Elevating Good | For Women of Faith Who Won't Give Up on People

Morenike Ogebe

You still believe people are worth fighting for — even on hard days. Elevating Good is a podcast for women of faith who are crossing divides without losing the people they love. Hosted by Morenike Ogebe — attorney, HR leader, and lifelong bridge builder — each episode brings you inspiring conversations rooted in faith, courageous compassion, and the conviction that every person carries inherent dignity. Belonging is not a program. It’s practice. And you were built for this. New episodes every other week. More on Substack, Facebook, and Instagram.

  1. 5d ago

    S5E8: The Blank Canvas — How Photographer Jimell Greene Lets People Be Who They Are

    What if the most powerful thing a photographer could do had nothing to do with the camera? Jimell Greene — D.C.-based photographer, cinematographer, and the man behind the Department of Government Waste — joins Elevating Good to talk about seeing people the way they deserve to be seen. From disposable cameras at Detroit parties to portraits of displaced federal workers against a weathered American flag, Jimell's career is built on one belief: let people be exactly who they are, and make it look beautiful. This conversation covers his origin story, Gordon Parks, the fear of repercussions in America, AI's threat to the creative industry, and what he'd tell any young Black kid picking up a camera today. IN THIS EPISODE Jimell’s origin story — Detroit, a single mom, disposable cameras, and a slow-building 16-year careerCalling moment — bringing his camera to his grandmother’s hospital bedside, and what those photos becameBeing a “blank canvas” — the gift of letting people feel no fear of judgment in front of youDepartment of Government Waste — the portrait project documenting displaced federal workersFear of repercussion in America — the most surprising thing Jimell found when the project launchedGordon Parks, single images, and how a photograph changed the course of historyBeing a Black photographer in 2026 — honest, layered, and realAI’s threat to the creative industry — and what Jimell predicted in a Paris café in 2024Smartphones, social media, and what it means to be a professional visual storyteller todayWhat he’d tell a young Black kid with a phone and a dream ABOUT JIMELL GREENE Jimell Greene is a Washington, D.C.-area photographer and cinematographer with 16 years of experience creating expressive portraiture, cinematic video, and documentary work for editorial features, commercial campaigns, government clients, and non-profits. He is known for rich color, dramatic mood, and an uncanny ability to capture the essence of a person, brand, or moment. He is the co-creator of Department of Government Waste — an ongoing portrait project documenting the human faces behind the federal workforce displacement of 2025. Each subject is photographed against a weathered American flag and given the option to appear in silhouette or in full. The project asks not about politics, but about people: How are you doing? How is your family? How do you feel about America right now? Jimell served on the board of the American Photographic Artists, D.C. chapter, following his protest photography in 2020. He is based in Baltimore, Maryland, and takes assignments across the United States. CONNECT WITH JIMELL GREENE  Email: hello@jimell.com Website: https://jimell.com Jimell Greene on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jimellgreene Jimell Greene on LinkedIN: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jimell Jimell Greene on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jimellgreenephotography Department of Government Waste: https://www.departmentofgovernmentwaste.com Gordon Parks Foundation: https://www.gordonparksfoundation.org OpenGovHub (mentioned in episode): https://www.opengovhub.org American Photographic Artists – D.C.: https://www.apanational.com CONNECT WITH ELEVATING GOOD Elevating Good is a podcast for women of faith who refuse to give up on people. Hosted by Morenike Ogebe — attorney, bridge builder, and people-centered leader — each episode shines light on the good God is doing in the world. Substack (subscribe to bonus content): https://elevatinggood.substack.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/elevatinggood Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/elevatinggood NEW! Everyday Bridge Builders Community: www.facebook.com/groups/elevatinggoodbridgebuilders/ If this episode moved you, share it. Leave a review. And if you know someone who needs to hear Jimell’s story right now, you know what to do.

    1h 7m
  2. Jun 10

    S5E7: PTSD Is Treatable: Simone Swartz on Healing, Service Dogs, and Reclaiming Your Life

    Content note: This episode includes candid conversation about military sexual trauma, PTSD, substance use, and childhood sexual abuse. Please listen with care and step away if you need to. What does healing actually look like — not as a concept, but as a lived, embodied, decades-long journey? In this powerful episode, Morenike sits down with Simone Swartz: U.S. Army veteran, published author, Reiki practitioner, and co-founder of Service Dog Strong. Simone knows the weight of undiagnosed PTSD from the inside. She also knows what it looks like when healing — finally — takes hold. After surviving military sexual trauma in the Army and spending nearly a decade managing her pain through self-medication, Simone found her way to recovery through counseling, holistic healing, faith, and an extraordinary bond with her service dog, Gunner. Today she advocates globally, writes, coaches, and speaks the truth she wishes someone had spoken to her sooner: PTSD is treatable. This conversation is honest, hopeful, and deeply human. Morenike opens up about her own journey as a survivor, and together these two women model exactly the kind of courageous, bridge-building dialogue that this podcast exists to hold. In this episode, you'll hear: How a single incident in the military set off a decades-long domino effect — and what finally broke the cycle Why Simone reframes PTSD as a post-traumatic injury, not a disorder — and why that distinction matters for healing The surprising way Simone discovered her own PTSD (hint: she went to therapy to help someone else) Why healing must be physical, not just mental — and what martial arts, Reiki, bodywork, and exercise have to do with it The science behind why service dogs can reach sexual assault survivors in ways that even therapists sometimes cannot What it means that "shame must switch sides" — and how speaking out becomes the last step of the healing journey Simone's vision of a beloved community: a world where darkness has no place to hide About Simone Swartz Simone Swartz is the author of PTSD and What Helped Me: A Step-by-Step Guide to Start Your PTSD Recovery Journey, a practical guide written from inside lived experience. She has contributed research to Elsevier, one of the world's leading medical publishers, and co-founded Service Dogs Strong — one of the first nonprofits in the country dedicated to providing trained service dogs at no cost to survivors of sexual assault living with PTSD. She is a speaker, coach, mother of three, and a tireless advocate for trauma survivors everywhere. Connect with Simone   www.ptsdandwhathelpedme.com  PTSD and What Helped Me — book and workbook available on her website 💬 Simone is currently accepting a limited number of coaching clients Facebook  Resources mentioned: Vet Centers (free counseling for veterans and their families) — vetcenter.va.gov Service Dogs Strong — servicedogsstrong.org Simone's book includes a comprehensive list of FDA-approved and holistic PTSD therapies — Eastern and Western modalities Additional resources: National sexual assault hotline: 1(800) 656-4673 Veteran’s Crisis Line: 988  Crisis text line: 741741 Crisis line for kids and teens: 1 (877) 968-8491 Enjoying Elevating Good Podcast? Share, follow, and review if you like what you hear so more people can discover EGP! ⁠⁠⁠⁠Facebook⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠Instagram⁠⁠⁠⁠ Subscribe to additional content on ⁠⁠⁠⁠Substack⁠⁠ Shop for EGP merch: https://elevategoodpod.com

    48 min
  3. May 29

    S5E6: Mulberries in the Rain - Growing Plants, Cultivating Belonging with Ryan Blosser

    What if the way we grow food could teach us how to build community — and even bridge our deepest divides? In this rich, wide-ranging conversation, Morenike sits down with Ryan Blosser, farmer, educator, mental health professional, and co-founder of Shenandoah Permaculture Institute, to explore the living intersection of land, belonging, and human connection. Ryan is the co-author (with Trevor Pearsall) of Mulberries in the Rain: Growing Permaculture Plants for Food and Friendship — a book that weaves personal story, practical plant wisdom, and a deeply relational philosophy of sustainability. This episode is one in From the Ground Up permaculture miniseries and it might be the most human one yet. From Division I basketball to Hawaii surfboards to food forests in the Shenandoah Valley, Ryan's journey is a masterclass in following the hard path toward what truly matters — and discovering that community is not built in a moment, but grown, slowly, through rupture and repair. In This Episode  ​The origin story behind Mulberries in the Rain and why approachability matters in permaculture​Ryan's surprising path: from Division I basketball to surfing in Hawaii to discovering Bill Mollison and permaculture​Why plants become characters in our lives — and what deep relationship with a single plant can teach us about commitment​The concept of the 'human sector' in permaculture design and why 98% of permaculture project failures trace back to it​Guilds in permaculture: anchor plants, barrier plants, dynamic accumulators, pest confusers, beneficial attractors, and nitrogen fixers​The biggest misconceptions about permaculture (hint: it's not a technique — it's a design system)​Why community building is hard — and why that's not a reason to stop.​Permaculture's most urgent principle for our current political moment: integrate, don't segregate​Honoring indigenous ecological knowledge — and moving beyond acknowledgment to action​How to start your permaculture journey (spoiler: don't buy land yet)Resources Mentioned ​Mulberries in the Rain: Growing Permaculture Plants for Food and Friendship by Ryan Blosser & Trevor Pearsall​Sand Talk by Tyson Yunkaporta — recommended by Ryan for indigenous ecological knowledge​Deakin University / Tyson Yunkaporta's Indigenous Technologies Lab document on respectful use of IEK​Dave Jacke and Eric Toensmeier's work on permaculture design and guilds​Wendell Berry poem: 'Be joyful, even though you have considered all the facts'Website: https://www.shenandoahpermaculture.com/ ​Shenandoah Permaculture Institute (SPI) — courses offered spring & fall; 2 scholarships available per cohort​Upcoming SPI courses: University of Richmond area (spring) | University of Mary Washington, Fredericksburg (fall)Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shenandoahpermaculture/?__pwa=1 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/shenpermaculture Enjoying Elevating Good Podcast? Share, follow, and review if you like what you hear so more people can discover EGP! ⁠⁠⁠⁠Facebook⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠Instagram⁠⁠⁠⁠ Subscribe to additional content on ⁠⁠⁠⁠Substack⁠⁠ Shop for EGP merch: https://elevategoodpod.com

    1h 14m
  4. May 13

    S5E5: When Survival Mode Becomes Home — and How To Find Your Way Back with Cendrine Hosoda

    In this episode of Elevating Good, Morenike sits down with Cendrine Hosoda, a trauma-informed life consultant, speaker, and founder of Pursuing Wholesome Health. Cendrine has a gift for meeting people right where they are — especially those who have carried invisible wounds for so long that survival mode has started to feel like home. Cendrine brings a beautifully integrated approach to healing: one that weaves together neuroscience, somatics, and faith. As a Neurosomatic Intelligence Certified practitioner, she helps complex trauma survivors gently move from hypervigilance and shutdown into greater safety, regulation, and wholeness — without bypassing the body or the spirit. Whether you've experienced trauma yourself, love someone who has, or simply feel like you've been running on empty longer than you'd like to admit, this conversation will meet you with compassion and offer a path forward. In this episode, you'll hear: ​What complex trauma actually is — and why so many people don't recognize it in themselves​Why healing isn't just a mental process — and what the nervous system has to do with it​How faith and neuroscience can work together (not against each other) in the healing journey​What it means to move from survival mode into sustainable wholeness​Practical wisdom for anyone ready to stop white-knuckling through life Cendrine is also a mom of two young adults who finds restoration in nature, a good book, and a beautiful meal — and that groundedness comes through in every word she shares. This is the kind of conversation that makes you feel less alone — and more hopeful about what's possible. Contact Cendrine Website: https://pursuingwholesomehealth.com/ Facebook Instagram LinkedIN Link to a free resource: https://pursuingwholesomehealth.com/nervous-system-foundations-a-gentle-introduction-to-nsi/ Enjoying the Elevating Good Podcast? Please share, follow, and review: Subscribe to additional content on ⁠⁠⁠⁠Substack⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠Facebook⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠Instagram⁠⁠⁠⁠ Bluesky Looking for wealth-building options? Join the Black Woman Lifestyle 5-Day Igniter Challenge and start building your digital highway to wealth: https://blackwomanlifestylemanifesto.com/access?am_id=morenike8460 Shop for EGP merch: Elevategoodpod.com

    1h 3m
  5. Apr 30

    S5E4: One Man Processes Grief with Jason Tuttle

    Some conversations don't expire — they wait for the moment the world is ready to receive them. We're bringing back this powerful episode with Jason Tuttle because the moment is now. In a time when headlines are surfacing painful truths about men's mental health, grief, the silent weight so many men carry alone, and the tragic impacts men who do not get adequate intervention can have on their women and homes, Jason's story is exactly the kind of voice we need to hear. Jason lost his young son — and rather than retreating into silence, he did something courageous: he talked about it. In this episode, Jason opens up about: ​What grief actually looks and feels like for men — and why it often goes unseen​How men process loss differently, and why that difference matters​Practical ways women can show up for the men in their lives who are hurting​How one man's willingness to share his pain became a lifeline for others Jason's journey doesn't offer easy answers. It offers something better — honest witness, hope, and a reminder that healing is possible even in the darkest valleys. Website: www.LettersToZachary.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61552174684952 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/letters2zachary/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@letters2zachary What do you think about the Elevating Good Podcast? Share, follow, and review if you like what you hear so more people can discover us! ⁠⁠⁠⁠Facebook⁠⁠⁠⁠: https://www.facebook.com/share/1DE2k7uA56/?mibextid=wwXIfr ⁠⁠⁠⁠Instagram⁠⁠⁠⁠: https://www.instagram.com/elevategoodpod Subscribe to bonus content on ⁠⁠⁠⁠Substack⁠⁠: https://open.substack.com/pub/elevatinggoodpod Website: https://elevategoodpod.com

    1h 12m
  6. Mar 19

    S5E2: One Table at a Time: Bridge Building, Belonging & Courageous Compassion with Andrea Putting

    Andrea Putting is a speaker, award-winning author, and the host of Chocolate and Coffee Break: A Compassionate Proposition — a broadcast where strangers sit down together,share their stories and leave seeing each other differently. Her work centers on three convictions: belonging as practice, listening as leadership, and compassion as a courageous daily choice. What began as the simplest of invitations — a pieceof chocolate, a warm drink, and a willingness to listen — has grown into a media platform dedicated to rebuilding trust in divided spaces. Andrea is the author of Compassionate Purpose and Compassionate Prosperity. Her message is clear and urgent: the quality of our conversations shapes the future of our communities. She describes her work not as a career but as a calling — one she follows in obedience to a quiet, persistent nudge to keep building bridges. One table at a time. Visit her website to learn more about her books and speaking - https://andreaputting.com.au/ Watch Chocolate and Coffee Break: A Compassionate Proposition - https://chocolateandcoffeebreak.com/ Follow Andrea on social media for daily doses of compassionate leadership. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/andrea.puttingInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/andreaputting/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@AndreaPutting LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/chocolate-and-coffee-break/ Books by Andrea Compassionate Purpose — Available wherever books are sold.Compassionate Prosperity —Available wherever books are sold. Enjoyed this episode? Like, follow, share, and subscribe. Elevating Good Podcast is also on: Website: https://elevategoodpod.com/ Facebook: https://facebook.com/elevatinggoodpod Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/elevategoodpod/ Unlock more resources on bridging divides by subscribing to Substack: https://elevatinggoodpod.substack.com/ Books by Andrea Putting

    1h 2m

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

You still believe people are worth fighting for — even on hard days. Elevating Good is a podcast for women of faith who are crossing divides without losing the people they love. Hosted by Morenike Ogebe — attorney, HR leader, and lifelong bridge builder — each episode brings you inspiring conversations rooted in faith, courageous compassion, and the conviction that every person carries inherent dignity. Belonging is not a program. It’s practice. And you were built for this. New episodes every other week. More on Substack, Facebook, and Instagram.