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Walk With Me

Walk With Me

De : Giovanni Dejesus
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Walk With Me is a podcast for people who feel stuck, misaligned, or disconnected from their lives despite doing the “work.” It helps them understand the internal pillars, patterns, and beliefs shaping their reality so they can create real, lasting change. Unlike traditional self-improvement or manifestation content, Dr. Giovanni DeJesus DC, MSPP, focuses on systems over quick fixes, blending logical breakdowns with honest conversation to help people stop performing growth and start understanding the version of themselves creating their life.

Walk With Me — because you can’t change your life until you understand the version of you creating it.

© 2026 Walk With Me
Science Sciences sociales
Épisodes
  • The Fear Of Being Free
    Jul 6 2026

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    Why does freedom feel unsafe, overwhelming, or empty after you finally leave the job, relationship, role, or identity that once trapped you?

    In this episode of Walk With Me, I explore the psychological weight of freedom through the lens of Erich Fromm’s Escape from Freedom and the Walk With Me Method. As a chiropractor, Identity and Internal architecture coach, public speaker, and creator of the Walk With Me internal architecture framework, I break down why people often say they want freedom, but unconsciously run from the responsibility, uncertainty, grief, and identity collapse that real freedom brings.

    This episode is for anyone who has ever left a toxic job, relationship, belief system, family role, or old version of themselves, only to feel strangely lost afterward. You may have escaped the structure that confined you, but that structure may also have given you certainty. Without a strong internal architecture, freedom can feel less like liberation and more like standing in an open field with no map, no walls, no instructions, and no one left to blame.

    I explore the difference between negative freedom and positive freedom. Negative freedom is freedom from control, rules, oppression, or old identities. Positive freedom is freedom to create, love, choose, build, and live from the inside out. The problem is that many people fight to be free from something without knowing who they are free for.

    This walk also breaks down three ways people escape freedom: submission, destructiveness, and conformity. Submission is giving your identity to a person, group, ideology, relationship, role, or leader who promises certainty. Destructiveness is trying to destroy what makes you feel powerless, including opportunities, relationships, dreams, or parts of yourself. Conformity is becoming whatever the room, culture, platform, or system rewards until borrowed thoughts start to feel like your own.

    Through the 8 pillars of the Walk With Me Method: Awareness, The Mind, Identity, The Nervous System, Emotions, Capacity, Behavior, and Meaning, I explain why freedom is not only a political or external condition. Freedom is an internal capacity. You can have options and still not be free. You can have money and still be chained to success. You can leave the old environment and still carry the same internal architecture.

    In this episode, you’ll explore:

    • Why freedom can feel unsafe after leaving an old structure
    • The difference between negative freedom and positive freedom
    • How Erich Fromm’s Escape from Freedom applies to modern anxiety, identity, and self-improvement
    • The three ways people escape freedom: submission, destructiveness, and conformity
    • Why people recreate the same prison after leaving the old one
    • Why freedom requires awareness, nervous system regulation, emotional capacity, behavior, and meaning
    • How the 8 pillars help you build the internal architecture to hold freedom
    • Why real freedom is not just “doing whatever you want”
    • How to stop outsourcing your identity and become internally directed

    This episode challenges the fantasy that freedom means no limits, no responsibility, and no structure. Real freedom is the ability to choose consciously, stand in your own body, think your own thoughts, feel your emotions, belong without disappearing, love without submitting, disagree without destroying, succeed without becoming a product, and be alone without abandoning yourself.

    The question for this walk is simple:

    Where do you escape freedom?

    Do you submit to a role, relationship, ideology, group, or authority so you do not have to stand alone? Do you destroy opportunities, relationships, or dreams before they can expose you? Do you conform so well that the life you built to be accepted starts looking like the life you actually wanted?

    If that question hits something, do not shame yourself. Study it.

    The part of you that escapes freedom is not evil. It is afraid. It is trying to find safety, belonging, and a structure strong enough to hold uncertainty. But what if the structure you are looking for is not another person, ideology, achievement, role, or group to disappear into?

    What if the structure is you?

    Follow Walk With Me for new episodes every Monday morning at 3:00 AM Eastern Time. Leave a review, share where you are listening from, and send this episode to someone who is ready to stop performing freedom and start building the internal architecture to actually live it.

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    26 min
  • What If Self-Sabotage Is Actually Protection?
    Jun 29 2026

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    What if self-sabotage is not weakness, laziness, or inconsistency, but your nervous system trying to protect you?

    In this episode of Walk With Me, I explore the nervous system as the part of your internal architecture that asks one question before you move toward love, success, visibility, rest, responsibility, or expansion: “Is it safe for me to be here?” As a chiropractor, Identity and internal architecture coach, public speaker, and creator of the Walk With Me Method, I break down why the body can pull the emergency brake even when the mind knows exactly what it wants.

    This episode is for anyone who has ever felt ready to start the podcast, launch the brand, open their heart, grow the business, or step into their next level, only to procrastinate, pick a fight, disappear, overthink, get “sick,” or suddenly worry about everything that could go wrong. What most people call self-sabotage may actually be a nervous system caught between who you were and where you are trying to go.

    Through the metaphor of the Hallway Monitor, I explain how your body scans for safety and may block you from rooms it still believes are dangerous: success, intimacy, peace, rest, being seen, or being fully yourself. I also share a personal story about expanding his coaching business and realizing that success itself had started to feel unsafe because achievement had often come at a high cost.

    This walk reframes anxiety, procrastination, inconsistency, and self-sabotage as possible signs of dysregulation rather than proof that something is wrong with you. Instead of asking, “Why am I like this?” I invite you to ask, “What part of me does not feel safe yet?”

    In this episode, you’ll explore:

    • Why the nervous system can treat success, love, rest, or visibility as a threat
    • How self-sabotage can actually be protection
    • Why fear and excitement can feel almost identical in the body
    • How the mind labels intensity as danger or expansion
    • Why shame deepens dysregulation instead of healing it
    • How to stop fighting your biology and start updating the manual
    • A practical exercise called The Hallway Pass

    For this week’s exercise, I walk you through five steps: locate the signal, acknowledge the manual, stay for 10 seconds, change the lens, and issue a temporary pass. The goal is not to force yourself forward or retreat into old patterns. The goal is to teach your nervous system: “We are safe enough to take one more step.”

    Your nervous system is not your enemy. It is not broken. It is trying to protect you with the information it has. The work is not about breaking the system. It is about updating the manual.

    Follow Walk With Me for new episodes every Monday morning at 3:00 AM Eastern Time. Leave a review, share where you are listening from, and send this episode to someone who is ready to stop calling themselves lazy and start understanding the system.

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    14 min
  • Your Mind Is Not Reality: The Narrator Running Your Life
    Jun 22 2026

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    Why do your thoughts feel so true, even when they keep pulling you back into old patterns?

    In this episode of Walk With Me, I explore the mind as the narrator of your life: the part of your internal system that interprets experience, assigns meaning, and turns old stories into patterns that feel like personality. As we walk together, I break down how the conscious mind, subconscious mind, identity, nervous system, and body work together to shape the reality you keep living.

    This episode is for anyone who has ever thought, “This always happens to me,” “I’m not enough,” “If I open up, I’ll get hurt,” or “I’m just not that kind of person.” Those thoughts may feel personal, objective, and true, but what if they are actually narration? What if your mind is not simply describing reality, but interpreting it through old survival scripts?

    I share a personal story about rage, “Hulking out,” and the painful realization that what I once called a demon was actually a younger protector running an outdated subconscious survival script. Through the car metaphor, I explain the subconscious as the engine, the conscious mind as the steering wheel, the body as the vehicle, perception as the windshield and mirrors, and the mind as the driver interpreting the road.

    This walk explores why your automatic reactions are not random, why old thoughts feel loyal to your identity, and why the subconscious does not care about your goals as much as it cares about repetition, familiarity, and survival. I also reframe manifestation as rehearsal: the process of teaching your system that a new reality can become familiar and safe.

    You’ll learn how to interrupt the narrator through The Pause, question whether a thought is true or simply familiar, and begin reclaiming authorship over the story you are living.

    In this episode, you’ll explore:

    • Why we are feeling beings who think
    • How the mind turns raw experience into story, label, conclusion, and truth
    • The difference between the conscious mind and subconscious mind
    • Why old survival scripts can feel like personality
    • How identity filters your thoughts
    • Why manifestation is rehearsal, not just wanting something
    • How to question the narrator without fighting your mind
    • A practical exercise for observing repeated thoughts and emotional triggers

    For this week’s exercise, I invite you to become the mechanic of your own system. Notice the thoughts that repeat when you feel challenged, pressured, rejected, or unseen. Then ask: What emotion came before this thought? Whose voice does this sound like? What is this story trying to protect me from? Is this thought describing reality, or continuing a pattern?

    You are not here to perform growth. You are here to understand yourself clearly enough to live differently.

    Follow Walk With Me for new episodes every Monday morning at 3:00 AM Eastern Time. Leave a review, share where you’re listening from, and send this episode to someone who is ready to stop fixing symptoms and start understanding the system.



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    15 min
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