• Building A Free Mental Health Resource Network For Caregivers with Michael Mackniak
    Apr 27 2026

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    54 mins
  • A Mother Remembers Her Son And Rebuilds Life After Opioid Loss with Katie Rizzo
    Apr 27 2026

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    One phone call, one prescription, one quiet apartment, and a life splits into before and after. We sit down with Katie Rizzo, a former high school anatomy and AP biology teacher, to talk about the loss of her firstborn son Nicholas to opioid addiction and overdose, and the brutal moment she realised grief was no longer an event, it was part of her identity.

    Katie brings a rare mix of tenderness and clarity to subjects many of us avoid: bereaved parenthood, the stigma around substance use disorder, and the chaos a family carries while trying to save someone they love. She walks us through Nicholas’s story, from an adventurous childhood to injuries, painkillers, and the spiral that so often defines the opioid crisis. We also get honest about anger, blame, and how “legally acceptable” prescribing can still create devastating outcomes.

    Then Katie shares the framework that changed how she survives: the “trimesters of grief.” She explains why grief can feel like a pregnancy you cannot end, how art becomes a lifeline, and why telling the truth out loud can be a form of healing. We also talk non opioid pain management options, shame, recovery support, and why law enforcement and healthcare need more trauma informed responses during wellness checks and overdose calls.

    If you care about grief support, addiction recovery, opioid addiction education, or helping families after overdose, this conversation will stay with you. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review with the line that hit you the hardest.

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    53 mins
  • Ripple Retreat with guest JJ Holley, A Veteran who lives to pay it forward
    Apr 24 2026

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    A quiet town in Maine. A historic 1830s farmhouse and barn. A veteran with seven years of sobriety and a plan that flips the usual “tourism takes from locals” story on its head. We brought back our friend JJ Holly to do something different: a walking tour of Ripple Retreat in West Paris, where he’s building an alcohol-free wellness and event space designed to create real, measurable community impact. His promise is bold and specific: after opening on 7 April 2027, Ripple Retreat will return 75% of profits to the town of West Paris and local charities.

    As JJ shows us around, you’ll hear what’s coming to life on the property: Studio 22 for yoga, meditation, massage, Reiki, and holistic healing during the week, plus music lessons and kid-friendly programming that feels like a throwback to real community. Weekdays also include affordable Airbnb stays in two apartment-style units, with easy access to Maine ski resorts like Sunday River, Black Mountain, and Mount Abram. On weekends, the full property becomes a place for sober weddings, retreats, and gatherings, with clear rules that protect peace and neighbors: no alcohol and no music past 10 p.m.

    The heart of this conversation is JJ’s story. He shares how the loss of Commander Murphy Sweet shaped his life, how he survived a dark moment overseas, and why recovery starts with reaching out and learning to love yourself. He also tells the unforgettable “White Socks” story from Baghdad, a reminder that tiny choices can create enormous ripples. That’s the same idea behind his fundraiser: a $5 “cup of love” on ripple-retreat.com to help fund the rebuild, plus weekly updates so supporters can track the progress.

    If this moved you, subscribe, share the episode with someone who needs hope, and leave a review so more people can find Ripple Retreat and the recovery message behind it.

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    38 mins
  • A New Partnership For Trauma-Informed Mental Health Support with Michael Mackniak
    Apr 22 2026

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    The scariest part of a mental health crisis isn’t always the symptoms. It’s the moment you realise nobody is talking to each other and your loved one is getting treated like a problem instead of a person. We sit down with veteran attorney and caregiver advocate Michael Machnac to share a major new partnership bringing his care coordination work together with Victoria’s trauma-informed recovery approach, aimed squarely at the families and individuals who feel trapped in the gaps of the system.

    We get specific about what “care coordination” actually means: building a complete history, understanding the family ecosystem, aligning providers around one direction, and making the patient the captain of the ship. Along the way, we unpack why modern healthcare navigation is so exhausting, from repeated paperwork to siloed hospitals and rushed appointments that leave dignity behind. We also talk candidly about crisis response, autism and de-escalation, and the difference between being managed and being heard.

    You’ll hear what we’re planning next for Mental Health Awareness Month, why we’re launching a podcast series to share real strategies (not just complaints), and how character and habits can help you climb out of your own rut when life hits hard. If you’ve ever felt alone on the “crazy train” of mental health advocacy, this conversation is your reminder that you’re not imagining it and you’re not on your own.

    Subscribe, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review so more caregivers and survivors can find these tools. What’s the biggest communication breakdown you’ve seen in healthcare?


    Michael Mackniak
    Website: https://michaelmackniak.com

    Care Coalition: Care Coalition – https://carecoalition.org

    Academy: https://guardian-academy.thinkific.com

    Email: mike@guardian-ct.org


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    48 mins
  • Leaving An Abusive Relationship Starts With A Safety Plan
    Apr 20 2026

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    “Why don’t you just leave?” gets thrown at survivors like it’s a simple fix, so we slow it down and tell the truth. We’re Stucco, Rusty, Sexy Victoria, and Michael, and we talk through what actually keeps people in abusive relationships: isolation, money, kids, pets, housing, fear, and the very real danger that comes with trying to exit without a plan. If you’ve ever judged someone for staying, or blamed yourself for going back, this conversation is built to challenge that reflex and replace it with clarity.

    Victoria brings the clinical lens and lived experience, and we dig into why the average survivor may return again and again when the safety plan is not in place. We also talk about the shelter dilemma and why “removing the victim” can feel like losing your home twice. From there, we get into trauma after survival: PTSD, complex PTSD, and the triggers that can show up in everyday life long after the relationship ends. We also call out how often obvious abuse signs get minimized in medical settings, and what trauma-informed care should look like instead.

    We don’t stop at survival. We talk boundaries with family and “out of the woodwork” people who only show up when they want something, plus the difference between real change and manipulation. We go straight at narcissistic abuse and accountability, and we share what recovery looks like when someone finally chooses a different life. If you want practical support, we point you to a free escape plan course at Monstermile.mn.co. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs it, and leave us a review so more survivors can find these resources.

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    43 mins
  • TikTok Toilets And A Very Bad Diastat Day
    Apr 16 2026

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    One phone call can flip your whole world. We start with real life and real laughs, then move into the kind of story that makes your stomach drop: what happens when a school says your child had a medical emergency, but the timeline and the paperwork don’t match what you know to be safe care.

    We talk about why families choose no contact, why the “but they’re your parents” line misses the point, and how breaking generational trauma often looks like setting boundaries that others don’t understand. We also get honest about modern distraction, screen time at the dinner table, bullying on social media, and the hard truth that “talk to your kids” only works when adults slow down and truly listen.

    From there we dig into healthcare access and patient advocacy: long waits for specialists, rushed appointments, and how the system can accidentally funnel people toward unsafe answers. Then Victoria tells the full Faith story from a parent-advocate lens, including IEP details, school accountability, documentation, and why staying calm can be your sharpest tool when everything is on the line.

    If you care about special needs parenting, IEP meetings, school safety, teen mental health, patient rights, and protecting your peace, this conversation will stick with you. Subscribe, share with a parent who needs it, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • What If Overworking Is A Trauma Reflex
    Apr 13 2026

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    Burnout does not always look like falling apart. Sometimes it looks like answering messages at midnight, working seven days a week, and telling yourself you will rest after the next task. We get honest about what happens when your life becomes one long to do list, why “just push through” stops working, and how switching things up can be the difference between staying steady and giving up. Along the way, our newest golden retriever River Rose tries to steal the mic and reminds us that joy can be loud and inconvenient.

    We also go deeper than productivity. We talk about trauma recovery, body dysmorphia, and the ways survivors try to feel safe again, from hiding in oversized clothes to avoiding photos. From amputation pain and coping habits to rebuilding health with GLP-1 medications like semaglutide and tirzepatide, we share what has helped, what has not, and why the real goal is feeling healthier, not chasing perfection. Michael opens up about a new diabetes diagnosis and the lifestyle changes that come with it, plus the kind of unfiltered marriage humor that only happens when you have nothing left to hide.

    Then we bring it back to commitment and purpose. We talk about what keeps a marriage from going stale, what “all in” really means, and why advocacy matters when families are trying to survive the court system. If you are navigating burnout, work life balance, diabetes, GLP-1 weight loss, or healing after abuse, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review so more survivors and caregivers can find the support.

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    39 mins
  • Five Packs Of Grits And A Side Of Reality
    Apr 9 2026

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    A blood test can be louder than any argument, and we start there: Michael’s A1C comes back at a 9, and suddenly “I’ll deal with it later” is not an option. We talk candidly about diabetes, cravings, and the awkward first days of a lifestyle change when the fridge is full of bread, pasta, ice cream, and old routines. We also get into GLP-1 medications, including the real-world differences people feel with options like semaglutide and tirzepatide, and why the goal is health, not hype.

    Then we make a sharp but necessary turn into domestic violence awareness. We break down why people misunderstand what they’re seeing in public, how victims often shut down as danger escalates, and what it can mean to intervene in a way that de-escalates instead of inflaming the moment. From law enforcement protocol to lived experience, we talk about weapons access, permits, and why violence plus a gun is a combination that changes everything in seconds.

    April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month, so we share practical personal safety tips you can use immediately: getting your head out of your phone, using simple car settings to reduce risk, and what to do if someone tries to drag you toward a vehicle. We also share updates on our work, scholarships, and community support, plus a check-in with Eddie Raven Scott from Creepy Coffees and Flagstaff CreepyCon with an easy way to help the mission. If this hits home, subscribe, share it with someone you care about, and leave a review so more people can find these conversations.

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    58 mins