The School of Greatness podcast

Fear, Shame, and the Fight to Get Out of Your Own Way | Joel Kinnaman

0:00
1:27:53
Spol 15 sekunder tilbage
Spol 15 sekunder frem

You can be wildly successful and still be quietly falling apart inside.

Joel Kinnaman has appeared in some of the most talked-about shows in Hollywood. He has starred in The Killing, Robocop, House of Cards, Altered Carbon, and is currently in his fifth season of For All Mankind. And he will be the first to tell you that none of that made the war inside his head any quieter.

Before every live theater performance for three straight years, he threw up. He kept a bucket backstage. The negative voices in his mind were relentless, and he spent years drinking heavily, using drugs, and force-feeding himself in a desperate attempt to hide the shame he felt about a physical condition that had left him feeling deformed since childhood.

What changed everything was not a breakthrough moment. It was a choice to stop running from the fear and bury himself in the work. He memorized a 105-minute one-man show in 10 days, playing 16 different characters, and walked on stage without throwing up for the first time. That experience taught him something he still carries: preparation is armor. The deeper a role is in your bones, the more freedom you have to be alive inside it.

He is still working on the personal side. He describes himself as a disaster in relationships, not from a lack of care, but from years of treating his career as the only thing that could not touch him. He talks about wanting to find the balance between the structure that builds trust and the childlike wonder that keeps him creative. That tension is where this conversation lives.

Joel’s IMDB

In this episode you will:

  • Understand how shame about a physical condition called pectus excavatum triggered an eating disorder that took years to unpack and overcome
  • Discover how Joel turned debilitating stage fright and a 3-year pattern of pre-performance vomiting into a breakthrough that rewired his relationship with fear
  • Learn why preparation is the most underrated performance skill and why Joel insists on being at least 3 nights ahead on every scene he shoots
  • Hear why Joel sees himself as a different man in his career versus his personal relationships, and what he believes he needs to change to close that gap
  • Explore how Joel uses psilocybin experiences, breathwork, and the Buddhist concept of shepa to create space between triggers and reaction in his daily life

For more information go to https://lewishowes.com/1933

For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960

Follow The Daily Motivation for essential highlights from The School of Greatness

More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:

Lewis Howes Solo [7 Habits To Be Happier]

Josh Groban

The Jonas Brothers

TOPICS

Joel Kinnaman, stage fright, eating disorder recovery, pectus excavatum, performance anxiety, preparation as armor, shepa, psilocybin, self-loathing, personal growth, For All Mankind, relationship consistency

Get more from Lewis!

Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!

Get The Greatness Mindset audiobook on Spotify

Text Lewis AI

YouTube

Instagram

Website

Tiktok

Facebook

X


Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Flere episoder fra "The School of Greatness"