Loss as Transformation
Loss reshapes our understanding of life, prompting a deeper reflection on how we want to live moving forward. For Marisa, the passing of her mother instilled a profound commitment to embodying and passing on values like kindness and empathy to her son. While external achievements can aid in healing, it’s the internal transformation and the values we uphold that truly define our legacy.In this clip
From this podcast

Good Life Project
Grief is Love: Navigating Loss, Health & Transformation | Marisa Renee Lee
Related Questions
If we can't forget traumatic events but can modify our emotional response to past events, can the changes to a person's character following an event also be reversed or altered? For example, if someone who was once very positive and engaging returns from war or suffers the loss of a parent/spouse and becomes guarded and distant, how much of our character is malleable? Or can people truly become stuck in their ways? This question relates to the episode What Everyone Struggling Needs to Know Right Now | Ed Mylett on Impact Theory and the clip Identity and Transformation. It also relates to the episode 365: Benjamin Hardy | How to Break Free from Self-Limiting Beliefs and the clip Personality and Passion.
If we can't forget traumatic events but can modify our emotional response to past events, can the changes to a person's character following an event also be reversed or altered? For example, if someone who was once very positive and engaging returns from war or suffers the loss of a parent/spouse and becomes guarded and distant, how much of our character is malleable? Or can people truly become stuck in their ways? This question relates to the episode Jake Wood | Once a Warrior and the clip Personal Transformation. It also relates to the episode What Everyone Struggling Needs to Know Right Now | Ed Mylett on Impact Theory and the clip Identity and Transformation.
If we can't forget traumatic events but can modify our emotional response to past events, can the changes to a person's character following an event also be reversed or altered? For example, if someone who was once very positive and engaging returns from war or suffers the loss of a parent/spouse and becomes guarded and distant as a result, how much of our 'character' is malleable? Or can people truly become 'stuck in their ways' as discussed in the episode #396: Permission to Grieve with J.S. Park and the clip Emotional Toll of Caregiving?