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Conversations That Change How You Think, Decide, and Live.

Explore powerful conversations on mindset, relationships, leadership, and decision-making — designed to help you think deeper and act with clarity.

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EP – 01

Relationships

January 21, 2026

Leading Through Crisis: Cambodia's Minister of Health on COVID, Sacrifice & Reform

In this powerful episode, we sit down with one of Cambodia’s most celebrated healthcare leaders — a woman who stood at the frontlines of the COVID-19 pandemic, led the nation’s vaccination campaign, and carried the weight of an entire country’s health on her shoulders. 

What We Discuss

In this episode, we explore what it truly means to lead in the face of a national crisis — how one woman navigated misinformation, public fear, political pressure, and personal sacrifice to steer Cambodia through the COVID-19 pandemic, and what she’s building for the future of the country’s health system.

  •  COVID-19 Leadership & Crisis Response She shares deeply personal accounts of leading Cambodia’s COVID-19 response — including the sacrifice of health workers (“if we die, we die for the people, but health workers must walk in“), combating misinformation/fake news, and the vaccination campaign.
  •  Public Communication & Trust Discussion around how the Ministry managed public fear, the challenge of people receiving conflicting information, and building trust with citizens to take the vaccine.
  • Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) Expanding healthcare services for diabetes and hypertension down to community health centers, and linking substance/alcohol use to rising NCD rates among youth.
  • The Whole-of-Government Approach She references the “whole of government and whole of society” approach, crediting Prime Minister Hun Sen’s leadership and civil servant participation (including salary contributions to fund the COVID response).
  • Her Book She reveals she wrote a book documenting Cambodia’s COVID-19 experience, motivated by the fact that international teams kept asking Cambodia to share its lessons — so she decided to document it herself.
  • Out-of-Pocket Health Expenditure A policy milestone: reducing out-of-pocket health spending from 60% down to 35% by 2035.
  • Digital Health & Future Vision She discusses digital health investment, human resource development, and Cambodia’s health vision for 2035.
  • Personal Resilience She shares the emotional weight of leadership — nearly giving up, the pressure on her family, but choosing to push forward. She draws a parallel between the COVID era and surviving the Pol Pot era as a child.
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EP – 02

Relationships

January 21, 2026

Never Give Up: Lessons from 20 Years of Building an Empire

In this powerful episode, we sit down with one of Cambodia’s most influential business leaders — a man who built an empire from the ashes of failure, and whose story of resilience, sacrifice, and unshakeable self-belief has inspired a generation of young Cambodians.

What We Discuss

In this episode, we explore what it truly takes to build something from nothing — how one man turned a failing three-way partnership into one of Cambodia’s most diversified business groups, and why he believes failure is not the end, but the price of experience.

  • The Origin of Alpha Group He started with three shareholders — Cambodian, Thai, and Vietnamese — building a construction company that kept losing money. After years of disputes and losses, both foreign partners walked away, leaving him to take over alone with only family support.
  • Turning Failure Into Opportunity Rather than seeing the collapse as defeat, he reframed it as paying to learn. He took over the failing company, rebuilt the team from near-zero, and even deposited 5% of his own money to clients upfront to prove his commitment — a move that earned him his breakthrough project.
  • Building a Culture of Responsibility At Alpha Group, he instills one core rule: only promise what you can deliver. He teaches his team to operate at 80% capacity — always keeping 20% in reserve for the unexpected.
  • Smart Diversification How Alpha Group expanded from construction into banking, insurance, agriculture, footwear manufacturing, and travel goods — always ensuring one sector was strong before moving to the next, with dedicated teams and leadership for each.
  • Agriculture as Cambodia’s Biggest Opportunity He believes agro-processing is the most underutilized sector in Cambodia — fertile land, clean environment, and strong government incentives make it ripe for investors willing to go beyond raw export.
  • The Art of Continuous Learning From asking questions at a restaurant to observing street vendors, he explains how curiosity and observation — not just formal education — have been his greatest teachers. “You never know more than the person who does one thing for 20 years.”
  • Advice for the Next Generation He urges young people to set a clear direction, stay committed to one path long enough to master it, seek the right mentors, and never just follow the crowd or switch careers out of boredom.
  • Resilience and the Power of Your Support System His closing message: when hardship hits, don’t give up. He credits his wife’s unwavering encouragement over 20+ years as the quiet force behind everything he’s built — “like blood dripping on the heart, but we carry on.”
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EP – 03

Relationships

January 21, 2026

Education is the Greatest Wealth

In this powerful episode, we sit down with a visionary educator who turned his back on city life and comfort to build world-class international education in the heart of Cambodia’s provinces — proving that a mission driven by love can move mountains.

What We Discuss

In this episode, we explore what it means to dedicate your entire life to a single cause — how one man built an internationally recognized school from nothing in rural Cambodia, and why he believes quality education is the only real path to a nation’s prosperity.

  • The Accidental Teacher He never planned to be a teacher — he wanted to be a lawyer. But after landing his first teaching job in 1995, he realized that transferring knowledge to others was one of the most powerful things a human being could do. That moment changed his life’s direction forever.
  • A Mission Born from Inequality Growing up poor in Kampong Cham and studying in Battambang, he saw firsthand that quality education only existed in Phnom Penh. He made a decision: if no one was going to bring world-class education to the provinces, he would do it himself.
  • Building Dove International from Zero With no money, no investors, and limited resources, he launched Dove International in Battambang. Today it has expanded across the western region — Battambang, Pursat, Pailin, and beyond — with 600+ staff and over 100 foreign teachers, and partner schools in the USA and Thailand.
  • Leading Through COVID When the pandemic hit, Dove was 95% ready for online learning before anyone else. His message to his team was simple: “We either do this, or we die together.” Every teacher committed. Not a single day of education was lost.
  • Leadership Without Ego He never makes decisions alone. His board includes volunteers from the US, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand. His philosophy: empower your team, create space for mistakes, and never make people fear speaking up. His meetings focus on motivation and vision — not just technical problems.
  • Financing a Dream with Borrowed Money He openly shares that Dove is built largely on bank loans — currently constructing a new $8 million, 100+ room campus on 4.5 hectares and another school building valued at $7 million. He is not wealthy personally. But he believes quality always attracts the resources it deserves.
  • STEAM, Robotics & AI Readiness Dove runs a STEAM-based curriculum with robotics programs imported from America, and is actively training teachers in AI — preparing students 8 years ahead of when most schools started thinking about it.
  • What Cambodia Needs Most He believes the key to Cambodia’s economic growth is not infrastructure or investment — it’s human capital. Quality education in every province, not just the capital, is the foundation everything else must be built on.
  • His Closing Message to the Youth Do what you love with everything you have. Work so hard that your boss has no choice but to rely on you more than anyone else. He started at $80 a month — and never complained once. That hunger is what built everything.
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EP – 04

May 16, 2025

SMEs Are the Backbone: Cambodia's Quiet Economic Warrior

He survived the Pol Pot era with nothing, built his way up from selling gold and silver in Battambang, and then spent the next two decades quietly traveling every single province in Cambodia — holding free workshops for small business owners who had no one else in their corner.

What We Discuss

In this episode, we sit down with one of Cambodia’s most dedicated advocates for small and medium businesses — a man who believes that the future of Cambodia’s economy won’t be built by the wealthy few, but by the millions of everyday entrepreneurs across all 25 provinces who just need the right knowledge, the right connections, and someone willing to show up for them.

  • From Nothing to Nation Builder He grew up in poverty after the Pol Pot era — four of his ten siblings didn’t survive, the rest fled to America. He stayed, started trading gold and silver in Battambang, and slowly built his way into the business world with nothing but grit and observation.
  • Why SMEs Are Everything SMEs make up 99.5% of all businesses in Cambodia. He calls them the backbone of national economic growth — pointing to Japan and South Korea, both of which built their economic power on the backs of small enterprises, never abandoning them.
  • Building FASMEC from Scratch Starting in 1998 through the Chamber of Commerce, he began knocking on doors across all 25 provinces to organize Cambodia’s small business owners — eventually founding the Federation of Associations of SMEs with branches nationwide. He charged nothing.
  • The Free Workshop Model For over 20 years, he has personally funded and organized free seminars across Cambodia — covering import/export, taxation, investment, and business law. When he couldn’t afford a trainer, he went and recruited ministers and experts to come down with him.
  • Cambodia Must Stop Importing, Start Exporting He is convinced Cambodia’s biggest economic mistake is its dependence on imports. As an agricultural country with fertile land and a clean environment, Cambodia should be processing its own products and selling them to the world — not buying from Thailand and Vietnam.
  • The Agriculture Goldmine Thailand earned over $66.5 billion from fruit exports alone in a single year. Cambodia exports less than 10% of what it’s capable of. He sees contract farming — buying directly from farmers at guaranteed prices — as the key to unlocking this potential.
  • What the Government Must Fix He pushes hard for an accessible SME bank, lower rural interest rates (currently as high as 24%), affordable electricity and water in the provinces, and local government officers who know what their own land can grow.
  • The Molisei Association He founded this association under the legacy of Samdech Techo to continue developing SMEs — organizing 5,000-person solidarity events and lobbying for policies that reach ordinary people, not just the capital.
  • His Philosophy on Humility He speaks five languages — Khmer, Chinese, Vietnamese, Thai, and French — but never brags. His phone is always on. He helps anyone who calls. He says the moment you start thinking you’re above others, you lose the ability to learn from them.
  • His Legacy Message SMEs are the backbone. Unite, process, export, and believe in Cambodia’s land. “We don’t need gold and dollars to survive — we have soil. That’s enough if we use it wisely.”
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EP – 05

May 24, 2025

The Fire That Can't Burn Alone

She didn’t come from an artistic family. She had no roadmap. She just heard the beat of a shadow puppet drum at nineteen and decided that sound was worth chasing for the rest of her life.

What We Discuss

This one’s different. Lomor Pich isn’t a business mogul or a policy maker — she’s someone who fell in love with something ancient, refused to let it disappear, and quietly built one of Cambodia’s most beloved cultural movements from a single evening among four friends. We talk about what it really takes to build something that lasts, what it feels like to be criticized for loving your own culture too loudly, and why she thinks fear is the most dangerous enemy you’ll never be able to see.

  • The Grandmother and the Drums It started with a memory — her grandmother Nivan taking her to watch traditional Lkhon as a little girl in Kampong Chhnang. Then, years later at university, she heard Lkhon Sbaek Thom drums for the first time and something cracked open in her chest. She describes it as “something being pulled out from ancient soil.” That was the moment she stopped being a spectator.
  • Bon Phum Was Just Supposed to Be One Evening In 2014, four friends sat around and thought it would be nice to organize a single night of shadow puppetry. Twelve years later, Bon Phum is a national cultural festival that mobilizes thousands of Cambodians every year. She says they still can’t believe it got this far — and that’s exactly why it did.
  • The Name Phleung Kob She named her production house Phleung Kob — meaning “a fire that cannot burn alone.” One flame by itself dies. It needs others around it to survive and grow. That’s the whole philosophy: no solo heroes, no single visions, just people who believe in the same thing burning together.
  • Bringing Shadow Puppetry to the Shopping Mall One of her boldest moves was staging traditional Lkhon inside a modern shopping center. People were furious — they called it disrespectful, a desecration of culture. She did it anyway. Now the same people want to go back. She talks about why she believes preservation without innovation is just a museum, and innovation without preservation is just noise.
  • Being a Woman in the Room When she first started working in media and film, there were two women in the entire space. She built Phleung Kob with an intentional commitment to creating room for women and for the LGBTQ+ community — not as a political statement, but because talent shouldn’t depend on who you are.
  • She Didn’t Know What She Wanted Until COVID She spent years doing many things and loving all of them — filmmaking, festivals, production. COVID forced her to sit still long enough to finally admit that her number one love is directing films. Her number two is building the platform that lets others do the same thing. It took until 2022 to say it out loud.
  • Recognition That Hit Different Bon Phum has been invited to international festivals where neighboring countries like Thailand and Vietnam were not included. She doesn’t say it to brag — she says it because she wants Cambodian youth to know that what they’re building actually matters to the world, even when it doesn’t feel like it at home.
  • What She Wants to Leave Behind She believes that in one thousand years, someone will open a history book and see Cambodia’s name in it again — not for what was built before, but for what this generation chose to create. That belief is what keeps her going on the hardest days.
  • To Every Young Person Who’s Scared Fear, she says, is an enemy with no face and no body — it’s just a wall built to make you think you have no tomorrow. Her advice: you are twenty years old once. You won’t be twenty again. Stop waiting to feel ready. Go find out what your fire is, and then let it burn.
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EP – 06

June 03, 2025

The Weight You Don't See

Most people know him as the first Cambodian to run Manulife Cambodia. What they don’t know is that behind every meeting, every decision, every early morning run — he comes home to a family navigating something the world still doesn’t talk about enough.

What We Discuss

Mr. Chanrotha didn’t come on this show to talk about insurance. He came to talk about what keeps him awake at night — raising a child with autism in a society that isn’t ready for it yet, what it really means to lead with humility, and why he thinks the hardest part of reaching the top isn’t getting there. It’s deciding every single day that you still deserve to be there.

  • The Stat That Stops You Cold In the 1950s, one in ten thousand children had autism. Today, it’s one in a hundred — and for boys specifically, one in thirty. He doesn’t say this to shock. He says it because most Cambodian families are living this right now without knowing it has a name, without knowing where to turn, without knowing anyone else who understands.
  • This Is Personal His third child has autism. His sister-in-law gave up her career the day her child was born — thirteen years ago — and hasn’t gone back. She dedicated her entire life to one child who still can’t speak. He talks about this without any performance. It’s just the truth of his house.
  • What Leadership Actually Feels Like from the Inside Getting the title is the easy part. Staying worthy of it — that’s the daily war. He asks himself every morning whether he still qualifies to sit in the chair he sits in. Not as self-doubt. As self-respect.
  • He Runs, He Reads, He Writes — Every Single Day Since 2017, almost no day has passed without him reading. He calls himself addicted to books. He journals every night. He runs every morning and is currently training for full marathons in Iceland and the Netherlands. He gives books from his personal library as gifts because, as he puts it, if you have nothing to give, you have nothing.
  • The Autism Community Doesn’t Need Pity — It Needs Presence What parents of autistic children need most isn’t charity events or corporate donations. It’s someone willing to sit down, listen, and not make them feel like they have to hide their child. He wants to build spaces — real ones — where parents can speak honestly, find each other, and stop carrying this alone in the dark.
  • Three Things He Actually Wants to Build A parent support community where people can finally say “my child is struggling” without shame. A vocational training school where autistic children develop real skills and real independence. And a running event — families together, autistic kids included — because movement and belonging are things every child deserves to feel.
  • Do What You’re Good At. Then Fall in Love With It. He’s tired of the advice that says follow your passion. His version: find out what you’re genuinely skilled at first, work it until results come, and the love follows. Faking passion doesn’t last. Three years, he says — that’s how long before people can see through anything that isn’t real.
  • His Wife Is the Reason the House Doesn’t Fall Apart He says this plainly: mothers carry the weight. She never loses hope. She doesn’t push him with words — she just stays steady when everything else isn’t. He knows most of the invisible work lands on her, and he says so.
  • Who You Spend Time With Is Who You Become He asks about family background in every interview he conducts. Not as a filter — as a window into who someone really is. He believes your life, ten years from now, will look like the average of the five people you’re closest to today. Choose carefully.
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EP – 07

June 08, 2025

She Refused to Dissolve

She opened this episode not with words — but with a performance. And in that silence before the drums hit, you understood immediately that this was someone who had given her entire life to something most people can’t even put into words.

What We Discuss

This conversation begins with a dance and ends with a story about walking into a foreign museum and performing in front of stolen Khmer sculptures without anyone’s permission. Everything in between is about what it costs — and what it means — to spend your life carrying your culture on your body, across borders, through grief, through pregnancy, through an identity crisis in Los Angeles, and into rooms where no one expected you to show up.

  • Neang Amri — The Dance That Opens Everything The performance she gave at the start of this episode tells a story: a woman caught between her past and her future, wanting to run toward the light but unable to move forward until she makes peace with the shadow behind her. She built this piece in 2005 as a reflection on Khmer identity — on what we carry, what we can’t erase, and why we shouldn’t try.
  • The Past Isn’t Something You Leave Behind She talks about the Pol Pot era not as a wound to keep reopening, but as a shadow that becomes smaller only when you build something bigger beside it. She lost her father, her brothers, her grandmother. She survived. And her answer to all of that was to make art so serious, so rooted, so undeniable that the darkness had nowhere left to spread.
  • Studying the Formula, Not Just the Form At UCLA, she studied dance from India, Bali, Africa, Korea, and Latin America. Not to borrow their moves — to understand their method. Her philosophy: every tradition has a formula that makes it work. Once you know how it works, you can apply that logic to make your own tradition stronger. You don’t replace what you have. You sharpen it.
  • The Identity Crisis in Los Angeles She married and moved to the United States in 1991, and for a time she stopped wearing traditional clothes, stopped speaking Khmer at home, found herself surrounded entirely by a world that didn’t know her. Then one day she put on a traditional costume and pressed play on classical music. She says it was like being woken up — like something in her body remembered who she was before the world started pulling her in other directions. She decided then that she would never let herself dissolve.
  • The $100 Sculpture As a student with no money in Los Angeles, she wandered into a shop and found a Khmer sculpture for $100. She walked back and forth past it for days. Eventually she found the money, bought it, and took it home. She describes it as though the sculpture was asking her — take me with you, don’t leave me here among strangers. She understood exactly how it felt.
  • The Day She Danced in the Museum Without Permission For years, Cambodia’s Ministry of Culture had been writing letters to a museum near Broadway that held Khmer artifacts. No reply. She went. She saw the sculptures. And without asking anyone, she began performing classical Khmer dance directly in front of them — quietly, traditionally, completely. Museum staff asked her to stop. She stopped. She left. Weeks later, the museum sent an apology letter and opened formal negotiations with the Ministry. What years of letters couldn’t do, a single dance cracked open.
  • Costume Is Not Just Decoration She talks about the three qualities every Khmer dance costume must have — tight, supple, and steady. These aren’t aesthetic preferences. They are the philosophy of the dance itself put into fabric. If the costume isn’t right, the movement isn’t right. And if the art isn’t presented with full dignity, no one will treat it with full dignity.
  • She Danced Through Both Pregnancies Classical masters teach that a dancer’s power comes from the legs. So she never let her legs go weak — not through pregnancy, not through exhaustion, not through anything. She kept training because she knew that if she stopped, even for a season, she would have to rebuild something she had spent a lifetime growing.
  • Stepping Back Is Not Failure One of the most striking things she says: it takes more courage to retreat than to keep going in the wrong direction. She has made things that didn’t work. She pulled them back. She doesn’t call that defeat — she calls it responsibility. You are the guardian of what you make, and part of that guardianship is knowing when to stop.
  • She Has Reached the Summit — And She’s Still Climbing She says if she retired today she would have no regrets. The work has been performed across the world. The recognition has come. The mountains she set out to climb — she has climbed them. But she is not retiring. Because the next generation needs to see someone still going.
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EP – 08

June 13, 2025

Thirty Years of No Shortcuts

She didn’t choose her path — her path chose her. And then she spent three decades proving that where you start has nothing to do with how far you go

What We Discuss

This episode is about the kind of success that doesn’t make noise. No overnight wins, no viral moments — just thirty years of waking up early, working late, never cutting corners, and building something quietly enough that most people still don’t know the half of what she’s done. We talk about what it actually costs to be a woman building something serious in a world that asks you to do everything twice.

  • She Failed Into Her Calling She didn’t apply for dental school — she was placed there after failing to get into general medicine. The students who did get in made sure she knew it. She made sure they regretted it. That rejection became the engine that ran everything that followed.
  • The Motorbike She Sold Without Asking The first dental equipment she ever owned was bought with money from selling her husband’s motorbike — without telling him. She turned the ground floor of their house into a clinic while he worked above. He wasn’t happy. Now he laughs about it. That’s the whole story in one image.
  • Thirty Years and Still Standing Master Care opened in 1993. In a country where most businesses don’t survive a decade, it has outlasted almost everything around it. The reason isn’t luck or timing — it’s that she never once put gold under porcelain and told a patient it was all porcelain. Small things. Done consistently. For thirty years.
  • Women Have to Work Twice She says it plainly: to reach the same place as a man, a woman does the work twice. She worked 13 to 14-hour days for years. Nobody knew. Nobody was supposed to know. She wasn’t doing it for recognition — she was doing it because her family needed a foundation and she was the one building it.
  • She Slowed Down on Purpose When her children were young, she made a deliberate choice to grow more slowly — to take fewer patients, to be home more. She says she doesn’t regret a single appointment she missed. The business would catch up. Her children’s childhood wouldn’t.
  • She Built Things No One Knows About She is a co-founder of Cambodia’s dental disciplinary council under the Ministry of Health — the body that now governs the entire dental profession in the country. She has never been publicly credited for it. She brought it up in this conversation almost as an afterthought. That tells you everything about how she operates.
  • She Hires People Better Than Her Every doctor at Master Care is, in her words, more skilled than she is in their specialty. She doesn’t hire people she can manage easily. She hires people she has to respect. And she says the ones who stay do so because their values match — not just because of the salary.
  • She Never Stopped Learning At her current age, she is still studying English. She reads constantly — business books, biographies, philosophy. She says reading is the one habit that has given her the clearest thinking across every challenge she’s faced. She started before it was popular. She hasn’t stopped.
  • Her Message to Young Women Who Want to Build Something Don’t rush. The desire to succeed fast is the fastest way to fail. Use your own resources first. Build one step before you reach for the next. The women she worries about most are the ones who want to skip from step one to step ten — because she’s watched too many of them fall on the way down.
  • What She Wants Her Clients to Know After thirty years, the promise is the same as day one: quality over price. The people treating you at Master Care are not there to fill a quota. They are some of the most carefully selected professionals in their field. That’s what she built. That’s what she’s leaving behind.
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EP – 09

June 20, 2025

She Carries Every Dream Like It's Her Own

Over a thousand couples. Eleven years. And not one moment she describes as a crisis — not because the road was easy, but because she had mapped every step of it before she ever opened the door.

What We Discuss

This conversation is about what it looks like when someone builds a business not from ambition alone, but from a deep, deliberate investment in other people’s most important days. She is not simply a bridal stylist. She is the architect of the experience that surrounds one of the most significant moments in a couple’s life — and she treats every single one as if it were her own.

  • Over a Thousand Couples, One Standard Since opening in 2014, the business has served well over a thousand couples — roughly a hundred weddings every year for eleven years. What is most striking is not the volume, but the consistency. The level of care described for the first couple is indistinguishable from the most recent.
  • Thinking Five Years Before You Start Before she ever opened, her mother-in-law gave her a principle that shaped everything: think five years ahead before you launch. Not tomorrow. Not next year. Five years. She spent years as a fashion designer and stylist building knowledge, reading the market, and preparing for problems she hadn’t yet faced — so that when she opened, those problems felt manageable rather than overwhelming.
  • She Left for Australia and Came Back Ready She had been showcasing Khmer fashion designs abroad. Within one month of returning home, she launched the bridal salon. The preparation was already complete. The time away had given her clarity on where the local market was underserved and what she wanted to build that no one else had built yet.
  • The One Rule She Never Breaks: Be Yourself She has never copied a competitor. Not because she didn’t see successful ones around her, but because she understood that copying someone else’s success doesn’t give you that person’s foundation. She asks herself one question consistently: what is mine to offer? Everything else follows from that answer.
  • Why She Says She Has Had No Major Obstacles When the host expresses surprise at this — given that most business owners describe significant crises — she explains it precisely: preparation reframes obstacles. When you have thought through every scenario in advance, what others experience as a crisis you experience as a familiar problem with a familiar path forward. Her mother-in-law’s words became a discipline, not just advice.
  • The Fifteen-Point Framework Behind Every Wedding She developed a fifteen-point operational checklist that maps every vendor, every handoff, and every moment of a wedding day. She knows each vendor’s role in depth — not because she does their job, but because when a client asks anything, she can answer. That depth of knowledge is what allows her team to move together without friction and what allows her to remain calm when variables change.
  • The Calm That Comes From Genuine Care When asked about maintaining composure in high-pressure moments, she makes a distinction that matters: there is a difference between performing seriousness and genuinely caring. She says she does not force herself to be calm. She simply cares — completely, every time — and that care produces its own steadiness. When she encounters a demanding client, she does not see difficulty. She sees a new perspective, a detail she hadn’t considered, something to carry forward.
  • What Nokia Has to Do With a Bridal Salon The host raises the story of Nokia’s collapse: a company that did nothing wrong by the standards of its time, but failed to grow beyond them. Her response is direct. Recognition and reputation are not a destination. The moment you stop evolving your craft and your presence, you begin the decline. She plans not just for next season’s weddings but for the next chapter of what the brand can become.
  • Three Principles She Stands On When asked to distill everything into three words, she writes them down: know yourself, have clear goals, understand what you are doing. She is specific about the third. Understanding is not the same as executing. You can go through every motion and still not understand the people you are serving. The ones who truly understand can navigate anything.
  • The Family That Makes It Possible Her husband and mother-in-law have never once told her she was wrong. Not because they agree with everything — but because they chose to support rather than critique. She describes this as the source of her energy. When you carry other people’s dreams professionally, you need people at home who carry yours.
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EP – 10

June 27, 2025

Transforming Hardship into Success: The Power of Education, Discipline, and Mindset

This deeply moving episode explores how a resilient mindset, unwavering discipline, and commitment to education transformed a cyclo driver into a prominent leader. It offers profound philosophical insights on overcoming poverty, finding inner peace, ethical leadership, and why taking control of daily habits unlocks a truly successful, fulfilling future.

What We Discuss

In this episode, we explore what it takes to rise from the ashes of extreme hardship — how a former cyclo driver transformed his life to become a top government minister, and why he believes unwavering discipline, education, and moral character are the true keys to unlocking human potential.

  • The Invaluable Power of Education Even when born into difficult circumstances, education is the great equalizer. The speaker notes that despite his mother being an uneducated street vendor, she instilled the absolute necessity of learning, proving that education and discipline are the ultimate tools to build a person’s true worth in society.
  • Reframing Hardships Difficulties are a natural law of life for everyone, regardless of wealth or status. Instead of feeling crushed by the weight of a “problem,” the advice is to view it simply as a task that needs to be solved with intense focus, discipline, and mental clarity.
  • The Philosophy of Respect and Continuous Growth A core principle for success is treating everyone with equal respect—compared to a bee that gathers sweet nectar without judging the color of the flower. This humility and good character naturally open doors, attract good people, and foster lifelong learning.
  • Overcoming the “Born Poor” Mindset Coming from a rural or impoverished background does not limit human potential. True wealth lies in intellect, ambition, and self-belief. The discussion emphasizes that anyone has the capacity to develop themselves and reach the highest levels of society if they refuse to be defeated by their starting point.
  • Ethics and Teamwork over Ideas Having good ideas is never enough. To turn ideas into reality, you need strong morals, discipline, and the emotional intelligence to work harmoniously with others. Being a person that others genuinely want to work with is crucial.
  • Living Without Regrets Reflecting on decades of survival and leadership, the ultimate takeaway is to live with zero regrets. Every experience should be embraced, and even unintentional mistakes are simply the essential “flavor of life” that builds resilience.
  • Change Your Habits, Change Your Life The closing message urges the younger generation to avoid the modern trap of instant gratification. By building self-awareness, weighing actions carefully, and focusing only on doing things that bring true value, you can dictate your own future.
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EP – 11

July 05, 2025

A Lifelong Dream Realized: The Power of Patience, Lifelong Learning, and Uplifting Others

This inspiring episode explores how a childhood dream of making films, born in a refugee camp, survived decades of patience and hard work. It offers profound wisdom on the power of a positive mindset, lifelong learning, and the importance of funding and uplifting the next generation of creative talent.

What We Discuss

In this episode, we explore what it means to hold onto a single dream for 40 years — how a former refugee built successful businesses in France before becoming the “guardian angel” of Cambodian cinema, and why he believes uplifting others is the ultimate key to success.

  • The Power of a Youthful Mindset He explains that staying young and fresh is rooted in mindset. By focusing on the beauty surrounding us—rather than stressing over problems—and choosing to live in the present moment, we can maintain our energy and avoid unnecessary worries.
  • A 40-Year Dream Seeing his first film, The Snake Man, at a refugee camp in Thailand at age 11 sparked a lifelong dream. He didn’t study film—instead, he worked in various fields like business and real estate in France and Cambodia—but he never lost sight of his ultimate goal.
  • Becoming a Guardian Angel for Filmmakers Realizing that young Cambodian directors lacked funding and experience, he stepped in to support them. By funding successful, award-winning projects like Diamond Island, Sound of the Night, and White Building, he provided the crucial chance they needed to prove their talent on the global stage.
  • Acting Without the Pressure of Casting Despite his success, he avoids traditional casting calls due to the pressure. Instead, opportunities come to him naturally—like landing a role in a French film simply by having a coffee with the director and speaking Spanish.
  • The “Sponge” Philosophy of Lifelong Learning He believes we must act like dry sponges, constantly absorbing knowledge and experiences from our surroundings. He emphasizes that personal growth never stops; we must keep learning until our last breath.
  • Overcoming Setbacks with Perspective When facing failure or obstacles, his strategy is to take things step by step, as rushing only leads to slipping. Remembering the extreme hardships of the Khmer Rouge and the pain of missing his hardworking widowed mother in France helps him put all modern challenges into perspective.
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EP – 12

August 15, 2025

Rebuilding a Nation's Soul: The Philosophy of Art, History, and Preserving Culture

This insightful episode explores how a deep passion for art history transformed a curious student into a dedicated cultural curator. It offers profound reflections on the philosophical value of artistry, the devastating impact of war on culture, and the vital importance of rebuilding intellectual spaces for our future generations.

What We Discuss

In this episode, we explore what it means to dedicate your life to an underappreciated field — how a deep curiosity for visual arts led one man to become an art curator and researcher, and why he believes understanding our cultural history is essential for Cambodia’s true development.

  • The Path Less Traveled: Instead of becoming an artist himself, he was driven by curiosity to understand the “why” behind the art. Despite a lack of local programs and a societal focus on wealth, he pursued art history and visual arts, finding a sense of privilege in studying something so unique.

  • Following Passion Over Pressure: Growing up in the aftermath of the civil war in Battambang, his father wanted him to become a soldier. Encouraged by his mother, however, he chose to follow his love for art and culture, learning that true success in life comes from doing what you love rather than chasing money.

  • Creating a Space for Intellectuals: Co-founding “Silapak Trotchaek Pneik” with his aunt—an intellectual who survived the Khmer Rouge—they aimed to recreate the Enlightenment-era coffee houses of Europe. They transformed a house into a gallery and library, creating a much-needed sanctuary for artists and intellectuals to meet, discuss, and grow.

  • The Impact of War on Art: He explains the paradox of Cambodia’s rich artistry contrasted with the financial struggles of modern artists. War and financial crises devastate infrastructure and culture—as seen in both Cambodia and Iraq—because destroying art and artifacts is fundamentally a method of destroying a nation’s ethnicity and identity.

  • Rebuilding the Artistic Foundation: Acknowledging that the tragic loss of intellectuals and artists during the Khmer Rouge set the country back by generations, he emphasizes that true national development requires heavy investment in artistic infrastructure. Art is not just a luxury, but a vital component of a society’s overall well-being.

  • The Philosophy of Delayed Judgment: Training as a visual arts analyzer has taught him to observe deeply rather than react quickly. He believes that pausing to gather information and analyzing the small details—whether questioning the true meaning of “perfection” in a sculpture or facing challenges in life—leads to a calmer, more grounded mindset.

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EP – 13

August 25, 2025

Building Trust and Healing: The Journey of Le Premier Clinic

This episode delves into the creation of Le Premier Clinic, exploring the challenges of launching a healthcare business during the pandemic. Dr. Tiv Virak shares his dedication to treating chronic pain, the importance of a multi-disciplinary medical approach, and how strong leadership and continuous team training drive long-term success.

What We Discuss

In this episode, we explore the immense challenges and profound dedication required to build a top-tier medical facility in Cambodia — how Dr. Tiv Virak navigated the pandemic to establish Le Premier Clinic, and why he believes changing the public mindset is key to treating chronic pain.

  • Changing Mindsets on Chronic Pain: Dr. Virak highlights how many elderly patients resign themselves to chronic pain, believing it’s an incurable part of aging. He emphasizes that with proper care, multi-disciplinary approaches, and patient cooperation, chronic pain is highly treatable and manageable.
  • Overcoming Early Obstacles: Starting the clinic in 2018 without sufficient funds and lacking initial support from his own family, Dr. Virak faced immense pressure. When the pandemic hit, rather than giving up, he used the downtime to personally train his team, spending three years building a strong foundation of technical skills.
  • The Power of a Multi-Disciplinary Approach: Healing chronic pain isn’t a one-size-fits-all solution. Dr. Virak explains the dangers of medical professionals working in silos (pharmacists vs. surgeons vs. massage therapists) and stresses the necessity of integrating various treatments under strong leadership to look at the “big picture.”
  • The Battlefield of Business: He likens running a business to entering a battlefield filled with unpredictable storms. Success requires resilience, a clear vision, and the willingness to take on the heavy burden of responsibility—ensuring that every department aligns to offer a holistic, one-stop service for patients.
  • A Commitment to Continual Improvement: Despite achieving a level of service that rivals expensive overseas hospitals, Dr. Virak acknowledges that there is always room for growth. He openly shares his goal of expanding the facility to eventually include surgical capabilities, reinforcing his mission to prioritize patient healing above all else.
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EP – 14

August 28, 2025

Building Trust and Financial Security: Leadership Lessons in the Insurance Sector

This insightful episode features Mr. Prou Sithon, CEO of Forte Life Assurance, discussing the fundamental principles of building trust in business. It explores his expertise on corporate leadership, the value of life insurance in Cambodia, and how financial literacy empowers families to secure their futures against unpredictable hardships.

What We Discuss

In this episode, we explore the critical role of financial security — how Mr. Prou Sithon built a career rooted in reliability, and why he believes establishing absolute trust is the most important foundation for both personal leadership and the life insurance industry.

  • The Foundation of Trust in Business He answers the central question of the episode: what it truly takes to build trust. In an industry where customers are paying for a promise of future protection, he explains that total transparency, consistency, and a customer-first approach are absolute non-negotiables for long-term success.
  • Overcoming Misconceptions About Insurance He addresses the common misunderstandings many Cambodians have regarding life insurance. Rather than viewing it as an unnecessary expense, he explains why shifting the public mindset is necessary to ensure the financial well-being and security of families facing unexpected life events.
  • The Weight of Leadership Drawing from his experience leading Forte Life Assurance, he details the heavy responsibility that comes with managing people’s financial futures. He discusses how to effectively lead a corporate team so that every department understands the gravity of their promise to the customers.
  • The Importance of Financial Literacy He advocates for better personal financial management across the country. He highlights that understanding how to protect one’s wealth against unforeseen risks—and proactively preparing for the future—is just as critical to a nation’s overall economic growth as generating daily income.
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EP – 15

August 29, 2025

Rebuilding a Nation Through Education: The Power of Moral Leadership and Compassion

This inspiring episode explores how to rebuild a nation through education. Dr. Kol Pheng, Founder of Paññāsāstra University, shares his profound philosophy on moral leadership, the transformative power of compassion, and why our future depends entirely on raising a wise, globally minded generation dedicated to helping others.

What We Discuss

In this episode, we explore what it truly takes to reconstruct a country’s intellectual foundation from the ground up — how a former Minister of Education founded Paññāsāstra University of Cambodia, and why he believes that teaching morality and compassion is just as important as academic excellence.

  • Rebuilding Through Education: He discusses the vital role of education in healing and advancing a nation that has endured immense hardship, emphasizing that true national development always starts inside the classroom.
  • The Philosophy of Meaningful Living: Sharing his lifelong motto, “Life is meaningless without helping others,” he explains that material success alone can never fulfill a person, and that true purpose is found only through acts of kindness and service to the community.
  • The Pillars of Moral Leadership: He outlines the essential qualities of a good leader. Without a strong foundation of ethics, empathy, and integrity, even the smartest leaders will fail to bring genuine peace and prosperity to their people.
  • Cultivating a Globally Minded Generation: He stresses the importance of raising students who are not just technically skilled, but who are wise, compassionate, and possess a global perspective, preparing them to solve complex future challenges rather than repeating the mistakes of the past.
  • The Motto of Wisdom and Morality: Reflecting on the core values of his university—Morality, Concentration, and Wisdom (Sīla, Samādhi, Paññā)—he explains how integrating spiritual and ethical teachings into modern education creates a far more resilient and harmonious society.
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