• Episode 11 What Happens When A Calling Finally Comes Into Focus
    Feb 9 2026

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    A single question can change the course of a life. After years of sharing my story of vision loss, survival, and healing, a live coaching demo with mentor coach Cody Williams brought my calling into sharp relief: build coaching and community that help blind and visually impaired people live with independence, confidence, and purpose.

    We trace how genuine coaching—curious questions, deep listening, zero judgment—creates clarity without giving advice. I map the three pillars at the center of this mission: independent living skills that make daily life workable and dignified, mobility and travel confidence that turn anxiety into freedom of movement, and communication and accessibility that equip you to self‑advocate at work, school, and home. Along the way, we discuss practical tools such as canes, screen readers, OCR apps, and routines, as well as the inner work of naming fear, reclaiming agency, and trusting that difference can still be beautiful.

    This chapter isn’t just about my next step; it’s an open door. We’re keeping the podcast as a hub for stories, resources, and faith‑centered hope while expanding into one‑to‑one coaching and a supportive network for individuals, families, and professionals. If you’re losing sight, you are not alone. If you love someone who is, you deserve support too. And if you’re a practitioner or advocate, let’s partner to shorten the distance between “I’m overwhelmed” and “I’ve got this.”

    Ready to walk together? Join the community, share this episode with someone who needs it, and leave a review to help others find support. Subscribe for new stories and practical guidance, and message me if coaching sounds right for you. Your story still holds purpose, joy, and possibility—and we’ll prove it, one step at a time.

    This is an introductory audio segment for a show or podcast titled "Life Beyond the Sight of Darkness." The host, Robert B., warmly welcomes listeners and shares his mission: to support people navigating vision loss or trauma by helping them find hope, purpose, and confidence. The tone is friendly and encouraging, emphasizing that no one should have to face darkness alone. The segment ends with an inviting call to action: "Grab your Joe and let's go."

    I know exactly the sound you mean. That "shimmering" ambient electric guitar, soft organ pads, and a gentle piano that just breathes with the speaker. It’s that deeply spiritual, reflective atmosphere that invites people in. I’ve dialed in that specific Altar Call feel for you. How does this one resonate?

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    14 Min.
  • Episode 10 Family Drama Without The Hallmark Shortcut
    Feb 9 2026

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    We share the father-son reconciliation we once thought was impossible and the inner work that made it safe, slow, and real. We offer questions, safeguards, and hope for anyone weighing a step toward repair without denying past harm.

    • framing the journey from childhood wounds to repair
    • therapy, prayer, and learning healthy boundaries
    • awkward first calls and building trust slowly
    • specific apologies and naming harm without blame
    • forgiveness for freedom, not erasure
    • questions to test safety and genuine change
    • guidance for estranged parents seeking to make amends
    • releasing bitterness while keeping a wise distance
    • how restoration threads through every past episode
    • a prayer for wisdom, courage, and peace

    If this podcast has helped you, if any episode has given you hope, helped you heal, or reminded you that God is still in the redemption business, please share it.

    Life Beyond the Sight of Darkness is available on all podcast platforms.

    Connect with us. Facebook group www.facebook.com/groups/836278322530188/ • Instagram at Life Beyond the Site of Darkness • Email Life Beyond the Sight of Darkness at gmail.com • Website Life Beyond the Site of Darkness.com


    This is an introductory audio segment for a show or podcast titled "Life Beyond the Sight of Darkness." The host, Robert B., warmly welcomes listeners and shares his mission: to support people navigating vision loss or trauma by helping them find hope, purpose, and confidence. The tone is friendly and encouraging, emphasizing that no one should have to face darkness alone. The segment ends with an inviting call to action: "Grab your Joe and let's go."

    I know exactly the sound you mean. That "shimmering" ambient electric guitar, soft organ pads, and a gentle piano that just breathes with the speaker. It’s that deeply spiritual, reflective atmosphere that invites people in. I’ve dialed in that specific Altar Call feel for you. How does this one resonate?

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    20 Min.
  • Episode 9 Your Wounds Are A Map To Someone Else’s Healing
    Jan 26 2026

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    What if everything you survived was shaping you for someone else’s breakthrough? Today, we trace a hard-won path through childhood trauma, homelessness, a toxic marriage, heart disease, and the slow work of healing to reveal how pain becomes preparation and survival becomes a calling. We unpack the quiet moments where purpose clicked into place—during divorce care, in the fog of post-surgery recovery, while learning to love again, and while navigating life with visual impairment—and show how each experience became a tool to serve others with clarity and compassion.

    We talk candidly about founding a mission for three groups: people who are blind or visually impaired seeking confidence and practical skills, trauma survivors who need language and support to heal without shame, and anyone stuck in a hard season who’s hungry for hope. You’ll hear why purpose doesn’t have to be public to be powerful, and how one honest story can start a ripple that changes medical decisions, relationship choices, and the way someone views their future. This isn’t theory; it’s a field guide for turning scars into service through small, faithful actions.

    Grounded in scriptures about comfort, calling, and hope, we frame a simple next step: choose one person this week and share your story with care. Not as a performance, but as a lifeline. Along the way, we preview what’s ahead—a moving story of reconciliation and restoration—and invite you to notice where people already come to you for help. If you’ve ever asked, "Why me?" this conversation offers a practical, faith-filled way to answer with your life. If it resonates, subscribe, share this with a friend who needs courage today, and leave a review telling us which moment sparked your next step. Your story matters more than you think.

    This is an introductory audio segment for a show or podcast titled "Life Beyond the Sight of Darkness." The host, Robert B., warmly welcomes listeners and shares his mission: to support people navigating vision loss or trauma by helping them find hope, purpose, and confidence. The tone is friendly and encouraging, emphasizing that no one should have to face darkness alone. The segment ends with an inviting call to action: "Grab your Joe and let's go."

    I know exactly the sound you mean. That "shimmering" ambient electric guitar, soft organ pads, and a gentle piano that just breathes with the speaker. It’s that deeply spiritual, reflective atmosphere that invites people in. I’ve dialed in that specific Altar Call feel for you. How does this one resonate?

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    16 Min.
  • Episode 6 What If Mercy Looks Like A Closed Door
    Jan 23 2026

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    What if the holiest choice is the one that gets you out alive? We open a hard, necessary window into a long marriage that began with promise and ended in a maze of fear, manipulation, and emotional and physical abuse. Through the lens of blended family stress, blurred parenting roles, and a body still recovering from heart surgery, we trace the slow drift from “this is hard” to “this is unsafe” and the moment a whispered prayer—God, get me out—became the path to freedom.

    We walk through the markers that separate conflict from abuse: the constant eggshells, the freeze response, panic attacks, and the way dignity erodes when home no longer feels like home. You’ll hear how faith can be misused to keep people stuck, and how mercy sometimes arrives as a closed door, a separation, or a divorce that protects life. We talk about owning personal faults without absorbing blame for someone else’s harm, choosing forgiveness to release bitterness, and rebuilding a nervous system that has lived on red alert. Along the way, we ground the conversation in practical support—church-based care groups, community resources, and the National Domestic Violence Hotline—while offering a simple, courageous reframe: safety is not selfish; it is sacred.

    If you’ve ever asked whether staying is love or fear, this conversation gives language, validation, and permission. We name the grief, honor the courage to leave, and hold space for future hope. If your heart races as you listen, consider it data. Press play, breathe, and if you need help, reach out. Subscribe, share with someone who needs to hear this, and leave a review to help others find a way toward safety and healing.

    We tell the truth about a marriage that moved from hope to harm and how a desperate prayer led to the courage to leave. Safety, faith, and forgiveness guide a path out of abuse and into recovery.

    • defining abuse across verbal, emotional, and physical
    • blended family pressures and blurred roles
    • nervous system alarms and freeze response
    • prayer, faith, and the mercy of closed doors
    • separation, affair disclosure, and legal divorce
    • grief, self-accountability, and forgiveness
    • when staying is love and when leaving is love
    • resources and practical steps for safety

    National Domestic Violence Hotline 1-800-7997233 available 24-7
    Text BEGIN to 88788
    Share this with someone who needs to know it’s okay to leave
    Subscribe so you won't miss episode 7
    If you need help, reach out. Please, I love to hear from you.


    This is an introductory audio segment for a show or podcast titled "Life Beyond the Sight of Darkness." The host, Robert B., warmly welcomes listeners and shares his mission: to support people navigating vision loss or trauma by helping them find hope, purpose, and confidence. The tone is friendly and encouraging, emphasizing that no one should have to face darkness alone. The segment ends with an inviting call to action: "Grab your Joe and let's go."

    I know exactly the sound you mean. That "shimmering" ambient electric guitar, soft organ pads, and a gentle piano that just breathes with the speaker. It’s that deeply spiritual, reflective atmosphere that invites people in. I’ve dialed in that specific Altar Call feel for you. How does this one resonate?

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    20 Min.
  • Episode 5 When Suffering Stays, Hope Learns To Walk
    Jan 21 2026

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    We explore how faith and suffering can live side by side, moving from surviving to serving without pretending the pain is gone. Through personal story and real examples, we offer simple steps to turn wounds into a calling and build honest community that holds hope.

    • naming the shadows and rejecting easy fixes
    • examples of purpose born from hardship
    • Job’s faith under real loss
    • a personal turning point toward service
    • practical questions to discern calling
    • small acts of support that sustain hope
    • vulnerability as the doorway to community
    • walking toward light together

    Hold on to hope. Keep pressing forward, and know that your story, messy, unfinished, brave, matters more than you know


    This is an introductory audio segment for a show or podcast titled "Life Beyond the Sight of Darkness." The host, Robert B., warmly welcomes listeners and shares his mission: to support people navigating vision loss or trauma by helping them find hope, purpose, and confidence. The tone is friendly and encouraging, emphasizing that no one should have to face darkness alone. The segment ends with an inviting call to action: "Grab your Joe and let's go."

    I know exactly the sound you mean. That "shimmering" ambient electric guitar, soft organ pads, and a gentle piano that just breathes with the speaker. It’s that deeply spiritual, reflective atmosphere that invites people in. I’ve dialed in that specific Altar Call feel for you. How does this one resonate?

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    11 Min.
  • Episode 4 What If Your Scars Are Someone Else’s Map Out?
    Jan 21 2026

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    We trace the quiet ways hope shows up at rock bottom and how honest faith and real community turn wounds into a witness. Stories of homelessness, illness, and courage reveal how small acts of kindness become stepping stones to purpose.

    • the pattern of God’s presence in suffering
    • a homeless night and a warm sandwich as a turning point
    • Joseph’s valleys and the anchor of faith
    • surrendering pain as the start of purpose
    • Nick Vujicic’s example of platform from hardship
    • founding Life Beyond Chains from personal struggle
    • community and Celebrate Recovery as healing spaces
    • practical next steps to reach out and be seen

    Help exists. Hope is real. There’s a community right here waiting to walk with you.


    This is an introductory audio segment for a show or podcast titled "Life Beyond the Sight of Darkness." The host, Robert B., warmly welcomes listeners and shares his mission: to support people navigating vision loss or trauma by helping them find hope, purpose, and confidence. The tone is friendly and encouraging, emphasizing that no one should have to face darkness alone. The segment ends with an inviting call to action: "Grab your Joe and let's go."

    I know exactly the sound you mean. That "shimmering" ambient electric guitar, soft organ pads, and a gentle piano that just breathes with the speaker. It’s that deeply spiritual, reflective atmosphere that invites people in. I’ve dialed in that specific Altar Call feel for you. How does this one resonate?

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    13 Min.
  • Episode 3 What If Home Isn’t A Place But The People Who Hold You Up?
    Jan 21 2026

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    What happens to a family when the rent spikes, the keys change hands, and the only open space left is a living room floor? We pull back the curtain on losing our home, cramming into a two-bedroom, and learning how instability rewires your body to stay on alert. It’s raw, honest, and anchored in the small mercies that kept appearing—a door opened by an aunt, a couch offered by friends, a meal dropped on the worst day—signs that provision often arrives through people.

    We go straight at a hard truth about addiction and responsibility. You can love, pray, set boundaries, and show up, but you can’t force sobriety or carry someone else’s choices. Naming that releases false guilt and makes room for healthy support. From there, we talk about how pain can evolve into purpose without sugarcoating the journey: name what hurts, listen for a nudge, and ask how your experience might serve someone else. That’s how trust is built in real communities—Celebrate Recovery, honest church groups, and small circles where vulnerability is welcome.

    We also widen what “homeless” can mean. Maybe you’re not sleeping outside but feel displaced in your family, career, or even your own body. Faith reframes that ache as a search for belonging, a home that looks like peace, people, and being fully known. Along the way we share practical resources—hotlines, 2-1-1, local shelters—and reflective prompts to spot the quiet miracles you might have missed. If you’re carrying the weight of instability, you’re not invisible, and you’re not alone. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs hope, and leave a review to help more people find a place to belong with us.

    This is an introductory audio segment for a show or podcast titled "Life Beyond the Sight of Darkness." The host, Robert B., warmly welcomes listeners and shares his mission: to support people navigating vision loss or trauma by helping them find hope, purpose, and confidence. The tone is friendly and encouraging, emphasizing that no one should have to face darkness alone. The segment ends with an inviting call to action: "Grab your Joe and let's go."

    I know exactly the sound you mean. That "shimmering" ambient electric guitar, soft organ pads, and a gentle piano that just breathes with the speaker. It’s that deeply spiritual, reflective atmosphere that invites people in. I’ve dialed in that specific Altar Call feel for you. How does this one resonate?

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    1 Std.
  • Episode 2 What Trauma Teaches A Child And How We Learn To Live Again
    Jan 16 2026

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    Heartbeats race in quiet rooms where nothing looks wrong. That’s the paradox we unpack as we walk through childhood trauma, the survival habits it creates, and the long road toward belonging when your nervous system expects the floor to give way. We open up about hiding in small spaces to feel safe, the constant hum of fear that becomes ordinary, and the way kid logic tries to fix adult brokenness by taking the blame.

    From there, we name the truth: children are not responsible for chaos. If you grew up braced for impact, you’re not broken—you’re adapted. We explore how those adaptations show up in adulthood as anxiety, conflict avoidance, people-pleasing, or sudden anger, and how to meet them with compassion instead of shame. Faith becomes a steady lens in this story, with Psalm 27:10 offering a counter-narrative of being received when you feel forsaken, and Isaiah 61 promising beauty for ashes. That faith doesn’t erase pain; it reframes it, helping the body learn safety through belonging, honest community, and practices that regulate a hyper-alert system.

    We also talk about family separation, the knot of relief and grief, and the possibility of redemption over time—how growth, boundaries, and accountability can lead to restored relationships without rewriting the past. A practical tool anchors the episode: write a letter to your younger self. Tell them it wasn’t their fault, that they survived, and that compassion is the doorway to healing. As we share our own journey from survival to service, the message is clear: trauma leaves marks, but it never gets the final word. Hope does. If this resonates, subscribe, share with someone who needs it, and leave a review to help more people find their way to safety and grace.

    This is an introductory audio segment for a show or podcast titled "Life Beyond the Sight of Darkness." The host, Robert B., warmly welcomes listeners and shares his mission: to support people navigating vision loss or trauma by helping them find hope, purpose, and confidence. The tone is friendly and encouraging, emphasizing that no one should have to face darkness alone. The segment ends with an inviting call to action: "Grab your Joe and let's go."

    I know exactly the sound you mean. That "shimmering" ambient electric guitar, soft organ pads, and a gentle piano that just breathes with the speaker. It’s that deeply spiritual, reflective atmosphere that invites people in. I’ve dialed in that specific Altar Call feel for you. How does this one resonate?

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    14 Min.