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Home » Modern Wisdom: w/ Joe Hudson on Living with an Open Heart (Transcript)

Modern Wisdom: w/ Joe Hudson on Living with an Open Heart (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of coach and entrepreneur Joe Hudson’s interview on Modern Wisdom podcast with host Chris Williamson, January 12, 2026.

Brief Notes: Chris Williamson sits down with executive coach and Art of Accomplishment founder Joe Hudson to explore what it really means to live with an open heart in the “real world.” They unpack why so many people struggle to feel their emotions fully, how early experiences with love and criticism shape adult behavior, and why moving toward pain instead of avoiding it often leads to genuine freedom.

From breaking cycles of negative self-talk to making better decisions by listening to intuition, Joe shares practical frameworks for emotional mastery that go far beyond quick-fix hacks. Use this transcript to follow their full two-hour deep dive into vulnerability, resilience, and building a richer inner life.

Introduction

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: Joe Hudson, welcome to the show.

JOE HUDSON: Thanks Chris. Good to see you man.

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: Feels different to speak to you now.

JOE HUDSON: Yeah, I bet it feels different.

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: The audience will know that I spent a long week with you at your intensive retreat.

JOE HUDSON: Yeah.

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: So yeah, to now sit down back in my domain after having spent a week desperately trying to survive in yours feels somewhat different.

JOE HUDSON: Yeah, it was great to have you there.

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: It was a very strange, very meaningful experience, especially given that it’s completely sober. You know, there’s a lot of talk of how important it is, how popular it is at least, to do the psychedelic trip down to Costa Rica or the Ayahuasca DMT thing. You can get pretty far without having to add anything in except for a morning coffee if you’ve got the right container and practices.

JOE HUDSON: Yeah. I don’t know if you’ve ever seen the data on the work, but we change negative self-talk by a standard deviation across all the participants and the neuroses drops by a little less than a standard deviation. So yeah, cool stuff can happen.

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: Harvard, who’s doing the study?

JOE HUDSON: There’s a researcher who worked at Harvard, she no longer does. And then we had somebody at Columbia who’s doing it and we just now have another person doing another research project on us. Quantum physics from Oxford is the new person who’s at least talking to us about it. We haven’t figured out what we’re doing yet.

Is It Hard to Live in the Real World with an Open Heart?

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: So that doesn’t surprise me. One of the questions that came up after we spent a week together was: is it hard to live in the real world with an open heart? Yeah, it was one of the first questions that I thought of.

JOE HUDSON: It’s hard not to, is my experience. I don’t know anything that feels better with a closed heart. So we have this thing that our brain does that tells us that, oh, I’m going to get hurt or I’m going to get in trouble or I’m going to get taken advantage of if I don’t close my heart, if I don’t protect myself.

But there’s not a tremendous amount of evidence for that. Like Gandhi didn’t get taken advantage of or Martin Luther King didn’t get taken advantage of. A really open-hearted mother doesn’t particularly get taken advantage of. Some might, some might not, but they’re not really correlated.

And so my experience is that if you close your heart down it hurts, it’s just painful. And we talk about it a lot in our society, like if you don’t forgive, then you’re punishing yourself. That would be the typical way to say it. But my experience is just anytime that my heart starts closing down, it hurts.

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: Why do we do it?

Why We’re Scared of Love

JOE HUDSON: We’re scared of love. I mean, that’s one of the things that I think you must have noticed in the Groundbreakers is that on some level, you could say almost everybody there had been entrained in love in some way that was not useful, and so now they’re scared of it.

So like, love came with guilt, and therefore love isn’t safe. Or love came with getting smothered, or love came with criticism or obligation, and therefore, love is scary. But at the same time, we definitely want love. We’re born wanting love. Like, little kids are like, give me attention, give me love. That’s what they want.

And so we have this desire for it, but then when we get it, it comes with something that’s toxic or not good. And then we’re like, oh shoot, we’re scared of love. And to some degree, that’s all of it. I can see almost all humans kind of doing this with love.

You know, the most pronounced one is jealousy. If I’m in a relationship and I’m jealous, on one level, I’m like, I want you, I want you, I want you. And on one level, I’m like, I’m going to criticize you and make you feel wrong and bad, and I’m pushing you away. And this is what I see almost everybody’s doing with love in their life, with themselves as well. I mean, even in loving themselves, they’re doing that.

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: So we have that pattern, I think. Is it hard to live in the real world with an open heart?

JOE HUDSON: Yeah.

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: It came to me as a question because it was pretty easy to do it within the container of this very gentle, very understanding environment.

JOE HUDSON: Check it out. You just said it’s gentle and understanding, but right before that, you said intense, hardcore. The way you said it wasn’t like everyone’s going to be like, yeah, I want to go do that. That sounds like fun. It was like, no, that shit’s intense. So how do you put those two things together?

The Intensity of Being Fully Seen

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: Well, the dauntingness, I think, of fully being seen is to do with it being alien.