SuperLife with Darin Olien podcast

What My Mom's Death Taught Me About Living

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What if grief isn't something we're meant to "get over"—but something we're meant to carry with love?

In one of his most personal episodes ever, Darin opens his heart following the passing of his mother, Sandra Lee Olien. Rather than offering easy answers or tidy stages of grief, he shares the raw, complicated reality of loss: the tears, the gratitude, the anger, the laughter, the memories, and the profound realization that death doesn't simply teach us about endings—it teaches us how to live.

Drawing from psychology, cultural traditions around the world, personal stories, and the wisdom of those facing the end of life, Darin explores why Western culture struggles with grief, why love is an active practice rather than a feeling, and how embracing mortality can become one of the greatest invitations to authenticity, forgiveness, vulnerability, and purpose.

This is not simply an episode about death. It's an episode about living so fully that, when the end eventually comes for all of us, there is as little left unsaid as possible.

 

 

What You'll Learn

  • Why Western culture often avoids meaningful conversations about grief

  • The difference between "moving on" and maintaining continuing bonds with loved ones

  • How cultures around the world approach death and remembrance

  • Why grief isn't linear—and why that's completely normal

  • The psychology of disenfranchised grief

  • Darin's deeply personal reflections after losing his mother

  • How unconditional love creates lifelong resilience

  • Why unresolved relationships become our greatest regrets

  • The five most common regrets people share at the end of life

  • Why vulnerability is one of the greatest expressions of love

  • How death can become one of life's greatest teachers

  • Practical ways to live with more honesty, forgiveness, and purpose

 

 

Chapters

00:00:00 – Welcome to SuperLife

00:00:33 – Sponsor: Alkemis Paint

00:03:24 – A deeply personal announcement: the loss of Darin's mother

00:04:01 – Why this is the first episode about grief

00:05:04 – Grief, celebration, and holding conflicting emotions at once

00:06:00 – Why life continues after loss

00:07:02 – Death teaches us how to love

00:08:11 – Why grief receives so little space in Western culture

00:09:14 – Understanding disenfranchised grief

00:10:24 – Moving on versus maintaining continuing bonds

00:11:25 – Why grief doesn't have a finish line

00:12:01 – Modern society has outsourced death

00:13:17 – Moving inward instead of moving on

00:13:33 – Sponsor: Manna Vitality

00:15:28 – How Mexico celebrates ongoing relationships with ancestors

00:16:16 – Madagascar, Ghana, India, and global grief traditions

00:18:15 – Why rituals help us process loss

00:19:30 – Allowing yourself to truly feel

00:20:27 – Remembering Sandra Lee Olien

00:21:36 – A mother's unconditional love

00:22:41 – How love creates courage and confidence

00:23:32 – Letting go while honoring another person's choices

00:24:26 – Celebrating kindness, resilience, and stubborn strength

00:25:25 – Feeling his mother's presence after her passing

00:26:17 – Love is an active practice

00:27:25 – Why nothing important should remain unsaid

00:28:20 – The five regrets of the dying

00:29:29 – Living your own life instead of someone else's expectations

00:30:10 – Work, vulnerability, friendship, and choosing happiness

00:31:24 – Death as the other side of SuperLife

00:31:54 – The greatest fatal convenience: assuming there's more time

00:32:57 – Responsibility, forgiveness, and radical honesty

00:33:29 – Grief and gratitude can exist together

00:34:22 – Say the thing. Forgive. Love now.

00:34:45 – A heartfelt farewell to Mom

00:34:53 – Closing thoughts

 

 

Thank You to Our Sponsors

 

 

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Find More from Darin Olien:

 

 

Key Takeaway

"Death isn't the opposite of a SuperLife—it reveals whether we've truly lived one. The conversations we avoid, the forgiveness we postpone, the love we leave unspoken, and the dreams we delay all become painfully clear when we're reminded that none of us is promised more time. Grief isn't something to conquer or rush through. It's love continuing to exist after physical presence has ended. And perhaps the greatest tribute we can offer those we've lost is to live with more honesty, more courage, more vulnerability, and more love while we're still here."

 

 

Bibliography/Sources:

Peer-Reviewed Research & Journals

  • Phan, H. P., Ngu, B. H., Chen, S., & Hsu, L. (2025). How cultural beliefs and rituals may help alleviate grief and despair: A four-dimensional framework. Frontiers in Sociology, 10.

https://doi.org/10.3389/fsoc.2025.1620016

Books & Academic Encyclopedias

  • Doka, K. J., & Martin, T. (2002). Disenfranchised grief. Research Press.

https://books.google.com/books?id=disenfranchised-grief

  • SAGE Publications. (n.d.). Death rituals. In SAGE Encyclopedia of Anthropology.

https://sk.sagepub.com/reference/anthropology

  • Ware, B. (2011). The top five regrets of the dying: A life transformed by the dearly departing. Hay House.

https://bronnieware.com/blog/regrets-of-the-dying/

Psychology & Cultural Publications

  • Kuzo and Foulk Funeral Homes. (2024). Cultural traditions around death and mourning: A global perspective.

https://www.kuzofoulkfh.com/

  • Simply Psychology. (2026). Grief across cultures: How different traditions approach loss and mourning.

https://www.simplypsychology.org/

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