Soma+IQ™

Steven Jaggers & Soma+IQ Team

This podcast provides an in-depth look into Somatic Breathwork (which uses the power of breath for Emotional Wellness and Mental Clarity) and why it is becoming the top breathwork modality in the world. We will be showcasing Testimonials, Student reactions, as well as a Behind The Scenes look at our Soma+IQ™ trainings to become a Soma+IQ™ Certified Practitioner and bring this Powerful Modality to your friends, family, community and culture.

Episodes

  1. 09/07/2025

    The Hidden Intelligence of Loneliness

    The modern world is awash in anxiety, depression, and chronic loneliness. These conditions are not aberrations of character, but predictable consequences of an environment increasingly at odds with human needs. At its core, the crisis is not about chemical imbalances or personal shortcomings. It is about connection, or rather, the profound lack of it. A recent discussion on the Soma+IQ podcast, hosted by Adam Carbary with founder Steven Jaggers, surfaces a central idea: healing is less about self-improvement and more about repairing the bonds that tether us to our bodies, our communities, and one another. Consider the cultural backdrop. Many of us cannot name our neighbors. Our social interactions unfold more on screens than across kitchen tables. The daily exchange of hugs and eye contact, basic nutrients for the nervous system, has been replaced with likes, comments, and fleeting digital affirmations. It is no wonder the body reacts with symptoms we label as illness. We are living in an abnormal environment, and our stress is a normal response. Jaggers and Carbary propose a reordering of priorities. Instead of chasing “trauma release” or the endless project of self-fixing, the work should begin with connection. When individuals link head, heart, and gut into a coherent whole, the system organizes itself. Pain diminishes. Relationships deepen. Communities strengthen. Healing, in this framework, is not the prize at the finish line; it is the natural consequence of being genuinely connected. The nervous system operates like the mycelial networks that allow forests to communicate. Breath becomes the mediator of that network. By drawing attention back from the whir of thoughts into the chest and diaphragm, people restore the physiological conditions for curiosity and presence. This matters because curiosity, as the hosts argue, is the gateway to connection. It is impossible to remain both tightly contracted in stress and open to wonder at the same time. If children embody relentless curiosity, adults often surrender it in the name of stability. Work, bills, and societal expectations calcify into boxes: the settled career, the settled relationship, the settled beliefs. But settlement comes at a cost. It forecloses growth, silences imagination, and diminishes the ability to truly know oneself, let alone another person. The alternative is harder but richer: to keep asking questions, to let people and beliefs remain verbs instead of nouns, and to bear the discomfort of revising one’s worldview. Loneliness, too, is reframed not as pathology but as signal. It is supposed to hurt; the pain is evolutionary design, compelling us back into relationship. Yet not all relationships resolve loneliness. Without connection to the self, even a crowded room can feel empty. The first step, then, is inward, integrating one’s own history, weaving one’s own story into coherence, before extending outward. Ultimately, the conversation circles back to beauty, defined not as an object but as the recognition of relationships between things: tree to soil, breath to body, neighbor to neighbor. Beauty lies in the web, not the individual strand. The editorial lesson is stark but hopeful. Healing is not the goal; connection is. Our health, mental, physical, and civic, depends less on innovation than on remembering what we have forgotten: that we are social creatures wired for reciprocity, presence, and touch. If modern life feels unlivable, it is because it asks us to live against our own nature. The way forward begins simply: a deeper breath, an honest conversation, a hand extended not through a screen but across a table.

    44 min
  2. 08/30/2025

    Stop People Pleasing: Unmask the Real You

    You can have the job, the house, the relationship, the outward markers of success, and still feel like something essential is missing. The smile in the mirror looks fine, the world applauds your progress, yet inside, the question nags: Why don’t I feel like myself? It turns out that many of us live this quiet contradiction. On the surface, we perform. Beneath it, we wonder who we really are. From childhood, we inherit a script of shoulds. We should be polite, we should chase security, we should look a certain way or want a certain life. Over time, these expectations press into us like barnacles on a ship’s hull, small at first, then heavy enough to slow the vessel down. The pressure is subtle but relentless, and before long, we mistake it for our own voice. The result is a life that looks polished from the outside but feels off-kilter within. We sense it in the unease of Sunday nights, the exhaustion that lingers even after a vacation, the quiet fear that we have built a life for everyone but ourselves. The body knows before the mind does. When our nervous system is relaxed, we slip easily into conversation. There is no need to perform, no urge to defend or impress. We are simply present, and enough. But when we are straining to be different versions of ourselves, one person at work, another with friends, still another at home, we drain our energy at every turn. It is the greatest tax we pay, and it accrues daily. Nowhere is this clearer than in the habit of people-pleasing. Many of us soften our words, dilute our truths, or swallow our needs just to keep the peace. It feels safe in the moment. But over time, it hollows out relationships. A bond built on silence and performance is not really a bond at all. The paradox is striking: the very effort to preserve a connection by avoiding conflict ends up eroding the connection itself. Plenty of people live lives that look perfect, the curated Instagram feed, the smiling holiday cards, the milestones achieved right on schedule. And yet, beneath the surface, a gnawing disconnection persists. Without authenticity, accomplishments taste bland. The show might win applause, but the actor backstage feels unseen. Here is the uncomfortable truth: conflict is not always a threat. Sometimes it is a plea. When two people collide, not because they are broken, but because they are both being themselves, the friction can deepen the bond. Relationships often grow not from the easy afternoons but from the arguments survived, the truths spoken, and the mutual decision to remain present anyway. The Hardest Question: What Do You Want? Ask most people what they should be doing, and they have a ready list. Ask them what they want, and the pause is deafening. Years of living for others erodes the muscle of desire. Rebuilding it starts small: choosing the gym over the movie night, admitting that you would rather walk alone than go to the party, telling someone close to you what you actually need. These are tiny acts of rebellion against the tyranny of “should.” And they add up. Loneliness, though painful, is not the enemy. It is a signal. If you feel lonely even in a crowded room, that ache is trying to drive you back toward authenticity. The irony is that many people chase connection to relieve loneliness but end up feeling emptier when they are not themselves in the presence of others. The way forward is paradoxical: use loneliness as a compass, not to find just anyone, but to find yourself again. When someone drops the mask, when they shed the shoulds and settle into their own skin, you feel it. There is a magnetism in authenticity that no strategy or performance can replicate. A regulated nervous system, a congruent self, an honest voice, these are what draw others closer. It is also what makes a life feel worth living. The path back to self is not grand or glamorous. It is not about blowing up your career overnight or booking a one-way flight. It begins with awareness: writing down the shoulds that dominate your thoughts, noticing the moments you hide, daring to tell three people in your life what you actually want. The steps are simple, but they are rarely easy. They might dismantle parts of the life you have built. But continuing to live for others, to hide behind masks and obligations, is costlier still.

    48 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
9 Ratings

About

This podcast provides an in-depth look into Somatic Breathwork (which uses the power of breath for Emotional Wellness and Mental Clarity) and why it is becoming the top breathwork modality in the world. We will be showcasing Testimonials, Student reactions, as well as a Behind The Scenes look at our Soma+IQ™ trainings to become a Soma+IQ™ Certified Practitioner and bring this Powerful Modality to your friends, family, community and culture.