Passion Struck with John R. Miles - When AI Runs the World, What’s Your Competitive Edge? w/John R. Miles | EP 693
Episode Date: November 21, 2025What if the future belonged not to the fastest, the smartest, or the most optimized, but to the most human?In this milestone 200th solo episode of Passion Struck, John R. Miles reveals why yo...ur humanity — your creativity, your emotional depth, your intentionality — is the sharpest competitive edge you have in an AI-accelerated world.Drawing from insights across our Irreplaceables series and weaving in lessons from guests like Scott D. Anthony, Elias Weiss Friedman (The Dogist), Amina AlTai, and Lynn Smith, John explores the core truth of the decade:Everything that can be automated will be. Everything that can be commoditized already is. What is left, and what has always been left, is the part of you no machine will ever replace.You will uncover why creativity is the purest expression of a lived life, how emotional depth builds trust faster than any KPI, and why intentionality is the one domain AI will never touch. This episode is not just a reflection. It is a blueprint for staying irreplaceable in the age of automation.If you have ever wondered how to protect the parts of you that make you who you are, this episode will awaken you to the daily practices that transform vulnerability into a superpower.Read the full show notes here: https://passionstruck.com/why-humanity-is-your-competitive-edge/Listen, Watch, and Go DeeperAll resources, including Passion Struck, You Matter, Luma, The Ignited Life Substack, and the Start Mattering Store, are collected here:👉 linktr.ee/John_R_MilesWant to apply to today’s episode?Download the free companion workbook: The Human Edge Field Guide, available now at TheIgnitedLife.netInside, you will find reflection prompts, science-backed exercises, and the three daily practices John teaches in this episode to keep your humanity sharp in a machine-shaped world.Support the MovementEveryone deserves to feel seen, valued, and like they matter.Show it. Wear it. Live it.StartMattering.comSee 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,
what if I told you the thing that will define your success
and your significance in the next decade isn't your skills?
It's not your resume.
It's not even your intelligence.
It's your humanity.
Not the polished version you post on LinkedIn,
but the raw, messy, unautomitable parts.
How you imagine when no one's watching.
How you empathize when it costs you something,
how you create meaning out of chaos.
no algorithm will ever understand. In a world, addicted to efficiency, the ultimate competitive
advantage is being courageously, stubbornly, beautifully human. 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.
Welcome back, friends, to Passion Struck episode 693.
I'm your host, John Miles, and today is truly a special moment.
This is episode 200 of our solo series.
200 times you and I have sat here together.
Just us, a microphone, and the conviction that a life of intention is still worth fighting for.
that number still takes my breath away. Thank you for showing up. Thank you for growing with this show
and thank you for being part of a community that still believes humanity isn't a weakness. It's the
point. If this show has ever inspired you or help you take a meaningful step forward,
here's how you can help it grow. First, share this episode with someone who will find it valuable.
And leave a five-star rating review on Apple Podcast or Spotify. It's a
single best way to help new listeners discover these conversations. Now, we're deep into November
and deep into our series The Irreplaceables. A month-long reminder that as the world accelerates
faster than our nervous system we're designed for, the things that make us human have never
been more valuable, or more rare. Being irreplaceable isn't about your title or your output. It's
about the way you love your people. The courage to rewrite a story that no longer fits.
the quiet strength, to keep showing up when life gets harder than you planned.
And if you've been listening the past few weeks, you've already felt what I mean.
Elias Wise Friedman, or as millions know him on social media as the doggist,
showed us that a single moment of eye contact with a stranger's dog can crack us open in ways
productivity apps never will.
Amina Altai reminded us that abandoning yourself is the fastest path to burn out,
and reclaiming your worth is the foundation of sustainable ambition.
Earlier this week, Scott D. Anthony proved that creativity isn't a flash of genius.
It's the courage to fall in love with a problem.
No one else is willing to hold long enough.
And Lynn Smith, after 15 years on national TV,
let us see behind the curtain, the brain bowl, the perfectionism,
and the slow bravery building of self-belief.
Each guest gave us a different piece of what it means to be irrefutable.
replaceable, creativity, emotional death, self-worth, presence, courage. And today, episode
693, we pull those threads into something larger. Because if creativity is the raw material
and emotional depth is the amplifier, then the force that shapes them into a true competitive
advantage is something only you can supply. Your intentional humanity. Before we dive in,
Remember, you can find behind-the-scenes insights on our YouTube channels and comparison resources
for every episode at the IgnitedLife.netnet.
My substack where I share workbooks and tools so you can apply each lesson to your own life.
All right, let's get into it.
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.
For 50 years.
We were sold a very specific formula for success.
Go to the best school, collect the impressive credentials, outwork everyone, optimize every minute of your life, and you will win the future.
That story died the moment ChatGPT wrote a better cover letter in six seconds than most of us could in six hours.
Welcome to the age of acceleration.
Information is air. Speed is table stakes.
Optimization is now a 20-a-month subscription, and yet, think about what actually moved you
last week. Was it the fastest email response? The cleanest slide deck, the most optimized workflow.
Or was it the text from a friend who remembered the anniversary of your dad's passing, a voice
note from your kid that just said, I miss you today, or that unexpected moment when someone
paused a conversation and asked a question that changed.
everything. Those moments didn't win because they were efficient. They won because they were human.
Those leaps, those turn the course of your life moments, don't come from process and power.
They come from lived experience, from scar tissue, from the nights you cried in the dark asking,
why does any of this matter and somehow found an answer worth waking up for?
Let me ask you something. Think of the last decision your genuine
proud of. The one that still feels right in your body. Did you make it because you ran more scenarios
or because you stopped optimizing, got quiet, and listened to a deeper truth inside you. That quiet
place is the new scarce resource. The future will not belong to the most productive humans. It will
belong to the ones who can harmonize doing with being. Doing can be automated. Being cannot.
The most valuable person in the next decade won't be the one with the most skills.
It will be the one whose humanity has been sharpened by failure,
softened by compassion, and deepened by choosing the meaningful thing instead of the efficient thing.
Because everything that can be automated will be.
Everything that can be commoditized already is.
What's always been left is the part of you no machine.
will ever replace. The part that feels, the part that chooses, the part that loves, the part that
decides, that some things are worth doing slowly, imperfectly, and entirely human. Hold on to that
part. Protect it fiercely. It's not just your humanity. In the world, we're stepping into,
it's your edge. Here's the simple truth. Once you understand that doing,
can be automated, but being can't, you start to notice something else.
The ideas that you visit at midnight, the instincts that tug at your ribs, for reasons you can't
explain, the pattern you see that no one else in the room sees. That's not productivity. That's
not optimization. That's not a skill. You even list on a resume. That right there is
creativity, and it's the purest expression of your humanity. Real creativity,
doesn't come from someone's job title or IQ score.
It comes from a life fully felt.
It comes from the heartbreak that you didn't think you'd survive,
the loss that rearranged your insides.
The moment you realized something needed to be said aloud,
even if your voice trembled,
the contradictions that you've learned to carry in the same chest.
I'm scared and I'm ready.
I failed and I'm still here.
I'm broken and I know there's something in me worth saving.
No machine has lived a life like that.
No dataset contains that level of contradiction or courage.
And that's why your creativity is so dangerous, so wholly, so irreplaceable.
Think about Sarah Blakely in 1998, standing in her apartment, frustrated beyond belief
that Pantyhose hadn't changed since the 1960.
So she grabs scissors, cuts the feet off, and changes an entire industry.
Not because of technology, but because discomfort sparked defiance, and defiance sparked innovation.
Or think about Lynn Manuel Miranda in 2008, reading a Hamilton biography by the pool,
just two pages in, suddenly hearing hip-hop in the founding father's voices.
He's overwhelmed, crying on a lounge chair.
Most people would have shrugged and said cool idea, but he followed that whisper until it became a revolution on a Broadway stage.
Or think about J.K. Rowling on that delayed Manchester train, ideas arriving faster than she could catch them.
No paper, too shy to borrow a pen. So she sits there, letting a world pour through her.
A world that one day would allow millions of kids to see themselves as powerful.
chosen and full of possibility.
These stories aren't about genius.
They're about aliveness, about feeling something so deeply that the universe inside you demands
a form outside you.
And your creativity comes from that same place.
It's in the way you talk your teenager off an emotional cliff by cracking a joke you didn't
plan.
It's in the email you write for your team that somehow shifts the whole room from panic
to possibility.
It's the business idea that shows up while you're sitting in traffic because your mind is unguarded enough to wander.
In a world, drowning in perfect copies, the original becomes priceless.
Your creativity isn't your talent. It's your testimony. It's the artifact of every wound you've healed and every hope you've carried, every truth you've had to live through.
And here's the part most people forget.
Creativity is not optional. It's not a nice to have. It's not something quote-unquote artists do. It's how humans metabolize life.
We take our experiences, the pain, the joy, the confusion, the awe, and we turn them into something, a solution, a sentence, a song, a strategy, a small act of connection that echoes for years.
That is the thing no machine will ever replicate, not because of limitations in code,
but because creativity is born from the deeply personal terrain of being alive.
So feed your creativity, protect it from the speed of the world, give it boredom, heartbreak, wonder,
long walks, silence, risk.
Because the day you sacrifice your weird, wild imagination at the altar of efficiency,
is the day you start becoming replaceable.
And you, with your stories, your scars,
your contradictions, your aliveness,
were never meant to be replaceable.
So here's the truth I want you to hear in your bones.
Creativity may be the spark,
but emotional death is the oxygen.
Your ideas make you irreplaceable,
but your humanity is what makes those ideas land.
And that brings us to something almost nobody talks about.
Because for decades, we've been taught to hide it, downplay it, sanitize it.
But in the age of AI, it has quietly become the hardest currency there is.
Before we go deeper, let me pause and ask you something.
When was the last time you truly felt seen?
Not evaluated, not optimized, seen.
If you've been following the irreplaceable series, you already know this.
Connection is a superpower and it starts young.
That's why I'm so excited to share my first children's book,
You Matter Luma, which is now available for pre-order at Barnes & Noble.
It's a beautifully illustrated story about a little bunny
who feels too small to matter.
Until she discovers the light inside her can change everything.
It's about belonging, empathy, courage,
the same themes we explore here every week.
When you pre-order, you help bring the message of mattering to families,
classrooms, and communities everywhere. Just visit you matterluma.com to learn more.
Now, a quick word from our sponsors. Thank you for supporting those who support the show.
It truly helps us keep bringing you conversations that matter.
You're listening to Passionstruck on the Passionstruck network. Let's pick up where we left off.
We've been conditioned to treat emotional death like the soft stuff, the bonus, the thing
you get to after the real work.
But emotional death is not soft.
It's the hardest currency in the modern world.
Empathy builds trust faster than any KPI dashboard could.
I've seen billion-dollar deals close,
not because someone had the best valuation model,
but because one founder looked the other in the eye
and said, hey, you know what?
I know how terrifying this is.
I almost lost everything in 2008.
In that moment, humanity did what spreadsheets couldn't.
Integrity builds a reputation
that outlives every title and every exit.
People forget metrics,
but they remember the time you honored a promise
when no one would have known if you walked away.
Compassion creates loyalty.
No compensation package can buy.
For instance, I know the owner of a restaurant
in St. Petersburg, Florida,
who spent the pandemic paying his employees not to work.
Not HR, not a script, him.
Three years later, his turnover is almost zero.
Because people don't leave leaders who showed up in the dark.
Because people don't leave leaders who showed up in the dark.
And presence, real undistracted presence.
Creates connection, no filter, no camera angle,
No perfectly polished persona can fake.
We all know what it feels like when someone is truly with us.
No slack, no side-eyeing their phone, just two humans breathing the same air.
It's rarer than an Ivy League resume and infinitely more valuable.
People don't follow perfection. They follow someone who feels like home.
Think about the leaders who shaped your life. Were they flawless or were they the ones who sat
beside you in the mess and made you believe you could survive it. People don't pay for information
anymore. We're drowning in information. They pay sometimes desperately to feel seen, to feel
understood, to feel less alone. A therapist isn't paid for memorizing diagnoses. They're paid for
the strength to sit in someone else's pain without flinching. A coach doesn't.
doesn't earn $50,000 because they have the best systems.
They earn it because when you whisper,
I'm terrified I'm going to fail.
They say, tell me about the last time you survived something
you thought would break you.
A creator doesn't build a million-person audience
because their edits are perfect.
They build it because one day they cried on camera
about the divorce or the addiction
or the night they almost didn't make it.
And strangers whispered back, me too.
That's emotional death in action.
It's not a liability.
It's the performance advantage that compounds over time.
The deeper you're willing to go, the higher everyone around you rises.
Your emotional death is not the soft part of your humanity.
It is the strongest part, and it's the part that becomes impossible to replace.
But here's the thing most people never realize.
emotional death doesn't work in isolation. It only becomes direction, only becomes power
when you point it somewhere, because feeling deeply is one thing. Choosing what those feelings
are in service of, that's where life actually changes. Creativity gives you new possibilities.
Emotional death gives you the courage to pursue them. But intentionality, intentionality is what
keeps you from building a fast, optimized, beautifully efficient life that you don't even want.
So let's talk about the part of humanity AI will never touch, the part where you decide what
your life is actually for. Automation ends where meaning begins. Your phone already knows how to
run your day. It can fill your calendar, reorder your groceries, write your birthday cards,
remind you of anniversaries,
even nudge you toward the optimal version of yourself.
All of that is convenient,
but none of it is meaningful
unless you decide what any of it is for.
Because your life is not shaped by the tasks you automate,
it's shaped by the choices you make on purpose,
the ones no algorithm can make for you.
Intentionality is the quiet discipline
of choosing what deserves your
finite energy, what you will protect, even when it's inconvenient, what you will walk away from,
even if it looks like success on paper, and who you will become when no one is watching. Those choices
build a life, not the optimized ones, the intentional ones. I think about an executive I worked with
last year. Corner office, seven figure bonus, the resume people dream about, and he sat across from me and
said, I'm terrified. I've built the wrong life. I could sympathize with them because I have been that
person before. AI could have optimized his next 10 career moves. Only he could choose to step
off the ladder. Take a 70% pay cut and move his family across the country to be near his aging
parents while he still had time. His kids don't remember the bonus. They remember the father.
who finally showed up you see intentionality rarely looks glamorous it's like
closing the laptop at 5 p.m. even when Slack is still slamming it looks like
having the uncomfortable conversation instead of the efficient one it looks like
choosing the slower truer path because that's the one that leads you back to
yourself AI will never ask you is this still who I want to be it will never sit
down with you after a loss and help you decide what
It matters enough to keep going.
This, this meaning-making, value-chusing,
identity-shaping space belongs to you alone.
The algorithms will keep getting faster.
Let them.
Your job is to keep getting clearer,
because the most powerful force in your one wild life
is not speed, it's not efficiency,
it's certainly not optimization.
It's the quiet daily courage to live on purpose.
purpose. So that's the truth about intentionality. It's not a productivity hack. It's not a morning
routine. It's the daily act of choosing what your life is for. And once you understand that,
once you realize your choices, not your outputs, shape the only life you get. There's a bigger
question waiting underneath all of it. A question, this entire series, and honestly,
these 200 solo episodes have been pointing toward. A question only you.
you can answer.
So here it is.
What makes you irreplaceable?
Not your output, not your resume,
not the number of tabs you can open
or how efficiently you power through your day.
Those are skills.
Useful, sure, but increasingly replicable.
What makes you irreplaceable is everything in you
that cannot be automated, accelerated, or optimized.
You are irreplaceable because,
you can tell stories no machines will ever understand, not generic stories, your stories.
The night your grandmother didn't come home from the hospital, the moment someone chose you
when you didn't feel choosable, the memory you carry of forgiving someone who never apologized.
An algorithm can generate a thousand fictional heartbreaks. Only you can tell the one that actually
happened in the voice only you have lived. You are irreplaceable because you can feel things
machines will never feel. Grief that sits like a stone in your chest. Joy so sharp it almost
scares you. The ache of watching your child step into who they are in a way from who they've been to you.
A model can describe emotion. It cannot wake up gasping from it. It cannot decide to
side to get out of bed anyway, but you can. You are irreplaceable because you can love in ways
machines will never love. Not the curated version, not the emoji version. I'm talking about the love
that stays when it's wildly inconvenient. The love that remembers a friend's coffee order 20 years
later, the love that sits with someone in their lowest moment with nothing to offer except your
presence. That kind of love rewires a life. It heals families. It's the only reason the human story
has survived this long. And you are irreplaceable because you can imagine futures. Machines will
never dream. Not the optimized future, not the extrapolated future. I mean the futures that hit
in prayer, in a shower, at a funeral, on a long drive across the country. The futures that demand
everything because they feel more true than the present ever did. Those visions have reshaped
nations, families, movements, and destinies, and every one of them began in the chest of a single
human being. Your humanity isn't the soft edge of your success. It is the sharpest blade you will
ever wield. And here's the paradox. The more the world automates everything else, the more
you're stubborn, messy, loving. Dreaming humanity becomes your ultimate advantage. It becomes the
reason someone hires you, trusts you, follows you, falls in love with you, remembers you long after
you're gone. So stop waiting for permission to be fully human. Stop apologizing for the parts of
you that can't be measured. Stop treating your death like a flaw. The machines are coming for
everything else. Let them. You were always meant to win by being the one thing they will
never be unapologetically, irrevocably, beautifully human. So if all of that is true,
if your stories, your imagination, your empathy, your love, your lived humanity are the things
that make you irreplaceable, then the question becomes, how do you protect that? How do you sharpen it?
How do you live in a world of machines without slowly becoming one? Because being human isn't a one-time
declaration. It's a daily practice, a choice you make in small, almost invisible ways. And I want to
leave you with three of those daily choices, simple, repeatable, transformative, not haps,
not a 30-day sprint, just three behaviors that over time turn your humanity into a superpower.
Let's land this milestone episode here with the practices that keep you unmistakably, undeniably,
beautifully human. The first is to build your meaning-making muscle. Every night before your head
hits the pillow, ask yourself two questions. What happened today? And why did it actually matter?
I'm not talking about what you accomplished, not what you checked off a list.
Did your day matter to the person you're becoming?
Maybe it was a hard conversation you finally had.
Maybe it was a stranger's kindness at the grocery store.
Maybe it was the way your child hugged you a little longer than usual.
Five sentences is enough.
Do that for 30 days and patterns will appear.
Do it for a year and you realize you weren't just living days.
You were building a story.
Reflection doesn't slow life down. It gives it direction.
And here's the second thing you can do.
Practice creative courage.
Every single day, make one thing that didn't exist yesterday.
A voice memo, a scribble, a paragraph in the notes app,
a melody you hum while making coffee,
a recipe you invent because you're out of the right ingredient.
It doesn't have to be good, it has to be yours.
Because creation isn't about output, it's about aliveness.
It reminds your nervous system, I don't just consume the world, I shape it.
And every small act of creation makes the next one easier.
Until I'm not creative turns into what else have I been wrong about.
And third, choose presence over performance.
In your next conversation, it doesn't matter who it's with.
Give someone three minutes of undivided attention.
Put the phone out of reach.
Look them in the eyes.
Listen like their words are the only thing on the planet.
That's it. Presence is the rarest currency left on Earth.
People won't remember your perfect advice.
They will remember how you made them feel seen.
Do this daily and watch what happens.
Relationships deepen.
Trust grows and you become the person others feel safe around.
That safety, that warmth, that groundedness.
That's your humanity at full voltage.
Three practices.
meaning creation connection start tonight no permission needed no perfect conditions required just the
quiet decision that your irreplaceable self is worth three small acts of courage every single day
because the blade only stays sharp when you use it friends we did it 200 episodes 200 times
we've sat together you me a microphone and the belief that intentional living still matters
If today's episode gave you a new lens on your humanity or helped you feel a little less alone in the noise,
here's how you pay the fee.
Share this episode with one person who needs to hear it.
Leave a five-star rating on Apple Podcast or Spotify.
It's how new listeners find this movement.
Subscribe to the ignitedlife.net.
My free substack where I give you takeaways, companion workbooks, and behind-the-scenes insights for every episode.
And don't forget, my children's book, UMatter Luma, is now available for pre-order at Barnes & Noble.
If you want a child in your life to grow up knowing that they are seen valued and never too small to make a difference, this book was written for them.
Pre-orders help bring this message of mattering into homes, families, and classrooms everywhere.
And next week, we continue the irreplaceables with a conversation that left me changed.
I'm sitting down with Jane Chen for a live discussion face-to-face.
Jane is the co-founder of Embrace Innovations, whose low-cost infant warmer has saved millions.
millions of premature babies around the world.
We explore the emotional resilience required to change the world,
how heartbreak became our purpose,
and why human compassion, not technology,
remains our most powerful catalysts for change.
I finally connected the dots.
Feeling so powerless through my childhood,
that's what had driven me to want to help
the most powerless people in the world.
I had not made that connection before.
So my pain had become
my purpose, but it was also my shadow because it led me to working in very unhealthy ways,
as I said, to the point of just complete burnout, because I also believe that my worth
depended on what I achieved. So it wasn't just like the passion and the urgency, but there was
this whole thing where my worthiness and sense of enoughness was tangled up in achievement.
Until next time, remember, to matter is to be seen, and the revels with one gaze, one name, one I noticed.
I'm John Miles. This is Passionstruck. Thank you for 200 episodes. Now, go start the revolution.
If you followed me for any length of time, you know I'm constantly searching for the
breakthroughs that actually make a difference in how we age, feel, and perform.
Lately, I've been taking timeline mitopure gummies, and I've got to tell you, I'm feeling the
shift. My energy is more sustained, my focus sharper, and my recovery quicker. It's like
I upgraded my engine at the cellular level. What makes them stand out? They're powered by
mitopure, the only clinically proven form of urolithin A, a compound that activates your longevity
pathways, supports muscle strength, and improves cellular energy. It's clean, vegan, and backed by
over 15 years of cutting-edge science. Dr. Mark Hyman calls uralithin A a game changer for longevity,
and with mitopure, everyone can benefit, no matter your gut health. If you want to stay strong
and energize now, and as you age, then you have to try mitopure gummies. My friends at Timeline
are offering 20% off just for my listeners.
Head to timeline.com slash passionstruck to get started.
That's timeline.com slash passionstruck.
Yourselves will thank you.
