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Philosophical Entertainment
Nirakara Vani
50 episodes
2 days ago
Philosophical Entertainment is a concept coined by Alan Watts, who referred to himself as a Philosophical Entertainer. Through listening to Watts, we decided to take up the mantra of making philosophy entertaining again!

Science only studies the usual, which is why our objective has been to take uncommon topics (the more taboo the better) and dive into why it makes us uncomfortable. As we settle into our fears, we find that it is what lies behind the heebie jeebies that has us scared; it is death that has us frightened. That being the case, we want to explore death and find out why we feel so unsettled with our own mortality.
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Philosophy
Society & Culture
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All content for Philosophical Entertainment is the property of Nirakara Vani and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Philosophical Entertainment is a concept coined by Alan Watts, who referred to himself as a Philosophical Entertainer. Through listening to Watts, we decided to take up the mantra of making philosophy entertaining again!

Science only studies the usual, which is why our objective has been to take uncommon topics (the more taboo the better) and dive into why it makes us uncomfortable. As we settle into our fears, we find that it is what lies behind the heebie jeebies that has us scared; it is death that has us frightened. That being the case, we want to explore death and find out why we feel so unsettled with our own mortality.
Show more...
Philosophy
Society & Culture
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Awakening Wonder: The Inner Child, Joy, and the Secret of Life
Philosophical Entertainment
58 minutes 20 seconds
4 months ago
Awakening Wonder: The Inner Child, Joy, and the Secret of Life
If you’re not philosophically entertained, our entertainment is only philosophical.


Season 4, Episode 11: Awakening Wonder: The Inner Child, Joy, and the Secret of Life
Episode Overview
In this heartwarming and eye-opening conversation, Nirakara Vani sits down with Bracha Goetz—Harvard-educated wellness expert and beloved author of 45+ children’s books—to explore how reconnecting with our inner child may be the secret path to spiritual awakening, joy, and emotional resilience. Together, they dive into the profound simplicity of truth and how the softest voices in our soul often carry the loudest wisdom.
As they reflect on childhood wonder, spiritual growth, and the power of gratitude, this episode becomes more than a conversation—it becomes an invitation to shed the weight of adulthood and remember who we’ve always been.
Key Topics Discussed:
The Inner Child as a Spiritual Guide


How our inner child holds the wisdom, wonder, and clarity we often lose as adults


The paradox that awakening may come not through knowledge, but remembrance


Why innocence is not naiveté—but a form of truth before distortion


The Voice That Traps Us


Exploring the inner critical voice that tells us we’re not enough


Bracha’s children’s book Don’t Read This Book as a tool to unmask the inner saboteur


Reframing the “voice in your head” as a personalized growth trainer rather than an enemy


Gratitude as a Daily Practice


Why gratitude is not a feeling, but a spiritual muscle we can train


The neuroscience behind gratitude and its effect on emotional well-being


How daily “gratitude exercises” can shift one’s relationship with life


Addiction, Emptiness, and the Search for Wholeness


Bracha’s journey through food addiction and the deeper spiritual hunger beneath it


How addictions are often misguided attempts to fill a soul-level void


Learning to nourish the soul with joy, connection, and meaning instead of quick fixes


Channeling, Flow, and Creative Purpose


The mystical process behind writing her books: waking at dawn and channeling ideas


What it feels like to be a vessel for something greater than oneself


Why creativity flows best when we let go of control and show up in service


Simplicity as Spiritual Wisdom


The power of simplifying complex truths into childlike language


How language can be a hypnotic trap—and simplicity can be a portal to presence


Teaching timeless principles through metaphor, rhythm, and joy


Religion, Joy, and the Search for Meaning


A candid discussion on religion, purpose, and whether “heaven” is a future or a now


How faith can become a gratitude practice, not a fear-driven treadmill


The balance between tradition and personal truth


Final Takeaways:


Your inner child still lives within you—and may be the key to your greatest awakening


Joy is not something to earn, but something to remember


That critical voice in your head? It’s not who you are—it’s your training partner


Simplicity is not weakness. It is the wisdom of those who see with clarity


You don’t need to become someone else—you need to uncover who you’ve always been


Gratitude is a muscle. The more you flex it, the more joy you’ll feel


Let yourself play. Let yourself wonder. The path home begins with a whisper: “You are already enough.
Philosophical Entertainment
Philosophical Entertainment is a concept coined by Alan Watts, who referred to himself as a Philosophical Entertainer. Through listening to Watts, we decided to take up the mantra of making philosophy entertaining again!

Science only studies the usual, which is why our objective has been to take uncommon topics (the more taboo the better) and dive into why it makes us uncomfortable. As we settle into our fears, we find that it is what lies behind the heebie jeebies that has us scared; it is death that has us frightened. That being the case, we want to explore death and find out why we feel so unsettled with our own mortality.