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  • Ep. 8 - Who You Love Shapes Your Mental Health
    2025/12/11

    Dating choices don’t just shape romance, they shape your nervous system, your sleep, and the story you tell yourself about who you are. We sit down with licensed therapist and social worker Jenna Myers to map the real links between relationships and mental health, from the lift of secure attachment to the toll of criticism, conflict, and constant anxiety. If you’ve ever wondered why the first months feel magical and then turn messy, this conversation offers a practical lens and a calmer pace.

    We dig into green flags that actually matter, emotional regulation, vulnerability that feels safe, and partners who protect your individuality rather than consume it. Jenna breaks down love bombing, the neurochemistry behind that early rush, and a simple 90–120 day window that reveals character under stress. You’ll learn how to separate wants from needs, set boundaries rooted in values, and say them out loud so respect isn’t left to chance. For teens and parents, we unpack why young brains magnify heartbreak and how listening, validation, and quick connection to trusted adults can prevent isolation and risky choices.

    The episode also looks at system health: how nightly fights rob sleep, how worry kills appetite, and how fatigue erodes resilience. We share ways to create closure when you won’t get it from someone else, keep therapy as prevention rather than a last resort, and notice the moment your gut says something’s off. Expect clear tools, steady encouragement, and the reminder that hopelessness is a state, not a sentence.

    If you’re ready to choose better, heal cleaner, and feel more like yourself, press play, take notes, and share this with someone who needs a healthier map for love. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us the boundary you’re setting next.

    If you are in a crisis or feel unsafe, call or text 988 or dial 911 for immediate support. There are people out there who will listen and can help.

    Follow and stay connected:

    Website: justintimepodcast.com
    YouTube: youtube.com/@justintime.podcast
    Instagram: @justintimetosavealife
    Facebook: Just In Time To Save a Life

    Never miss an update—follow, subscribe, and join the conversation!

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    38 分
  • Ep. 7 - From Survival to Purpose: A Veteran’s Story
    2025/11/27

    What if the bravest move isn’t silence, but a phone call that keeps you here? We sit down with Dale Fewson from the Arkansas Crisis Center to unpack the quiet reality many veterans face: feeling alone in a crowd. From the Chaplain Corps to crisis response, Dale brings a ground-level view of loneliness, stigma, and the decisions people make at 3 a.m. We talk candidly about why some veterans press Option 2 on 988 instead of the Veterans Crisis Line, and what it takes to meet them with trust, speed, and the right resources the first time.

    Across the hour, we connect the dots between immediate support and true prevention. Dale shares how skilled call specialists do more than listen—they map reputable, local resources that fit each person’s needs. We explore spiritual triage, where care centers those closest to death so they are not alone, and how that lens broadens our approach to suicide prevention beyond checklists. We also dig into practical tools: improving sleep to break the stress spiral, movement and cold exposure for nervous system balance, and using neuroplasticity to rewire patterns that keep the brain stuck in survival mode.

    Collaboration sits at the heart of real change. Dale outlines a plan to strengthen existing veterans’ services through training, awareness, and upstream partnerships that make belonging and purpose part of the safety net. We highlight why comparison harms recovery—your crisis is your crisis—and why speaking up early is an act of strength. If you’re supporting a veteran, you’ll leave with concrete ways to show up without overstepping. If you’re struggling, you’ll hear a clear message: you’re not alone, and help is one call away.

    If this conversation lands with you, hit follow, share it with someone who needs hope, and leave a quick review so more people can find support. And if safety feels uncertain right now, call or text 988. Your story can change. We’re here for it.

    If you are in a crisis or feel unsafe, call or text 988 or dial 911 for immediate support. There are people out there who will listen and can help.

    Follow and stay connected:

    Website: justintimepodcast.com
    YouTube: youtube.com/@justintime.podcast
    Instagram: @justintimetosavealife
    Facebook: Just In Time To Save a Life

    Never miss an update—follow, subscribe, and join the conversation!

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    22 分
  • Ep. 6 - How 988 Connects Arkansas To Life-Saving Help
    2025/11/13

    Imagine a three-digit lifeline that connects you to a real human who won’t hang up until a safety plan is in place. That’s 988. We sit down with Luke, executive director of the Arkansas Crisis Center, to unpack how this number works, why geo routing matters, and how local partnerships turn calls and texts into real-world support.

    We explore the surge in help seekers—especially teens who increasingly choose text and chat—and what that means for training, staffing, and community education. Luke walks us through the six-week preparation for call counselors, the focus on reflective listening and de-escalation, and the tough but vital filters that make sure people are ready to do the work safely. We talk honestly about privacy, when dispatch becomes necessary, and the growing collaboration with law enforcement, firefighters, and EMTs through crisis intervention team training. You’ll also hear how simple awareness tactics—from student IDs to clean billboards—can move thousands to reach out sooner.

    Arkansas is scaling support where it’s needed most: rural counties facing isolation and farm stress, and tribal communities seeking culturally informed care. We share updates on AR Teen Connect, a warm line built for youth by youth, designed to catch struggles upstream before they escalate. Along the way, we trade practical resilience tools—exercise, heat and cold exposure, stepping away—to show how coping skills and community care fit together. If you’ve ever wondered whether 988 is real, local, and effective, this conversation offers a clear, grounded yes, plus concrete ways to volunteer, train, sponsor, or simply share the number.

    If this moved you, make a difference: share 988 with someone you love, follow the show for more candid conversations, and leave a quick review so others can find these resources. Your voice may be the nudge that saves a life.

    If you are in a crisis or feel unsafe, call or text 988 or dial 911 for immediate support. There are people out there who will listen and can help.

    Follow and stay connected:

    Website: justintimepodcast.com
    YouTube: youtube.com/@justintime.podcast
    Instagram: @justintimetosavealife
    Facebook: Just In Time To Save a Life

    Never miss an update—follow, subscribe, and join the conversation!

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    35 分
  • Ep. 5 - Your Body Is the Brain Hack
    2025/10/30

    When your thoughts won’t slow down and your chest feels tight, the fastest way out might be through your feet. Jessica sits down with Parker for a candid, practical conversation about how movement changes mood, why neuroplasticity makes lasting change possible, and the small, repeatable actions that pull you out of a spiral when motivation is low.

    We dig into the research in plain English: exercise is linked to fewer poor mental health days, aerobic movement boosts brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), and endorphins actually shift how stress feels in your body. Then we map science to real life. From “touching grass” after a day stuck in bed to taking non-negotiable work breaks, from pushing a stroller at dusk to a seven-minute guided meditation in an infrared sauna, the tools are simple and doable. We also explore cold plunges and heat as stress-training, breathwork that calms the nervous system, and micro-commitments that keep you moving when an hour-long workout feels impossible.

    Modern life keeps us overstimulated and on demand. Nature cuts through that noise. Parker shares why hunting and fly fishing restore attention, while Jessica talks about dancing while vacuuming, garage-gym routines, and protecting your media diet when you’re vulnerable. We offer a quick “time test” for anxiety, "will this matter in a month?", and a reminder that self-compassion is a skill, not a slogan. The goal isn’t perfection; it’s traction. Ten minutes of movement can open a window for better thoughts, better choices, and real hope.

    If this conversation helps, pass it on. Subscribe, leave a review, and share your favorite no-cost mood lifter in the comments. What small move changes your day?

    If you are in a crisis or feel unsafe, call or text 988 or dial 911 for immediate support. There are people out there who will listen and can help.

    Follow and stay connected:

    Website: justintimepodcast.com
    YouTube: youtube.com/@justintime.podcast
    Instagram: @justintimetosavealife
    Facebook: Just In Time To Save a Life

    Never miss an update—follow, subscribe, and join the conversation!

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    33 分
  • Ep. 4 - Beyond Baby Blues: A Real Talk on Maternal Mental Health
    2025/10/16

    The happiest day isn’t always the happiest season, and saying that out loud can save a life. We sit down with AFSP area director Jacqueline Sharp to trace a clear line between baby blues and postpartum depression, talk frankly about suicidal thoughts after birth, and map the small, practical choices that turn the tide. No clichés, no shaming, just lived experience, credible guidance, and the kind of details you can use today.

    We explore why postpartum struggles often stay hidden behind “you should be so happy,” how bonding challenges and perfectionism fuel shame, and what partners can do to truly help. From miscarriage and the quiet grief of trying to conceive, to hormonal freefalls, thyroid shifts, and the myth of “bounce back,” we bring nuance to a spectrum of maternal mental health experiences. We also get specific about support: setting boundaries with visitors, using an “eight minutes” code to ask for help, deciding between breastfeeding and formula without guilt, and building routines that reconnect you with your body and the world.

    Medication and therapy are on the table, with a reminder to consult your OB‑GYN about safe options and dosing, and to seek a second opinion when needed. We share the numbers every family should save: 988 for immediate crisis and the National Maternal Mental Health Hotline at 1-833-9-HELP4MOMS (1-833-943-5746), available 24/7 in multiple languages. If you’re navigating postpartum depression, or love someone who might be, this conversation offers clarity, comfort, and a path forward. If it resonates, subscribe, share it with your village, and leave a review to help more parents find real support.

    If you are in a crisis or feel unsafe, call or text 988 or dial 911 for immediate support. There are people out there who will listen and can help.

    Follow and stay connected:

    Website: justintimepodcast.com
    YouTube: youtube.com/@justintime.podcast
    Instagram: @justintimetosavealife
    Facebook: Just In Time To Save a Life

    Never miss an update—follow, subscribe, and join the conversation!

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    57 分
  • Ep. 3 - Healing Trauma & Finding Hope
    2025/10/02

    What if the most powerful pharmacy already exists inside your brain? What if you could break free from the darkest thoughts by literally rewiring your neural pathways?

    The concept might sound far-fetched to someone struggling with suicidal thoughts, but on this raw and deeply personal episode, Jessica and psychologist Diego Martinez share something remarkable: they've both been there, attempted suicide multiple times, and found their way out through neuroplasticity.

    Their friendship began during a retreat in Costa Rica when both were in profound pain. Diego, while running on the beach during Jessica's darkest moment, told her something that initially sounded impossible: "You just need to reprogram your brain." This conversation became the lifeline she desperately needed. Eight years later, they reflect on their transformations with genuine amazement at how completely their lives have changed.

    The discussion navigates the complexity of mental health recovery with extraordinary nuance. They emphasize that neuroplasticity isn't a quick fix or standalone solution; sometimes, medication, therapy, and other approaches are necessary first steps. Diego shares how his mother couldn't benefit from mindset work until the right medication stabilized her brain chemistry. Only then could she access other healing modalities.

    What makes their message so powerful is the lived experience behind it. When they talk about pushing through triggers, creating new neural pathways, and the discipline required to change thought patterns, they speak from the trenches of their own battles. Jessica candidly shares about the PTSD she experienced after finding her brother after his suicide.

    For listeners feeling trapped in darkness, this conversation offers something rare and precious, genuine hope from people who've walked the same path. Their message isn't that recovery is easy, but that it's possible, even when it seems utterly impossible.

    Ready to begin your own journey with neuroplasticity? As Diego beautifully explains, begin "tasting the flavor" of the experience you want to create, allowing your brain and body to align with that new reality.

    If you are in a crisis or feel unsafe, call or text 988 or dial 911 for immediate support. There are people out there who will listen and can help.

    Follow and stay connected:

    Website: justintimepodcast.com
    YouTube: youtube.com/@justintime.podcast
    Instagram: @justintimetosavealife
    Facebook: Just In Time To Save a Life

    Never miss an update—follow, subscribe, and join the conversation!

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    46 分
  • Ep. 2 - Ask the Question, Save a Life
    2025/09/18

    When it comes to suicide prevention, many of us freeze - unsure what to say, afraid of making things worse, or paralyzed by the weight of the topic. In this powerful conversation, Jessica Greenwalt sits down with Jacqueline Sharp, Area Director for the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, to dismantle myths and provide clear, evidence-based guidance that could save lives.

    "Are you thinking about killing yourself?" It's a question many of us fear asking, but Sharp explains why it's one of the most important questions we can voice. Contrary to popular belief, asking directly about suicide doesn't plant the idea; instead, it creates space for honesty and can provide immense relief to someone suffering in silence.

    The conversation unpacks two fundamental principles of suicide prevention: time and distance. Creating time allows someone's brain to move beyond crisis, while establishing distance between a person and potential lethal means dramatically reduces risk. These insights have fueled innovations like the Community Armory Project, which provides locations where people can voluntarily surrender firearms temporarily during a mental health crisis, a program that now has 12 locations across Arkansas.

    Sharp also addresses the power of language, explaining why phrases like "committed suicide" perpetuate stigma by implying criminality or moral failure. "Individuals who die by suicide, they're not committing a crime," she explains. "You wouldn't say someone 'committed cancer.'" This subtle but crucial language shift acknowledges suicide as a health issue rather than a moral failing.

    For those supporting suicide loss survivors, the discussion offers compassionate guidance: say the deceased person's name, understand that grief isn't linear, and recognize that checking in consistently matters. The episode concludes with information about the "Do You Have Eight Minutes?" campaign, which provides a simple code phrase people can use when they need support but struggle to directly express their pain.

    Whether you're concerned about a loved one, supporting someone grieving a suicide loss, or simply want to be better prepared to help, this episode provides practical, life-saving information delivered with compassion and clarity. Remember: in a crisis, call or text 988 for immediate support.

    If you are in a crisis or feel unsafe, call or text 988 or dial 911 for immediate support. There are people out there who will listen and can help.

    Follow and stay connected:

    Website: justintimepodcast.com
    YouTube: youtube.com/@justintime.podcast
    Instagram: @justintimetosavealife
    Facebook: Just In Time To Save a Life

    Never miss an update—follow, subscribe, and join the conversation!

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    53 分
  • Ep. 1 - From Darkness to Hope
    2025/09/04

    What if the thoughts in your head aren't telling you the truth? What if freedom from suicidal thinking is actually possible? Jessica G's powerful journey from thirteen years of suicidal ideation to complete freedom will challenge everything you thought you knew about mental health recovery.

    After losing both her father and brother to suicide within a single month, Jessica found herself spiraling into a darkness she had battled since age 13. Despite trying medications, therapy, and even inpatient treatment, nothing seemed to break the cycle of suicidal ideation—until friends introduced her to the concept of neuroplasticity and brain rewiring.

    This raw, vulnerable conversation with guest Jennifer Joy explores how our thoughts create our feelings, which drive our choices, creating a loop that can either destroy or heal us. Jessica shares the specific techniques that helped her consciously create new thought patterns, even when her body was still in "survival mode." She explains how it took about 90 days of consistent practice before her brain began to rewire itself, ultimately freeing her from suicidal ideation completely.

    What makes this episode particularly powerful is Jessica's honesty about the invisible nature of mental health struggles. As Jen points out, when they first met at a piano bar, Jessica appeared vibrant and charismatic—no one would have guessed she was carrying such profound pain. This reality underscores why kindness matters; you never know who might be holding on by a thread.

    The conversation culminates in Jessica's vision for Just In Time to Save a Life, a nonprofit dedicated to making neuroplasticity-based suicide prevention accessible to everyone. If you're struggling right now or know someone who is, this episode offers more than just hope—it provides a roadmap for lasting transformation. Remember: your brain can change, so can your story.

    If you are in a crisis or feel unsafe, call or text 988 or dial 911 for immediate support. There are people out there who will listen and can help.

    Follow and stay connected:

    Website: justintimepodcast.com
    YouTube: youtube.com/@justintime.podcast
    Instagram: @justintimetosavealife
    Facebook: Just In Time To Save a Life

    Never miss an update—follow, subscribe, and join the conversation!

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    28 分