Michael Kutcher

Michael Kutcher

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Keynote Speaker, Perspective Shifter, Disability & Inclusion Champion He is a advisor for the Cerebral Palsy Foundation, Joshin and Finleys.

Michael Kutcher is a national Public Speaker who delivers a message of inspiration, hope and appreciation. Michael is also an advocate for organ donation and serves on the board of directors for Valeos.

06/08/2026

Some days remind me that being human is a lot messier than we like to admit.

There are days when the energy is there, the motivation is there, and everything seems to flow. Then there are days when nothing feels quite right, even when there is no obvious reason why.

The older I get, the more I realize that giving ourselves grace is not weakness. It’s wisdom. We are allowed to have off days. We are allowed to feel tired, frustrated, or out of sync without turning it into a judgment about who we are.

A bad day is not a bad life.

Sometimes it’s simply a reminder to be a little kinder to ourselves while we keep moving forward.

06/05/2026

Overthinking can make fear feel like truth and uncertainty feel like danger. But when we create space between ourselves and our thoughts, we begin to see things differently.

That space is where perspective can shift. That is why I created “Untangling Your Mind”.

Click here to get the full workbook: https://bit.ly/Untangling-Your-Mind-Workbook

Photos from Michael Kutcher's post 06/03/2026

Sometimes people think happiness comes from finally reaching a certain place in life. But I’ve learned that a lot can change when your perspective changes first.

The situations in our lives do not always immediately improve, but the way we carry them can. When we stop viewing every challenge as proof that we are failing, we start creating more space for gratitude, growth, and peace.

Looking happier is often less about having a perfect life and more about learning to see life differently.

Photos from Michael Kutcher's post 06/01/2026

I have been learning that sometimes the hardest thing to do is slow down long enough to acknowledge the life you have actually lived.

It is easy to keep reaching, building, chasing, and becoming. But every now and then, we need to stop and recognize the strength it took to get here.

There are chapters we prayed through, carried quietly, and somehow made it beyond.

And today is a good day to give yourself credit for the courage you almost forgot you had.

05/29/2026

We spend so much of our lives trying to outrun certain ages.

Thirty can feel “too late” when we compare ourselves to timelines, expectations, or where we thought we would be by now. But the moment a life is cut short at 30, the perspective shifts completely. Suddenly, 30 feels incredibly young.

That contrast says a lot about how perspective shapes the way we value life.

Sometimes we are so focused on where we think we should be that we forget the privilege of simply getting the time to become who we are still growing into.

05/27/2026

We tend to think we’re responding to life exactly as it is, but most of the time we’re responding to the meaning we’ve already attached to it.

The way we interpret our circumstances quietly shapes what we believe is possible for us.

When that meaning shifts, something subtle but powerful happens. Things don’t necessarily change externally right away, but internally, the way forward starts to look different.

That’s the work I bring into my keynotes, perspective shift, helping people see things differently and see how much meaning is shaping their experience. If you’d like me to speak at your next event, feel free to reach out.

Photos from Michael Kutcher's post 05/25/2026

It’s easy to get caught up in the pressure of everyday life and forget to step back and see what those moments actually represent.

A lot of what we move through daily is not just “hard” or “annoying.” It’s also connection, opportunity, responsibility, and care. And I’ve learned that meaning often shows up later, not in the moment itself.

That’s where perspective matters for me. Because when I slow down enough to look at things differently, I don’t just see what I’m dealing with. I start to see what it means.

And that changes everything about how I carry it.

05/22/2026

I’ve come to realize that impatience often shows up when I forget I’m not the only person experiencing a moment.

There are times when waiting feels personal, like something is taking longer than it should. But when I pause and look around, I’m reminded that everyone else in that space is carrying something too.

That shift changes everything for me. What I interpret as delay is often just life unfolding in parallel for different people, in different ways, at the same time.

It brings me back to perspective. And a little more patience with the moment I’m in.

05/20/2026

Some of the strongest people you know might be carrying things you may never fully see. They’re showing up while trying to keep themselves together behind the scenes.

I think that’s why conversations around mental health matter so much right now. Not because people suddenly became weaker, but because more people are finally willing to admit that being human can feel heavy sometimes.

What changes everything is when people stop feeling like they have to hide it.

A little more patience, a little more compassion, and a little more checking in on each other.

Because you never really know what someone is fighting through just to make it through the day.

05/18/2026

I think one of the most powerful things we can give another person is the feeling that they belong.

A lot of people go through life feeling judged for what makes them different. Over time, that can make someone feel invisible, even when they are surrounded by others.

Sometimes the biggest change starts with a simple perspective shift: choosing to see people for who they are, not just what makes them different.

The strongest communities are built when people feel valued, heard, and included. 💚

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