
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send us a text
In this episode, Kolby explores what it means to live in the quiet, unsettled space between questions and answers — the place where uncertainty challenges our beliefs and opens us to deeper reflection. Drawing on John Stuart Mill’s defense of free expression and the Socratic practice of inquiry, Kolby asks whether discomfort in conversation might be a sign not of failure, but of freedom. Through meditation, curiosity, and a willingness to say “I don’t know,” we slow down our reflex to react — and instead learn to inhabit the fragile, human distance between minds.
By Kolby WadeSend us a text
In this episode, Kolby explores what it means to live in the quiet, unsettled space between questions and answers — the place where uncertainty challenges our beliefs and opens us to deeper reflection. Drawing on John Stuart Mill’s defense of free expression and the Socratic practice of inquiry, Kolby asks whether discomfort in conversation might be a sign not of failure, but of freedom. Through meditation, curiosity, and a willingness to say “I don’t know,” we slow down our reflex to react — and instead learn to inhabit the fragile, human distance between minds.