Path Found

Monica Argandoña

Path Found is the podcast for anyone who’s ever asked, “What now?” This show explores the real, messy, and inspiring journeys people take to find fulfilling work—and themselves. From pivots and side hustles to mentorship and major career changes, Path Found reveals what college never taught and counselors never said.

  1. He Spent 24 Years in the Wrong Job — Here's What He Did Next

    hace 2 días

    He Spent 24 Years in the Wrong Job — Here's What He Did Next

    Send us Fan Mail Tom Miller* grew up Catholic, careful, and certain that college wasn't for him. After losing his mother to leukemia at 18, and spending that summer as her primary caregiver, he drifted into a 24-year career in commercial printing, doing skilled work that paid well and meant nothing to him.   At 40, on a vacation to Savannah, Georgia, he told his wife: I can't do this anymore. What followed was a return to college, a bachelor's in education, six years teaching in high-poverty schools in Dallas, a master's degree earned at night while teaching by day, and eventually a full-time practice as a Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC).   In this conversation, Tom reflects on what it cost him to stay too long in the wrong career, what it felt like to finally work in alignment with his values, and what he'd tell his 18-year-old self about belief, mentorship, and vocation.   He also shares the story of his son, a student with a 4.37 GPA who left college 12 credits short of graduation to become a chef, and why buying him a set of knives was one of his proudest parenting moments. *Tom Miller is a pseudonym. Because of his work as a therapist, he did not want to use his real name. The picture for this episode is AI-generated. 🎧 Listen to “Path Found Podcast” Real stories of pivots, side quests, and scenic routes that inspire new possibilities. 📅 New episodes drop every Thursday. 👉 Subscribe & Listen: https://www.youtube.com/@PathFoundPodcast ★ Follow, rate, and share if you’ve ever taken the scenic route. Get Involved: 🌐 See the work we’re doing at Keystone Network - Web: https://keystonenetwork.org 💬 Submit your comments, questions for guests, or suggest new guests you’d love to hear from! 📷Instagram: @pathfoundpodcast

    26 min
  2. A Sports Kid Who Found His Way Back to the Field

    25 jun

    A Sports Kid Who Found His Way Back to the Field

    Send us Fan Mail William Combs always assumed he'd run his own business. He just didn't know it would be a Subway franchise in Orange County. In this conversation, William traces his path from a kid who scraped by as a B student, through Cal Poly Pomona's hotel and restaurant management program, into management roles at Islands and Jamba Juice, and eventually into a multi-year stint as a Subway business consultant that flipped a switch: "I can do this... I wish I was sitting on that other side of the table." William talks candidly about the rocky first year of ownership (he was naive about the avalanche of costs that come with running a store), the slow grind toward profitability, and the deliberate choice not to let the business consume his life. He also opens up about his regrets, like skipping college job fairs, staying closed-minded about other paths, and what he'd tell a 20-year-old trying to figure it all out. Now semi-retired and working as a youth and high school sports official, William reflects on confidence, balance, and the value of not rushing big decisions. 🎧 Listen to “Path Found Podcast” Real stories of pivots, side quests, and scenic routes that inspire new possibilities. 📅 New episodes drop every Thursday. 👉 Subscribe & Listen: https://www.youtube.com/@PathFoundPodcast ★ Follow, rate, and share if you’ve ever taken the scenic route. Get Involved: 🌐 See the work we’re doing at Keystone Network - Web: https://keystonenetwork.org 💬 Submit your comments, questions for guests, or suggest new guests you’d love to hear from! 📷Instagram: @pathfoundpodcast

    27 min
  3. Going Through the Trash (On Purpose): Anna Sacks on Reinvention, Waste, and Systemic Change

    11 jun

    Going Through the Trash (On Purpose): Anna Sacks on Reinvention, Waste, and Systemic Change

    Send us Fan Mail What do investment banking, a Jewish farming fellowship, and New York City's trash have in common? For Anna Sacks, known to hundreds of thousands of followers as The Trash Walker, they're all stops on the winding road to her life's work.  In this episode, Anna shares the honest story of her career search: the years of trying art galleries, finance, and rotations through a confusing resume before she discovered what she calls "inherently meaningful work" - waste reduction, composting advocacy, and corporate accountability.  We talk about what it looks like to build credibility without a cohesive resume, how going through trash led to legislative wins worth millions of dollars to New York City's composting infrastructure, and why she believes the most powerful thing ordinary people can do right now happens at the local level and not the federal one.  Anna is thoughtful, funny, and deeply honest about the ways her path worked out and the ways it didn't. This is a conversation about non-linear careers, the cost of meaningful work, and what it means to stay in a fight even when you're not sure it's working.  Follow Anna on Instagram: @thetrashwalker Watch the documentary: Buy Now: The Shopping Conspiracy streaming on Netflix. 🎧 Listen to “Path Found Podcast” Real stories of pivots, side quests, and scenic routes that inspire new possibilities. 📅 New episodes drop every Thursday. 👉 Subscribe & Listen: https://www.youtube.com/@PathFoundPodcast ★ Follow, rate, and share if you’ve ever taken the scenic route. Get Involved: 🌐 See the work we’re doing at Keystone Network - Web: https://keystonenetwork.org 💬 Submit your comments, questions for guests, or suggest new guests you’d love to hear from! 📷Instagram: @pathfoundpodcast

    42 min
  4. The First Principles of Being Human

    28 may

    The First Principles of Being Human

    Send us Fan Mail Justin Rufa grew up in a small Rust Belt town on the St. Lawrence River with one clear thought: I'm leaving. What followed was nearly 24 years in the Air Force — aeronautical engineering, a master's, a PhD from Michigan, teaching calculus at the Air Force Academy, space launch operations in El Segundo — and then retirement at 42 with no clear next step. Two months in Kansas. A year teaching high school math. A three-month solo stint in Colorado, walking a creek every morning, trying to figure out what comes next when structure is no longer handed to you. What Justin eventually landed on wasn't a job title. It was a question: What does it mean to be a good human being? In this episode, he talks about the tension between prestige and passion, what the military gives you and what it doesn't, and why he thinks the younger you can reach a student, the better. He's now tutoring, academic coaching, and moving toward middle school teaching in the Boulder area, and for the first time, it feels like the right fit. This one is for anyone who has ever taken the long road back to what they actually care about. 🎧 Listen to “Path Found Podcast” Real stories of pivots, side quests, and scenic routes that inspire new possibilities. 📅 New episodes drop every Thursday. 👉 Subscribe & Listen: https://www.youtube.com/@PathFoundPodcast ★ Follow, rate, and share if you’ve ever taken the scenic route. Get Involved: 🌐 See the work we’re doing at Keystone Network - Web: https://keystonenetwork.org 💬 Submit your comments, questions for guests, or suggest new guests you’d love to hear from! 📷Instagram: @pathfoundpodcast

    35 min
  5. Denim on Her Own Terms: The Bold, Scrappy Path Behind Knorts

    21 may

    Denim on Her Own Terms: The Bold, Scrappy Path Behind Knorts

    Send us Fan Mail Eleanore Guthrie didn't set out to disrupt the fashion industry. She set out to find a pair of shorts that looked good on a bike. What followed was more than a decade of building Knorts, a brand built entirely on knit denim - from weekend photo shoots in her parents' driveway to Revolve partnerships, a Lady Gaga placement, a Kendall Jenner moment, a collaboration with Urban Outfitters, and a Vogue write-up.  In this episode, Eleanore shares the unfiltered version of what it actually looks like to build something genuinely new: the years of not making money, the burnout of doing everything alone, the painful lessons of growing too fast, and the identity crisis that comes when bigger brands start copying your signature textile. She also talks about her newest pivot — moving from selling clothes to selling textiles and launching Big L's Gym, a media project aimed at getting the denim and activewear industries to finally see what she's known for years: knit denim is the future. This one is for anyone who has ever been told their idea is weird, wondered if they should just quit, or tried to do too many things at once because there was no other choice. Eleanore's path is proof that stubbornness, when pointed in the right direction, is a superpower. 🎧 Listen to “Path Found Podcast” Real stories of pivots, side quests, and scenic routes that inspire new possibilities. 📅 New episodes drop every Thursday. 👉 Subscribe & Listen: https://www.youtube.com/@PathFoundPodcast ★ Follow, rate, and share if you’ve ever taken the scenic route. Get Involved: 🌐 See the work we’re doing at Keystone Network - Web: https://keystonenetwork.org 💬 Submit your comments, questions for guests, or suggest new guests you’d love to hear from! 📷Instagram: @pathfoundpodcast

    44 min
  6. From High School Dropout to Harvard Law: How Discipline, Detours, and Doing the Work Built a Career

    14 may

    From High School Dropout to Harvard Law: How Discipline, Detours, and Doing the Work Built a Career

    Send us Fan Mail Steven Kerns grew up in Long Beach, California, dropped out of high school at seventeen, and eventually made his way through the Army Infantry, Long Beach City College, Cal State Long Beach, Harvard Law School, and on to the California Department of Justice. Today, he works as a deputy attorney general, representing land-use and energy regulatory agencies, including California's oil and gas regulator. He also teaches environmental law at CSULB. In this episode, Steven traces the surprisingly coherent through-line of a path that, from the outside, looked like a series of sharp right turns. We talk about what the military instills that classrooms can't, what it felt like to arrive at Harvard and wonder if he'd made a grave mistake, and how a polite follow-up email to a rejection changed the arc of his career. We also get into the big picture — his "earn tomorrow" life mantra, how imposter syndrome functions as a signal rather than a warning, and what he tells students trying to figure out what to do in a world reshaped by AI. Steven brings a lot of hard-earned wisdom to this conversation. He's also just genuinely funny and kind. 🎧 Listen to “Path Found Podcast” Real stories of pivots, side quests, and scenic routes that inspire new possibilities. 📅 New episodes drop every Thursday. 👉 Subscribe & Listen: https://www.youtube.com/@PathFoundPodcast ★ Follow, rate, and share if you’ve ever taken the scenic route. Get Involved: 🌐 See the work we’re doing at Keystone Network - Web: https://keystonenetwork.org 💬 Submit your comments, questions for guests, or suggest new guests you’d love to hear from! 📷Instagram: @pathfoundpodcast

    54 min

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Path Found is the podcast for anyone who’s ever asked, “What now?” This show explores the real, messy, and inspiring journeys people take to find fulfilling work—and themselves. From pivots and side hustles to mentorship and major career changes, Path Found reveals what college never taught and counselors never said.

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