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Wiser Living with Sissi Wang

Wiser Living with Sissi Wang

De: Sissi Wang
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A podcast sharing the life wisdom of leading thinkers, artists and newsmakers of the past and present. Your host Sissi Wang turns them into practical takeaways to help you achieve deep fulfillment in your own life.


To learn more about each guest and to see pictures from the interviews, visit https://www.sissi-wang.com/

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Sissi Wang Media Inc.
Ciencias Sociales Desarrollo Personal Éxito Personal
Episodios
  • Ep 19. William Irvine, Philosopher and Best-selling Author on Desire and the Ancient Art of Stoic Joy
    Nov 10 2022

    “A life of satisfaction is within your grasp if only you would change the way you think” - William Irvine



    If you’re addicted to chasing after the next best thing and want to learn how to get off the desire train and be satisfied with your life right now, then this episode is for you. William Irvine is an American philosopher and the author of a series of popular books written for a general audience on the Stoic philosophy of life and how it can help us find more joy in our day-to-day life. He stumbled upon Stoicism, an ancient philosophy that aims to minimize the negative emotions we experience while maximizing the positive emotions, during a mid-life crisis 20 years ago.


    "The insight of the Stoic and Buddhist is that there’s another solution. Instead of working hard for the thing you want to be satisfied, spend that time and energy working to appreciate the things you’ve already got,” says Irvine.


    Studying and practicing Stoicism have certainly helped him become a happier person and he encourages others to give it a try as well if you have a hard time being satisfied with what you have or would like to experience more joy in your daily life.


    We chatted about:

    · Desires, where they come from and why they never end

    · The gap theory of unhappiness: why we’re never satisfied

    · How to get off the desire train

    · Stoicism as a way of life

    · Stoic strategies for staying calm and satisfied

    · How to handle intrusive thoughts

    · And simple exercises you can try at home to boost your joy

    Additional Resources:

    William Irvine: https://www.williambirvine.com/

    On Desire: Why We Want What We Want: https://www.amazon.com/Desire-Why-We-Want-What/dp/0195327071

    A Guide to the Good Life: The Ancient Art of Stoic Joy: https://www.amazon.com/Guide-Good-Life-Ancient-Stoic-ebook/dp/B0040JHNQG

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    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1 h y 3 m
  • Ep 18. Lindsay Wong, Author of "The Woo Woo" on How to Rise Above Childhood Trauma and Get Along with Your Parents
    Sep 19 2022

    “People who’ve endured horrible things can laugh at anything”


    Our childhood shapes much of who we become as adults, so what happens if you had a really traumatic childhood?



    Lindsay Wong is the author of “The Woo Woo: How I Survived Ice Hockey, Drug Raids, Demons, and My Crazy Chinese Family”, a memoir about her unusual childhood growing up with a mercurial and unreliable mother who’s obsessed with ghosts and once lit her foot on fire in the name of exorcising demons. Her father was away working most of her childhood, and called her terrible names as a way to motivate her to achieve in life.



    Lindsay's parents immigrated to Canada from Hong Kong, and much of the dysfunctional family dynamic came from their Asian immigrant experience and her mother’s mental illness arising from generations of trauma. It was a super strange childhood growing up in the suburbs of Vancouver next to Chinese drug millionaires and her “crazy” family, where her aunt once held the City of Vancouver hostage on Canada Day for eight hours after threatening to jump off a bridge. Given her family’s history of mental illness, Lindsay began questioning her own sanity once she became an adult. Her childhood experience had also left her maladjusted to face the real world. She had anger issues, and wherever she went, trouble always seemed to follow. It took her many years to unlearn her early conditioning and find peace within herself.



    Working on the memoir had helped her heal and forgive her parents, Lindsay told me. When I interviewed her, she looked happy and content with her current life. She said it’s resilience that helped her through it all; her difficult experiences had also given her a wicked sense of humor, which grips you as soon as you open “The Woo Woo.” For our interview, I wanted to know how Lindsay managed to rise above her traumatic childhood and went on to thrive and create a life for herself that she loved. I was also curious what insights she had to offer on navigating the difficult patches of our relationship with our parents that we all experience from time to time.



    Along the way, we also chatted about how she accidentally became an author | How she’s a magnet for bad luck | The friction between immigrant parents and their children | How writing helped her heal | How she forgave her parents | What her current relationship is like with her parents | Whether we can truly escape intergenerational trauma | How to get along with difficult parents



    Lindsay Wong (Twitter): @lindsaymwong

    Lindsay Wong (Instagram): @lindsaywong.m

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    55 m
  • Ep 17. Patrick de Belen, Toronto Spoken Word Artist Speaks Up about Mental Health
    Aug 27 2022

    “If depression is more normalized then we wouldn’t have to wait to interfere… Mental wellness and mental health is just health. Just like your body and physical health, it requires a whole spectrum and a whole list of things to keep healthy."



    Patrick de Belen is a Filipino-Canadian spoken word artist based in Toronto, Canada, who’s well known in North America and the Philippines.

    As an artist, he’s praised for his wit, creativity, passion and sharp social commentary. He’s done commercial work for the Toronto Raptors, NFL Players Association, World Vision and Elections Canada, but it’s his personal digital poetry collection In Between Lines (2020) that spoke to me the most and made me want to reach out and interview him.



    The spoken word album has been called his most confessional work as an artist. In it, he bravely talks about his deepest fears and insecurities, and opens up about his longstanding mental health struggles. Patrick and his brother Jordan both struggled with mental health issues growing up. In the Filipino culture, mental health problems are often dismissed and never talked about in the open. In 2021, Patrick found Jordan dead in his apartment after committing suicide. Jordan’s passing affected Patrick deeply. Since then, Patrick has been working on a documentary about Jordan’s life to remember him, volunteering at Bereaved Families Ontario, and writing poetry to help him cope with the tragedy. Patrick says he’s doing everything he can to stay too.



    Patrick tells me he has always turned to writing and art to help him cope with his inner struggles, and today’s episode is a story of two brothers and their bond, mental health, art and healing.



    To see pictures from this episode and to read my thoughts on mental health, visit https://www.sissi-wang.com/episodes/ep-17-patrick-de-belen

    Patrick de Belen: http://www.patrickdebelen.com/

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    28 m
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