Episode
Buried Not Broken (Beyond the Boost)
- Published
- Apr 15, 2026
- Duration seconds
- 3209
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Summary
Mia Godfrey grew up under communism in Romania, youngest of ten children, standing in line at 5:00 AM for a six-inch piece of bread. That was survival. But nothing prepared her for the kind of loss that doesn’t leave a physical scar. Losing her husband at 42. Losing the sister who had been her lifeline since childhood. Losing the version of herself that only knew how to exist inside those relationships. This conversation doesn’t follow a neat arc. It’s honest in the way only lived experience can be. Mia didn’t find herself on the other side of grief. She had to build someone new from the rubble of who she was. That’s a different thing entirely, and it’s worth sitting with. What makes this conversation matter for a listener isn’t the scale of the hardship. It’s the identity question underneath all of it: when the life you built around another person disappears, who do you become? Mia’s answer is one of the clearest articulations of earned identity this show has featured. She didn’t arrive at resilience as a philosophy. She arrived at it as a fact, forged slowly, through community, therapy, grief, and the stubborn refusal to give up. There’s a line she says near the end: “I wouldn’t change anything. I would change the pain the people I love experienced.” That’s not a motivational quote. That’s someone who has reconciled their whole story, and it sounds different than anything performed. In This Conversation * How growing up under a communist regime in Romania built a survival identity that Mia carried into every chapter of her adult life * Why losing her husband at 42 didn’t just bring grief, it exposed how completely her sense of self had been built around someone else * The moment when loneliness, not the workload, became the thing that nearly broke her, and what a sin…