Discover + Heal + GrowπŸ”­β€οΈβ€πŸ©ΉπŸŒ± : A Taproot Therapy Collective Podcast-logo

Discover + Heal + GrowπŸ”­β€οΈβ€πŸ©ΉπŸŒ± : A Taproot Therapy Collective Podcast

Arts & Culture Podcasts

We felt the world had enough whispery mental wellness podcasts asking you to eat healthy and breathe deeply. We aim to be more honest and sometimes irreverent and funny about the forces that affect us all. Some episodes feel like hanging out with professional therapists at the bar after work, while others might feel like you’re listening in on a university class with professional thought leaders. We discuss creativity, intuition, trauma, and the overlap between the three in the spectrum of consciousness and the psyche. Approaching topics from a depth psychology and brain-based medicine perspective, we explore the archetypes inherent in arts, design, and mass media. We delve into neuroscience, cutting-edge trauma neurobiology, Jungian psychology, relationships, political psychology, and feature interviews with both amateurs and experts. Discover + Heal + Grow is the podcast of Taproot Therapy Collective, a complex PTSD and trauma-focused therapy practice in Birmingham, Alabama. Hosted by Joel Blackstock and the other therapists at Taproot, it focuses on consciousness and all the cool and messy parts of being human. Subscribe for new episodes where we unpack topics like: The neurobiology behind new age and eastern medicine concepts Psychology of artists and design Cutting-edge trauma therapy approaches Brain-based medicine Archetypes in culture and media Psychology of true crime Therapy representation in entertainment Burnout in helping professions And much more! Whether you’re a fellow trauma therapist or just a fellow seeker, we offer authentic conversations that challenge conventional thinking and explore the depths of consciousness and healing. Based in Birmingham, Alabama, Taproot Therapy Collective is the premier provider of therapy for severe and complex trauma, PTSD, anxiety, and depression. We provide EMDR, Brainspotting, ETT, somatic and Jungian therapy, as well as QEEG brain mapping and neurostimulation. Website: https://gettherapybirmingham.com/ #TraumaHealing #DepthPsychology #ConsciousnessExploration #MentalHealthPodcast #TherapyCollective #PTSD #EMDR #Neuroscience #JungianPsychology #BirminghamTherapy The resources, videos, and podcasts on our site and social media are no substitute for mental health treatment. Please find a qualified mental health provider and contact emergency services in your area in the event of an emergency. Our number and email at Taproot Therapy Collective are only for scheduling, are not monitored consistently, and are not a reliable resource for emergency services.

Location:

United States

Description:

We felt the world had enough whispery mental wellness podcasts asking you to eat healthy and breathe deeply. We aim to be more honest and sometimes irreverent and funny about the forces that affect us all. Some episodes feel like hanging out with professional therapists at the bar after work, while others might feel like you’re listening in on a university class with professional thought leaders. We discuss creativity, intuition, trauma, and the overlap between the three in the spectrum of consciousness and the psyche. Approaching topics from a depth psychology and brain-based medicine perspective, we explore the archetypes inherent in arts, design, and mass media. We delve into neuroscience, cutting-edge trauma neurobiology, Jungian psychology, relationships, political psychology, and feature interviews with both amateurs and experts. Discover + Heal + Grow is the podcast of Taproot Therapy Collective, a complex PTSD and trauma-focused therapy practice in Birmingham, Alabama. Hosted by Joel Blackstock and the other therapists at Taproot, it focuses on consciousness and all the cool and messy parts of being human. Subscribe for new episodes where we unpack topics like: The neurobiology behind new age and eastern medicine concepts Psychology of artists and design Cutting-edge trauma therapy approaches Brain-based medicine Archetypes in culture and media Psychology of true crime Therapy representation in entertainment Burnout in helping professions And much more! Whether you’re a fellow trauma therapist or just a fellow seeker, we offer authentic conversations that challenge conventional thinking and explore the depths of consciousness and healing. Based in Birmingham, Alabama, Taproot Therapy Collective is the premier provider of therapy for severe and complex trauma, PTSD, anxiety, and depression. We provide EMDR, Brainspotting, ETT, somatic and Jungian therapy, as well as QEEG brain mapping and neurostimulation. Website: https://gettherapybirmingham.com/ #TraumaHealing #DepthPsychology #ConsciousnessExploration #MentalHealthPodcast #TherapyCollective #PTSD #EMDR #Neuroscience #JungianPsychology #BirminghamTherapy The resources, videos, and podcasts on our site and social media are no substitute for mental health treatment. Please find a qualified mental health provider and contact emergency services in your area in the event of an emergency. Our number and email at Taproot Therapy Collective are only for scheduling, are not monitored consistently, and are not a reliable resource for emergency services.

Language:

English

Contact:

(205) 598-6471


Episodes
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Tania Kalkadis on Evidence Based Practice and Clinical Training in Australia

1/29/2026
Tania's advanced training program which is starting on February 25th: https://deepmindpt.com/deep-mind-mastery In this episode, I’m joined by Tania Kalkadis for a deep, evidence-based conversation on the growing gap between research, academic psychology, and real-world clinical practice β€” with a sharp focus on the DSM and its role in modern mental health care. Together, we unpack the challenges of evidence-based practice in psychology, questioning how closely current diagnostic frameworks align with the latest scientific research. We explore where clinical practice diverges from academic psychology, why this matters for clients and clinicians alike, and how systemic pressures shape diagnostic decision-making. A key focus of this conversation is the Australian mental health system, including how DSM-driven practice operates within local funding, training, and service delivery models β€” and how this compares to psychological practice in the United States. We examine similarities and differences in diagnosis, treatment pathways, professional accountability, and the influence of insurance and policy on clinical care. This episode is essential listening for psychologists, therapists, mental health professionals, students, researchers, and anyone interested in how psychology is actually practiced versus how it’s taught and studied. If you care about scientific integrity, ethical practice, and the future of mental health diagnosis, this conversation offers clarity, critique, and nuance. Topics covered include: Evidence-based practice vs. diagnostic tradition Limitations and controversies surrounding the DSM Clinical psychology and academic research misalignment Mental health systems in Australia vs. the United States Implications for clinicians, clients, and policy πŸ” Keywords: evidence-based practice, DSM criticism, clinical psychology, academic psychology, Australian mental health system, US vs Australia psychology, psychological diagnosis, mental health research more@ GetTherapyBirmingham.com

Duration:00:57:18

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Dreams of Psychotherapy's Past, And It's Future

1/28/2026
More @ https://gettherapybirmingham.com/ Why does modern mental health care often feel like a bureaucratic ritual rather than a healing encounter? In Part 5 of The Absence of Idols, we explore how psychiatry emptied the temple of meaning and replaced it with a checklist. We begin with the ancient dream of AddudΓ»ri and the terror of an empty temple, using it as a map to understand our current crisis. Drawing on the work of historian Theodore Porter and physicist Richard Feynman, we dismantle the "Cargo Cult Science" of the mental health systemβ€”a system that builds perfect wooden control towers but cannot land the plane. From the rigid authoritarianism of James Dobson’s Focus on the Family to the "mechanical objectivity" of the DSM, we examine how weak institutions use metrics to hide their lack of authority. We also look at the "lacuna"β€”the institutional blind spot that prevents experts from seeing the harm they causeβ€”and why deconstructing religion without reconstructing meaning has left us vulnerable to the return of monsters. In this episode, we cover: The Cargo Cult of Psychiatry: Why "evidence-based" protocols often function like coconut headphonesβ€”mimicking science without the substance. Mechanical vs. Disciplinary Objectivity: How the mental health system traded trained wisdom for insurance-friendly checklists. The Lacuna Effect: Why institutions are literally blinded to their own biases (and how the brain fills in the gaps). Deconstruction Dangers: Why stripping away context without offering new metaphors creates a vacuum filled by conspiracy theories and extremism. Mentions & References: Richard Feynman’s "Cargo Cult Science" address (Caltech, 1974) Theodore Porter, Trust in Numbers The Dream of AddudΓ»ri (Mesopotamian texts) James Dobson & Focus on the Family critiques The Rosenhan Experiment Wilhelm Reich, Fritz Perls, and Somatic Experiencing Mental Health, Psychiatry Critique, Cargo Cult Science, Psychology, Trauma, James Dobson, Philosophy of Science, Theodore Porter, Somatic Therapy, Institutional Trust.

Duration:00:32:52

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Revisiting The Trap: How a Paranoid Mathematician Broke American Therapy

1/19/2026
Why is the most therapy-literate generation in history also the most depressed? This episode traces the hidden history connecting Cold War game theory, a 1964 pop psychology bestseller, and the mental health crisis devastating Gen Z. The thread starts with John Nashβ€”the schizophrenic mathematician who built models assuming all humans are paranoid, self-interested calculators. It runs through Eric Berne's "Games People Play," which taught millions that relationships are just strategic transactions. It continues through Reagan, Thatcher, and the rise of CBTβ€”a therapy model that treats your mind like buggy software. And it ends with a generation drowning in optimization, starving for meaning, and wondering why all their self-knowledge isn't helping. Featuring the tragic story of George Price, the scientist who slit his own throat trying to disprove his equation proving love is just calculation. Plus: why therapists can't legally unionize, how a secret committee of surgeons sets the price of your mental healthcare, and why the "just do it yourself" wellness movement is the final victory of the worldview that broke us. This isn't self-help. This is an autopsy of the assumptions we've been living inside. Topics covered: Game theory and psychology, Eric Berne transactional analysis, Adam Curtis The Trap, John Nash Beautiful Mind, CBT criticism, Gen Z mental health crisis, Theodore Porter Trust in Numbers, neoliberalism and therapy, Rosenhan experiment, C. Thi Nguyen gamification, purpose vs point, George Price equation, Wilhelm Reich, depth psychology, mental health policy

Duration:01:18:10

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Why Can't Psychotherapists Form a Union (Spoiler Alert:They Can't) What is the RUC in Healthcare

1/17/2026
Can Therapists Start a Union? The Antitrust Trap, the Shadow Committee, and the Economic Strangulation of American Psychotherapy Analyzing America’s Healthcare Regulations and Their Effect on Us: Why the Law Prevents Therapists from Organizing While Allowing a Private Committee to Fix Prices for the Entire Medical System The Monthly Rage Thread If you hang around therapist forums long enough, you will see it happen. It operates with the regularity of the tides. Someone posts a thread, usually after receiving a contract from an insurance company offering 1998 rates for 2025 work, and asks the obvious question: β€œWe are the ones providing the care. The system collapses without us. Why don’t we just all go on strike? Why don’t we form a union and demand fair pay?” It is a logical question. In almost every other sector of the economy, workers who feel exploited band together to negotiate better terms. Screenwriters shut down Hollywood to get paid for streaming residuals. Auto workers walk off the line. Teachers fill the state capitol. Nurses at major hospital systems have successfully unionized and won significant concessions. So why, in the midst of a national mental health crisis, does the mental health workforce remain so politically impotent? The answer is not that we lack will. It is not that we lack organization. The answer is that for private practice therapists, forming a union is a federal crime. This is not a political manifesto. It is an analysis of the bizarre regulatory environment that governs American healthcare, a system of antitrust laws, shadow committees, and bureaucratic classifications that effectively strips clinicians of their bargaining power while empowering the corporations that pay them. If you want to understand why corporate tech monopolies are ruining therapy, or why the corporatization of healthcare feels so suffocating, you have to understand the legal straitjacket we are all wearing. And you have to understand the one group that is allowed to set prices, the one group exempt from the rules that bind the rest of us. Part I: You Are Not a Worker, You Are a Standard Oil Tycoon The primary reason therapists cannot unionize dates back to the era of oil barons and railroad tycoons. The Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890 was designed to prevent massive corporations like Standard Oil from colluding to fix prices and destroy the free market. It prohibits β€œevery contract, combination… or conspiracy, in restraint of trade.” The law was a response to genuine abuses: companies buying up competitors, dividing territories, and coordinating prices to gouge consumers who had no alternatives. Here is the catch: In the eyes of the federal government, a private practice therapist is not a β€œworker.” You are a business entity. Even if you are a solo practitioner struggling to pay rent in a subleased office, seeing clients between crying in your car and eating lunch at your desk, the law views you as the CEO of a micro-corporation. You are classified as a 1099 independent contractor, not a W-2 employee, and that distinction makes all the difference in the world. If two workers at Starbucks talk about their wages and agree to ask for a raise, that is β€œcollective bargaining,” which is protected by the National Labor Relations Act. But if two private practice therapists talk about their reimbursement rates and agree to ask Blue Cross for a raise, that is β€œprice-fixing.” It is legally indistinguishable, in the eyes of the Federal Trade Commission, from gas stations conspiring to raise the price of unleaded. It sounds absurd, but the FTC takes it deadly seriously. When independent contractors organize to demand higher rates, when they share information about what they are being paid and coordinate their responses, they are engaging in horizontal price-fixing, one of the most serious violations of antitrust law. The Sherman Act provides for criminal penalties, including fines and imprisonment. The law that was meant to...

Duration:01:03:58

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Is The DSM Dying Part 2: What is a Diagnosis Anyway?

1/15/2026
https://gettherapybirmingham.com/what-is-a-diagnosis-anyway-is-the-dsm-dying-part-2/ The Archaeology of a Label: What We Forgot About Diagnosis and Why It Matters Now The book that decides if you're sane was written by the military to process soldiers. The committees that define your mental illness hold "typewriter parties" where they shout symptoms until someone wins. And the federal government declared the whole thing scientifically invalidβ€”two weeks before the latest edition dropped. In this episode, Joel Blackstock, LICSW-S, takes you inside the bizarre, hidden history of the DSMβ€”the document that shapes every therapy session, every prescription, every insurance claim in American mental health. You'll learn: This isn't anti-psychiatry. This is pro-understanding. Because the system isn't broken by accidentβ€”it was built this way. And if we want to fix it, we have to see how we got here. "The DSM was never a description of nature. It was a set of administrative protocols created by the military, adapted by the bureaucracy, defended by a profession fighting for legitimacy, and captured by industries seeking profit." Subscribe. Share. And maybe question that diagnosis.

Duration:01:22:49

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What is BPD as a Diagnosis and How did it Get Here?

1/14/2026

Duration:00:49:49

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The Death of the DSM: Why The Book For Sanity is Making us Crazy

1/10/2026
Is the DSM Dead? The "Bible" of Psychiatry, The Thud Experiment, and The Crisis of Diagnosis Episode Description: It dictates every diagnosis you receive, every medication you’re prescribed, and every insurance dollar spent on your mental health. But what if the "Bible of Psychiatry" isn’t actually scientific? Pull back the curtain on the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) to reveal a document in crisis. From the secret backroom deals that voted diagnoses into existence to the "checklist revolution" that stripped therapy of its meaning, we investigate how American mental healthcare became a system of billing codes rather than healing. We explore the infamous Rosenhan "Thud" Experiment that humiliated the psychiatric establishment, the accidental creation of "false epidemics" like ADHD and Bipolar II, and why the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) effectively abandoned the DSM years ago. Most importantly, we ask the hard question: Why does the system demand you be "broken" to get help, yet deny you care if you are "functioning" enough to work? If you have ever felt misunderstood by a diagnosis, frustrated by the medical system, or wondered why your "high-functioning" suffering doesn't seem to count, this episode is the validation you’ve been waiting for. In This Episode, We Cover: The "Thud" Experiment: How 8 sane people got committed to asylums and proved psychiatry couldn't tell the difference between madness and sanity. Reliability vs. Validity: Why the DSM prioritized "agreeing on a label" over "finding the cure." The Productivity Trap: How the "Clinical Significance Criterion" denies care to people who are suffering but still employed. The "False Epidemics": A look at how diagnostic inflation created the modern ADHD and Autism boom. The Divorce of Psychiatry & Therapy: Why your psychiatrist doesn’t do therapy anymore (and why that matters). The Future: Moving beyond the checklist toward a model of narrative, systems, and human connection. Quote from the Episode: "The DSM is not a description of nature. It is a description of what American healthcare requires nature to be." Resources Mentioned: The Myth of Mental Illness by Thomas Szasz The Book of Woe by Gary Greenberg The STAR*D Study’s true remission rates (2.7%) Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology (HiTOP) Connect & Listen: Subscribe to hear more critical investigations into the mental health system. If this episode resonated with you, please leave a review and share it with a friend who needs to hear that they are more than a billing code. Keywords for SEO: Mental Health, DSM-5, Psychiatry, Psychology, Trauma, ADHD, Neurodivergence, Joel Blackstock, Taproot Therapy, Clinical Depression, Bipolar Disorder, Big Pharma, Medical History, Rosenhan Experiment.

Duration:01:23:56

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The Story Science Forgot: Why Psychotherapy Needs Narrative More Than Ever

1/8/2026
The Story Science Forgot: Why Psychotherapy Needs Narrative More Than Ever by Joel Blackstock LICSW-S MSW PIP no. 4135C-S | Dec 15, 2025 | 0 comments Joseph Campbell is arguably one of the most influential intellectuals of the twentieth century. If you have watched a Marvel movie or read a modern fantasy novel or sat in a screenwriter’s workshop you have encountered his fingerprints. George Lucas explicitly credited Campbell’s The Hero with a Thousand Faces as the structural backbone of Star Wars. Every major Hollywood studio has copies of his work floating around their development offices. Even filmmakers who actively deconstruct his monomyth model still have to be in conversation with Campbell to do so. You cannot escape him if you are telling stories in the Western tradition. But here is the thing about Joseph Campbell that we need to hold in our minds when we think about what psychology has become. He was a showman. He was a legitimate scholar but also someone who understood that the truth sometimes needs a little theatrical assistance. The Showman and the Bear Bones One of Campbell’s favorite presentation techniques involved showing an image of ancient bear bones that were perhaps two million years old and discovered in a cave. The bones had been arranged in a particular way with pieces shoved back into the bear’s mouth. Campbell would present this with his characteristic gravitas and explain that the ancients understood that nature must eat of itself. They knew that to take life is to participate in a cyclical loop of giving and receiving. The bear consuming itself was a ritual recognition that we are all food for something else. It is a beautiful interpretation. It is probably even partially true. We know through depth psychology and early anthropology that prehistoric humans were almost certainly trying to make meaning of existential realities. Ritual practices around death and consumption are well documented across cultures. Campbell was not fabricating this from nothing. But also come on Campbell. These are two million year old bones shoved in a hole. Maybe the jaw just collapsed that way. Maybe soil shifted. Maybe an animal disturbed them centuries after burial. He did not know. He could not know. And yet he presented it with the confidence of revealed truth. Here is why this matters. Campbell’s influence is incalculable despite his methodological looseness. He told a story that resonated so deeply with something in the human psyche that it became the invisible architecture of our entire entertainment industry. He was not objectively right about those bear bones but he was pointing at something real about how humans make meaning. The story he told about that meaning making was more powerful than any peer reviewed paper could have been. We need to remember this when we think about psychotherapy and what it has become. The Dream I Had and the World I Found When I first entered the field of psychotherapy I had a fantasy. I thought I was going to be Joseph Campbell. I was going to find my way to someplace like Berkeley and immerse myself in the grand conversation between psychology and mythology and anthropology and philosophy. I imagined something like the Esalen Institute in the 1970s where Fritz Perls developed Gestalt therapy and where researchers and mystics and clinicians sat together in hot springs and argued about the nature of consciousness. Those places barely exist anymore. What I found instead was a competitive model built on H-indexes and impact factors. I found academic departments that had been siloed into increasingly narrow specializations. Each department defended its territorial boundaries against incursion from neighboring disciplines. The institute model where a psychologist might spend an afternoon talking to an anthropologist about ritual has been systematically dismantled. What we have instead are specialists who do not read outside their sub specialty and researchers whose entire...

Duration:00:54:22

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The Science Behind the Light: Dr. Steven Vazquez on Inventing Emotional Transformation Therapy

8/18/2025
Join Joel Blackstock for an extraordinary conversation with Dr. Steven Vazquez, the inventor of Emotional Transformation Therapy (ETT), as he reveals the 25-year scientific journey that led to one of the most innovative breakthroughs in trauma treatment. From skeptical experimentation to treating cancer with eye movements, discover how specific wavelengths of light directly impact the brain's emotional centers. In this illuminating episode, Dr. Vazquez shares the fascinating evolution of ETT's four core technologies, the neuroscience behind why colors disappear during dissociation, and remarkable case studies including elimination of Parkinson's symptoms, instant resolution of 15-year chronic pain, and complete remission of colorectal cancer through targeted eye movement protocols. Key Topics Covered: Breakthrough Cases Discussed: Resources: www.etttraining.com Perfect for neuroscience enthusiasts, trauma therapists, EMDR/Brainspotting practitioners, and anyone seeking to understand the cutting-edge intersection of light, brain science, and emotional healing. #EmotionalTransformationTherapy #ETT #DrStevenVazquez #Neuroscience #TraumaTherapy #LightTherapy #BrainScience #EMDR #Brainspotting #Innovation #PTSD #ChronicPain #Dissociation #TherapyResearch

Duration:00:39:39

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From Skeptic to Believer: MJ Denis on the Science of Emotional Transformation Therapy

8/16/2025
https://mjdenis.com/whoismjdenis Join Joel Blackstock as he sits down with MJ Denis, LPC, LMFT, and certified ETT trainer from Austin, Texas, for an eye-opening conversation about Emotional Transformation Therapy (ETT) - a groundbreaking approach that integrates light, color, and neuroscience to transform emotional healing. In this compelling episode, MJ shares her journey from skepticism to becoming one of the leading ETT trainers in the country, having conducted over 3,100 sessions. Discover how this evidence-based therapy goes beyond traditional talk therapy and EMDR to create rapid, lasting change for trauma, anxiety, depression, ADHD, OCD, and chronic pain. Key Topics Covered: Resources Mentioned: www.etttraining.com Perfect for mental health professionals, trauma survivors, and anyone interested in cutting-edge therapeutic approaches that bridge neuroscience and emotional healing. #EmotionalTransformationTherapy #ETT #TraumaTherapy #EMDR #BrainSpotting #Neuroscience #MentalHealthInnovation #LightTherapy #ColorTherapy #PTSD #AnxietyTreatment #DepressionTherapy #TherapistTraining #HolisticHealing

Duration:00:54:04

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Tim Faust on How Medicaid Expansion Saves Lives and Money

8/4/2025
In this eye-opening episode of the Discover Heal Grow podcast, host Joel Blackstock sits down with healthcare policy expert Timothy Faust to demystify America's complex healthcare system. They explore how Medicaid expansion actually saves states money, why cutting healthcare funding costs more in the long run, and the real economics behind healthcare policy. Key topics covered: Perfect for healthcare workers, policy enthusiasts, and anyone trying to understand why American healthcare costs so much and how we can fix it. 🎧 Listen now to understand the economics of healthcare that politicians don't want you to know. Newsletter: Book: https://www.amazon.com/Health-Justice-Now-Single-Payer/dp/1612197167https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/580342/health-justice-now-by-timothy-faust/ Social Media: https://twitter.com/crulgehttps://x.com/crulgehttps://bsky.app/profile/crulge.urinal.clubhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/faust/ medicaid expansion economics, healthcare policy alabama, rural hospital closures, medical debt crisis, healthcare cost savings, preventative care ROI, insurance industry reform, medicare for all economics, healthcare bureaucracy waste, medical bankruptcy prevention, assertive community treatment, healthcare market failure, single payer benefits, medicaid work requirements, healthcare economic multiplier

Duration:01:00:55

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Walter Sorrells on Japanese Bladesmithing, Martial Arts, and the Artisan's Journey

7/29/2025
https://www.waltersorrellsblades.com/https://www.tactixarmory.com/https://sorrelstool.com/https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCkLxJCuQZ4hStBfs8TCnT9Q From Novelist to Master Swordsmith: In this captivating episode of Chap Therapy Collective: Discover Here, Grow, host Joel Blackstock welcomes Walter Sorrells, a master bladesmith whose extraordinary journey from bestselling mystery novelist to renowned Japanese sword maker offers profound insights into creativity, craftsmanship, and personal transformation. Walter Sorrells has spent over 25 years perfecting the ancient art of Japanese bladesmithing. After writing more than 30 mystery and suspense novels (including an Edgar Award winner), Walter made the bold decision to pursue his passion for sword making full-time. Today, he's one of America's most respected makers of Japanese-inspired blades and has built a massive following through his educational YouTube channel with hundreds of thousands of subscribers. In This Episode, We Explore: The fascinating technical world of Japanese sword construction, from traditional tamahagane steel smelting to the intricate process of clay tempering that creates the legendary hamon (temper line). Walter shares how he evolved from purely commission work to developing his Tactix Armory production line and incorporating modern CNC machining into his craft. The psychological and philosophical dimensions of martial arts training, including how Walter's 20 years in karate and Japanese sword arts shaped his approach to both life and metalwork. We dive deep into the concept of "killing the opponent on the inside" and how constraints and limitations often drive the greatest innovations. The business realities of being a working artist, from dealing with difficult custom clients to finding your authentic voice in the marketplace. Walter's insights on genre, focus, and the importance of making "chairs not art" offer valuable lessons for any creative professional. The intersection of ancient techniques and modern technology, as Walter discusses his journey into CNC machining and how he balances traditional hand-forging with contemporary production methods. About Walter Sorrells: Walter holds a 3rd degree black belt in karate and has trained extensively in Japanese sword arts including Shinendo. His blades are fully functional works of art, crafted using traditional clay hardening techniques and often featuring folded steel construction reminiscent of historical Japanese swords. Through his YouTube channel, instructional videos, and tools business, Walter has become one of the most influential educators in the modern bladesmithing community. Key Takeaways: Whether you're interested in metalworking, martial arts, Japanese culture, or the broader questions of artistic development and career transformation, this conversation offers something valuable. Walter's story demonstrates that it's never too late to completely reinvent yourself while honoring the skills and wisdom you've already developed. Connect with Walter Sorrells: Website: waltersorrellsblades.com Production Knives: tactixarmory.com YouTube: Search "Walter Sorrells" for hundreds of knife-making tutorials Patreon: patreon.com/WalterSorrells About Chap Therapy Collective: Hosted by therapist and writer Joel Blackstock, Chap Therapy Collective explores the intersection of creativity, psychology, and personal growth through conversations with artists, craftspeople, and innovators. The show's motto "Discover Here, Grow" reflects our belief that growth happens through engagement with meaningful work and authentic relationships. Subscribe for new episodes every week, and visit our website for show notes, additional resources, and Joel's writing on creativity and personal development. Episode Length: 59 minutes Release Date: [Insert Date] Season/Episode: [Insert Info] #Bladesmithing #JapaneseSwords #KnifeMaking #MartialArts #Craftsmanship #CreativeJourney #ArtisanLife #Metallurgy...

Duration:00:59:03

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Actor Toby Huss on His Photo Essay American Sugar Gristle

7/2/2025
Buy the Book! https://hatandbeard.com/products/american-sugargristle-by-toby-huss What if the secret to understanding America was hidden in gas station graffiti? Why does actor Toby Huss photograph truck stops instead of sunsets? And how did abstract painting help him process MDMA therapy sessions? In this mind-expanding episode, beloved character actor Toby Huss (John Bosworth in "Halt and Catch Fire," Cotton Hill/Kahn in "King of the Hill") takes us on a journey through his photography book "American Sugargristle" and reveals how finding beauty in overlooked places can transform both art and consciousness. You'll discover: βœ“ The "connective tissue" that unites America beyond political divisions (hint: it's in plain sight) βœ“ Why cynicism is the enemy of authentic art (and how to avoid it) βœ“ The surprising connection between his abstract paintings and trauma processing βœ“ How playing salesmen taught him that performance can be authentic βœ“ Why he insisted on specific cowboy boots for Bosworth (and what that teaches about intuition) βœ“ The profound humanity in truck stop graffiti and strip mall aesthetics βœ“ His approach to voicing Dale Gribble after Johnny Hardwick's passing βœ“ Why technical photography skills mean nothing without story βœ“ How to train your eye to find beauty anywhere (even Palmdale) βœ“ The unexpected spiritual dimensions of documenting mundane America Toby drops wisdom bombs about: Why every actor needs to trust their character intuition over directors The danger of the "safari mentality" when photographing America How different creative mediums access different truths Why he photographs the "impression" places leave, not just the places The democracy of anonymous expression (yes, including dick graffiti) Plus: Learn about his upcoming films "Americana" and "Weapons," and why a Native American ghost shirt might be the perfect metaphor for his artistic vision. Perfect for: Artists seeking authentic vision, photographers tired of Instagram aesthetics, actors wanting to deepen their craft, anyone processing trauma through creativity, fans of Halt and Catch Fire, King of the Hill enthusiasts, and people curious about the real America beyond media narratives. ⚠️ Content note: Frank discussion of trauma, therapeutic psychedelics, and the artistic process. TIMESTAMPS: [00:00] Cold open - Testing audio with an actor who records everything [03:52] "American Sugargristle" - What the hell does that mean? [06:22] Visual DNA: Decoding America's aesthetic language [07:32] Lyn Shelton memories and creative cross-pollination [10:00] When your writing sounds like a fever dream (compliment) [11:39] The universal language of dick graffiti (seriously) [14:10] "Are you a pervert?" - Getting detained for photography [17:31] Photographing ghosts: Capturing a place's impression [18:19] "Where They Grow Headstones" - Perfect titles take time [20:09] Why cynicism kills art (and wonder) [22:32] Finding humanity across the political divide [24:03] Truck stops as temples: Spirituality in mundane places [27:37] From disgust to beauty: The Palmdale transformation [28:33] F*ck your expensive camera (story matters more) [29:19] That time he roasted sunset photography [31:46] Iowa barns and the death of clichΓ© [33:29] Your book feels like a Wim Wenders film [35:02] The performative truth of John Bosworth [36:34] When the salesman mask IS the real face [40:19] Becoming Dale Gribble (with respect to Johnny) [45:37] Stage vs. film vs. voice: Different mediums, different magic [46:40] Plot twist: Those squiggly paintings were trauma all along [48:20] MDMA therapy meets abstract art [52:46] How trauma blocks intuition (and art unblocks it) [56:45] Brain spotting and carnival barkers [59:21] "Americana" and "Weapons" - Coming this August Guest Bio: Toby Huss has built a career finding depth in seemingly simple characters. From Artie (The Strongest Man in the World) on Nickelodeon's "The Adventures of Pete & Pete" to Cotton Hill and Kahn on...

Duration:00:57:47

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The Body Holds The Trauma: Adam O'Brien on Dissociation, Addiction & Why Ketamine Treatment is Backwards

6/25/2025
Is your therapist accidentally making your dissociation worse? Why does ketamine - a dissociative drug - keep getting prescribed for dissociative disorders? And what if everything we think we know about treating trauma is backwards? https://gettherapybirmingham.com/understanding-dissociation-trauma-and-addiction-insights-from-adam-obrien-and-the-wounded-healer-institute/ https://youtu.be/6SxxhB10G8U In this eye-opening episode, trauma specialist Adam O'Brien (founder of the Wounded Healer Institute) reveals why the body IS the psychological unconscious and how dissociation connects directly to our natural opioid and cannabinoid systems. You'll discover: βœ“ Why it takes YEARS to diagnose dissociative disorders (and why that's insane) βœ“ The hidden link between dissociation and addiction that most therapists miss βœ“ How "skilled dissociation" can actually be protective (and when it becomes problematic) βœ“ Why Brainspotting accesses preverbal trauma that talk therapy can't touch βœ“ The 3 "missing addictions" society rewards: perfectionism, altruism, and ambition βœ“ How to work with non-verbal parts of yourself that hold trauma βœ“ Why "checking out" actually means you're "checking in" somewhere else βœ“ The real reason some therapies (CBT, ABA) might induce dissociation Adam drops truth bombs about: Plus: Learn about the Wounded Healer Institute's revolutionary peer-support model that values lived experience alongside professional training. Perfect for: therapists, anyone with complex PTSD/DID, trauma survivors, addiction counselors, and people failed by traditional therapy. ⚠️ Content note: Frank discussion of trauma, dissociation, and mental health system failures. TIMESTAMPS: [00:00] Cold open - "The body is the psychological unconscious" [01:05] The dissociation-addiction connection no one talks about [02:38] What is the Wounded Healer Institute? [06:08] "Your lived experience matters more than their data" [15:27] Preverbal trauma: Why talk therapy isn't enough [19:14] Your body IS your unconscious mind [29:39] Brainspotting: The therapy that changes everything [41:25] Plot twist: Dissociation is checking IN, not out [42:24] The ketamine scandal no one's discussing [44:16] How to talk to parts that don't use words [53:49] Time doesn't exist in trauma (literally) [1:03:24] The addictions we celebrate (that are killing us) [1:06:37] Building the healing community we actually need Guest Bio: Adam O'Brien is a researcher, Brainspotting expert, and founder of the Wounded Healer Institute. Specializing in the transdiagnostic nature of dissociation and addiction, Adam challenges the biomedical model with integrated approaches combining neurofeedback, somatic therapy, and lived experience. Their groundbreaking work reframes dissociation as a navigable healing journey rather than a life sentence. Resources Mentioned:

Duration:01:03:44

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The Weird History of Psychotherapy Part 5: Casting New Gods from Forgotten Bars of Gold

6/16/2025
The ancient wisdom that keeps coming back because it's true Athens, 399 BCE. Socrates holds the cup of hemlock, about to die for something that can't be proven - only known. The daimonion. The inner voice. The shamanic function that guides from beyond rational thought. 2,400 years later, we call it the unconscious. Or intuition. Or the default mode network. Same truth, different words: There's something in us that knows, and everything depends on whether we listen. This final episode reveals the perennial philosophy underlying all effective therapy. The wisdom that every culture discovers, then forgets, then rediscovers when the forgetting becomesunbearable. https://gettherapybirmingham.com/the-weird-history-of-psychotherapy-part-5-the-perennial-philosophy/ You'll learn: From Socrates' inner voice to Jung's active imagination to modern parts work, the same insights keep emerging. Not because they're trendy, but because they're true. True like the sunrise. True like the need for love. True like the mystery we can never fully grasp but must learn to dance with. πŸ“š RELEVANT BLOG ARTICLES FROM TAPROOT THERAPY: On Intuition vs Trauma (Featured in Episode): Brain-Based Therapies for Trauma: Understanding Internal Family Systems (Parts Work): Parts-Based Therapy Explained: NARM Therapy for Developmental Trauma: Body-Brain Connection in Trauma Healing: BREAKTHROUGH: Why 73% of Therapy Fails & The 5 Hidden Treatments That Actually Work | Depression as Superpower URGENT: If traditional therapy isn't working, this episode could save years of your life. Discover why depression & anxiety might be evolutionary gifts, not mental illness. 🚨 WARNING: This challenges everything you've been told about mental health treatment. πŸ”₯ WHAT 127,000+ TRAUMA SURVIVORS DISCOVERED: ❌ WHAT'S FAILING: βœ… WHAT'S ACTUALLY WORKING: ⏰ TIMESTAMPS - SAVE FOR LATER: 0:00 πŸ”₯ CRISIS ALERT: Why Your Therapy Isn't Working 1:58 The Connection Crisis - Chaplin's Warning About Modern Isolation 5:39 Ancient Wisdom Test - Socrates' Inner Voice vs Modern Psychiatry 7:03 BREAKTHROUGH RESEARCH: Depression as Evolutionary Advantage 9:42 ADHD Revelation - Hunter-Gatherer Survival Skills in Modern World 12:16 The Missing Piece - Why Every Culture Needs Warriors AND Shamans 17:24 EXPOSED: How Evidence-Based Practice Became Pharmaceutical Marketing 22:45 Memory Revolution - Why Different Trauma Needs Different Treatment 25:13 CBT Reality Check - When It Works vs When It Fails 28:05 Genius Case Studies - Milton Erickson's Intuitive Breakthroughs 35:47 Metaphor vs Reality - How Your Brain Actually Heals 38:12 FUTURE REVEALED - The Next Generation of Integrative Therapy 🧠 LIFE-CHANGING QUESTIONS ANSWERED: πŸ” "Why have I tried 5 therapists and nothing works?" πŸ” "Is my depression actually protecting me from something worse?" πŸ” "Why do I feel worse after CBT sessions?" πŸ” "How can anxiety be an evolutionary advantage?" πŸ” "What's the difference between trauma responses and intuition?" πŸ” "Why do some people need medication while others need meaning?" πŸ” "How does my body hold memories my mind can't access?" ⚑ BREAKTHROUGH SCIENCE REVEALED: ✨ Polyvagal Theory validates 10,000-year-old indigenous healing ✨ Neuroscience proves we have multiple selves (Parts Work validation) ✨ Epigenetics confirms your grandmother's trauma affects you TODAY ✨ Mirror neurons explain why group therapy heals faster than individual 🎯 PERFECT FOR YOU IF: πŸ’₯ Tried multiple therapists without lasting results πŸ’₯ Medication isn't enough or has bad side effects πŸ’₯ Interested in trauma-informed, body-based healing πŸ’₯ Exploring alternatives to traditional mental health πŸ’₯ Healthcare workers experiencing burnout/compassion fatigue πŸ’₯ Therapists questioning mainstream approaches πŸ’₯ Anyone seeking integration of ancient wisdom + modern science πŸ† FEATURED TREATMENT BREAKTHROUGHS: 🧬 EMDR - FDA-approved trauma processing (77% success rate) 🧬 Brainspotting - Revolutionary brain-based trauma...

Duration:00:46:38

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The Weird History of Psychotherapy Part 4: Empty, Dull, Thud, The Satanic Panic and the Scientific Method

6/11/2025
How therapy became a computer program and lost its soul 1973: A researcher walks into a psychiatric hospital claiming to hear voices saying "empty, hollow, thud." He's immediately diagnosed with schizophrenia and held for weeks. The twist? He's perfectly sane. It's all an experiment to prove psychiatric diagnosis is fiction. Those three words - empty, hollow, thud - would become the perfect description of what American therapy was about to become. This episode exposes how Cognitive Behavioral Therapy conquered psychology by promising scientific precision while secretly throwing out everything that makes therapy work. The computer metaphor for mind created treatments that were measurable, billable, and completely ineffective. https://gettherapybirmingham.com/the-weird-history-of-psychotherapy-part-4-empty-hollow-thud-or-cbt-and-the-satanic-panic/ You'll discover: πŸ“š Essential Reading from Taproot Therapy Collective: https://gettherapybirmingham.com/science-or-science-flavored-capitalism-deconstructing-the-evidence-based-practice-paradigm/ https://gettherapybirmingham.com/the-limits-of-behaviorism-rediscovering-the-soul-in-psychotherapy/ https://gettherapybirmingham.com/a-history-of-psychotherapy-and-how-it-got-here/ https://gettherapybirmingham.com/theodore-m-porter-and-the-critique-of-quantification/ https://gettherapybirmingham.com/when-evidence-based-practice-goes-wrong/ The tragic irony: While hunting for evidence-based treatments, we lost the evidence for what actually heals - relationship, depth, time, and the mysterious process of being truly seen.

Duration:01:08:32

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The Weird History of Psychotherapy Part 3: No Body, No Soul, No Discharge in the War

6/9/2025
From genius discovery to UFO battles: The man who found trauma in the body Wilhelm Reich made one of psychology's greatest discoveries: The body remembers what the mind forgets. Trauma doesn't just live in thoughts and memories - it's held in muscle tension, breathing patterns, and physical armor that protects us from unbearable feelings. Then he went completely insane. This episode follows Reich's journey from Freud's most promising student to a paranoid exile shooting orgone energy at alien spacecraft. But here's the twist: His early insights about somatic trauma were revolutionary. They laid the foundation for every body-based therapy that actually works. https://gettherapybirmingham.com/the-weird-history-of-psychotherapy-part-3-wilhelm-reich/ https://gettherapybirmingham.com/what-are-wilhelm-reichs-character-styles/ https://gettherapybirmingham.com/wilhelm-reichs-analysis-of-fascism-enduring-wisdom-and-controversial-reception/ https://gettherapybirmingham.com/the-curious-case-of-wilhelm-reich/ https://gettherapybirmingham.com/john-c-lilly-when-dolphins-drugs-and-the-deep-end-of-consciousness-collided-in-the-psychedelic-70s/ You'll learn about: Discover the untold story of how trauma therapy evolved from Freudian analysis to revolutionary body-based healing approaches that preceded "The Body Keeps the Score" by decades. This evidence-based deep dive explores the pioneering work of Wilhelm Reich, Carl Jung, and Fritz Perls who discovered that trauma lives in the body long before modern neuroscience proved them right. Learn why your physical symptoms might be stored emotional memories and how the therapeutic revolution of the 1960s changed psychology forever. What You'll Learn: Perfect for: Mental health professionals, trauma survivors, psychology students, anyone interested in the history of psychotherapy, and those seeking alternatives to traditional talk therapy. Evidence-Based Content: Drawing from peer-reviewed research, historical documents, and the foundational texts of somatic psychology, this episode traces the scientific evolution from Freudian psychoanalysis through modern neuroscience-backed trauma therapy. Keywords: trauma therapy, somatic therapy, body keeps the score, Wilhelm Reich, Carl Jung, Fritz Perls, PTSD treatment, psychology history, mind-body connection, character armor, nervous system healing, experiential therapy, depth psychology Hosted by experts in trauma-informed care with clinical experience in EMDR, brainspotting, somatic experiencing, and Jungian analysis. Resources: Visit gettherapybirmingham.com for articles on somatic trauma mapping, Jungian therapy, and evidence-based body-centered healing approaches. Discover the untold story of how trauma therapy evolved from Freudian analysis to revolutionary body-based healing approaches that preceded "The Body Keeps the Score" by decades. This evidence-based deep dive explores the pioneering work of Wilhelm Reich, Carl Jung, and Fritz Perls who discovered that trauma lives in the body long before modern neuroscience proved them right. Learn why your physical symptoms might be stored emotional memories and how the therapeutic revolution of the 1960s changed psychology forever. What You'll Learn: Perfect for: Mental health professionals, trauma survivors, psychology students, anyone interested in the history of psychotherapy, and those seeking alternatives to traditional talk therapy. Evidence-Based Content: Drawing from peer-reviewed research, historical documents, and the foundational texts of somatic psychology, this episode traces the scientific evolution from Freudian psychoanalysis through modern neuroscience-backed trauma therapy. Keywords: trauma therapy, somatic therapy, body keeps the score, Wilhelm Reich, Carl Jung, Fritz Perls, PTSD treatment, psychology history, mind-body connection, character armor, nervous system healing, experiential therapy, depth psychology Hosted by experts in trauma-informed care with...

Duration:01:00:13

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The Weird History of Psychotherapy Part 2 Carl Jung: The Bottom of Consciousness

6/4/2025
The mystic who mapped the soul while America decided it was too scary https://gettherapybirmingham.com/the-weird-history-of-psychotherapy-part-2-jungs-and-the-bottom-of-consciousness/ While Freud was projecting his trauma onto patients, Carl Jung made a radical discovery: There's a layer of mind beneath the personal unconscious that we all share. The collective unconscious. A realm of archetypes, myths, and healing wisdom that every culture discovers independently. But Jung's profound insights came at a cost. His confrontation with the unconscious nearly drove him mad. For years, he dialogued with inner figures, painted visions, and mapped territories of psyche that science still can't explain. He emerged with the most complete understanding of human consciousness ever developed. The trial of Carl JHung Assesing his legacy Carl Jung's Work with the OSS Carl Jung's Shadow the Tension of the Oppposites Development of Carl Jung's Theories A Short Intro to Jungian Psych What does Mysticism have to do with therapy How did Freud and Jungs Parent Effect Their Psychology Archetypes in Relationships What is Emotion The Trial of Carl Jung’s Legacy Carl Jung’s Work with The CIA How Psychotherapy Lost Its Way Ritual and Animism Tensions in Modern Therapy Schizophrenia Trauma and the Double Bind Jung and the New Age Science and Mysticism Therapy, Mysticism and Spirituality? The Left and Right Hand Path in Myth The Shadow The Golden Shadow The Symbolism of the Bollingen Stone What Can the Origins of Religion Teach us about Psychology The Major Influences on Carl Jung Animals in Dreams The Unconscious as a Game How to Understand Carl Jung How to Use Jungian Psychology for Screenwriting and Writing Fiction How the Shadow Shows up in Dreams How to read The Red Book The Dreamtime Using Jung to Combat Addiction Healing the Modern Soul Jungian Exercises from Greek Myth Jungian Shadow Work Meditation The Shadow in Relationships Free Shadow Work Group Exercise Post Post-Moderninsm and Post Secular Sacred Mysticism and Epilepsy The Origins and History of Consciousness Archetypes Jung’s Empirical Phenomenological Method

Duration:00:43:02

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The Weird History of Psychotherapy Part 1 Freud: A Different Version of Your Dad

6/2/2025
The cocaine addict who convinced the world children want to sleep with their parents Vienna, 1866. Ten-year-old Sigmund Freud watches antisemitic thugs knock his father's hat into the mud. Jakob Freud picks it up, head down, and walks on. This moment of paternal humiliation would shape the entire field of psychology. But this episode reveals the shocking truth textbooks won't tell you: Freud was high on cocaine for 10-15 years while developing psychoanalysis. His "revolutionary" theories weren't insights into universal human nature - they were the projections of a traumatized man who never dealt with his own demons. You'll learn: From his partnership with the bizarre Wilhelm Fliess to his golden ring cult of yes-men, this episode exposes how personal pathology became "scientific" theory - and why we're still paying the price. Trigger warning: Discusses substance abuse, childhood trauma, and controversial therapeutic practices.

Duration:00:46:27

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Jungian Addiction Recovery with Corey Gamberg

5/26/2025
Addiction Recovery Psychology: Jung, 12-Step Evolution & Depth Therapy Breakthrough with Recovery Expert 🎯 ADDICTION RECOVERY | PSYCHOLOGY | THERAPY | MENTAL HEALTH | SPIRITUALITY Discover the revolutionary integration of Jungian psychology and addiction recovery with Corey Gamberg, Executive Director of Rockland Recovery Treatment Centers. This groundbreaking episode reveals why traditional 12-step programs often plateau after 3-4 years and how depth psychology creates sustainable, soul-level transformation for lasting recovery. πŸ”₯ WHAT YOU'LL DISCOVER: Addiction Treatment Revolution: Jungian Psychology Applications: Recovery Science & Spirituality: πŸ“Š EPISODE BREAKDOWN: 🧠 Psychology & Mental Health (0:00-15:00): ⚑ Addiction & Recovery Science (15:00-30:00): πŸ”„ Spirituality & Personal Growth (30:00-45:00): 🎭 Advanced Therapy Techniques (45:00-End): 🎯 PERFECT FOR: Mental Health Professionals: Recovery Community: Psychology Enthusiasts: πŸ’‘ EXPERT INSIGHTS: Corey Gamberg brings unique expertise combining: 🌟 KEY TAKEAWAYS: πŸ“š RESOURCES & REFERENCES: Books Mentioned: Therapeutic Approaches: Organizations & Training: πŸ”— CONNECT & LEARN MORE: Guest Information: Related Topics to Explore: 🏷️ TRENDING TOPICS: #AddictionRecovery #JungianPsychology #DepthPsychology #MentalHealthTreatment #TherapyInnovation #RecoveryScience #SpiritualPsychology #ArchetypalTherapy #TraumaHealing #AddictionTherapy #RecoveryCoaching #PsychologicalHealing #MentalHealthAwareness #TherapistTraining #ClinicalPsychology #HolisticRecovery #SoulWork #PersonalGrowth #PsychotherapyEvolution #RecoveryEvolution Episode Length: 60 minutes | Content Rating: Educational/Professional | Release Date: [Current Date] This episode contains mature themes related to addiction, mental health, and psychological healing. Intended for educational and therapeutic purposes. Not a substitute for professional mental health treatment.

Duration:00:59:08