity?
It helps you cut through reactivity
and re-center on what matters most. And the third
anchor is something I call aligned action. What would it look like to move from that truth even
just 10% more? Not perfectly, not dramatically, but maybe you say one sentence differently.
Maybe you pause before hitting send. Maybe you speak a
quiet no where you used to smile and say sure. Because every time you align how
you feel, what you believe, and what you do, you reclaim a little bit more of your
integrity. You become someone you trust and people can feel that even if they
don't have the words for it. These three practices are how you move inside the connection compass.
How you stay grounded when things get noisy.
If you're feeling lost emotionally, start in the north.
Inner awareness.
Ask what's really going on inside me.
What emotion am I avoiding or not naming?
If you're in the heat of
conflict or stress, head east. Emotional regulation. Use the react method that I
talked about in episode 627. Anchor and breath. Slow down. Respond. Don't react.
If you feel distant from others or if you feel like you're performing to be
liked, then that is your cue to go south, valuing others.
Try small, genuine presence, a name, a note,
a pause to really see someone.
And if you're clashing with someone
who's different from you, that's West, cultural intelligence.
Ask, am I curious or am I just assuming how can I connect across this gap?
Not control it. Each direction brings something different, but they all lead the same way. Back
to congruence, back to connection, back to you. And this is why the React method matters. It's
not just a way to stay calm. It's a way to stay congruent, especially when pressure
rises.
Let's line the RACKED method up for you.
Recognize the spike.
That's self-honesty.
Exhale before engaging.
That's the pause that protects your values.
Align with your values.
That's your North Star.
Choose your response. That's aligned action.
Take time to reflect. That's how you integrate, learn, and grow. Presence, awareness, integrity.
It all comes back to this. Not being someone else, not performing a more polished version of you, but practicing daily
what it means to be true, even 10% truer than yesterday.
So if congruence is the soil that real connection grows in, what would it look like to tend
to yours?
This isn't about being perfect. It's about being real, about becoming someone
you trust, even in the quiet moments, even in the tension, even when no one else is watching.
So, here's my challenge to you. Step one, name where you feel off. Where in your life do your insides and outsides
not match up? Is it a relationship? Is it your leadership? Your voice in the room, perhaps?
Be honest. Step two, take one micro-choice towards congruence. Not a leap, just a move. What's one thing that you can do to bring your inner
truth and your outer expression 10% closer? Say no. Speak up. Pause before replying or just name
the feeling even to yourself. And then step three, say it out loud to a partner, a friend,
perhaps just write it down in your journal.
Say this, I am choosing congruence here,
even if it's messy, even if it's small,
because that is how trust grows,
not all at once, but one real act at a time.
And if you're not sure where to begin,
start with the compass.
Ask yourself what direction feels most out of sync right now.
Is it self-awareness, emotional presence,
valuing others, seeing across difference?
Then take one step in that direction.
That wraps up our journey through the Connected Life,
a series about presence, emotional awareness,
and building trust in a noisy world.
And I hope what you're walking away with
isn't just a set of rules,
but a deeper relationship with yourself.
Because connection doesn't start out there,
it starts in here.
And if you're ready to go deeper, go to the ignited life.net or
check the show notes. You'll find the congruence check in toolkit, a free guide with prompts,
the three anchors framework and reflection questions to help you navigate today's episode.
And if this series helped you see yourself and how you connect with others differently,
share it, leave a review, send it to someone you care about others differently. Share it. Leave a review.
Send it to someone you care about. We grow in community. We grow by practicing out loud.
And we grow by continuing the work, even when no one's watching.
Next week, we turn the page. We're launching a brand new series for July titled The Power
to Change, a month-long dive into how real transformation
happens in our thoughts, our behaviors, and our emotions. We kick it off with Dr. Bob Rosen,
a global CEO whisperer, psychologist, and New York Times bestselling author to unpack the science
behind why change is so hard and how to actually make it stick. Detached does not mean disengaged or disconnected. Quite the opposite. It means that you get rid of
the stuff that is holding you back and holding you down, the baggage, and it frees up energy
to focus on the things that matter, whether it's our
health and wellbeing or our communities or democracy or the environment, wherever you
stand politically, it frees you up for energy.
I'll see you next week and until then, be real, be rooted, be someone you trust, and
live life passion struck.