163 episodes

45-minute conversations and investigations with today's leading thinkers, authors, experts, doctors, healers, scientists about life's biggest questions: Why do we do what we do? How can we come to know and love ourselves better? How can we come together to heal and build a better world?

Pulling The Thread with Elise Loehnen Elise Loehnen and Audacy

    • Education

45-minute conversations and investigations with today's leading thinkers, authors, experts, doctors, healers, scientists about life's biggest questions: Why do we do what we do? How can we come to know and love ourselves better? How can we come together to heal and build a better world?

    Working with the Divine (Nicole Avant)

    Working with the Divine (Nicole Avant)

    “I really think that the past, we can go back to it and we definitely learn lessons because I'm always a hindsight person. So in hindsight, I'm always thinking that, okay, what could I have done better? But the past experiences for me, I've learned as I've gotten older, is to grab the lesson. And hopefully there's a blessing in there too. And then move on. I used to stay stuck in the past and try to understand why, why, why, why, why I would spend so much time, Elise, that I'm never getting back or why did this person do that? Why did this happen? Why did they treat me this way? And really try to unpack all of their baggage. And what I've learned is the “why” doesn't even really matter. It's, you know, what is the lesson for me? What is the lesson for my soul that I need right now?”
    So says Nicole Avant, a philanthropist, filmmaker, and former diplomat. In her recent memoir, Think You’ll Be Happy, Nicole describes attending to the grief and shock of her mother’s unthinkable murder—she was shot in the back by a home intruder in 2021—by creating a living legacy in her honor. Her mom, Jacqueline Avant, had turned her Los Angeles home into a refuge for artists, politicians, and world-changers as the partner to Nicole’s father, entertainment mogul Clarence Avant, who is the subject of Nicole’s beautiful documentary,The Black Godfather. Nicole grew up sitting at the feet of extraordinary artists like Bill Withers, Oprah Winfrey, Quincy Jones, Sidney Poitier watching as her parents navigated the world to make it better for future generations. In today’s conversation, we talk about that legacy—as well as Nicole’s relationship to the divine. Like her parents, she is a master connector—putting people together to see what unfolds.

    MORE FROM NICOLE AVANT:
    Think You’ll Be Happy: Moving Through Grief with Grit, Grace, and Gratitude
    The Black Godfather, on Netflix
    Follow Nicole on Instagram

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    • 49 min
    Recovering Our Ability to Feel (Prentis Hemphill): TRAUMA

    Recovering Our Ability to Feel (Prentis Hemphill): TRAUMA

    “I think we need each other. I say this all the time, there are some things that are too big to feel in one body. You need a collective body to move them through. And I think that's what we need. We need to come together in spaces to heal, not just to consume together or to watch a movie together, but to feel together and to have human emotion in real life, in public and act from the place of a feeling body, to choose action from a feeling body and not just a reactive or a numb body, but a body that feels, a body that can connect. What kind of actions do you take in the world from that kind of body? I think it's different.”
    So says Prentis Hemphill, therapist, embodiment facilitator, and author of the just-released, What it Takes to Heal: How Transforming Ourselves Can Change the World. In today’s conversation—the final in a four-part series—we explore a path to putting ourselves, and the collective, back together, and how this begins with a visioning…but a visioning born from getting back in touch with how we actually feel. I loved their book—just by reading along with Prentis’s own path to re-embodiment, I found myself finding similar sensations in my chest, back and heart. In today’s conversation, we talk about somatics, yes, but also about conflict—and what it looks like to become more adept with our emotions in hard times. This is one of my favorite conversations I’ve had to date on Pulling the Thread—I hope you enjoy it too.

    MORE FROM PRENTIS HEMPHILL:
    What it Takes to Heal: How Transforming Ourselves Can Change the World
    Prentis’s Website
    The Embodiment Institute
    Follow Prentis on Instagram

    RELATED EPISODES:
    PART 1: James Gordon, M.D., “A Toolkit for Working with Trauma”
    PART 2: Peter Levine, Ph.D, “Where Trauma Lives in the Body”
    PART 3: Resmaa Menakem, “Finding Fear in the Body (TRAUMA)”
    Thomas Hubl: “Feeling into the Collective Presence”
    Gabor Maté, M.D.: “When Stress Becomes Illness”
    Galit Atlas, PhD: “Understanding Emotional Inheritance”
    Thomas Hubl: “Processing Our Collective Past”
    Richard Schwartz, PhD: “Recovering Every Part of Ourselves”

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    • 51 min
    The Myth of Resilience (Soraya Chemaly)

    The Myth of Resilience (Soraya Chemaly)

    “This is the richness of the traditional wife explosion, right? There's this simple idea that you get to choose. Now you're choosing to emulate a situation that's a fiction in that those women didn't choose anything. They had to dress like that. They had to live like that. They had to be nice to the men like that, because they had no bank accounts. They had no cars. They had no licenses. They had no income. They had no security. So, don't equate these two things because you're just kind of living a dignified version of something that was pretty egregiously harmful, you know. And it's the difference, I think, in knowing that you have an option.”
    So says Soraya Chemaly, an award-winning writer, journalist and activist whose work has been at the center of mine. Her now-classic, Rage Becomes Her: The Power of Women’s Anger lit me on fire—not only for the deftness of her arguments but also because she is a meticulous researcher. What she gave air to in the pages of that book blew me away. She figures prominently in the endnotes of On Our Best Behavior.
    Her new book, The Resilience Myth: New Thinking on Grit, Strength, and Growth After Trauma, follows a similar path. Soraya takes something we’ve been served as an ideal—develop resilience—and flips it on its head, both widening and undermining this definition. She challenges our cultural myths about this concept and urges us all to shift and expand our perspective on the trait, moving from prioritizing the role of the individual to overcome and conquer to focusing on what’s really at work, which is collective care and connections with our communities. As she proves in these pages, resilience is always relational. 

    MORE FROM SORAYA CHEMALY:
    The Resilience Myth: New Thinking on Grit, Strength, and Growth After Trauma
    Rage Becomes Her: The Power of Women’s Anger
    Follow Soraya on Instagram
    Soraya’s Website

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    • 58 min
    Finding Fear in the Body (Resmaa Menakem): TRAUMA

    Finding Fear in the Body (Resmaa Menakem): TRAUMA

    “Here's what I would say: peace will happen when people invest in cultivating peace as opposed to war. Peace will happen. And one thing I know, for me, I know peace, I know I will never see it, but maybe I can put something in place to where I leave something here and my children's, children's, children's grandchildren can nibble off of and feed on what I've left here the same way I feed off of Frederick Douglass's stuff.”
    So says therapist and social worker Resmaa Menakem, author of the New York Times bestseller My Grandmother’s Hands: Racialized Trauma and the Pathway to Mending our Hearts and Bodies and originator of the Somatic Abolitionist movement. I met Resmaa many years ago, when he was one of the few voices in this space—Resmaa calls himself a communal provocateur and this is true, as his work challenges all of us to recognize and acknowledge that we’re scared. And that much of this fear is ancient. We were supposed to talk today about trauma in relationships, but our time together took a different turn—Resmaa jumped at the opportunity to put me in my familial and familiar fear. It’s hard, or at least it was for me, but hopefully you’ll stick with us to see how this works. This is the third part of a series on trauma, and it won’t surprise you to hear that Resmaa also trained with Peter Levine.

    MORE FROM RESMAA MENAKEM:
    My Grandmother’s Hands: Racialized Trauma and the Pathway to Mending our Hearts and Bodies
    Monsters in Love: Why Your Partner Sometimes Drives You Crazy—And What You Can Do About It
    The Quaking of America: An Embodied Guide to Navigating Our Nation’s Upheaval and Racial Reckoning
    Resmaa’s Website
    Follow Resmaa on Instagram

    RELATED EPISODES:
    PART 1: James Gordon, M.D., “A Toolkit for Working with Trauma”
    PART 2: Peter Levine, Ph.D, “Where Trauma Lives in the Body”
    Thomas Hubl: “Feeling into the Collective Presence”
    Gabor Maté, M.D.: “When Stress Becomes Illness”
    Galit Atlas, PhD: “Understanding Emotional Inheritance”
    Thomas Hubl: “Processing Our Collective Past”
    Richard Schwartz, PhD: “Recovering Every Part of Ourselves”

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    • 47 min
    Take Back Your Brain (Kara Loewentheil)

    Take Back Your Brain (Kara Loewentheil)

    “There are studies showing that, once your basic needs are met, and you're not worried about losing your house, losing your health care, increases in money don't significantly increase happiness, right? So I think, you know, money helps alleviate the very real biological primitive fear of you're gonna die if you don't have shelter and food and in our society, healthcare, but when it comes to things beyond that, I think that we have been sold the lie that money creates security and it's a natural conflation because at a certain point for securing the necessities,and it makes other problems easier to solve also clearly, but emotionally, money is not the solution to an emotional problem any more than food or having a certain kind of body or being married or not married.” 
    So says Kara Loewentheil, author of Take Back Your Brain: How a Sexist Society Gets in Your Head—and How to Get it Out. While Kara and I went to college together, I first met her when she was gracious enough to have me on her hugely successful podcast, UnF*ck Your Brain, where I obviously fell in love with…her brain. Kara is theoretically an unlikely life coach—she graduated from Harvard Law School, litigated reproductive rights, and ran a think tank at Columbia University before deciding that she wanted to go upstream and rewire our culture’s brain instead. 
    Kara is fixated on what she calls the “Brain Gap” in women—the thought patterns so natural to women that keep us feeling anxious and disempowered. It’s in that “Brain Gap” that we continue to both unconsciously support and re-enact a culture that doesn’t do great things for women. My work and Kara’s work are very aligned. In fact, Take Back Your Brain: How a Sexist Society Gets in Your Head—and How to Get it Out is a cousin to On Our Best Behavior—one that’s written with actionable insights, by a life coach, for getting to the root of the problem.

    MORE FROM KARA LOEWENTHEIL:
    Take Back Your Brain: How a Sexist Society Gets in Your Head—and How to Get it Out
    Kara’s Website: The New School of Feminist Thought
    Kara’s Book Website
    Kara’s Podcast: UnF*ck Your Brain
    Follow Kara on Instagram

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    • 53 min
    Where Trauma Begins (Peter Levine, Ph.D): TRAUMA

    Where Trauma Begins (Peter Levine, Ph.D): TRAUMA

    “There are therapies where the person is made to relive their traumas over and over and over again. It's called flooding. And that's the one type of therapy that I do not agree with. I think it, not all the time, but it can be harmful, again, in somatic experiencing, we titrate the experience, we touch into a sensation in our bodies that have to do with the trauma, but just touch into it, and then notice the shift to a higher level of order, a higher level of coherence, a higher, greater level of flow. To go from trauma to awakening and flow is really, I think, what healing is all about."
    So says Peter Levine, PhD. If you’ve read or heard anything about trauma, you likely know Peter’s name, as he’s the father of Somatic Experiencing, a body-awareness approach to healing trauma that’s informed the practice of almost every trauma-worker today. Levine is a prolific writer—his international best seller, Waking the Tiger, has been translated into twenty-two languages—though much of his work has been for fellow academics and teachers. He’s just published a new book, An Autobiography of Trauma: A Healing Journey, which is highly accessible for all of us. It’s a beautiful book that recounts how he came to understand the somatic experience of trauma through an event in his own childhood—and the scientists and cultures he encountered along the way that informed what ultimately became a world-changing protocol. Today’s conversation explores all of this—including some very surprising appearances by Einstein.

    MORE FROM PETER LEVINE, PHD:
    An Autobiography of Trauma: A Healing Journey
    Waking the Tiger: The Innate Capacity to Transform Overwhelming Experiences
    Trauma & Memory: Brain and Body in a Search for the Living Past
    In an Unspoken Voice: How the Body Releases Trauma and Restores Goodness
    Somatic Experiencing International

    RELATED EPISODES:
    PART 1: James Gordon, “TRAUMA/Tools for Transforming Trauma”
    Thomas Hubl: “Feeling into the Collective Presence”
    Gabor Maté, M.D.: “When Stress Becomes Illness”
    Galit Atlas, PhD: “Understanding Emotional Inheritance”
    Thomas Hubl: “Processing Our Collective Past”
    Richard Schwartz, PhD: “Recovering Every Part of Ourselves”

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    • 47 min

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