
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Click here to read the episode highlights.
The "Living with Heart" Podcast is brought to you by Chip Dodd Resources (www.chipdodd.com) and The Voice of the Heart Center (vothcenter.com). You can connect with Dr. Chip Dodd at [email protected]. Contact Bryan Barley for coaching at [email protected].
Be sure to subscribe to Dr Chip Dodd’s new Substack. He will be sharing two to three articles a week. The topics focus on healthy relationship, personal growth, and leadership. Dr. Dodd shares content two to three times a week. To subscribe, use the link above or go to chipdodd.com.
Relationship with others
Neuroscience research points out very clearly that we are connection seeking creatures. We are born to “look for who is looking for us.”
In the Voice of the Heart, which came out years before neuroscience research validated Dr Dodd’s work, he writes that we are created by God to seek life to the full, but we can only find that fulfillment in relationship with ourselves (head and heart connected), with other, and with God.
Relational fulfillment is a dictate of our emotional and spiritual genetics. This genetic makeup is so powerful that we will seek a sense of connection that relationship brings in legitimate forms or in illegitimate ways as other episodes have explained, like the recent Addiction Series, Episodes 97-110.
So much of life is about the benefits of relational fulfillment that even the word share means that you receive from others initially, so that you can offer the gifts you have to others—whether that be the flowers you have grown; the experiences you have had; or the love you have received.
We cannot give what we do not have; therefore, we must be open to all that relational fulfillment can offer us, so that we have much to offer others.
Research has shown that gratitude for receiving allows a person to increase their sense of gratitude by giving.
There exists a “child-like” willingness that a person must have to live fully, because relational fulfillment with another person requires that we be:
Click here to continue reading the episode highlights.
By Dr. Chip Dodd & Bryan Barley4.9
105105 ratings
Click here to read the episode highlights.
The "Living with Heart" Podcast is brought to you by Chip Dodd Resources (www.chipdodd.com) and The Voice of the Heart Center (vothcenter.com). You can connect with Dr. Chip Dodd at [email protected]. Contact Bryan Barley for coaching at [email protected].
Be sure to subscribe to Dr Chip Dodd’s new Substack. He will be sharing two to three articles a week. The topics focus on healthy relationship, personal growth, and leadership. Dr. Dodd shares content two to three times a week. To subscribe, use the link above or go to chipdodd.com.
Relationship with others
Neuroscience research points out very clearly that we are connection seeking creatures. We are born to “look for who is looking for us.”
In the Voice of the Heart, which came out years before neuroscience research validated Dr Dodd’s work, he writes that we are created by God to seek life to the full, but we can only find that fulfillment in relationship with ourselves (head and heart connected), with other, and with God.
Relational fulfillment is a dictate of our emotional and spiritual genetics. This genetic makeup is so powerful that we will seek a sense of connection that relationship brings in legitimate forms or in illegitimate ways as other episodes have explained, like the recent Addiction Series, Episodes 97-110.
So much of life is about the benefits of relational fulfillment that even the word share means that you receive from others initially, so that you can offer the gifts you have to others—whether that be the flowers you have grown; the experiences you have had; or the love you have received.
We cannot give what we do not have; therefore, we must be open to all that relational fulfillment can offer us, so that we have much to offer others.
Research has shown that gratitude for receiving allows a person to increase their sense of gratitude by giving.
There exists a “child-like” willingness that a person must have to live fully, because relational fulfillment with another person requires that we be:
Click here to continue reading the episode highlights.

1,698 Listeners

1,717 Listeners

10,492 Listeners

1,656 Listeners

3,204 Listeners

2,361 Listeners

1,925 Listeners

36,296 Listeners

6,644 Listeners

1,393 Listeners

592 Listeners

587 Listeners

2,874 Listeners

900 Listeners

1,412 Listeners