• 34. Teaching Young Teens, Finding Purpose, and Shaping Our Future
    Jan 14 2026

    On this week’s episode, I share my conversation with Karl Mauks-Kopke — eighth grade math teacher and not-so-secret philosopher. Karl is a dear friend and one of the most thoughtful people I know. (Some call him heaven.)

    We talk about Karl’s work inside the middle school classroom, including how he motivates kids who don’t always see the point of school, or math, and why learning math is a lot like weightlifting. Karl explains his reverence for his students and how he fuels his own sense of purpose in his work.

    From there, we zoom out into some of the bigger things kids and adults are dealing with right now, including screen time, AI, and how automation continues to shift our cultural views of education and work. We zoom even further out to discuss his fundamentally optimistic outlook on where we might be headed as a culture. And our shared sense of humor does not take a back seat throughout.

    Podcast is available wherever you listen to podcasts.

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    2 hrs and 12 mins
  • Supporting a Mentally Ill Child, Grieving a Son, and Leaning on Community
    Dec 17 2025

    Today’s episode cuts to the origin tale of how this very podcast was created. I’m interviewing my mother, Laine Neiman, about parenting a child with mental illness, handling the grief of losing him, and opening up to the community for support. Lainie (a.k.a. Mom Neiman) is an executive and leadership coach, as a family business consultant. More importantly, she spent the last 30 years in the trenches of loving someone with bipolar disorder. We tragically lost my brother, her son, Andy Neiman, 4 years ago last June. My mother saw him through his initial diagnosis and treatment, the chaotic first ten years of medication adjustments and hospital stays, his last ten years of marriage, fatherhood, and relative stability, up until his final descent during COVID.

    We talk about the role of the pandemic in Andy’s demise, her bravery in choosing to speak out about his illness from the beginning, how she spiritually coped with the uncertainty of his life path, and how she’s handling the monumental grief since his untimely departure. If you’ve ever cared for someone struggling with mental health issues or know someone who has, you’re going to want to check this episode out. My momela is a warrior and an inspiration.

    Please like/share/subscribe if this resonates with you. Available wherever you listen to podcasts.



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    1 hr and 18 mins
  • 32. Thyroid Cancer, Holistic Healing, and Low Toxic-Living
    Nov 20 2025

    On this week’s episode, I share my conversation with Jennifer Stevens, Holistic Nutrition Practitioner and Thyroid Cancer Survivor. We talk all about Jen’s experiences with anxiety pre-cancer, leading to a very unexpected diagnosis in her late 30s. Jen shares her decision to forgo radiation in favor of surgery and holistic healing, and how that led her into her new career helping others.

    In addition to her healing journey, Jen brings us into what life is like off the grid in Costa Rica, sharing her wisdom on low-tox living and her perspective on Western excess. We even touch on how ADHD brains thrive in purpose driven settings, how the MTHFR gene mutation interferes with alcohol metabolism, and how high-stress lifestyles fuel anxiety disorders.

    Podcast is available wherever you listen to podcasts. If you enjoy it, please like/subscribe/share with anyone who might be interested! Your support means the world.

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    1 hr and 27 mins
  • Early Parenthood, Post-Partum Anxiety, and How Diet Affects Metal Health
    Nov 4 2025

    Our first episode of season three kicks off with a very special, long-awaited guest…a woman who needs no introduction, but I’m giving her one anyway because she’s ‘a my wife—Amanda Neiman. We explain the reason for our truncated 2nd season and our exceptionally long hiatus: we had a baby! In new-parent fashion, our conversation is a wild, sleep-deprived reflection on how we’re adjusting to the love bomb that just exploded in the epicenter of our lives: our five-month-old little boy, Asher Andy Neiman.

    But wait! There’s more! In addition to being the mother of my child, Amanda is also an integrative nutrition coach, writer, and licensed attorney. She deals with ADHD and General Anxiety Disorder, for which she has been living medication-free for six years. Discussing her Herculean transition into motherhood, Amanda shares a bit about how her relationship to mental health is shifting as she adjusts to our radically new reality. She also dusts off her nutrition coach hat, offering her wisdom on the dietary protocol that keeps her sane. We even touch on current health trends, including the protein craze, Ozempic, and the anti-diet-culture movement. Somewhere along the way, it will probably become pretty clear why I chose to spend my life with this woman. Not that I’m biased.

    Podcast is available wherever you listen to podcasts. If you enjoy it, please like/subscribe/share with anyone who might be interested. And get ready for new episodes every Sunday night for season three!

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    59 mins
  • 29. Love in Medicine, Liability Culture, and the Mystery of Dying
    May 21 2025

    This week, I’m joined by nurse practitioner Margaret Decker for a conversation about the role of love and community in modern medicine. We talk about what it means to show up for people—not just as professionals, but as humans—especially in moments of illness, aging, and death. We explore how belief, religion, and ideology intersect with science in clinical settings, and how the fear of liability can quietly distort what care is meant to be. Margaret shares how she approaches her work as something more than a job—as a kind of communal presence that extends beyond any single patient interaction.


    Episode available wherever you get your podcasts.

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    1 hr and 27 mins
  • 28. The Discipline of Art, Navigating Unpredictability, and Protecting Your Mental Health as a Creative
    May 7 2025

    This week, we’re joined by Betsy Capes—founder of Capes Coaching and a powerhouse guide for artists, creatives, and performers looking to build sustainable careers in an unpredictable industry. Betsy shares her wealth of wisdom on how to thrive in a high-risk, high-reward profession, touching on the pressures of hustle culture and social media that often feel at odds with the artistic spirit. This conversation is full of real talk about what it means to live a creative life today—whether you're all-in on your craft or nurturing it alongside another path. Tune in for grounded insights, practical strategies, and a powerful reminder that your creative work matters.

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    1 hr and 8 mins
  • 27. Microdosing, Recreational Psychedelics, Ayahuasca, and the Power of Struggle
    Apr 22 2025

    Today’s episode features my illuminating conversation with Jason Gold, personal coach and psychedelics expert. We explore the therapeutic potential of psilocybin—not just as a healing modality, but as a meaningful alternative to more addictive recreational substances like cannabis and alcohol. Jason offers grounded wisdom on the importance of integration, intention, and nervous system regulation, emphasizing how set and setting shape our experiences.

    We also dive into the misunderstood value of a “bad trip,” reframing it as an invitation to confront what’s rising to be healed. Jason shares his perspective on microdosing and gentler dosing as sustainable pathways to transformation, challenging the cultural overemphasis on macro doses. Our conversation also touches on ayahuasca, including Jason’s belief that this powerful plant medicine must “call” you—and that the real healing happens not during the ceremony, but in the long-term follow-through.

    Whether you’re psychedelic-curious or well-traveled, this episode is a reminder that struggle, when approached with intention and support, can be a portal to profound growth.


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    1 hr and 26 mins
  • 26. The History of Childbirth, Obstetrics vs. Midwifery, Reproductive Justice, and How to Birth in Power
    Apr 1 2025

    Today’s episode features my fascinating conversation with Birdie Condon, Hudson Valley-based midwife and sex educator. We talk all about the history of childbirth including how and why it became industrialized, the differences between obstetrics and midwifery, and how certain medical interventions can stall labor. Birdie shares her non-dogmatic, highly nuanced perspective on the various ways women choose to give birth, born out of her 25-year practice, even touching on reproductive justice. Ultimately, Birdie delivers a powerful message on childbirth as an expression of empowerment, inspiring us into a new paradigm of how we view the female body and the role of compassionate care.

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    1 hr and 11 mins