Reimagining the Good Life with Amy Julia Becker

Amy Julia Becker

A podcast about reimagining the good life through the lens of disability, faith, and culture. Host Amy Julia Becker interviews guests in conversations that challenge assumptions about the good life, proclaim the inherent belovedness of every human being, and help us envision a world of belonging. 

  1. 5d ago

    The Life You Planned vs. the Life You Got with Karen Swallow Prior, PhD

    S10 E4—Do you ever wonder what your life would look like if you had made different decisions a long time ago? Author Karen Swallow Prior joins Amy Julia Becker for a conversation about regret, human limitations, and her experience of not having children. Together, they explore what it means to face the losses of the past while remaining open to the unexpected opportunities and possibilities that can emerge alongside them. 00:00 Introduction to Personal Narratives 04:22 Navigating Infertility and Ethical Dilemmas 07:10 The Role of Faith and Community in Decision-Making 11:01 Control, Risk, and Reproductive Technologies 17:30 The Intersection of Calling and Life Choices 20:57 Navigating Regret, Limits, and Choices 25:07 Historical Context of Childlessness 29:07 Imagination and Reality in Family Dynamics 37:25 Reimagining the Good Life Without Children MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: Christianity Today essay by Karen Swallow Prior: “The Birds and the Bees, Babies and Me”Institute for Family Studies essay by Amy Julia Becker: “Confessions of a Middle-Aged Mother”You Have a Calling: Finding Your Vocation in the True, Good, and Beautiful by Karen Swallow PriorThe Midnight Library by Matt Haig_ SUBSCRIBE to Amy Julia's Substack: amyjuliabecker.substack.com WATCH this conversation on YouTube: Amy Julia Becker on YouTube JOIN the conversation on Instagram: @amyjuliabecker LISTEN to more episodes: amyjuliabecker.com/shows/ _ ABOUT OUR GUEST: Karen Swallow Prior, Ph.D. is the 2025-26 Karlson Scholar at Bethel Seminary. She is a popular writer and speaker, a contributing writer for The Dispatch, and a columnist for Religion News Service. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times, The Atlantic, Vox, The Washington Post, Christianity Today, and many other places. Her most recent book is You Have a Calling: Finding Your Vocation in the True, Good, and Beautiful (Brazos 2025). CONNECT with Karen: karenswallowprior.com Facebook: Karen Swallow PriorInstagram: karenswallowpriorX: @KSPrior Substack: @karenswallowprior__ We want to hear your thoughts. Send us a text! Connect with me: InstagramFacebookYouTubeWebsiteThanks for listening!

    44 min
  2. Jun 2

    The R-Word and the Language of Disability with Christina Cipriano, PhD

    S10 E3—The return of the R-word is about more than language. The words we choose both reflect and shape our moral imagination. When disability becomes an insult or a political weapon, it influences how we understand human worth, vulnerability, and belonging. In this conversation, Christina Cipriano, PhD, joins Amy Julia Becker to explore her research on political language and disability, including the return of the R-word. They discuss what these patterns reveal about the systems shaping care, education, and belonging, and they consider: how can we resist dehumanizing language and  choose words that move us toward justice and joy? 00:00 Introduction to Disability Discourse Matters 06:53 Asset-Based vs. Deficit-Based Perspectives 10:27 Personal Narratives and Language Choices 19:49 The Rise, Fall, and Rise of the R Word 23:42 Dehumanization in Political Rhetoric 28:47 Historical Context of Disability Discourse 33:00 Disability Language and Future Generations 40:48 Reimagining Disability and the Good Life MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: Disability Discourse MattersThe Education Collaboratory at Yale | Child Study CenterSpread the Word – Special OlympicsMontclair University: Use of the Slur [r-word] Triples on X After Elon Musk Shares the Word in a PostBe Unapologetically Impatient by Christina CiprianoEuphemism Treadmill article_ SUBSCRIBE to Amy Julia's Substack: amyjuliabecker.substack.com WATCH this conversation on YouTube: Amy Julia Becker on YouTube JOIN the conversation on Instagram: @amyjuliabecker LISTEN to more episodes: amyjuliabecker.com/shows/ _ ABOUT OUR GUEST: Christina Cipriano, PhD, is currently an associate professor of applied developmental and educational psychology at the Yale Child Study Center in the Yale School of Medicine and Director of the Education Collaboratory. This fall Dr. Cipriano will transition to be the inaugural Joseph W. and Alma W. Keilty Endowed Chair in Education and Professor with tenure at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and the Education Collaboratory will be moving to the College of Education at UMass Amherst. An award-winning scholar and internationally regarded expert in the science of learning and development, Chris received her PhD from Boston College, her EdM from the Harvard Graduate School of Education, and her undergraduate degree from Hofstra University. Dr. Cipriano has published over one hundred and twenty papers, commentaries, and reports, spanning top-tier journals such as Child Development and the Review of Educational Research as well as media outlets including The Washington Post, NPR, The New York Times, PBS, and Education Week. Her award-winning and best-selling new book, Be Unapologetically Impatient: The Mindset Required to Change the Way We Do Things (2025), is the latest must-read for every educator, provider, parent, and person interested in improving the lives of children and families, right now. A prolific public scholar, educator, and speaker, Chris privileges her positionality as a first-generation high school graduate and mother of four children in her science. https://www.drchriscip.com/ https://www.disabilitydiscoursematters.org/ https://www.beunapologeticallyimpatient.com/ https://medicine.yale.edu/profile/christina-cipriano/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/christinacipriano/ LinkedIn @ChristinaCipriano Instagram @DrChrisCip BlueSky @DrChrisCip Twitter @DrChrisCip We want to hear your thoughts. Send us a text! Connect with me: InstagramFacebookYouTubeWebsiteThanks for listening!

    46 min
  3. May 26

    The Spirituality of Weariness with Tish Harrison Warren

    S10 E2—What do you do when you’ve done all the “right” spiritual things and still feel exhausted? Tish Harrison Warren, a writer and Anglican priest, joins Amy Julia Becker to explore burnout, spiritual dryness, midlife weariness, and the practices that help us stay rooted when God feels distant. For those who are tired, discouraged, or wondering why faith feels harder than it used to, here’s hope for the long middle of life from Tish’s latest book, What Grows in Weary Lands. 00:00 Introduction to Tish Harrison Warren 03:29 Exploring Spiritual Weariness and Doubt 14:47 Understanding Fortitude and Resilience 23:23 The Imagined Good Life 30:20 Navigating the Desert of Faith 35:10 The Practice of Stability 44:04 Community in Seasons of Aridity MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: Books by Tish Harrison Warren:  What Grows in Weary Lands Liturgy of the Ordinary Prayer in the Night _ SUBSCRIBE to Amy Julia's Substack: amyjuliabecker.substack.com WATCH this conversation on YouTube: Amy Julia Becker on YouTube JOIN the conversation on Instagram: @amyjuliabecker LISTEN to more episodes: amyjuliabecker.com/shows/ _ ABOUT OUR GUEST: Tish Harrison Warren is an Anglican priest and the author of several books, including Liturgy of the Ordinary, which won Christianity Today’s 2018 Book of the Year, and Prayer in the Night, which won Christianity Today’s 2022 Book of the Year and the 2022 ECPA Christian Book of the Year. She formerly wrote a weekly newsletter for The New York Times, which focused on faith in public discourse and private life. She was also a columnist at Christianity Today. Her articles and essays have appeared in Comment Magazine, The Point Magazine, Religion News Service, and elsewhere. She currently serves as the C.S. Lewis Theological Writer-in-Residence for The Anglican Episcopal House of Studies at Baylor’s George W. Truett Theological Seminary. She is a senior fellow with the Trinity Forum and an assisting priest at Immanuel Anglican Church. She lives in Austin, Texas, with her husband and three children. https://tishharrisonwarren.com/ https://www.instagram.com/tishharrisonwarren/ We want to hear your thoughts. Send us a text! Connect with me: InstagramFacebookYouTubeWebsiteThanks for listening!

    53 min
  4. May 19

    How to Design a More Human World with Sara Hendren

    S10 E1—When you walk into a room, what does that room tell you about who you are as a human being? What assumptions go into our restaurants and civic buildings and churches and homes and schools? What do they say about who we are and about how we relate to each other? Artist and design researcher Sara Hendren joins Amy Julia Becker to explore how modern spaces—from office buildings to nursing homes—shape what we believe about dignity, dependence, and belonging. Together they uncover how design can either diminish or restore our shared humanity, and why the good life depends on reimagining how we live together. 00:00 Introduction to Design and Humanity 05:24 Understanding the Machine Model and Anti-Human Design 14:32 What Spaces Communicate About Being Human 29:29 Design Choices and Human Dignity 34:49 Innovations in Dementia Care Design 37:26 Art and Dignity for Individuals with Disabilities 41:32 The Metaphysics of Dignity and Human Connection 51:07 Designing for the Good Life: Relationality and Community MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: What Can a Body Do? How We Meet the Built World by Sara HendrenPrevious podcast conversation: “S3 E15 | Who Belongs? Disability and the Built World with Sara Hendren”Comment Magazine essay by Sara Hendren: “Pattern Recognition: Design for humans in unexpected places.”Short film: Simple MachineBeing Mortal by Atul Gawande_ WATCH this conversation on YouTube: Amy Julia Becker on YouTube SUBSCRIBE to Amy Julia's Substack: amyjuliabecker.substack.com JOIN the conversation on Instagram: @amyjuliabecker LISTEN to more episodes: amyjuliabecker.com/shows/ _ ABOUT OUR GUEST: Sara Hendren is an artist, design researcher, writer, and professor at Northeastern University. Her book What Can a Body Do? How We Meet the Built World explores the places where disability shows up in design at all scales: assistive technology, furniture, architecture, urban planning, and more. It was named one of the Best Books of 2020 by NPR and won the 2021 Science in Society Journalism book prize. Her art and design works have been exhibited on the White House lawn under the Obama presidency, at the Victoria & Albert Museum, the Seoul Museum of Art, the Vitra Museum, and many others, and her work is held in the permanent collections at MoMA and the Cooper Hewitt. She has been an NEH Public Scholar and a fellow at New America, and her commentary and criticism have been published in Harper’s, Art in America, The New York Times, the Washington Post, and elsewhere. Website: sarahendren.com __ We want to hear your thoughts. Send us a text! Connect with me: InstagramFacebookYouTubeWebsiteThanks for listening!

    56 min
  5. Feb 5 ·  Bonus

    [Take the Next Step] Ep 12 • When Special Education Works with Adrian Wood

    Exciting news! New episodes are dropping on my Take the Next Step podcast, and I’m sharing this one here so you won’t miss out. Be sure to follow Take the Next Step with Amy Julia Becker wherever you listen so you are sure to get future episodes. https://pod.link/1838911087 More about Take the Next Step: amyjuliabecker.com/step/ ___ What if inclusion in schools didn’t have to be a constant fight? Adrian Wood, PhD, shares what actually helped her son with autism thrive in their public school system. Adrian and Amy Julia Becker explore: Building trust with educatorsCollaboration and creativityNavigating IEPs and transitionsSmall changes that make a big differenceAsk Me Anything: Record (or email) your question for our upcoming Ask Me Anything episode: amyjuliabecker.com/qr/ 04:30 Navigating Public School for Children with Disabilities  06:53 Creative Thinking and Working Together as a Team  15:55 Strategies for Success  __ MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: VLOG: Tales of an Educated Debutante_ WATCH this conversation on YouTube: Amy Julia Becker on YouTube SUBSCRIBE to Amy Julia's Substack: amyjuliabecker.substack.com JOIN the conversation on Instagram: @amyjuliabecker LISTEN to more episodes: amyjuliabecker.com/shows/ _ ABOUT: Adrian Wood is the creator of the vlog Tales of an Educated Debutante. She has a PhD in Educational Research and contributes to Today Parents, The Today Show, and the Love What Matters blog. She lives in rural eastern North Carolina with her family. She is the co-author of Autism Out Loud.   CONNECT with Adrian on her website (talesofaneducateddebutante.com), Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube.  __ Take the Next Step is produced in collaboration with Hope Heals. Hope Heals creates sacred spaces of belonging and belovedness for families affected by disabilities to experience sustaining hope in the context of inclusive, intentional, inter-ability communities. Find out more about our resources, gatherings, and inter-ability communities at hopeheals.com. Follow on Instagram @hopeheals. We want to hear your thoughts. Send us a text! Connect with me: InstagramFacebookYouTubeWebsiteThanks for listening!

    16 min
  6. Jan 27

    Culture Care, not Culture War with Makoto Fujimura

    S9 E9 — Our culture feels like a battlefield, but perspectives and actions change when we see it as a garden we’ve forgotten how to tend. Artist and author Makoto Fujimura shares with Amy Julia Becker how art, wonder, and imagination can restore our capacity to love, hope, and tend culture with care. Together they explore his book Art Is: A Journey into the Light, slow art, spiritual imagination, and a gentler way to live faithfully in a fractured world. 00:00 Introduction to Makoto Fujimura and the Process of Art 07:08 Stewardship Responsibility for Imagination and Creativity 13:34 The Importance of Slow Art and Observation 19:19 Engaging with Darkness in Art 22:15 The Role of Artists within the Darkness of Society 29:07 Giving Away Beauty: The Heart of Art 34:07 Imagination, Faith, and Love 42:58 Culture Care: Changing the Metaphor __ MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: Art Is: A Journey into the Light, Art and Faith: A Theology of Making, and Culture Care: Reconnecting with Beauty for Our Common Life by Makoto FujimuraEmbers InternationalAmy Julia’s episode with Justin Giboney: “How the Civil Rights Generation Can Lead Us Out of the Culture War” with Justin Giboney Amy Julia’s Take the Next Step podcast - new episodes beginning February 4, 2026_ WATCH this conversation on YouTube: Amy Julia Becker on YouTube SUBSCRIBE to Amy Julia's Substack: amyjuliabecker.substack.com JOIN the conversation on Instagram: @amyjuliabecker LISTEN to more episodes: amyjuliabecker.com/shows/ _ ABOUT OUR GUEST: Makoto Fujimura is a leading contemporary artist whose process driven, refractive “slow art” has been described by David Brooks of New York Times as “a small rebellion against the quickening of time”. In addition to his work as an artist, Mako is an author whose latest work is entitled Art Is: A Journey into the Light. From 2003 to 2009, he served as a Presidential appointee to the National Council on the Arts. He is a celebrated speaker and advocate for the arts and has received five Honorary Doctor of Arts degrees. https://makotofujimura.com/ https://www.instagram.com/iamfujimura/ ___ We want to hear your thoughts. Send us a text! Connect with me: InstagramFacebookYouTubeWebsiteThanks for listening!

    50 min
  7. Jan 13

    How the Civil Rights Generation Can Lead Us Out of the Culture War with Justin Giboney

    S9 E8 — We're living through a season of deep division, political unrest, and global instability. Justin Giboney, political strategist and author of Don't Let Nobody Turn You Around, joins Amy Julia Becker to help us recover a moral imagination shaped by faith—one that resists polarization, refuses hatred, and offers a better way forward in public life. 00:00 Guidance from the Civil Rights Generation 07:18 The Black Church's Public Witness 10:00 The Civil Rights Movement vs Progressive Activism 13:52 Forgiveness and Redemption 17:28 Navigating the Culture Wars 25:39 The AND Campaign: Bridging Divides in Politics 28:51 Cultivating Moral Imagination 31:51 The Impact of Social Media 37:52 Practices for Living Out a Moral Imagination __ MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: • Don't Let Nobody Turn You Around: How the Black Church's Public Witness Leads Us out of the Culture War by Justin Giboney  • AND Campaign: andcampaign.org  • Church Politics podcast  • Amy Julia's Take the Next Step podcast: amyjuliabecker.com/step/ _ WATCH this conversation on YouTube: Amy Julia Becker on YouTube SUBSCRIBE to Amy Julia's Substack: amyjuliabecker.substack.com JOIN the conversation on Instagram: @amyjuliabecker LISTEN to more episodes: amyjuliabecker.com/shows/ _ ABOUT OUR GUEST: Justin Giboney (JD, Vanderbilt University) is an author, ordained minister, attorney, and political strategist. He is the founder and president of the AND Campaign, a Christian civic organization focused on raising civic literacy, promoting civic pluralism, and equipping Christians to engage politics with the love and truth of Jesus Christ. Justin is dedicated to promoting Christ-centered values as the basis for engagement in politics and social issues.  BOOK: Don’t Let Nobody Turn You Around INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/justinegiboney/ We want to hear your thoughts. Send us a text! Connect with me: InstagramFacebookYouTubeWebsiteThanks for listening!

    45 min

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About

A podcast about reimagining the good life through the lens of disability, faith, and culture. Host Amy Julia Becker interviews guests in conversations that challenge assumptions about the good life, proclaim the inherent belovedness of every human being, and help us envision a world of belonging. 

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