2016-03-02
33 分钟Today we're wrapping the third ever installment in our new Good Life project roundtable format, so hope you've enjoyed it.
If this is the first time you're catching this format, we're not replacing our long form conversations or short and sweet riffs.
We're running a fun experiment to actually see about adding a third show every week.
It's called the Good Life Project Roundtable, and we'll have guests in residence, two other guests who will be jamming with us for the better part of a month so you can really get to know them and go deep into some really cool conversations with each of them.
We each throw out a single topic on this roundtable format.
Nobody knows what the topic will be beforehand when we sit down to record, and we just take it wherever it feels like it needs to go.
Today's guests in their final appearance as guests in Residence are Tara Moore, author of playing big.
You can find her at Tara Moore Mohr and Erin Moon, yoga teacher, voice artist, philanthropist and world traveler, and we will drop her contact information into the show notes.
Also, the URL is a bit long and windy.
So fantastic people, thinkers, soulful, wise and generous.
The topics that we'll be exploring today are is there such a thing as unbiased media when money is involved?
Have you ever been conned and believing that everything is for the good, or deciding that everything can be used for the good?
Do things really happen for good reasons, or are there just some bad things that happen?
So I hope you enjoy these conversations.
As I mentioned, this is our final day with Tara and Erin in residence.
Really looking forward to the conversation, to sharing it with you, and then to introducing you to our next round of guests in residence next week.
Onto the conversation.
I'm Jonathan Fields and this is good life project.
So I was on the phone with a friend of mine this week.
She just went through a really hard surgery that had a lot of very unexpected and serious complications, and she was sharing that it has caused a real crisis of faith for her.