This Human Experience with Allie Nunzi

Christian Correa: The Curious Paradox of Human-ing

Episode Summary

Paul McCartney and John Lennon wrote a not-so-popular-for-The-Beatles song, “The End”, that so many people quote: “And in the end, the love you take is equal to the love you make.” If there is one thing we seem to be failing at as human beings these days, it is realizing our individual responsibility of having our words, actions, and inactions align with the kind of world we want to live in and communities we want to be a part of. If you want the world to be a certain way, then you are the one to act accordingly. Seems obvious that the world will reflect with you put out, right? It isn’t. In this conversation, Allie connects with her dear friend and comedian Christian Correa. Comedians have a brilliant way of pointing out the total absurdity in the obvious… the stuff that the rest of us overlook. They also chat about the psychological constructs that shape our beliefs in politics, social issues, and “others”; having the courage to confront what is not working; and examining the microcosm of humanity that is our own communities.

Episode Notes

Comedian, artist, writer, and all-around Renaissance Man Christian Correa invites us all to have the courage to look beyond the belief systems that keep us in a horn-lock. He uses all of these creative mediums to enroll us in, what we call at This Human Experience, the third way — a pathway to loving one another that is beyond right or wrong. What will it take for us to look at our own human-ing? 

In this episode, Allie and Christian explore aspects of human-ing including: 

Resources:

This episode was co-produced by Lucca Petrucci and Allie Nunzi mixed and mastered by Alec Kwo.