Perspective Shift
- Waking up, growing up, and cleaning up arrive together, tangled, in the same ordinary moment. A flash of emptiness, a flare of old trauma, a glimpse of a wider worldview — all in the space of a single breath. We keep trying to sort life into separate practice hours, but life refuses the schedule. Learn to meet the whole braid at once.
- Telling someone they’re whole when they feel broken only deepens the wound. Real wholeness opens the field so wide that the broken feeling is completely allowed to exist. That permission is itself the medicine — the moment brokenness is fully welcomed, it’s already being held by something larger than itself.
- Awakening without shadow work will collapse, however complete it feels. You can live for months undivided, the self quietly dissolved, certain you’ve arrived — and leave your conditioning, your selfishness, your capacity to wound others entirely untouched. Enlightenment doesn’t clean up after you. That work waits exactly where you left it.
- Ask the well-adjusted people around you what a friend is, and watch them struggle to answer. We’ve turned friendship into a possession, a noun we own, and lost the verb underneath it. Befriending is something you do — a steady turning-toward, in your own experience and in one another. When the culture has become a desert of objectification, that turning-toward is water.
- You are not a thing that persists; you are an unfoldment that never stops. Thirteen billion years of cosmos press behind you, an unformed future opens ahead, and the now is always surfing that front edge. The bracing — “I am this way, I’ll always be this way” — is the only thing fixed about you. Feel yourself instead as the ongoing creative advance into novelty.
Waking up was supposed to fix everything. So why did it fall apart?
Zen priest and former psychotherapist Chad Bennett sits down with Keith Martin-Smith to dismantle one of the most seductive ideas in spiritual life: that if you just awaken deeply enough, the rest of you will sort itself out. It won’t. Enlightenment doesn’t clean up after you.
In this conversation, two old Dharma brothers explore why waking up, growing up, and cleaning up have to be practiced as a single braid — not three separate projects. They get into why telling someone they’re whole when they feel broken only makes it worse, what a “frozen part” of you is actually guarding, why most people don’t try hard enough, and what it really means to befriend your own experience in a culture that’s forgotten how to be friends.
Equal parts teaching, live practice, and the easy warmth of genuine friendship.
In this episode:
- Why awakening collapses without integration
- The two-part meditation Chad guides live on the call
- Including your experience vs. indulging it
- “Most people don’t try hard enough” — the right kind of effort
- What is a friend? (and why so few people can answer)
Key Questions
Here are some questions you can contemplate while listening to this discussion. We suggest you take some time to use these as journaling prompts.
- Where in my life have I been told — or told myself — that I’m fine when I don’t feel fine? What might shift if I allowed the broken feeling to be fully here, instead of rushing to fix or transcend it?
- Do I treat myself primarily as a problem to be solved? Where have I objectified my own experience, turning a living, moving thing into a fixed diagnosis I now carry around?
- When I notice a stuck or protective part of myself, what is my instinct — to repair it, banish it, or befriend it? What might that part actually know that I’ve never paused long enough to hear?
- Have I ever had an awakening, insight, or breakthrough that later collapsed? Looking back, what went untouched — what conditioning or shadow simply kept running alongside the clarity?
- Am I trying hard enough, or too hard? Where in my practice and my life am I caught in self-aggression, and where am I drifting in a comfort that asks nothing of me?
- What are the “hard things” in my life that actually mean something to me — and where am I just breaking metaphorical rocks for the sake of breaking rocks?
- Do I experience myself as a fixed identity — “I am this way, I’ll always be this way” — or as an unfoldment still in motion? What becomes possible when I feel myself as a process rather than a thing?
About Integral Edge
Welcome to a world on the edge.
AI is rewriting the rules. Politics are more polarized than ever, with the far right and left in an endless clash. The metacrisis looms, late-stage capitalism is unraveling, DEI is evolving, and strongmen are rising once more.
But that’s just the beginning.
This podcast takes an integral look at the forces shaping our reality—from cutting-edge neuroscience and biohacking to cryptocurrency, global economics, and the ancient wisdom of awakening, mindfulness, and embodiment.
Keith Martin-Smith brings a deep, multi-perspective lens to the chaos, cutting through the noise to find what actually matters.
This isn’t just another commentary on the world. It’s a guide to seeing—and living—beyond the divide.
New episodes of Integral Edge every second and fourth Wednesday of the month at 10 AM PT. See our events calendar to join the live discussion!
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About Chad Bennett
Rev. Zenho Chad Bennett, MA, LPC is an Integral Zen Priest that has been practicing meditation since 2003, spending several years in Thailand and India doing extended periods of Therevadan retreat. He returned to the USA for a master’s degree in Transpersonal Counseling Psychology at Naropa University and his teaching style is practical and experiential, stressing the importance of healthy holistic character development all the way up and down the evolutionary spiral. Chad is currently in private practice as a psychotherapist and spiritual counselor and leads the Integral Zen Denver/Boulder community as a senior student of Doshin Roshi.
About Keith Martin-Smith
Keith Martin-Smith is an award-winning author, writing coach, and Zen priest. He is passionate about human connection, creativity, and evolution. His books include "The Mysterious Divination of Tea Leaves", "A Heart Blown Open", and "The Heart of Zen". His most recent book is his first novel, "Only Everything", a novel that explores the promise and the pain of following an artist's path.