Restored with Corie Weathers, LPC cover art

Restored with Corie Weathers, LPC

Restored with Corie Weathers, LPC

Written by: Corie Weathers LPC BCC
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About this listen

Conflict is everywhere — in our homes, our communities, our workplaces, and across the globe. Restored with Corie Weathers explores what it takes to move through conflict and discover peace.

Through powerful stories and thoughtful conversations, Corie — a licensed professional counselor, author of Military Culture Shift, and storyteller inside the military community — examines how people and cultures heal, reconcile, and rebuild after division. Each episode blends personal narratives, expert insights, and timeless lessons from psychology, history, leadership, and spirituality.

From military leaders and spouses to athletes, conflict mediators, and cultural voices, Restored looks beyond the headlines to uncover how ordinary people make extraordinary choices to find peace.

If you’re navigating transition, searching for meaning in struggle, or simply curious about the human work of reconciliation and healing, this podcast is for you.

🎧 Subscribe to Restored: Stories of Conflict, Healing, and Peace and join the conversation about how we can cultivate grit, reconciliation, and hope — in ourselves, in our relationships, and in our world.

Copyright 2023 All rights reserved.
Political Science Politics & Government
Episodes
  • What Conflict and Tension Teach Us
    Jan 2 2026

    What if the discomfort we’re trying to escape is actually trying to teach us?

    In this solo episode of Restored, Corie Weathers explores cognitive dissonance—the inner tension we feel when our beliefs, values, and lived experiences no longer align. Rather than rushing to certainty or easy answers, this episode invites listeners to slow down and learn how to listen to inner conflict as a source of wisdom.

    Drawing on insights from Viktor Frankl, psychology, history, and cultural observation, Corie examines why we struggle to sit with the “messy middle,” how individuals and cultures often resolve tension by avoiding responsibility, and what becomes possible when we stay present long enough for meaning to emerge.

    This episode includes a guided reflective practice, helping listeners notice where inner conflict is showing up in their own lives—and how to engage it without fear, rigidity, or avoidance.

    This is not an episode about having the right answers. It’s about learning how to remain human in the questions.

    If this episode stirred something in you, you’re invited to share your story. You can record a short voice memo and email it to: 📩 https://linktr.ee/corieweathers

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    25 mins
  • When Conflict Cuts Deep: What Restores Us with Dr. Mike Sytsma
    Dec 15 2025

    What does healing actually require — in a marriage, in a community, or in a culture stretched thin by conflict?

    We’re living in a time when tension feels everywhere — in our homes, online, within institutions, and across the nation. The emotional strain we feel collectively often mirrors what happens inside relationships: disconnection, mistrust, stuck narratives, and the fear that things may never return to peace.

    That’s why today’s conversation with Dr. Mike Sytsma is so compelling.

    For more than 30 years, Mike has worked with couples facing some of the most painful relational fractures imaginable — and he’s learned something stunningly consistent: two things must be present for healing to even begin:

    1. A contrite, humble heart

    —a genuine willingness to acknowledge harm and soften defensiveness.

    2. Grace

    —creating space for change without erasing boundaries, truth, or accountability.

    These two human capacities, he says, are just as essential for restoring marriages as they are for healing communities and cultures under strain.

    In this episode, Mike and Corie explore:

    • Why deep conflict (personal or societal) emerges when pain goes unaddressed

    • What makes a contrite heart so transformative — and so rare

    • How grace functions as an active force in reconciliation, not passive acceptance

    • The difference between forgiveness, safety, and rebuilding trust

    • Why some relationships — and some communities — recover while others fracture

    • How humility, grit, and emotional regulation allow peace to take root again

    • What healing looks like when it’s slow, nonlinear, and imperfect

    • The inner work required of both individuals before reconciliation can occur

    Corie reflects on how these insights reach far beyond intimate relationships: To heal a divided culture, individuals must first examine the inner conflicts that shape how they show up in the world. The principles that restore a marriage — truth, humility, accountability, and compassion — are the same principles that restore communities.

    Listener Invitation

    Do you have a story of conflict, healing, or peace? We’d love to hear it. Record a short voice memo on your phone and send it to:

    📩 https://intimatemarriage.org/.

    Past Episodes with Dr. Mike:

    Secrets of Sex with Dr. Michael Sytsma: https://www.podbean.com/eas/pb-xc6gm-13cde55

    Sexual Intimacy & Post-Affair:

    https://www.podbean.com/ep/pb-yettc-97de7e

    Restoring Trust:

    https://vimeo.com/117354250?fl=pl&fe=sh

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    1 hr and 18 mins
  • When Community Reaches Its Breaking Point: Military Spouse Wellness with Evie King
    Dec 1 2025

    What happens when a community is stretched past its limits?

    Military spouses live in a unique tension: deeply tied to the institution, yet often left without a voice in its decisions. Their wellness reflects not just individual resilience, but the health of the entire military community.

    In this episode of Restored, Corie Weathers speaks with Evie King, president of InDependent, about groundbreaking research she co-led with the University of Texas on military spouse wellness. Their findings reveal the cost of compounding stress, the reality of isolation, and the essential role of community in healing.

    But this conversation doesn’t stop at the data. Evie later came back to re-answer two questions — more honestly, more vulnerably — and issued a sobering warning: if cultural dynamics don’t change, the system risks collapse.

    Together, Corie and Evie explore what it takes for individuals, families, and institutions to find peace in the midst of ongoing conflict. And why community is not optional — it is the key to survival and restoration.

    Find out more about. Independent, their research, and programming here: https://in-dependent.org/

    If you have a story of your own about reconciliation, transition, or choosing peace, record a short voice memo and send it to corie@corieweathers.com or find all links here: https://linktr.ee/corieweathers

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 12 mins
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