Episodios

  • Call 988 in Crisis: The Importance of Normalizing Conversations Around Suicide with Lisa Sugarman
    Jul 3 2024

    **Trigger Warning: Suicide**

    The following content discusses topics related to suicide. This may be distressing or triggering for some individuals. If you or someone you know is struggling with suicidal thoughts, please seek help from a mental health professional or contact a crisis hotline immediately.

    ____________________________________________________________________________________________

    Sharing creates a community and an environment where people don't feel judged.


    Lisa Sugarman is an author, syndicated columnist, three-time survivor of loss from suicide. She’s also a storyteller with NAMI, and a crisis counselor with the Trevor Project. Lisa shares her personal story of losing her father, cousin, and childhood friend. Lisa didn't know her father had taken his life until she was 45, the same age he was when he died. The specific kind of grief she experienced prompted Lisa to learn all she could about mental health and share her experiences to help others.


    While Lisa is an empath and a highly sensitive person, her work as a counselor in Lifeline is not negatively affecting her. Rather, it has empowered her more! Lisa shares tips on how to deal with people in crisis and how to help them manage the tough feelings they’re experiencing.


    The decision to take one’s life stems from horrible suffering, often endured silently. Listening to people’s stories, doing all you can to understand them, and holding a safe space to express their problems can help tremendously.


    It’s so important to bring uncomfortable subjects to the surface and into the mainstream so we can normalize conversations around mental illness, suicide, and crisis.

    Show notes:
    ☹️ Lisa is a Crisis counselor: she lost her father, cousin, and childhood friend to suicide. 01:47
    🤩 Storytelling, writing, and being a listener to help suicidal people. 03:18
    ⚠️ Understanding the power of sharing your story as a suicide loss survivor: suicide loss is a specific kind of trauma. 07:07
    👂 There is no fix for grief but holding space gives empowerment. 11:03
    😭 The way Lisa found out her dad took his life: the different kind of grief. 12:35
    👩‍👧 Mother’s protection and family dynamics after the suicide. 15:43
    🦸 Crisis counselors are unsung heroes: meeting people in their most raw realness. 20:23
    🗣️ Using blunt language with a person who is in pain or potentially suicidal. 24:04
    ☎️ Lifelines are needed for every crisis and should be used regularly: call 988. 29:40
    🌺 Lisa creates short videos and writes the column We Are Who We Are: creating recourses and making them available for everyone. 32:18.

    Links:

    Website: www.lisasugarman.com

    Connect with Lisa: www.linkedin.com/in/lisa-sugarman-she-her-hers-16925b69
    Follow Dr. Bonnie Wims:www.linkedin.com/in/drbonniewims

    Book a free call with Dr. Bonnie Wims:calendly.com/bonnie-96

    Más Menos
    38 m
  • The Lens of a Family System: Contribute to Society by Healing Yourself and Your Relationships with Phyllis Leavitt
    Jun 5 2024

    We are wired to be dependent, to connect, to love, and to feel a sense of belonging.


    Phyllis Leavitt is a podcaster, author, and psychotherapist for over three decades. In her book, America in Therapy: A New Approach to Hope and Healing for a Nation in Crisis, she discusses in-depth how abusive family dynamics are playing out in America, especially in politics, and how we can use the best of what we have learned from psychology, Family Systems, and Family Therapy to interrupt the escalating cycle of hatred, divisiveness, and violence, and begin to heal the family of America.


    Phyllis Leavitt shares her experience and focuses on healing relationships, both with ourselves and with others. She advocates for applying this within larger institutions to bridge divides, build empathy, and foster understanding. Her approach involves taking personal responsibility, making necessary changes within ourselves, and building deep connections rather than blaming others, which we usually do.


    To reconnect with that beautiful person that we were born to be, that innocent baby, people need to heal. When people heal and find that inner essence, and connect to it, they have a source of love and understanding that they bring into the world around them. Healing on an individual level is deeply connected to the broader societal context and the only way to make this world a better place is to start from ourselves.


    Love and connection, among many other positive things, are essential for human well-being. When we lack these, we feel unwell.

    Notes:
    🔗 Unhealed trauma, models, and values of the people we grow up with—all the groups that affect family dynamics and us. 02:05
    🤔 Healing her trauma helped Phyllis realize that people don’t understand what is going on with them. 05:19
    ⭐ The more we heal individually, the more we bring love and attention to the people around us and to society. 10:41
    2️⃣ Learned helplessness and identifying with the aggressors are two patterns that we are experiencing as a society. 12:42
    ⚠️ The stigma around needing another human being for help is specifically tied to mental health: we all need love and support. 18:18
    🤯 Adopting trauma to survive and not knowing how to move from the behavioral patterns. 22:03
    🔁 Attraction to the familiar: abuse creates a feeling of disliking dependency. 25:32
    🌺 Allow yourself to get help and depend on help to heal: the power of random kindness and the ripple effect of our behavior. 28:18

    Links:

    Website: www.phyllisleavitt.com

    LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/phyllis-leavitt-630179255

    Book: www.amazon.com/dp/1636983367

    Más Menos
    38 m
  • How Healing Trauma Can Help Triumph in Your Business with Jennifer Dawn
    May 1 2024

    We are not broken, we just need help to understand ourselves.


    Jennifer Dawn is an expert business coach, creator of Best Planner Ever, author and podcaster. She very openly shares her story that started with a mix of trauma but also entrepreneurial creativity. Her childhood wounds affected her life, relationships and business. Jennifer discusses her experiences with trauma and abuse. Therapy helped her recognize and address these issues, leading to personal growth and healing. Her reason for going into therapy may seem a bit different, but it worked perfectly for her.


    We are all coping. We all feel pain inside, but most of us push it deep down and try to walk through life like nothing happened. However, the pain often shows up in things that are not always obviously connected with the pain and trauma. It’s unfortunate that getting therapy is stigmatized, as it is essential to healing our self talk, discomfort, and worries. Our mental health impacts various aspects of life, including things like business planning and organization skills. When we heal, we get new perspectives, new impacts in business and in life. Ultimately, a new us.

    Notes:
    👩‍💼 Jennifer is a business coach who organized a retreat in Costa Rica, where Bonnie had an amazing experience. 01:55
    😇 Personal development and mental health journey: Jennifer is advocating and talks very openly about her personal and mental challenges. 03:34
    👧 Childhood trauma impacted Jennifer’s relationships: therapy helped her in fixing her issues, but the reason she went on it is a bit different than usual ones. 05:13
    💣 Pressing bad things and trauma in: trauma gets out in harsh, fighting reactions to small things. 11:16
    😥 Pushing through as coping mechanism: relationships showed something is not working well for Jennifer. 15:17
    ⚠️ Childhood wounds are real: not all got abused, but we just don’t admit we have pain inside. 17:03
    🆚 Misunderstanding around anxiety: healing vs diagnosis. 18:20
    🍀 Therapy changed Jennifer’s business as well: emotional intelligence show up in our actions. 21:17
    💭 The thoughts you tell yourself are very important to recognize and admit. 23:37
    🤩 Find the right therapist and have intention to heal: don’t give up if you have bad experiences here and there. 26:03
    🔑 Transformation Bonnie shares: being open is the key for all epiphanies in life.
    🌹 When you heal, everything changes around you: new perspectives, relationships and new you. 32:26
    🏖️ Retreats, coaching and all Jennifer is working on. 33:36

    Links:

    Website: https://jenniferdawncoaching.com/

    Retreats: https://jenniferdawncoaching.com/our-retreats/

    Follow Dr. Bonnie Wims:www.linkedin.com/in/drbonniewims

    Book a free call with Dr. Bonnie Wims:calendly.com/bonnie-96

    Más Menos
    35 m
  • Fostering Healthy Relationships Through Boundary Setting and Self-Care with Olivia Verhulst
    Apr 3 2024

    Self-care and boundaries are ever-evolving, just as our identity evolves!


    Olivia Verhulst is a psychotherapist, adjunct professor, Forbes Health Advisor and She Leads LIVE conference speaker. With a strong focus on self-care and boundaries, Olivia believes it is important to allow ourselves to have needs and address them. Self-care is a deep-rooted sense of what it is to care for ourselves, and we need to allow ourselves to make decisions that align with nourishing self-preservation boundaries.


    Olivia teaches that while boundaries can sometimes be scary to implement, they are, in fact, what keeps us close to others. Setting boundaries in our lives allows us to place limits in our relationships and to create a space within which we can show up genuinely and authentically without running the risk of overextending ourselves.


    Be willing to hear what it is that you are telling yourself, and then show up for yourself!

    Notes:
    🎤 Olivia met Bonnie at the She Leads LIVE 2023 conference, where she gave a speech about self-care. 3:07
    ⚠️ Self-care is really about the purpose and context, not Spa trips and massages. 4:47
    👉 The desire to constantly try to be perfect comes from a sense of inadequacy. 07:08
    🤔 Boundaries are scary for many, but they're the thing that keeps us close to others. 10:06
    👀 Resentment can inform us about what's going on inside of us. 13:15
    🫂 Intimacy involves being truly seen and known by another. 18:21
    🗣️ People are not mind readers: when we communicate with them, we name our limits in relationships. 21:22
    🌸 Our identity is ever-evolving, and thus, so are our boundaries. 26:40
    😇 Being willing to hear what you're telling yourself: permitting yourself to be a needy human. 29:39

    Links:

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/olivia-verhulst-34098b136/

    Psychology Today: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/mary-olivia-verhulst-new-york-ny/1003416

    Más Menos
    33 m
  • Therapy Across Cultures: A Journey to Self-Acceptance with Yuri Chu Su
    Mar 6 2024

    Getting to know yourself so that you may be kinder to yourself.


    Yuri Chu Su is a digital nomad who embarked upon a 20-month transformative journey around the world. Growing up in a household where emotions were not openly discussed, Yuri felt alone in her struggles with stress and anxiety. In a critical step in college, Yuri found a female Chinese therapist on campus and her therapy journey began.


    Through therapy, Yuri realized the importance of self-awareness and self-compassion. The process of observing thoughts without judgment and recognizing the value of having a safe space to unload and be validated are just some of the benefits she received from going to therapy.


    How to take a beat and step out of reaction mode to witness the thoughts that are bothering us is the greatest tool for self-awareness. “I’m not my thoughts, but I’m the awareness of my thoughts” - is the biggest lesson Yuri learned by going to therapy.

    Show notes
    🇨🇷Yuri and Dr. Bonnie met in the jungle in Costa Rica. 01:07
    👩🏼‍🎓 Yuri has been in therapy since she was 19: her family does not speak about emotions or mental health, so she has often felt alone in her struggles. 04:04
    😇 Challenging herself to speak about emotions: getting out of the comfort zone in order to feel better. 06:46
    🤩 A good therapist validates feelings without judging whether they are good or bad. 08:38
    👩🏻‍⚕️ Cultural experiences with therapy: Yuri’s first therapist was Chinese and female, which led to a deep and more complete understanding of each other. 10:01
    ✌️ The importance of finding a therapist with experience working with issues similar to yours. 11:48
    ✍🏻 Finding the method that works for you: different types of therapies - online typing therapy, video call therapy, classic one-on-one. 14:27
    🤗 The benefit of talking to someone who is not judging you: present and validating relationship. 16:13
    🛠️ The concept of self-awareness and personal programs: getting the tools to navigate situations through your life. 18:18
    🤓 Self-awareness is creating a space between thoughts and observing them with critical thinking. 21:24
    🪷 Cultural clash and contrasts of Chinese and Peruvian cultures: finding a way to navigate two different worlds. 24:02
    🎯 You are not flawed - challenge the preconceptions we have. 25:49
    😍 Therapy helped Yuri to become an even kinder version of herself and improve the negativity, judging and shame she unleashed on herself. 28:13
    💎 Push through the reluctance: only good things can meet you on the journey of getting to know yourself. 29:16

    Links:

    🤩 Connect with Yuri on Instagram: @yurichusu & at www.yurichusu.com

    Connect with Dr. Bonnie Wims: www.bonniewims.com

    Book Mentioned: https://www.amazon.com/Called-to-Lead/dp/B094RF5K9L

    Follow Dr. Bonnie Wims: www.linkedin.com/in/drbonniewims

    Book a free call with Dr. Bonnie Wims: calendly.com/bonnie-96

    Más Menos
    35 m
  • Helping Men to Build Relationships and Express Themselves, with Owen Marcus
    Feb 7 2024

    Men often get left behind when it comes to therapy.

    Owen Marcus, a coach who works with men to connect so that their relationships work, believes men are hungry for an environment where they can feel safe, and get connected in authentic ways to other men. Owen trained and often taught with leaders in the fields of somatic and relationship therapies in the late 1970s and 1980s. Ron Kurtz and Peter Levine, Ph.D., taught him how to use body awareness as a powerful yet gentle way to produce significant change.

    Men have been trained in different ways to perform, to fix, to solve problems; they are indoctrinated from a young age to do so. Female partners and spouses often ask for men to be able to empathize with their emotions. Owen believes that men can be both masculine AND vulnerable, once they understand that it is okay to discuss emotions and feelings.


    Sometimes you can't go in straight in the front door. This therapeutic approach is a window that allows people to start thinking about things in a different way!

    Notes
    🧔 Owen is a coach who works with men: it seems like men often get left behind in therapy. 01:06
    👨‍🦱 He was immersed in the somatic psychotherapy approach: men hardly talk about their emotions. 02:06
    ⚡ Hakomi method: using the body as a vehicle to create emotional change. 05:20
    🌞 Men are good at fixing things, but they need connection: emotional connection with women happens when men are authentic in their own emotional language. 08:33
    ⚠️ We aren't innately flawed: men do not feel they are enough, and they think they are trapped. 13:49
    🚩 Men think they’re being emotional, by using emotional words, but they are not connecting emotionally. 18:37
    😇 Men are hungry for an environment where they can feel safe, and get connected in really authentic ways to other men. 24:56
    🗣️ Practicing with other people and having a practicing arena for therapists and couples: learning new skills and having mutual help. 29:58
    🤓 Physiology of stress, the emotional aspect of it, and the impact of culture: when the box of understanding expand, men have more space for relationships and changes in their lives. 33:10
    🛑 Stephen Porges’ Polyvagal theory: shame runs rampant for men - stop the pathway in which you are wrong. 36:07

    Links

    Meet Owen: www.owenmarcus.com

    Connect with Dr. Bonnie Wims:www.bonniewims.com

    Book:https://www.amazon.com/Called-to-Lead/dp/B094RF5K9L

    Follow Dr. Bonnie Wims:www.linkedin.com/in/drbonniewims

    Book a free call with Dr. Bonnie Wims:calendly.com/bonnie-96

    Más Menos
    39 m
  • The 1% Shift: Navigating New Year Resolutions and Building Lasting Change
    Jan 3 2024

    Progress is not achieved by sudden flight but by gradual steps of introspection, adaptation, and perseverance.

    Together with Dr. Wims, let’s analyze the shortcomings of New Year’s resolutions, attributing their lack of success to unrealistic expectations and the absence of a structured plan for change.

    By shedding light on James Clear’s concept of making 1% changes through consistent habits, she emphasizes the power of small, incremental shifts over grand but unsustainable transformations. She urges her listeners to recognize existing habits and strategically introduce new ones, creating an environment conducive to change. Instead of focusing on impossibly high-end goals, prioritize positive self-talk and gradual, attainable changes.

    Encourage yourself to accept gradual changes, maintain a positive mindset, and persevere through setbacks, understanding that enduring transformation is a journey, not an instantaneous achievement.

    🎉 New Year, new me: resolutions as a tool for changing our lives, but why are those not working? 01:06
    🗓️ Social pressures and creating new habits: we don’t have a system, yet we hope for change. 04:20
    🔑 Small shifts are essential for the breakthrough moment: 1-minute shifts and ice cube melting explanation. 05:39
    💪 Encouraging yourself to make 1% change: the craving, response, reward. 09:07
    🧱 Using stacking and combining things you love with new things: small ideas on how to make a system for a change. 10:31
    🔍 We already have habits in our life, just notice them: the cue, craving, behavior, and reward. 12:37
    🧠 Mental health change: look at your habits and how you are watching yourself. 14:50
    📈 Gradual change for improvement: don’t get discouraged by the setbacks. 16:20

    Links:

    Connect with Dr. Bonnie Wims: www.bonniewims.com

    Book: https://www.amazon.com/Called-to-Lead/dp/B094RF5K9L

    Follow Dr. Bonnie Wims: www.linkedin.com/in/drbonniewims

    Book a free call with Dr. Bonnie Wims: calendly.com/bonnie-96

    Más Menos
    21 m
  • How Challenging Yourself Can Expand Your Idea of Who You Are & What You Are Capable Of Achieving
    Dec 6 2023

    We are all unknowingly wearing our limitations within ourselves.


    Dr. Bonnie Wims talks about her transformative journey deep into the heart of the Costa Rican jungle, which was a source of anxiety but also a profound exploration of self-discovery. In the internal thickets of fears, limitations, and negative self-talk, she understood that we are wearing all that as a coat on a daily basis. This heavy burden of barriers is not helping to move us forward.


    The challenge lay in dismantling self-imposed restrictions, one by one. Dr. Wims urged herself and all of us to embark on a journey of introspection, asking profound questions about the definitions and negative self-talk we are living as part of ourselves. In what ways do you limit yourself today? And in what ways can you challenge that?


    It is time to identify the moments when we downplayed our worth, when we failed to believe in ourselves, and when we limited our potential and then to remove that burden through therapy.

    Notes
    🇨🇷 Dr. Bonnie Wim’s transformative trip to Costa Rica: a challenging trip she had second thoughts about going on. 01:09
    🐸 Meeting a huge frog in the jungle: when all her fears began to pour out. 03:58
    🌞 Insecurities you harbor about yourself: finding out there are things you can do. 06:17
    🧥 Seeing yourself and challenging yourself: defense mechanisms we are wearing each day. 08:13
    🔃 You can challenge who you think you are, what you think you deserve, and your capabilities: choosing with intention. 11:56
    ⏰ How do we wake up to our possibilities: intentional and consistent challenges. 15:52
    ⚠️ Be aware of the stories you tell yourself first: the next step is to act and work on those stories. 19:05

    Links

    Connect with Dr. Bonnie Wims:www.bonniewims.com

    Book:https://www.amazon.com/Called-to-Lead/dp/B094RF5K9L

    Follow Dr. Bonnie Wims:www.linkedin.com/in/drbonniewims

    Book a free call with Dr. Bonnie Wims:calendly.com/bonnie-96

    Más Menos
    22 m