93 episodes

In 2015 one woman decided to sit on a sidewalk to listen to strangers to understand what was making us sick, lonely, and divided. Today over 8000 people join Traci Ruble in their endeavor to cultivate their own heart-centered listening in a world that values talking at, fixing, advice giving, and therapizing.

Listen in as Traci talks to all different kinds of people and practice listening with heart and you hear the podcast.

To join, you can visit www.sidewalk-talk.org

Sidewalk Talk Traci Ruble

    • Society & Culture
    • 4.9 • 18 Ratings

In 2015 one woman decided to sit on a sidewalk to listen to strangers to understand what was making us sick, lonely, and divided. Today over 8000 people join Traci Ruble in their endeavor to cultivate their own heart-centered listening in a world that values talking at, fixing, advice giving, and therapizing.

Listen in as Traci talks to all different kinds of people and practice listening with heart and you hear the podcast.

To join, you can visit www.sidewalk-talk.org

    Normalize Loving Conflict Everywhere with Rosa Zubizaretta

    Normalize Loving Conflict Everywhere with Rosa Zubizaretta

    Rosa supports leaders and groups around the world to work creatively with divergent perspectives. Her mission is developing our collective capacity to transform friction into useful energy and greater insight. Author of From Conflict to Creative Collaboration, a manual on Dynamic Facilitation. She also just finished her Ph.D. so soon we should say Dr. Rosa Zubizaretta.  This has freed up her time to take on new clients after some time steeped in academia.
    What would happen if helping a neighbor with a conflict was as normal as waking up in the morning?  What if our companies had an ethos that conflict is not only natural but good and has a hearty system for restoring after conflict?  That is what Traci and Rosa discuss as well as why we need to not start with our most difficult political rivals but make resolving conflict with those close to us our first order of business.
    Episode Timeline

    [00:09] Intro 
    [1:41] Meet Rosa
    [3:21] Rosa’s contribution to the Sidewalk Talk Bus Tour
    [5:23] German and European ties
    [7:16] We need each other
    [8:51] De shame yourself
    [11:42] Common causes of conflict
    [15:43] How conflict is in heaven
    [18:56] Dominic Barter’s restorative circles
    [25:40] Start where it is easy
    [33:30] Love wrestling with your husband
    [38:08] Passionate conflict is an energy turbine
    [41:32] The roots of violence
    [46:18] Closing
    [48:35] Outro

    Resources Mentioned
    From Conflict to Creative Collaboration (Book)
    Standout Quotes

    “I just want to start with the fact that as human beings, we get into messes with each other” (Rosa)
    “Anybody can learn how to hold space productively for another person and listen deeply.” (Rosa)
    “If the 99 % could figure out how to do collaboration between us, we'd be so F* strong,” (Rosa)
    “But we grew up in a culture where we do not learn how to confront people with love. ” (Rosa)
    “Conflict happens when we're at our edge. It's like, there's an edge there. There's something that I don't know or understand yet, or something's getting triggered or something. And so it's a potential growth place. ” (Rosa)
    “I think conflict is a potentially renewable, sustainable source of energy ” (Rosa)
    “We just have to open the space so that we are not butt heads against each other, but that that passion gets harnessed.” (Rosa)

    Connect
    Find | Sidewalk Talk 
    At sidewalk-talk.org
    On Instagram: @sidewalktalkorg
    On Twitter: @sidewalktalkorg
     
    Find | Traci Ruble
    At Traciruble.com
    On Instagram: @TraciRubleMFT
    On Twitter: @TraciRubleMFT
    On Facebook: @TraciRubleMFT
     
    Find | Rosa Zubizarreta
    At www.diapraxis.com 
    www.co-intelligence.institute
    On LinkedIn: @rosazubizarreta
     
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    • 48 min
    Being A Sacredly Powerful Human with Julio Maria Muhorro

    Being A Sacredly Powerful Human with Julio Maria Muhorro

    Julio Maria Muhorro is a power coach, facilitator, and speaker.  He uses his 10 years of experience in management, training, and research to enable entrepreneurs, leaders, and organizations to tap into their power so that they can engage with their stakeholders from a place of deep purpose, sharpen their offerings to deliver innovative services and digital products and tell transformational stories to drive long-lasting social and economic impact.
    Join Traci in a conversation with Julio where Traci asks Julio, “How can I use my power wisely?” Julio will lay out three concrete steps you will need to take and give you a heads-up on the significant resistance you will likely meet.  This is a podcast where you will likely want something to take notes with nearby.
     
    Episode Timeline

    [00:09] Intro 
    [2:58] Meet Julio
    [3:48] It isn’t about wealth and achievement
    [6:57] Saudade - Portuguese word to long to be with
    [11:16] It’s what you do with your power that counts
    [13:01] The will of nature and the will of the divine trumps human will
    [16:08] Three steps to using your power
    [25:54] Powerful on the sidewalk
    [29:55] Sharing your power with the right people
    [34:15] Boundaries and what is sacred
    [40:30] Closing
    [42:42] Outro

     
    Resources Mentioned
    Never Been Done Before Global Facilitator’s Community
     
    Standout Quotes

    “Power is tricky because we are real shitheads with power.” (Traci)
    “Power is not something that it can be given or taken from you because you are powerful because you exist.” (Julio)
    “...remember, you're not controlling your life. You are leading the co-creation of it.” (Julio)
    “A lot of the times there is a disassociation between what people are saying about you and how you see yourself.” (Julio)
    “We show up today not based on our performance and results that we achieved in the past, but based on what we believe is possible in the future.” (Julio)
    “It's getting in alignment with all the different wills, the human will, the natural will, and the divine will to choose the right people to be in this virtuous circle with.” (Traci)
    “What will it take for you to live in power now? Not to rest in power, not to have a powerful moment or a powerful day tomorrow, but to live in power now.” (Julio)
    “If you're not able to see the sacredness in you, everything else will fall apart. Because even if people are trying to honor that sacredness, you don't feel as though you deserve it. So you will sabotage it, you will deflect it.” (Julio) 

     
    Connect:
    Find | Sidewalk Talk 
    At sidewalk-talk.org
    On Instagram: @sidewalktalkorg
    On Twitter: @sidewalktalkorg
     
    Find | Traci Ruble
    At Traciruble.com
    On Instagram: @TraciRubleMFT
    On Twitter: @TraciRubleMFT
    On Facebook: @TraciRubleMFT
     
    Find | Julio Maria Muhorro
    At Link Tree
    On Instagram: @liveinpowernow
    On LinkedIn: @juliomuhorro
    On TikTokr: @liveinpowernow
     
     
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    • 43 min
    What this crisis manager learned from indigenous wisdom | Thomas Lahnthaler

    What this crisis manager learned from indigenous wisdom | Thomas Lahnthaler

    Thomas Lanthaler drops into hot spots of crisis all over the world and helps people make decisions to get through the chaos as peacefully as possible.
    He is an experienced international crisis leader, experiential facilitator, and speaker with nearly two decades of experience across 30 countries. Thomas is the Founder and CEO of The Crisis Compass. This cross-sectoral consultancy acts as a partner and guide to companies genuinely interested in working with a crisis as a means for innovation. He advises leaders on all aspects of human-centered crisis management, confident decision-making, and making businesses crisis-ready using innovative tools to deal with uncertainty and challenging situations  - all centered around learning and communication to reframe crises into means of reinvention.
    In this episode of the Sidewalk Talk podcast, you will get an inside view of the life of a humanitarian crisis manager and learn what crisis management even is.  Then you will have the chance to go on a deep and soulful journey with Thomas as he experienced a new way of thinking about community care and self-responsibility while training with aboriginal leaders in Australia. 
    Episode Timeline

    [00:09] Intro 


    [0:58] Meet Thomas


    [7:35] Becoming a crisis manager


    [11:17] Fatherhood and how children are natural crisis managers


    [13:32] What is crisis management


    [17:21] When we label things a crisis


    [25:15] What are your non-negotiables?


    [31:40] Ritual and spirituality


    [39:17] An earth-based practice of collectivism


    [48:46] Closing


    [49:40] Outro

    Resources Mentioned
    Navigating Beyond Crisis (Book)
    Standout Quotes

    “If you make a small difference with just one person, you've already made a difference.” (Thomas)


    “A crisis is not an event. A crisis is basically the aftermath of it.” (Thomas)


    “If it's not a life or death crisis, no one is dying in front of you, there's always time.” (Thomas)


    “I deserve the acceptance here, but I also have to give acceptance because others are different and they will see it differently.” (Thomas)


    “I'm talking about the awareness, what it does to me if I actually let go.” (Thomas)


    “We're trying to do what you just talked about, sitting there on the land, trying to practice collectivism.” (Traci)

    Connect
    Find | Sidewalk Talk At sidewalk-talk.orgOn Instagram: @sidewalktalkorgOn Twitter: @sidewalktalkorg
    Find | Traci RubleAt Traciruble.comOn Instagram: @TraciRubleMFTOn Facebook: @TraciRubleMFT
    Find | Thomas LahnthalerAt www.thecrisiscompass.comOn LinkedIn: @thomaslahnthalerOn Medium:@thomas-89340
    Subscribe to this podcast
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    On Spotify
    On YouTube

    • 49 min
    Going to Work is an Important Source of Happiness Despite Its Bad Press with Dr. Tracy Brower

    Going to Work is an Important Source of Happiness Despite Its Bad Press with Dr. Tracy Brower

    Dr. Tracy Brower is a PhD sociologist and vice president of workplace insights for Steelcase. She is the author of The Secrets to Happiness at Work and Bring Work to Life, as well as a contributor to Forbes.com and Fast Company.
    Traci and Tracy sort through information on workplace happiness and how the workplace meets important needs in our lives for happiness, meaning, and belonging. Not everyone wants to be friends with their co-workers but we do get an important sense of identity and belonging from our work that cannot be overlooked.
    Episode Timeline
    [00:09] Intro 
    [0:58] Meet Tracy
    [4:19] Human connection and feeling of community is critical for our work.
    [7:19] The workplace is an important place of stability and identity that is important to our well-being. 
    [14:19] Comparison goals like wealth and status don’t lead to happiness.
    [17:08] List of the top 5 happiness producers in our lives.
    [25:08] What leads to workplace burnout?
    [34:27] Friendship, friendliness, and trust in our workplace relationships. 
    [43:06] Closing
    [43:32] Outro
    Resources Mentioned
    The Secrets to Happiness At Work (Book)
    Bring Work to Life (Book)
    Standout Quotes
    the thing that I'm thinking about work is just how critical it is that we appreciate it as part of a full life, not the only part of our life, but part of a full life.” (Tracy)
    I think we can get into this almost like a vicious cycle of I don't feel connected, I don't feel as valued, therefore, I don't connect as much, and I don't feel as valued.” (Tracy)
    “Whenever we get our roots disconnected from our community, we have a psychological reaction to that from a deep attachment place, from a psychological place in us. For some of us, what happens is we do have to find a villain in that narrative.” (Traci)
    “One of the things that's correlated with happiness is focusing on the community, focusing on what I'm giving. More generosity is correlated with happiness, and more self-focus is negatively correlated with happiness.” (Tracy)
    Sometimes we think of purpose with a capital P, and if I'm not changing the world. But really, it's just the thing that we do well. We wake up in the morning and do well for the people that we care about and for our work community and our broader community.” (Tracy)
    Usually, the best team bonding happens through task where we're rolling up our sleeves together and working on a new initiative or solving a problem.” (Tracy)
    Connect:
    Find | Sidewalk Talk 
    At sidewalk-talk.org
    On Instagram: @sidewalktalkorg
    On Twitter: @sidewalktalkorg
     
    Find | Traci Ruble
    At Traciruble.com
    On Instagram: @TraciRubleMFT
    On Twitter: @TraciRubleMFT
    On Facebook: @TraciRubleMFT
     
    Find | Dr. Tracy Brower
    At www.davidbedrick.com
    On Instagram: @tlb108
    On LinkedIn: @tracybrowerphd
    On Twitter: @tracybrower108
     
    SUBSCRIBE TO THIS PODCAST
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    On YouTube
     

    • 42 min
    Body-shame, Hunger and Redemption: Beyond Sexism and Diet Culture with David Bedrick

    Body-shame, Hunger and Redemption: Beyond Sexism and Diet Culture with David Bedrick

    David Bedrick is a psychological activist - an ally to the unheard and marginalized voices inside individuals and the culture at large.
    Join Traci as she discusses body image, body-shame and diet culture with David, which is also the subject of David’s book: You can’t judge a Body by its Cover: 17 Women’s Stories of Hunger, Body Shame, and Redemption.
     
    Episode Timeline
    [00:09] Intro 
    [0:58] Meet David
    [2:39] How David (a white man from New York) came to write a book about women’s bodies
    [9:33] How David’s longing to be witnessed led to him become a witness to others
    [13:42] Psychological Activism
    [14:48] What’s cooking?
    [29:40] The inner paradox of diet culture
    [38:12] How you can find David
    [41:43] David’s message to the Sidewalk Talk volunteers
    [43:06] Closing
    [43:32] Outro
     
    Resources Mentioned
    You can’t judge a Body by its Cover: 17 Women’s Stories of Hunger, Body Shame, and Redemption (David’s book)
     
    Standout Quotes
    “The idea of having a witness to somebody else's suffering my own and other people's bodies and difficulties became a very important thing to me.” (David)
    “So my fascination or hunger to learn from other people was really important to me.” (David)
    “The word that's just coming into the foreground is this deep longing that you had to be witnessed, that you've now been transmuted into as the witnesser.” (Traci)
    “What happens if I'm not seen or I'm looked at as a problem and not as a source of brilliance or beauty or creativity?” (David)
    “Are you trying to make everyone a sliced piece of really boring American cheese where we're all plasticy wrapped up in that cellophane wrapper so that we're convenient and we go back to work and we're not a pain in the ass?” (Traci)
    “And what I hear you advocating for is the beauty, the wisdom, the complexity, the nuance, the multigenerational story that a soul holds, and the fixed idea of psychology sometimes doesn't do a very good job of gestating.” (Traci)
    “Research says 98% of women have violent voices in their head every day about their bodies. And it's not minor violent. Not like that doesn't look good on you. I'm not talking about that. I would repeat them, but then we'd have to slow down and hear them because they're so gross.” (David)
    “Oh, my god. So what if what if all of us women are going on diets and choosing to fail the diets because it's the actual way that we're trying to rise up against patriarchy to say f**k you to the diet.” (Traci) 
     
    Connect:
    Find | Sidewalk Talk 
    At sidewalk-talk.org
    On Instagram: @sidewalktalkorg
    On Twitter: @sidewalktalkorg
     
    Find | Traci Ruble
    At Traciruble.com
    On Instagram: @TraciRubleMFT
    On Twitter: @TraciRubleMFT
    On Facebook: @TraciRubleMFT
     
    Find | David Bedrick
    At www.davidbedrick.com
    In Two Deep (David’s podcast): https://www.intwodeep.com/
     
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    • 43 min
    Seeking Wonder with Andrea Scher

    Seeking Wonder with Andrea Scher

    Andrea Scher is a writer, artist and life coach whose work is driven by her belief in the transformative power of wonder for creativity and wellbeing. For nearly two decades, through her award-winning blog Superhero Journal, her international workshops, her Creative Superheroes podcast, and bestselling e-courses, she has thrilled others with their own power to find magic all around them.
    Join this conversation for a celebration of joy, love, friendship and the wonder of wonder.
     
    Episode Timeline
    [00:09] Intro 
    [0:57] Meet Andrea
    [3:20] A peek inside Andrea’s birthday and book release party
    [4:43] How Andrea’s experiences of depression and anxiety led her to become a seeker of wonder
    [6:26] Who Andrea is in the world 
    [8:12] How Andrea leads people to their own joy and delight
    [9:27] How to recognise a Full Body Yes
    [10:37] How Andrea used her Full Body Yes to meet some extraordinary people through online dating
    [11:36] Desire tracking (and what gets in the way of us doing it)
    [13:00] The people who have most inspired Andrea
    [17:34] The creative spark that birthed Andrea’s book
    [21:14] Putting on your Wonder Goggles
    [26:11] Negativity bias
    [29:27] How we can cultivate wonder in our relationships
    [30:54] Andrea’s (platonic) rendezvous with a beautiful man on a flight from Milan
    [37:34] Andrea’s message to the Sidewalk Talk volunteers
    [39:49] Closing
    [40:44] Outro
     
    Resources Mentioned
    Wonder Seeker (Andrea’s book)
    Superhero Journal (Andrea’s blog)
     
    Standout Quotes
    “I think what I like to do is help people move toward their delight and move toward what feels joyful for them, what feels delicious to them.” (Andrea)
    “a lot of times we're just living this life in this sort of default, unconscious way, and we're not pursuing what actually makes us feel joyful. So that's what I'm sort of orienting people toward.” (Andrea)
    “Isn't the body amazing at giving us cues and how often we're living in our heads?” (Traci)
    “We’re not even tracking our own desire and our own wanting, because we're already thinking about, well, what does this other person need and what do they want and what's convenient for them?” (Andrea)
    “I'm so grateful that this dream happened when I turned 50 because I feel like I can hold the joy of it fully.” (Andrea)
    “It's not an accidental thing that when you invite it in and put yourself in the way of wonder, you actually set your life up to have more and more of it.” (Traci)
    “we need to train our brain to also scan for what's good and what's beautiful and what's working in order to sort of, like, kind of balance the scales neurologically so that we have a chance at feeling more joy.” (Andrea)
    “There's a way that your life is always speaking to us, whether that means, like, our higher self is speaking to us, our spirit is speaking to us, or the mystery, it really doesn't matter how you name it, but yeah, I think that's so beautiful and absolutely the way I move through the world, and it feels like magic.” (Andrea)
    “Curiosity is key because we think we know things. We think we know. We think we know what wonder means. We think we know who our partner is. We think there's nothing new to discover.” (Andrea) 
    “finding our wonder inside of the messiness is exactly where we need to tend it most. So tending our joy, tending our wonder is crucial at moments like this.” (Andrea)
     
    Connect:
    Find | Sidewalk Talk 
    At sidewalk-talk.org
    On Instagram: @sidewalktalkorg
    On Twitter: @sidewalktalkorg
     
    Find | Traci Ruble
    At Traciruble.com
    On Instagram: @TraciRubleMFT
    On Twitter: @TraciRubleMFT
    On Facebook: @TraciRubleMFT
     
    Find | Andrea Scher
    At www.andreascher.com 
    On Instagram: @AndreaScher
     
    SUBSCRIBE TO THIS PODCAST
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    On Spotify
    On YouTube

    • 41 min

Customer Reviews

4.9 out of 5
18 Ratings

18 Ratings

TYKNEE WIHNGZ PHAN ,

Uplifting and insightful!

This is my favorite podcast! Traci is both a connection expert and insanely inquisitive so her conversations with connection experts are heartfelt, authentic and full of lessons for all of us. This podcast makes me feel like we might just find our way back to each other.

A@r0nN ,

By far my favorite Podcast on the web

Rock solid topics, empathy, connection, compassion, spirituality, death, life, psychology, a wonderful host and each episode is deep, filled with wisdom and wit, intelligence and humanity

kiera71 ,

Favorite

This podcast inspires and comforts while, somehow, also challenging our/my go-to thinking about all the important parts of being a present, compassionate human.

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