Loving Everything

Andrea Love

When it comes to healing trauma, the best medicine is love. A commitment to a way of thinking and behaving that honors interconnectedness, compassion and kindness. In Loving Everything, I invite you to experience intimacy as art. To awaken you to the opportunity for depth and intensity, and the visceral nature between these connections. To help inspire you to give the greatest gift to humanity by embracing your own suffering with the greatest of care, curiosity, consistency, and affection, in order to pursue your true destiny and incredible potential. To seek love deeply, expansively, and unconditionally, and to love everything you find. Find out more about Andrea Love, and her services here: https://andrea.love All production by Cody Maxwell. Artwork by Cody Maxwell. https://sharkfyn.com https://maxwellskitchenpodcast.com Opening graphic assets by arakelov and Envato Elements.

  1. 3일 전

    EP74: Carrying What Others Don't See - What Happens When You Refuse to Look Away

    Drawing from his work documenting protests in Portland, reporting in conflict environments, and responding directly to human need through community action, Josh shares what most people never see: • the difference between events on the ground and how they are portrayed • ethical reporting and the responsibility of truth-telling • the emotional impact of witnessing suffering over time • protest, conflict, and the psychology of escalation • food insecurity, systems failure, and humanitarian response • burnout, compassion fatigue, and staying human in volatile environments • masculinity, emotional responsibility, and relating to pain • the line between documentation and exploitation • how to care deeply without losing yourself This is not a political conversation. It is a human one. A conversation about suffering, empathy, responsibility, and what happens when we stay awake to the realities around us. If you have ever felt overwhelmed by the state of the world — or struggled to understand why some people feel everything while others seem untouched — this conversation will meet you there. Now streaming on YouTube and all major platforms. About Josh White: Josh White is a conflict reporter, journalist, humanitarian, and founder of Heretic Coffee whose work centers on ethical reporting, humanitarian response, and documenting the human stories behind conflict, protest, and systems failure. From Portland demonstrations to international conflict environments, his work explores truth, harm reduction, and what it means to remain human in high-intensity spaces. Josh is affiliated with Independent News and Heretic Coffee, a Portland community-centered coffee project grounded in mutual aid and food justice. Follow Josh: Instagram / Threads: @joshjwhite @humanite.peace.collective @hereticcoffeepdx — About Loving Everything: Loving Everything is a long-form podcast exploring trauma, relationships, identity, grief, and meaning-making through honest, in-person conversations. — Find out more: https://andrea.love — All production by Cody Maxwell Artwork by Heather Grace Gordy

    1시간 57분
  2. 3일 전

    EP73: High Functioning, Quietly Struggling: When Competence Masks Anxiety, Depression, and Codependency

    You can look completely fine… and still be quietly struggling.  You can be capable, productive, dependable, and high functioning… and still feel anxious, exhausted, depressed, or disconnected from yourself. I n this episode of Loving Everything, Andrea Love sits down with Marriage and Family Therapist Kelley O'Gorman for an honest conversation about what happens when competence becomes survival. Because anxiety does not always look like panic. Depression does not always look like collapse. And codependency does not always look like neediness. Sometimes it looks like being the reliable one. The caregiver. The person who holds everything together. Until the strategies that helped you survive stop helping you feel alive. Kelley brings a grounded, evidence-based lens shaped by narrative therapy, family systems, brain science, and nearly two decades of clinical work helping high-functioning people navigate anxiety, depression, caregiving, and identity patterns. Together we explore: • high functioning anxiety and depression that often go unseen • competence, caregiving, and humor as survival strategies • family roles and how they shape identity over time • codependency in people who never identify with the label • when coping skills help — and when they become another form of control • the power of hearing yourself tell your story out loud • confidence and resiliency without performance • what measurable growth actually looks like This conversation is especially for people who look like they are doing well… but quietly feel overwhelmed, lonely, or exhausted inside. This is not a conversation about fixing yourself. It is about understanding what lives underneath overfunctioning — and learning how to stay connected to yourself without turning healing into another job. Learn more about Kelley: https://www.therapyisrad.com/ — About Loving Everything: Loving Everything is a long-form podcast exploring trauma, relationships, identity, grief, and meaning-making through honest, in-person conversations. — Find out more: https://andrea.love — All production by Cody Maxwell Artwork by Heather Grace Gordy

    1시간 27분
  3. 3일 전

    EP72: Why Men Shut Down - Attachment, Burnout, and the Cost of Holding It Together

    Why do some men go quiet when life gets hard? Not because they do not care. And not always because they are unwilling. Sometimes, emotional shutdown is survival. In this episode of Loving Everything, I sit down with therapist and men's mental health specialist Dr. Miles Salisbury for a powerful conversation about attachment, burnout, masculinity, emotional shutdown, and the hidden cost of always holding it together. For many men, competence becomes identity. Strength becomes performance. Silence becomes protection. But what happens when the strategy that once helped you survive starts costing you intimacy, connection, and emotional truth?  Together we explore: • emotional shutdown and overwhelm as adaptive responses • attachment, masculinity, and early relational conditioning • burnout, irritability, numbness, and emotional withdrawal • performance, responsibility, and the pressure men quietly carry • why vulnerability often feels dangerous • the difference between overwhelm and unwillingness • how shame and emotional isolation develop • men's groups, accountability, and emotional language • what sustainable, integrated change actually looks like This conversation is especially for: • men feeling overwhelmed, disconnected, or emotionally shut down • women trying to understand the men in their lives without abandoning themselves • anyone interested in attachment, relational healing, and emotional maturity This is not a conversation about excusing harm. It is a conversation about capacity, accountability, and what happens when survival strategies outlive their usefulness. Learn more about Dr. Miles Salisbury: https://www.milesaheadcounselingandcoaching.com/about — About Loving Everything: Loving Everything is a long-form podcast exploring trauma, relationships, identity, grief, and meaning-making through honest, in-person conversations. — Find out more: https://andrea.love — All production by Cody Maxwell Artwork by Heather Grace Gordy

    1시간 41분
  4. You Might Also Like: Stuff Matters with Ed Conway

    3일 전 ·  보너스

    You Might Also Like: Stuff Matters with Ed Conway

    Introducing LEDs: How a little blue light changed the world from Stuff Matters with Ed Conway. Follow the show: Stuff Matters with Ed Conway A flashing wristband at an NFL game sends Ed Conway down an unexpected economic rabbit hole. To listen without ads, get new episodes a week early, exclusive bonus episodes and much more, become a Sky News Insider. Find out more and subscribe at skynews.com/stuffmatters. LEDs were supposed to be one of the great technological and environmental success stories: a revolutionary technology that uses a fraction of the energy of traditional light bulbs. But is that what they've become? Or are they just an example of humankind’s insatiable desire for stuff? After all - we’ve just started lighting up more of the world than ever before. Ed’s journey takes us from a small chemical factory in rural Japan where inventor Shuji Nakamura spent years battling explosions in pursuit of the world's first blue LED, all the way to Victorian Britain and the economist William Stanley Jevons whose ideas still shape the way we think about energy and consumption today. Along the way, Ed explores one of the biggest questions in economics and climate policy: The Jevons Paradox. When technology becomes more efficient, do we actually use less of it, or simply find new ways to consume more? Do you have any thoughts about the episode or questions for Ed? Email us at stuffmatters@sky.uk and maybe we'll feature your email in an upcoming Q&A episode! Sky News Insider requires a paid subscription and is available to UK listeners aged 18 and over. Find out more and subscribe at skynews.com/stuffmatters. The Stuff Matters series producer is Jake Otajovic. The production team includes assistant producer Valeria Rocca, specialist producer Aoife Yourell, and video producer Charlie Bell. Our bonus episodes are produced by Soila Apparicio. The editor is Philly Beaumont, and the commissioning editor is Paul Stanworth. Sound design and mixing by Luke Hatten. Original music for the series composed by Klong and Ed Conway. DISCLAIMER: Please note, this is an independent podcast episode not affiliated with, endorsed by, or produced in conjunction with the host podcast feed or any of its media entities. The views and opinions expressed in this episode are solely those of the creators and guests. For any concerns, please reach out to team@podroll.fm.

  5. 5월 25일

    EP68: Learning to Feel Safe Again - Wilderness, Skill, and Self-Trust

    What if safety is not something you find — but something you learn to build again? For many women healing relational trauma, betrayal, emotional neglect, or years of self-abandonment, the world can stop feeling safe. But what if confidence does not come from reassurance or positive thinking alone — what if it comes from competence, embodiment, and learning to trust yourself again? In this episode of Loving Everything, I sit down with Norther Emily — wilderness guide, forager, writer, endurance athlete, and founder of Wild Solitude Guiding — for a powerful conversation about fear, self-trust, nervous system healing, and what happens when we reconnect with our own capability. Raised among the forests and basalt cliffs of the Oregon coast, Norther teaches wilderness skills through what she calls intimacy with place — helping people move beyond fear and learn how to navigate, forage, assess risk, and feel genuinely at ease in the natural world. This is not a romanticized conversation about nature. It is an honest conversation about: • fear, anxiety, and learning to work with uncertainty • why real skill changes the nervous system differently than reassurance • wilderness competency and evidence-based risk management • self-trust after trauma and relational injury • embodiment, courage, and rebuilding confidence • emotional healing through nature and place connection • foraging, navigation, and reclaiming personal agency • the difference between survival and truly feeling alive • what wilderness teaches us about resilience, identity, and belonging We also explore childhood, family systems, healing, self-leadership, masculinity, safety culture, environmental stewardship, and the deeper psychological question beneath Norther's work: How do we learn to feel safe again — inside ourselves and in the world? This conversation is especially for women navigating: • betrayal trauma • attachment wounds • emotional abuse or high-conflict family systems • loneliness and identity loss • nervous system dysregulation • rebuilding self-trust in midlife • learning to stop abandoning themselves to stay safe in relationships Because healing is not only emotional. Sometimes healing is learning you can carry yourself through the forest — and through life. ⟡ Guest: Norther Emily Founder, Wild Solitude Guiding Wilderness guide • forager • writer • teacher of nature connection and wilderness skills Follow Norther: Instagram: @wildsolitudeguiding Website: wildsolitudeguide.com — About Loving Everything: Loving Everything is a long-form podcast exploring trauma, relationships, identity, grief, and meaning-making through honest, in-person conversations. — Find out more: https://andrea.love — All production by Cody Maxwell Artwork by Heather Grace Gordy

    1시간 41분
  6. 5월 9일

    EP71: Undoing Aloneness - Healing Overwhelm Through Connection

    You can be surrounded by people… and still feel completely alone inside your experience. In this episode of Loving Everything, I sit down with therapist Kelly Pratt to explore a concept at the heart of real healing: undoing aloneness. Because most people don't just struggle with anxiety, grief, or overwhelm. They struggle alone. Alone inside their experience. Alone inside their emotions. Alone inside their nervous system. And that's what keeps suffering in place. Kelly's work is grounded in AEDP (Accelerated Experiential Dynamic Psychotherapy), where healing doesn't happen through fixing or analyzing—it happens through being deeply accompanied. In this conversation, we explore what overwhelm actually is, how it forms, and what begins to shift when someone no longer has to hold it alone. We also move beyond theory and into experience, with a live, guided moment in session that shows what this work feels like in real time. In this episode, we discuss: • What "undoing aloneness" actually means in therapy and in real life • Why overwhelm is often a relational experience, not just an internal one • How the nervous system changes in the presence of safe connection • The difference between explaining emotions and actually feeling them • Why self-reliance and intellectualizing can keep people stuck • How emotional accompaniment reduces overwhelm physiologically • What people truly need—but rarely receive—when they're struggling • How to stay present with pain without trying to fix or bypass it This conversation is for anyone who has ever felt overwhelmed… and alone inside it. You don't have to do this alone.  — About Kelly Pratt: Kelly Pratt is a Professional Counselor Associate specializing in AEDP, somatic therapy, IFS, and relational healing. Her work focuses on helping clients access emotional truth, reduce overwhelm, and experience deeper connection and self-understanding. Learn more: https://www.guidedinsight.care/ — About Loving Everything: Loving Everything is a podcast exploring trauma, relational healing, identity, and meaning-making through long-form, in-person conversations with clinicians, educators, and healers. — Find out more: https://andrea.love — All production by Cody Maxwell Artwork by Heather Grace Gordy

    1시간 24분
  7. 4월 25일

    EP70: Why Do We Fall In Love? The Psychology No One Talks About

    We're told it's about chemistry. About connection. About finding the right person. But that's only part of the story. In this solo episode of Loving Everything, I break down what's actually happening when we fall in love— from attachment and neuroscience to the deeper psychological truth most people don't talk about: You're not just falling in love with someone else. You're falling in love with who you become in their presence. This episode explores the difference between falling in love and staying in love, why intensity can be mistaken for intimacy, and how early attachment patterns shape who we're drawn to, and why. We also look at heartbreak differently. Not as a failure. But as information. Because the way a relationship ends often reveals more than how it begins. In this episode, we cover: • Why we are biologically wired to fall in love • The role of dopamine, oxytocin, and attachment • Why chemistry doesn't equal compatibility • The difference between falling in love and staying in love • What actually creates long-term connection • Why some relationships feel intense but don't move forward • How heartbreak reveals patterns, not just loss • What it means to choose yourself without closing your heart This is not about becoming cynical about love. It's about understanding it clearly—so you can participate in it differently. — About Loving Everything: Loving Everything is a podcast exploring relational healing, trauma, identity, and meaning-making through long-form, in-person conversations with clinicians, educators, and thought leaders. — Find out more: https://andrea.love — All production by Cody Maxwell Artwork by Heather Grace Gordy

    18분
  8. 4월 13일

    E69: Midwifing the Grief Heart - Love, Loss, and Life's Thresholds

    In this episode of Loving Everything, I sit down with KP Parks—therapist, healer, and midwife of the heart—for a conversation about grief, transformation, and what it means to stay present in the face of life's most profound thresholds. KP brings a deeply integrative approach to their work, shaped by over 25 years of lived experience with grief, a background in midwifery, and a commitment to walking alongside people—not as an expert or fixer, but as a guide. Together, we explore grief not as something to resolve or move past, but as something that lives with us, in the body, in the nervous system, and across the lifespan. We talk about: • Grief as a lifelong companion rather than a problem to solve • How loss reshapes the nervous system, memory, and sense of safety • Why grief can feel like a survival response—long after the loss • The role of ritual, creativity, and embodiment in healing • Identity shifts, queerness, and navigating life transitions • What it means to "midwife" someone through change, rather than fix them • Staying human, open, and connected in a world shaped by impermanence This conversation moves beyond clinical language and into something more human—an honest exploration of love, loss, and the spaces in between. KP works with grief, trauma, life transitions, and identity-based healing, offering care that is relational, somatic, spiritual, and deeply attuned. Their work centers those navigating complex grief, end-of-life processes, pregnancy and postpartum experiences, and major identity shifts. If you've ever felt like grief doesn't "end," or that something in you was fundamentally changed by loss—this conversation will meet you there. — Connect with KP Parks: Website: https://www.mithtracounseling.com/ Offerings include grief tending groups (virtual and in-person), trauma-informed therapy, and support for life transitions. — About Loving Everything: Loving Everything is a podcast exploring relational healing, trauma, identity, and meaning-making through long-form, in-person conversations with clinicians, educators, and healers. — Subscribe for more conversations on mental health, grief, and relational healing. __   Find out more about Andrea Love and her services here: andrea.love   Find out more about The House of Healing & Love here: thehouseofhealing.love   ___   All production by Cody Maxwell.   sharkfyn.com   Artwork by Heather Grace Gordy.   Opening graphic assets by arakelov and Envato Elements.

    1시간 53분

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When it comes to healing trauma, the best medicine is love. A commitment to a way of thinking and behaving that honors interconnectedness, compassion and kindness. In Loving Everything, I invite you to experience intimacy as art. To awaken you to the opportunity for depth and intensity, and the visceral nature between these connections. To help inspire you to give the greatest gift to humanity by embracing your own suffering with the greatest of care, curiosity, consistency, and affection, in order to pursue your true destiny and incredible potential. To seek love deeply, expansively, and unconditionally, and to love everything you find. Find out more about Andrea Love, and her services here: https://andrea.love All production by Cody Maxwell. Artwork by Cody Maxwell. https://sharkfyn.com https://maxwellskitchenpodcast.com Opening graphic assets by arakelov and Envato Elements.