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The Living Jewishly Podcast

Living Jewishly
The Living Jewishly Podcast
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  • No Magic Bullet: Outcast
    “Since I've acknowledged PTSD and what's going on, and accepted the facts, and stopped seeing it as a sign of weakness, I've made some progress.”— Wilson TaguinodFacing our challenges is the first step to healing, according to guest Wilson Taguinod. On this episode of What’s In Your Toolbox: An Honest Discussion on Mental Health, host Bobby Koven has a deep conversation with Wilson about his challenges with PTSD and depression, as a veteran of the Vietnam war and a person who lives with cancer. Wilson has developed several coping tools to manage his mental health struggles, including fly fishing, reading, woodworking and puzzles. But he also relies on his family, specifically his wife, who helps him to reframe and put into perspective, the thought processes that lead him towards depression. Wilson has developed intuitive strategies to notice negative thoughts, and reset, and has begun learning how to manage anger based on cause and effect.Tune in to learn what Wilson’s advice is for anyone who is struggling with mental health, and learn how he developed his coping strategies so that you can apply his learnings to your own experience.This‌ ‌episode discusses:‌✔ PTSD as a war veteran✔ Strategies to reframe negative thoughts✔ The power of acknowledging the thing that is challenging you, to work towards recovery ‌  Highlights:‌ ‌00:01 Intro02:34 Meet Wilson Taguinod04:28 Wilson’s experience with PTSD10:40 Fly fishing as a tool to manage mental health16:22 How Wilson managed his anger18:11 Obtaining a university degree despite mental health challenges  22:02 How Wilson’s tools have helped him 25:45 Wilson’s Amazing Support Team  27:58 Wilson’s advice 29:13 Wrap upLinks:‌ ‌ To get in contact or learn more about Living Jewishly:  Visit‌ ‌our ‌website: https://livingjewishly.org  Follow us on Instagram: @living.jewishly  Watch us on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCO2YEegjapKpQeXG6zh6tzw   or send us an email at [email protected].    Shalom!
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  • REPLAY: Tu B'shvat - The Trees
    Tu B'Shvat is a Jewish holiday that celebrates the renewal of trees in a yearly cycle. Elliott notes, the timing of the holiday on the Jewish calendar is weird, falling out in the middle of winter. If we really wanted to get into the spirit of the day, we'd send everyone out into the middle of nature, "into the wild," to experience the trees. Rabbi Yossi points out that the winter is also a cool time to think about trees, because it is when the sap starts to run. The trees are starting to come alive, on the inside, where the sap is starting to build. Really, this is symbolic of the inner growth that takes place inside of us as human beings. Yossi adds that maple syrup is an ancient food but you have to get rid of the excess foam, which is a great metaphor for what people have to do - to keep the sweet parts of ourselves and get rid of the excess. As Yossi says, "whatever your winter looks like" you have to learn to go through the dark nights and come out on the other side.Elliott also notes that educationally, Tu B'shvat should teach us to "throw out the playbook." Jewish schools could plan a trip, throw away the books for a day, and take students out into nature to experience renewal and the miracle of creation. The holiday of the trees shows us that religious education can be found as much in nature as in textbooks. Yossi says there should be "Outward Bound" program for Tu B'shvat. This holiday represents the environmental ethic of the ancient rabbis and their view of the ecosystem, exemplified in the discussion of rain in the second paragraph of the Shema prayer. God gives human stewardship over the earth and it is up to us to make sure we treat that as a sacred trust. In an age of climate change, this is a powerful message.Shout out to the late great Neil Peart of Rush and his wonderful song "The Trees!"This‌ ‌episode discusses:‌ ‌ The importance of Tu B’Shvat How to use this time of year to cultivate renewal in oneselfThe history of Tu B’ShvatEmail us at [email protected], we would love to hear from you!Be sure to follow us on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/living.jewishly/ and on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/livingjewishly/ If you like the show, please leave a review, it helps us to reach more people just like you.Links:‌ ‌ To get in contact or learn more about Living Jewishly:  Visit‌ ‌our ‌website: https://livingjewishly.org  Follow us on Instagram: @living.jewishly  Watch us on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCO2YEegjapKpQeXG6zh6tzw   or send us an email at [email protected].    Shalom!
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  • Collaborative Aging
    “We age with success when we are in connection with others, it's relational.”— Sue Lantz On today’s episode of What’s In Your Toolbox: An Honest Discussion On Mental Health, host Bobby Koven has a conversation with Sue Lantz, a boomer who is hoping to live a long and healthy life, and founder of Collaborative Aging. Sue is passionate about sharing her healthcare, housing, and caregiving expertise in a way that helps her peers – along with the people who will be supporting them – to envision and fulfill their best possible aging transitions and experiences.Sue discovered early in her career that designing systems and tools for various populations requires an immense amount of collaboration - not just from individuals but from organizations as well. She took this wide breadth of experience with collaborations to develop Collaborative Aging, a platform that offers educational and consulting services to help individuals, families, and communities, to prepare the way for healthy, empowered aging and balanced caregiving.Tune in to hear how Sue’s journey with elder care crossed over with various mental health experiences, and for some inspiration to plan your future as you age, collaboratively.This‌ ‌episode discusses:‌ ‌✔   Forming teams of care providers to age on your own terms✔   The effects of aging on our mental health✔   The importance of planning for care and support as we age ‌  Highlights:‌ ‌00:01  Welcome02:29 Meet Sue Lantz05:10 Collaborative Aging  09:17 How Sue’s path led her here14:02 Sue’s career journey 23:01 What’s in Sue’s toolbox 26:01 Sue’s journey with mindfulness 27:40 Aging and mindfulness29:01 Sue’s Amazing Support Team 31:10 Sue’s advice for collaborating with aging parents 34:40 Next episode teaser Links:‌ ‌ www.collaborativeaging.com https://optionsopen.org https://instagram.com/optionsopenguide To get in contact or learn more about Living Jewishly:  Visit‌ ‌our ‌website: https://livingjewishly.org  Follow us on Instagram: @living.jewishly  Watch us on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCO2YEegjapKpQeXG6zh6tzw   or send us an email at [email protected].    Shalom!
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  • Call Us Gifted
    TRIGGER WARNING: This episode contains content around self-harm and suicide and brief mention of sexual violence against children.“They tried to ‘fix’ my stigmas to make me like everyone else, rather than leveraging my gifts. I said, ‘screw that, I'm gonna manage my gifts.’ And I started developing my gifts and ignoring the stigma.”— Tim NelsonIn this episode of What’s In Your Toolbox: An Honest Discussion on Mental Health, Bobby Koven interviews Tim Nelson about his mental health journey. This conversation is raw and authentic, and at times may be triggering to some listeners. We have noted the timestamps for the triggering content.Tim Nelson is an expert problem solver, but he wasn’t always able to use his dyslexia and dyscalculia to his advantage. Tim was diagnosed in his early twenties, but through the lens of stigma. And his late diagnosis prevented him from integrating into the mainstream school system.But as a creative problem solver, Tim chose to see his diagnoses as little annoyances rather than burdens, and followed the path of his dyslexia as a gift. In his youth, Tim developed seven skills that helped him navigate his childhood through learning disabilities and other mental health challenges. The skills are creativity, coaching projects, running programs, improving people, knowing oneself, understanding interactions and defining standard work. Developing these consistent skills was key in overcoming the challenges of dyslexia and dyscalculia, and the consistency has paid off, putting Tim in charge of some of the largest projects in the world. Tim has also put his RECOVER system into practice to recuperate from life events that had a massive impact on him.  RECOVER is an acronym; R is receive help, E is exhibit compliance, C is care, O is outline a schedule, V is venture out, E is establish purpose, and R is reach for the stars.This‌ ‌episode discusses:‌ ‌✔ How dyslexia and dyscalculia impact learning and education and self-esteem✔ The seven skills Tim developed to overcome dyslexia and dyscalculia challenges✔ Tim’s RECOVER acronymHighlights:‌ ‌00:01  Intro02:53 Meet Tim Nelson09:10 Tim’s Gifts11:33 Growing up12:48 Tim’s seven skills15:08 Diagnosing dyslexia and dyscalculia20:55 Leveraging gifts22:57 Bipolar diagnosis and mania23:52 TRIGGER WARNING: Self-harm and suicide26:42 Tim’s RECOVER acronym28:30 TRIGGER WARNING: Sexual violence towards children30:59 Tim’s Amazing Support Team33:28 TRIGGER WARNING: Suicide35:18 Tim’s advice to othersAbout Guest:Tim Nelson is an expert problem solving coach, change agent, global diversity and inclusion ambassador and author and inventor.Links:‌Connect with Tim:LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/tim-nelson-0270526Website https://onefivefifty.com/To get in contact or learn more about Living Jewishly:  Visit‌ ‌our ‌website: https://livingjewishly.org  Follow us on Instagram: @living.jewishly  Watch us on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCO2YEegjapKpQeXG6zh6tzw   or send us an email at [email protected].  Shalom!
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  • REPLAY: Sacred Time Tevet
    “Anger can be illogical and it can cause a lot of harm. But it also can be righteous and it can be rectifying something that’s wrong.”— Ganga DeviWhat is the role of anger in our lives? And what can we learn from our sense of it?This episode of Living Jewishly is an instalment of Scared Time, a podcast devoted to the healing art of the Hebrew calendar.As we bid goodbye to Chanukah, we enter Tevet, the tenth month of the calendar. This is a time of cold and darkness, but one that evokes a fiery emotion. Its 10th day commemorates the onset of the siege of Jerusalem — no wonder that Tevet is associated with the sense of anger. Tevet is also connected to the story of Purim, as it is in the month of Tevet that Esther was taken to the King Achashverosh's palace to be chosen as Queen. Most of us are only aware of anger when we feel it or when others feel it toward us, but in these heightened states we are unable to reflect on and understand the wisdom and potential carried within it.Tevet offers us the rare opportunity to examine anger from a place of peace. Through drawing on Kabbalistic themes and psychological tools, we may work intentionally with anger and see it with new eyes. This episode explores anger’s purpose — how it can point us to unmet needs and fuel us to make necessary changes in our lives, relationships, and social systems.“That is what Tevet gives us to work with. It’s understanding: what is anger? What does it mean to play with the fire of anger?”— BluthThis‌ ‌episode discusses:‌How anger can be used as a tool to create positive and necessary changeComparisons between ecological fire and the fire of anger, and how each plays a role in stripping away what no longer servesHow to differentiate between the needs and the strategies connected with our angerHighlights:‌01:30  Welcome to Tevet02:58  Purim & The Book of Esther03:53  Chanukah & Purim06:39  Tevet & anger08:04  Comparison between anger & fire10:46  Emotions as data points 12:10  Regenerative anger & trauma15:13  Empathic communication & reframing19:58  Our needs v. our strategies24:45  The Language of Emotions26:51   Ganga Devi’s story 31:41  The Work That Reconnects33:10  Tools within & without us37:31  Cultivating integrityLinks:‌Marshall Rosenberghttps://www.nonviolentcommunication.comAlexandra Paretta, Tantra practitionerhttps://www.wovenyin.comKarla McLaren, The Language of Emotionshttps://karlamclaren.com/product/the-language-of-emotions-bookhttps://karlamclaren.com/understanding-and-befriending-angerJoanna Macy, The Work That Reconnectshttps://www.joannamacy.net/mainTo get in contact or learn more about Living Jewishly:Visit‌ ‌our ‌website: https://livingjewishly.orgVisit our learning community: https://www.schooloflivingjewishly.comFollow us on Instagram: @living.jewishlyWatch us on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCO2YEegjapKpQeXG6zh6tzw   Send us an email at [email protected]!
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