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by Empathetic agile strategies for stronger teams and better leaders.
Welcome to the AgilEmpath Podcast, where we explore empathetic, agile methodologies to enhance team building in creative ways. With a foundation in mental health counseling, we bring a deep understanding of human behavior to help you lead more effectively. Are you coaching a team and need support in teaching soft skills? We provide tools to manage conflict and stress, boost productivity, and improve engagement—both at work and home—through emotional intelligence.
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The church must stop hiding sin and start having real conversations — not with cruelty, but with the expectation that kindness is the natural starting point. People can handle the truth. Many already know it. When we try to cover things up, we insult their intelligence and damage trust. The call is to speak honestly and kindly — because science and Scripture both confirm that this is how we were designed to operate.The Problem: Covering Sin in the Church* We cover as human beings. It’s instinctive to protect reputation, avoid conflict, and maintain appearances.* But covering sin doesn’t make it disappear — it festers, spreads, and eventually surfaces in more destructive ways.* Many people in the congregation already know what leadership tries to hide. The cover-up often causes more damage than the sin itself.* The church loses credibility not when sin is exposed, but when it’s discovered that sin was concealed.The question isn’t whether people can handle the truth — it’s whether we trust them enough to share it.We Need to Have Real Conversations; Jesus did* Real conversations require:* Courage — to name what’s happening* Humility — to acknowledge our own brokenness* Kindness — as the default posture, not an afterthought* Trust — in the resilience and maturity of the body of Christ* These conversations aren’t about gossip or public shaming. They’re about honest accountability within a community that claims to follow the God of truth.The Science: Kindness Is Instinctive — Not WeaknessThe Default Mode: Kindness Is InstinctiveDr. Jamil Zaki, Stanford Social Neuroscience Lab:“People tend to act kindly when they’re not thinking about it. If you ask people to make decisions very quickly, they tend to make kinder decisions than if they spend a long time deliberating.”* Interviews with Carnegie Hero Project honorees — people who risked their lives to save strangers — reveal a consistent pattern:“I didn’t think about it. I just ran into the burning building.”* Key insight: Kindness is not a calculated strategy. It is an automatic, instinctive response — our default mode.* When we overthink, we talk ourselves out of kindness. The church should lean into its instinct, not away from it.Oxytocin — The “Love Hormone”* The paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus releases oxytocin, a neuropeptide that drives social behavior and produces feelings of connectedness.* Oxytocin stimulates the limbic system to release dopamine, creating a reinforcing loop of rewarding feelings.* Beyond mood, oxytocin is:* Anti-inflammatory* Pain-reducing* Wound-healing* Blood pressure–lowering* Cardioprotective* Acts of kindness cause the release of nitric oxide via oxytocin, which dilates blood vessels and reduces blood pressure.Source: Doty, J.R. — “Why Kindness Heals,”Stanford Center for Compassion and Altruism Research and Education (KindnessEvolution.org)God literally wired our bodies to reward kindness. When we speak truth with kindness, we are operating in alignment with both divine design and biological design.The ScriptureHebrews 11 — The Faith Chapter* The “Hall of Faith” — a catalog of people who acted on truth even when it was costly.* These heroes didn’t hide. They didn’t cover. They moved forward in faith despite uncertainty, persecution, and death.* Abel offered a better sacrifice — and was killed for it.* Noah warned of a flood no one could see — and was mocked for it.* Abraham left everything familiar — on nothing but a promise.* Moses chose affliction with God’s people over the comfort of Pharaoh’s house.* The common thread: They told the truth with their lives. They didn’t manage appearances — they walked in faith.“These were all commended for their faith, yet none of them received what had been promised.”— Hebrews 11:39They didn’t need to see the outcome to be faithful. Neither do we.<a target="_blank" hre
Being a Lifelong Learner is a Happiness Habit! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit alexia.substack.com/subscribe
For years, executive presence was taught like a performance: dress better, speak tighter, look more confident. But that’s not the real thing.Real executive presence happens when who I am on the inside becomes visible on the outside; in my character, my confidence, and the way I communicate. It’s not about becoming more impressive. It’s about becoming more fully expressed.If this resonates, ask yourself: What do I know, believe, or carry that still isn’t fully visible in the room?That gap is where the real work begins. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit alexia.substack.com/subscribe
Jude https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Jude&version=NLT20 But you, dear friends, must build each other up in your most holy faith, pray in the power of the Holy Spirit,[g] 21 and await the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ, who will bring you eternal life. In this way, you will keep yourselves safe in God’s love. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit alexia.substack.com/subscribe
I’m going to tell you something that doesn’t make sense on paper.Last week I stood in front of a room at the Wellness State SHRM26 conference. The session was on happiness; my life’s work, the thing I’ve been building in Knoxville and beyond for years. The room was designed for maybe 130 people. 160 showed up. They filled every chair. They lined the walls. They stood in the back, shoulder to shoulder. Someone joked it was a fire hazard. They let them keep coming anyway.HR directors. Recruiters. Engagement specialists. People who spend their days trying to figure out how to make workplaces human. They packed that room to hear about happiness, and by the end they were laughing, connecting, leaning in — moved.And the woman standing in front of them? The woman who moved that room?She was selectively mute.Let Me Tell You Who I Actually AmI am 56 years old. I know what the world says about that. It says I should be winding down. Coasting. Planning the retirement party. Thinking about what I was instead of what I’m becoming.I proclaim … oh no. Fifty-six is only the start.Because I found it. The sweet spot. The place where everything I’ve been through, everything I believe, and everything I’ve learned how to say out loud finally converged. It has a name. It’s called executive presence. And it is how I moved that room; to laughter, to joy, to something real.But I need you to understand where I started. Because if you only see the woman on the stage, you’ll think this came naturally. It didn’t. It almost didn’t come at all.The Girl Who Couldn’t SpeakI was born in 1970, a first-generation Greek Cypriot in Annapolis, Maryland, raised in Knoxville, Tennessee. My father was a farmer turned biophysicist; he worked at Johns Hopkins before earning tenure as a full professor at the University of Tennessee. My mother was a resilient woman who balanced a career and homemaking and filled my life with lessons of courage, faith, and humanity. These values became my roots.In 1973, we visited Cyprus, where my mother was pregnant with my brother. I still remember my grandfather picking me up from school every day with a homemade ice cream cone in his hand; a symbol of love, community, and care. But that year also taught me something else. One day, my mother tripped while pregnant, and despite the fear and worry of our family, she stood back up, unshaken. She carried on — showing resilience in the face of adversity. From her, I learned that strength isn’t about never falling. It’s about rising each time you do.One year later, in 1974, the Turkish invasion of Cyprus shook our family’s roots. Our extended relatives fled their homes, leaving behind everything; including the memories stored in precious photo albums. The injustice was profound. I didn’t fully understand it then, but I felt it. Watching my parents, who had already endured so much under British rule, taught me about courage; courage that goes beyond the physical, courage that comes from within.And then there was me. A quiet, introverted child in an American school where I didn’t speak much English. Public speaking terrified me. Not the normal kind of terrified; the clinical kind. The kind that has a diagnosis. What is now known as selective mutism. I could think clearly. I could feel deeply. I had things to say. But the words would not come out. My body would not let them.I want you to sit with that for a moment. Because the woman who stood in front of 160 people last week and made them laugh, made them cry, made them lean forward in their chairs; that woman spent her childhood unable to speak in a classroom.The Moment Everything Shifted — And the Decades It Took AfterIn fifth grade, I was called to present a book report. There was no way out. I prayed for strength. And something shifted. I found my voice; not all of it, not permanently, not without fear…but enough. For the first time, I understood that faith and courage could transform fear into something I could walk through. The mutism began to break that day; but it did not resolve with once experience. But here’s what nobody tells you about overcoming anxiety. It doesn’t happen once. It happens over and over and over again. Every new room. Every new audience. Every new level.I became a mental health therapist. A good one. I could communicate; that was my training, my gift, my professional identity. Sitting across from another human being, listening deeply, reflecting back what I heard, helping them find their own words; I was built for that.But speaking? To a room? To a crowd? To people who were looking at me and waiting for me to lead?Terrified.I had retired from therapy. I was building something new; the Knoxville Happiness Coalition, a movement to bring the science of well-being into workplaces and communities. I had the mission. I had the re
SHRM Talent 2026 Testimonial https://youtube.com/shorts/0tKPbYPUBvY?si=ECfMK97FrlBKVxA5 This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit alexia.substack.com/subscribe
The Harvard Study of Adult Development began on its groundbreaking journey in 1938, featuring a diverse cohort of 724 participants. This initial group comprised 268 Harvard College undergraduate students and 456 14 year old boys from economically challenged neighborhoods in Boston, Massachusetts. The study, initiated by Dr. Arlie Bock, aimed to unravel the mysteries of a fulfilling and content life.If this spoke to you, I would love to connect.I work with organizations and leaders who are navigating the intersection of AI, performance, and human wellbeing. I offer interactive keynotes, coaching, and team trainings designed to help you build the happiness habits and human centered leadership practices that sustain people inside acceleration. Every session is grounded in positive psychology research and designed to be experienced, not just heard.Save the date and join us Saturday March 20, 2027 in Knoxville, Tennessee for our annual International Day of Happiness celebration. This year’s theme is Measuring Happiness, and it begins with a Saturday morning breakfast gathering bringing together leaders, researchers, and practitioners who believe that what we measure shapes what we build.Come for the breakfast. Stay for a retreat.Knoxville is the gateway to the Great Smoky Mountains, and we can curate a weekend retreat for your team that combines happiness science, leadership development, and the kind of genuine human connection that no app can replicate. Imagine a cabin in the Smokies with your team, away from the noise, doing the real work of building culture together. Or stay in town and explore one of the most vibrant and underrated cities in the South.Reach out to learn more at alexia@knoxvillehappinesscoalition.comAlexia Georghiou is the founder of the Knoxville Happiness Coalition, an adjunct professor at the University of Tennessee, and creator of Happiness Habits. She specializes in human centered leadership, positive psychology, and helping organizations design AI enabled cultures that protect cognitive wellbeing, strengthen connection, and sustain long term performance. Alexia works with executives, teams, and institutions through interactive keynotes, coaching, workshops, and retreats. Her work is built on a simple conviction: the future of work will be defined by how human we remain while building it. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit alexia.substack.com/subscribe
Most people don’t fail because they’re lazy.They fail because their habits are too big.Start smaller:1 habit you already do* 1 tiny action* repeat dailyThat’s how consistency is built.Track daily habits, improve mental health, and build happiness routines with this free habit tracker app. https://happinesshabits.netlify.app/appIf this spoke to you, I would love to connect.I work with organizations and leaders who are navigating the intersection of AI, performance, and human wellbeing. I offer interactive keynotes, coaching, and team trainings designed to help you build the happiness habits and human centered leadership practices that sustain people inside acceleration. Every session is grounded in positive psychology research and designed to be experienced, not just heard.Save the date and join us Saturday March 20, 2027 in Knoxville, Tennessee for our annual International Day of Happiness celebration. This year’s theme is Measuring Happiness, and it begins with a Saturday morning breakfast gathering bringing together leaders, researchers, and practitioners who believe that what we measure shapes what we build.Come for the breakfast. Stay for a retreat.Knoxville is the gateway to the Great Smoky Mountains, and we can curate a weekend retreat for your team that combines happiness science, leadership development, and the kind of genuine human connection that no app can replicate. Imagine a cabin in the Smokies with your team, away from the noise, doing the real work of building culture together. Or stay in town and explore one of the most vibrant and underrated cities in the South.Reach out to learn more at alexia@knoxvillehappinesscoalition.comAlexia Georghiou is the founder of the Knoxville Happiness Coalition, an adjunct professor at the University of Tennessee. She specializes in human centered leadership, positive psychology, and helping organizations design AI enabled cultures that protect cognitive wellbeing, strengthen connection, and sustain long term performance. Alexia works with executives, teams, and institutions through interactive keynotes, coaching, workshops, and retreats. Her work is built on a simple conviction: the future of work will be defined by how human we remain while building it.https://www.knoxvillehappinesscoalition.com This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit alexia.substack.com/subscribe
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Welcome to the AgilEmpath Podcast, where we explore empathetic, agile methodologies to enhance team building in creative ways. With a foundation in mental health counseling, we bring a deep understanding of human behavior to help you lead more effectively. Are you coaching a team and need support in teaching soft skills? We provide tools to manage conflict and stress, boost productivity, and improve engagement—both at work and home—through emotional intelligence.
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