
Michael Ignatieff: Where We Turn For Meaning
03/28/23 • 44 min
1 Listener
Historian and Canadian politician Michael Ignatieff explores the cracks in our seamless worldviews... or at least the worldviews we thought were seamless until we’re faced with tragedies of all kinds. In this wide-ranging exploration, Kate and Michael probe humanity's enduring attempt to console ourselves and construct meaning from our pain.
In this conversation, Kate and Michael discuss:
- Why truth and trust are so important when it comes to finding meaning in our pain
- The difference between comfort and consolation
- The limits of stoicism and hyper-futurism
- What it means to be hopeful
- The importance of community through pain and suffering
Michael does not denigrate anyone’s attempt for comfort, but asks us to look carefully at the consolation that lasts. He asks: What is consolation? And why do we all crave that practice of meaning-making?
***
Looking for the transcript or show notes? Click here.
Find Kate on Instagram or Facebook or Twitter.
THE LIVES WE ACTUALLY HAVE: 100 Blessings for Imperfect Days is out now. Learn more, here.
We have free Lent guides for you to use by yourself, with a group, or with your church. Click here to get started.
Leave us a voicemail and who knows? We might even be able to use your voice on the air: 919-322-8731
To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy
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Historian and Canadian politician Michael Ignatieff explores the cracks in our seamless worldviews... or at least the worldviews we thought were seamless until we’re faced with tragedies of all kinds. In this wide-ranging exploration, Kate and Michael probe humanity's enduring attempt to console ourselves and construct meaning from our pain.
In this conversation, Kate and Michael discuss:
- Why truth and trust are so important when it comes to finding meaning in our pain
- The difference between comfort and consolation
- The limits of stoicism and hyper-futurism
- What it means to be hopeful
- The importance of community through pain and suffering
Michael does not denigrate anyone’s attempt for comfort, but asks us to look carefully at the consolation that lasts. He asks: What is consolation? And why do we all crave that practice of meaning-making?
***
Looking for the transcript or show notes? Click here.
Find Kate on Instagram or Facebook or Twitter.
THE LIVES WE ACTUALLY HAVE: 100 Blessings for Imperfect Days is out now. Learn more, here.
We have free Lent guides for you to use by yourself, with a group, or with your church. Click here to get started.
Leave us a voicemail and who knows? We might even be able to use your voice on the air: 919-322-8731
To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Previous Episode

Paulina Porizkova: Complicated Grief and Complicated Love
Supermodel Paulina Porizkova has been in the public eye all her life. But it has been a rollercoaster of soaring successes and deep heartache. Grief and pain comes to us all, and in those moments, we need our shared humanity (and not our super-anythingness) to build a bridge back to others.
In this tender conversation, Kate and Paulina discuss:
- How to show up to friends in unsolvable pain
- Why “what doesn’t kill you will make you stronger” is just plain wrong
- Why the assumptions we make about one another are untrue
CW: Spicy language
***
Looking for the transcript or show notes? Click here.
Find Kate on Instagram or Facebook or Twitter.
THE LIVES WE ACTUALLY HAVE: 100 Blessings for Imperfect Days is out now. Learn more, here.
We have free Lent guides for you to use by yourself, with a group, or with your church. Click here to get started.
Leave us a voicemail and who knows? We might even be able to use your voice on the air: 919-322-8731
To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Next Episode

Rabbi Steve Leder: Don’t Come Out Empty Handed
How should you show up for people in grief? What do you say? What should you do? Why is it that beauty can exist alongside deep suffering? What can be said at funerals when the person who died was complicated? These are just a few of the questions I wanted to ask Steve Leder—a bestselling author and a rabbi who has presided over a thousand funerals with wisdom and kindness.
In this conversation, we discuss:
- The mysterious way beauty can be found the closer we inch to death (our own or someone else’s).
- The importance of just showing up. And being you.
- Honoring someone’s memory at the same time being truthful about how human they were
- The peace that comes from acknowledging that life is full of dualities
- “If you have to go through hell, don’t come out empty handed” (Steve Leder), but no, the lessons were never, ever worth the pain
CW: suicide, adult language
***
Looking for the transcript or show notes? Click here.
Find Kate on Instagram or Facebook or Twitter.
THE LIVES WE ACTUALLY HAVE: 100 Blessings for Imperfect Days is out now. Learn more, here.
We have free Lent guides for you to use by yourself, with a group, or with your church. Click here to get started.
Leave us a voicemail and who knows? We might even be able to use your voice on the air: 919-322-8731
To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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