Trust-Based Living
Welcome to Trust-Based Living, the podcast that redefines how we connect, build trust, and live authentically in a world dominated by speed, transactions and technology.
Hosted by Ari Galper, the world’s leading authority on trust-based selling and author of eight best-selling books, this show explores how trust isn’t just a concept -- it’s a way of being.
Through transformative insights and actionable steps, Ari shares how to align your choices with integrity, presence, and humanity, creating deeper connections and a life rooted in trust.
Whether you’re a business leader, entrepreneur, or someone seeking more meaningful relationships, Trust-Based Living offers a practical guide to living authentically and embracing trust as the foundation of everything you do.
The journey begins with a single choice: to prioritize trust in every aspect of your life.
Trust-Based Living
Why Looking for the Best in People Changes Everything
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In this episode:
Without realizing it, a quiet guard had formed, and every conversation was entered already braced for friction, resistance, and disappointment. The unsettling part was how often those expectations seemed to come true, which made them feel like accurate observations rather than a lens distorting the view. When people were expected to be difficult, conversations felt strained. When disinterest was assumed, people rarely leaned in. A harder question eventually surfaced: what if the way others were showing up had less to do with them, and more to do with what was being brought into the room? This piece explores what happens when you begin to realize that the story you carry about people is quietly writing the outcomes you keep experiencing.
If this message resonates, order Ari’s new books at www.TheTrustBook.com and learn how to build trust in a way that feels natural, calm, and pressure-free.
Welcome to the Trust-Based Living Podcast. This podcast is about living a life centred on trust, integrity, and meaningful connection. Each episode will explore ideas and stories that help you align your values, build deeper relationships, and create a life that is authentic and fulfilling. Ari Galper is the world's number one authority on trust-based selling. In this episode, Ari will be sharing his new insights and ideas to help you live a trust-based life. Let's hear what Ari has to share today.
SPEAKER_00Not openly, not consciously, but internally. I expected hesitation, I expected resistance, I expected people to disappoint me in small, subtle ways. What surprised me most was how often I seemed to be right. Over time I began to notice a pattern. When I expected people to be difficult, conversations felt strained. When I assumed someone was uninterested, they rarely leaned in. When I believed trust would be hard to earn, it usually was. At first I thought this was simply how people were. Eventually I started to question something deeper. What if the way I was seeing people was shaping how they showed up around me? This became clear during a working relationship that felt unusually tense. The other person was reserved and cautious with their words. They answered questions briefly and rarely volunteered more than necessary. I found myself filling in the blanks, assuming they were disengaged or closed off. Instead of addressing the tension directly, I tried something different. I slowed down. I stopped interpreting their behavior as a problem that needed fixing. I made a conscious choice to assume positive intent, even though I had no proof. I imagined that perhaps they were unsure. Perhaps they were protecting themselves, perhaps they simply needed time. So I adjusted how I showed up. I listened more carefully. I gave them space to finish their thoughts. I stopped trying to push the conversation forward and let it unfold at its own pace. Something shifted, but not immediately. Over time, their responses became fuller, their posture softened, they began to share more than just surface level information. Nothing dramatic happened. There was no defining moment, just a gradual sense of ease that had not been there before. That was when I understood something important. People tend to rise or fall to the level at which we see them. When we look for the worst in people, we notice every flaw, every pause, every misstep. We interpret neutral behavior as negative and uncertainty as disinterest. Without realizing it, we close ourselves off first. When we look for the best in people, we create space, space for trust to develop, space for people to relax, space for real connection to form. This is not about ignoring poor behavior or pretending everyone has good intentions. It is about choosing not to let fear be the default lens through which we see others. Most people are not trying to be difficult. They are trying to feel safe. They are trying to avoid being misunderstood. They are trying to do their best with what they know. When you approach someone from that place, the dynamic changes. Conversations become less guarded. You stop trying to manage people and start trying to understand them. There is another shift that happens quietly. When you practice seeing the best in others, you begin to extend that same patience to yourself. You become less reactive when things do not go perfectly. You soften your inner dialogue. You allow learning to replace judgment. The next time you find yourself frustrated with someone, pause before forming a conclusion. Ask yourself what you might not be seeing yet. Notice where curiosity could replace certainty. Sometimes the biggest change does not come from saying or doing something differently. It comes from seeing differently.
SPEAKER_01Thank you for listening to this episode on how to live a trust-based life with Ari Gulper. If you would like to learn more about Ari's work, including his books, membership programs, speaking, and consulting, visit www.arigulper.com.