Kindness in Motion

Kindness in Motion

Kindness in Motion is a podcast about what happens when kindness becomes active, brave, and human. Hosted by Suzy and Parry, each episode explores courage, connection, neurodiversity, and the small everyday moments that spark real change. This is a movement for tired hearts, hopeful humans, and anyone ready to believe that kindness still matters — and that it can move us all.

Episodes

  1. May 18

    Being Human: Kindness, Vulnerability & Finding Meaning

    What does it really mean to be human? In this episode of Kindness in Motion, we dive deep into kindness, vulnerability, identity, selfhood, meaning‑making, mental health, and the everyday practice of being human. Our guest Justin joins us from Florida to explore how we stay grounded, connected, and compassionate in a chaotic world. We talk about kindness as a daily practice, why vulnerability takes courage, and how our sense of self is shaped by social media, modern life, neurodiversity, and the stories we tell about who we are. Justin brings together psychology, philosophy, naturalistic spirituality, and cognitive science to help us understand how humans think, feel, and make meaning. From self‑awareness and identity to authenticity, sincerity, and emotional wellbeing, this conversation explores the messy, beautiful layers of being human. We look at how to reconnect with ourselves, how to take small acts of kindness into the world, and how to navigate anxiety, overwhelm, and the pressure to perform. We also explore: Why kindness matters in a disconnected world How vulnerability builds connection The impact of social media on identity and mental health Meaning‑making, relevance realisation, and self‑reflection The sacred without the supernatural AI, compassion, and the future of human connection How to take one small step toward kindness today If you’re curious about wellbeing, self‑development, emotional resilience, spirituality, psychology, or the human condition, this episode is for you. It’s thoughtful, grounding, and full of practical insights for anyone trying to live with more kindness — toward themselves and others. Keywords: kindness, vulnerability, wellbeing, mental health, identity, selfhood, meaning, philosophy, psychology, spirituality, compassion, connection, self‑awareness, authenticity, emotional resilience, human behaviour, personal growth, neurodiversity, social media, mindfulness, being human.

    38 min
  2. Mar 30

    The Cost of Kindness: Armour, Boundaries, and Being Human

    In this heartfelt episode of Kindness in Motion, Suzy and Parry dive into what kindness really means — beyond the clichés, beyond the fluff, and deep into the messy, human reality of how we give, receive, and sometimes struggle with kindness. Together they explore kindness as armour, kindness as survival, and the difference between being nice and being truly kind. Suzy shares powerful stories from her childhood, including the community kindness she witnessed in the 1980s and how those early experiences shaped her understanding of compassion, confidence, and care. The conversation moves into the emotional cost of selfless giving, the importance of agency when helping others, and the surprising ways kindness can become a defence mechanism. This episode also opens up an honest discussion about bullying, mental health, and the long‑term impact of childhood trauma. Suzy talks about her mission to advocate against bullying and why protecting children’s emotional wellbeing is a responsibility we all share. Parry brings thoughtful insight into self‑kindness, self‑criticism, and the complicated relationship many of us have with our own expectations. If you’re interested in kindness psychology, mental health, anti‑bullying advocacy, neurodiversity, self‑compassion, or simply becoming a kinder human without losing yourself, this warm and honest conversation will resonate deeply. It’s reflective, funny, vulnerable, and full of the real‑life moments that make kindness powerful. A welcoming, grounding listen for anyone who believes kindness can change lives — starting with our own.

    50 min
  3. Mar 17

    Listening Spaces

    Kindness in Motion — The Quiet Power of Listening with Katie Van Haeften What if the most transformative act of kindness isn’t what we say… but how we listen?In this episode, Suzy and Parry explore the life-changing impact of active listening, human connection, and emotional presence with educator and facilitator Katie Van Haeften, whose work spans decades and continents. Katie shares the surprising research behind why being truly heard boosts wellbeing, reduces conflict, and strengthens relationships. She reveals how her “listening spaces” help people feel seen without judgement, and why five uninterrupted minutes of attention can shift someone’s entire emotional landscape. We dive into: Why listening is a powerful act of kindnessHow language shapes connection and emotional safetySimple listening techniques that improve communicationThe link between self-awareness, empathy, and mental healthHow different cultures express presence and communityWhy listening can reduce bullying and support young peopleA guided grounding exercise to help you listen inwardFrom rural Himalayan villages to everyday moments of tenderness, Katie’s stories reveal what humans everywhere long for: to be heard, valued, and understood. If you’re interested in wellbeing, mindfulness, communication skills, self-development, or building more compassionate relationships, this conversation offers practical tools and gentle insight you can use immediately. A grounding, hopeful episode for anyone wanting to show up with more kindness — for others and for themselves.

    33 min
  4. Mar 3

    Late Diagnosis, Mid‑Life Clarity: The Moment Everything Finally Made Sense

    This episode dives into the moment my entire life snapped into focus — the late‑diagnosis clarity that arrived in the most unexpected place: a silent, snow‑covered week in Sweden. It wasn’t a retreat or a reset. It was a rupture. A mid‑life, neurodivergent, mask‑cracking, identity‑shifting moment where everything I’d been carrying finally made sense. Parry and I talk about what it feels like to reach adulthood — mid‑life, even — without the language for your own brain. We explore autism, ADHD, masking, burnout, and the emotional exhaustion of spending decades performing a version of yourself that keeps everyone else comfortable. And then we talk about the moment that performance stopped. The moment the mask slipped. The moment the truth arrived with a kind of quiet force: Oh. This is who I am. Sweden became the backdrop for that awakening. The frozen lake. The bunk beds. The silence that was so loud it became a mirror. The sensory overwhelm. The unexpected calm. The grief of realising how long I’d been lost. The relief of finally being found. And the mid‑life clarity that came with understanding my neurodivergence not as a flaw, but as the missing piece of my story. This episode is about late diagnosis, identity, kindness, rupture, and the slow, tender integration that follows when you finally stop running from yourself. It’s about the moment everything clicked — creatively, emotionally, neurologically — and the beginning of a life that feels like it actually fits. If you’ve ever wondered why you feel different, if you’ve ever hit mid‑life and felt everything shift, if you’ve ever sensed that your story might make more sense than you’ve been told — this conversation is for you. It’s honest, warm, slightly chaotic, and rooted in the kind of kindness that doesn’t apologise for existing.

    31 min
  5. The Psychology of Kindness with Dr K

    Feb 10

    The Psychology of Kindness with Dr K

    Welcome back to Kindness in Motion, where courage, curiosity, and connection lead the way. In this episode, Suzy and Parry sit down with the brilliant and deeply grounded Dr Kirsten Krawczyk — a child psychologist, mother, and late‑diagnosed ADHD woman whose work spans prisons, families, trauma, and the emotional worlds of children. Together, we explore the psychology of kindness: not as a personality trait, but as a skill we can grow. Dr K shares powerful insights into how kindness develops, how listening shapes the brain, and why connection is biologically protective. We dive into: • how kindness works in the brain (dopamine, cortisol, oxytocin) • why listening is a neurological act, not just a social one • how neurodivergent people may “listen differently” • the impact of secondary trauma from news and social media • how to be kinder to ourselves when our first reaction isn’t our best • what children really need to feel safe, seen, and connected • why kindness is active, intentional, and relational We also explore the idea of kindness as a growth skill, drawing on the work of psychologist Carol Dweck, whose research on growth mindset has transformed how we understand learning and emotional development. Learn more about her work here: Carol Dweck – Mindset Research: https://www.mindsetworks.com/science/ And for anyone wanting to build a daily practice of emotional grounding, Dr K and Suzy touch on the power of gratitude journaling — a simple, evidence‑based tool shown to increase wellbeing, reduce stress, and strengthen connection. A helpful starting point: Gratitude Journaling Overview: (positivepsychology.com in Bing) This conversation is warm, honest, and full of practical wisdom — from growth mindset to emotional regulation, from parenting to community care, from the Friendship Bench model to the everyday moments where kindness becomes a lifeline. Kindness isn’t who you are — it’s what you do. And it’s something we can all grow.

    53 min
  6. Jan 25

    Kindness in a Complicated World

    In this hour‑long conversation, Suzy and Parry dive deep into what kindness really means — beyond the Disney sparkle and into the messy, courageous, beautifully human reality of it. From childhood memories and generational shifts to online trolling, social media culture, and the biology of empathy, this episode explores how kindness shows up, how it gets lost, and how we can bring it back. Together, they wander through stories of growing up in different eras, the changing nature of community, the power of digital connection, and the strange comfort (and danger) of AI‑mediated empathy. They unpack bullying, belonging, self‑protection, and the quiet bravery it takes to stay open in a world that often encourages us to shut down. With humour, honesty, and the occasional rabbit hole, Suzy and Parry reflect on: Why kindness isn’t fluffy — it’s gritty, active, and sometimes uncomfortableHow trolls can become humans againThe tension between online connection and real‑world presenceThe role of technology, AI, and social media in shaping our emotional livesWhat ancient anthropology can teach us about caring for each otherWhy constructive criticism can be an act of kindnessHow self‑awareness, boundaries, and honesty shape kinder relationshipsThis episode is part exploration, part confession, part philosophical wander — and entirely human. Settle in for a conversation that’s warm, curious, occasionally chaotic, and deeply rooted in the belief that kindness still matters, and that it can move us all.

    1h 6m
  7. Season 1, Episode 1 Trailer

    Why Kindness Needs to Move: Staying Visible in a Lonely World

    Why Kindness Needs to Move | Kindness in Motion Podcast Episode 1 In this opening episode of the Kindness in Motion podcast, hosts Suzy and Parry explore why kindness can’t stay passive — and why it matters more than ever in a world where so many people feel unseen, unheard, or quietly shrinking. They talk honestly about the loneliness pandemic, online cruelty, and the emotional impact of being misread, dismissed, or pushed to the edges. Drawing on lived experience, including Suzy’s late diagnosis of autism and ADHD, they unpack how harmful patterns on social media and in everyday life can slowly erode confidence, visibility, and connection. This episode is for anyone who’s ever felt invisible or “too much.” It’s for people who care deeply but feel tired, overwhelmed, or stretched thin. It’s for listeners who want to believe kindness still exists — even when the world feels sharp — and for those looking for a kindness podcast that doesn’t sugar-coat reality, but still makes space for hope, courage, and repair. Suzy and Parry explore what real kindness looks like: not politeness, not perfection, but active, noticing, interrupting kindness. The kind that steps in before someone disappears into silence. The kind that moves through communities, friendships, workplaces, and online spaces like warmth moving through a cold room. Each episode of the Kindness in Motion podcast ends with a simple, human-sized act of kindness you can try in your own life. This week’s invitation is small but powerful: think of someone who’s been a little quiet lately and send them a short message — no fixing, no pressure, just a bit of warmth to say, “You’re not forgotten.” Key themes in this episode include: Why kindness is more than “being nice” — and why it’s a lifeline The loneliness pandemic and feeling invisible in a hyper-connected world How online bullying and subtle cruelty echo real-life harm Neurodiversity, late diagnosis, and seeing harmful patterns more clearly How small, consistent acts of kindness can keep people visible Kindness doesn’t need to be perfect. It just needs to move. And when kindness moves, people feel seen, supported, and a little less alone. New episodes every two weeks: Suzy and Parry return with conversations about kindness, courage, loneliness, mental health, neurodiversity, and the real stories that keep communities going. Sometimes it’s just the two of them; sometimes they’re joined by guests who bring their own lived experiences of kindness, harm, and healing. If you have a story of kindness in motion — big or small — share it using #KindnessInMotion. This movement, and this podcast, belong to all of us.

    13 min

Trailers

About

Kindness in Motion is a podcast about what happens when kindness becomes active, brave, and human. Hosted by Suzy and Parry, each episode explores courage, connection, neurodiversity, and the small everyday moments that spark real change. This is a movement for tired hearts, hopeful humans, and anyone ready to believe that kindness still matters — and that it can move us all.