How to Share Your Superpower

It may be that you are not yourself luminous, but that you are a conductor of light. Some people without possessing genius have a remarkable power of stimulating it.” – Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

As you can imagine, there’s a lot of chatter going on in Seattle about the Seahawks after they won Super Bowl LX this past weekend. I heard a story the other day about head coach, Mike Macdonald. He was being interviewed and the reporter asked him something like “What’s so special about you?” Apparently, Mike just sat there silently thinking about that question and never came up with an answer. Chalk one up for Mike Macdonald’s humility.

But this week’s How To Share guest, Roger Kastner, says only about half the people he asks can name their superpower. As a podcast host and producer of the What Do You Know to Be True? podcast, Roger has a gift for teasing out people’s superpowers. He is a fantastic facilitator of meaningful conversations—inviting accomplished guests to explore the truths that shape how they lead and live.

In this episode you can see and hear his deep passion for connection, curiosity, and the power of reflective dialogue. Roger’s mission is to share the learning and practices that help people thrive, build capabilities, and unlock purpose and potential.

Roger’s theme for this season of What Do You Know To Be True? is joy. Fitting because Roger shows how good he is at fostering joy through laughter, appreciation and the act of creating.

This is a fantastic episode with a powerful guest who knows how to bring out the best in others. I know you’ll love it!

Takeaways

  • Heart and mind alignment is essential for personal growth.
  • Superpowers are connected to our purpose in life.
  • Curiosity and empathy are key themes in discovering our superpowers.
  • Creating frameworks helps individuals and teams thrive.
  • Connection with others enhances our ability to share our superpowers.
  • Joy is accessible even in challenging times.
  • AI can handle probabilities, but humans excel in exploring possibilities.
  • Sharing knowledge and experiences fosters community and growth.

So — tell me, what is your superpower?

Here’s a great clip of Roger describing the mission behind What Do You Know To Be True?

Here are some ways you can watch or listen to all of this insightful and helpful episode:

Please listen, watch, provide feedback and subscribe.

47-From Stuck to Momentum: Thomas Edison’s Method for Progress (Try, Learn, Improve, Repeat) The Life of Try: Personal growth, one try at a time.

Feeling stuck? This episode of The Life of Try uses the story of Thomas Edison to reframe progress: not as one perfect breakthrough, but as a steady practice of continuing to try. Behind the famous light bulb moment is a mindset of learning from what doesn’t work, building momentum through small improvements, and staying in motion long enough for your next step to appear.You’ll hear five practical lessons—be systematic, don’t do it alone, keep improving, apply what you learn across areas, and rest (yes, naps count)—plus a bonus insight on the tension between creativity and control. If you’re working on a project, a habit change, or a long-shot goal, this conversation is an invitation to get unstuck by taking the next try.Get unstuck by focusing on the next controllable stepMake progress through iteration—small wins that compound over timeKeep going with support, structure, and restCreate more, control lessThe Life of Try is a personal growth and self‑help podcast about getting unstuck, navigating uncertainty, and choosing to try—even when it’s uncomfortable, inconvenient, or not your idea.Hosted by Wynne Leon, the show explores how real growth, reinvention, and discovery often begin not with confidence or clarity—but with a single attempt. Through thoughtful interviews, reflective conversations, and real‑world case studies, each episode examines what it looks like to keep going when doubt shows up, plans fall apart, or life forces a change you didn’t ask for.This podcast is for anyone who:Feels stuck or uncertain about what’s nextIs navigating change, burnout, or reinventionWants to live more intentionally without pretending growth is easyBelieves progress starts by trying—again and againThe Life of Try isn’t about hustle or perfection. It’s about learning as you go, surfacing what matters, and sharing what you discover along the way.If you’re ready to surf the uncertainty, outlast the doubts, and step into your own try‑cycle, you’re in the right place.Links for this episode:From Stuck to Momentum: Thomas Edison's Method for Progress show notesThe Genius of Patience: Five Lessons from Thomas Edison transcriptEdison by Edmund Morris Thomas Edison on WikipediaAfter the Super Bowl, Seahawks Coach Mike Macdonald Kept Repeating 2 Words. It's a Lesson in How to Win on Inc.com
  1. 47-From Stuck to Momentum: Thomas Edison’s Method for Progress (Try, Learn, Improve, Repeat)
  2. 46: The Quiet Transformation That Changes Everything
  3. 45: The Life of Try: Alex Honnold Case Study
  4. How to Share a Reimagined Sci-Fi Trilogy with Dr. Wayne Runde
  5. How to Share Advocacy with Sam Daley-Harris Part 2

Links for this episode:

How to Share Your Superpower Transcript

What Do You Know to Be True? website

What Do You Know to Be True? on YouTube, Apple Podcasts and Spotify

Roger Kastner on LinkedIn

From the host:

My book about my beloved father: Finding My Father’s Faith

(featured photo from Pexels)

61 thoughts on “How to Share Your Superpower

  1. I think my superpower is just loving my animals 🤭😁 Such a deep question. My neighbors might answer for me, not me🤩. I like this podcast topic, Wynne. Edifying one!

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Oh how interesting. I have to bookmark this to listen to the whole thing!

    I think I would have to ask others what they think my superpower is… I tend to think it is mine has something to do with inviting people in to share, sort of. Not sure how to define it!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. And maybe ability to beautifully convey images in just a few words — and willingness to jump in to challenges?

      It’s a fun episode. I hope you enjoy it! Thanks for tuning in, Dale!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Awww. How sweet are you?

        I told my coworker about this and she said ask me what I think yours is! So I did. She said my sense of humour was fabulous and that I had a knack of dealing with people and not fretting when things get complicated. Pleasure to work with me, she added. Well! Okay then!

        Liked by 1 person

  3. “Podcast was born” and there you have it, his superpower is observational, intuition, followed up by action. What an inspiration. I’m going to try and listen to then entire episode! Fabulous Wynne, xo, C

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Oh, I love your take on his superpower, Cheryl. I think you’re right – you have such a gift for seeing things deeply! I hope you enjoy the whole episode – he really is an inspirational and thoughtful speaker! Thanks for tuning in, my friend!

      Liked by 1 person

  4. I like that Roger shared “curiosity” as being a common response to the superpower question with his guests. This is relatable to me. I have always been extremely curious, and that became the springboard to most everything else: my writing, my exploration of the world; my love of learning. I need to fill up all the time. Separately, I really liked his story about his wife and her sister and how her superpower of kindness was born. That’s beautiful. Thanks for bringing on such an engaging guest! (Congrats on the Seahawks, Wynne. I thought of you. 😊)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I can see curiosity as a defining factor for you, Melanie. But you also have such an amazing ability to follow it where it leads which is rare!! And thanks for the Super Bowl congrats. My kids and I went down to see the parade today. It’s a fun moment of collective effervescence in this city!

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Best not to tell the young about there Superpower, unless you are sure they aren’t going to try to fly like Superman out of their second floor window. I have seen it happen!

    Liked by 1 person

  6. My superpower was learned from my teaching days, the ability to see someone who is feeling uncomfortable and to help them reduce their anxiety by simply going over and talking to them. We all want to be accepted. Children have kind hearts and will come to the aid of others who are feeling lonely or left out, a feeling we can all relate to.

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Great conversation between two great coaches and mentors. I love conversations that explore what makes people and teams tick – and so much of it is beyond the hard skills, but the soft skills that are harder to teach.

    Love the connection you draw from superpower to purpose to potential – and all the ingredients that contribute to it, from joy, courage, teamwork and adaptability. It’s like a muscle that you can practice and grow.

    A nice pick-me-up boost as I commute to a day at work! 😊 Enjoy your day and upcoming long weekend!

    Liked by 1 person

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