18 episodes

Welcome to Grounded on Purpose with Jennifer Duck. This is an intentional space where we can get grounded together and gain insight from experts I’ve met in my personal, academic, and professional life as an Emmy Award winning TV producer and college professor. My work with Oprah, Katie Couric, and Anderson Cooper, among many others, has given me access to the world’s most incredible thought leaders who will help bring us all back down to earth.

So let’s dig in! I’m truly so excited to have you join me on this journey as we get grounded together on purpose.

Grounded on Purpose Jennifer Duck

    • Society & Culture
    • 5.0 • 12 Ratings

Welcome to Grounded on Purpose with Jennifer Duck. This is an intentional space where we can get grounded together and gain insight from experts I’ve met in my personal, academic, and professional life as an Emmy Award winning TV producer and college professor. My work with Oprah, Katie Couric, and Anderson Cooper, among many others, has given me access to the world’s most incredible thought leaders who will help bring us all back down to earth.

So let’s dig in! I’m truly so excited to have you join me on this journey as we get grounded together on purpose.

    "Becoming Restoried" with Michael McRay

    "Becoming Restoried" with Michael McRay

    This episode brings home many of the topics we discussed over the past two seasons. Conflict consultant and award-winning author Michael McRay has traveled to Israel, Palestine, Northern Ireland, and Africa studying conflict and resolution. These experiences inspired Michael to build his own company, Becoming Restoried, which uses the power of story to make meaning, heal harm, and repair relationships.



    Michael takes us around the world, sharing his personal interviews with people who were deeply divided but came together despite all odds. Michael also opens up about his own journey of finding peace with himself, which inspired his life’s work. 



    Links to Michael’s work and his TEDx Talk are below.

    Becoming Restoried:

    https://www.becomingrestoried.com/ 



    Book - I Am Not Your Enemy:

    https://www.amazon.com/Am-Not-Your-Enemy-Transform/dp/1513805932 



    TEDx Talk: 

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1g8EREBbdxY 



    *Special note: Mental health topics including suicide are discussed during this conversation. If you or someone you know is in crisis, please call or text 988. Wherever you are, please know you are not alone and people are on call at all hours to help you.

    • 51 min
    "The Possible" with Former Senator George Mitchell

    "The Possible" with Former Senator George Mitchell

    It’s been an eventful month in Northern Ireland. I was fortunate to be in Belfast as the region celebrated 25 years with the Good Friday peace agreement. The politics in Northern Ireland today are far from perfect, but sectarian violence has decreased significantly with about 164 security-related deaths in the past 25 years. This is a dramatic shift from the 3,500 deaths during the 30-year span of the Troubles.



    Northern Ireland is still deeply divided, but despite their differences, many political leaders gathered in one room at Queen’s University Belfast over a three-day period to directly address these divides. Architects and brokers of the 1998 Good Friday Agreement also took the stage to explain the importance of listening and finding common ground. 



    The keynote speaker, Former U.S. Senator George Mitchell, has been described as the glue that held leaders from different political parties together during the 1998 Good Friday peace talks. After three years with no public appearances, Mitchell gave an address that brought nearly everyone on their feet as applause echoed throughout the historic hall, which had its own history of conflict and questionable completion during World War II.



    At 89 years old battling acute leukemia, Mitchell could have appeared remotely. But the power of his presence as a leader in both the U.S. and Northern Ireland spoke volumes. 



    This episode features highlights of George Mitchell’s historic speech.



    A link to George Mitchell’s full speech can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2xuno4MP6O8&t=2871s 



    *Special thanks to Queen’s University Belfast for their continuing support and for allowing me to cover the “Agreement 25” events.

    • 11 min
    How to Connect Across the Political Divide with Tania Israel

    How to Connect Across the Political Divide with Tania Israel

    Hi everyone! I’m so glad you're joining us this month. The conversation you’re about to hear is a follow up on our last episode, Finding Common Ground Despite our Differences. 

    Have you ever talked with someone who continued to spread information that just isn’t true? I definitely have, and it can be frustrating, especially when it happens on social media.

    My frustration reached a peak in 2020 when we were locked down and only communicating online. I searched high and low for ways to confront these disinformation dilemmas. Thankfully I found psychologist and UC Santa Barbara Professor Tania Israel.

    Listening to this conversation with Tania again reminded me that reaching across the political divide and finding common ground are skills we need to constantly remind ourselves of and practice often.

    There's so much to glean from Tania's tips and takeaways. I can't wait for you to join our conversation. 

    Thank you as always for listening!

    • 33 min
    Finding Common Ground Despite our Differences with Corrymeela's Sylvia Gordon

    Finding Common Ground Despite our Differences with Corrymeela's Sylvia Gordon

    It’s a New Year, and if you’re like me, you’re probably one of the millions of people around the world with new goals in mind for 2023. This likely includes how to create meaningful relationships and keep them, even if there are some differences with those we hold dear.

    On this month's special video podcast, we’re taking a deep dive into how we can work through these differences with someone who does this daily. Sylvia Gordon is Head of Programme at the Corrymeela community, which resides on one of the most beautiful coasts of Northern Ireland where three different waterways come together to join as one. Like these waters, Sylvia helps people from all over the political spectrum come together to tackle some of the most divisive issues of our time.

    As always, thank you for listening. For more updates and bonus content, follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @GroundedOnPurpose.

    *This episode was edited and produced by David Pang and Jennifer Duck. The Grounded on Purpose theme music is by J. Lauren and Mike Olekshy.

    • 41 min
    Trouble Songs: Odes to Northern Ireland

    Trouble Songs: Odes to Northern Ireland

    We’re joining you again from the Sonic Arts Centre at Queen’s University Belfast, and we are thrilled to welcome Belfast-born journalist, author, and co-founder of the Oh Yeah music centre, Stuart Bailie. Stuart is also editor of Dig With It magazine.

    In our last episode, we talked about conflict, politics, and peace through the Troubles, and in this episode, we will dive more specifically into music’s role through the 30-year conflict.

    Stuart explains in his book Trouble Songs, “...music has not been a passive voice. It has called for subversion and disobedience. It has put out stories that have challenged the given histories. And in the place of the old, stuck ideas, music has imagined new fixes…the punk rockers, ravers and rogue strummers have all done their job."

    Growing up in a small town, music was often my window to the outside world and big news events. I love U2, the Cranberries, Thin Lizzy, Van Morrison, and Sinead O’Conner, among others. When I heard their songs growing up, it made me dig deeper into world events.

    As Stuart says, "God bless music. It just can take you to places that you're not expecting and can challenge all sorts of given stories."

    In honor of that, a personally curated playlist to accompany this podcast is linked below:

    https://open.spotify.com/playlist/3BRUcTbj1iLCp6sSqynLxt?si=d7ceed204a88488f 

    Thank you as always for listening.

    *Special thanks to James Elliott who introduced me to Stuart, to my husband Quinn and Jodi Marr who helped me with the playlist, and to Molly Seuss who has been helping with editing. Heartfelt thanks also goes out to Mike Olekshy and J. Lauren who helped me launch this podcast and created our main theme music.

    • 41 min
    Seeking Peace During Deep Political Polarization

    Seeking Peace During Deep Political Polarization

    I’m so thrilled to join you this month from Queen's University, Belfast.

    I spent two weeks in Northern Ireland learning more about the history, the people, and the politics. There's so much to take in and it's truly such a beautiful and resilient place.

    As I sit across the pond and watch U.S. divisions dominate headlines, family conversations, and social media feeds, I'm grateful to learn more about a region that has one of the most prominent peace deals in modern political history.

    However, this came at a huge cost, and the people in Northern Ireland have told me they worry that the U.S. will fall into a similar violent history if we continue to let extreme polarization take over our lives.

    Joining me for this special interview is Richard English, Professor of Politics at Queen's University, Belfast, where he is also Director of the Senator George J. Mitchell Institute for Global Peace, Security, and Justice. Richard's research focuses on the history of political violence, terrorism, and nationalism. He has authored several books focusing on Irish Freedom as well as the IRA.

    As the United States has reached an unprecedented point of polarization in this current century, Richard explains so eloquently how history can help us avoid a tipping point. “You can hear echoes of what's happened elsewhere and possibly even pre-echoes of what might happen elsewhere in these layered situations of political polarization and division,” Richard explains.

    Never has there been a more important time to tune in. Thank you as always for listening and for following our bonus content on Facebook and Instagram: @GroundedOnPurpose

    *This episode was edited and produced by Jennifer Duck and Molly Seuss. The Grounded on Purpose theme music is by J. Lauren and Mike Olekshy.

    • 51 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
12 Ratings

12 Ratings

deliamarie ,

Time well spent

Jennifer Duck is an incredible host that brings lightness to all topics, no matter how complex. After listening to "Grounded On Purpose" I felt inspired, enlightened and eager to take on the world. Duck's guests are fascinating and her interview style is both engaging and easy to follow. Do yourself a favor and listen to this podcast, I promise it will be time well spent!

eileenk7 ,

Love it!

Jennifer Duck an insightful interviewer, truly listens to her guests and engages them by asking excellent follow up questions, staying present in the conversation and yet always finding a way to bring it back to being ‘grounded’ or working with ‘purpose.’ These days, so many people think they can have a podcast, but what they don’t realize is making an interview sound like a conversation (where listeners can learn something new while being entertained) is HARD! It takes composure, skillful thought in the moment and the ability to be agile depending on where the conversation goes. Jennifer is a natural who is mindful that her questions are conduits to allowing her guests to do the talking, as opposed to so many hosts who make it about themselves or interrupt their guests constantly throughout an episode.

I’ve loved the episodes so far - can’t wait to hear more.

MalikaDudley ,

Inspiring and insightful!

First of all Jen has an AMAZING voice. As someone in the industry, I love the tone of her voice. It’s soothing and easy to listen to. She’s also a great interviewer who offers insights and intriguing questions for her guests. The content of the podcast kept me engaged and interested. I found myself nodding a lot. I really appreciated the interview with Mary Ellen and the discussion about how the digital world is impacting us and what we can do to lead “a good life.” Loved the quote she shared too: “forever is made up of nows” - deep! Looking forward to listening more!

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