Épisodes

  • Ep 124 - Creativity Grows Best in Good Soil
    Apr 6 2026

    Dawn and Ruth are celebrating Easter and swapping stories about Holy Week weather, canceled egg hunts, and Dawn's experience dyeing eggs at a New York community garden that sounds like the perfect "third space,” complete with potlucks, music, and the kind of welcoming energy that makes you want to stay all day.

    They're also reintroducing their new Patreon "Created Creative Conversations," themed around "seeds,” because that's how creative ideas actually work. They need nurturing, community, and the right conditions to grow. Join them for $10/month through the show notes.

    But the real magic happens when they share clips from past guests about how creativity actually emerges:

    Rob Bell describes novel-writing as this beautiful mix of loose direction and surprise—completely different from teaching, where you know where you're headed.

    Blessing talks about her "Sparkle Joy in New York City" microgrants, funded by leftover "Christmas Joy" money to spark neighborhood projects. Because sometimes the best ideas come from reimagining what you already have.

    Tyra explains how songs emerge while she's practicing—they require quiet focus and the willingness to let something unexpected unfold.

    Cathy Pino shares the story of writing "You are the Light of the World" at a stoplight and how community made it something that gets sung widely. Because creativity isn't just about the spark—it's about the people who help it grow.

    This episode is for anyone who's ever wondered how ideas actually turn into something real, or who needs reminding that creativity thrives in community, not isolation.

    LINKS: Join our Patreon here: patreon.com/u11072417

    00:09 Holy Week Weather

    01:10 Community Garden Eggs

    02:23 Egg Hunt Traditions

    03:11 Joining the Garden

    05:04 Seeds Theme Patreon

    06:46 Rob Bell Writing Flow

    10:37 Blessing Microgrants Joy

    12:04 Bubbles And Community Pins

    12:40 Scaling Micro Grants Citywide

    13:13 Funding From Christmas Joy

    13:53 Small Money Big Impact

    14:48 Songwriting With Tyra

    15:33 Tyra Creative Process Deep Dive

    21:44 Kathy Pinot Light Of World

    25:18 Themes Beginnings And Patreon

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    26 min
  • Ep 123 - Cleaning for Holy Week and the Moravian Gravestone Tradition (Because Sometimes Sacred Preparation Involves a Really Good Scrub)
    Mar 30 2026

    Dawn and Ruth dive into spring cleaning, hospitality, and the surprisingly spiritual act of preparing for Holy Week. But this isn't just about vacuuming. They're exploring a beautiful Moravian tradition of cleaning gravestones before Easter, bringing flowers, telling stories about loved ones, and sometimes even worshiping right there in the graveyard.

    They share the details of Ruth’s dining room refresh project, Dawn’s aversion to both cleaning and clutter, and coordinating the beautiful chaos of church logistics for Holy Week. This episode is for anyone who's ever felt like spiritual preparation should be more meaningful than just showing up, or who needs permission to find the sacred in the everyday work of making space—literally and figuratively—for what matters most.

    LINKS: Join our patreon and let us help you bring your project from idea to implementation: patreon.com/u11072417

    00:23 Cleaning and Clutter

    01:13 Dining Room Makeover

    01:53 Yellow Kitchen Memories

    03:01 Moravian Easter Prep

    04:55 Decluttering and Toys

    07:34 Holy Week Logistics

    08:57 Stained Glass Art Project

    11:20 Movies and Musicals

    12:57 Easter Plans

    14:43 Holy Week Encouragement

    15:54 Closing and Farewell

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    16 min
  • Ep 122 - Being Hearable: Regina Shands Stoltzfus on Teaching Peace, Trauma, and Sustaining Activism (Because You Can't Teach Peace Without Understanding Violence)
    Mar 23 2026

    If you enjoy Created Creative Podcast, we warmly invite you to become a patron: patreon.com/u11072417 For just $10 a month you can become part of our monthly Created Creative Conversations. Find out more below!

    Dawn and Ruth welcome Regina Shands Stoltzfus, Goshen College professor in northern Indiana and Mennonite Church USA member, whose journey from peace education and anti-racism training led her through activism, pastoring, seminary, and into higher education.

    Regina's book Resistance, Resilience, and Radical Love: Reflections on Blackness and Teaching Peace tackles something crucial: You can't teach peace without studying violence. And to do that effectively, you have to be "hearable" creating space where students can actually listen and engage without shutting down from trauma.

    She's using historical cases like the Wilmington Massacre of 1898 to teach about systemic violence, addressing secondary trauma in the classroom, and navigating the current political pressures around DEI work. Regina defines what it means to "work together for justice" across different professions and commits to creating an accountability plan for her next book on the seasons of activism life.

    This conversation is for educators, activists, and anyone wondering how to sustain justice work without burning out, how to teach difficult truths without retraumatizing people, and what it actually takes to be "hearable" in a world that's often too loud or too defensive to listen.

    LINKS: We love making this podcast for you and we'd love your support for! patreon.com/u11072417 Join at the $10 level and become part of Created Creative Conversations where you can get support from Dawn and Ruth and other creatives for your own new project! Want to write a book? Dreaming of starting a business? In April our theme is "Seeds of Possibility" and we'll help you get moving!

    Find out more about our guest, Regina Shands Stoltzfus: https://www.goshen.edu/academics/faculty/regina-shands-stoltzfus/

    00:17 New Tech Week

    00:30 Tech Rage Stories

    02:28 Get Human Help

    02:44 Church Water Timer

    03:32 Small Town Singalong

    07:30 Meet Regina

    08:11 From Activism to Academia

    11:16 Teaching in a Red State

    13:05 New Book Launch

    14:06 Teaching Peace Studies Violence

    16:35 Holding Trauma in Class

    17:35 Writing Through Sabbatical

    20:08 Course Design for Care

    21:32 Hearable as Black Professor

    23:22 Student Pushback and Growth

    25:12 Systemic Violence Rhymes

    26:00 Citations Over Opinions

    26:15 Fake Historian Cred

    26:47 First Solo Book

    27:39 Writing Through 2024

    29:30 Teaching Under Scrutiny

    31:09 Choosing the Right Rooms

    32:17 Work Together Justice

    34:30 Conflict Skills Everywhere

    36:53 Next Book Seasons

    38:14 Accountability Mapping Plan

    40:40 Memorial Day Deadline

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    44 min
  • Ep 121 - Small Steps, Big Hope: Kimberly Knowle Zeller on Blessings, Pilgrimage, and Writing
    Mar 16 2026

    Dawn and Ruth check in mid-Lent about rotating Wednesday pastorates, quirky church history discoveries, and children's theater outings before sitting down with Kim Knowle Zeller, ELCA pastor and writer from rural central Missouri.

    Kim's got two books under her belt: The Beauty of Motherhood: Grace-Filled Devotions for the Early Years (co-authored) and her new release Small Steps: Blessings to Lift Your Soul on the Pilgrimage of Life. But here's what makes her story compelling—the new book was born from her Camino de Santiago pilgrimage and a "100 Day Project" where she wrote one blessing daily.

    That practice changed everything. Kim learned to notice God's presence in small, ordinary moments instead of waiting for the big spiritual revelations. She reads "A Blessing for When the World Is on Fire" during the conversation, and honestly? It's the kind of blessing we all need right now.

    Kim shares her traditional publishing journey, marketing strategies, writing rhythms, and the truth about what blessings actually do. Spoiler: They don't guarantee safety or fix everything. But they do something maybe more important—they accompany people into a hard world so they're not alone.

    This conversation is for anyone who's ever wondered if the small, everyday moments of faith actually matter, or who needs permission to find the sacred in the ordinary instead of waiting for lightning bolts from heaven. Because sometimes the biggest hope comes from the smallest steps.

    If you love the work we do at Created Creative Podcast we invite you to become a patron! For just $10 a month you can be part of our Created Creative Conversations and get the support you need as you start your own next creative project! patreon.com/u11072417

    Kimberly Knowle-Zeller is a writer, pastor, wife, mother of two, and the co-author of The Beauty of Motherhood: Grace-Filled Devotions for the Early Years, and the upcoming book of blessings, Small Steps: Blessings to Lift Your Soul on the Pilgrimage of Life. She lives with her family in Cole Camp, Missouri. She loves to walk around her town of 1,000 and enjoy the many festivals and events, as well as attend her monthly book club and trivia night.

    IG: @kknowlezeller

    Substack: https://kimberlyknowlezeller.substack.com

    Website: kimberlyknowlezeller.com

    00:00 Blessing Not Bubblewrap

    00:21 Lent Check In

    00:36 Country Church Tales

    04:28 Marionettes In Central Park

    06:18 Meet Kim Knowle Zeller

    08:24 Beauty Of Motherhood Book

    11:00 Small Steps New Blessings

    12:13 Hundred Day Blessing Habit

    15:05 Structuring The Pilgrimage Lens

    16:33 Finding An Agent Publisher

    18:54 Landing a Publisher

    19:21 Marketing Through Connection

    20:22 Local Media and Events

    21:02 Substack Over Instagram

    21:48 Writing Rhythm and Routine

    23:47 Favorite Devotionals and Reads

    25:38 Reading a Blessing Aloud

    27:27 Coaching for Motivation

    29:57 Simple Reels and Tech Help

    32:52 Blessings as Creative Faith

    34:04 Final Thanks and Sendoff

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    35 min
  • Ep 120 - Living Outside the Box with Matt Smith (Because Some People Actually Know How to Do Everything)
    Mar 10 2026

    Matt Smith is a fellow yogi from rural Minnesota who makes the rest of us feel like we've been living in bubble wrap our whole lives. He grew up seasonal farm style: spring morel and Chicken of the Woods mushroom foraging, summer Boundary Waters canoeing, winter camping at 38-below (because apparently that's a thing people do for fun), and winter beaver trapping and fur handling. You know, typical Tuesday activities.

    But wait, there's more. Matt worked wildland firefighting, became a paramedic, and then decided to build his own log house over eight years without taking out any loans. Just learned as he went, recounting close calls with falling trees and a horse accident that probably should've ended differently.

    Oh, and in his spare time? He built a glamping retreat from scratch. Road, platforms, bathhouse, septic—the whole operation. It's earned over 100 five-star reviews because of course it has.

    Matt also talks about yoga, self-work, faith, community service, and how he's encouraging his kids to overcome fear and learn actual skills. You know, the kind of skills that matter when the power goes out or you need to, I don't know, survive in the actual world.

    This conversation is for anyone who's ever wondered what it looks like to live completely outside society's safety nets and create something entirely from your own hands and knowledge. Because some people really do know how to build a life from the ground up. Literally.

    LINKS:

    Join our patreon to support this podcast and to join Created Creative Conversations in April! patreon.com/u11072417

    00:00 Backcountry Beginnings

    00:17 Welcome and Boxes

    01:27 Meet Matt the Builder

    02:45 Farm Life Seasons

    03:18 Mushroom Foraging 101

    05:15 Chicken of the Woods

    07:43 Farming and Work Ethic

    08:45 Boundary Waters Adventures

    10:04 Wildland Fire to Paramedic

    10:40 Building a Log Home

    12:09 Close Calls and Mustangs

    13:37 Trapping and Fur Craft

    16:46 Glamping Retreat Origins

    18:22 Zillow Hobby Hunting

    18:37 Buying Land For Family

    19:08 Building The Glamping Retreat

    20:41 Community Know A Guy

    22:01 Reviews And Retreat Ideas

    22:48 Yoga And Self Work

    25:02 Kids Farm Freedom

    26:33 Fixing A Calf Leg

    29:00 You Are The Project

    31:45 Mindset And Failure

    33:28 Campfire Cooking Stories

    34:50 Documentary And Farewell

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    36 min
  • Ep 119 - Dangerous Songs with Richard Bruxvoort Colligan
    Mar 2 2026

    Some songs are too dangerous for the songbook—and that's exactly why we need them. Richard Bruxvoort Colligan joins Dawn and Ruth from Rochester, MN fresh from selling his Iowa home and diving into his first book: “Dangerous Songs: The Psalms in a Gloriously Disrupted Life,” dropping April 21 with a music-focused kickoff event.

    Here's what makes this conversation so compelling: Richard's not talking about the pretty, comforting Psalms you hear in worship. He's diving into the extreme songs—the ones about thriving, desolation, and unknowing. The violent ones. The frightening ones. The ones that make you go "wait, this is in the Bible?"

    He shares what he learned about ego through the editing process, his writing journey, and how the Psalms aren't just ancient poetry but raw, honest expressions of what it means to be human when life gets gloriously disrupted. Plus, he's got future book ideas brewing and runs "psalmimmersion" on Instagram.

    This episode is for anyone who has ever wondered why we sanitize the Bible's most honest moments, or who needs permission to bring their whole messy, complicated, disrupted life to their faith.

    LINKS:

    Support this podcast by becoming a patron patreon.com/u11072417

    Richard's music: https://www.worldmaking.net/

    Follow him @psalmimmersion on instagram

    Find Dawn's coaching at bigpicturebigpurpose.com

    Happy mail for ministers at consecrate.cratejoy.com

    00:00 Finding Yourself in Psalms

    00:26 NYC Snowstorm Survival

    02:06 Taxes That Actually Help

    05:20 School Closures and Meals

    05:57 Microwaves and Power Problems

    07:05 Space Heaters and Cold Venues

    09:21 Psalm for Conference Lament

    00:18 Meet Richard and New House

    11:30 Cat Talk and Holy Week Jokes

    12:24 Book Origin Story

    13:29 Dangerous Songs Book Launch

    13:53 Writing Process and Ego

    14:49 Author Editor Tension

    15:14 Daily Writing Routine

    16:43 Book Structure Explained

    18:21 Thriving Desolation Unknowing

    20:19 Devotional Use Today

    21:22 Launch Events Singing Psalms

    22:59 Beatles Meets Psalms

    23:50 Hard Psalms Canon Questions

    25:39 Future Books Promotion

    28:11 Personal Faith Takeaways

    29:44 Ancient Text Modern Shock

    31:22 Publisher Credits Wrap

    32:42 Where To Find Richard

    33:11 Final Thanks Call To Create

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    34 min
  • Ep 118 - What If "Normal" Is Actually the Problem? with MaryAnne McKibben Dana
    Feb 23 2026

    Dawn and Ruth start this one with Ash Wednesday updates and a wild circus reinvention Dawn attended (no animals, robotic performers, no ringmaster, just pure light-show magic). The circus becomes the perfect metaphor for what happens when you throw out the old playbook and create something entirely new.

    Enter MaryAnne McKibben Dana: Presbyterian pastor in Northern Virginia, writer, leadership coach, and author whose fourth book Better Than Normal drops April 14, 2026. MaryAnne's been living the "yes, and" improv principle for years (she literally wrote a book called God, Improv, and the Art of Living), and now she's taking it to the next level.

    Here's her thesis: What if most of our struggles aren't internal deficits but external cultural mismatches? What if "norm culture" is the problem? MaryAnne knows this from raising three neurodivergent kids through mental health challenges and watching how the world tries to squeeze them into boxes that don't fit.

    Better Than Normal argues for discarding the idea of a default human standard altogether. We're talking neurodivergence, race, immigration status, LGBTQ identity: all the ways humans actually exist versus how we pretend they should. The book's six chapters walk through shifts like moving from certainty to curiosity, from rigid categories to expansive possibilities.

    MaryAnne imagines a world where we question everything: the 40-hour work week, traditional schooling, all of it. Dawn coaches MaryAnne through her discomfort with self-promotion, reframing publicity as stewardship of an idea that can reduce suffering. Because this book? It's arriving at exactly the right cultural moment.

    LINKS: Find out more about MaryAnne McKibben Dana's work: https://www.maryannmckibbendana.net/

    Join our Patreon now and gain access to monthly group conversations and Q & A about creativity (starting in April) - patreon.com/u11072417

    00:00 Throwing Out “Normal”: Making Room for the Full Human Spectrum

    00:23 February Check-In: Lent, Ash Wednesday, and New York Stories

    01:07 Ashes on the Sidewalk: Church at a Busy Intersection

    01:47 Ash Thursday at the Circus: The Reinvented Big Top (No Animals!)

    03:45 From Acrobats to Expectations: Setting Up the “Living Outside the Norm” Theme

    04:48 Meet Maryanne McKibben Dana: Pastor, Writer, Coach, Runner

    06:58 Improv as Spiritual Practice: “Yes, And” for Real Life

    09:22 Introducing the New Book: From Hope During COVID to Better Than Normal

    11:15 What “Better Than Normal” Argues: Ditching Defaults, Choosing Curiosity

    13:42 If the Book Changed the World: Rethinking School, Work, and Assumptions

    15:07 Creativity on the Run: Capturing Ideas Mid-Workout

    16:22 Running vs. Yoga: Different Paths to a Creative Mind

    17:07 Finding a Writing Rhythm in the Margins of Life

    18:16 Writing Retreats: Making Space for Deep Work

    19:04 Virtual Co-Working & Pomodoro: The ‘Writing Table’ Method

    20:43 Creative Mentors & Inspiration (Substack, Austin Kleon, Carrie Newcomer)

    22:59 Where Creativity Meets Spirituality: Writing as a Journey

    25:11 Pastor + Writer: Boundaries, Authenticity, and Being ‘More Than One Thing’

    27:54 Coaching on Book Promotion: From Self-Promo to Stewardship

    30:43 Sincerity vs. Cynicism: Getting the Idea Into the World

    33:12 Release Details, Pre-Orders, and Final Send-Off

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    34 min
  • Ep 117 - "Other Significant Others" (Because Life Doesn't Always Fit the Nuclear Family Template)
    Feb 17 2026

    Dawn and Ruth are unpacking a lot this episode, and honestly? It's some of their most honest conversation yet. Things get real when they talk about Dawn's recent eye scare: floaters and peripheral flashes that sent her straight to urgent retina care. This leads to reflecting on Ruth's Guillain-Barré experience a year ago, her recovery, and how health scares change everything about how you show up for people. Because there are people who disappear when things get scary, and people who show up. Guess which ones matter?

    From there, they dive into The Other Significant Others, a book about lifelong, non-romantic partnerships and chosen family. Think: power of attorney, co-parenting arrangements, end-of-life decisions made by people who aren't legally married. Society gives all the benefits to romantic partnerships—tax breaks, bereavement leave, legal recognition—while other deep relationships get zero validation.

    They're exploring alternative family structures, cultural attitudes toward single adults, and how community-building works differently in Minnesota versus New York City. Plus, they're questioning inherited beliefs about friendship and why we act like romantic love is the only kind that really counts. This episode is for anyone who's ever felt like their most important relationships don't fit the template society expects.

    LINKS:

    We'd love your support! Join our patreon: patreon.com/u11072417

    00:00 Why One Person Can’t Meet All Your Needs (Friendship vs. Marriage)

    00:18 Meet Dawn & Ruth + The Suzuki Conservatory Info Night

    01:06 How Suzuki Works: Commitment, Interviews & Letting Kids Choose Instruments

    03:29 City Life Updates: Late Nights, Ash Wednesday & The Circus Next Door

    04:14 Eye Scare & Dr. Google: Floaters, Retina Fears, and Getting Checked

    06:37 A Year After Guillain-Barr: Recovery, Gratitude, and New Perspective on Illness

    08:11 “Just Show Up”: Visiting the Sick, Funerals, and Who Really Comes Through

    08:54 Your Support Network in Action + Introducing ‘The Other Significant Other’

    10:13 Redefining Life Partners: Legal Rights, Co-Parenting, and Chosen Family

    12:39 Society Built Around Romance: The Village Model and Making Space for Deep Friendships

    13:20 Friendships as ‘Real’ Family: Being Seen Beyond Marriage

    14:02 When the System Doesn’t Recognize Your People (Deathbeds & Bereavement)

    15:53 Nontraditional Paths to Parenthood: Co-Parenting, Donors, Surrogacy & IVF

    17:50 The Stigma of Being Unpartnered (and the ‘Not a Real Adult’ Moment)

    19:12 Money, Taxes, and Why Culture Pushes Unhappy Partnerships

    20:06 Place, Belonging, and Chosen Family: Minnesota vs. New York

    23:23 Discussion Guide: Learning to Say ‘I Love You’ to Friends

    25:17 History of Friendship Commitments: Sworn Brotherhoods & Romantic Pedestals

    26:03 Closing: Emergency Contacts, Legal Recognition, and Final Takeaways

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    27 min