エピソード

  • Healing with Homeopathic Venom: Vanessa Morgan on Root Cause Recovery
    2026/05/05
    Mary interviews Vanessa Morgan of the Self Heal Center about her background in natural medicine (medical herbalism, acupuncture, homeopathy) and diagnostic approaches including EAV testing, blood lab evaluation, tongue/pulse assessment, and dark-field microscopy. Vanessa describes how, during COVID, she began exploring homeopathic snake venom remedies after hearing reports of snake venom peptides found in COVID-positive samples and noticing symptom overlap with acute COVID, long COVID, and vaccine injury, emphasizing spike-protein-related toxicity. She shares clinical observations of improvements in patients using specific venom remedies, discusses broader correlations between snakebite effects and the COVID experience (fear, isolation, paralysis, censorship), and highlights post-COVID issues including clotting, immune dysfunction, reactivated pathogens, mental-emotional distress, and significant hormonal and fertility disruptions. Vanessa explains how Chinese medicine frames these patterns and provides ways to reach her via selfhealcenter.com and Substack.
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    55 分
  • Red Pill Mary Poppins: Julie’s Quest to Heal the Next Generation
    2026/04/28
    In this episode of Reinventing Mental Health, the host interviews author Julie about her children’s book series centered on nonconformity, propaganda, and control, using the metaphor of a colorless town where independent thinking is tied to “wonder.” Julie describes books that address themes including education, peer pressure, politicized science, media censorship, masks and lockdown parallels, medicine “safety drops,” and later topics such as the World Economic Forum, the Great Reset, and weather weaponization, presented in childlike but not childish stories for ages 10–14 with study guides and audiobooks. The host shares how COVID-era messaging and censorship affected families and teens, prompting homeschooling and a move to Texas. Julie also discusses trauma-healing work at homeschool conferences and her guidebook, “Wounds to Wonder,” which uses story vignettes, questions, and biblical-based emotional healing steps to help parents and kids process hurts together; resources are available at thequestforwonder.com.
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    42 分
  • Gratitude That Heals: Chandani Patel Thompson’s Journey from Corporate Law to Clarity
    2026/04/21
    On Reinventing Mental Health, Mary interviews Chandani Patel Thompson, a former in-house corporate lawyer who worked at Apple (during early iTunes) and later at Sephora, PopSugar, Pandora, Adobe, and TuneIn, before being laid off in May 2025 amid company changes. Chandani shares how a consistent six-minute gratitude journaling practice (three minutes morning and evening) started in November 2024 helped her feel lighter, reduce pressure, and shift her perspective, leading her to study gratitude science and create a lawyer-focused journal, the Point One Daily Gratitude Journal. The journal includes the “morning brief,” a “midday recess” somatic/mindfulness tool, and an “evening close” to track wins and connect tasks to service and purpose. The conversation also covers negativity bias, community and purpose (including Blue Zone findings), her family’s move from California to Tennessee, and how gratitude practices helped her children. She shares her business, Clarity Print, and a planned weekly “midday recess” email and website launch in early 2026.
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    28 分
  • Root Causes of Mental Health: Patricia Lemer's Total Load Theory
    2026/04/14
    On Reinventing Mental Health, host Mary interviews mental health professional and author Patricia Lemer about moving beyond symptom management to address root causes of mental health and developmental symptoms. Lemer recounts her decades in diagnostic testing, founding the nonprofit Developmental Delay Resources, and later merging its materials with Epidemic Answers (now Documenting Hope). She discusses her books and explains why her newer work expands beyond autism to include nutrition, toxins, sleep, movement, vision therapy, trauma and nervous system regulation (including the vagus nerve), and lifestyle factors as drivers of symptoms and “dual diagnoses.” The conversation also covers earlier onset of anxiety/ADHD in children, the developmental importance of play and motor/vision milestones, concerns about school demands and toxins, and practical interventions such as sleep hygiene, movement, and even camping to reset circadian rhythms. Leer also describes an AI companion tied to her content and her podcast, The Autism Detectives.
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    52 分
  • Healing Families Through Addiction: Jacob Bowker's Recovery Coaching Journey
    2026/04/07
    In this episode of Reinventing Mental Health, host Mary Parker talks with Jacob Bowker, a father of four and certified adolescent mental health and recovery coach, about addiction as a family issue and approaches that support both the individual and their relatives. Jacob shares how his oldest son’s early addiction and hospitalization changed his perspective, leading him to use media-based tools like podcast-style conversations, music, and writing to help people open up, reflect, and heal within the family system. He emphasizes coaching as non-diagnostic, walking alongside clients, and ensuring the person actually wants help, while guiding them to find their own answers. Jacob describes his nonprofit Story Ministry and the Family Care Plan, and discusses integrating AI for adaptive learning, predictive analytics, 24/7 companion support, safeguards, and stronger community connection.
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    30 分
  • From Sick Kid to Impact: Tom Kotter’s Journey of Feeding Kids, Faith & One Small Step
    2026/03/31
    In this episode of Reinventing Mental Health, host Mary talks with Tom Cotter—founder of the nonprofit Backpack Friends and creator of Rebel 90—about functional approaches to mental health rooted in purpose, habits, and community. Tom shares how Backpack Friends began in 2014 after a Pflugerville High School student passed out from not having food over the weekend, leading him and his wife Heather to start feeding 12 kids and eventually serve about 190,000 kids across Central Texas. He explains Rebel 90 as a free 90-day protocol focused on small daily steps across body, mind, and spirit, emphasizing sustainable habit stacking, identity shifts, and accountability. They discuss loneliness, community’s role in longevity, and Tom’s book, Unleashing Your Creativity.
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    28 分
  • From Struggle to Purpose: Chris Evans' Journey of Faith, Patience, and Growth
    2026/03/24
    On Reinventing Mental Health, the host interviews friend Chris Evans, a janitorial company owner born in Philadelphia and raised in Killeen, Texas, about his difficult journey after college football, trouble finding work, and learning the janitorial business through trials and mentorship from Ravi Ward. Chris shares how he recognized his impatience and anger, became more patient by thinking situations through, and leaned into faith, prayer, and consistent church involvement encouraged by his gym partner Kevin. He describes finding community and self-reflection through church, discusses how community and purpose relate to longevity, and talks about staying physically active as you age. The host also offers practical advice on health, financial habits like saving 10–20% and delaying expensive rent, and finding purpose, while Chris mentions interests in travel, music, and possibly returning to school to coach football.
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    26 分
  • Healing Through Rhythm: Suzy Turner's Journey to Therapeutic Drumming
    2026/03/17
    In this episode of Reinventing Mental Health, host Mary talks with Suzy, owner of Soulshine Rhythm Experience, about interactive group drumming programs used for all ages in corporate, community, and therapeutic settings. Suzy shares how drumming supported her through an abusive marriage and led her to research its benefits, citing a study by music therapist Christine Stevens and neuroscientist Dr. Barry Bitman showing measurable changes such as reduced anxiety, increased endorphins and neurotransmitters, bonding effects, and boosted immune markers. They discuss brain-body connection, creating new neural pathways, bilateral integration through movement, and how drumming and singing can help people in recovery or dementia settings feel engaged and connected, sometimes more than talk therapy. Suzy demonstrates building rhythms with words, explains facilitated structure versus unstructured circles, and invites viewers to learn more at soulshinerhythm.com and join the upcoming “Let’s Get Real” tour with community-nominated locations in early 2026.
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    39 分