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There are some books that inform you. And then there are a few that quietly work on you, long after you’ve stopped listening. The Surrender Experiment by Michael A. Singer is one of those books.
This episode is a little different from our usual founder story. Yes, there’s business here. Yes, there’s a remarkable company that grows into a hundred-million-dollar enterprise. But at the center of this story is something much more personal—and much more challenging: the idea of surrendering control over your own life.
Michael Singer didn’t set out to build a company, a movement, or a legacy. In fact, he didn’t set out to build anything at all. What he did instead was make a radical decision early in his life: he would stop resisting whatever life placed in front of him. Not selectively. Not when it felt comfortable. But fully.
That decision becomes the core of what he calls “the surrender experiment.”
As you’ll hear in this episode, Singer’s life unfolds in ways that feel almost unbelievable—yet deeply human. From living in solitude and meditating in the woods, to being pulled into unexpected responsibilities, leadership roles, and eventually the world of software, finance, and corporate growth. At every step, his mind protests. It wants to say no. It wants control. It wants safety and predictability.
And yet—he keeps letting go.
If you’re anything like me, parts of this story may make you uncomfortable. There were moments while listening when I felt my own resistance show up immediately. My mind wanted to argue. To negotiate. To skip ahead. That reaction alone is part of the lesson. Singer isn’t asking us to abandon ambition or stop caring about outcomes. He’s pointing to something much subtler: the internal friction we carry when reality doesn’t match our preferences.
What happens, he asks, if instead of fighting life, we work with it?
Throughout the episode, we explore not just what happened to Singer, but what was happening inside him. How each unwanted situation became an opportunity to release fear. How discomfort became a teacher rather than a problem to solve. And how surrender, surprisingly, didn’t lead to passivity—but to clarity, effectiveness, and trust.
This story also forces an uncomfortable question: how much of our stress comes not from what’s happening, but from our resistance to it?
Singer’s journey doesn’t offer a formula to copy. It offers something more honest: an invitation to notice where we’re saying no internally, even as life continues to move forward. Whether you’re building a business, navigating uncertainty, or simply feeling worn down by the need to control outcomes, this episode gives you space to pause and reflect.
At its heart, this is a deeply human story about learning to live with less inner conflict—and discovering that when you stop pushing against life, life often meets you with unexpected generosity.
If this episode resonates, you’re not alone. That quiet recognition—the sense that someone has put words to something you’ve felt but never named—is exactly what Deeply Driven is about.
Deeply Driven Books (Amazon Affiliate) - 100% of commissions will be donated to help support Children’s Literacy!
https://amzn.to/45R6rxC
Michael Singer Interview with Oprah
The Untethered Soul: The Journey Beyond Yourself
Past Episodes Mentioned
#1 Henry Ford My Life and Work (What I Learned)
Kent Taylor and his Texas Roadhouse Dream
#16 How Jim Casey Turned Service Into UPS's Superpower
Estée Lauder: Divine Purpose of Beauty
#22 Leonard Lauder: The Power of Small Details
If you enjoyed this episode, please leave us a review. It would greatly help the show and we thank you in advance for all your tremendous support.
Deeply Driven Newsletter
Welcome!
Deeply Driven Website
Deeply Driven
X
Deeply Driven (@DeeplyDrivenOne) / X
Substack
https://larryslearning.substack.com/
Thanks for listening friends!
By Deeply Driven Podcast | Insights into Business History and EntrepreneurshipThere are some books that inform you. And then there are a few that quietly work on you, long after you’ve stopped listening. The Surrender Experiment by Michael A. Singer is one of those books.
This episode is a little different from our usual founder story. Yes, there’s business here. Yes, there’s a remarkable company that grows into a hundred-million-dollar enterprise. But at the center of this story is something much more personal—and much more challenging: the idea of surrendering control over your own life.
Michael Singer didn’t set out to build a company, a movement, or a legacy. In fact, he didn’t set out to build anything at all. What he did instead was make a radical decision early in his life: he would stop resisting whatever life placed in front of him. Not selectively. Not when it felt comfortable. But fully.
That decision becomes the core of what he calls “the surrender experiment.”
As you’ll hear in this episode, Singer’s life unfolds in ways that feel almost unbelievable—yet deeply human. From living in solitude and meditating in the woods, to being pulled into unexpected responsibilities, leadership roles, and eventually the world of software, finance, and corporate growth. At every step, his mind protests. It wants to say no. It wants control. It wants safety and predictability.
And yet—he keeps letting go.
If you’re anything like me, parts of this story may make you uncomfortable. There were moments while listening when I felt my own resistance show up immediately. My mind wanted to argue. To negotiate. To skip ahead. That reaction alone is part of the lesson. Singer isn’t asking us to abandon ambition or stop caring about outcomes. He’s pointing to something much subtler: the internal friction we carry when reality doesn’t match our preferences.
What happens, he asks, if instead of fighting life, we work with it?
Throughout the episode, we explore not just what happened to Singer, but what was happening inside him. How each unwanted situation became an opportunity to release fear. How discomfort became a teacher rather than a problem to solve. And how surrender, surprisingly, didn’t lead to passivity—but to clarity, effectiveness, and trust.
This story also forces an uncomfortable question: how much of our stress comes not from what’s happening, but from our resistance to it?
Singer’s journey doesn’t offer a formula to copy. It offers something more honest: an invitation to notice where we’re saying no internally, even as life continues to move forward. Whether you’re building a business, navigating uncertainty, or simply feeling worn down by the need to control outcomes, this episode gives you space to pause and reflect.
At its heart, this is a deeply human story about learning to live with less inner conflict—and discovering that when you stop pushing against life, life often meets you with unexpected generosity.
If this episode resonates, you’re not alone. That quiet recognition—the sense that someone has put words to something you’ve felt but never named—is exactly what Deeply Driven is about.
Deeply Driven Books (Amazon Affiliate) - 100% of commissions will be donated to help support Children’s Literacy!
https://amzn.to/45R6rxC
Michael Singer Interview with Oprah
The Untethered Soul: The Journey Beyond Yourself
Past Episodes Mentioned
#1 Henry Ford My Life and Work (What I Learned)
Kent Taylor and his Texas Roadhouse Dream
#16 How Jim Casey Turned Service Into UPS's Superpower
Estée Lauder: Divine Purpose of Beauty
#22 Leonard Lauder: The Power of Small Details
If you enjoyed this episode, please leave us a review. It would greatly help the show and we thank you in advance for all your tremendous support.
Deeply Driven Newsletter
Welcome!
Deeply Driven Website
Deeply Driven
X
Deeply Driven (@DeeplyDrivenOne) / X
Substack
https://larryslearning.substack.com/
Thanks for listening friends!