Épisodes

  • Parenting While Sick Is Brutal (And No One Talks About This)
    Feb 15 2026

    In this episode, I talk about how brutally hard it is to parent when you’re sick—and your kids are sick too. When your body is exhausted and your nervous system is overloaded, the thing you want most is solitude, quiet, and space to regulate. But parenting doesn’t pause.

    I explore the tension between needing solitude to heal and still showing up for your kids, even when you feel emotionally and physically depleted. I also revisit something I keep coming back to: repair matters more than perfection. You don’t have to be a flawless parent—you just have to be a present, repairing one.

    And because this episode drops on Valentine’s Day, I end with a reminder of love—not just romantic love, but the messy, tired, human love that exists in families every day.

    Happy Valentine’s Day. 💙

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    32 min
  • Playing with myself - exploring play
    Feb 3 2026

    What is play, really—and why does it seem to disappear as we get older?

    In this episode, I explore where play comes from, why it feels so essential when we’re young, and what happens when adulthood slowly pushes it aside. We look at how play shapes curiosity, creativity, connection, and even identity—and why so many of us feel disconnected from it later in life.

    But play isn’t automatically good. So we also ask the harder questions:
    Is play always healthy? Is it truly natural? Can play become escapism, avoidance, or even destructive?

    This is a reflective conversation about joy, seriousness, culture, and what we lose—and maybe can reclaim—when we stop playing.

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    38 min
  • What if your mind is its own universe?
    Jan 29 2026

    What if your mind is its own universe?

    In this episode, I explore the idea that we all carry vast inner worlds within us—inspired by The Life of Chuck, Walt Whitman’s Song of Myself, and the concept that we “contain multitudes.” This is a conversation about consciousness, identity, and the unseen inner landscapes that shape how we move through the world.

    I reflect on watching my kids’ universes grow—how their awareness, imagination, and sense of self are forming—and what it teaches me about being human. I also dive into those powerful moments in life when it feels like something larger is guiding you, nudging you toward a specific path. What is that feeling? Intuition? Fate? Alignment? Or the voice of your inner universe finally speaking clearly?

    This episode blends philosophy, poetry, parenting, and personal experience to explore meaning, direction, and the mystery of existence.

    Perfect for listeners interested in:

    • Philosophy of mind and consciousness

    • Walt Whitman and poetic meaning

    • Parenting reflections

    • Intuition and life purpose

    • Existential questions and mindfulness

    A quiet, thoughtful exploration of what it means to live inside—and alongside—the universe within.

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    32 min
  • Be a better parent
    Jan 21 2026

    In this episode, I reflect on getting back into meditation, the unexpected wisdom of Bluey, and how online negativity has pushed me to step back from social media. I explain why negative comments come from a specific sample of people—not reality—drawing from lessons I learned in grad school research classes.

    I also talk about parenting stress, the statistic that 20% of couples split within the first year after having a child, why betraying a child’s safety is the deepest form of betrayal, and why so many of us are afraid to die.

    We wrap it up with a challenge: maybe growth doesn’t come from comfort—but from learning to embrace struggle bubbles.

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    38 min
  • The Minnesota Shooting happened an Hr from my home.
    Jan 9 2026

    On January 7th, an ICE-related shooting in Minnesota shook communities across the state. In this episode, I process what it feels like to live just an hour away from where it happened—and how proximity makes events like this hit differently. When something violent and politically charged happens so close to home, it’s no longer just a headline. It’s personal, unsettling, and deeply confusing.

    I talk about the difficulty of knowing what’s true when social media is flooded with opinions, partial information, and emotionally charged narratives. How do we decipher what’s really happening when every platform seems designed to divide us further? And how do we hold compassion for people on both sides of an issue when fear, anger, and grief are running so high?

    This episode explores what it’s like living in a place where communities feel fractured, trust feels fragile, and uncertainty feels constant—while still trying to stay human, empathetic, and grounded.

    I also shift gears and share a personal moment of light in the middle of all this heaviness: my recent trip to Key West and attending my first pole vault event in two years. After being away from the sport for so long, I was genuinely surprised to be welcomed back with open arms. That experience reminded me how powerful community can be—even when the world feels divided.

    This episode is about proximity, perspective, truth, compassion, and finding moments of connection when things feel unstable.

    Topics include:

    • The January 7th ICE shooting in Minnesota

    • Living close to a traumatic, divisive event

    • Sorting truth from noise on social media

    • Political and social division in local communities

    • Fear, empathy, and compassion for multiple perspectives

    • Returning to pole vault after two years away

    • Finding belonging and connection again

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    33 min
  • Christmas isn't as Christian as we think. When strangers touch your kids
    Dec 20 2025

    This episode is a mix of reflection, discomfort, and honesty.

    I talk about how Christmas isn’t entirely as Christian as we think , why I don’t like people touching my kids in public, and a run-in I had at Costco that raised serious questions about boundaries and protection. I also reflect on turning 40—and a realization about an old pattern of trying to fix other people’s stress so I don’t have to feel my own anxiety.

    Faith, parenting, aging, and self-awareness—all colliding in one episode.

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    36 min
  • Why kids are afraid of vacuums, and adults have temper tantrums
    Nov 18 2025

    Why are toddlers afraid of the dark? Why do they think there are monsters under the bed? In this episode, I break down the brain science behind toddler fear, including how the amygdala “coming online” triggers imagination, anxiety, and nighttime panic.

    I also explore the surprising connection between toddler tantrums and adult emotional meltdowns, and why both come back to the same neurological systems.

    Then we dive into what Inside Out 2 teaches us about emotional regulation, identity, and the idea that we are not our emotions—a concept that matters for kids and adults.

    Finally, I ask a question so many people avoid: Are “thoughts and prayers” actually meaningless, or is there real psychological impact behind offering support?

    Perfect for listeners interested in parenting, psychology, childhood development, emotional intelligence, and how the brain shapes behavior at every age.

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    33 min
  • How do you determine what's right and wrong? I mean the villain is the hero in their story
    Nov 12 2025

    In this episode, I dive into the messy, beautiful question of how we decide what’s right and wrong—and why sometimes the hero is the villain of their own story. I talk about my love-hate relationship with Christmas—how obligation can drain the magic out of it, but somehow Christmas movies, my kids, and love always bring it back. It’s a conversation about morality, meaning, and finding light in the tension between what we should do and what we feel.

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    32 min