X‑Files | Kate Assaraf, DIP, and the Quiet Rebellion Against Unconscious Living

A grounded, Gen-X conversation with Kate Assaraf about conscious consumption, refill culture, and building human-centered systems inside a disposable world. No hype—just alignment, intention, and a quiet rebellion against autopilot living.

Jan 19
By Ian Primmer — CommonX Host

Sometimes the most important conversations don’t feel like interviews at all. They feel like alignment. That’s exactly what happened when Kate Assaraf joined us on the CommonX Podcast. No hype. No guru energy. No hard sell. Just a grounded, curious, deeply human conversation about consciousness, consumption, power, and what it means to live intentionally inside systems we didn’t design—but still have to navigate.

Why This Conversation Mattered

Gen-X didn’t grow up being told to “manifest” or “optimize.” We grew up learning how to endure. We were taught to walk it off, show up, and keep moving—often at the cost of our health, attention, and inner clarity. Kate’s work doesn’t reject that toughness. It refines it. What struck us most wasn’t a philosophy—it was her discipline around awareness. Kate doesn’t argue against success, ambition, or building things at scale. She questions what happens when scale outpaces humanity—and why that distinction matters.

Consciousness Without the Costume

Kate Assaraf isn’t interested in labels like “minimalist,” or “Anti-Capitalist".” What she practices—and teaches—is conscious choice. Less autopilot. More intention. That philosophy shows up in how she lives, how she builds, and how she formulates DIP—a product designed not to stimulate, spike, or hijack your nervous system, but to support clarity and presence.

We used DIP the morning of the recording. What surprised me most was that I felt like I already understood who Kate Assaraf truly is before I ever used the product. As I opened the simple, unpretentious box, something clicked almost immediately—longevity, conservation, and a personality larger than life.

DIP Products, quality handmade in the US raising environmental awareness.

Reading the back, it became clear I wasn’t just using a “soap product.” I was continuing a rebellious Gen-X lifestyle—the same one my life has always been framed by. I felt it immediately: the quiet peace of mind that comes from honoring a personal agreement with the karma of the world—not burning through plastic bottles, not feeding a system that treats convenience as disposable.

We’re not big on corporate gimmicks here at CommonX, and that’s not what this was. What Kate Assaraf gave us was something far more personal—an experience that unexpectedly sent me back in time.

I was a kid again, riding my bike to Minder’s Meats in Bremerton, Washington, the cool clatter of baseball cards in the spokes, a dollar in my pocket—maybe. Garbage Pail Kids. Pop Rocks. That first taste of the gum that came with the cards. Childhood. A time when life was simple, happiness was easy, and it didn’t matter how much money I made or what clothes I wore.

In that moment, I realized I wasn’t just using a product—I was aligning with a movement I genuinely believe in.

Actual DIP Garbage Fail Kids card included with Product.

DIP: A Product That Matches the Philosophy

Here’s the part we don’t say lightly: we believe in DIP, and we believe in Kate’s genuine mission to create a product that is hand-crafted, cruelty-free, and plastic-free. Not because it was pitched. Not because it’s trendy. But because it aligns with the exact values we talk about on CommonX:

  • Intentional inputs

  • Nervous-system awareness

  • Sustainable energy over artificial urgency

  • Products that respect the human behind the habit

DIP isn’t about doing more. It’s about doing better—and doing it responsibly.

The Cultural Undercurrent: Scale vs. Humanity

During the conversation, we didn’t talk about tearing systems down—we talked about scale, and what gets lost when it grows too large. For Gen-X, this isn’t a new tension. We watched local mom-and-pop shops disappear, convenience replace craftsmanship, and one-click solutions slowly reshape how we interact with the world.

This wasn’t framed as an attack on Amazon or modern logistics. It was an honest look at the trade-offs—how efficiency can quietly distance us from people, places, and responsibility.

Kate doesn’t argue against progress. She asks a more grounded question: how do we build and participate in systems that reduce waste, respect the planet, and keep human intention at the center? Refill centers, conscious consumption, and smaller-scale solutions aren’t about nostalgia—they’re about sustainability, accountability, and choosing not to outsource our values.

The real question isn’t convenience versus conscience. It’s whether we’re still paying attention. And that’s why refill is the new record store.

Transparent “Dip” logo including direct link to dipalready.com

Final Thought

CommonX tribute to Kate Assaraf and rebelling against the disposable.

We meet a lot of cool people and have had some incredible guests over the years. Some guests come on to promote. Others come on to connect. Kate Assaraf did the latter.

And for those listening—Gen-X builders, skeptics, parents, veterans, entrepreneurs—this episode wasn’t about believing everything. It was about asking better questions.

We’re humbled to have met such an incredible, grounded, and genuinely thoughtful human. We encourage you to explore DIP Premium Hair Care and learn more about Kate’s Renegade Honesty approach—her passion for intentional living, responsible products, and protecting smaller, mom-and-pop businesses that prioritize environmental awareness without defaulting to one-click convenience.

🎧 This episode is coming soon. Clips and production updates will be shared in the weeks ahead.
🔗 Explore DIP and Kate Assaraf’s work. Choose intention over autopilot.

CommonX

Explore DIP Today!

CommonX

Kate Assaraf, Founder and CEO of DIP

Kate Assaraf, Founder & CEO of DIP

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Jared Ball: The Voice Breaking Through the Noise

Dr. Jared Ball brings sharp intellect and unfiltered honesty to the CommonX conversation, challenging the narratives we’re fed and pushing us to think bigger. In a world drowning in noise, his clarity cuts through — and this episode reminds us why real dialogue still matters.

Every once in a while, a voice enters the room and changes the temperature. Not by volume, not by theatrics — but by substance. Professor Jared Ball is one of those voices.

When he joined us on CommonX, it wasn’t just an interview. It was a masterclass in clarity, contradiction, accountability, and raw honesty. Ball talks like a man who has seen the system from the inside, understood its gears, and still chooses to challenge it — not for fame, not for followers, but because he believes in truth.

And that matters.

It matters in an age where information travels faster than understanding. It matters when algorithms reward outrage instead of integrity. It matters when Gen X — our people — are looking around the digital landscape and asking, “Who can we trust?”

Jared Ball is one of the few who can answer that question with his work, not his words alone.

The Genius Behind “I Mix What I Like!”

Ball’s podcast “I Mix What I Like!” is a perfect reflection of the man himself:

  • unapologetically intelligent

  • culturally grounded

  • politically fearless

  • historically aware

  • creatively bold

The show doesn’t spoon-feed. It doesn’t pander. It challenges listeners to think, to interrogate narratives, to understand power, media, and culture from angles most people never see.

Supporting this show isn’t just supporting Jared Ball. It’s supporting critical thinking. It’s backing the kind of media that refuses to let anyone off the hook — not the government, not corporate media, not us as individuals.

This is the kind of content that makes people better.

A Conversation That Hit Home for CommonX

Our audience felt it.

We felt it.

Jared felt it too.

The chemistry was undeniable — two Gen X hosts hungry for depth, a guest armed with decades of research and lived experience, and a conversation that mattered. The episode reminded us why CommonX exists in the first place:

to explore the overlooked corners of humanity, culture, and truth with courage and compassion. Ball brought that out of us.

Honoring a Voice the World Needs

So today, we stand with Jared Ball.

We support his message.

We amplify his podcast.

We encourage our audience to seek out voices that challenge the mainstream narrative — voices that push us to think harder, dig deeper, and grow.

And in a media landscape built on clickbait and conformity, Ball’s authenticity is a rare and powerful thing.

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