
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


This final piece shifts from ideas into something more personal and direct: intention. Instead of explaining the path, it offers a way to step onto it—through a deeply honest, no-shortcuts kind of prayer.
At its core, this is about commitment. Not just wanting a better life, but being willing to face whatever stands in the way of it, especially within ourselves.
The prayer moves through a series of clear, grounded intentions: to see the truth about ourselves, to take responsibility for our experiences, and to stop avoiding discomfort. It names the usual suspects—pride, fear, self-will, avoidance—and asks for the strength to face them without hiding or softening the edges.
What stands out is the balance between effort and trust. There’s a willingness to do the work, paired with a recognition that guidance and support are also needed.
It also reframes pain in a practical way—not as something to escape, but as something that leads somewhere meaningful when we’re willing to feel it honestly. The tone isn’t heavy; it’s steady and sincere.
The takeaway feels simple: real change starts with a clear, wholehearted “yes” to the process.
Listen to Get a Better Boat
By PhoenesseThis final piece shifts from ideas into something more personal and direct: intention. Instead of explaining the path, it offers a way to step onto it—through a deeply honest, no-shortcuts kind of prayer.
At its core, this is about commitment. Not just wanting a better life, but being willing to face whatever stands in the way of it, especially within ourselves.
The prayer moves through a series of clear, grounded intentions: to see the truth about ourselves, to take responsibility for our experiences, and to stop avoiding discomfort. It names the usual suspects—pride, fear, self-will, avoidance—and asks for the strength to face them without hiding or softening the edges.
What stands out is the balance between effort and trust. There’s a willingness to do the work, paired with a recognition that guidance and support are also needed.
It also reframes pain in a practical way—not as something to escape, but as something that leads somewhere meaningful when we’re willing to feel it honestly. The tone isn’t heavy; it’s steady and sincere.
The takeaway feels simple: real change starts with a clear, wholehearted “yes” to the process.
Listen to Get a Better Boat