A Beautiful Fix | Midlife Burnout, Human Design & Reinvention

What a Hans Zimmer Concert Reminds Us About the Beauty of Being Different

Tracy Hill Season 1 Episode 37

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I thought I was going to a concert.

Turns out, I walked into a full-body, soul-stirring reminder of what makes life beautiful.

This episode is about music, yes—but more than that, it’s about energy. It’s about what happens when contrast, complexity, and wildly different humans come together to create something breathtaking.

From global musicians on stage to the sea of strangers in the arena… this night hit me right in the heart. And it made me wonder:

What if our differences aren’t something to tolerate—but the whole point?

I’m sharing the experience that left me speechless in the parking lot afterward… and why I think it holds a message we all need right now. No politics. Just perspective. And maybe a little goosebumps.

Tune in if you need a beautiful reminder that sameness isn’t the goal. Harmony is.

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What a Hans Zimmer Concert Reminded Me About the Beauty of Being Different

[00:00:00] So what if we celebrated our differences like they were the point? Because they are.  

I started a beautiful fix simply because I just wanted to [00:01:00] remind the world how ridiculously beautiful life is. Just want it to shine a spotlight on it because we don't always see it. We miss it a lot. It's quiet, it's subtle, it gets overlooked. It can't compete with all the noise out there. And I, for one, crave my beautiful fixes.

That's why I'm always saying, get high on life, one beautiful fix at a time. And this weekend I got my beautiful fix. Oh, and I just have to share it because if you have an opportunity to experience this, I need you to go see it. I saw the world of Han Zimmer. So Han Zimmer, I am sure you've heard of his music.

If you've been to any movie in the past couple of decades, think the Prince of Egypt. Um, interstellar driving, miss Daisy inception, Batman, [00:02:00] Superman, gladiator, um, lion King. Did I mention Lion King? I mean. Uh, Sherlock Holmes, the Pirates of the Caribbean, just so many, he is the genius behind these musical scores.

And I know for me, I think I take it for granted. I love a good, um, movie soundtrack. I always have. A lot of my playlists are simply just soundtracks, but when I'm watching the movie, I, I get lost in the movie and I don't always appreciate that some human. Wrote this music, brought all of these musicians together and Han Zimmer is just genius.

So this experience is beautiful Projections of the movie playing behind these musical scores as they are playing it. Um, [00:03:00] you also hear from Han Zimmer, you know. What was going on when he was writing this music. Um, and he has a stage full of musicians from all walks of life, from all parts of the world, South Africa, Zimbabwe, Israel, Lebanon, Spain, Brazil, France, the United States.

It. It is just simply amazing. It is powerful and it's not, um, it's also sitting in a, in an arena filled with people from all walks of life, think young and old, there's so much going on. It's, it's almost like it overwhelms your sense because it, you're getting hit from every angle. And when I left, I had to just [00:04:00] sit in the car for a second.

I just had to just wrap my head around what I just experienced and why it was so moving and, um, what made it so powerful. And I landed on diversity. There was so much diversity in that room from the people that came. To see it and experience it to the musicians on that stage from all walks of life, from the different genres of music, the different styles, the, the different movies that were being portrayed.

Um, the, the soloists from different parts of the world, the from the simple to the complex. And it was so gorgeous and it just made me think, what if Han Zimmer had just played one song the entire evening, or one instrument [00:05:00] or one note just over and over and over again, it wouldn't have worked.

It was the. The contrast, it was the white keys and the black keys and the minor notes and the major notes and, um, the strings, the melodic strings versus the, the percussion in that room. It was all of it. All of it came together to create that experience and it's. It's just, it's energy. It's the music moved through you and it wasn't from just volume just being loud.

It was from, it was vibration. And it was just that connection to human energy and the unique resonance that each person in that room brought. It all came together beautifully. And you know it's true in real life, [00:06:00] people. Cultures, skin tones, hair textures, freckles, voices, perspectives, outlooks, all of it.

So what if we celebrated our differences like they were the point? Because they are. And the more we learn to love the differences in ourselves, wolves, the more we can love it in each other. Let's start celebrating the things that make us human and messy and real and rare.

It's the contrast that makes things interesting.

It's the contrast. We don't thrive in sameness. Sameness is safe. It's not very interesting though. So my invitation to you this week is to celebrate your differences. The thing in you that makes you [00:07:00] different, quirky, weird, just stand out and the differences in each other.

Let's embrace them. Let's notice them. Let's. Let's understand that that is what brings us together is appreciating how all of the differences make this world the beautiful place that it is.

what's an experience that you can tell me about? What's something I should experience to get my next fix? I don't want this to be just a monologue, a one-way monologue. I want it to be a dialogue, a conversation, a community. I would love to hear from you. I would love it if you took a moment to just reach out to me and connect and say, Tracy, if you think that was amazing, you need to check out this,

So until next [00:08:00] time, keep getting high on life, one beautiful fix at a time.