16 episódios

Welcome to the Affliction/Resilience podcast hosted by New York Times Bestselling author Judy L. Mandel. We’ve all had some kind of affliction. Whether it’s psychological, physical or situational. And we all deal with adversity in different ways. In each episode, we’ll talk to people who recognize and use their own affliction in their lives, as well as psychologists and other experts who counsel them. It may be addiction recovery, the trauma of disease and treatment, or in the case of the host, her role as a replacement child. Hopefully you will take away useful information for your own life. Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/judy-mandel/support

Affliction & Resilience Judy Mandel

    • Educação

Welcome to the Affliction/Resilience podcast hosted by New York Times Bestselling author Judy L. Mandel. We’ve all had some kind of affliction. Whether it’s psychological, physical or situational. And we all deal with adversity in different ways. In each episode, we’ll talk to people who recognize and use their own affliction in their lives, as well as psychologists and other experts who counsel them. It may be addiction recovery, the trauma of disease and treatment, or in the case of the host, her role as a replacement child. Hopefully you will take away useful information for your own life. Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/judy-mandel/support

    A Personal Conversation about Asian Hate in America

    A Personal Conversation about Asian Hate in America

    This is a bit of a different kind of podcast for me. It's a very honest and personal talk with a friend about Asian hate in America, and really about all forms of racial hatred. Rachel Wong and I are friends through writing workshops and classes. We’ve talked recently about the rise of anti Asian violence in the country. I wanted to talk to Rachel about her up close experiences in NYC, what has changed in the last few years and through the pandemic, what’s basically the same and her thoughts about what we can do about it. I also want to ask her about her book, since it focuses on Anti-Asian hate.

    Rachel Wong became a writer at 14 when she sold her first non-fiction short story to a magazine. She has worked for tech startups, agencies, even an international law firm. In her free time, she helps run monthly board game socials and collects rare plants.  She has two degrees in Creative Writing (BA + MFA) and her current (and longstanding) project is a speculative fiction YA novel called Catalyst. She lives in New York City.

    I asked Rachel what she recommends for action to combat Asian hate and she suggests the following:

    Biden signed AAPI protections into law but we need more action on a state level. Please petition your local leaders to sign protections for these increased race-based hate crimes. California and New York, big cities in particular, have a spike in these crimes.

    There are a few funds that I can recommend:

    - Hate Is A Virus commUNITY Action fund

    - #StopAsianHate: Support AAF (Asian American Federation) gofundme campaign

    - AAPI Community Fund

    If you don’t have money to spare but have time, volunteer groups like Compassion in Oakland and “Community Angels” in NYC chinatown chaperone Asian elders who go out on errands, so they won’t be alone

    For education and resources.:

    https://www.laaunch.org/

    https://hateisavirus.org/

    https://www.sendchinatownlove.com/ (great foundation that also does “gift a meal” funds for the needy)

    https://www.taaf.org/

    An op-ed about Asian-Black Solidarity: https://www.cnn.com/2021/03/19/opinions/black-asian-american-solidarity-jones/index.html

    More of “what we can do:” https://www.instagram.com/evachen212/guide/ways-to-help/17906750905739799/?utm_medium=copy_link


    ---

    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/judy-mandel/message
    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/judy-mandel/support

    • 42 min
    Being a Young Woman Secret Service Agent Changed Her Life

    Being a Young Woman Secret Service Agent Changed Her Life

    Melanie Lentz became a Secret Service special agent at twenty-two, one of the youngest female agents ever hired. She spent eight years in the Los Angeles Field Office where she worked financial crime investigations, investigated threats against the President, Vice President and others, and participated in countless protection assignments all over the country and abroad. Her last assignment was Former First Lady Nancy Reagan. At the same time that Mrs. Reagan passed away, Melanie's personal life had fallen apart, and she decided to leave the job she loved and start over in her thirties. She credits the Secret Service for giving her the tools to start protecting herself. She's the author of Agent Innocent: How the Secret Service Changed My Life and the upcoming Advance Work: A Personal Protection Assignment 7-Day Workbook.

    Agent Innocent: How the Secret Service Changed My Life is available on Amazon and Smashwords.

    www.melanielentz.com


    ---

    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/judy-mandel/message
    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/judy-mandel/support

    • 31 min
    Newsflash: We are all going to die. But you can make it easier for your loved ones.

    Newsflash: We are all going to die. But you can make it easier for your loved ones.

    In this episode I talked with Catherine Turner about something we don’t want to think about—our own death. I wanted to know how her new book, Create a Legacy of Love:  Everything Your Loved Ones Need to Know (When you can no longer tell them), might give people some peace of mind as they think about the inevitable, even if it's far off. I also wanted to ask her about her own resilience after she lost her baby just days before his expected delivery date, and how she felt that experience actually made her a better mother for her two subsequent children. That is a story of growth and love and perspective that I didn't anticipate.

    Her book serves as a guide and a workbook to organize oneself, so that when it is their turn to die, they aren’t leaving their loved ones battered with questions and decisions that can fracture families who are left to grapple amongst themselves at such a highly charged time emotionally.  It frames the inevitability of death with fresh perspective: an opportunity to show your family how much you care by providing them with all the answers to their questions right when they need them the most. You can find the book on her website: LegacyofLoveBook.com


    ---

    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/judy-mandel/message
    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/judy-mandel/support

    • 26 min
    The First Thing She Had to Unpack was Witnessing Her Mother's Murder

    The First Thing She Had to Unpack was Witnessing Her Mother's Murder

    Keyonna Cox is an Entrepreneur, Conversationalist, Creative Director, and the Author of Unpacked Baggage: Getting To Know Keyonna Cox From A to Z, scheduled for June 2021 release. At the age of two, her mother was brutally murdered while Keyonna was present in the home. She obviously had some baggage to unpack herself. She’s become very successful despite some of that baggage, and I wanted to find out how.

    Keyonna has been featured as a business leader in Business Innovators Magazine, has been a guest on BET, and featured as a fashion expert in First for Women. She has been a speaker at numerous colleges, seminars, workshops, conferences, and other educational institutions.

    Her hope is to encourage people to eradicate any excess baggage that weighs them down, and prevents them from living a free life. She wants people to know they are not alone in their afflictions.

    Her book is available for pre-order at http://www.unpackedbaggage.com/


    ---

    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/judy-mandel/message
    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/judy-mandel/support

    • 27 min
    Do you self-sabotage your weight loss plan? That's one of the topics I talk about with Dr. Franchell Hamilton, who has had her own amazing journey.

    Do you self-sabotage your weight loss plan? That's one of the topics I talk about with Dr. Franchell Hamilton, who has had her own amazing journey.

    “I used to be a life corrupter, but now I am a life-changer,” says weight loss surgeon Dr. Franchell Hamilton.

    I wanted to know how someone who was in gangs as a teenager found her own resilience and motivation be become a surgeon. Dr. Franchell Hamilton first reminded me that only 2% of all physicians are Black, and an even smaller percentage of surgeons are Black and female, and she’s proud to be among that group.

    Dr. Franchell Hamilton, is a weight loss surgeon, health and wellness visionary and author of Transformation is a Mindset, the journey to changing your input and your world.

    We talk about her troubled life as a teen and how she found her path to becoming a doctor.

    Dr. Hamilton founded A Better Weigh Center – a place for her patients to receive treatments ranging from bariatric surgery and medical weight loss to hormone therapy. As her practice grew, she began seeing more and more patients, but many had the same recurring issue – weight regain with return of their other medical conditions. She wanted to provide results with longevity. Thus, the 4 Pillars of Transformation was founded – Dr. Hamilton’s weight loss and wellness system. She uses her book as a guide to help thousands struggling with unhealthy strongholds in their life find the root of the problem.

    If you are interested in contacting Dr. Hamiliton, or learning more, you can visit her website at

    http://www.drfhamilton.com/


    ---

    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/judy-mandel/message
    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/judy-mandel/support

    • 32 min
    A Single Mother by Choice Talks About Her Journey

    A Single Mother by Choice Talks About Her Journey

    Louisa Pateman is the Australian author of: Single, Again, and Again, and Again… What do you do when life doesn’t go to plan? Louisa has had a successful career as a civil engineer, working all around the world. She is a dedicated traveler and has ventured to over 70 countries, while also building a substantial individual property portfolio.

    For  20 years, Louisa tried very hard to fulfill her life plan; the path set by society: to find her soulmate, get married and have children. But after a dozen failed relationships and a biological clock that was about to expire, she conceded defeat and gave up her dreams of finding ‘the one’. In order to salvage her last chance of motherhood, at 37 she embarked on a journey to become a single mother by choice. She says it turned out to be the best decision of her life.

    Louisa offers a window for women considering this option, and some concrete ideas for making this important, life changing decision. Not to mention being a lovely person to chat with long distance!


    ---

    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/judy-mandel/message
    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/judy-mandel/support

    • 28 min

Top podcasts em Educação

Flow Podcast
Estúdios Flow
Top Áudio Livros
Top Áudio Livros
Inglês do Zero
Jader Lelis
6 Minute English
BBC Radio
Histórias em Inglês com Duolingo
Duolingo
Psicologia na Prática
Alana Anijar