The Examined Life

Kenneth Primrose

The Examined Life podcast explores the questions we should be asking ourselves with a range of leading thinkers. Each episode features a different interview, and appeals to those interested in wisdom, personal development, and what it might mean to live a good life. Topics vary from discussing the role of dopamine mining and status anxiety, to exploring the science of awe and attention.

  1. Kathryn Mannix - Is mortality a threat or a catalyst?

    1D AGO

    Kathryn Mannix - Is mortality a threat or a catalyst?

    Send us Fan Mail Mortality: Threat or Catalyst? A Conversation with Dr. Kathryn Mannix In this episode of The Examined Life, Kenny Primrose is in conversation with writer, speaker, and retired palliative care physician Dr. Kathryn Mannix about whether mortality is experienced as a threat or a catalyst for living. Mannix describes how early fear and resentment of death drew her to caring for dying patients, what she observed as medical abandonment, and how nurses taught her that the most important thing at the bedside is “how you are.” She argues that modern culture has lost “death literacy,” fueling fears shaped by Hollywood depictions and that talking about death through storytelling helps people to understand ordinary dying and what to expect. The discussion covers loss of control, end-of-life “audits,” regret as a processed, safer place than rage or shame, emotional literacy, and companionship that makes space for distress. Mannix suggests accepting finitude can clarify values and cultivate gratitude. 00:00 Mortality As Catalyst 01:27 Meet Dr Mannix 04:01 Threat Or Catalyst 04:32 Learning To Be Present 11:22 Magical Thinking Fears 16:56 What Dying Looks Like 23:11 End Of Life Audit 27:38 Rethinking Regret 32:25 Regrets and Joys 34:05 Regret as Wisdom 35:01 Emotional Literacy Work 38:35 Guilt Shame Reframing 40:50 Self Compassion Voices 43:33 Holding Space Culture 48:52 Telling the Story 51:22 End of Life Audit 53:28 Death Catalyst Gratitude 58:59 Closing Reflections Relevant Links: https://www.kathrynmannix.com/ www.examined-life.com https://thisexaminedlife.substack.com/ Support the show

    1h 1m
  2. Dr BJ Miller - How are you grieving?

    APR 14

    Dr BJ Miller - How are you grieving?

    Send us Fan Mail BJ Miller on Loss, Meaning, and Learning to Feel In this conversation, Kenny Primrose speaks with palliative care physician BJ Miller, co-founder of Mettle Health, about grief—not as an interruption to life, but as one of its central experiences. Rather than treating grief as something that happens only after death, Miller suggests it is a constant human condition: the emotional response to loving things that inevitably change, fade, or disappear. The problem, he argues, is that modern culture is profoundly grief-illiterate. We rush people toward closure, reward emotional stoicism, and teach one another to avoid feeling too much. Drawing on his own life—including a catastrophic electrical accident at age 19 and the later death of his sister, Miller explores how grief shapes identity, attention, relationships, and even politics. When grief is denied, it often reappears disguised as anger, grievance, blame, or division. When felt honestly, however, grief reconnects us to meaning, deepens aliveness, and enlarges our capacity to live well. The conversation ranges from personal loss to healthcare reform, from daily mortality practices to the healing role of beauty and nature at the end of life.  In This Episode  Why grief is not exceptional but universal  How emotional avoidance creates “grief illiteracy”  The pressure to perform strength—and its hidden costs  What patients at the end of life teach about living  How grief transforms into anger, grievance, and polarization  Loss as a doorway to presence and gratitude  The importance of rituals and communal containers for mourning  Why medicine often treats death as failure  Practicing mortality as a path to meaning  Beauty, nature, and tenderness as forms of medicine Key Ideas Grief as Love Continuing Grief reveals what mattered. Rather than diminishing life, it clarifies it. Grief vs. Grievance Unfelt grief frequently becomes blame, resentment, or political division. Learning to Feel Emotional literacy—pausing before reacting, tolerating discomfort—is both personally healing and socially protective. Rituals Matter Modern societies have lost many shared practices that help people metabolize loss. We must rediscover or reinvent them. Rethinking Healthcare End-of-life care should prioritize meaning, beauty, and connection—not simply the postponement of death. Website - www.examined-life.com Substack - https://thisexaminedlife.substack.com Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/@ExaminedLifePodcast BJ's TED talk - https://www.ted.com/talks/bj_miller_what_really_matters_at_the_end_of_life Other resources on Grief - https://edition.cnn.com/all-there-is-anderson-cooper Mettle Health - https://www.mettlehealth.com/  Support the show

    1h 6m
  3. Dr Lucy Hone - What has loss taught you?

    MAR 30

    Dr Lucy Hone - What has loss taught you?

    Send us Fan Mail Learning from Loss with Dr. Lucy Hone How do you survive the unthinkable? When resilience researcher Dr. Lucy Hone lost her 12-year-old daughter in a tragic accident, she didn't just study the science of grief—she had to live it. In this episode, Lucy joins Kenny Primrose to share the practical, evidence-based tools that help us oscillate between mourning and living, and what we can learn about life in the wake of loss. In This Episode: In this new series on grief and mortality, we explore why the "stages of grief" model often fails us and what actually works instead. Dr. Lucy Hone discusses her journey from the University of Pennsylvania’s resilience program to the frontlines of her own personal tragedy. Key Topics Discussed: The Myth of "Bouncing Back": Why we need a more pragmatic definition of resilience.The 3 Habits of Resilient Grievers: Simple, actionable shifts in attention that can change your trajectory.The "Helping or Harming" Test: A vital tool for psychological flexibility.The Jigsaw Metaphor: How to rebuild your life when the old pieces no longer fit.Hidden Grief: Understanding "non-death" losses and how to process them.About Lucy: Dr. Lucy Hone is a best-selling author, TED speaker, and co-director of the New Zealand Institute of Wellbeing & Resilience. Her work has been published in The Journal of Positive Psychology and featured in The Washington Post, BBC, and The Guardian. Resources Mentioned: Book: Resilient Grieving: How to Find Your Way Through a Devastating LossNew Book: How Will I Ever Get Through This? (On hidden and non-death grief)TED Talk: The Three Secrets of Resilient PeopleConnect with The Examined Life: Host: Kenny PrimroseWebsite: www.examined-life.comYoutube: https://www.youtube.com/@ExaminedLifePodcastFollow & Subscribe on substack: https://thisexaminedlife.substack.com/ Support the series - buymeacoffee.com/kennyprimrose If you found this episode helpful, please leave a rating and review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify—it helps others find these conversations. Support the show

    51 min
  4. Victor Strecher - Who am I?

    JAN 2

    Victor Strecher - Who am I?

    Send us Fan Mail Living With Purpose: Insights from Victor Strecher In this episode of The Examined Life Podcast, host Kenny Primrose explores the profound questions of life's purpose and values with Professor Victor Strecher, a leading expert in the field from the University of Michigan. Strecher shares his deeply personal journey following the tragic death of his daughter, which led him to a renewed focus on what matters most in life. The conversation delves into how reflecting on death and one's core values can lead to a more purposeful and fulfilling life. Strecher also discusses the scientific and physiological benefits of having a strong sense of purpose, the distinction between self-transcending and self-aggrandizing purposes, and practical steps for individuals seeking to discover their own purpose. The episode touches on themes of identity, motivation, and the human condition, offering listeners profound insights and practical advice for living a more examined life. 00:00 Introduction: What Matters Most 00:34 Welcome to The Examined Life Podcast 00:44 Exploring Victor Strecher's 'Life On Purpose' 01:40 A Conversation with Professor Victor Strecher 03:35 The Big Question: Who Am I? 05:09 The Root System of Our Lives 08:09 A Personal Story of Loss and Purpose 14:15 The Mystical Experience and Its Impact 21:32 The Role of Death in Understanding Life 24:59 Exploring the Neuroscience of Purpose 25:26 The Role of Core Values in Purpose 26:16 Purpose and the Brain's Fear Center 26:53 Building the Brain's Purpose Muscle 28:08 Types of Purpose: Self-Transcending vs. Self-Aggrandizing 28:57 Historical Perspectives on Purpose 31:52 The Metaphor of the Camel, Lion, and Child 35:05 The Crisis of Meaning and Purpose 41:51 Practical Steps to Discovering Your Purpose 47:39 Final Thoughts and Reflections Links: Substack - https://thisexaminedlife.substack.com/?utm_campaign=profile_chips Examined Life Website - www.examined-life.com Victor Strecher - https://sph.umich.edu/faculty-profiles/strecher-victor.html Support the show

    49 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
10 Ratings

About

The Examined Life podcast explores the questions we should be asking ourselves with a range of leading thinkers. Each episode features a different interview, and appeals to those interested in wisdom, personal development, and what it might mean to live a good life. Topics vary from discussing the role of dopamine mining and status anxiety, to exploring the science of awe and attention.

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