The Courage to Be Stupid
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The Courage to Be Stupid
We spend so much of life trying not to look foolish. We polish our words, perfect our image, and perform certainty — all to hide the places we feel unsure.
But what if the moments we call stupid are actually moments of sacred openness?
In this tender conversation, Thomas explores the lifelong pattern of masking vulnerability with knowing, and the healing that comes when we meet our own uncertainty with compassion instead of shame.
Drawing on Gangaji’s invitation to “be willing to be stupid,” Jungian psychology, and modern neuroscience, he reveals how the courage to not know can free us from perfectionism and deepen our connection to self and others.
Featuring insights from Esther Perel and rest activist Tricia Hersey, this episode invites listeners to reclaim curiosity, humility, and the quiet brilliance that lives inside imperfection.
It includes a gentle, heart-based practice, The Three-Step Pause, for the moments you feel the urge to cover up instead of open up.
A reminder that wisdom isn’t found in having all the answers. It begins in the willingness to learn out loud.