The School of Greatness - Your Brain Is Built for God, Not Scarcity | Dr. Lisa Miller
Episode Date: June 8, 2026The #1 illness of our time has nothing to do with your body. Dr. Lisa Miller, Columbia University researcher and author of The Spiritual Child, has spent over a decade scanning human brains to underst...and how we're built for God's presence. What those MRIs reveal is both startling and deeply hopeful. You were not built for scarcity or isolation. Three specific circuits in every human brain light up when you connect to something greater than yourself, a bonding network, an attention network, and a parietal network, each wired to receive love, guidance, and the awareness that you are never alone. The awakened brain is one-third innate, two-thirds cultivated. Which means you can build it. The research on teens will stop you cold. A strong shared spiritual life is 82% protective against completed suicide, which has now surpassed auto accidents as the leading cause of teen death. 80% protective against the onset of addiction. This is not philosophy. These are numbers from global studies of 270,000 children. The path to your best life might not require more effort. It might require a different kind of listening. The Awakened Brain: The New Science of Spirituality and Our Quest for an Inspired Life Amazon Ebook Audiobook The Spiritual Child: The New Science on Parenting for Health and Lifelong Thriving Amazon Ebook Audiobook Dr. Lisa's Instagram Dr. Lisa's Website In this episode you will: Learn why the #1 illness of our time is an ailment of perception, not biology, and what that means for how you live Discover the three brain circuits that hardwire every human being for spiritual connection and how to activate them starting today Recognize the difference between achieving relationships and awakened relationships, and why that shift changes every room you walk into Explore the 4 P's framework developed with the Pentagon for raising spiritually grounded children and adults Understand why a shared spiritual life is the single most protective factor against teen depression, addiction, and suicide, and what every parent can do right now For more information go to https://lewishowes.com/1938 For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960 Follow The Daily Motivation for essential highlights from The School of Greatness More SOG episodes we think you’ll love: Lewis Howes Solo [I Owed THIS To God] Dr Joe Dispenza Dr. Daniel Amen TOPICS Dr. Lisa Miller, awakened brain, The Spiritual Child, spiritual fitness, achieving vs. awakened relationships, 4 P's framework, adolescent spirituality, spiritual parenting, spiritual injury, post-traumatic spiritual growth Get More From Lewis! Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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We have done 10 years of MRI studies through which we've found very specific circuits in the brain,
true to every single human being on Earth.
And they show us that we are built to receive and perceive a relationship to our higher power.
Specifically, there are three circuits in the brain.
We all have these three circuits.
The first...
She is a psychologist, a New York Times best-selling author,
and one of the world's leading researchers at the intersection of neuroscience,
and spirituality. Please welcome Dr. Lisa Millen. You can choose this very moment to activate your
awakened brain. It is right there a quarter inch under the surface, built and ready to go.
Everyone has this equipment. So then it's a choice, and you and you alone can cultivate your own
awakened awareness. If someone doesn't have a relationship to God, what happens to their brain,
or what do you see in MRI studies or research in that person's brain? This is such an important point.
If someone wants to create or manifest a new reality for themselves, what is it that your research has revealed about the connection between our brains and spirituality that would surprise a lot of people?
There's two things that we all need to know.
The first is that every one of us is born a naturally spiritual person with a brain hardwired for spiritual awareness built into our brain from day one.
our circuits through which we can perceive the transcendent presence.
My word is God.
Everyone has their own sacred word.
Yes.
Jesus, Hashem, the universe, Christian, whatever one's sacred word may be.
We are built, literally Lewis, wired in our brain, to be able to have a transcendent
relationship with our higher power.
That relationship is real.
It is built into the fabric of who we are.
so that we can perceive the reality of the world as it's truly built.
Is that built into our brains?
Is it into our heart, our nervous system?
Is it into our soul?
Like, what is the research sharing or revealing about this?
We have done 10 years of MRI studies,
through which we've found very specific circuits in the brain,
true to every single human being on Earth.
And they show us that we are built to receive and perceive a relationship
to our higher power.
Really?
Is that higher power
mean whatever that word is for you,
God or universe,
or whatever that is?
It's whatever your word may be
as it applies
to the deep,
loving, guiding, presence in life.
Is it our higher selves
or our creator?
It is our creator.
Okay.
It is our creator.
Interesting.
And it's not just something bigger
than ourself.
Because something bigger
than ourself
could be something
unfortunate, like a cult
or an extremist group.
That's bigger than ourselves.
This is something
loving,
guiding and ever-present.
And the MRIs reveal this?
Like, how does it show this?
MRI show that we are built to perceive a loving, holding, guiding creator.
Wow.
Specifically, there are three circuits in the brain.
We all have these three circuits.
The first is the bonding network, which lets us know that we are loved and held.
Just as we were loved and held as children in our parents' arms.
The second is a shift in our attention network from the narrow task-driven, got to have it, got to get it, dorsal attention, to the big view of the ventral attention network.
The lights come back on and a new direction pops.
We receive guidance.
We are loved, held, we are guided.
And the third core component of the spiritual brain is the parietal that puts in and out hard boundaries so that we know.
that Lewis is in this chair and Lisa's in the other,
and we have friends at all different GPS coordinates.
We are a point and we are a wave.
We are unique and we're part of one family of life,
the greater oneness, loved, held, guided, and never alone.
The three circuits in our brains that allow us to see that we are loved held,
guided, and never alone.
Map on to the reality of a creator who is all loving,
all knowing and all present.
If someone doesn't have a relationship to God or their creator that is all loving, all knowing,
all presence, and they don't believe in that.
What happens to their brain or what do you see in MRI studies or research in that person's brain?
So this is such an important point.
We are all built not just to believe, but to perceive a loving, guiding, present creator.
So if we don't, right, which is fine, right, that opportunity still exists within us.
Nobody's left out.
No one is born without these circuits.
And the same way that we all are born with ears and eyes and feet, this is how we're built.
So if I don't feel the presence, it's simply a matter of building the muscle.
And the same way that we might have physical fitness for the physical core, we can have spiritual fitness for.
the spiritual core, practicing, awakening. This can be prayer, meditation. It can be reflective
reading or teachings, introspection, a deep connection to the divinity through nature.
Whatever our pathway, it leads us to the same place.
I feel like there's a lot of disconnected people in the world right now that are distracted by
things that are not connecting them to source, to God, to their creator. And their abilities
to perceive that experience with God is diminished.
And maybe it doesn't even feel like it's there at all.
What actually changes inside of the brain for someone when they activate their awakened brain
versus living disconnected?
You can choose this very moment to activate your awakened brain.
It is right there a quarter inch under the surface built and ready to go.
Everyone has this equipment.
So then it's a choice.
It's a choice.
Because while the awakened brain is in.
born. It is one third innate, two-thirds cultivated. And you and you alone can cultivate your own
awakened awareness in the same way that you and you alone can build your muscles and build your
stamina and cultivate your temperament. You and you alone can build your birthright.
If someone has been very disconnected from that ability to perceive or feel God's presence
or the creator's presence, what are a few things they can do right now to start activating
that connection?
Good.
If there is from your past an old rusty prayer that spoke to you at one point, I invite you to
dust that off.
And it might be awkward the first time, even the second, but very quickly, if as a child
you prayed, you paved the road, effectively myelinated the past.
pathway in your brain to get back to your childhood gift, which we all have of a relationship
to the Creator. Now, if no one ever sat by your side, and that has happened, some people have
never been taught to meditate or pray. Some people have never heard a word from a parent or
grandparent. You still have the wiring in your brain to awaken. So shall we do a practice?
Sure. Okay. This is a practice, which is in the language of life, and it
maps on quite specifically to the awakened brain.
It is my favorite practice because it engages love, held, guided, and never alone.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Good.
This is a practice.
I like to thank my teacher from the late Dr. Gary Weaver.
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
I invite you to take five breaths, clear out your inner space.
I invite you to set before you a table.
This is your table.
And to your table, you may invite anyone living or deceased who truly has your best interest in mind.
Anyone living or deceased who truly has your best interest in mind.
And now you may invite your higher self, the part of you that is so much more than anything you may have or not have,
anything you may have done or not done, your true eternal.
higher self and ask you if you love you. And now finally, you may invite your higher power,
whatever your word, however you know, your higher power, and ask if they love you.
And now with all of these people sitting here right now, what do they need to share?
What do you need to know? What do they need to tell you now?
When you're ready, I invite you back.
I remember this exercise.
Yeah.
It's powerful.
It's like entering another world.
It's very powerful.
Were you moved by who came?
Yeah.
My parents and when my father passed away, so he was there, my grandparents.
And my grandparents that I never met, who are, you know, only wanted to see their kids and their grandkids.
do well in life with God and my higher power, my highest version of me, I guess.
And there's two things that I was just feeling that they were saying and that I was saying
to myself, which is, there's two words.
One is forgiveness of everything from the past, which I feel like I've already done that.
So I think it's just a consistent way of being to like live in forgiveness of everything
I've done or other people have done and be at peace of the past, right?
Not be naive, but forgive and continue to forgive.
I think life is a journey of probably forgiving.
And the second word was love.
It's continued to do everything from a loving space.
And so those were the two words.
But it just felt very powerful because I felt like this pulsating.
And it was almost like it's your counsel of high.
awareness kind of pulsating together and connecting to your brain, I guess, into your heart.
When you breathe and you think in that way and you see these people in your table, you know,
so it's having this higher counsel guide you is a very powerful exercise.
And I can only imagine if people did that on a consistent basis, how it would bring them back into presence to be able to perceive
and feel what they need to feel and act and be in a certain way of being.
I have an on-going dialogue.
Yeah, of course.
With your counsel.
Right.
Yeah.
With your ancestors, with your higher power.
Everybody's always there.
Yes.
They're right there.
It's very peaceful feeling, you know.
Did you feel great love?
Of course, yeah.
I still feel it, yeah.
It's very peaceful.
It's a relaxing.
And it's like a journey.
You know, you're going on this journey, even if it's for a few moments.
So that's a beautiful exercise.
Have you studied under MRI when people do that exercise or other types of exercises like that
where they're connecting to a spiritual presence of conversation back and forth from beings that are not physically present?
Yes.
And what is the MRI or the study show?
The MRI shows that no matter what tradition we may be from, Hindu, Catholic, Jewish, Muslim,
or spiritual and not religious.
The same neural correlates run
as we are in conversation
with our ancestors
or our higher power,
we're in a true,
authentic, transcendent relationship.
We are literally both speaking to God
and hearing a response.
Interesting.
And what happens in the brain
when we're in a transcendent experience?
That is the engagement
of our awakened brain.
That is when we see that deep love is the love we detect through the bonding network,
the direction, which could also be an affirmation in this case.
Your ancestors are proud of you, that is through the attention network that that's perceived.
And then the notion that you walked away knowing they're always there is the prior to letting
us feel their constant presence.
Yeah, and if you do the exercise, you can always go back to you.
to seeing them or being with them.
Yes.
You know?
Yes.
Which is kind of comforting.
If you ever feel alone in your life, that exercise, I didn't feel alone, you know, even though we're here, but I felt like I was in a different world within my mind.
And it brought a level of peace, you know, and it brought a level of comfort.
It brought bonding, I guess, these networks.
It's like I was cultivating these networks that you talked about.
We are never alone.
We are never alone.
Exactly.
Exactly.
Why do so many people feel like they're alone?
We have the greatest mental health crisis that we've ever had in the past 100 years.
We have higher rates of depression, higher rates of addiction, higher rates of suicide, higher rates of anxiety.
But in fact, there's really only one ailment, which is an ailment of perception.
Really?
We perceive that we are alone.
We perceive great separateness.
great isolation, that is an atrophy of the awakened brain.
The number one illness of our time is an illness of perception.
Wow.
And it is our ability right here, right now, to flip the switch and engage our awakened brain.
It's so true, because when I think about the times when I was in my younger years, teen years,
maybe even in my 20s, when I had more of a...
I kind of live two different lives because in some moments, I was very joyful and loving and
positive.
In other moments, I was like, everyone hates me and I'm alone and I'm a loser.
I kind of had like these two different worlds I'd go back and forth on it.
It was based on how I would perceive experiences, moments, people saying things, people
not saying things, results I would get or wouldn't get.
It was based on my perception of what was actually happening around me.
And when that perception started to shift over time,
and I learned to cultivate it by not taking things personally,
by not looking at everything as I'm bad and wrong,
or by looking at, you know, okay, I didn't, I failed at this thing.
It doesn't make me a failure.
And reimagining what that actually is for me, it's actually a good thing.
I'm learning. I'm developing.
It's when I learned to perceive differently, I learned to just feel better in general, right?
As opposed to go back into this disconnected,
mindset.
Disconnected, splintered, lonely.
Yeah.
And actually, as you say, with such wisdom, that is an illusion of perception.
Interesting.
I can sit in a room with 400 people and 390 of them feel totally alone.
But, Lewis, there's 400 people in the room.
It's a choice to perceive the presence of others as being in sisterhood and brotherhood with us.
It's a choice to perceive community.
Man's Search for Meaning, I think, is such a great example of that, where it's how you create
the meaning from a situation that determines whether you're going to have a good experience
or a bad experience or continue to live after that experience in pain and suffering or more peace
around it.
Well, you know, it's very interesting.
Science shows us that pain and suffering actually is a knock at the door to awakening.
Really?
That the brain is literally primed in times of pain and suffering.
suffering to potentiated, the brain is potentiated, to widen the lens, let in more light, and start
to feel closer to God, closer to the Creator. So suffering is, in our brain, suffering can be
an accelerant, a precondition for an awakening. Most people don't want to suffer. So they think,
oh, is that the only way to stay connected to God or my creator is to like pain and suffering all
day. It's like, no one wants that.
Well, it's not the only way.
Okay. Yeah. Certainly it's not the only way. But it's very helpful to know that if we're stuck,
if we feel kind of blah, you know, just that low-grade blah, like I don't quite have the
life I want, I don't quite feel right within myself, the offness. That is actually an invitation
to try to pray, try to meditate, try to open up your heart to the creator.
Yeah.
And we're actually better at it if we get a little push.
The more pain you go through, it's reminding you're out of alignment, usually.
Yes.
It's like, I'm suffering, I'm pain.
Why did all these things keep happening to me?
Why is everything a challenge and so hard?
Why am I not making money?
Why does everyone break up with me?
Why everyone say no?
It probably means you're disconnected to yourself.
You're out of alignment.
You're out of boundary.
Something is off.
So this pain is going to keep showing you.
Something is out of alignment within yourself, most likely.
And when you can hopefully now get closer to what that is and connect to yourself,
hopefully you'll find ways to release the pain.
And there's no better way to draw into alignment than to be an open system and allow the force of life to align you.
That's true.
Very often in the 20th century, the brain was thought of as a factory that makes thoughts.
and if we're out of alignment, how can I think my way out of this?
In the 21st century, the brain Lewis is thought of as an antenna that receives consciousness, a conduit.
If I feel out of alignment, I can raise the antenna and what God do you ask of me now?
Hand it over.
We are built to hand it over every day of our lives.
We are built Lewis as an open system to be in a sustained relationship.
with the creator.
Yeah. And so if your if your brain is like an antenna,
and you're constantly covering your antenna with things that don't let you
to have a clear signal to God or to access to information or being resourceful
or perceiving the world in a specific way, you're always going to feel disconnected
because you're covering your antenna. That's what I'm hearing you say.
And yet every one of us in the next 20 seconds can raise the antenna and open our heart, open our soul and say, I'm here.
I love you, God.
I love you, creator, whatever your word is, be present to receive.
Because the awakened brain through the lens of science is a receptive form of perception.
The circuits in our brain are built to receive the presence of God.
Well, I'm curious then, is the human brain physically wired for scarcity or spirituality?
Spirituality.
Then why are so many people living in scarcity?
Right.
It is an ailment of perception.
Exactly.
We have tremendous abundance.
We have abundance.
In any given moment, we have a decision to make.
We have two choices.
We can make an achieving decision.
Okay, I'm sitting next to this new person at a dinner party.
What can they do for me?
let me size them up. Are they bigger or smaller than me? That is called an achieving relationship. I'm
measuring them up as if we're about to be competitors in a race, right? But at that same dinner
party by the same person, in that same moment, I can make an awakened decision. I can realize that,
wait a minute, this party is sitting next to me. Here's another soul on earth. Of all people,
in all space and time right now,
God has put me next to this person.
And so I can ask a very simple question,
tell me about you.
I'd love to get to know you.
Can you tell me about the funniest day of your life?
Can you tell me about the most beautiful moment?
So, Louis, I was at a dinner party the other night,
and I couldn't listen one more peep
about who'd accomplished what
and who paid what rent.
I didn't hear it.
So I said, can you tell me about
the most beautiful day of your life?
and what came forward from that dinner party, I'll remember forever.
One man talked about being in, after years and years, feeling disenfranchised,
returning to his childhood house of worship.
One woman talked about seeing light on the water as she was sailing.
These were beautiful moments.
And I walked away feeling like I'd actually made awakened relationships.
Versus achieving relationships.
Versus achieving relationships.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think the most, I mean, the best way to do it, I think, maybe not the best way, but
is when you go in to an event, knowing that everyone's always thinking of like these
strategies for building relationships to get something.
And if you're just a constant way of being is, I'm just here to ask questions about
others and learn about them, you're going to gain more than you've ever gained by trying
to go in there and accomplish or strategize.
If you just go in and ask people questions and listen,
you're going to be the most interesting person in that room.
Just by asking questions of being present, they're like, wow, I really like that person.
What can I do to help you?
They're just going to want to naturally help you because most people don't do that.
Because you care about that.
Exactly.
Exactly.
That's powerful.
I love the idea of awakening relationships versus achieving relationships.
We have a radically transactional culture.
When we silenced spiritual and religious life in the public square about 40 years ago,
we don't talk about this here.
people became all about business all the time.
Now we're at a turning point, and the hunger of the heart is so great right now for true love, real relationships, to move out of narrow, monotonous achieving relationships and start to bring in awakened relationships.
Yeah, more depth, you know, beyond just results.
And, you know, there's a quote from your book, The Spiritual Child, that says on page 28 that says spirituality is a vast, untapped resource in our understanding.
understanding of human development, illness, health, and healing.
Specifically, research and medicine and psychology has found that people with a developed
spirituality get less sick, are happier, and feel more connected and less isolated.
And your data shows that a robust spiritual life is the single most protective factor against
adolescent depression and substance abuse.
I'm curious, why is spirituality more effective?
than other forms of therapy or support?
The adolescent is in a search for meaning,
not because they choose to me,
not because it's a cultural norm.
It is hardwired.
Because spirituality is innate,
it has a developmental past.
In adolescence with literal biological puberty,
the adolescent goes through a surge,
a biological clock goes off for every teen.
What is my purpose?
What is my meaning?
And I don't mean, is it going to be, you know, law or business.
Doctor or this, yeah, yeah.
What is my purpose as a soul on earth?
And I don't mean what meaning do I want to make of this world,
lie upon the world.
What is the meaning written into life, the golden thread through life?
The teen is exquisitely good at seeking.
We're built for it.
But it doesn't come easy.
because with this expansion, hardwired expansion in our spiritual capacity, the teen can feel a half-empty glass of spirituality, existential struggle, meaninglessness, exquisite rage at boniness when things aren't true.
What's the point of all this?
What's the point?
And yet, this is a gift, even though it hurts and it's hard.
And it's very easy to get distracted as a teen, start using drugs, drink a lot, harm yourself.
But actually this struggle, this existential yearning, angst of the teen, propels the teen to search, to search for God, to search for their higher power.
And even their brain is sensitized to discover, to raise the antenna.
Wow.
The teen is sensitized to raise the antenna.
and start to receive the signals from God.
How hard is it for an adolescent or a young adult to raise their antenna to connect to God and be more spiritual when they're on drugs, when they're smoking or vaping or drinking or mindlessly on their phone for 15 hours a day, when they're not sleeping well?
How hard is it for them to connect to spirituality in God?
This is not a solo act.
Every teen needs the sangha, the minion, the journey group, the fellowship.
You need your people who engage in authentic spiritual practice.
If you have a teen who's drinking, who's self-harming, yes, of course they need therapy,
but therapy alone is not enough.
There needs to be a group, a youth group, a songa, a group around the teen of people who feel God's presence and talk about it.
Every teen needs their spiritual people.
Yes.
They're spiritual buddies.
And they may be in school, they may be out of school.
Right.
I mean, you've been a professor and a researcher at Columbia for over 25 years.
And you also have, you know, kids who went through teen years.
What was that like for you when your kids were teens, you know, with you as the expert, the researcher, the spiritual leader of the family in certain ways?
of hopefully guiding them.
Did they struggle just like every other teen?
Did they go down the dark side for a while?
Did they have these practices?
How did they navigate this?
So spiritual individuation, the me and not me of what's real,
is God real.
Does prayer speak to me?
What's good and evil?
What's the purpose, spiritual purpose of my life?
That can only be done by the teen themselves.
Really?
No matter we can support them.
But it is built into our hardwired brain.
It's spiritual individuation as a road we all must walk ourselves.
Now, to have a youth group, to have a family around you,
to have a group with whom you share the spiritual reality,
put it in words, pray together, know that our relationship goes to that depth.
This gives the two-thirds nourishment.
onto the one-third innate awakened brain.
It is not enough to be born spiritual.
We need to cultivate our spiritual awareness.
And when as a parent, we walk the walk and talk the walk.
When we say, you know, today, Mommy was really out of sorts.
I'm so sorry I was grumpy.
I'm so sorry I was short with you.
I apologize.
But also now that I've apologized to you,
will you join me in a prayer?
Because today was a gift.
and I feel I kind of squandered it.
And the prayer might be whatever your words are in our home,
you know, loving God, please forgive me and renew my heart,
that I might be present to your great love.
And we might be present as a family to your love.
So that you're back off to the races.
Anything can be fixed.
Yes.
And when as parents we show our kids,
there's a spiritual response to a misstep,
a spiritual response to suffering.
What they really learn is that they can fix their lives spiritually.
That's beautiful because it's hard to fix your life physically.
You know, it's hard to fix it through physical means in terms of I'm going to smoke, drink, you know, do physical harm to myself to feel like that's going to make me feel better.
You know, the physical numbing, I guess, of life is what I mean.
You know, through the lens of science, adolescents are exquisitely sensitive to both spiritual hunger, but also to,
pain. Why is that? We're an open system. We're porous. We're wide open. And right at the time
where we're strengthening and tooling up spiritually, we're at greatest risk to turn the wrong
direction and make the pain go away. Really? And in fact, the protective benefits of spirituality
against addiction are greatest in adolescence. All our lives, spirituality can help prevent
drinking and drugs. But in adolescence, it is twice as protective.
to have a strong spiritual life.
And is there any data around kids who don't have a strong spiritual life
if they get into more drugs or have children younger
or, I don't know, go through abuse or anything like that?
Do you have any data on that?
14. A strong spiritual life is 80% protective
against onset of addiction.
Really?
Adolescence being the trailhead of a lifetime course of struggle with addiction.
A strong spiritual life is 70% protective against risk-taking, driving too fast, jumping out the window at a party.
A strong spiritual life to the epidemic of our times, when spiritual life is shared by teens, it is 82% protective against completed suicide.
Really?
The number one killer of teens is now suicide. It has surpassed auto accident.
So, Lewis, if I said, here's a little pill, and you can give this to your teen, and it will protect them four-fifths against the greatest cause of death in teens.
Who wouldn't give that to their child?
And yet to realize our natural spirituality is how we're built.
Every parent has two jobs.
One is to love your child, and the second is to build their spiritual core.
And everything else will fall into place.
So when did suicide become the number one killer of teens?
When did this happen?
So over the past 20 years, there's been a sharp decline in family faith observance, family spiritual life.
And with that sharp decline in family spiritual life has been an equally sharp increase in the diseases of despair.
Wow.
Addiction, depression, and even suicide.
The two statistically Lewis go hand in hand.
A spiritualality has gone down as a sharp.
shared family unit, harm, pain, suffering, addiction, suicide has gone up.
Yes.
Wow.
And as important as it is that each and every one of us cultivate our spiritual core, it is
even more important as a parent to pass the torch to your child.
The protected benefits are even greater if it is from your parent or grandparent that your
spiritual life is built.
So for instance, if a child inherits from their parent, a deep spirit, you know, a deep spirit
practice through which they form an authentic dynamic relationship with God, that child is
80% protected against major depression going through the sensitive window of risk, which is mid-delayed
adolescence. Now, Lewis, if that torch is past two generations from grandparent to parent
to child, that child is protected 90% against major depression going through the window of risk,
which means that the carrier matters.
You as a parent are an ambassador of spiritual life for your child.
We're designed that way.
You and the child.
Yes.
Why does it seem like so many parents shy away from bringing spirituality, faith, prayer to their children?
Lewis, I've spoken with many parents.
And the story I hear most often is, I'm just not sure what I believe.
I don't want to tell them the wrong thing.
A caring parent says, I don't want to do this wrong.
will let them choose when they're older.
Now, as well-intentioned as that may be, science says waiting is to foreclose.
Do not wait.
Do not wait.
The child is primed to grow spiritually through the relationship with the parent.
We don't need to be great experts to show up to the spiritual life of the child.
I don't need to know a thing about any religion or any great theology to listen to the spiritual voice.
of my child and let them know it's real.
That's all we need to do.
So many children will have a mystical experience.
They'll say, you know, I saw Grandma, even though Grandma's in heaven.
Grandma came to see me.
Wow.
We don't need to be an expert.
We can honor that great gift.
Wow.
Grandma must really love you.
That's cool.
What does that say to the child?
Mystical experiences are real.
You can trust yourself as a knower.
You are authorized as a spiritual knower.
Our relationship is sanctified.
It goes to that depth.
And in fact, you, in your whole life, are on a spiritual path.
If someone grows up in a family that has prayer, spirituality, potentially church,
but then they see their parents do something that goes against it.
The one teaching or leading them kind of breaks against what they,
they've been teaching, or there's a divorce, or there's an affair, or there's physical abuse,
or they were screaming, or they didn't feel safe as a child growing up, but they were trying to incorporate
spirituality, prayer, lessons, church. Or maybe they experienced something poor with the religious
leader of the church that they witnessed, that there wasn't a good thing or something.
Does that hurt more the child when they see an adult?
leading through spirituality, but making not minor mistakes, but big mistakes.
How does that affect the brain of a child throughout their life?
The child is watching us exquisitely, so very closely.
Do we walk the walk that we talk?
So as a parent, as a clergy person, as a teacher, a coach, we are torchbearers.
We don't make the fire.
The fire is divine.
We carry it.
Every significant adult is a spiritual torchbear to a child.
The child's looking very closely.
Are you walking in step with your teachings?
Now, when we are a little bit foibled, we can apologize and pray and fix it.
That's being human.
And it teaches the child a spiritual response to the human struggle.
Yes.
If we are more egregiously forbilled or harmful, the child has a tendency to look at the
torchbearer and say, you're a hypocrite, you're phony, the flame is false.
That is called spiritual injury when the ambassador, the torchbearer does not walk the walk.
Okay.
Spiritual injury is excruciating.
Yes.
It is profoundly painful.
What does it sound like?
I don't know if God is real.
Everything you ever told me, mom, dad, pastor priest,
to a Moncoach teacher.
It's a lie.
If you're phony, then the flame is phony.
I think God is phony or this is phony or I don't believe any of it.
Yeah.
That's spiritual injury.
Spiritual injury is very painful because the child is left in a very chilly, cold, damp place.
You feel alone.
Existial emptiness.
Yeah, yeah.
And yet, Lewis, the good news is spiritual injury can be healed.
There's a way back from spiritual injury.
The child can.
meet a good torch bearer who does walk the walk. And again, that could be a coach, a parent,
a grandparent. It could be a pastor, priest, and monroe out by a youth leader. And by watching closely
a good torch bearer, they see another way of relating to the flame. The second way that
spiritual injury can be healed is to bring God's presence into that very memory together.
Right. And ask God for guidance through that memory, through that moment. That's called post-traumatic spiritual growth. Suddenly I felt God would forgive us. Then I knew I was not to blame. The wiser truth that speaks to the inner heart, post-traumatic spiritual growth. And then the third way is to invite the child into a direct connection, their own direct connection to God.
The visualization we shared at the council table, I have done with homeless children who were abused and thrown out of the house.
Every homeless child sleeping under the Brooklyn Bridge was able through the council practice to go back to God.
Wow.
No one had an empty table.
There was always someone there, a grandmother, an uncle, a coach.
They could see God.
For some, it was Jesus or Mary.
For some, it was a great white light.
No matter what we've been through, we were.
are built to receive God's presence in our brain.
There was one time where our fellow said, you know, no one showed up in the first chair,
those who truly have my best interest in mind.
So he waited with his eyes closed.
And he said, oh, there she is.
I know her.
We said, who is she?
He said, it's my future wife.
Wow.
That's crazy.
Because our awakened awareness.
has information that has yet to unfold before us.
It's so interesting you say that because probably,
I have to find this because it was probably the first or second year of the podcast,
10, 11 years ago where I did a meditation with a friend of mine as a coach,
his name's Chris Lee, where he had me visualize my future wife.
And it was at a time when I was single.
And I dated two other people actually after that that were not my wife.
but the person I envisioned 10, 11, 12 years ago, whenever this was, is Martha, my current wife.
Now, I just had to go through some other lessons to get there, but it was like I called her from the future.
And it was really more like I needed to continue to become a certain way of being in order to be in alignment with her, in her in alignment with me.
So I was still going through my process.
and but doing this practice I was hopeful that I was coming in like six months but it took a decade
but if I look back on that having that that moment that exercise that meditation that prayer of
visualizing it and having a spiritual day he made me walk through what does this day look like
with this person and who is this person like really visualizing it I felt like it like in
in my spiritual personality. It was like, okay, this is who I need to become eventually. I just
wasn't ready to be that person yet. But such loving, sacred guidance is available to us.
It is. You chose to raise the antenna and receive loving sacred guidance. 100%.
I think you knew her when you saw her. Yes. I was kind of frustrated because I didn't want to,
I was like, oh, shoot. Right away, I was like, dang it, this is different.
I knew it.
But I was like, oh, my ego wants to not have this be ready yet.
But I was like, I feel like God was protected me.
God put her in my life to protect me, literally, from my ego.
And so a part of me was like resistant for a moment, but I was like, I just need to surrender.
I was like, this is what God wants for me.
And it's been a beautiful journey.
So.
The surrender.
The surrender.
What God are you showing me?
now. What God do you ask of me now? See, that's the dialogue. That is how the awakened brain is built
to be an open system in dialogue with God. Yes. So this is not send out and you get what you ordered.
This is listening. And the chat, I mean, it was so undeniable because I think a lot of people
say that when they get into a relationship. Oh, we have so many things in common. But there was so many,
I would ask God this, maybe not daily, but consistently throughout the first three months.
of getting to know Martha.
And I was just like,
show me a sign, a synchronicity that is so undeniable
that I wouldn't believe it that we're meant to continue this journey.
I don't know if we're going to be together forever
or if we're going to get married,
but just that I need to continue down this dating journey with her.
And it was just like stuff that I couldn't even believe
was happening, the synchronicities.
And they were there from the very first moment.
The God's laying on your path.
It was like God was.
like screaming at me with such clarity. And it was like, if this is not a sign from me
that you can't see. And I'm, you know, stubborn. So I needed a lot of them. But it was like months.
And God just kept showing me these beautiful, like mystical synchronicities. That's just like,
this is unbelievable. Do you remember one? The first one was very clear within the first five minutes
of meeting her, probably two minutes of meeting her. I picked her up to go to dinner. I was in Mexico
and she was in Mexico and we met up and I got my buddy's Jeep. I didn't have a car, so I just took
his Jeep and I put my phone when I picked her up, we said hi, open the door, she got in the car
and my phone was sitting in the middle council, like the middle area of the Jeep. And then I came
around and got in there and right away like the screensaver was on. And I was on. And
And the light was on.
It was at night.
And so you could see kind of my phone screensaver.
And it was a photo of a young boy.
And she looked down at it and kind of looked at me.
I go, oh, don't worry.
I don't have a kid.
It looked like my son.
And I go, oh, don't worry.
I don't have a kid.
She goes, I know what that is.
You're healing the inner child.
And I was just like, oh, geez.
And she goes, look at my phone.
And she had a photo of herself.
I get chills thinking about it.
She had a photo of herself.
She was like, I've been on this journey for a while.
It's a beautiful journey, isn't it?
And I was just like, holy cow, I get chills thinking about it.
Because then just right away, the relationship is about depths, curiosity.
It's not about trying to prove or achieve.
It's not about like, oh, I'm trying to take this girl out to win her over or, you know, look good.
It was more like, let's just connect and connect on a spiritual level.
And that was a beautiful sign I felt from God.
Like, okay, I don't have to explain myself.
You know, she understands it.
And there was just so many things like that almost every week that were just mind-blowing.
So, but I needed to, my antenna needed to be cleaned and clear and elevated in order for me to receive these signs and not be scared of them.
Because I think I would have been scared of them years before.
They're for you.
Yes.
Synchronous cities are for you.
They are.
if some of them are unpleasant.
Oh, yeah.
Those are beautiful synchronicities.
Some might be big red flag synchronicities.
Like, oh, you shouldn't go down this path.
Like a dead bird on my doorstep, right?
Oh, man.
Yeah, something like that.
And so thank you, God, for the guidance.
Even if it's not what I want to hear, I'm being loved and held.
I'm being guided.
I am not alone.
Yes.
We don't need to get our way.
See, that's narrow, relentless achieving awareness.
If I'd gotten everything I wanted, it would not be.
my first choice life. I am so much more excited by the dialogue with God.
Yes.
By the awakened path that's led me to the life I lead. It's an inspired life.
It is an inspired life.
You don't know where it's going. You don't know where it's going. You have to trust.
Now you have the girls. Yes. Twin girls. Which I told her when we first met,
maybe within like six months, she was like, do you see yourself having kids? And I go,
yes, twin girls. Wow.
I swear.
Wow.
And she goes, wow, really.
And she had, like, twins in her family, like extended family and triplets in her family.
And I was like, yeah, I see us having twin girls.
I don't know why I said that, but I was just like.
And I was also uncertain.
I wasn't not, I wasn't like 100% like I want to just be a dad and have kids like earlier in my life.
I was afraid of being with the wrong person having kids and feeling trapped.
That was with a fear.
So I wasn't excited about married family life.
if it meant feeling like a prisoner or caged or I couldn't be myself or, you know, whatever,
going through a divorce like I experienced growing up with my parents.
And so it was more of like I just didn't feel emotionally safe to think that way.
But then when I was with her, I was like, oh, I feel safe.
I feel emotionally, spiritually safe.
there really is, the question was,
once I got to a point where I said,
okay, if I ever died,
if something ever happened to me,
do I feel emotionally and spiritually safe
that this person could raise my kids?
That they'd be able to figure it out, you know,
and be resourceful enough.
And that's what I felt with Martha,
where I'd never felt that before.
So for me, it was like, okay,
I felt that safety.
In my path, I think,
if all of the achieving goals were gone,
would there be a four-legged table holding up an awakened life?
If tomorrow the achieving goals were gone,
would there be a depth of soul connection,
an awakened relationship?
And with her huge success,
but if you weren't, she'd love you just as much.
I think she would, yeah.
Well, something you should tell me all the time.
That's real.
Yeah, she was like, I'll follow you anywhere.
You know, she would say that all the time.
She still says that.
And, you know, when she met me, I was in a, I mean, I was in a nice apartment, but it was a two-bedroom apartment.
I don't have a lot of stuff.
You know, it's not like I didn't need a big house or anything.
I've been in a two-bedroom apartment in my whole life, essentially, adult life.
And, yeah, she's just like, I'll follow you anywhere.
If we need to be in a one-bedroom apartment, if we need to be in a big home, if we have to move, wherever it is, I'll follow you anywhere.
From that first date.
Yeah.
You share in a depth.
Yes.
You shared an awakened relationship.
right out of the blocks.
Exactly.
Right away.
Well, then you're never trapped.
I don't feel trapped.
Because there's no transaction.
No, I feel free.
You're free.
I feel accepted.
And it makes me want to work hard to be able to provide a life that feels safe, that
feels abundant, that feels joyful, playful, all these different things, adventurous.
But, yeah, it feels good.
Bedrock, unconditional love.
It's an awakened partnership.
Yeah, it feels great.
I think of marriage less as a contract, more,
a calling. I think I do as well because my whole vision for the relationship is how do we serve people
at the highest level together. And that might be our children, that might be our community,
our families, whatever it may be, but how do we come together to serve one another and our
family to then serve others? How has been a father changed you? You know, I feel like once they
start talking, maybe I'll start to feel something.
even different. But it's changed me the fact that, I mean, to wake up and look at like two
little beautiful souls is such a cool thing. I mean, first off, for me, it's a cool thing.
It's really gotten me even more in check with my integrity with myself, my thoughts, actions,
just even stronger integrity with self because I'm like, gosh,
I just, I can't be a hypocrite with these girls.
You know, even the littlest things they're going to find out.
You know, it's like we observed our parents, right?
We observed them.
And I'm just like, I know I'm not going to be perfect.
I know I'm going to make mistakes.
But how can I be present and connected and responsible to lead them to what they're meant to be here for?
So for me, I just feel like it's calling me to be an even better version of myself.
Has it deepened your spirituality?
100%.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because I'm also, I have to have trust in God that they're going to wake up.
Otherwise, you're anxious all night.
You know, it's like you're just thinking, are they breathing?
Are they going to be okay?
Are they going to wake up?
Like, you have to trust God that they will wake up, that they're going to be protected.
You know, it's like it could be extremely emotionally debilitating, I think, if I didn't have trust.
that they're going to be okay.
So I hope someday you and Marta
share your first date story with the girls.
Oh, we will.
Because it's both a love story.
Yes.
And inspired, spiritual.
You know, hopefully they'll get to watch all these videos.
You know, it's like I've got almost 2,000 interviews I've done.
Oh, they'll love it.
And so they can throw a record of just content of like,
oh, what was dad thinking at this time, you know,
what was mom thinking at this time?
So when we as parents, science says it's beautiful,
So there's a findings.
Science shows us that when we as parents speak out loud about our spiritual truth,
that is the most powerful form of shaping the child's own spiritual awareness.
The child's born with the capacity to perceive the spiritual reality.
Every child has implicit spiritual cognition, which means unless socialized out of it,
the young child will perceive continuity of spirit or consciousness after death.
And less socialized out of it, the young child will perceive that we can have direct knowing, inspiration, intuition, without being told.
It is only because they hear from adults, oh, no, that's not real, that they come too lower and cover the antenna.
So we don't really teach spirituality.
We nurture what's already in the child.
How do we nurture what's in our children?
by living and breathing our own spiritual life.
Out loud, full blast, in the car, on the playing field, and in the house of worship.
Do you know anyone who's against God, who's an atheist, who doesn't believe in spirituality,
who lives a peaceful, abundant, joyful life?
I've seen people who call themselves humanists.
What does that mean?
That they think the ultimate reality is being good to other people.
And some of those folks say that they're not spiritual.
But in truth, as you do unto others, you do on to me.
And the same parts of the brain through which we talk to God are the same parts of the brain
through which I feel and see God in you.
So really, the humanist and the Orthodox or evangelical are using the same parts of their
brain.
So they're more, they still have a code of morals and ethics and values and service to other
humans. And just as were loved held and never alone, they show up for others to be loving,
guiding, and never lead anyone alone. Yeah. So they still live with a similar, I guess,
act of kindness, love, joy, service to others, which brings them that peace and joy. It's fascinating
Lewis. We looked over 10 years of MRI studies at the spiritually engaged brain. The very last
study we did was to say what practices of spiritual and religious life most strengthen our awakened
brain. And we looked at everything, transcendent practice, moral living, all sorts of things.
Meditation, prayer. And it all shapes and matters. It all matters in shaping the awakened brain.
But the number one predictor of a strong awakened brain is altruism, love of neighbor.
So when we, with our feet, I call it prayer in action, our loving.
guiding and never leave anyone alone, we are literally gauging the same neurodocking station
that allows us to feel God's presence. So Mother Teresa had many years, dark night of the soul
towards the end of her life, where it was service and service alone that sustained her soul.
Mother Teresa had profound mystical experiences in the first part of her life. And the second part of
her life struggled with the darkness, and yet felt sustained, but through service,
profound altruism.
Really? I didn't know she had that darkness. What was that about?
She had like a disconnect to God or what was it?
So what we know from the records is that she still continued to feel God's presence through service.
Wow.
So if someone really feels stuck, walk out the door and serve.
Give.
Because that is prayer and action.
Interesting.
Now, how do you distinguish between religion and spirituality in a lab setting or in a research setting?
Yes. So we can use a twin study to determine whether any human capacity is inborn or environmentally formed. So height and weight is largely inborn, right? Temperament is about half inborn if we're extroverted and introverted. The capacity through which we experience spirituality, a connection to God, whatever our word, is innate. It is one-third innate, two-thirds cultivated.
religion, no matter what our tradition may be, the beautiful world faith traditions, Hindu, Catholic, Christian, Jewish, Muslim, whatever our tradition may be, religion is environmentally transmitted, the beautiful texts, the practices, the community, all our forms, the really gifts of our parents and grandparents.
We might choose a tradition and immerse ourselves. Religion is environmentally transmitted. Spirituality is a reality is a
innate. For two-thirds of Americans, spirituality and religion, go hand in hand. It's through my faith
tradition, they will say, that I cultivate my natural spiritual awareness. So we're all born to
feel God's presence, but what we call God, and whether we pray or meditate, and the stories we
learn to help us cultivate that depth of relationship, those are gifts of our environment. Those may
come from our religion.
Yes. Beyond just loving our kids, what's the number one thing a parent can do for a child?
Beyond loving our kids, there is one and one alone job of every parent, which is to build the spiritual core.
If you want your child to be healthier, to have good character, to be able to love and make commitments, build the spiritual core.
In fact, Lewis, we looked at 270,000 young kids, eight through 17. And what we saw was that those,
Those kids with a strong spirituality had more grit, more optimism, more forgiveness.
Character, which is virtue, but it's also traction towards your mission and goals.
Character is how you perform in the world at the end of the day.
So if you want even an outwardly performing kid, it all is rooted in the spiritual core.
Interesting.
And when you look at 270,000 kids, is it through brain scans, through MRIs, through studying other things?
Like, how do you see that?
And is it a certain percentage of those that were doing, that had spiritual core that were performing better than others?
Luce, we looked all around the world.
We did a mass survey of 270,000 kids.
And what we saw was that some kids were very high in grit and optimism and forgiveness and
temperance and judgment.
All of the character strengths and virtues load into the same kids.
what can be said about those kids?
They have a strong spiritual core.
And then we looked at those kids
who we love just as much
who are low in grit
and low in optimism
and temperance and judgment
and they tended not to have
a strong spiritual core.
Spirituality and character
go hand in hand.
And when we looked at what predict
what, it is spirituality
that is the root
character, the beautiful magnolias.
So if a parent is thinking,
you know what, I'm going to love my kids
by taking them to every class,
by tutoring them, by putting them in every workshop or after-school activity and showing up on the
sideline at every game and just drilling in that they've got to work hard, be gritty, have character,
and succeed. But I don't bring an element of spiritual connection to their life. What happens to those
kids of parents that are meaning well, potentially in their own mind, to create kids that
deliver results or perform, but lack the spiritual connection.
Narrow achieving parenting leads kids to be depressed, to feel that they have to sing for
their supper, that I am only as worthy in your eyes, Dad, as my latest wind. Contingent
love. And in fact, contingent love is actually found more commonly in high achieving
families. Contingent love is experienced by a child as I'm only as good as my
outward success. So if I don't get into this college or if I come home with a D or even a B minus,
my dad's literally going to love me less. Wow. That is the felt experience. It's associated with
depression. It's associated with addiction. It's even associated with sociopathy that every relationship's a
deal. Wow. But as a parent, this moment, this is actually a very, this story has a happy
as a parent at every moment, we can say, wait a minute, whether it's riding to school in the SUV
or talking about the loss on the baseball field, this moment is also a spiritual moment.
There is a golden thread that goes through every parent-child moment in life, an opportunity to witness God's presence.
Okay, you know what? It's true you lost, but you were so gracious to that kid from the other team.
You treated him as your brother. Isn't that what God would want us to?
to do. Okay, I see that you've gotten the D and you're disappointed, but let's sit down here,
you know, and Joey Brown and see what comes to you. You know, I don't care if you come home with
an ABC or D when it comes to how much I love you. Yeah. I love you because you're my child.
I love you because you're God's child. I love you as a soul on earth. And now let's sit here,
shoulder to shoulder on the same team and figure out a plan where we can attack this class another way.
that's cool I like that so there's two ways to pick up your child every day from third grade you could have an achieving greeting or you can have an awakened greeting the achieving greeting is did you win today the achievement greeting is how the math test go the awakened greeting is I am so excited to see you hi sparkly eyes you know dad loves you mom loves you and then of course a good parent wants to know how you're doing in
school, but it's not the bedrock of our relationship. I love you, not just because I say it,
but because I show it, whether it's A, B, C, or D today, you light up my world. Yeah, that's cool.
And how can a parent then help their child grow spiritually if they don't believe in anything
themselves? Oh, it's such an important question. The child comes a naturally spiritual child.
The child will spontaneously share beautiful. I mean, hard.
Art rendering, just beautiful moments, so much love and forgiveness.
I remember when my center child, who goes by center child, was in nursery school.
There was this little boy, Lewis, like, clockwork, right before the teacher opened the
door to start the day, this little boy would come up and give her a swift kick.
And as a parent was very upsetting.
My husband was so angry.
He was going to sue the nursery school.
He was in every distress.
But what did the little child say?
What did my daughter say?
Oh, sweet little John, I'm teaching him not to kick.
The child has a compassion already written into who they are.
In fact, natural spirituality in the unchild awakens spirituality in us as parents.
A child will see fellow living beings, little ducks in the park, geese, as sisters and brothers, as friends.
unless we say to them, hey, that little goose just wants your breadcrumbs. That's a transaction. The child will think they are friends because they are. A child loves family, their classroom, the wholeness of we. If someone's not at school, they'll say, you know what? Agatha was not in school today. Apparently she's not feeling well. We each matter. Our absence matters. A child loves spiritual ceremony, wants to sing in the choir.
wants to pray. I've heard Sufi parents say that says if they know the movement before they're even
taught, children come hardwired to live and breathe spiritual life unless we shut it down. If I don't know
as a parent what to say or what to do, it is 100% good enough to show up and say, wow,
what do you feel? What do you think? In fact, often the child doesn't want an answer to their question.
If a child says, why does God allow bad people to be on earth?
They don't always necessarily want the answer.
The child's looking for us to show up and be with them while they explore.
The lesson that we as parents actually convey is that life is a big sacred quest.
We don't need to know the summative answer, the period at the end of the sentence.
We need to have a stance of quest to be game for a moment.
spiritual discovery. Yes. So we model spiritual exploration when we say, wow, what's your heart
say, what your inner compass show you? Authorize our children as spiritual knowers and their
whole life, they'll be able to use their inner compass for life's biggest challenges.
As a parent to new twins, what is something that you would recommend I never do?
when your child
has a spiritual question
or spiritual experience
comes to you
maybe even saying the thing you don't want to hear
don't tell them it's not real
never tell your child
they're not a knower
the most important thing to as parents
is authorize our children
as direct knowers
that's not real
is the worst thing you can say to your child
about everything or about like Santa Claus or you know about what that's not real says that whatever
level of reality you're experiencing that on i i just invalidated
those i've had so many people come to me as young adults saying i was such a spiritual child
and my dad told me it wasn't real and it took me years to come back
Interesting.
So, for instance, a parent might have a tiff with their religious tradition.
But the child, your own child, may have a profound, authentic spiritual experience in that very tradition.
Don't diminish it.
Let them have their own spiritual path.
That's cool.
The book is really inspiring.
I want people to learn more about this book.
The spiritual child, which is the new science of parenting for health and lifelong thriving.
And I feel like in a time right now where I feel like parenting for most seems to be from what I hear is harder than ever because of social media, because of devices, because of AI, because of whatever challenges at school that might be different than what they were in the past, because of comparison and judgment is higher than ever, it seems like.
Because you're not comparing yourself with your own peers.
you're comparing yourself with every kid in the world on social media.
So I hear parenting is really hard for a lot of people.
And you really go into the science about how to parent children for a healthy, happier, longer life.
And I think at a time where people are confused more than ever,
this is a book that people need more than ever,
the spiritual child by Dr. Lisa Miller.
What is one thing that you think people will get out of this book that will support them in overcoming the challenges of parenting in this modern era?
There's a lot of frustration, there's a lot of despair, there's a lot of feeling that somehow the world's coming to an end.
But those are just perceptions.
And when we awaken to the presence of the spiritual presence in our lives, that fills our homes.
And that opens our eyes and lets our children see clearly.
Every day is an incredible, glorious gift.
Yes.
Good morning, honey.
Thank God we're all alive.
Let's see what today has in store.
Yeah, this goes back at the beginning where you said, like the biggest illness is our perception.
Yes.
Our inability to perceive things better than how we perceive them as worse, is what I'm hearing you say.
If you have a direct connection to God, nothing can break you.
Amen.
So if there's one thing we give our child, it is to fortify their birthright, their own direct connection to God.
Then nothing can break your child.
100%.
That's beautiful.
It might be a challenge that they're going to have to face.
They might have to overcome some pain and suffering and sadness.
Funny.
But as long as they stay connected spiritually, it will keep them on a path to overcome that challenge.
And I think that's what we all want.
So I want to be able to get the book, the spiritual child, the new science of parenting for health and lifelong thriving.
Lots of great research in here.
And your child will find her calling.
I think that's what every parent wants probably, right?
Their soul's past.
They're calling.
That's it.
I'm in a season right now where it's like my daughters are, you know, six months, they're not talking yet and they're not walking yet.
But I can only imagine what that will be like when they're asking questions and walking and adventuring.
And that's all I'm going to want them to do is learn how to develop their unique innate gifts inside of them and then share that with the world.
I'm assuming that's what I'm going to want for them.
Because they'll be watching you.
Exactly.
People say to me if there's one thing that I want to tell my child in high school so that they can then go off to college or get a job and know there's a framework to live by.
In my work with the Pentagon, we took the spiritual.
child, 20,000 people in the Pentagon read the spiritual child and distilled this to four
p's. You need a practice through which you connect to your higher power. You need your people
with whom together you connect to the higher power and share that practice. You need an ultimate
purpose and you need your path. The four peas. All of those are rooted in a connection to God or
your higher power. I love that. When we develop our own practice, we find the right people,
we pursue our purpose on our own path through the connection to God. That probably feels like
you're living on mission. Then you're walking a spiritual path, living on mission. Yeah,
that's beautiful. I want people to get your book, The Spiritual Child, and also check out your
website and social media, Dr. Lisa Miller over on Instagram. You've got workshops for adults,
and workshops for spiritual parenting as well.
So if they go to your social media, if they go to your website,
they can get updated on when you're doing more of those workshops as well,
and they can get your book, which is really inspiring.
I asked you this question before in the last interview.
I'm going to have to go back and see what you said if it's different from now.
But I asked you about the three truths.
I don't know if you remember what you shared then,
but if you could imagine living as long as you want to live in this earth,
but on the final day, you have to take all of your work with you.
Your books, courses, this interview,
It has to go.
It's not on this earth anymore.
But on your last day of life,
you get to share three lessons with the world.
What would those three lessons or three truths be for you?
Listen to what God has in store for you.
Show up and be a trail angel for someone.
Walk with them on their spiritual path.
Third above all else.
Most importantly, teach your children to love God.
That's good.
That's good.
Every bit of science.
says the most important thing we can ever do
is teach our children to love God.
So that is not just a gift as a mother.
That's a gift as a scientist.
Yeah.
Hundreds of peer review articles.
One thing we can do for our children,
teach them to love God.
Wow.
That's beautiful.
And Lisa, your definition of greatness.
Listening and try to live out God's plan.
That's it.
Dr. Lisa Miller,
thank you so much for being here.
Appreciate it.
Beautiful, connect with you, Liz.
I hope you enjoyed today's
episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a full rundown of today's
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