
131 episodes

The Place We Find Ourselves Adam Young | LCSW, MDiv
-
- Religion & Spirituality
-
-
4.8 • 2.1K Ratings
-
The Place We Find Ourselves podcast features private practice therapist Adam Young (LCSW, MDiv) and interview guests as they discuss all things related to story, trauma, attachment, and interpersonal neurobiology. Listen in as Adam unpacks how trauma and abuse impact the heart and mind, as well as how to navigate the path toward healing, wholeness, and restoration. Interview episodes give you a sacred glimpse into the real-life stories of guests who have engaged their own experiences of trauma and abuse. Drawing from the work of neuroscientists such as Allan Schore, Dan Siegel, and Bessel van der Kolk, as well as psychologist Dan Allender, this podcast will equip and inspire you to engage your own stories of harm in deep, transformative ways.
-
How Your Story Affects Your Sexuality
Jay Stringer joins me to talk about the relationship between our current sexual difficulties and our story in our family of origin. Sexual struggles are rooted in our stories—and, very often, our stories of attachment to our primary caretakers. As Jay puts it, “When it comes to sexual struggles, there are always two story lines at play: there is the story line of your present sexual struggles, and then there is the story line of your growing up experiences which set you up for those present sexual struggles.” If you want to explore your sexual story in more depth, please sign up for the Sexual Attachment Conference on May 5-6. You can sign up here.
-
How to Heal from Sorrow and Grief Part 1
For most modern people, the place we find ourselves is in a land where grief and sorrow are unwelcome. Most of us do not feel like the people around us can bear the depth of our sorrow and grief. And since we don’t want to risk our sense of belonging—our sense of acceptance—we hide our sorrow and grief. But sorrow and grief are real. In today’s episode, I identify some of the types of sorrow and grief that we all carry. Then I discuss the immense cost of denying our sorrow/grief and invite you to consider what it would look like to welcome your sorrow and grief and bring it into the light.
-
Engaging Your Family of Origin Story with Dan Allender
This episode is a joint release of The Allender Center podcast and The Place We Find Ourselves.
We have all experienced hurt, abandonment, or disappointment at the hands of our parents or caretakers, whether it was intentional or not. So much of our beauty and brokenness — so much of what makes us human — is tied to our family of origin. In today’s episode, Dan Allender and I discuss what it means to begin engaging the harm that we endured during our growing up years. Are we dishonoring our father and mother if we name the hurt we experienced growing up? Should we just “let it go?” If you want to learn more about how to engage your story in your family of origin, please join Dan and I for a 2 hour webinar on February 23, 2023. You can register here. -
But Then Something Happened
I’m joined today by theologian and author Pete Enns, who also co-hosts a podcast called The Bible for Normal People. Although we talk about quantum physics at the end, the focus of our conversation is “What do you do when you experience something that calls into question your understanding of who God is and what God is doing in the world?” Pete calls these experiences curveballs, and he suggests that these experiences are good things that cause us to grow and mature in our faith. If you want to hear more about this topic, you can check out his recently published book Curveball.
-
What Gets in the Way of Healing? Four Obstacles
God created our hearts, minds, and bodies to heal. When the conditions are right, healing will occur. Therefore, it’s important to clear away the things that block the right conditions for healing. Today I discuss four of the most common obstacles to healing: minimizing your story, spiritualizing the bad things that have happened to you, self-contempt, and the frenetic pace of your life.
-
When Bible Verses Are Used Against You (or, Is Your Heart Really Trustworthy?)
Last year I saw an Instagram post asking people to share stories of Bible verses that had been used against them. The comments section was devastating. I read story after story of how the Bible had been used to do immense harm. The verse that was most frequently mentioned? Jeremiah 17:9, which says, “the heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure.” In today’s episode I take a close look at what Jeremiah 17:9 is really saying. I also make some comments about what the Bible teaches concerning whether or not your heart can be trusted.
Customer Reviews
Life changing!!
Adam Young and his pod cast the “ The places we find ourselves” is a MUST to listen and learn from. I was so broken down and trying to understand myself. He simply broke it down easily for me to understand who I am and why I am the way I am. Thank you so much for your pod cast. Whole heartedly, it changed my life the day I found it and tuned into it. I share with every person that I know who struggles to understand certain things, and they come out saying the same thing. Highly recommend if you are still trying to seek answers that you need clarity on.
Christianity meets reality and science
If you grew up in a fundamentalist, conservative Christian home and church, this is for you. Prioritize listening to these healing episodes. Adam Young does an outstanding job of marrying neuroscience, biology and the brain to the matters of the heart.
Slippery
If you’re a Christian, please be wary of this guy!
After listening to Episode 128, I have seen how hostile this guy is to the Bible and to Pastors and is predatory to people who are seeking counsel and guidance.
In this episode he starts out with giving you the “correct” interpretation of a bible verse. Later on, he concludes that we should not believe anyone else’s interpretation of the Bible because 1) the Bible isn’t clear on ANYTHING and 2) if we believe someone else’s interpretation of the Bible, we are being idolatrous.
Not only is that incredibly contradictory to him telling the listener how to interpret a bible verse in the beginning of the same talk, it’s incredibly predatory in the way he talks. He tells you not to listen to your pastor if they use a bible verse to show you sin in your life, he tells you not to listen to your parents if they use the Bible as guidance and help, he still has his interpretation there, showing you that HE can be trusted, just not anyone else.
This entire conversation (I didn’t even get into the unbiblical theology he was drawing out) was spoken in a laughing, jovial, no biggie tone to comfort the listener as he spoke contradictions and lies.
Dear Christian, please be wary. If this is someones presuppositions about the Bible and about the guidance and counsel of the church, how can anything from his mouth and heart be trusted?