Passion Struck with John R. Miles - Whose Story Are You Living? How to Take Back the Pen w/ John R. Miles | EP 684
Episode Date: October 31, 2025What if the story you’re living… isn’t yours?In this powerful solo episode of Passion Struck, host John R. Miles explores how culture, work, and media quietly script our lives — shapi...ng what we value, chase, and believe we deserve — often without us realizing it.Drawing on insights from Claude Silver (VaynerX Chief Heart Officer) and Nick Thompson (CEO of The Atlantic), John unpacks how the stories we inherit, absorb, and create define who we become — and how to reclaim authorship in a world that profits from your distraction.You’ll learn why belonging isn’t the same as becoming, how the algorithms that shape your feed also shape your identity, and why the courage to rewrite your story might just be the most important act of your life.This episode closes out our acclaimed series, The Forces That Pull Us — a month-long journey through the invisible forces that guide how we think, lead, and live.If you’ve ever felt like you’re performing a role that no longer fits, this episode is your call to take back the pen.Read the full shownotes here!🎧 Listen + Watch + Go DeeperAll episode resources—including my books You Matter, Luma, and Passion Struck, The Ignited Life Substack, and Start Mattering store—are gathered here:👉 linktr.ee/John_R_MilesTo go deeper, download the free companion workbook:The Stories That Shape Us Toolkit — available now at TheIgnitedLife.net.Inside, you’ll find reflections and prompts to help you uncover the cultural, professional, and personal stories that have shaped your identity — and begin rewriting them with intention.🧠 About the EpisodeDiscover how culture, work, and media quietly script your life — and how to reclaim authorship.Learn why belonging isn’t the same as becoming — and how to rewrite the stories that hold you back.Explore how algorithms shape what we see and believe, and how intentional awareness changes everything.Understand why authenticity isn’t rebellion — it’s reclamation.Gain practical steps to audit your inherited stories and realign them with your chosen values.Let’s Continue the ConversationWhat story are you living right now — and who’s holding the pen?Share your reflection on The Ignited Life, or post it on social using #TheStoriesThatShapeUs.John will feature select responses in next week’s newsletter.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
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Your first great love story is free when you sign up for a free 30-day trial at audible.ca slash
Wondery. That's audible.ca.com. Coming up next on Passionstruck, what if your entire life
is being shaped by forces you can't see? Not fate, not luck, something subtler. The quiet gravity
that pulls you towards purpose, the doubt that test your fate in it. The intuition that
that whispers when logic runs out, the words that build trust or fracture it. The culture that
tells you who you're supposed to be. These are the invisible currents that shape us, whether we
notice them or not. They guide how we lead, how we love, how we create, and how we connect.
They define what we chase, what we fear, and what we believe we deserve. But here's the paradox.
the same forces that pull us can also free us once we learn to see them.
So today, as we close, the forces that pull us series,
we're looking at the stories that shape our reality,
the cultural myths, the workplace identities,
and the media narratives that quietly decide who we become.
Because to live intentionally, you have to know which forces you're following
and which ones are quietly writing your story for you.
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, welcome to episode 684 Passionstruck. I'm your host, John Miles, and I'm
so glad you're here. To all of you who come back week after week, thank you. You're not just
supporting a podcast. You're fueling a movement to create a world where people feel seen,
valued, and like they truly matter. And if the show has ever inspired you or helped you live more
intentionally, here are two quick ways to help it grow. First, share this episode with someone
who's searching for meaning. A friend, a colleague, a leader in your life. Second, leave a five-star
review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. It takes less than a minute, but it's the single best way to
help new listeners discover these conversations. This episode also comes with a free companion
workbook. I created just for you at the ignitedlife.net. It's called The Stories That Shape
Us Toolkit, and it's filled with reflections, prompts, and exercises to help you uncover
the cultural, professional, and personal stories that have shaped your identity and began
rewriting them with intention. Today marks the final chapter of our month-long series,
The Forces That Pull Us, where we've explored how unseen influences quietly guide the way we
think, lead, and live. In week one, we began with Dr. Brennan Spiegel and Dr. Bobby Palmer
exploring gravity, doubt, and the pull toward meaning, how uncertainty, belief, and moral
tension can become catalysts for transformation. In week two, Judd Kessler and Amy Lee McCray
showed us how luck, intuition, and the art of intentional design reveal life as a balance
between serendipity and self-direction, between what happens to us and what we create.
In week three, Dr. Sinita Saw and Charles Duhigg took us deeper into doubt, leadership, and
language, how the unseen forces of trust and communication shape our ethical choices and
relationships. And now, in week four, we close with Claude Silver and Nick Thompson, two leaders
from very different worlds who share a common question.
Whose story are you living?
Claude reminds us that authenticity at work
is a radical act of leadership,
that the courage to be yourself
can rewrite culture from the inside out.
Nick reveals how media, technology,
and performance culture
shape the stories we tell,
and why reclaiming our narrative
may be the most human act left.
Because here's the thing.
The stories you live by
might not actually be yours.
What if they're written for you, by your culture, by your company, or the algorithms on your
phone? A story isn't just something we consume, it's something that consumes us. And the deeper
truth, maybe it's not one or the other. Maybe it's both, because we are what we consume.
Every guest this month has shown us a different storyteller. Luck, intuition, doubt, language,
leadership. But none write on us permanently as the stories we keep swallowing. Every culture,
every workplace, every media feed is a storyteller, whispering who to be, what to value, and what
to fear. But what happens when those stories begin to eclipse our own? Today, on Passionstruck,
we're exploring what it takes to reclaim your narrative from the culture, the companies in the media
that shape it, and how to find your true voice in a world that profits from your silence. Thank you for
choosing Passion Struck and choosing me to be your hosting guide on your journey to creating an
intentional life. Now, let that journey begin.
Every story begins somewhere. But most of us don't start with a blank page. Before we ever write
our own story, we inherit one. It comes from our families, our cultures, our workplaces,
all quietly telling us what matters, what success looks like, who we should be, and how we're
supposed to behave to belong. Each one delivers a silent syllabus built on four axis, values, what
matters, metrics, what success looks like, roles, who we should be, rules, how to behave
to belong. But belonging is not the same as becoming. Stedman Graham calls this the moment of identity
foreclosure when the script hardens into a cage. So how do you get out? You audit the inheritance.
Keep the values that still vibrate in your chest. Delete the roles that fit someone else's
silhouette. Then write the one-line philosophy that outranks every other choice.
This is who I am when no one is watching and what I will build when everyone is.
But here's the funny thing.
These stories are powerful because they start off invisible.
They're not written in books or scripts.
They're written in expectations.
In the praise we chase, the approval we seek, the rules we learn not to break.
Claude Silver knows this feeling all too well.
Before she became the chief heart officer at Vayner-Ex, she was a high-performing advertising executive, living out the story the world had defined as winning.
She had the clients, the corner office, the titles, the paycheck, everything that says, you've made it.
Then one day she realized she'd fallen out of love with the very thing that was supposed to define her.
She told me, I cared less about the campaigns and more about the heartbeat of this place.
That line hit me hard because in that moment, Claude stopped performing someone else's story
and started living her own. She didn't just change jobs. She changed authors. She walked away from
selling ideas to start nurturing people, from metrics to meaning. And that shift, that quiet act of
rebellion, was her way of saying, this story isn't mine anymore. It made me think about the stories
we all inherit. The ones that come disguised as ambition or responsibility, the ones that tell us
were only as valuable as our output, or as lovable as our success, the stories that reward conformity
more than creativity, obedience, more than authenticity. And because those stories are repeated by culture,
by leaders, by systems, by media, they start to feel like truth. But here's the thing. Every inherited
story carries a hidden question. Do you accept this as your own? When I look back at my own life,
I can see the story I inherited too. It was one built on discipline, achievement, and service.
Values I still hold deeply. They were the rails my childhood ran on. Wake at 5.30. Practice the
scales. Make the grades. Serve the family. The team. The cause. I mistook the rhythm.
the road. Discipline is the engine. Direction is the map. You can run a flawless machine in
circles and still arrive nowhere you're meant to go. I remember the year I hit every metric
I'd been handed. Promotion, savings target, volunteer hours logged. I stood in the kitchen
of a house that looked exactly like success and felt the hollow echo of a question I hadn't
asked in a decade, whose life am I optimizing? The inherited story had kept me moving,
but it hadn't kept me aimed. It rewarded motion over meaning. It celebrated the how at the expense
of the why. And the longer I obeyed its cadence, the quieter my own compass became. Purpose doesn't
come from the story. Others write for you. It comes from the meaning you choose to live into. That's
the deeper cut. Discipline without direction is just discipline drifting. You can log the miles,
check the boxes, and still wake up a stranger to yourself. The inherited script is a powerful
starting point. Mine gave me grip, reliability, and a moral spine. But it's not the destination.
It's the launch pad. The moment I saw the difference, I started auditing the autopilot. Every habit,
every goal, every should, got cross-examined. Does this still point toward a life I'd choose
if no one were watching? Does this deepen the story I want my obituary to tell in one honest
sentence? Some answers were brutal. I let go of the 4 a.m. runs that were more penance than joy.
I stopped chasing the next credential that looked good on a form but felt hollow in my hands.
kept the discipline, the muscle memory of showing up, but I re-aimed it. I pointed it at questions
instead of quotas, at relationships instead of resumes, at the quiet work of becoming the kind of man
my future self would thank, not just a plot. Direction I learned is discipline and service
of a chosen North Star. It's a difference between a soldier marching in formation and a pilgrim walking
toward a horizon only he can see. One is impressive. The other is alive. So I'll keep the inherited
values, discipline, achievement, service. But I'll yield them like tools, not chains. I'll ask,
every quarter, every dawn, is the life I'm building still mine? Because the greatest act of authorship
isn't writing a new story from scratch, it's having the courage to edit the one you were handed
until the protagonist sounds unmistakably like you. And maybe now you're thinking about your own
life, the story you've inherited, the one that still whispers, what you should be. Take a breath,
friends, what's the script you're still acting out? Claude's story is a reminder.
Leadership begins with authorship, because you can't lead others towards authenticity if you're still performing a role yourself.
Here's the thing. It's one thing to inherit a story. It's another to be constantly fed one.
Every day, we're absorbing stories from culture, from media, from the digital world that now lives in our pockets.
Stories about what success should look like, what happiness should feel like.
like. What's trending? Who's winning? Who's worthy? And if we're not careful, those stories
start living in us. Before we even realize, we've invited them in. Nick Thompson, the CEO of the
Atlantic, has spent his entire career studying this. He's seen firsthand how the stories we consume
shape the stories we believe. When we spoke, he told me something that really stuck.
There's going to be a real premium on authenticity. No one's going to trust people who use
AI to write. And he's right. Because in a world where algorithms decide what we see and technology
shapes how we sound, authenticity is no longer a given. It's an act of resistance. Nick talked about
how the media, and I'd argue social media most of all, doesn't just inform us. It forms us. It edits
our attention. It curates our values. And over time, it subtly rewrites
who we think we are. Think about it. Your feed learns what makes you pause, what makes you
angry, what makes you click, and then it feeds you more of that. It's storytelling in reverse.
Instead of you choosing the story, the story starts choosing you. But here's the pivot Nick
didn't spell out, the one that puts you back in the driver's seat. You still hold the wheel. Every
Every scroll, every linger, every tap is a vote you cast.
The algorithm isn't a puppet master, it's a mirror, and it amplifies what you already choose
to engage with.
That's why Nick's perspective hit home for me, and why it doesn't have to end in surrender.
Because what he's describing isn't just a technological issue, it's a human one.
We've outsourced our curiosity.
We've traded reflection for reaction.
And in the process, we've let the loudest stories drown out the quietest truths inside us.
When I look back on the conversations throughout this series, with people like Judd Kessler and
Luck, Amy Lee McCree on intuition, Sonita Saw on Defiance, and Charles Duhigg on communication,
I realize they've all been pointing toward the same invisible force, the tension between
noise and narrative between the external voices that shape our world and the internal voice that
defines our soul. And the human part, that's where the power lives. Engagement isn't passive
consumption. It's authorship. When you decide to pause on curiosity instead of outrage, to share
wonder instead of division, the feed learns a new story. Your story. Authenticity then isn't just
resistance, it's reclamation. You choose, you curate, you drive. Nick calls it the attention
economy. I call it the authorship crisis. Because if you're not careful, you end up living someone
else's algorithm. And before you know it, your identity is being copyrighted in real time by likes,
by views, and validation loops. That's why authenticity matters more now than ever. Not the performative
kind, the kind that starts in silence when you step back and ask yourself, do I still believe this
or do I just scroll into it? The stories we absorb don't just shape our worldview. They shape
our worth. And if we want to reclaim that worth, we have to reclaim what we consume. So maybe the next
time you open your phone, take a breath before you scroll. Ask yourself, is this story expanding me or editing
me because every piece of content you consume is either deepening your truth or diluting it. And in a world
that profits from your distraction, paying attention to what shapes you might just be the most
intentional act you can take. So here's a question for you to sit with. What stories are you living
that no longer feel like yours? Are they inherited, absorbed, or intentionally chosen? You can share
your reflection in the comments on The Ignited Life are posted on social using the hashtag
the stories that shape us. I'd love to feature a few of your insights in next week's newsletter.
And if you haven't heard yet, I just announced my first children's book, You Matter Luma.
It's a beautifully illustrated story about a little bunny who feels too small to make a difference
until she discovers that her light truly matters. It's a story about belonging, kindness, and
self-worth, inspired by my own childhood experiences, of learning that being seen can change
a life.
You Matter Luma is available now for pre-order, if Barnes & Noble or wherever books are sold.
When you pre-order, you're helping bring the message of mattering to families everywhere.
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 bringing you conversations that matter.
You're listening to Passionstruck on the Passionstruck network.
So far, we've explored how the stories we inherit and absorb quietly shape who we become.
But what happens when we stop living by those stories and start writing our own?
These are the ones we write consciously, through the choices we make, the values we live by,
and the meaning we give to what happens.
They don't come from culture.
They don't come from algorithms.
They come from intention.
For me, that moment came years after the Navy, deep into corporate life, title on the door, salary
in the bank, respect in the room.
From the outside, the story was perfect.
Inside, it was hollow.
I was living a narrative about performance, not purpose.
Impact measured in numbers, not meaning.
The more I won, the less that I recognized myself.
I remember the boardroom.
Spreadsheets glowing.
Strategy decks stacked.
The hum of a projector, the smell of burnt coffee, and a single thought that cracked it open.
This can't be the whole story.
It wasn't burnout.
It was recognition.
I had stopped growing.
I was reciting an old script.
One I'd outgrown.
So I asked a new question.
What is success isn't something you climb toward, but something you craft from the inside out?
That question became the seed of Passionstruck.
It started as a whisper.
What if people lived and led with intention so that they could matter?
That whisper became a podcast.
That podcast became a movement because Passionstruck isn't about achievement.
It's about mattering, to yourself, to the people you touch, to the quiet corners of the world
that only you can reach.
But here's the truth I learned.
Creating a story that matters
doesn't begin when you have it all figured out.
It begins when you're brave enough to admit
this no longer fits.
Claude Silver did it when she traded ad campaigns
for heart-led culture.
Nick Thompson does it
when he chooses editorial soul
or algorithmic scale.
And you do it every time you pause the feed and ask,
does this still make me matter?
The stories we create aren't written with certain
They're written with courage.
Every time you choose, meaning over metrics, presence over performance, truth over trends,
you etch one more line into a life that matters.
So here's your pen, one sentence.
What will your future self read back and whisper?
Thank God you wrote that because now I matter.
Because the next chapter isn't waiting to be discovered.
It's waiting to be authored.
And that page, it's already open, waiting for the story that finally feels like home.
When you really think about it, every story we live becomes part of something bigger.
Because culture isn't a distant, abstract thing that lives out there.
It's right here built moment by moment, choice by choice, inside each of us.
Every time you choose honesty or image,
you rewrite what leadership looks like.
Every time you listen instead of react,
you change what communication feels like.
Every time you give someone your full attention,
your presence, you remind them that they matter.
That's how culture shifts.
Not through slogans or strategies,
but through people who decide to live differently.
People who decide to matter.
This entire series, the forces that pull us,
has been about that,
about the invisible forces that guide us,
and learning to work with them instead of being controlled by them.
Because gravity, doubt, luck, intuition, language, and story,
they're not enemies to overcome, they're energies to understand.
When we pay attention to them, they become tools for growth instead of traps or self-doubt.
So here's the invitation.
This week, notice the forces shaping your decisions.
Ask yourself, what's pulling me right?
right now, is it fear, expectation, or purpose?
If it's fear, name it.
If it's expectation, question it.
If it's purpose, follow it.
Because that's how we begin to change culture,
not by shouting at the system,
but by rewriting the story inside ourselves first.
Every act of courage, every boundary drawn in truth,
every moment lived with intention,
it all ripples outward.
And one by one, those ripples become connection.
Connection becomes belonging.
Belonging becomes culture.
That's the real force that pulls us forward.
A culture where everyone matters.
So as we close this series, here's my question for you.
What story are you going to live next?
And how will that story make the world around you just a little bit more human?
Because in the end, culture isn't built by system.
It's built by us, by the stories we choose to live, and the courage it takes to live them well.
And when we do, we don't just change culture.
We become the culture.
Thank you for joining me today and for being part of the forces that pull us series.
If this episode inspired you, share it with a friend or colleague, and take a moment to leave a five-star rating or review on Apple Podcast or Spotify.
It's the best way to help new listeners discover the show.
and it keeps this movement growing,
a movement to build a world
where people feel seen, valued,
and like they truly matter.
And if you'd like to go deeper
in today's conversation,
download the free companion workbook,
the stories that shape us toolkit
over at my substack,
the ignitedlife.net.
It's filled with reflections, questions, and prompts
to help you uncover the cultural
and personal narratives
that have shaped your identity
and begin rewriting them with intention.
You can also watch every full-length episode
and interview on our YouTube channels.
Just search for Passion Struck with John R. Miles.
Hit subscribe and join our growing community of people choosing to live like they matter.
Over the past month, we've explored gravity, luck, doubt, language, and story.
The invisible forces that shape how we live, lead, and matter.
But awareness is only the beginning.
The real transformation happens when we start using those forces intentionally.
That's exactly where we're heading next.
In November, I'm launching a brand new series,
called The Irreplaceables, a journey into what makes us humanly unique in an age of algorithms
and acceleration. We'll open up with a powerful conversation with Dr. Zach Seedler, one of the
world's leading experts on men's mental health. Zach and I explore how shifting expectations,
loneliness, and cultural presence are redefining what it means for men to belong, connect,
and lead with the heart. It's one of the most important and eye-opening discussions we've
ever had on the show. I think with anyone, if you're going to get up each and every day and do something
that really matters to you that you have a sense of purpose and meaning around, it has to resonate
on a personal level. It has to light your fire one way or another. And really, there are
many different interweaving narratives that led me to where I am today. The more I reflect on it
through conversations like this, I pick up different threads along the way that really turned me
to the man that I am and led me down the path to doing the work that I do.
Then that Friday, I'll share a solo episode called What AI Can't Teach, the Power of Emotional
Awareness. We'll explore how emotional presence and self-regulation form the foundation of
mattering and why these are the human skills that machines will never replace.
Until next time, listen with empathy, speak with intention, and as always, live life passion-struck.
Thank you.
