The Aligned Living Podcast - Conversations on living from congruence: body, heart, mind & soul.

iesha delune

Join Iesha Delune, Wholistic Life Coach and author, for soulful, practical conversations on living from congruence: body, heart, mind & soul in harmony. Each episode blends wisdom and real-world application to support your authentic, embodied, and empowered living. Gentle truth-telling, grounded insight, and deep alignment — this is where inner knowing becomes everyday life. Welcome to The Aligned Living Podcast.

  1. May 28

    27. Receiving Feedback, Staying Present, and Building Healthy Relationships

    In this episode of The Aligned Living Podcast, I explore the skill of receiving feedback, and why it can feel so difficult, overwhelming, confronting, or deeply triggering for so many people. Receiving feedback is not just an emotional skill. It’s a nervous system skill, a self-reflection skill, and a relationship skill. And if we want healthy, honest, lasting relationships, it’s important that we build the capacity to stay present enough to hear and understand the people we care about, even when what’s being shared is uncomfortable. I speak about the difference between listening to understand and listening to prepare a defence, and why relationships can begin to quietly disconnect when people no longer feel safe, welcome, or able to share honestly. Throughout the episode, I walk through some of the most common reasons feedback becomes difficult to receive, including: feeling overly compromised or depleted feedback triggering identity or sense of self feedback feeling like a demand for perfection nervous system responses connected to past criticism or rejection shame responses lack of self-reflection skills confusing understanding with agreement feedback being delivered without communication skill trying to “win” conversations rather than understand I also explore how feedback conversations become much healthier when we are grounded in our own congruence and sense of self, rather than needing agreement, certainty, or control in order to feel okay. This episode is an invitation to gently reflect on your own relationship with feedback: What happens inside you when someone shares the impact of your behaviour? What patterns arise? And what might become possible if feedback no longer immediately pulled you out of openness, curiosity, and connection? If communication, relationships, feedback, boundaries, or living congruently are areas you would like support with, there are links in this episode to book a Discovery Call and explore ways we can work together. Here's a link to explore 1-1 Wholistic Life Coaching with me: https://ieshadelune.com.au/offerings/wholistic-coaching/ Here's a link to book your no-cost Discovery Call: https://TimeWithIesha.as.me/NoCostDiscoveryCall Here's a link to a free series I ran called the Foundations of Congruence: https://ieshadelune.com.au/offerings/foundations-of-congruence/ Thanks for listening.

    21 min
  2. May 5

    26. What’s Mine and What's Theirs?

    Iesha opens with a quote from Tiny Buddha: "There comes a time when you stop trying to make things right with people who won't own their part in what went wrong." And from there, asks: where is the line between taking responsibility for your own behaviour and taking on the other person's part too? Learning that clear delineation of what's mine and what's theirs is a skill. And there's a further skill of communicating in ways that cultivate connection and understanding (not conflict), while not taking on more than your part in any dynamic. In this episode Iesha covers: The two directions of imbalance: a profoundly underdeveloped ability to absorb your share of responsibility, or a radically overdeveloped tendency to absorb more than your share How both sides of this polarity can show up across all kinds of relationships - personal, professional, community An invitation to notice, without judgment, where you tend to sit on this spectrum Will and skill: two elements at play in any area of growth (and we can never be responsible for someone else's level of either) What's ours: attuning to our own congruence, honouring our yeses and nos, asking for what we need, communicating impact clearly, and staying present and open when receiving feedback even when it's not delivered gracefully What's theirs: what someone chooses to do with our sharing and our requests is their work The long term consequences of the overdeveloped and underdeveloped dynamic playing out in long term relationships, and what Iesha has seen happen many times when one person finally walks away A closing invitation to look at the key dynamics in your life - work, community, family, friendships - and contemplate where you sit on this spectrum Work With Iesha If you’d like support building these skills and creating more aligned, connected relationships, you’re invited to explore working with Iesha. You can book a Discovery Call to talk through what’s happening for you and how she can support you. Check out 1-1 packages and book your Discovery Call here:  https://ieshadelune.com.au/offerings/wholistic-coaching/ Want to go deeper into Aligned Living?  You're welcome to receive Iesha's free series, The Foundations of Congruence: https://ieshadelune.com.au/offerings/foundations-of-congruence/ And here's the promised link to Tiny Buddha, the source of today's quote: https://tinybuddha.com/

    14 min
  3. Apr 25

    25. Aligned Relationships: Apology & Relationship Repair - When, “Sorry”, Isn’t Enough

    In this episode, Iesha explores why saying “sorry” doesn’t always lead to relationship repair, and what’s actually required for trust to be rebuilt. She begins by naming that the word “sorry” is used in different ways, from simple human acknowledgment of someone’s pain, to situations where we recognise we’ve caused impact but have no intention of change, through to apologies that carry genuine responsibility and commitment. Because we use the same word across all of these, much of the meaning is assumed, often leading to misunderstanding and unmet expectations. From there, Iesha introduces the three elements of effective apology when the goal is repair. She walks through the importance of self-responsibility, truly understanding the impact on the other person, and having a clear, thought-through plan for behaviour change. She also highlights that words alone are not the repair, behaviour change is. This episode speaks to both sides of the process, those apologising and those receiving an apology, offering a grounded, practical framework for moving through rupture in a way that is honest, meaningful, and capable of real healing. What You’ll Hear in This Episode Iesha explores the different ways we use the word “sorry,” and how the same sentence can carry very different levels of responsibility, awareness, and intention. She introduces the three elements of effective apology for relationship repair, self-responsibility, understanding the impact, and a clear plan for change, and explains why each one matters. She speaks to the common experience of feeling like you’ve apologised many times without things improving, and also to the experience of receiving apologies that don’t translate into healing or trust. Through examples and client patterns, she shows how misunderstanding, assumption, and lack of clarity can keep relationships stuck, and how deeper self-reflection and communication can begin to shift that. Key Themes The different meanings behind the word “sorry” Why apology alone doesn’t equal relationship repair The three elements of effective apology The importance of taking full responsibility for actions and choices Understanding the real impact on the other person Why behaviour change is where repair actually happens The role of self-reflection in preventing repeated patterns How both people participate in the repair process A Gentle Invitation If you are in the process of repairing something in a relationship, or wanting to move through something that hasn’t quite resolved, this episode invites you to look a little more deeply. If you’re apologising, what level of responsibility and reflection are you bringing? If you’re receiving an apology, what do you need to feel that it’s meaningful and believable? And in both roles, where might slowing down and engaging with the deeper work create something that is actually complete, rather than something that keeps resurfacing? Want to have a no-cost Discovery Call with Iesha, to explore 1-1 Wholistic Life Coaching? Head here, look at the options and book your call: https://ieshadelune.com.au/offerings/wholistic-coaching/ Want a deeper understanding and experience of congruence? Receive Iesha's free series - The Foundations of Congruence, here:  https://ieshadelune.com.au/offerings/foundations-of-congruence/

    23 min
  4. Apr 16

    24. Aligned Relationships: Communication - Filling in the Gaps

    Episode Summary In this episode, Iesha introduces a core foundation for aligned relationships and communication: understanding and being understood. She explores how this sits at the heart of truly relating to one another, and how one of the key ways this breaks down is through what she calls “filling in the gaps.” Before moving into a future episode on effective apology, she explores how misunderstandings are often created, not by what is said, but by what is assumed. Using the metaphor of the eye’s blind spot, and how the brain fills in the gap with what it expects to be there, Iesha explains how we naturally fill in missing information in conversation based on our own perspectives, experiences, and expectations. While this happens automatically, it can lead to misinterpretation, disconnection, and decisions made on faulty understanding. What You’ll Hear in This Episode Iesha explores the role of understanding and being understood as a core foundation of aligned and healthy relationships. She makes a clear distinction between understanding and agreement, and highlights how true relating requires us to take the time to genuinely understand each other’s experience and perspective. She shares how common words and phrases, like “I’m sorry” or “I love you,” can carry vastly different meanings depending on the person saying them and the person receiving them. When we assume shared meaning without checking, we can unintentionally create hurt, confusion, and misalignment. Through real client examples, Iesha illustrates how “filling in the gaps” can impact relationships, from assumptions about commitment and agreement, to misunderstandings that compound over time. Key Themes Why understanding and being understood is foundational to aligned relationships How we unconsciously “fill in the gaps” in communication The different meanings underneath common phrases like “I’m sorry” and “I love you” How assumptions can lead to misalignment, hurt, and repeated patterns The role of curiosity and asking questions in creating clarity and connection A Gentle Invitation This episode is an invitation to bring awareness to where you might be filling in the gaps in your own relationships. Where might you be assuming meaning instead of checking for understanding? Where could your communication benefit from asking a few more questions? And where might greater clarity, in both how you share and how you listen, create more alignment and connection? Work With Iesha If you’d like support building these communication skills and creating more aligned, connected relationships, you’re invited to explore working with Iesha. You can book a Discovery Call to talk through what’s happening for you and how she can support you. Check out 1-1 packages and book your Discovery Call here:  https://ieshadelune.com.au/offerings/wholistic-coaching/ Want to go deeper into Aligned Living?  You're welcome to receive Iesha's free series, The Foundations of Congruence: https://ieshadelune.com.au/offerings/foundations-of-congruence/

    15 min
  5. Apr 3

    23. The Avoidance Landscape

    We have signals of congruence when body, heart, mind and soul are all saying yes. And we have signals of incongruence. In this episode Iesha explores what we can do with those signals of incongruence besides normalise them or push through them, and that's avoid them. Avoidance is a bigger and more complex landscape than most people realise. Some of our avoidance strategies are things we'd never label as avoidance — things that are genuinely good for us. And that's exactly what makes this worth looking at consciously. In this episode Iesha covers: Why avoidance isn't always dark or destructive, and what it actually is in this context: anything we do to feel better, feel good, raise our energy or distract ourselves, that means the thing that actually needs addressing doesn't get addressed The intelligent feedback system we're always in communion with: body sensations, emotions, thoughts, gut knowing, intuition Why we can do so much work and still not be living aligned, satisfied and soul deep happy When you can name a problem, you don't have a problem anymore, you have a project The landscape: journaling, movement, focusing on another life area, focusing on someone else, spending money, socialising, sex, television, alcohol and other substances The sneaky one: reframing as avoidance  A client story about a carer whose role was gradually hollowed out, and how avoidance built quietly around a misalignment that grew over two years, until the conversation shifted from surviving to project managing toward something aligned The diagnostic question: do you discharge the energy and go back and address the issue ? Or does the thing just never get dealt with? Closing reflection questions to sit with, slowly, like slow release fertiliser: What do I regularly do to feel good or feel better? And is there anything that doesn't get addressed as a result? When something's out of whack, or I get triggered or upset - what do I do? And is there anything that doesn't get dealt with as a result? If you'd like Iesha's skills and expertise on team you while you sit with these questions and project manage what comes from them, you're welcome to get in touch.  This page will take you to a page on my website that describes my coaching pillars, show you the 1-1 coaching options, and allows you to book a single session or a Discovery Call: https://ieshadelune.com.au/offerings/wholistic-coaching/

    21 min
  6. Mar 28

    22. Your Comfort Zone Isn't Automatically the Enemy

    There’s a common personal development narrative that says discomfort equals growth, and that everything you want sits on the other side of your comfort zone. In this episode, Iesha slows that idea down and looks underneath it, bringing the conversation back to alignment and feelings as feedback. Using examples (and a few sharp questions), Iesha explores how resistance can sometimes be your body’s wisdom saying “no”, or “I need more information”, and why normalising stress as the price of growth can pull you away from your own signals and your own congruence. In this episode, you’ll hear: Why deep wisdom can become unhelpful when it’s turned into a sound bite The difference between a congruent yes with a learning curve, and pushing yourself into something misaligned Why stress and resistance are information, not automatic instructions How “follow the resistance” falls apart when we apply it to real life examples (consent, legality, safety, preference) A reminder that stress is feedback asking for change, not something to “manage” so you can keep overriding yourself How Iesha works with growth and goal-setting through alignment first: the goal, the foundations beneath it, and the stepping stones A grounded example using public speaking, and how the same action can be aligned for one person and misaligned for another Why your comfort zone isn’t automatically the enemy of growth (and how a healthy tree grows in the conditions that nourish it) If you’d like support to explore your own goals, foundations, and next steps through the lens of alignment, you’re welcome to reach out to Iesha. https://ieshadelune.com.au/

    18 min
  7. Mar 22

    21. Closure: Keeping the Keys to Your Own Resolution

    Closure is one of those experiences we all long for - that moment when something painful finally moves from front and centre into the rear view mirror, settling into the rich, multicoloured tapestry of our lives rather than hijacking us daily. In this episode, Iesha opens a honest and tender conversation about what closure actually is, what gets in the way of it, and where we really need to look for it. Drawing on her work with clients navigating the end of relationships and business partnerships, Iesha explores one of the most common ways we unknowingly hand our power over to the very situation we're trying to leave behind: placing our closure outside of ourselves, in the hands of someone else's actions, self-reflection, or change of heart. Through three real client scenarios - a woman waiting for her ex-partner to finally see and own his part in the breakdown of their relationship, someone trying to make sense of choices that fall completely outside their own value system, and a person whose sense of resolution hinged on being paid out by someone whose goodwill had already proven unreliable - Iesha gently illuminates how this outward focus, however understandable, keeps us tethered to the very thing we want to move beyond. The episode then turns toward what closure actually looks like when we bring it home. Iesha offers a grounding framework - looking back to ask what did I do well, what could I have done better, and if I were ever here again, how would I do it differently? - as a way of extracting real nutrient value from even the most painful experiences. This isn't self-blame. It's reclaiming the points of power that live inside our own story, building the skills we wish we'd had, and learning to trust ourselves and our lives again. Warm, clear, and deeply practical, this episode is an invitation to stop waiting for someone else, and turn toward your own healing instead.   Key Takeaways Whether we call it closure, moving on, or letting go, we're talking about the same thing:  arriving at a place of peace, balance, and understanding where the past is integrated rather than intrusive. Time alone doesn't heal, tending does. Unresolved feelings and thought loops are important feedback. They are doorways into what still needs to be seen, heard, understood, and supported. Placing closure outside yourself is one of the most common [and most disempowering] patterns there is. Waiting for someone else to take responsibility, to understand what they did, or to make good on what they owe keeps you a hostage to their choices rather than the one holding centre stage in your own healing. Some things genuinely cannot be understood. When another person's choices fall entirely outside our own values or way of being, seeking to truly understand them pulls our energy away from our own centre, which is where healing actually happens. Closure is mostly an inside job. Especially in the early steps. This doesn't mean the external circumstances don't matter, they do, but the keys to your own resolution should never be handed to anyone else. Bringing closure inward means tending to yourself with honesty and compassion. This includes the you that didn't hold a boundary, the you that kept the peace at the cost of your own, the you that justified away behaviour that wasn't acceptable, or the you that jumped in before reading the fine print. A simple but powerful framework for self-reflection: What did I do well? What could I have done better? If I were ever in this situation again, how would I do it differently? This process builds self-trust. When we turn the focus inward - toward the skills we want to build, the deeper learning about ourselves - it places resolution and healing in our own hands.   Work With Iesha If you've been trying to move through something and feel like you're not getting there fast enough, you don't have to navigate it alone. Iesha works with clients one-on-one and in small groups. If you're ready to tend to what's unresolved and come back to yourself, explore the ways you can work together,  including single session and package options and a no-cost Discovery Call, right here: 👉 https://ieshadelune.com.au/offerings/wholistic-coaching/

    12 min
  8. Mar 13

    20. Wholistic Ecology: Tending to the Whole

    In this episode of the Aligned Living Podcast, Iesha deepens into a crucial part of her coaching framework: Wholistic ecology. This is about recognising that all parts of our lives interact with each other, and they can drain or uplift the whole. Sometimes the journey to living congruently calls for small tweaks, and sometimes it calls for significant renovations and creations, but either way, wholistic ecology matters. Iesha offers two main lenses for working with this: Lens 1: Step back and look at the whole Iesha invites you to look back over your average week, month, or year and ask: What is getting your time, energy and focus? What is not getting your time, energy and focus? Why do you think that is? She names four common ways people lose alignment when they don’t step back and look at the whole: Focusing only on areas where you feel powerful and confident Alignment in one area, no matter how great it gets, won’t automatically create alignment across the board. Focusing only on the most painful area Pouring everything into the squeaky wheel isn’t sustainable if the rest of you isn’t being cared for. Giving all attention outwards Focusing only on other people can leave you out of alignment with your own inner world. Life gets full, and months or years go by without review The doing of daily life can take over, and we lose awareness of how we’re tending to the whole. Iesha shares an example of a client who came to her for parenting triggers and work frustrations, and when they stepped back and looked at the whole, she realised she hadn’t picked up a paintbrush for two years. Even creating 90 minutes a month for creativity shifted things. Lens 2: Specific alignment vs wholistic alignment Iesha names the difference between: Specific alignment, choice by choice, task by task Wholistic alignment, across the ecology of your whole life You can be very skilled at moment-to-moment aligned choices, and still have a life that is out of alignment overall, because the whole can have elements of too much or too little. She uses the example of water and plants: water is aligned for plants, and yet too much or not enough water causes issues. The same is true for us. Something can be aligned, and still be out of balance in proportion and capacity. What you might find when you review your life Iesha says when you look back at your month or year, one of two things usually happens: You find misalignment You might have normalised it as “this is just how life is”, or used “when-then” thinking. You might have been aware but not feeling like change was possible. She names some common signals of misalignment: feeling drained, despondent, anxiety and stress, procrastination, resentment, short fuse between event and reaction, dissatisfaction, underutilised, misunderstood, alone, craving time and space. A lot of life is aligned, but the whole has too much or too little Life can be too full even if it’s all good, or too empty, where your deeper essence isn’t receiving its minimum requirements. Iesha references the care label, like the cactus and the tropical plant. Both need water, the amount is different. No one is wrong. This work is about coming home to knowing the deeper you and what you need for your fullest expression. A practical invitation If you find misalignment, Iesha invites you to turn the problem into a self-care project. What’s one small step you can take to begin addressing it? If things are mostly aligned but there’s too much or too little, what’s one supportive next step you can take to bring it into balance? She reminds you this review is not about judgment or creating a bigger to-do list. It’s about awareness, because once you can see clearly, you’re more able to make kind, congruent changes. And as always, you don’t have to do this investigation alone. Iesha is available to support you into Aligned Living. For more free resources, or to join Iesha's email list visit : https://ieshadelune.com.au/ To explore 1:1 Wholistic Life Coaching with Iesha visit: https://ieshadelune.com.au/offerings/wholistic-coaching/

    20 min

About

Join Iesha Delune, Wholistic Life Coach and author, for soulful, practical conversations on living from congruence: body, heart, mind & soul in harmony. Each episode blends wisdom and real-world application to support your authentic, embodied, and empowered living. Gentle truth-telling, grounded insight, and deep alignment — this is where inner knowing becomes everyday life. Welcome to The Aligned Living Podcast.