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In this episode of The Noah Frequency, Noah begins with a simple observation:
A heavy heart is not the problem.
The story we create about it is.
As the discussion unfolds, Noah challenges the tendency to interpret every emotion through the lens of identity—assigning meaning, blame, fear, and certainty to experiences that may be something far simpler and far deeper.
According to Noah, even emotions we resist most—grief, confusion, disappointment, and pain—are not separate from love. They are love viewed through a different lens.
This conversation explores:
Sometimes the greatest source of pain is not what happened.
It's the story we keep telling ourselves about what happened.
And sometimes freedom begins the moment that story loosens its grip.
By Stephen BerkleyIn this episode of The Noah Frequency, Noah begins with a simple observation:
A heavy heart is not the problem.
The story we create about it is.
As the discussion unfolds, Noah challenges the tendency to interpret every emotion through the lens of identity—assigning meaning, blame, fear, and certainty to experiences that may be something far simpler and far deeper.
According to Noah, even emotions we resist most—grief, confusion, disappointment, and pain—are not separate from love. They are love viewed through a different lens.
This conversation explores:
Sometimes the greatest source of pain is not what happened.
It's the story we keep telling ourselves about what happened.
And sometimes freedom begins the moment that story loosens its grip.