Audiences forget content at a remarkable rate. What they keep is how the room felt: the moment the pace dropped and everyone exhaled, the minute of breath that turned strangers into a group, the point where an idea stopped being information and became something they could feel in the chest.
State is contagious. A regulated speaker changes the physiology of a room before the first slide loads, and a dysregulated one undoes a great deck without saying a wrong word. This is trainable, the same way the rest of capacity is trainable, and it changes what a talk can do.
The tools are the same ones taught in the method. Breath before the walk-on. Rhythm in the delivery, because a room entrains to cadence long before it parses an argument. Twenty years of teaching breath and nervous-system work, including years as the first U.S. Wim Hof Method instructor, turn out to be stage craft as much as method.
So a talk here comes with practice in it, in the room, live. Keynotes, workshops, and podcast conversations on capacity, the nervous system, regenerative enterprise, and living wide. The aim each time is simple: the audience leaves with something they felt, and a first rep they can repeat in the morning.