Most conversations about belief focus on what we say we think.
This one starts somewhere quieter.
It begins with the jokes that slip out when no one is trying to be profound. The casual remarks. The half-laughs. The familiar lines that smooth over disappointment or signal that a subject doesn’t need to be explored too closely.
In this talk, Lyn and Paul sit with a simple observation: humour often carries more certainty than our explanations do. Jokes don’t argue. They don’t persuade. They assume agreement. And in doing so, they can quietly reinforce what we believe is possible — or no longer worth considering.
Rather than teaching or correcting, the conversation stays deliberately open. It moves through ordinary moments, shared laughter, missed punchlines, and the subtle pauses that appear when old assumptions begin to loosen. There’s no framework to follow and no conclusion to reach. Just two voices noticing how belief, identity, and belonging sometimes hide in plain sight.
If you’ve ever laughed at something and felt, a moment later, that the laugh didn’t quite belong to you anymore — this conversation is for you.
Watch when you’re in no rush. Let it linger.