What a Therapist, Physicist, and Lifelong Explorer Taught Me About Awareness, Value, and the Life You’re Already Living
Richer Soul Podcast • Episode 493 • Lincoln Stoller
There is a particular kind of frustration that belongs almost exclusively to successful people. It is not the frustration of not having enough. It is the frustration of having done everything right and still sensing, quietly and persistently, that something is missing.
If you have felt that, this conversation is for you.
Lincoln Stoller is a therapist, physicist, former software entrepreneur, and one of the most genuinely wide-ranging thinkers I have had on Richer Soul. He has spent a decade mountaineering, lived in Mongolia, the Caribbean, the jungle, and Manhattan, built and lost businesses, practiced therapy across the full spectrum of human experience, and written a book on dream work as a path to inner transformation. He is 70 years old and still confounded by the most important questions. That, as you will hear, is exactly the point.
What follows are the insights from our conversation that I think are worth writing down.
The Real Currency Is Value, Not Money
Lincoln grew up in a household where money was present but never discussed as a primary pursuit. His father was an architectural photographer. His mother was a painter. Money existed as a resource, not a goal, and that framing, absorbed early and almost unconsciously, shaped everything that followed.
He put it plainly in our conversation: “I don’t care about quantity of money. I care about quality of value. Hell with money, it’s all about value.”
This is not a rejection of financial responsibility. Lincoln bought houses, ran a software company for two decades, and managed his own finances from the time he was a teenager funding mountaineering expeditions. But the orientation was always toward what a thing was worth in terms of insight, experience, and growth, not what it could be exchanged for.
For high achievers operating in a world that measures almost everything in financial terms, this is a quiet but significant reframe. The question is not how much you are making. The question is what value you are actually generating and receiving in your life, in your relationships, in your work, and in your inner world. Those are not always the same number.
Awareness Is the Diagnosis Most People Never Receive
If there is a single thread that runs through everything Lincoln said, it is awareness. He returned to it again and again, not as a buzzword but as a genuine clinical and philosophical anchor.
“What are you aware of? Are you even aware of what’s outside your window? Are you aware of your role in creating and establishing the things you call problems?”
This landed hard for me, because in my work with entrepreneurs and high achievers, I see the same pattern constantly. People who are brilliant at executing strategies they have chosen but almost entirely blind to the fact that they chose those strategies, and to the role their own choices are playing in the outcomes they are unhappy about. They treat their circumstances like weather. Something that happens to them, not something they are participating in creating.
Lincoln’s framework is direct: awareness precedes everything. You cannot change what you cannot see. And most of us, trained by educational systems and professional cultures that reward output over introspection, have never been seriously asked to develop the skill of looking honestly at ourselves.
This is not a moral failure. It is a gap in training. But once you name it, it becomes very hard to unsee.
What Education Was Actually Designed to Do
Lincoln has strong views on formal education, and they are grounded in history, not cynicism. He traces the origins of public schooling to 19th-century Prussia, where the explicit goal was to prepare a population for industrial participation: enough reading, writing, and arithmetic to run machines and organizations. What it was never designed to do was teach people how to be fulfilled.
“I think what education has to do, and doesn’t for the most part, is teach you how to be fulfilled, whatever that means.”
He made a remark that stopped me. He noted that several of his high school peers, people who had been conventionally successful, had achieved the grades and the goals and the identities that the system built for them, and later committed suicide. They had done everything right. They had simply never been asked what “right” meant to them personally.
“It’s especially frustrating to be a successful person and feel empty,” he said, “because you’ve built an identity for yourself that’s meaningless in that case.”
This is not a small observation. It is a diagnosis of a cultural failure that plays out every day in the lives of high achievers who feel they should be happier than they are, who feel guilty for not being satisfied, who have no framework for understanding why the thing they worked so hard for does not feel like enough.
The personal development world often responds to this with more productivity, more goal-setting, more optimization. Lincoln’s response is different. Stop. Look around. What are you actually aware of?
Creativity as the Bridge Between Success and Meaning
One of the most useful distinctions in our conversation came when we were exploring the relationship between rationality, spirituality, and what it takes to move from a life of achievement to a life of genuine meaning.
Lincoln does not believe you can simply add spirituality to a technically or professionally oriented life and get a meaningful result. But he does believe you can add creativity, and that creativity is where the bridge begins.
“If there’s no creativity, I think you’re two steps away from spirit, and you can’t reach it yet.”
He used Thomas Edison as an illustration. How does a person fail a thousand times and remain motivated to continue? What is sustaining that? Lincoln’s argument is that it cannot be productivity alone. There has to be something more like wonder, something that begins to approach the spiritual, even if it is never named that way.
For entrepreneurs especially, this reframe is useful. Entrepreneurship, as I have always seen it, is an inherently creative act. You are making something from nothing. You are tolerating ambiguity, failure, and the gap between vision and reality for long enough to find what works. That tolerance, that willingness to stay curious in the face of repeated failure, is not just a business skill. It is a form of spiritual practice, whether or not you call it that.
Rocky’s Perspective
What I kept coming back to during this conversation is how much of what Lincoln describes I see in the people I work with every day. The gap between what they have built and what they feel is rarely about strategy. It is almost always about awareness.
I have learned, sometimes painfully, that I cannot pull someone up a mountain they are not ready to climb. I can walk alongside them. I can point out the path. But the moment I start carrying them, I am no longer helping. I am enabling the exact stuckness we are trying to address together.
What Lincoln helped me see more clearly is why people resist even small adjustments. A change that looks minor from the outside can represent an enormous internal shift for the person being asked to make it. When someone has their finger in the dyke for years, telling them to simply remove it is not a small ask. They know what will happen when they do.
That reframe has made me more patient, and more honest, about what real change actually requires.
One Question to Sit With
Are you aware of your role in creating the things you call problems, and if you are, what are you actually willing to do about that?
Bringing It Full Circle
Lincoln Stoller has spent 70 years crossing disciplines, cultures, and inner landscapes that most people never visit once. What he has found, consistently, is that the people who are most lost are not the ones who lack resources. They are the ones who lack awareness of the resources they already have.
The diamonds are at your feet. The question is whether you are willing to look down.
About Lincoln Stoller
He combines science, spirit, economics, and mental health through an understanding of the hard sciences, the psyche, and the behavior of groups. He is trained and practice as an independent physicist publishing on topics in fundamental quantum mechanics, a past computer software entrepreneur in business automation, and now a professional psychotherapist.
He began traveling across the US as a kid, assisting his father, an architectural photographer. Then he took up mountaineering, exploring wild lands on four continents, from the tropics to the Arctic. His graduate studies took him to six universities, during which time he traveled widely and became an ambassador to families in the Caribbean and Mongolia.
As a counselor, he works with people on both the high and low ends of the spectrum using brain retraining, talk therapy, hypnosis, diet, somatic experience, and psychedelics. On the high end, he’s a coach; on the low end, he’s a therapist. He inverts these by making the able more aware of their disabilities, and the disabled more aware of their abilities.
As a blogger, podcaster, and author, he publishes regularly on topics brought to him by his connections in work, physics, his teenage son, and reflections he sees in society. His emphasis is on getting people to think more deeply, become more self-aware, and to embrace radically different points of view.
He is not an academic, not the usual therapist, and he rails against anything institutional. To evolve requires leaving everything behind, including the mind he has grown up with.
Links
Website: https://www.mindstrengthbalance.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lincolnstoller/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lincolnstoller/
Watch the full episode on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@richersoul
Richer Soul Life Beyond Money. You got rich, now what? Let’s talk about your journey to purposeful, intentional, amazing life. Where are you going to go and how are you going to get there? Let’s figure that out together. At the core is the financial well being to be able to do what you want, when you want, how you want. It’s about personal freedom!
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Any financial advice is for educational purposes only and you should consult with an expert for your specific needs.
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