• Wrongly Convicted: How Resilience and Focus Made Survival Possible
    Jan 10 2026

    What happens when a successful entrepreneur’s life changes overnight — and everything you’ve built can no longer protect you?


    In this episode of CAMP Conversations, Dayna Conway sits down with Tim Parkes, chief innovator, builder, breaker, and fixer at Maple Leaf Realco, to share his experience of being wrongly convicted in the U.S., sentenced to a maximum-security prison, and spending over two years incarcerated before receiving a full acquittal.


    This conversation goes beyond the story itself and into what it truly takes to endure extreme uncertainty, loss of control, and isolation — and how resilience is built moment by moment when the future is unclear.


    Tim Parkes is the Founder of Canmark Automotive , Remington Industries, Remington Manufacturing, Remington Global, and the Maple Leaf Realco Development companies


    In this conversation, they discuss:

    • Defining the problem when money and success can’t fix it

    • Separating emotion from decision-making under extreme stress

    • How focus and discipline became survival tools

    • The role of relevance and belonging in resilience

    • Faith, reflection, and rebuilding after incarceration

    • Returning to a world filled with noise and overstimulation

    • Why relationships matter more than status or achievement

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    57 mins
  • When Adventure, Parenting, and Partnership Collide: A Conversation with Rebecca Mullen
    Dec 20 2025

    What if relationship conflict isn’t about communication skills—but about misunderstood needs?

    In this episode of Camp Conversations, Dayna sits down with Rebecca Mullen, Relationship Coach, Life Coach, author, and host of the podcast Habits for Your Happily Ever After, for a grounded and deeply relatable conversation about how relationships actually function under stress.

    Rebecca introduces her practical framework of the three roles present in every relationship: Partner, Lover, and Friend—and explains how tension builds when couples are operating in different roles without realizing it. Through real-life examples drawn from marriage, parenting, friendship, and adventure-driven lifestyles, Rebecca and Dayna explore why resentment forms, how invisible labor impacts connection, and what it looks like to slow down before communication turns reactive.

    In this conversation, they discuss:

    • Why conflict is often about the needs behind the needs

    • How Partner, Lover, and Friend roles can unintentionally compete

    • What happens when adventure, caregiving, and responsibility collide

    • Why naming how you’re communicating matters as much as what you’re saying

    • Simple language shifts that reduce defensiveness and build understanding

    • How caregivers can protect connection without over-functioning

    Rebecca also shares the personal experiences that shaped her work—from growing up with divorced parents to navigating marriage and parenting with deeply different needs—and reflects on insights from her TEDx Talk The Vegetarian & The Hunter: Creating Peace at the Dinner Table and her book 6 Steps to Better Marriage Communication.

    Listeners are invited to explore additional resources and podcast episodes from Rebecca related to each relationship role in the show notes, with more tools and step-by-step communication practices coming in a follow-up episode.

    About Rebecca Mullen

    rebeccamullencoaching.com

    TEDxTalk


    TikTok

    ⁠Instagram⁠

    Facebook

    LinkedIn


    Dig Deeper into the 3 Roles on Rebecca's podcast:

    Partner - Listen to Episode 5

    Lover - Listen to Episode 7

    Friend - Listen to Episode 6

    Read More on her Blog

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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • Teaching With Heart: How One Educator Keeps Her Spark Alive Amid Rising Classroom Challenges
    Dec 5 2025

    In this insightful conversation, elementary educator Rachel shares the lived experiences that drew her into teaching and the values that continue to guide her in an increasingly complex school landscape.


    From struggling as a student herself to working at Boys and Girls Club and now navigating today’s post-COVID classrooms, Rachel’s story highlights the compassion, creativity, and resilience that shape truly meaningful teaching.

    She reflects on:

    • How her own learning challenges inspired her to help students who “don’t see the steps” the way others do.
    • Why relationship-building—not pressure—is at the core of effective learning.
    • The shift from traditional resource rooms to in-class supports, and why teachers feel stretched.
    • The rise in learning needs, mental health challenges, and behavioural complexities.
    • Why making mistakes is essential to learning—and how she builds safe, joyful classrooms.
    • What burnout looked like for her, and why stepping out of the homeroom helped her rediscover her spark.
    • How teachers and parents can better communicate to support children without overwhelming one another.

    Rachel also shares the practices that keep her grounded—setting boundaries, embracing fresh perspectives, spending time on her family farm, and learning to leave work at work so she can show up fully for her students.

    Her honesty offers a powerful reminder that great teaching comes from humanity, not perfection—and that supporting educators is essential to supporting kids.

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    54 mins
  • Small Movements, Big Impact: Rethinking Burnout for Women and Caregivers with Physiotherapist, Kate Powell
    Nov 27 2025

    Burnout isn’t just exhaustion — for many women, it’s physical pain, resentment, pressure, and feeling like there’s never enough time to take care of yourself while caring for everyone else. After a sold-out community event on women and burnout, we’re continuing the conversation here.

    In this episode, physiotherapist Kate Powell returns to Camp Conversations to unpack what we learned from a room full of women navigating stress, caretaking, identity shifts, and physical breakdown. Kate works closely with women who come to her not knowing they’re burned out — only that their bodies are sending warning signs they can’t ignore.

    • Why so many women experience physical symptoms before realizing they’re burned out
    • The pressure for “60-minute workouts” — and why all-or-nothing thinking is hurting women
    • How tiny, 10-second movements can build strength, resilience, and mobility during busy seasons
    • The connection between posture, psychology, and shrinking yourself when life feels heavy
    • How repetitive movement patterns (running, biking, gym routines) can weaken other muscles and worsen burnout signals
    • Practical ways to integrate sneaky, supportive movement into caregiving, commuting, and everyday life
    • How communities, gyms, and friends can support burned-out mothers and caregivers

    Women aren’t burning out because they’re weak — they’re burning out because they’re carrying too much without the support, space, or sustainable practices they need. This episode brings compassion, clarity, and doable steps to help you reconnect with your body and your spark.


    Resources

    • CAMP Newsletter for event announcements: campmentalhealth.com/newsletter

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    30 mins
  • Building from the Inside Out: How CAMP Mental Health Began
    Oct 30 2025

    In this special solo episode, CAMP Mental Health founder Dayna Haig-Conway shares the personal journey that shaped the CAMP framework and the deeper motivation behind her work.


    From outdoor education and behavior intervention to school counselling and clinical practice, Dayna’s path has always centered around one goal: helping others feel full from within.


    She reflects on:

    • Why traditional behavior strategies often miss the mark.

    • How unmet needs drive motivation and resilience.

    • The moment she realized “fixing” specific behavior wasn’t enough.

    • What it means to build both children and adults from the inside out.

    • How the CAMP Certification Program now empowers coaches across Canada to teach this framework in their own communities.

    Dayna also shares how motherhood, self-reflection, and her “give back” family roots continue to fuel her purpose—and why true resilience begins with understanding our needs before adding more strategies on top.

    If you’re part of a school, nonprofit, or parent group, CAMP offers workshops that return 5% of proceeds back to your organization. Learn more at campmentalhealth.com.

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    16 mins
  • From Campfires to Caregiving: Doug Wigood on Compassion & Connection
    Oct 24 2025

    In this heartfelt conversation, Dayna Haig-Conway sits down with Doug Wigood, CAMP Coach (Ontario) and lifelong caregiver, to explore how compassion, calm, and quiet leadership shape meaningful connection.

    From early lessons in community care to years spent supporting children, youth, and elders, Doug shares how reflection, presence, and curiosity have guided his work across social services and mental health. Together, he and Dayna discuss how to stay grounded when your own flame flickers—and why leadership doesn’t always need to be loud to be powerful.


    Highlights:

    • Finding purpose through early caregiving and community support

    • Lessons from outdoor education: reflection as a daily practice

    • Why empathy begins with listening, not fixing

    • How equine therapy reveals the power of calm energy

    • The value of lifelong learning and collaborative care


    Doug Wigood



    Doug is a results-oriented and tenacious professional with a passion for lifelong learning and personal growth. His career has spanned diverse frontline roles supporting individuals and care teams across child and youth mental health, street-involved and homeless youth services, residential treatment for addictions and mental health, and elder care for those living with dementia. With extensive experience collaborating across multi-agency organizations, task committees, and community partners, Doug brings a thoughtful, person-centered approach to every role he takes on. As one of CAMP’s first certified coaches, he helps schools, organizations, and caregivers apply the CAMP framework to build connection, motivation, and resilience.


    Learn more at: campmentalhealth.com

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    30 mins
  • Beneath the Burnout: Blind Spots, Boundaries, and Self-Awareness with Gail McDonald
    Oct 17 2025

    In this thoughtful conversation, Dayna Haig-Conway sits down with Gail McDonald, Executive Coach and Founder of Blind Spots Coaching, to explore what it really means to see ourselves clearly—before rushing to fix or help others.

    Gail shares how her lifelong desire to care for people led her from customer service and banking to a two-decade career in coaching. Together, she and Dayna discuss how to build awareness, avoid burnout, and create space to “flow from within.”

    Highlights:

    • The power of reflection before intervention
      How to recognize your capacity and care for yourself as a caregiver
    • The role of ego and the inner critic in professional fatigue
    • Why doing what you do—and doing it well—creates meaningful impact
    • Reframing setbacks and “small stuff” through self-compassion


    Gail McDonald
    Professional Certified Coach & Founder, Blind Spots Coaching
    blindspotscoaching.com

    With over 20 years of experience supporting individuals and organizations, she helps clients uncover what’s getting in their way—so they can lead, communicate, and live with greater clarity and purpose.

    Specialties: Executive and personal coaching, emotional intelligence assessments, and leadership development for individuals and teams.

    Certified EQ-i Practitioner | Over 20 years of coaching experience

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    44 mins
  • Listening, Letting Go, & Staying Human with Registered Psychologist Dr. Tyla Mackay
    Oct 11 2025

    Dayna Haig-Conway sits down with Dr. Tyla Mackay, Registered Psychologist and founder of Alpine Pathways Psychological Services in Fernie, BC. Together, they explore the deeply human side of caregiving professions — how to maintain your spark, create healthy boundaries, and find meaningful rest in demanding work.


    Dr. Mackay shares practical rituals for separating work from home life, the importance of connection, and what it really means to care for others without losing yourself in the process.

    • Understanding vicarious trauma and compassion fatigue in caregiving roles
    • How rituals support emotional regulation and separation between work and home
    • Recognizing the early indicators of burnout and loss of motivation
    • The importance of self-awareness and reflective practice in sustaining long-term wellbeing
    • Simple, evidence-informed tools to support mind-body connection and recovery


    Dr. Tyla Mackay, Registered Psychologist Founder, Alpine Pathways Psychological Services — Fernie, BC

    Dr. Tyla Mackay has a small private practice in Fernie BC where she specializes in trauma, specifically working with healthcare providers, first responders, and RCMP with vicarious trauma and compassion fatigue. She sees individuals and provides workshops to organizations.


    Learn more or connect with Dr. Mackay:

    alpinepathwayspsychology.com

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    38 mins