None But Curious - A Podcast for Nones and Agnostics

Candyce Glave

In a world that often demands you choose a belief system, being a none, agnostic, or spiritual-but-not-religious can feel isolating. None But Curious is a space for people exploring meaning outside traditional categories. At times we lean on reason, and at others we wander into the wonder hidden in ordinary life. This podcast explores everything from the quiet rituals that shape our days to the myths and stories that have traveled across cultures. Together, we explore big questions, small moments of awe, and the playful, thoughtful spaces in between belief and doubt. If you’re searching for a grounded, open-hearted way to make sense of the world, this podcast is your companion on the journey. A new episode is uploaded every two weeks! #nonebutcurious #findmagicinthemundane #awedinary

  1. Mar 26

    What World Stories and Spiritual Practices Teach Us About Grief, Burnout and Change

    What if feeling like you’re going downward isn’t failure… but part of a pattern humans have recognized for thousands of years? In this episode of None But Curious, we explore why so many ancient stories begin with loss, disorientation, and darkness before renewal. Across cultures and centuries, myths tell the same surprising truth: descent often comes before transformation. You’ll journey through: The underworld descent of Inanna from ancient Sumer The grief-filled journey of Orpheus in ancient Greece Shamanic initiation practices from Siberian and Mongolian traditions, where symbolic dismemberment precedes healing Together, these stories offer a wider frame for experiences like: Grief that feels disorienting Burnout that strips away your sense of identity Seasons where life feels like it’s unraveling instead of progressing This episode doesn’t try to solve those seasons. It helps you see them differently. You’ll hear reflections on: Why transformation often begins with subtraction, not addition How myths normalize collapse as part of the human arc Why “hallway seasons” of life may be passages, not destinations How loss, doubt, and disorientation show up in nearly every culture’s storytelling If you’ve ever felt like you were moving backward instead of forward, this conversation will remind you: you are in very old company.   @nonebutcurious nonebutcurious.org

    15 min
  2. Mar 12

    When Life Feels Off but Nothing Is Wrong

    Ever feel like something is off… even when nothing is technically wrong? In this contemplative episode of the None But Curious Podcast, we explore the strange and familiar experience of existential restlessness—that subtle sense that life feels slightly misaligned even when everything looks fine on paper. Instead of rushing to fix the feeling, we ask a different question: What if this discomfort is actually a signal? Drawing from philosophy, psychology, and reflective writing, this episode explores how periods of dissatisfaction may actually be transitional spaces where growth begins. You’ll hear insights inspired by: Philosopher Alain de Botton and The Consolations of Philosophy Reflections on life transitions and identity shifts The idea of liminality—the space between who you were and who you are becoming A thoughtful perspective from Tiny Buddha’s “Feeling Off—It’s Okay” Together, we consider how to sit with uncertainty rather than immediately trying to solve it. Because sometimes the feeling that something is off isn't failure. It may simply mean something inside you is changing. In This Episode Why dissatisfaction can appear even when life seems fine The difference between depression and existential restlessness Why we feel pressure to “fix” every emotion What philosophy says about the human search for meaning How to navigate life’s in-between seasons If this resonates Share the episode with someone who might be in their own season of transition. Subscribe for more reflective conversations about curiosity, meaning, and living with unanswered questions. Website: nonebutcurious.org Podcast: None But Curious

    11 min
  3. Feb 26

    The Kind of Friend Who Changes Your Life (And Why Every Tradition Talks About It)

    February surrounds us with reminders of romance — heart decorations, flowers at checkout lines, and the quiet suggestion that love belongs mainly to couples. Yet across cultures and wisdom traditions, love has never been limited to romance. Again and again, friendship appears as one of the most life-shaping forms of love — the kind that walks beside us, tells the truth with kindness, and helps us grow into ourselves. In this episode, Candy explores friendship as a path in its own right. Buddhist teachings remind us that spiritual friendship is not an extra part of the journey but part of its foundation. The idea of kalyāṇa-mitta, or “noble friend,” points to companions who help us realign when we drift and encourage wisdom, compassion, and shared effort. Sufi wisdom teaches that the company we keep shapes the condition of the heart. True companions soften what has hardened, awaken sincerity, and reflect us back to ourselves with honesty and care. Confucian philosophy views friendship as a relationship that strengthens integrity and responsibility. Good companions encourage reflection, help us correct mistakes, and make honesty feel safe rather than shaming. Celtic spirituality offers the image of the anam cara, or “soul friend,” someone who welcomes doubt, hope, and uncertainty without judgment. In their presence, nothing essential needs to be hidden, and honesty becomes possible. Throughout the episode, Candy reflects on the quiet ways friendship sustains us — someone who listens without rushing to fix, remembers what matters to us, or stays present when life feels uncertain. Because the friendships that shape us most are rarely dramatic. They unfold in steady moments of truth, care, and shared presence. And in a culture that moves quickly, this kind of companionship reminds us: we are not meant to grow alone.   Drop Candy a line at nonebutcurious.org or find her on social media @nonebutcurious

    11 min
  4. Jan 29

    You Don’t Need Certainty to Begin—Ancient Myths Agree

    Have you ever stood at the edge of something new—a project, a decision, a blank page—and felt that quiet, dizzy question rise up? Do I actually know what I’m doing? In this episode of None But Curious, we explore a comforting truth hidden inside some of the world’s oldest creation stories: beginnings don’t start with certainty. They start with chaos, curiosity, pauses, missteps—and wonder. Rather than treating creation myths as explanations of how the world began, we approach them as mirrors for how humans begin again and again in their own lives. In this episode, we wander through: • The Rig Veda’s Nasadiya Sukta, a creation poem that dares to say maybe—suggesting that even the gods might not know how it all began • Hundun, from ancient China, a story of wholeness before categories—and the risk of rushing to clarify what was never broken • Obatala, from Yoruba tradition, shaping life with care, imperfection, humility, and responsibility • The Diné Bahane' - Navajo Creation Story, where worlds rise, fall, and rise again—teaching that learning, leaving, and beginning anew are part of life’s rhythm Along the way, we pause with questions like: Where are you waiting for certainty before taking a first step? What if uncertainty isn’t something to overcome, but something to respect? What becomes possible when you release the need to get it right? Could some beginnings require leaving rather than fixing? These stories don’t give instructions. They offer companionship. They remind us that beginnings are often lived before they are understood. If this episode resonates, you’re invited to sit with it awhile. Let the stories linger. Carry one question with you into your day. Notice where you are already beginning—quietly, imperfectly, without a map. New episodes of None But Curious arrive every other week, offering stories, reflections, and moments of pause drawn from mythology, folklore, and human experience across cultures. You can follow or subscribe wherever you listen, explore companion pieces at nonebutcurious.org, or simply return when you’re ready.

    16 min
  5. Jan 14

    What if You Stop Searching for a Life Narrative?

    What if you stopped trying to explain your life? Just for a little while. In this episode of the None But Curious podcast, we question the pressure to turn our lives into a clean, meaningful story and explore what psychology and philosophy actually say about living well without one. This episode is for you if you have ever felt: Pressure to make sense of everything that has happened The urge to explain who you are and where you are going Frustrated when your life does not form a clear arc Like you should have a lesson, a takeaway, or a tidy explanation by now Here is what we explore together: Why modern culture and psychology made life narratives feel mandatory What narrative identity research really shows and what it does not Why storytelling helps some people in some seasons, but not everyone How forcing meaning too early can actually increase stress and emotional fatigue Why uncertainty is not a personal failure We also introduce philosopher Galen Strawson’s idea that not everyone experiences life as a story: Some people are narrative and naturally connect their past, present, and future Others are episodic and live more fully in the present without a strong personal storyline Episodic ways of being are not broken, immature, or incomplete From there, we turn to Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and the idea of psychological flexibility: You are not your story You are the space where thoughts, feelings, and identities come and go Meaning does not have to come from explanation You can live ethically, deeply, and intentionally without having things figured out This episode offers permission to: Stop connecting the dots Let your identity stay unfinished Live inside a pause without labeling it as failure Care about your life without narrating it   Consider sharing this episode with someone who might need the permission to pause their narrative. Follow along at nonebutcurious, subscribe to the podcast, or visit nonebutcurious.org for more reflections on living gently with uncertainty. .

    10 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
6 Ratings

About

In a world that often demands you choose a belief system, being a none, agnostic, or spiritual-but-not-religious can feel isolating. None But Curious is a space for people exploring meaning outside traditional categories. At times we lean on reason, and at others we wander into the wonder hidden in ordinary life. This podcast explores everything from the quiet rituals that shape our days to the myths and stories that have traveled across cultures. Together, we explore big questions, small moments of awe, and the playful, thoughtful spaces in between belief and doubt. If you’re searching for a grounded, open-hearted way to make sense of the world, this podcast is your companion on the journey. A new episode is uploaded every two weeks! #nonebutcurious #findmagicinthemundane #awedinary