48 min

mental health and service dogs with brooklyn elizaa PARANOID IN MY PARADISE™

    • Mental Health

hiii homies!! :) welcome back to this week's episode of PARANOID IN MY PARADISE™ w/ @brooklynelizaa and her service dog Tuca! join us while brooklyn walks us through her everyday life of being joined by her service dog. if you ever wanted to know the dos and don'ts of seeing a service dog in public this might be for you :) brooklyn shares why and how she came to train Tuca, to be a service animal, how she copes, and the benefits, + some stories :) we also touch in-depth on depression, social fetishes, + mind and body > physical health + mental. " if you don't see a different way other than "normal"  on a regular basis it's easy to say you're an ally and joke about it, and say "oh I'm depressed or I did really bad on that test now I have anxiety" however mental health is a prolonged period not just feeling a certain way at the moment"  we have to be able to recognize someone else's position and the severity of it. we dive into a number of different conversations surrounding depression, indigenous ways of learning, cancel culture, difficulties of waitlists, social media and how it's changed comedy in its entirety. in good news recently bill 138 proper access to mental health was started for more resources and money for canadians youth. hopefully, we can see change and make change together :) 

little tip from brooklyn elizaa "don't pet the dogs while they are working" :) 

if you are someone you know who needs help, please visit https://cmhasaskatoon.ca/find-help/

PARANOID IN MY PARADISE™ is for informational and entertainment purposes only and is not a replacement for medical advice, diagnosis or treatment.

follow us: @reveursdevie I @paranoidinmyparadise

shop: reveursdevie.com

leave a review: if you enjoy listening to the podcast, please do leave a 5-star review on Apple Podcasts & Spotify - even one line helps! you can also dm us with any feedback, or thoughts on the lessons you've learnt from the episodes and we can thank you personally for tuning in :)

hiii homies!! :) welcome back to this week's episode of PARANOID IN MY PARADISE™ w/ @brooklynelizaa and her service dog Tuca! join us while brooklyn walks us through her everyday life of being joined by her service dog. if you ever wanted to know the dos and don'ts of seeing a service dog in public this might be for you :) brooklyn shares why and how she came to train Tuca, to be a service animal, how she copes, and the benefits, + some stories :) we also touch in-depth on depression, social fetishes, + mind and body > physical health + mental. " if you don't see a different way other than "normal"  on a regular basis it's easy to say you're an ally and joke about it, and say "oh I'm depressed or I did really bad on that test now I have anxiety" however mental health is a prolonged period not just feeling a certain way at the moment"  we have to be able to recognize someone else's position and the severity of it. we dive into a number of different conversations surrounding depression, indigenous ways of learning, cancel culture, difficulties of waitlists, social media and how it's changed comedy in its entirety. in good news recently bill 138 proper access to mental health was started for more resources and money for canadians youth. hopefully, we can see change and make change together :) 

little tip from brooklyn elizaa "don't pet the dogs while they are working" :) 

if you are someone you know who needs help, please visit https://cmhasaskatoon.ca/find-help/

PARANOID IN MY PARADISE™ is for informational and entertainment purposes only and is not a replacement for medical advice, diagnosis or treatment.

follow us: @reveursdevie I @paranoidinmyparadise

shop: reveursdevie.com

leave a review: if you enjoy listening to the podcast, please do leave a 5-star review on Apple Podcasts & Spotify - even one line helps! you can also dm us with any feedback, or thoughts on the lessons you've learnt from the episodes and we can thank you personally for tuning in :)

48 min