Imperfect Mens Club
Season 5, Episode 16: Self-Discovery Isn't Self-Help. There's a Difference Overview In this episode of The Imperfect Men's Club, Mark Aylward and Jim explore self-discovery as both a personal practice and a strategic starting point for men navigating career transitions, identity shifts, and life after major change. The conversation begins with Jim's unexpected encounter at a networking event, where a woman ran his numerology numbers — and the results were hard to dismiss. That exchange opens a wider discussion about the tools men have access to, and rarely use, for understanding themselves....
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Season 5, Episode 15 Overview In this episode of The Imperfect Men's Club, Mark Aylward and Jim explore one of the most misunderstood distinctions in a man's inner life: the difference between self-conviction and stubbornness. The conversation opens with Mark's recent visit to his adult daughters, where a heated political disagreement left a mark. Rather than venting, he turns the experience into a question worth answering — when you hold firm to what you believe, are you standing on principle or just digging in? This episode takes that question seriously, and follows it all the way down....
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Overview In this episode of the Imperfect Men's Club, Mark Aylward and Jim Gurule pull directly from their week to examine one of the more uncomfortable truths about self-accountability: before you can hold yourself accountable, you have to understand what you actually brought to the situation. Jim opens with a parking lot confrontation in Santa Barbara that turned into a referendum on projection, energy, and the moment a man decides to stop absorbing someone else's bad day. Mark connects it to a pattern he has been tracking in his own relationships and in the culture at large. The episode...
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THE IMPERFECT MEN'S CLUB PODCAST Season 5, Episode 13: The Easter Inventory Overview In this episode of The Imperfect Men's Club, Mark and Jim use the Easter season as a lens for one of the most practical exercises a man can do: taking inventory of his relationships, his patterns, and what he's been tolerating that no longer serves him. Jim arrives fresh off a stretch that included pneumonia, a period of mental fog, and a solo trip to Santa Barbara that helped him find his footing again. That experience leads him to revisit a conversation from 15 to 20 years ago with a woman named Susan, who...
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Season 5, Episode 12: Self-Sovereignty Overview In this episode of The Imperfect Men's Club, Mark Aylward and Jim Gurule dig into the concept of self-sovereignty, defined as having absolute authority, ownership, and control over one's own life, body, and personal decisions. Rather than treating it as a philosophical abstraction, they run it through the lens of real life: long-term relationships, libido, self-worth, and the day-to-day decisions that quietly determine the kind of man you become. The conversation opens with a candid discussion about how relationships change over time, what men...
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Beyond Self-Actualization: What Maslow Got Right (and Almost Got to) About Living a Meaningful Life Overview In this episode, Mark and Jim revisit one of the most recognized frameworks in psychology — Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs — and push it further than most people have taken it. Most men know the pyramid from a high school textbook. What they probably missed is what Maslow added near the end of his life: a sixth level he called self-transcendence, sitting above self-actualization, and pointing at something most men in midlife are only beginning to sense. The conversation runs the full...
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Show Notes Season 5, Episode 10 Self-Judgment, Self-Righteousness, and Self-Therapy Overview In this episode of The Imperfect Men's Club, Mark and Jim dig into three internal forces that quietly shape how men show up in the world: self-judgment, self-righteousness, and self-therapy. What started as a pregame conversation about empathy and judgment in Mark's coaching work turned into one of the more honest hours the two have shared. The episode draws directly from Mark's lived experience, including a contentious decade-long divorce, sole custody of three children, and the hard-earned insight...
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THE IMPERFECT MEN'S CLUB PODCAST Episode 9: The Self Series — Reflection, Awareness, Gratitude, Awakening, and Confidence Overview In Episode 9, Mark Aylward and Jim Gurulé go deep on what they call 'The Self Series' — five self-hyphen phrases drawn from Jim's growing library of 40-plus terms that sit at the center of the IMC flywheel. Self-reflection. Self-awareness. Self-gratitude. Self-awakening. Self-confidence. These aren't buzzwords. They're the actual mechanics of how a man either grows or gets stuck. The episode opens with Jim sharing a birthday ritual — the one thought he...
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Overview In this episode, Mark and Jim dig into what separates a great coach from an average one. The trigger was a podcast Jim came across from Graham Cochran, who breaks great coaching down into a three-part formula he calls the E3 Framework: Empathy, Encouragement, and Empowerment. Jim and Mark use it as a lens to examine how they each approach coaching, what they've learned from decades of working with people, and what they're building with the Imperfect Men's Club. The conversation goes well beyond theory. They talk about the difference between individual coaching and business...
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Overview A stranger in a hotel lobby asks Jim for life advice while they're both waiting on an Uber. That 20-minute conversation — with a VP in his 40s with young kids and a woman going through a divorce — becomes the backbone of this episode. Jim and Mark unpack what Jim said, why he said it, and what it means to offer perspective instead of advice when someone is genuinely ready to listen. The conversation covers failure, fear, the choice to grow bitter or better, the power of showing up, and why human connection is becoming one of the rarest things a man can find. This one sits right...
info_outlineIn this episode of the Imperfect Men’s Club Podcast, Mark Aylward and Jim Gurulé dive into the lost art of civil discourse—why it matters, how we’ve strayed from it, and what it takes to bring it back into everyday life.
The conversation explores:
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Why civil discourse is more than politeness
Civil discourse goes beyond surface-level politeness or avoiding conflict. It’s about creating space for real dialogue that expands knowledge, challenges assumptions, and strengthens community. Mark and Jim unpack why this practice is critical for healthy democracies, strong relationships, and personal growth—and why its absence is fueling so much of today’s division. -
The rules of engagement
The guys walk through the simple but often ignored ground rules of meaningful conversation: focus on issues rather than attacking people, defend your positions with facts instead of emotion alone, and be willing to entertain the possibility that you might learn something from the other side. They show how these guidelines, when practiced consistently, shift discussions from combative to constructive. -
The personal cost of polarization
What happens when we refuse to hear opposing views? Jim shares how shutting down or resorting to labels prevents us from seeing nuance, while Mark reflects on how defensiveness narrows our ability to learn. They both highlight the mental, relational, and even physical toll of living in a constant state of us-versus-them—and how practicing civil discourse can relieve that burden. -
Practical steps to have better conversations
Civil discourse doesn’t just belong in politics or philosophy—it’s useful at the dinner table, in the boardroom, and even on social media. Mark and Jim share practical steps: asking genuine questions instead of making assumptions, pausing before reacting, finding points of agreement before diving into differences, and setting clear intentions for the exchange. These tools help turn difficult conversations into opportunities for connection. -
How leaders (and men especially) can model calm, strength, and curiosity
Men are often conditioned to argue, defend, or dominate conversations. Mark and Jim challenge this narrative, suggesting that true leadership shows up as restraint, humility, and a willingness to be curious. They discuss how modeling composure and curiosity—especially in front of family, teams, or communities—creates ripple effects that invite others to follow suit.
Mark and Jim reflect on their own experiences—moments when they’ve struggled to stay grounded in heated discussions—and the lessons they’ve taken away about presence, restraint, and humility.
This isn’t about “winning” arguments. It’s about building mutual respect, deeper understanding, and a stronger sense of connection in a time when it’s easier than ever to divide.
If you’ve ever walked away from a conversation thinking, “That went nowhere”, this episode will give you the tools—and the courage to try again, differently.