Dennis Lewis

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Dennis Lewis earned a degree in the philosophy of religion before working as a computer programmer/analyst, book editor, and public relations executive. After leaving the corporate world, he studied a number of healing arts. A long-time student of Taoism, Advaita, and the Gurdjieff Work, Dennis Lewis teaches natural breathing, qigong, and meditation. He is theauthor of The Tao of Natural Breathing and Free Your Breath, Free Your Life.


Listen to Tami Simon's interview with Dennis Lewis: Breathing Space into Space

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Dennis Lewis: Breathing Space into Space

Tami Simon speaks with Dennis Lewis, an author, teacher, and practitioner of natural breathing, qigong, and meditation. After leaving the corporate world, Dennis studied a number of healing arts traditions, including Taosim, Advaita, and the Gurdjieff work. He is author of the books The Tao of Natural Breathing and Free Your Breath, Free Your Life, and with Sounds True he has produced the audio program Natural Breathing: Teachings and Exercises for Health and Self-Transformation. In this episode, Tami speaks with Dennis about the relationship between our emotions and our breathing, how we can let go into the unknown as we exhale, breathing as a metaphor for living, and what it might mean to “breathe space into space.” (56 minutes)

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Opening The Body, Freeing The Spirit: Yoga Flows To En...

Our bodies are messengers. They hold memory, emotion, resistance, and longing. With gentle attention, movement becomes more than physical; it becomes a sacred practice of release and reconnection. Through yoga for flexibility, we begin to soften the places we once braced, breathe into the spaces we once ignored, and return to ourselves with greater compassion and clarity. This kind of movement is not about performance. It is about presence. It is about remembering that each time we stretch or reach or fold, we are participating in something deeper than exercise; we are engaging in spiritual care.

For more than 40 years, Sounds True has been devoted to honoring the living transmission of spiritual wisdom in its most authentic form. Through audio teachings, online programs, and embodied practices, we’ve created a living library where seekers can connect with trusted guides, deepen their path, and awaken the body as a vessel for truth. Our programs support the whole being, mind, body, and spirit, with offerings that are both grounded and transformational.

In this piece, we will be exploring how yoga for flexibility can support emotional release, inner spaciousness, and embodied freedom, while offering spiritual connection through conscious movement.

Key Takeaways:

  • Practice Philosophy: Flexibility is not a physical achievement, but a spiritual practice rooted in softness, self-trust, and inner spaciousness.
  • Emotional Release Connection: Yoga for flexibility can support deep emotional healing through intuitive movement and embodied awareness.
  • Supportive Resources: Sounds True offers tools like mood-based yoga decks and guided rest practices that nurture both body and spirit.

Opening The Body, Freeing The Spirit: A Sacred Invitation To Move

At Sounds True, we understand that the journey of awakening often begins not in the mind, but in the body. When we create space within our physical form, we also open the door to greater emotional and spiritual freedom. This is the deeper invitation behind yoga for flexibility, not simply to stretch or lengthen, but to soften, surrender, and become present with what lives within us.

Flexibility is not a goal to be achieved; it is a process of unbinding. Each breath, each movement, becomes a conversation with the parts of ourselves that may have been holding on, protecting, or retreating. With gentle, intentional practice, the body begins to respond. Muscles lengthen, joints open, breath deepens. And with that softening, something profound happens: the spirit begins to speak more clearly.

This is not performance. It is presence. As we move through postures designed to increase mobility and ease, we are also cultivating spaciousness in our inner world. We learn how to stay with sensation, to breathe through resistance, to meet ourselves exactly where we are. In doing so, we align with the deeper rhythm of life itself.

Yoga for flexibility, at its core, is an act of trust. Trusting the body’s wisdom, trusting the spirit’s timing, and trusting that healing and transformation do not require force, only attention.

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Releasing The Grip Of Expectation

Many of us come to the mat with unconscious goals: touch the toes, hold the pose longer, go deeper into the stretch. But the moment we release those goals, we begin to enter into a different kind of relationship with the body, one built on listening instead of pushing. Flexibility, in this sense, becomes a byproduct of presence, not pressure.

Meeting Resistance With Compassion

Tightness in the body is often linked to protection, layers of stored emotion, memory, or trauma that manifest as tension. Yoga for flexibility teaches us to stay with those sensations rather than override them. In that space of patient attention, true healing begins to unfold.

Transforming Movement Into Prayer

As the body begins to open, a quiet spaciousness arises. Each posture becomes less about form and more about feeling, less about shape and more about truth. Movement is no longer mechanical; it becomes an intimate, sacred act of returning to self.

Bringing Depth To Your Practice

If you’re called to explore the union of movement and inner work, the Yoga and Movement collection at Sounds True offers a wide range of teachings that support both physical exploration and spiritual connection. Guided by trusted voices in the field, these resources invite you to move with reverence, depth, and presence.

How Yoga For Flexibility Cultivates Inner Spaciousness

Flexibility is not just something we practice in the muscles; it is something we invite into our inner world. When we soften the body with intention, we create the conditions for breath, energy, and awareness to move more freely. This inner spaciousness is what allows stillness, clarity, and spiritual insight to arise naturally:

Letting Go Of Held Tension

Many of us carry layers of unconscious tension in the body, shoulders that subtly hunch, hips that grip, jaws that tighten. Through yoga for flexibility, we begin to unravel these habitual contractions. With each exhale, the body remembers it does not need to hold so tightly.

Creating Room For The Breath

As the body opens, breath begins to move more freely. In flexibility-focused postures, we naturally access deeper, more rhythmic breathing. This expanded breath becomes a bridge between the physical and the subtle, helping us drop into a state of greater awareness and peace.

Supporting Emotional Release

Flexibility is not only physical, it’s emotional. Movements that open the hips, heart, or spine often invite feelings to surface. This is where the practice of free your body yoga becomes essential: we are not forcing anything out, but allowing what is ready to move to move.

Choosing Sequences That Match Your Mood

The body does not need the same thing every day. Some days call for a slow, restorative sequence; others for something more dynamic. The Yoga for your mood deck supports this intuitive listening with practices designed to meet you where you are, emotionally and energetically.

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Spiritual Flow Sequences To Deepen Connection And Clarity

Some yoga practices emphasize precision, repetition, or performance. But when we orient the body toward spiritual presence, flow becomes something else entirely. These spiritual flow sequences are not about choreography; they are about communion, with breath, with energy, with something greater than ourselves:

Returning To The Wisdom Of Rhythm

Spiritual flow sequences invite us to move in cycles rather than in a straight line. Each posture leads gently into the next, forming an unbroken thread of movement and awareness. Over time, this rhythm becomes a reminder that healing is not linear, and awakening happens in waves.

Letting Intuition Lead The Way

Rather than following a rigid script, these sequences encourage us to listen inwardly. How does the body want to move? What pace feels true today? This kind of freedom allows yoga for flexibility to become a tool not only for physical expansion, but for spiritual self-trust.

Tapping Into Collective Energy

There is a power in shared practice. Each year, the International Day of Yoga reminds us of the global community of seekers, healers, and movers who are using yoga to awaken the body and nourish the spirit.

Free Your Body Yoga As A Gentle Path To Emotional Release

The body remembers everything. Long before we have words, we store experiences, grief in the chest, worry in the belly, fear in the jaw. The beauty of free your body yoga is that it offers a loving, embodied way to meet those memories and begin to soften their hold:

Listening To What The Body Has Been Holding

We often think of emotional work as mental, but many feelings live beneath thought. In this kind of practice, we approach the body with tenderness, using mindful movement to reveal where something might be asking for release. This is where the deeper work of yoga for flexibility unfolds, through presence rather than pressure.

Gentle Sequences As Invitations, Not Instructions

Free your body yoga does not ask the body to perform. It asks the body to speak. Through slow, fluid sequences, we create a compassionate container in which feelings can move without being forced. The mat becomes a place not for fixing, but for feeling.

Rest As Integration

Once emotion has been stirred or released, the body needs stillness to absorb the shift. Practices like restorative yoga, seated breathwork, or guided rest are essential parts of this process. The Yoga Nidra —The Sleep Yoga podcast offers a space to fully let go, gently supporting the nervous system as it rebalances.

Energizing Yoga Routines To Awaken And Restore Vitality

Some days, the spirit calls for stillness. Other days, it asks to move, shake, and come alive. Energizing yoga routines can be a vital part of a spiritual practice, not to burn out or push harder, but to activate energy pathways, lift mood, and restore vibrancy from within.

These sequences are not necessarily fast; they are intentional. They often begin with breathwork or gentle movement that slowly builds momentum. This supports circulation, clears mental fog, and invites more presence into the body.

When practiced mindfully, energizing yoga routines help move stagnant emotions and stimulate joy. They can clear heaviness from the heart or dullness from the mind. As the body warms and opens, it becomes easier to access lightness, both physically and emotionally.

Vitality does not come from intensity alone; it comes from harmony. These practices are most effective when they leave you feeling both awake and grounded. That’s why many yoga for flexibility sequences include elements of both strength and softness, building energy without depleting it.

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Final Thoughts

Flexibility is often misunderstood as something you have or do not have, but in the spiritual sense, flexibility is not a trait; it is a way of being. It is the willingness to soften, to stay present, and to allow life to move through you with grace.

The practice of yoga for flexibility teaches us more than how to move our bodies; it teaches us how to live with openness. It shows us that growth happens not in the push, but in the pause. And it invites us to trust that even the subtlest shift in breath or posture can begin to unlock something sacred within.

Free your body yoga is not a destination. It is a lifelong conversation between the physical and the spiritual, a return to self through movement, stillness, and compassion. In every stretch, there is a chance to release. In every flow, a moment to remember who you are beneath the noise.

And through each of these practices, Sounds True remains devoted to supporting that remembering, with teachings, tools, and sacred space to help you return home to yourself, again and again.

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Frequently Asked Questions About Bridging Movement And Stillness

What is the best time of day to practice yoga for flexibility?

The best time to practice yoga for flexibility is when your body feels warm and responsive, often in the late morning or early evening. However, consistency matters more than the exact time.

Can older adults safely start yoga for flexibility with no experience?

Yes, older adults can begin yoga for flexibility with gentle, beginner-friendly classes focused on breath, joint support, and mindful movement. It’s wise to consult a healthcare provider before starting.

How long does it take to improve flexibility through yoga?

Results vary, but many practitioners notice an increased range of motion within 4–6 weeks of consistent practice, especially when combined with breathwork and relaxation.

Does yoga for flexibility also help with joint pain or stiffness?

Yes, regular yoga practice can help reduce stiffness and improve joint mobility by increasing circulation, strengthening supporting muscles, and relieving tension.

What types of yoga are most effective for improving flexibility?

Styles like Yin, Vinyasa, and Hatha are particularly helpful for flexibility. Each targets different muscle groups and allows varying levels of intensity and stillness.

Do I need yoga props to work on flexibility?

Props like blocks, straps, and bolsters can greatly support safe alignment and deeper release. They are especially helpful for beginners or those working with tight areas.

Is yoga for flexibility different from yoga for strength?

Yes, yoga for flexibility emphasizes lengthening and release, while strength-based yoga focuses on muscle engagement and stability. Both can be integrated into a balanced practice.

How can I stay motivated in a long-term flexibility practice?

Set small goals, journal your progress, and connect with teachers or online communities. Listening to your body’s needs can keep the practice meaningful and sustainable.

Michelle Cassandra Johnson is an author, activist, spiritual teacher, racial equity consultant, and intuitive healer. She is the author of six books, including Skill in Action and Finding Refuge. Amy Burtaine is a leadership coach and racial equity trainer. With Robin DiAngelo, she is the coauthor of The Facilitator's Guide for White Affinity Groups. For more, visit https://www.michellecjohnson.com/wisdom-of-the-hive.

Bridging Movement And Stillness: Exploring The Union O...

There is a moment, just after a posture ends and just before stillness settles in, where something shifts. The body softens, the breath deepens, and awareness begins to rise, not from effort, but from quiet. This is the space where yoga and meditation meet. For many of us, yoga begins with movement, and meditation begins with silence. But over time, these practices become less separate and more like two currents of the same river. Together, they help us remember what stillness feels like, not as emptiness, but as something alive and full of presence. This union is not about achieving perfect form or mastering silence. It’s about returning to yourself, again and again, through breath, movement, and listening.

For more than 40 years, Sounds True has offered a living library of spiritual wisdom, featuring the voices of teachers like Eckhart Tolle, Pema Chödrön, and Tara Brach. We were founded with a single intention: to preserve the authentic energy of spiritual transmission in real time, through courses, audio programs, podcasts, and events that honor each teacher’s unscripted voice. Our yoga and meditation offerings are crafted to support not just practice, but transformation. We don’t just deliver teachings, we invite you into an experience of awakening.

In this piece, we’ll be discussing how yoga and meditation come together as a path to inner stillness, and the deeper benefits of yoga when practiced as both movement and mindfulness.

Key Takeaways:

  • Embodied Presence: Yoga is more than movement; it’s a daily return to inner awareness and emotional grounding.
  • Union In Practice: The combination of yoga and meditation forms a spiritual path that strengthens resilience and compassion.
  • Support Through Tools: Programs like Sounds True’s Yoga for Your Mood Deck and Yoga Nidra podcast offer guided ways to deepen stillness.

The Sacred Bridge Between Movement And Stillness

In many traditions, the body is seen as a gateway, not an obstacle. Yoga invites us to meet our physical selves with presence, while meditation welcomes us inward, toward silence, awareness, and deeper being. At the heart of these practices lies the yoga and meditation union, a sacred convergence where motion softens into stillness, and stillness begins to move from within.

When we step onto the mat, we often begin with movement, stretching, strengthening, and breathing. But in time, we may notice that the external gestures echo something more subtle. The rise and fall of breath. The space between thoughts. The quiet that blooms at the end of a pose. Here, yoga is no longer just a physical practice; it becomes a preparation for entering stillness fully.

This union is not about doing more; it’s about becoming more aware. By anchoring attention in the body, we start to feel the mind settle. Through mindful movement, we open the door to a quieter interior landscape. Yoga becomes not just a practice of form, but a devotional act of listening. And meditation, once reserved for the cushion, begins to live in the body itself.

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The Profound Benefits Of Yoga As A Daily Practice

The most transformative rewards of yoga often emerge not in the big breakthroughs, but in the quiet, daily returns. When practiced consistently, yoga becomes more than a physical discipline; it becomes a gentle companion in emotional resilience, spiritual grounding, and embodied awareness:

Building Trust Through Repetition

One of the lesser-discussed benefits of yoga is the emotional steadiness that comes from simply showing up. Daily practice builds a relationship with the self, one grounded in trust, consistency, and care. Over time, this rhythm strengthens our ability to remain present even when life becomes unpredictable.

Emotional Clarity And Energetic Balance

Yoga gently creates space for emotion to move through the body. It offers practices that can stabilize energy, soften emotional turbulence, and restore clarity. Tools like the Yoga for your mood deck provide inspiration and support for selecting postures and breathwork based on how you’re feeling, making the practice deeply personal and responsive.

The Power Of A Yoga Mindfulness Practice

At its heart, yoga is a mindfulness practice, a way to train both body and attention to exist in the same moment. Through this integrated awareness, we learn to witness our experience with kindness and curiosity. It becomes easier to feel the breath without chasing it, to notice thoughts without becoming entangled in them, and to trust the body’s wisdom as a source of inner guidance.

How Meditation Deepens The Yoga Mindfulness Practice

Yoga and meditation are often seen as separate tracks on the same path, but when they meet, something profound shifts. Together, they become a mirror for awareness itself. This section explores how meditation enriches what we experience on the mat, transforming yoga from movement alone into a fuller field of conscious presence:

Refining Attention Through Breath And Stillness

Meditation invites us to notice what we might otherwise rush past, the pause at the top of the inhale, the subtle tension in a shoulder, the moment before the mind wanders. When we bring this quiet observation into yoga, the practice slows down and deepens. This is the essence of the yoga mindfulness practice: using the body as a ground for present-moment awareness.

The Meditation And Yoga Connection As Inner Listening

At a certain point, movement becomes internal. The meditation and yoga connection reveals itself most clearly in these moments, when breath leads movement, and movement dissolves into silence. By practicing this connection regularly, we begin to listen more deeply to the body’s cues and the heart’s quieter truths.

Rest As Integration

Sometimes, the deepest breakthroughs in practice happen during rest. Practices like Yoga Nidra, available through Sounds True’s Yoga Nidra —The Sleep Yoga podcast, offer a doorway into the subtler layers of awareness. As the body softens, the mind learns to settle without effort. Meditation, here, becomes less about doing and more about receiving.

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Discovering Inner Stillness Through Yoga And Breath

The breath is both a guide and a gateway. As we follow it inward, we begin to discover a spaciousness that doesn’t depend on external conditions. This is where inner stillness through yoga reveals itself, not as a goal to chase, but as something we return to, breath by breath:

Breath As Anchor For Inner Awareness

In yoga, the breath is more than a physiological process. It becomes a teacher, helping us soften the edges of our thinking and rest in the present moment. Inner stillness through yoga begins here, in the pause between inhales and exhales, in the soft surrender that comes when we allow the breath to lead the way.

Stillness Is Not Absence, But Presence

Often, we confuse stillness with emptiness. But what yoga reveals is that true stillness is rich with awareness. It is not the absence of thought, but the presence of quiet attention. By practicing regularly, we start to sense the aliveness beneath the surface of stillness itself.

A Collective Invitation To Pause

While this journey inward is deeply personal, it is also shared. Events like the International Day of Yoga remind us that stillness, too, can be a communal act. Practicing together, even across distances, strengthens our sense of belonging, not only to each other but to the silence we all carry within.

Embracing The Meditation And Yoga Connection In Daily Life

For many, yoga and meditation remain practices reserved for specific times, on the mat, or on the cushion. But their deepest transformation unfolds when we carry them with us into the ordinary. The meditation and yoga connection becomes not just a routine, but a rhythm that lives in how we walk, listen, and respond:

Making Practice A Living Presence

It’s one thing to practice mindfulness in stillness; it’s another to remain present in motion. By embracing the meditation and yoga connection throughout the day, we turn waiting in line into a breath practice, or a difficult conversation into an opportunity to stay rooted in awareness. Over time, these moments create a quiet thread of groundedness that runs through our daily life.

Mindfulness In Everyday Movements

The yoga mindfulness practice doesn’t require a studio. Washing dishes, walking the dog, or opening a window to feel the breeze, all of these can become invitations into embodied awareness. Through consistent attention, even the most routine acts can reconnect us with the inner calm we cultivate on the mat.

A Path That Meets You Where You Are

This isn’t about perfection. It’s about remembering. Returning. Whether you’re moving through grief, joy, or uncertainty, both yoga and meditation offer you something steady to lean on, a breath, a pause, a small space of stillness that reminds you you’re not alone.

Honoring The Yoga And Meditation Union As A Spiritual Path

Over time, the practice shifts. What may have begun as a way to relieve stress or stretch the body slowly becomes something deeper, something sacred. The yoga and meditation union reveals itself not just as a blend of techniques, but as a path of devotion, inquiry, and awakening:

A Practice Of Listening To The Heart

The more we listen within, the more we discover how movement and stillness serve the same purpose: to bring us home to ourselves. The yoga and meditation union makes this return possible. It invites us to slow down, to hear the quiet voice beneath thought, and to respond with compassion.

Inner Stillness Through Yoga As Devotion

In this context, inner stillness through yoga is not a performance or achievement. It becomes a devotional act, an offering of attention, breath, and presence. By meeting ourselves in this space day after day, we begin to recognize the sacred not as something outside of us, but as something we touch through awareness.

Deepening The Journey With Sounds True

For those ready to explore this path more fully, Sounds True offers a rich selection of teachings through their Yoga and Movement programs. These offerings support the spiritual dimension of practice, guiding seekers toward a more integrated and heart-centered experience of body and being.

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Final Thoughts

Stillness is not a destination; it’s a remembering. A return. The practices of yoga and meditation continue to call us back to that quiet center within, no matter how far we may feel from it.

Whether through movement, breath, or silence, we learn that the real gifts of practice live in the subtleties: the way we respond to discomfort, the gentleness we offer ourselves, the breath we return to when words fall short. These are the moments that change us, not suddenly, but steadily.

And in these moments, we discover inner stillness through yoga as something that doesn’t need to be chased or earned. It is already here, waiting in the pause, the exhale, the soft opening of presence.

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Frequently Asked Questions About Bridging Movement And Stillness

What are the mental benefits of yoga for older adults?

Yoga supports memory, focus, and emotional regulation in older adults. It also reduces stress-related cognitive fog by calming the nervous system.

Can I experience the benefits of yoga without being flexible?

Yes. Flexibility is not a prerequisite. The benefits of yoga arise from breath awareness, consistency, and alignment with your current body and abilities.

How long does it take to feel the benefits of yoga?

Some effects, like reduced tension or improved mood, can be felt after one session. Deeper benefits, such as resilience and self-awareness, build over weeks or months.

Is it better to do yoga before or after meditation?

It depends on your intention. Yoga before meditation can prepare the body to sit comfortably; meditation before yoga can help anchor presence in movement.

What role does breath play in experiencing the benefits of yoga?

Breath links body and mind. Conscious breathing enhances circulation, soothes anxiety, and grounds attention, deepening the impact of each posture.

How does yoga affect emotional healing?

Yoga creates space for emotional release through mindful movement and breathwork. It supports trauma healing by restoring a sense of agency and inner safety.

Can yoga replace other forms of exercise?

For many, yes. Yoga can improve strength, flexibility, and cardiovascular health. However, it can also complement other activities like walking or swimming.

What type of yoga is best for cultivating stillness?

Gentle styles such as Hatha, Yin, or Restorative Yoga are ideal for cultivating inner stillness. These styles emphasize slow movement and extended holds.

Are there specific yoga poses that support better meditation?

Yes. Poses that open the hips, lengthen the spine, and stabilize the pelvis, like Sukhasana, Padmasana, or supported forward folds, can enhance seated meditation.

Can the benefits of yoga be maintained without daily practice?

Absolutely. While consistency helps, even a few mindful sessions per week can maintain key benefits. The body and mind remember intentional presence.

Michelle Cassandra Johnson is an author, activist, spiritual teacher, racial equity consultant, and intuitive healer. She is the author of six books, including Skill in Action and Finding Refuge. Amy Burtaine is a leadership coach and racial equity trainer. With Robin DiAngelo, she is the coauthor of The Facilitator's Guide for White Affinity Groups. For more, visit https://www.michellecjohnson.com/wisdom-of-the-hive.

Steven Washington: “My Recovery Is Non-Negotiabl...

How do we remain committed to staying sober when grief strikes, when stress becomes overwhelming, or when shame threatens to pull us back into old patterns?

This week on Insights at the Edge, Tami Simon welcomes Steven Washington, a former professional Broadway dancer who has transformed his 23-year recovery journey into a powerful practice of embodied healing. Steven is the author of Recovering You: Soul Care and Mindful Movement for Overcoming Addiction and creator of the SWE Studio, an online community offering movement and meditation support for people in recovery.

In this deeply personal interview, Tami and Steven explore:

  • Why recovery must be “non-negotiable”—with no conditions attached, regardless of life’s challenges 
  • How shame operates as the linchpin of addiction and the healing power of sharing it with trusted others
  • The connection between sensitivity and addiction, and how to transform sensitivity from vulnerability into strength
  • Practical tools for creating a trigger plan that works for both small daily stressors and major life crises
  • How Qigong and embodied practices help regulate the nervous system and process emotions held in the body
  • The journey from inherited shame to self-compassion and authentic self-worth
  • Why asking for help—practiced with small things—prepares us for life’s biggest challenges
  • Developing a personal relationship with a higher power that feels authentic rather than inherited

If you’re navigating recovery, supporting someone who is, or seeking to understand the connection between embodiment and transformation, Steven offers both practical wisdom and profound compassion for the journey.

Note: This interview originally aired on Sounds True One, where these special episodes of Insights at the Edge are available to watch live on video and with exclusive access to Q&As with our guests. Learn more at http://www.join.soundstrue.com

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