『Tend HER Wild Podcast』のカバーアート

Tend HER Wild Podcast

Tend HER Wild Podcast

著者: Dr. Betsy Rippentrop and Kate Moreland
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Dr. Betsy Rippentrop, a psychologist, and Kate Moreland, a lawyer and CEO, are having conversations about how women have been conditioned to lose connection to their inner voice and natural instincts, and how the time has come for us to re-wild. Both grew up as overachievers and perfectionists and took traditional career paths, following the rules society set for success. This required a loss of authenticity and a disconnection to their own wild essence. We explore questions and tools around how best to listen to our inner voice, re-wild ourselves, and live the most authentic life, where we thrive instead of survive.2022 - Dr. Betsy Rippentrop and Kate Moreland 旅行記・解説 社会科学 衛生・健康的な生活
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  • 204. Toxic Relationships: We’ve All Been There
    2026/06/05

    In today’s episode we explore toxic relationships. We’ve all had them whether they are with partners, friends, social media, food, substances, or even our government. We seek to understand the hallmarks of them, what to do about it once you see the truth, why we get in them in the first place, and the parts of self we need to own that might be attracting in such relationships.

    We talk about:

    • Toxic behaviors and the signs that we are definitely caught in a toxic relationship.
    • Why we are drawn to them, and why they are so confusing.
    • Do we break up or let it fade away?
    • The work we may need to do to understand the patterns that allow such toxicity into our life.
    • Dr Clarissa Pinkola Este’s take on how to fend off toxic ideas, people and groups using the symbolism of the butterfly.

    Other Episodes You Might Like:

    Episode 197: Connecting To & Healing Your Inner Child

    Episode 183: Anger: Still Channeling the Fire

    Episode 174: Codependent No More

    Episode 161: Intergenerational Trauma

    Episode 150: Healing The 3 Feminine Wounds

    Episode 66: Therapy Anyone?

    Today’s Episode sponsored by:

    Kate Moreland Coaching (https://www.katemorelandcoaching.com/)

    Dr Yoga Momma (https://dryogamomma.com/)

    Heartland Yoga (https://heartlandyoga.com/)

    Want to do coaching work with Kate or mind-body psychotherapy with Betsy?

    Kate Moreland Coaching (https://www.katemorelandcoaching.com/)

    Dr Yoga Momma (https://dryogamomma.com/)

    Want to go on retreat?

    Want to join Betsy in Mexico in February May 20-27, 2027 on retreat? This beautiful retreat center in the nourishing haven of Playa Chacala on the Pacific Ocean will the home for a week of deep self-care. Teaching retreat is one of Betsy’s favorite jobs as it gives her a chance to move into deeper realms with people over an extended period of time using the tools of yoga, meditation, hypnosis, energy work, and self-inquiry. People typically observe deep shifts and quantum leaps forward on such retreats. All the details here! – Interested in Rewilding this Summer with Kate & Betsy? Join us for a 4-week LIVE online course starting July 7-28, 2026. The course includes 4 90-minute live classes with Betsy & Kate, 8 online yoga classes with a Rewilding Box that includes items to support your journey. Registration opens 6/16. Stay tuned!

    Source

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    39 分
  • 203. Annalise Nelson — An Honest Reflection of a Mother’s Grief
    2026/05/29
    In this deeply intimate conversation, we sit down with Annalise Nelson as she shares her story of motherhood, identity, loss, and rebuilding life after the death of her 7-year-old daughter, Ann-Marie. Now parenting a newborn son, Leo, Annalise reflects on how grief has reshaped everything she thought she knew about love, time, and meaning—while also revealing unexpected moments of beauty, connection, and grace. Annalise begins by sharing her early life in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, growing up as the youngest of four children in a home led by a strong single mother after the loss of her father. She reflects on how her mother modeled resilience, independence, and the importance of community—values that deeply shaped her path into teaching and later motherhood. She speaks candidly about the sudden medical crisis that led to Ann-Marie’s passing, and the devastating yet clarifying experience of receiving answers in the hospital. In the midst of unimaginable grief, she describes holding multiple truths at once: heartbreak, gratitude for medical staff, and a strange sense of grounding in understanding what had happened. A central thread of the conversation is how community carried her: Friends, neighbors, and even strangers showed up in profound waysAn 8.5-hour visitation revealed the depth of collective loveSmall gestures—like a stranger giving her a purple stone—became symbols of careA lifelong mentor reminded her: “The reason it hurts so much is because there’s so much love.” We explore how grief is not something to “get over,” but something that reshapes identity. Annalise reflects on: Learning that grief is love with nowhere to goHow time becomes nonlinear after lossThe importance of letting grief move through the body rather than avoiding itHow she and her husband grieved differently, yet both authenticallyThe role of writing, walking, and trusted relationships in processing pain She shares deeply personal and beautiful ways she continues to honor Ann-Marie: Weekly writing with a local writer to preserve memoriesDesigning a headstone that reflects her daughter’s artistic, joyful spiritA cartwheeling mermaid with fishnet tights—symbolizing her daughter’s wild authenticityContinuing traditions like birthday celebrations even after lossReceiving unexpected signs and meaning in everyday life Annalise also reflects on becoming a mother again through IVF and the arrival of baby Leo. She shares the emotional synchronicities surrounding his conception and birth, and how his name—Leo—feels connected to Ann-Marie in meaningful, symbolic ways. Rather than replacing grief, this new life exists alongside it. At the heart of the conversation is a powerful truth: You can hold joy and sorrow at the same timeLife does not require choosing one or the otherHealing is not linear, but deeply relational and embodiedLove does not end—it changes form She closes with a reflection on what it means to live fully human: Those who struggle most are often those who resist holding multiple truthsBeauty and tragedy will always coexist in a full lifeFeeling joy fully is just as important as allowing grief in This episode is a tender exploration of love, loss, and the enduring connection between a mother and her daughter—an invitation to stay open to the fullness of life, even when it hurts. Past Episodes You Might Like About Grief, Loss, and Motherhood: Episode 30: Grief: It’s Complicated Episode 122: Nina Lohman: The Body Alone: A Lyrical Articulation of Pain Episode 192: Anne Marie Nest-Pinero & Kristin Marrs: Performance Art that Educates About Infertility & Miscarriage Today’s Episode sponsored by: Kate Moreland Coaching (https://www.katemorelandcoaching.com/) Dr Yoga Momma (https://dryogamomma.com/) Heartland Yoga (https://heartlandyoga.com/) Source
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    1 時間 10 分
  • 202. The Severing of the Wild Woman
    2026/05/22

    What severs women from their wild, instinctual selves? Or maybe the better question is: when did we become disconnected in the first place?

    In this episode, we explore the concept of “Wild Severance” — the gradual disconnection many women experience from their intuition, instincts, bodies, power, and truth. Inspired by the work of Clarissa Pinkola Estés, we unpack the systems, experiences, and conditioning that teach women to override themselves in order to belong, perform, and stay safe.

    We talk about the subtle and overt ways women are taught to disconnect from their natural essence — and what it means to begin rewilding ourselves back into wholeness.

    In This Episode We Discuss:

    • How patriarchal systems condition women to perform rather than trust themselves
    • Kate’s early experience interviewing for a law job and being told not to wear her wedding ring
    • Betsy’s story of religious conditioning that taught her the body was sinful and untrustworthy
    • The lasting impact of Victoria’s Secret and cultural messaging around women’s bodies
    • Why systems of control benefit when women are disconnected from community, intuition, and each other
    • The tension many women felt around taking their husband’s last name — and ignoring the instinct that questioned it
    • How trauma disconnects women from instinct and intuition
    • Dr. Estés’ insight that wounded women can become more vulnerable to promises of safety, ease, and approval
    • Betsy’s story of early trauma and how it severed her connection to herself
    • The danger of teaching girls to always “be nice”
    • Why compliance and people-pleasing often require women to override their intuition
    • The truth that a mother wolf would never teach her cubs to ignore danger signals
    • Teaching daughters to trust themselves instead of abandoning themselves for approval
    • Dr. Estés’ question: “Why do women keep bending and folding themselves into shapes that aren’t theirs?”
    • The fear many women have of their own power
    • Betsy’s retreat experience of standing fully in her power — and how terrifying that felt
    • Why fear itself isn’t the problem unless it stops us from using our gifts in the world
    • Spring and summer as natural seasons for rewilding and reconnection

    Key Takeaway

    Rewilding begins with awareness.
    The first step is acknowledging where you have been severed from yourself — your body, intuition, instincts, voice, desires, or power.

    From there, healing becomes a return. Not becoming someone new, but remembering who you were before the disconnection.

    Books & References Mentioned

    Women Who Run With the Wolves by Clarissa Pinkola Estés

    Coming Soon an online course for Rewilding will begin in July!

    Kate Moreland Coaching (https://www.katemorelandcoaching.com/)

    Dr Yoga Momma (https://dryogamomma.com/)

    Heartland Yoga (https://heartlandyoga.com/)

    Want to do coaching work with Kate or mind-body psychotherapy with Betsy?

    Kate Moreland Coaching (https://www.katemorelandcoaching.com/)

    Dr Yoga Momma (https://dryogamomma.com/)

    Source

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    28 分
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