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Loving Kindness Everyday

Loving Kindness Everyday

Written by: Kindness Calloway
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Loving Kindness Everyday is where raw conversation meets divine synchronicity. It's a space for real moments, real stories, and the kind of conversations that don't feel planned—but somehow land exactly where you need them. Hosted by Kindness Calloway, the show brings together voices from all walks of life—survivors, artists, educators, healers, advocates, and everyday people navigating extraordinary experiences in real time. These aren't traditional interviews. They're unscripted, unfiltered conversations where people show up as they are. Where vulnerability isn't edited out—and where the most meaningful moments are often the ones no one saw coming. You'll hear stories about: Healing from trauma Finding purpose in unexpected places Questioning identity and belief systems Navigating relationships, loss, and growth Spiritual awakening, grounded in real life Some episodes are heavy. Some are expansive. Some feel like you're just sitting in the room with us while life unfolds. That's the point. Because often, the breakthrough you need isn't in something polished—it's in something honest. Every episode holds something different, but the thread is the same: connection, awareness, and the possibility of seeing yourself—and the world—a little differently. If you're looking for something real… something that makes you think, feel, or shift—this is for you. Listen when you're ready. It'll be exactly what you needed to hear...when you hear it.© Kindness Calloway. All rights reserved. Loving Kindness Everyday and its content are the property of Kindness Calloway. Unauthorized use, reproduction, or distribution is prohibited. For inquiries, visit [KindnessCalloway.com]. Hygiene & Healthy Living Psychology Psychology & Mental Health Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Loving Kindness Everyday | "Things We Lost in the Fire" with guest Debra Roberts
    May 30 2026

    Have you ever lost anything and then realized that losing it might have been the best thing that ever happened to you?

    Episode Sponsor: Asheville Sanctuary

    In this episode, Kindness Calloway sits down with Debra Roberts, a 74-years-young artist, poet, bee bhakti, and Appalachian mountain dweller who has spent a lifetime at the crossroads of creativity and spirituality. Debra grew up in a vibrant arts and crafts household and has explored nearly every creative form imaginable — documentary film, dance, theater, poetry, ritual, and spontaneous kitchen rumba. In 2005, the honeybees called and she answered. She now lives deep in the mountains of Western North Carolina with her husband Joe, all manner of wildlife, and thousands upon thousands of honeybees she tends with full devotion.

    Both Kindness and Debra have lived through house fires. Both lost everything. And what they discovered on the other side of that loss will make you rethink your relationship with your stuff, your sense of control, and your sense of self.

    If you've ever held on too tight to something, someone, or some version of yourself — this conversation is for you.

    You'll walk away from this episode with:

    A new way of thinking about what you're actually attached to and why.

    Permission to grieve the life you lost and excitement about the one being built.

    Debra's grounded, nature-rooted wisdom on starting over with nothing but yourself.

    A reminder that control was always an illusion, and that's actually good news.

    Connect with Debra: Explore her world of art, bees, and Appalachian wisdom at Holy Mischief on Substack

    Listen, follow and share:

    🎙️ Search "Loving Kindness Everyday" on Apple Podcasts or Spotify and hit Follow so you never miss an episode.

    ⭐ A five-star review takes 30 seconds and helps this show reach someone who needs it today.

    📲 Know someone rebuilding after a loss? Send them this episode. Kindness grows when we pass it on.

    ▶️ Watch on YouTube: Search Kindness Calloway and hit the 🔔 bell.

    Loving Kindness Everyday. Real stories. Soul-deep conversations. The divine synchronicity that happens when vulnerability meets wisdom.

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    34 mins
  • Living in a Body That Doesn't Fit Your Soul
    Apr 2 2026
    Some of the best things that have ever happened on this show started with a wrong turn. I wasn't looking for Jessica Elaine Blinkhorn. I was trying to find Jessica Marshall from Episode 3.12… when her face stopped me mid-scroll. I didn't know her personally—but I knew her. I had seen her around my neighborhood more times than I could count. Full punk makeup. Music loud. Powerchair in motion. Completely, unmistakably herself. So when her Instagram (@wheelie_an_artist) came up, I knew immediately: i know her. I reached out on July 13th. She replied the same day. We had been living four blocks from each other. That's Divine Synchronicity. Several days later we ended up back at my apartment with Christian Amaro—who just happened to already be there. No plan. Mics on. We just started talking. "I'm still here. I don't really feel like doing this." That's how this episode begins. Because that's real life. And some conversations are too important to wait until you feel ready. What followed was one of the most candid, necessary conversations we've had on this show. We talk about gender, pronouns, and how my own thinking has been shifting—especially after Episode 3.12. But the conversation doesn't stay there. It goes deeper. Into what it actually means to live in a body that the world wasn't built for. "The most disabling part about being disabled isn't my body. It's living within a system that feigns empathy but practices apathy." Jessica Blinkhorn shares what most people don't see: That 1 in 3 disabled women are sexually assaulted every yearThat 90% of people with developmental disabilities experience sexual violence That invisibility doesn't protect but instead it makes disabled people targets. She shares how she escaped an assault. How she nearly died alone in her apartment—trapped under a table, unable to breathe—until she found a way to move a laptop inch by inch to send a message for help. "You find a way. You find a way to make it work." We talk about the cost of survival: A $29,000 wheelchairA $60,000 accessible van $13,000/month for treatment $8,000–$10,000/month for care And a system that caps her bank account at around $2,000— while simultaneously making independence nearly impossible. "Having anything means losing everything for us." We also talk about something most people don't know: Disabled people in the U.S. effectively do not have marriage equality. Because getting legally married can mean losing access to healthcare, caregivers, and life-sustaining support. "We are the porcelain dolls of capitalism. Beautiful to look at—then put away." This conversation will challenge you. It challenged me. If you let it, it will change you. It changed me. I woke up that morning thinking things were relatively fair. I went to sleep knowing I was wrong. We also reference Saprea, a resource for survivors of childhood sexual abuse. 1 in 8 children are sexually abused before the age of 18. If that's part of your story, you're not alone. Jessica's work—including her project SPANKBOX—pushes people to confront how they think about disability, sexuality, and autonomy. It's uncomfortable. It's confrontational. And it's necessary. You'll hear everything as it happened: The pauses. The background noise. The MARTA. The sound of her powerchair shifting so she can breathe. I left it all in—so you can feel what it was like to be there. And the episode ends the way it ends. In real time. Jessica looks outside. The sky is turning. We leave so I can get her home before the rain hits. No perfect closing. No neat resolution. Just life continuing. "They're going to talk about it… not to your face, but behind your back." Not here. We say it out loud. This episode follows directly from Episode 3.12: Breaking Every Box. Jessica will be back. There's more to her story—especially the protest work she's been doing—and we'll bring you all of it. Check out more by searching "Loving Kindness Everyday" or "Kindness Calloway" online.
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    31 mins
  • LKE Special Edition || Out of the Fire Without the Smell of Smoke || Snellville's City Council Richelle D. Brown
    Oct 18 2025

    🕊️

    In this Loving Kindness Everyday Special, Kindness Calloway sits with Richelle D. Brown, Snellville City Council candidate, for a deeply spiritual and uplifting exchange about faith, endurance, and divine purpose.

    Richelle opens her heart about overcoming challenges, walking through the fire, and emerging refined but not consumed. Together, they explore how God's presence and love can guide not only personal healing but also public service — reminding us that even in the trials, grace leaves no trace of smoke.

    ✨ Don't forget to make your voice heard — Snellville votes on November 4th, we all vote on the 4th of November.

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    59 mins
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