• Ep 4: Stalking Prevention & Substance Use Treatment: Prevention, Protection, and Pathways to Peace Without Stigma and Shame.
    Jan 27 2026

    Stalking and substance use are public health crises that demand compassionate, judgment-free conversations. Yet, stigma and shame often silence survivors and those seeking help.

    In this episode, Drs. Eboni Haynes and Tynisha Camae Drennon explore the prevention strategies, protective measures, and pathways to healing that can save lives and restore peace.


    We're diving into:

    • Recognizing stalking behaviors and safety planning
    • Breaking the stigma around substance use disorder
    • Trauma-informed approaches to prevention and treatment
    • How to support survivors without judgment
    • Resources and organizations making a difference
    • Real stories of resilience and recovery


    This episode is for survivors, loved ones, healthcare providers, and anyone who wants to understand these critical issues without the shame.


    Plus, we're keeping it real with our discussion on the drama at Morris Brown College and Sinners' record-breaking Oscar nominations - because we believe in addressing serious topics AND having good conversation.


    Share this episode widely. These conversations save lives.


    Resource mentioned:

    • SAMHSA Substance Use Disorder Treatment Facilities: https://findtreatment.gov


    Have thoughts? Questions? Send us an email or voice note: podcast@enjoylifemoreabundantly.com


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    56 mins
  • Ep 3: Pregnancy, Prejudice & Power: Advocating for Better Healthcare for Mom and Baby
    Jan 20 2026

    Black maternal mortality is a crisis. Over 80% of pregnancy-related deaths are preventable, yet Black women die at three times the rate of white women from pregnancy complications. In this powerful episode, Dr. Eboni Haynes and Dr. Tynisha Camae Drennon dive deep into the systemic racism embedded in our healthcare system and what every Black woman needs to know to survive it.

    We honor Dr. Janelle Green Smith, a 31-year-old certified midwife, nurse, scholar, and maternal health advocate who tragically passed away from childbirth complications. Her story is a stark reminder that education, credentials, and resources don't protect Black women from a broken system.

    In this conversation, we're talking about:

    • Systemic racism in maternal healthcare
    • Why Black women are dismissed and how to advocate for yourself
    • Finding culturally competent care that actually listens
    • What happens before, during, and after pregnancy
    • Real stories of medical negligence and survival
    • The importance of having support and asking questions
    • Policy changes and organizations fighting for Black maternal health

    This episode is for everyone—moms, partners, sisters, friends, and anyone who loves a Black woman. Share it widely. And keep the Smith family in your prayers.

    Resources mentioned:

    • GoFundMe for Dr. Janelle Green Smith's family: https://gofund.me/0629efd35
    • American College of Nurse Midwives (ACNM): https://midwife.org/
    • Black Maternal Health Caucus (led by Congresswomen Alma Adams and Laura Underwood): https://blackmaternalhealthcaucus-underwood.house.gov/
    • American Civil Liberties Union: https://www.aclu.org/


    Have thoughts? Questions? Send us an email or voice note: podcast@enjoylifemoreabundantly.com

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    39 mins
  • Ep 2: Stressed Out: Surviving Stress, Strengthening Self-Care, and Staying Sane
    Jan 13 2026

    This week, Dr. Eboni Haynes and Dr. Tynisha Drennon keep it real about stress - what’s stressing them out right now, what research says are the “top” stressors in life, and what Black communities often carry that doesn’t always make the list. From racism and microaggressions to work-life imbalance, money pressure, major health conditions, grief, and breakups, they share practical ways to cope—without pretending the stress isn’t real.


    What We Covered

    • Why so many of us feel like we live in a perpetual state of stress
    • The “top five” stressors in general vs. stressors that uniquely impact Black health
    • Racism, anti-Blackness, and the daily stress of microaggressions
    • Work-life balance, hustle culture, and why taking work to bed isn’t a flex
    • Financial stress: small wins, saving strategies, and using your benefits (PTO + reimbursements)
    • Health stress: the importance of preventive care, primary care, and bringing someone with you to big appointments
    • Grief beyond death: breakups, losses, and unmet expectations
    • Mental health support: therapy, medication stigma, and the role of movement, sleep, and self-care


    Practical Takeaways (Do This This Week)

    • Use “the pause.” Before you respond to an email, comment, or conflict—pause, breathe, pray, walk, reset.
    • Take your PTO strategically. Stack PTO around holidays to get longer breaks with fewer days used.
    • Check your benefits. Look for reimbursements, wellness perks, and hidden benefits (like roadside assistance).
    • Move your body. Even 30 minutes can shift your mood and energy.
    • Prioritize sleep. Stop trying to run on 3–4 hours—your body keeps receipts.
    • Get preventive care. Don’t let fear or avoidance turn “what if” into a crisis.


    If You Lose Health Insurance (Resources Mentioned)

    • Special Enrollment Period: Losing a job is a qualifying life event (typically 60 days to enroll).
    • Marketplace: https://www.healthcare.gov
    • Federally Qualified Health Centers (sliding scale): https://findahealthcenter.hrsa.gov
    • Ask for the cash price. Providers often have a cash rate and can share programs or options if you ask.
    • Payment plans: Hospitals and many providers may offer payment plans (urgent care often does not).


    Calendar + Community Shoutouts

    • National Pharmacists Day: Pharmacists can do more than fill prescriptions—immunizations, screenings, chronic disease support, and medication guidance.
    • Delta Sigma Theta Founders Day: Celebrating 113 years of scholarship, sisterhood, and service.


    Herbal Tea Segment (Turning “gossip” into something beneficial for the community)

    • The “psychosis of critique”: when commentary crosses into name-calling, bullying, and pulpit policing
    • Can we still receive critique in love—and keep disagreements civil?
    • A reminder to take accusations seriously while maintaining “innocent until proven guilty”


    Next Week’s Topic

    Maternal Health (and yes—men should tune in too).


    Send Us Your Questions

    • Email: podcast@enjoylifemoreabundantly.com
    • Text/submit: enjoylifemoreabundantly.com/podcast


    Subscribe + Share

    If this episode helped you, share it with someone you love—and make sure you’re subscribed so you don’t miss next week.

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    55 mins
  • Ep 1: The New Year Reset: Kicking Off 2026 with Healthy Resolutions, Habits, and Spaces
    Jan 6 2026

    In our very first episode of Life More Abundantly, Dr. Eboni Haynes and Dr. Tynisha Camae Drennon pull up a chair and introduce what this podcast is really about: talking Black health the way we talk about everything else—real, out loud, and with love… with receipts, not rumors.

    We share how this podcast came to be, why “Life More Abundantly” matters (yes, John 10:10—but we’re not here to be churchy), and how faith, culture, and community shape the way we care for our bodies, minds, relationships, and everyday choices.

    Then we get into the new year energy: what Americans say their 2026 resolutions are, what’s actually realistic, and why “small wins” might be the most powerful health strategy you try this year. We talk Atomic Habits, tiny upgrades that stick, and how your environment can either support your goals—or sabotage them.

    Next up: a decluttering rundown inspired by a “start the year lighter” list. If you’ve ever said “I’ll do it later,” this part is for you.

    In our Community Calendar segment, we spotlight International Quality of Life Month and do a quick, no-shame check-in to help you figure out what area of your life needs attention first—energy, stress, support, purpose, boundaries, or security.

    And of course… we sip a little “Herbal Tea” — not gossip for gossip’s sake, but trending topics that open the door to real conversations about values, public perception, and community well-being.

    Next week, we’re going deeper into stress—because whew… we all feel it.

    Send your comments/questions to: podcast@enjoylifemoreabundantly.com and make sure you’re subscribed so you don’t miss what’s next.

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    49 mins