Dr. Dodge Rea
Dodge and Pete sit back for a spell to reflect on lessons learned from the first season of guests and conversations on The Change Paradox.
Listen NowPete and Dodge unpack a few dreams and revel in the discomfort that comes with learning new things about ourselves.
Listen NowLinda Odom is a gatekeeper of sorts. She’s a clinical psychologist in Nashville and while much of her work is around healing and recovery, she has a special knack for dreamwork. She teaches classes and workshops in which she teaches people how to access their own inner guidance through the language of dreams.
Listen NowDodge and Pete unpack their experience with Suman and the power of the first step following a mediative practice.
Listen NowSuman Chaudhuri is our healer, educator, and guide today. He is the owner of Karuna Center for Natural Healthcare in Nashville. He was formally trained as a chiropractor and naturopath, but to us, today, he is a meditation teacher, having spent decades immersed in the study and practice of meditation for healing and spiritual cultivation.
Listen NowPete and Dodge try to rehabilitate after a hard conversation on police violence and the data Sam’s team is collecting.
Listen NowWe have a light on the show today. And he happens to be a trusted source, too. His area of expertise is the other pandemic, the one that comes in and out of focus in striking competition with the disease state we’re living through. For our guest, it started with a big question: how many people have been killed by police?
Listen NowThis week, Pete and Dodge continue the ADHD exploration with only a bit of Thanksgiving distraction.
Listen NowADHD coach Nikki Kinzer joins Dodge to talk about the complexities and challenges of ADHD, and the joys that come with helping others find the systems they use to live with it. This is the paradox of ADHD: learning to adapt around that which we cannot change.
Listen NowCarleen Britton is a clinical social worker in Nashville. She’s here to teach us about Gestalt Therapy. Get ready, because Carleen is a superb educator and gives us a clear description of Gestalt practice, how it differs from other interventions, and then caps it off with an exercise that starts as an angry conversation with what might as well have been the robot in my phone, and ends with a gift of self-talk the likes of which I’ve never quite experienced.
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