Practicing Wholeness: An Invitation to the Second Half of Life Podcast Por  arte de portada

Practicing Wholeness: An Invitation to the Second Half of Life

Practicing Wholeness: An Invitation to the Second Half of Life

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Welcome to the very first episode of the Practicing Wholeness Podcast.

In this opening conversation, Brooke introduces a new chapter — both for the podcast and for herself. Moving away from heavily scripted, highly polished content, she shares why she’s choosing a more human, unscripted approach in a world increasingly shaped by AI, performance, and perfection.

This episode explores the deeper meaning behind Practicing Wholeness — not as an idea, but as a lived experience.

Brooke reflects on:

  • The shift from information to integration
  • Why most of us don’t need more knowledge — we need embodiment
  • The tension between future-oriented living and present-moment awareness
  • The contrast between “fixing yourself” and learning self-acceptance
  • Richard Rohr’s framework of the first half and second half of life
  • Moving from black-and-white thinking toward developmental maturity
  • Reclaiming inner authority after a lifetime of outsourcing it

She shares her own lived experience of transitioning from a mentally driven, achievement-oriented life focused on self-improvement… toward a more embodied, heart-centered way of being grounded in self-acceptance and presence.

This episode also includes a guided somatic inquiry practice, inviting you to notice how your body responds to questions about:

  • Living for the future vs. living with presence
  • Fixing yourself vs. accepting yourself
  • Outsourcing authority vs. insourcing guidance

You’ll be invited to slow down, breathe, tune into your body, and explore what wholeness feels like — not just conceptually, but somatically.

Brooke also shares her vision for the podcast going forward, including experiential episodes, integration practices, and the possibility of monthly live community recordings.

This is not just a podcast about ideas.

It’s an invitation into practice.

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