• December - The Fog Before The Frost
    2025/12/03
    When the lights come down and the phone stops ringing, what’s left? December can be beautiful—or brutal—for anyone aging alone. This episode sits in the space between celebration and silence. This episode is about the split-screen life of the week most people romanticize: office parties, gift exchanges, people planning trips, couples whispering about “our traditions”… while you’re nodding and smiling, pretending it doesn’t sting. Then you go home. And the silence hits different. This is the episode for the ones who come back to an empty apartment, dim lights, folded laundry, and the thoughts you tried to outrun all day. The ones who feel guilty for not feeling festive. The ones who try to clean the kitchen or reorganize the closet because the alternative is crying on the couch. The ones who don’t hate the holidays — they just don’t feel held by them. Here, we talk about the demons that come out when the world is celebrating: the fear that nothing will change, the ache of being no one’s priority, the loneliness that feels heavier under warm lights and fake cheer. If December feels like both a mirror and a reminder, this is your episode. You’re not broken. You’re not late. You’re not the only one sitting awake at 2 AM trying to make sense of a life you’re still building. Come sit. You’re still here.
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    24 分
  • The Week Nobody Talks About (Split Screen)
    2025/12/17
    There’s the version of this week everyone sees. Office parties. Laughter. Wrapping paper. People talking about flights, dinners, who they’re spending Christmas with. And then there’s the other version. The one that happens after you lock the door behind you. The quiet apartment. The half-done chores. The silence that gets louder at night. This episode lives in the split screen. It’s about the week before Christmas — the strange, heavy in-between where you’re expected to be cheerful in public while privately holding your breath. Where you try to stay happy for others, even as the loneliness taps you on the shoulder when you get home. Where demons don’t arrive loudly — they slip in quietly, disguised as thoughts you didn’t invite. We talk about: Performing “I’m fine” while feeling anything but The exhaustion of small talk and forced cheer Coming home to an empty space and trying to outrun the quiet The guilt of wanting to belong without wanting to ask The fear that this might be how it always feels And the stubborn, fragile hope that refuses to die anyway This isn’t advice. It’s not a plan. It’s a diary entry spoken out loud at 2 a.m. If this week feels heavier than it’s supposed to… If you’re doing your best but still feel unseen… If you’ve ever folded laundry just to keep from crying… You’re not alone. Still here? Come sit. Good night.
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    34 分
  • After the Fireworks Fade
    2026/01/01
    The confetti has settled. The champagne is flat. The noise has stopped. The party is over. Are you still awake? “It is the early hours of January 1st… or maybe just the long, quiet night between what was and what comes next. Tonight, we sit in the sudden stillness of New Year’s Night — not to set goals, not to reinvent ourselves, but to tell the truth about what it takes to make it to another year when the weight feels like yours alone to carry. We let go of January’s forced optimism and take a Real Recap — not the highlight reel, but the inventory of grief, resilience, and quiet victories no one else saw. We talk about the difference between Resolutions — promises meant to impress — and Revelations — truths you finally stop arguing with at 2:00 AM. If you felt relief instead of celebration when the clock struck midnight, come sit for a while. You aren’t the only one here. “Resolutions are promises you make to impress yourself. Revelations are truths you whisper because you’re finally ready to hear them.”
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    24 分
  • The Great Silence (The January Afterglow)
    2026/01/14
    The adrenaline is gone. The calendar has turned. And the world is finally quiet again. This episode lives in the aftermath—after the holidays, after the expectations, after the survival mode that carried you through December. The Great Silence is not about loneliness. It’s about the moment your body finally let go. In this midnight conversation, we sit with the adrenal crash no one warns you about. The exhaustion that is not sadness. The stillness that isn’t emptiness. The strange relief that comes when there’s nothing left to perform, fix, or explain. We talk about what happens when the noise stops—and how, for those aging alone, that quiet can feel both unsettling and deeply comforting at the same time. No resolutions. No reinvention. Just a woman in her own space, breathing again. If January feels slower, heavier, softer than you expected— you’re not broken. You’re coming down. And you’re allowed to rest here. Still here. Still breathing. Still yours.
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    29 分
  • The Archive of One (What Love Was Allowed to Be)
    2026/02/01
    Love doesn’t always arrive as romance. Sometimes it arrives as survival. In this episode of Still Here, Sandy and Sable strip away the upcoming Valentine’s Day noise to look at the love that exists without an audience. We explore the "Archive of One” what it feels like to be the only person remembering your own life—and the reality of "witness deprivation." We discuss: • The Shape of Survival: Why you learned to shrink, adapt, and become "low maintenance” the version of you that was just trying to survive • The Archive of One: The burden (and power) of validating your own existence when living alone. • Love as Shelter: The difference between a relationship that keeps you safe and one that lets you rest. • The Phantom Audience: How to stop performing "okay-ness" in an empty room. This isn’t about blame. It’s about recognizing the versions of love you were allowed to have. No advice. No fixing. Just a quiet look at what love becomes when you no longer need it to rescue you. Still here. Come sit.
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    30 分
  • The Drawbridge (When Safety Becomes a Cage)
    2026/02/11
    There is a popular saying: "You are only as alone as you allow yourself to be." Tonight, we challenge that. You didn’t choose isolation. You chose safety. But you stayed in safety so long, it turned into a cage. Tonight we introduce the metaphor of The Drawbridge: a safety mechanism we pulled up years ago to keep pain out, only to realize the hinges have now rusted shut. This episode is about the rust that settles on our lives when we stop risking connection. It is about the "micro-rejections" we give the world before it can reject us. And it is about the brave, terrifying act of lowering the bridge just an inch. You don’t have to walk through the door tonight. You just have to unlock it. If you have built a safe, predictable, but incredibly quiet life and don't know how to lower the bridge again—this conversation is for you. Still here. Come sit.
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    22 分
  • THE BORROWED MAP - Who Told You to Want This?
    2026/02/25
    At some point in your life, someone handed you a map. It showed you what success should look like. What should happiness look like. What a “complete” life should look like. And most of us followed it without question. Until one day, we arrived to the destination chosed for us … and felt nothing. In this midnight conversation, we examine The Borrowed Map — the invisible script of expectations, ambitions, and desires that were never truly ours. We explore the quiet moment when your soul begins to reject a life that looks correct on paper but feels hollow in your body. The archaeology of joy buried beneath years of “shoulds.” And the terrifying freedom that appears when you stop following directions that were never meant for you. If you’ve ever looked around at your life and wondered, “Who was this built for?” pull up a chair. You aren’t the only one standing in the blank space. I'm Still here. Come sit.
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    23 分
  • The Living Altar (When You Stop Living Like You’re Temporary)
    2026/03/11
    Winter taught us how to survive. March asks a different question: What does it look like to finally live in the space you survived in? In this special birthday episode of Still Here, Sable Ryn/Sandy Dilly De Leon invites you into the quiet thaw—the “March New Year”—when the ground softens and the real beginning begins. Knowing what it means to live out of a bag and always ready to move, Sable knows the “temporary posture” intimately: keeping walls bare, objects minimal, parts of yourself packed away in case everything changes again. Because a home can be a shelter. Or it can become a living altar— a place that reflects the person who stayed. This midnight conversation is for anyone who’s ever looked around their home and realized they’re still treating it like a waiting room for a “real life” that hasn’t arrived yet. We explore: • The Temporary Posture — Why we live “around” our lives instead of inside them, hovering like guests who don’t fully believe they’re staying. • Expired Agreements — Recognizing “Obligation Objects” that belong to earlier versions of ourselves, and understanding no one is coming back to reclaim the space. • The Radical Act of Preference — Shifting from survival mode to occupation by choosing what stays based on what actually nourishes you, not what’s “supposed” to be there. • The Living Altar — Transforming a shelter into a Soul Home: a place that reflects the person who stayed, not a show home performed for an imaginary audience. Spring doesn’t ask you to survive. Spring asks you to re-enter. If you’ve ever wondered whether you’ve fully arrived in your own existence, pull up a chair. It’s time to stop living like a guest in your own life. It’s time to stop living like you’re temporary. Still here? Come sit.
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    26 分