The Big Silence

Karena Dawn

Where there is darkness, there is an immense opportunity for light. The Big Silence aims to normalize conversations around mental health and empower people to turn their challenges into triumphs. Hosted by Karena Dawn – mental health advocate, wellness entrepreneur, co-founder of Tone It Up, and New York Times bestselling author – The Big Silence is creating a safe space to share our story, and for you to share yours. Like so many, Karena has experienced profound grief and trauma. Growing up with a mother diagnosed with paranoid-schizophrenia, her childhood was filled with traumatic experiences that resulted in repressed emotions of guilt, shame, depression, and eventually, a suicide attempt. Though filled with this darkness, Karena was able to find deep joy. And with The Big Silence, she's creating a space for you to find that joy, too. This podcast will feature in-depth conversations with psychologists, spiritual leaders, public figures, friends, and anyone who has been impacted by a mental health condition – either themselves, or through a family member or a friend. Suffering in silence only reinforces the stigma behind mental health issues and builds boundaries that prevent healing. Wherever you are, whatever you're going through, you have a spark of greatness inside of you. No more embarrassment, no more shame, only healing. -- A non-profit 501(c)3, The Big Silence Foundation provides resources and support to anyone directly or indirectly impacted by mental illness. 'The Big Silence' theme song was written and performed by James Nicholas Kinney. Executive Handyman, Bobby Goldstein.

  1. -2 J

    Turning Fear Into Creative Fuel: Josh Pais’ Secrets to Presence & Creativity

    Have a message for Karena? She'd love to hear from you and share your comment or question on air! Leave Karena a voicemail: https://www.speakpipe.com/KarenaDawn What if fear wasn’t an enemy to conquer, but a source of fuel for creativity?  In this powerful episode of The Big Silence, Karena sits down with actor, teacher, and Committed Impulse founder, Josh Pais. From growing up in New York’s gritty Alphabet City to starring in over 150 films and shows alongside legends like Robert De Niro, Meryl Streep, and Joaquin Phoenix, Josh’s story is one of resilience, presence, and creative freedom. He opens up about his new book, Lose Your Mind, how anxiety can become fuel instead of a roadblock, and why the unknown is the most powerful space for growth. Whether you’re an artist, entrepreneur, or simply trying to quiet the self-judgment in your head, Josh’s wisdom will shift the way you experience fear and creativity. How can we reframe fear as a source of creative energy? Josh reveals how fear, anxiety, and even sadness aren’t enemies to suppress but sensations to ride — opening the door to authentic expression, connection, and freedom. (00:01:00) From Ninja Turtles to Neuroscience How Josh’s father, a physicist who worked with Einstein, influenced his view of emotions as atomic vibrations.Early struggles with anxiety and why suppressing fear disconnects us from authenticity.How Committed Impulse grew from actor training into a tool for anyone stepping into the unknown. (00:11:30) The Four Access Points to Presence Josh’s simple framework: “I’m back,” body awareness, breath, and environment.Why tuning into sensation creates connection, from courtroom lawyers to surgeons in the OR.How these tools help shift from self-judgment into creativity. (00:20:00) Feeling Without Fixing Why any sensation, even anxiety, shifts in 7–12 seconds when fully felt.Josh guides Karena through noticing “atomic” sensations in her body.Why honoring sadness, joy, and fear unlocks energy instead of draining it. (00:27:30) Growing Up in Alphabet City Josh’s childhood surrounded by artists, danger, and addiction in Lower Manhattan.How play and imagination became his lifeline.The decision to step away from drugs and lean into creativity as a survival tool. (00:34:50) Lessons from Legends Stories from working with De Niro, Streep, Joaquin Phoenix, and more.Why the most powerful acting lesson he ever learned was simply: “Just talk to the person.”Josh’s mantra before every scene: “I don’t know what’s going to happen.” Guest ResourcesFollow Josh Pais on InstagramGet his new book Lose Your MindLearn more about Committed Impulse training If this episode moved you, please consider supporting The Big Silence Foundation and exploring our resources: Connect with The Big Silence Community Order: The Big Silence Memoir audiobooka...

    53 min
  2. 24 SEPT.

    Vanessa Rissetto: A CEO’s Honest Take on Nutrition, Mental Health, and Saying What You Mean is great

    Have a message for Karena? She'd love to hear from you and share your comment or question on air! Leave Karena a voicemail: https://www.speakpipe.com/KarenaDawn What happens when a cancer diagnosis collides with raising $10 million in venture capital? On this episode of The Big Silence, Karena sits down with Vanessa Rissetto, registered dietitian, CEO and co-founder of Culina Health, and cancer survivor who’s redefining resilience. From growing up in a Haitian household to building the only nutrition company backed by a big insurance provider, Vanessa’s story is proof that success is about more than grit — it’s about honesty, boundaries, and balance. She opens up about her diagnosis, how entrepreneurship pushed her to the brink, and why learning to say “no” has become her ultimate health strategy. How Do We Redefine Health and Success Beyond Hustle Culture? Vanessa shares how her cancer journey shifted her perspective from chasing external validation to prioritizing joy, mental health, and self-care, while still leading a groundbreaking health-tech company. (00:01:00) From Dietitian to Tech CEO: Building Culina Health Why Vanessa decided to take insurance when most dietitians catered only to the eliteHow COVID opened doors for telehealth and scaled her business to $1M in under a yearThe bold move that got Blue Cross Blue Shield on her cap table — a first in the industryHer mindset shift: every investor “no” was just practice for the next “yes” (00:10:30) Cancer, Entrepreneurship, and the Cost of External Validation The overlooked symptom that led to Vanessa’s breast cancer diagnosisRaising $10M in venture funding while undergoing treatment — and why she now calls it “f***ing stupid”How avoidance, anxiety, and resentment crept in post-diagnosisThe power of saying “no” as a complete sentence (00:17:00) Back to Basics: Nutrition, Myths, and Mental Health Why she believes restrictive diets like keto miss the bigger pictureThe truth about protein, fasting, and why micro-counting often backfiresHow Vanessa balances Doritos, home-cooked meals, and plant-based principlesNutrition as behavior change, not just “eat more vegetables” (00:29:00) Therapy, Caregiving, and Whole-Person Healing How Culina Health integrates with physicians and therapists for 360° careThe role of dietitians in eating disorder recovery and mental health supportWhy therapy for caregivers is just as important as therapy for patientsVanessa’s own two-therapist system: one for trauma, one for feelings (00:35:00) Menopause, Midlife, and Finding Joy Her experience with medically induced menopause and brain fog Why women need different strategies after 35 How AI is reshaping the future of nutrition and health-techThe freedom of midlife: smaller circles, more joy, and living on your own terms Thanks for the support from our partners, including: Guest ResourcesFollow Vanessa on InstagramLearn more about Culina HealthFollow Culina Health on Instagram If this episode moved you, please consider supporting The Big Silence Foundation and exploring our resources: Connect with The

    51 min
  3. 17 SEPT.

    Dr. Nadine Macaluso on Trauma Bonds: How to Spot Love-Bombing, Set Boundaries, and Heal

    Have a message for Karena? She'd love to hear from you and share your comment or question on air! Leave Karena a voicemail: https://www.speakpipe.com/KarenaDawn What happens when the “perfect” relationship is powered by control, confusion, and intermittent kindness?  In this powerful conversation, Dr. Nadine Macaluso, somatic psychologist and author of Run Like Hell, breaks down trauma bonds. She explains why love-bombing feels so intoxicating at first, and how to rebuild trust in yourself after leaving a toxic dynamic. We cover red flags, green flags, co-parenting with a difficult ex, and why “boring” can actually mean safe, steady, and good. How do you recognize when love turns into control, and find the courage to walk away from a trauma bond? Escaping toxic cycles isn’t just about leaving the situation. It’s about relearning safety, trusting your own signals, and choosing peace over chaos. (00:26) Origin Story & Reinvention at Any Age Going back to school at 39 and finishing a doctorate at 45 proves reinvention is possible at any ageHow early exposure to feelings and psychology sparked Nadine’s pathTherapy as a lifeline when chaos became overwhelming (04:03) Love-Bombing & Early Red Flags The intoxicating “soulmate” language and excessive attention of love-bombingWhy mismatched words and actions are an early signal to noticeTuning into your body’s warning signs when something feels off (07:09) What a Trauma Bond Really Is Two defining conditions: intermittent abuse and a power imbalanceHow Nadine’s Trauma Bonds Assessment and the Big Five test can offer clarityWhy it’s critical to drop self-blame and focus on prevention (11:20) Healing Timeline, Boundaries & Green Flags Why healing from a trauma bond takes about two yearsThe relief of “I hear you” as a sign of safetyQuick red flags to avoid: boundary-plowing, sudden rage, and chronic inconsistency (21:50) Co-Parenting, Somatic Tools & Choosing Peace Co-parenting from authenticity instead of rebellion or people-pleasingHow to track emotions somatically—where feelings live in the bodyReframing “boring” as safe, steady, and priceless for long-term peace Thanks for the support from our partners: Let our sponsor BetterHelp connect you to a therapist who can support you - all from the comfort of your own home. Visit https://betterhelp.com/thebigsilence and enjoy a special discount on your first month.If you have any questions about the brand relating to how the therapists are licensed, their privacy policy, or therapist compensation model, check out this FAQ: https://www.betterhelp.com/your-questions-answered/ Guest ResourcesVisit Dr. Nae’s WebsiteFollow her on InstagramRead her book, Run Like Hella href="https://drnae.com/brainmanager-big-5-personality-quiz/"...

    45 min
  4. 10 SEPT.

    From Panic to Peace: Gabby Bernstein’s Playbook for Healing, Reparenting & Real Talk on Meds

    Have a message for Karena? She'd love to hear from you and share your comment or question on air! Leave Karena a voicemail: https://www.speakpipe.com/KarenaDawn What if the breakdown you feared was actually the doorway to your greatest sense of peace? In this transformative episode of The Big Silence, Karena sits down with #1 New York Times bestselling author, spiritual teacher, and Dear Gabby podcast host Gabby Bernstein. From uncovering repressed childhood trauma in her mid-30s to navigating postpartum depression with courage and honesty, Gabby shares the tools that helped her move from chaos to calm. She opens up about EMDR therapy, medication without shame, reparenting the inner child, and finding relief one step at a time. Whether you’re in the depths of anxiety, grieving a loss, or simply craving a gentler way to heal, Gabby’s wisdom offers both compassion and practical next steps. How do you combine spiritual tools and evidence-based therapy to heal trauma without shame, guilt, or overwhelm? Healing isn’t about being “fixed.” It’s about creating safety, awareness, and compassion so you can finally live in peace. (02:06) Naming the Why Behind Patterns Spirituality and sobriety can plant seeds, but trauma will still surface in anxiety, addiction, or control.Memory of trauma can return much later in life; healing doesn’t require forcing recall.Recognizing “what happened to me” instead of “what’s wrong with me” reframes the path forward. (05:09) EMDR, Demystified Bilateral stimulation (eye movement, tapping, sounds) opens a safe “window of tolerance.”Starting with a present trigger often links back to earlier wounds.Small issues may shift quickly; deeper trauma requires more time but reduces triggers steadily. (09:02) Postpartum Depression: When Meditation Isn’t Enough Signs include panic attacks, insomnia, and suicidal thoughts. This is biochemical, not a personal failing.Antidepressants can create a baseline of safety so therapy becomes effective.Meds are not a shortcut but a foundation; Gabby paired them with three therapy sessions a week. (14:37) Grief Without Guilt Approach grief in doses: feel some, then step back before re-engaging.Notice when numbing shows up; honor it as a protective strategy.Relief through TV, rest, or joy is part of healthy grieving, not a failure. (18:51) Getting Unstuck: The 3-Question Inventory After each trigger, ask: 1) What triggered me? 2) What do I feel? 3) How do I run from it?Recognize patterns as protective, not personality flaws.Writing it down builds compassion and creates room for change. (20:30) Reparenting Yourself with the 4 S’s Safe: Breathwork, sleep, and grounding to calm your nervous system.Seen: Validate your wins and speak to yourself with compassion.Soothed: Make therapy and support part of your routine.Secure: Consistency builds an inner foundation of trust and resilience. (24:54) Psychedelic-Assisted Therapy: Proceed with Care Should only be done with trained clinicians under clinical guidelines.Medication conflicts exist; research protocols carefully.Curiosity is valid, but sobriety and safety must guide decisions. (28:57) Resources & Next...

    37 min
  5. 3 SEPT.

    The End of Mental Illness? Dr. Daniel Amen on Brainhealth, Tiny Habits & Hope

    Have a message for Karena? She'd love to hear from you and share your comment or question on air! Leave Karena a voicemail: https://www.speakpipe.com/KarenaDawn Could the secret to mental health be linked to brain health rather than what’s inside a pill bottle?  In this illuminating episode of The Big Silence, Karena sits down with world-renowned psychiatrist, brain health expert, and bestselling author Dr. Daniel Amen. With over 200,000 brain scans and decades of research, Dr. Amen is on a mission to end the stigma around mental illness by reframing it as brain health. Together, they dive into the real causes of depression, the daily habits that heal your brain, and the tiny shifts that can transform your life. If you’ve ever struggled with anxiety, negative thoughts, or burnout, this conversation will change how you see yourself—and your future. Is Mental Illness Really a Brain Health Issue?Dr. Amen challenges the outdated way psychiatry diagnoses mental illness and shows us how brain scans, nutrition, movement, and mindset can unlock the healing we’ve been searching for. (00:00) Rethinking Mental Illness: It Starts with the BrainWhy psychiatric diagnoses haven’t evolved since the 1800s and what needs to changeDepression is like “chest pain”: why we must ask why before we treatHow Dr. Amen divides depression and anxiety into seven different typesThe four “circles” of health: biological, psychological, social, and spiritual (05:28) What Brain Scans Reveal That Doctors MissThe difference between brain structure scans (MRI, CT) and SPECT scansWhy PTSD and traumatic brain injury need different treatments, and how scans show the differenceThe danger of misdiagnosing a “busy brain” vs. a “sleepy brain”Why more information is always better when it comes to treatment (08:22) Brain Health Habits Anyone Can Start TodayDr. Amen’s three essentials: brain envy, avoiding what hurts, and doing what helpsWhy alcohol and marijuana are not brain-friendly, despite cultural messagingThe shocking truth about body weight and brain size/functionHow media and marketing feed mental illness (13:37) Social Media, Sleep & The Digital Brain DrainHow social media thins your brain’s cortex and lowers self-esteemWhy more online “connection” often leads to greater lonelinessSleep as one of the most underrated brain health toolsHow Dr. Amen balances his social media presence with mental wellness (15:59) Tiny Habits, Big Shifts: Healing Your Brain DailyThe simple nightly practice that rewires your brain for positivityWhy accurate self-talk beats blind positivityThe “ANTs”: automatic negative thoughts and how to kill themMeditation and chanting as proven brain boosters (24:56) Hydration, Food & Loving What Loves You BackWhy just 2% dehydration can wreck your focus and coordinationThe story of Nancy, who transformed her life by starting with hydrationNo more fruit juice, and what to do insteadSecret #4 from You, Happier: Love food that loves you back (30:11) A Mission Too Big for One PersonDr. Amen on founding the Change Your Brain FoundationWhy infectious diseases like Lyme may play a role in schizophreniaKarena shares how changing her mother’s diet extended her life by five yearsWhy the fight for brain health is a mission for all of us Guest...

    42 min
  6. 27 AOÛT

    Love, Loss & Looking IRL: Stephanie Fischer on Resilience, Humor & Finding Your Person

    Have a message for Karena? She'd love to hear from you and share your comment or question on air! Leave Karena a voicemail: https://www.speakpipe.com/KarenaDawn What if modern dating wasn’t done with your thumb? In this refreshing episode of The Big Silence, Karena sits down with Stephanie Fischer, attorney-turned-tech CEO of NeverMissed, a proximity-based dating app designed to get you off your phone and into real life, safely. From a hilariously infamous childhood story to caregiving through cancer, and building a women-led tech company, Stephanie serves up honest, witty, and deeply practical wisdom on love, boundaries, burnout, and choosing yourself. What if the healthiest way to date is to close the app and look up?By stripping away the endless swipes and curated profiles, Stephanie argues that confidence, clarity, and community are built in person, one real conversation at a time. (00:00) Why “in‑person first” dating mattersNeverMissed’s premise: check in at your current location and only see others who’ve opted in there. Meet IRL, then put the phone down.Control & safety: you decide when you’re visible, you can check out anytime, and profiles are photo‑verified to be the real you.The point isn’t more messaging. It’s better matching energy in the room, not just in the feed. (01:58) Only‑Child Resilience & a Sense of Humor (The infamous pool story)Early chaos taught self‑advocacy: “Being ‘so mature’ was a response to chaos, not a compliment.”Humor as a coping tool: the infamous urologist‑dad pool becomes a lifelong icebreaker and puts a lens on embarrassment and identity.Takeaway: Name the chaos, keep the humor, and own your story—it stops owning you. (09:04) Reinvention at 30: Leaving the Comfort ZoneLeft Dallas for DC to break stagnant patterns: if your environment doesn’t support growth, change the room.Dating “decades” shift: bars → questionnaires → intentionality.Action: Audit your current circle & city: Do they match who you’re becoming? If not, move or shake up routines. (16:31) How NeverMissed Works (and Why It’s Different)Opt‑in visibility only when you check in at a venue; no searchable database.“Fleeting Moments”: post a sighting (“saw you at…”) to reconnect; uses simple descriptors to help find the person.Goal: to complement other apps, not replace them. Meet people doing what you already love (gym, tennis, concerts). (20:40) Female CEO in Tech: Owning AssertivenessNavigating “men are talking” energy with receipts: you pay the bills, you set the tone.Reframe “bitchy” → clear, paid, and prepared; assertiveness ≠ aggression.Tip: Put decisions and boundaries in writing; lead with outcomes and timelines. (31:49) Caregiving Without Losing YourselfCared for mom and now dad: same love, different game plan.Labs don’t lie: cortisol, hormones, sleep. If you don’t delegate, your body will.Action: Create a care team (siblings, friends, hospital resources); schedule your appointments first each month. (40:56) Dating‑App Burnout: Getting Your Hope BackDitch the artificial timeline (“married by 28”); Stephanie married at 39; right person, right time.Know yourself → know your filter. Less noise = better choices.Micro‑goal: 1 real‑life conversation per week (bookstore, class, coffee line). Momentum beats swiping. (43:59) First‑Date Playbook: Safety + ChemistryMeet in public somewhere you...

    1 h 3 min
  7. 20 AOÛT

    It’s Time to End the Cycle of Self-Abandonment: How to Set Boundaries, Heal Shame, and Reclaim Your Aliveness with Vanessa Bennett

    What if the guilt and shame you carry as a mother or caretaker weren’t yours to begin with?  In this episode of The Big Silence, Karena Dawn sits down with Vanessa Bennett, LMFT, licensed depth therapist, and author of the new book, The Motherhood Myth From growing up as a “parentified child” to raising her daughter with intention, Vanessa shares how generational wounds, from the “witch wound” to the “mother wound”, shape our lives in ways we may not realize. Together, they explore self-abandonment, the myth of perfection, codependency in relationships, and how to reclaim your identity through micro moments of self-choosing. Whether you’re a mother, daughter, partner, or friend, this conversation offers tangible ways to break cycles, set boundaries, and follow the breadcrumbs back to yourself. How Do We Heal Generational Wounds Without Losing Ourselves?Vanessa reveals how recognizing inherited patterns and our part in them is the first step to breaking free. (00:00:22) Depth Psychology and the Path to Individuation Vanessa explains depth psychology as the “psychology of the soul,” focusing on the whole being and the unconscious.Her upbringing as a parentified child and how it shaped her initial decision not to have children.The importance of holding your upbringing objectively to heal. “They're not all bad. And also, they're not all good.” (00:06:11) The Trinity Wound: Witch, Sister, and Mother The witch wound: epigenetic trauma silencing women’s power, sexuality, and individuality.The sister wound: competition among women fueled by scarcity thinking.The mother wound: how women unconsciously uphold patriarchy and pass down harmful narratives.Why ending these cycles starts with self-awareness and modeling change for the next generation. (00:12:30) Self-Abandonment, Guilt, and Rebuilding Your Sense of Self Guilt and shame are by design. They are tools of societal control, not signs you’re broken.Accept guilt as part of the process, then act anyway.Use “micro moments”  (like saying no when you mean it) as bricks in the foundation of self-trust.Following breadcrumbs: orienting toward what makes you feel alive, even if it’s small or scary. (00:22:09) Codependency, Resentment, and Healthy Boundaries We live in a codependent culture that teaches us to outsource our emotional regulation.Resentment as a diagnostic tool: a signal that a boundary is being crossed or unspoken.Attachment styles are fluid and change depending on the relationship dynamic.The link between resentment and projection and how awareness can stop the cycle.Why attraction often fades when relationships take on a parental dynamic, and how both partners can reclaim responsibility for their own happiness. (00:32:50) Friendships, Attachment Styles, and Communication Vanessa and her co-host model conflict resolution through a commitment to talk about issues openly.The cultural trap of expecting a partner to “reparent” us and why it can kill romantic attraction.Building safety without losing mystery or eros in long-term relationships. (00:40:17) Therapy, Accessibility, and the Power of Group Work Why therapists need therapists, and the stigma that still exists around seeking help.Alternative paths to healing: coaches, low-cost...

    56 min
  8. 13 AOÛT

    Dream Bigger Than Your Trauma: Natalia Kholodenko on Resilience, War & Reclaiming Joy

    What if the path to healing wasn’t in returning to the life you had, but in dreaming up an even better one?  In this powerful episode of The Big Silence, Karena Dawn sits down with Ukrainian psychologist and motivational speaker Natalia Kholodenko. Once a TV star living a glamorous life in Kyiv, Natalia lost everything in an instant when war broke out. Forced to flee, she faced displacement, trauma, and the collapse of her identity, but she refused to give up. Now rebuilding her life while helping others do the same, Natalia opens up about finding meaning in pain, rebuilding self-worth, and the daily practices that anchor her through the darkest moments. Can Your Dreams Be Stronger Than Your Trauma?Natalia shares how she went from surviving bombings to speaking on international stages, rebuilding her life through imagination, purpose, and healing. Her story is a blueprint for how to find meaning after loss. (00:01:00) Fame to Flight: Losing It All and Starting OverNatalia reflects on her life before the war: fame, wealth, and red carpets, and how it all vanished overnight.The hardest part wasn’t losing material things, but losing the belief in herself.“You are not alive when you are just surviving,” she says—describing how she knew she had to make a change. (00:08:00) The Steps to Rebuilding: From Despair to DreamingShe shares how survivor’s guilt set in and how she found meaning by choosing to live in honor of those who didn’t make it.“Dream is more powerful than trauma.” Natalia explains how imagining a “huge future” helped her begin again.From dreams came plans, and from plans came people to help. She shares the importance of turning imagination into action.Her philosophy: never stop dreaming, because good dreams create good plans, and good plans can fuel a good future.“We are marketologists for our lives,” she says. Speak bad things, and you’ll believe them. Speak dreams, and your brain follows. (00:14:00) Leading While Healing: How Helping Others Helped HerselfEven while navigating her own trauma, Natalia started speaking online to women in pain, discovering healing in connection.She shares how her live streams helped survivors practice joy and laughter, turning them into tools for survival.“I only found myself again in this life.” Viewing what happened as a gift that helped her discover her life’s work (00:17:00) Biohacks for the Soul: Daily Rituals That Anchor HerEvery morning, Natalia visualizes giving an interview about her dream life. “I talk to the future me,” she explains.Cold water immersion is her go-to anti-stress toolSinging is a daily practice. Even silly made-up songs rewire the brain for joy.She’s even sung with Gloria Gaynor in support of Ukraine, proof that big dreams can come true. Guest Resources Follow Natalia on Instagram + @kholodenkon Visit her websiteHelp Ukrainians in need If this episode moved you, please consider supporting The Big Silence Foundation and exploring our resources: Connect with The Big Silence Community Order: The Big Silence Memoir...

    30 min

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Where there is darkness, there is an immense opportunity for light. The Big Silence aims to normalize conversations around mental health and empower people to turn their challenges into triumphs. Hosted by Karena Dawn – mental health advocate, wellness entrepreneur, co-founder of Tone It Up, and New York Times bestselling author – The Big Silence is creating a safe space to share our story, and for you to share yours. Like so many, Karena has experienced profound grief and trauma. Growing up with a mother diagnosed with paranoid-schizophrenia, her childhood was filled with traumatic experiences that resulted in repressed emotions of guilt, shame, depression, and eventually, a suicide attempt. Though filled with this darkness, Karena was able to find deep joy. And with The Big Silence, she's creating a space for you to find that joy, too. This podcast will feature in-depth conversations with psychologists, spiritual leaders, public figures, friends, and anyone who has been impacted by a mental health condition – either themselves, or through a family member or a friend. Suffering in silence only reinforces the stigma behind mental health issues and builds boundaries that prevent healing. Wherever you are, whatever you're going through, you have a spark of greatness inside of you. No more embarrassment, no more shame, only healing. -- A non-profit 501(c)3, The Big Silence Foundation provides resources and support to anyone directly or indirectly impacted by mental illness. 'The Big Silence' theme song was written and performed by James Nicholas Kinney. Executive Handyman, Bobby Goldstein.

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