A podcast about self-care by a host that hates the term self-care. Therapist KC Davis, author of the book How to Keep House While Drowning talks about mental health, care tasks, and more.
116: Follow Up: California Passes New Family Vlogging Law
Today’s episode is a follow-up to Episode 65, The Dark Underside of Family Vlogging, Part 1, which aired almost a year ago. My guest from that episode, Cam, returns to discuss her reaction to a recent big development in the world of family vlogging. Cam grew up as the child of one of the first well-known “Mommy bloggers,” and is an international advocate for the children of influencers and family vloggers. She shares her perspective on the new California law. Join us!
Show Highlights:
Understanding the basics of the Child Content Creator Act in California to protect kids’ rights (similar laws are being passed in Illinois and Minnesota)
Legal ramifications for parents who don’t follow “the 30% rule”
Children on reality TV shows do NOT fall under the new law.
Understanding the Coogan Law
Cam’s perspective on the protections of the law for children—and what she wishes the law included
“The right to forget”: what it means and why it’s not included in the law
Cam’s thoughts about a recent scary cancer diagnosis in light of her past history with vulnerability at the hands of her mom’s vlog
Growing up with NO boundaries or privacy
Laws in CA, IL, and MN to protect kids from being exploited
Resources and Links:
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
10/21/2024 • 24 minutes
115: The Difference Between Bullying and Ordinary Meanness (and why it matters) with Dr. Eileen Kennedy-Moore
Today’s episode covers the topics of bullying, meanness, and conflict. My guest is uniquely qualified to share her wisdom and expertise, which she did in a TEDx talk. Bullying or meanness: what’s the difference, and how do we recognize the two? Join us to learn more!
Show Highlights:
● Dr. Eileen’s background as a clinical psychologist and author
● The specific criteria in the definition of bullying
● Empowering our kids to withstand meanness without taking a victim stance: “Conflict is inevitable.”
● Bullying has become “a thought-stopping cliche.”
● Meanness and bullying in the online world
● Vulnerability in being a content creator and dealing with feedback
● A better approach with kids: “Whose opinion matters to you?”
● The truth about self-esteem and a “quiet ego”
● Connecting with something greater than ourselves
● Helping kids learn self-compassion rather than self-esteem (Dr. Eileen teaches a “reflect, but downshift” technique in her book, Kid Confidence.)
● Dr. Eileen’s formula for teaching reflection to kids
● “Whose feelings are most important?”
● Validating and normalizing kids’ feelings (by following their lead) by offering empathy and confidence
● Being your kids “biased biographer”
● Learning to “stay in the water” instead of standing on the edge of the pool ● “Testing the water” to pull back on accommodations
Resources and Links:
Connect with Dr. Eileen Kennedy-Moore: Website (Find books for parents and kids!) and Kids Ask Dr. Friendtastic podcast,
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
10/14/2024 • 55 minutes, 1 second
114: Why Budgeting Doesn’t Work (and what to do instead) with Jill Sirianni
I have an honest confession to make. I am a terrible budgeter, but I’m a world-class financial goldfish. In this episode, I’ll explain my “financial goldfish” status and budgeting for our neurodiverse brains. I’m joined by Jill Sirianni, host of the Frugal Friends Podcast. If you’re like me, and budgeting just doesn’t work for you, you’ll learn a lot from our conversation. Join us!
Show Highlights:
Characteristics of a financial goldfish
Budgets–the diet of the financial landscape (and they don’t work any more than diets do for most people)
Top reasons we fall victim to impulse buying
The myth of “Wants vs. Needs”
The downfalls of typical antiquated budgeting
Creativity in meeting needs without spending
Jill’s 90-day transaction inventory
Helpful online tools
A moral problem vs. a systemic problem
KC’s helpful hack to be more thoughtful before spending impulsively (like late-night DoorDash)
Jill’s tips for creating a pause before spending: keep a list and buy second-hand
Understanding the marketing behind sales
Making choices about your behavior today that may not align with spending habits held up as the “standard”
Understanding values-based spending
In finances, one size does NOT fit all.
Resources and Links:
Connect with Jill Sirianni and Frugal Friends: Frugal Friends Podcast and Buy What You Love Without Going Broke book by Jen Smith and Jill Sirianni (pre-order now!)
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
10/7/2024 • 54 minutes, 12 seconds
113: Balancing Self-Care and Community Care with Nat Vikitsreth
This episode is about liberation, revolution, and social justice. We are tackling these topics from a practical perspective with my guest, Nat. Join us!
Nat Vikitsreth is a licensed clinical social worker who works with families who want to practice social justice in their daily lives but are torn between acting in their communities and at home. She helps them bridge the gap despite being tired, overwhelmed, and stretched too thin. Holding space for their beautiful intentions and walking with them on this journey are Nat’s passions.
Show Highlights:
Nat’s background as a transgender woman from Thailand who has become a clinician and a social justice organizer
Trying to honor our values about liberation at home and in the community
Being your own ally first with agility and awareness of your available bandwidth
Learning to hold space for accountability
The root causes of our suffering: white supremacy, colonialism, capitalism, and patriarchy
Leading with compassion in action instead of punishment
What it means to be truly humble
Nat’s advice for parents
Finding the sweet spot between discomfort and boundaries
Being realistic in your family about what causes you can support and take action on with your limited capacity
Nat’s words of advice about actions beyond the “sexy actions” to take
Resources and Links:
Connect with Nat Vikitsreth: Website and Come Back to Care Podcast
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
9/30/2024 • 54 minutes, 3 seconds
112: When a Loved One Won’t Seek Mental Health Treatment with Dr. Alec Pollard
What do you do when a loved one won’t seek the mental health treatment that they obviously need? We are looking at the very important topic of mental health from the perspective of your concern for a loved one who might be resistant to asking for help, and what you can do about it. I’m joined by Dr. Alec Pollard, a co-author of When A Loved One Won't Seek Mental Health Treatment: How to Promote Recovery and Reclaim Your Family’s Well-Being. With a long career as a clinical psychologist, he is the founding director of the St. Louis Behavioral Medicine Institute. Join us to learn more!
Show Highlights:
Dr. Pollard’s background and four decades of experience as a psychologist
Turning his focus to help those who are concerned about their loved one’s mental health
Dr. Pollard explains The Family Well-Being Approach/Consultation
Two types of accommodations that loved ones make: commission and omission
Differentiation between appropriate and inappropriate accommodations for a loved one
Recovery avoidance: a pattern of behavior that is inconsistent with the process of recovery
Creating opportunities for a loved one to get better through support, incentives, and positive rewards
Dr. Pollard’s book and its approach of finding a balance between long-term planning and crisis management
Dr. Pollard’s takeaway about his book as his proudest achievement in his career
Resources and Links:
Connect with Dr. Alec Pollard: St. Louis Behavioral Medicine Institute and When A Loved One Won't Seek Mental Health Treatment
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
9/23/2024 • 37 minutes, 29 seconds
111: How to be a Content Creator without Wrecking Your Mental Health with Franchesca Ramsey
If you joined us for last week’s episode, you know that we promised Part 2 of my conversation with Franchesca Ramsey. She brings an expert perspective on the various aspects of content creation, like authenticity, compassion, handling negative comments, the value of listening, and more. Franchesca Ramsey is an actor, writer, public speaker, and longtime content creator. She wrote and performed in the web series MTV Decoded, where she tackled race, pop culture, and other uncomfortable topics. Other notable accomplishments include writing for The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore and a nomination for an NAACP award for one of the best books of 2018: Well, That Escalated Quickly: Memoirs and Mistakes of an Accidental Activist. Franchesca shares her expertise and insights about guarding your mental health as a content creator. Join us to learn more!
Show Highlights:
The skills we lack in being human, trusting each other, and genuinely calling someone IN
The public vs. private sphere of an online presence
Listening, forgiving, and doing the right thing
Hard-earned perspectives on hot takes and being silent
What’s your WHY for content creation?
Handling critical and negative comments on social media
Being authentic in content creation means sometimes logging off.
KC’s thoughts on her WHY as a content creator
Resources and Links:
Connect with Franchesca Ramsey: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and book
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
9/16/2024 • 47 minutes, 10 seconds
110: How to be a Content Creator without Wrecking Your Mental Health with Franchesca Ramsey
Today’s episode is a conversation I’ve been wanting to have for awhile, and I’ve found the perfect person for this topic. Franchesca Ramsey is an actor, writer, public speaker, and longtime content creator. She wrote and performed in the web series MTV Decoded, where she tackled race, pop culture, and other uncomfortable topics. Other notable accomplishments include writing for The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore and a nomination for an NAACP award for one of the best books of 2018: Well, That Escalated Quickly: Memoirs and Mistakes of an Accidental Activist. Franchesca shares her expertise and insights on longevity and mental health as a content creator. Join us to learn more!
Show Highlights:
Burnout is real in the content creation world.
Lessons learned about life and authenticity as a content creator, influencer, and vlogger
Are you putting your time and energy in the wrong place?
You have to censor yourself EVERY day!
Impulsive reactions on social media can have severe consequences. Give yourself space to step back.
Prioritizing joy in your content and not reacting with anger
The nature of social media
Strengthening internal boundaries by getting comfortable with being misunderstood
Thoughts on cancel culture and negative backlash
Our conversation is so good that we don’t want it to end. We will continue with Part 2 with Franchesca in next week’s episode!
Resources and Links:
Connect with Franchesca Ramsey: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and book
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
9/9/2024 • 40 minutes, 21 seconds
109: Should We Bully Immoral People? with Ellie Rushton
Join us for today’s interesting conversation about ethics, boundaries, suffering, bullying, and being online/offline. There are many facets to these topics as they intertwine with morality, and we are diving into a discussion with Ellie Rushton,
Show Highlights:
Ellie’s background, work, and TikTok content about “cultivating bold spaces”
Ellie’s definition of bullying: “doing something harmful several times on purpose for the sake of someone’s suffering”
Thoughts on bullying and why people do it
Holding someone accountable vs. bullying—what’s the difference?
Ellie’s perspective on online comments to others’ content
Thoughts on the roots of inequality, oppression, and suffering—and the problem with categorizing “good” and “bad” people
People are afraid of embodying compassion.
What is effective in online spaces
Thoughts about boundaries, revenge, and retribution
Standing up for what you believe while holding yourself accountable
Resources and Links:
Connect with Ellie: TikTok
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
9/2/2024 • 51 minutes, 43 seconds
108: BEST OF: The Sex Ed You Should Have Gotten with Rachel Coler Mulholland
🌟 Taking a Break! 🌟
Hey everyone! I am taking a short break for August to recharge and prepare exciting new content for you. I’ll be back in September with fresh episodes and engaging conversations. Thanks for your support and patience. Stay tuned for what’s coming next!
Today, we are covering an important topic today, but maybe not in the way you expect. I’m joined by Rachel Mulholland (aka Shug CM), a therapist whom I met on TikTok because of her incredible content around sex education for children. Today’s focus is on how our lives as adults are impacted if we don’t get comprehensive sex education as children. Join us for the conversation!
Show Highlights:
How KC’s story from her teenage years illustrates the gaps that most people have in their education about sex and the fact that sex ed is NOT a one-time conversation
How “purity culture” is impacting teenagers in certain places in the US in damaging ways
How even most comprehensive sex ed doesn’t address the pleasurable side of sex–and (for females) that the pleasure doesn’t have to come from another person
How sexual predators take advantage of the lack of information in sex ed from SAFE places
Why parents have real fear about talking to their kids about sex ed
The effects of NOT educating kids that sex and pleasure don’t always go together
Rachel’s Four Pillars of Safe Sex: confirmation, communication, lubrication, and enthusiastic participation
Why parents should be aware when their kids are ready to hear and learn–and begin at the most basic level appropriate for their age
How to answer those first little-kid questions around, “Where do babies come from?”
Why curiosity is a foundational part of body talk for kids–not just around sexuality
How parents can work through their own feelings around sex ed with their children
Why Rachel’s next project is a book about body talk
Resources:
Connect with Rachel: TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, and Website (coming soon!)
Recommended by Rachel: How Do You Make A Baby by Anna Fiske
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
8/26/2024 • 43 minutes, 44 seconds
107: BEST OF: The Color of Care Tasks with Danita Platt
🌟 Taking a Break! 🌟
Hey everyone! I am taking a short break for August to recharge and prepare exciting new content for you. I’ll be back in September with fresh episodes and engaging conversations. Thanks for your support and patience. Stay tuned for what’s coming next!
I’m excited to have Danita Platt on the show today. I didn’t know anyone of color in the field of care tasks until I met her. Her content resonates with me and my views around care tasks, so I hope you’ll enjoy hearing more from Danita!
Show Highlights:
Who Danita is and how she became an expert on gentle care tasks
How our society over the last two generations has moralized care tasks and tied them to the worth of a woman
Why we need to rethink our views about care tasks and “being a good woman” that go back to the founding of the US, historically speaking
How the concept of “invisible labor” has carried over from colonial days even to today
How many white people were able to live the lives they did because of the cheap, exploitable labor of Black women
How the Great Migration happened to move many Black families to northern cities from the South
How the shift happened to push Black (and white) women to work industrial jobs while men were away during the war
How the push is recurring for 1950s homemaking to be viewed as the superior role for women
What we DON’T talk about in the fulfilling life of a homemaker
How Danita chooses to honor the Black women who had to wash clothes, clean house, and cook meals under duress–with no freedom or choice of their own
What Danita would say to women who want to live more joyfully in their homes and experience more freedom and quality of life
Resources:
Connect with Danita: TikTok and Instagram
Mentioned in this episode: Sisters in Hate: American Women on the Front Lines of White Nationalism
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
8/19/2024 • 45 minutes, 2 seconds
106: BEST OF: Is Rejection Sensitivity Dysphoria Real? with Dr Lesley
🌟 Taking a Break! 🌟
Hey everyone! I am taking a short break for August to recharge and prepare exciting new content for you. I’ll be back in September with fresh episodes and engaging conversations. Thanks for your support and patience. Stay tuned for what’s coming next!
I’m back with one of my favorite guests who is always up for the challenge of a podcast–no matter what the topic is! I want to explore the term rejection sensitivity dysphoria and get Dr. Lesley Cook’s take on it because I have so many questions. Let’s learn more together!
Dr. Lesley Cook is a psychologist who works with those with ADHD and other kinds of neurodivergence. Born and raised in Hawaii, she now lives in Virginia and works with children, adolescents, adults, couples, and families.
Show Highlights:
● What RSD (rejection sensitivity dysphoria) is and how it is manifested
● KC’s personal experience with RSD and feelings of worthlessness
● How RSD is different from sensory sensitivity and autism
● Thoughts about the strong word dysphoria in RSD
● KC’s personal experience with RSD and being told she is “too sensitive”
● How we can grow, change, and find regulatory strategies for RSD
● Why it is difficult to communicate the facets and nuances of RSD and other interpersonal difficulties
Resources and Links:
Connect with Dr. Lesley Cook: TikTok
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
8/15/2024 • 38 minutes, 55 seconds
105: BEST OF: Self-Esteem Sucks. You need Self-Compassion with Dr Kristin Neff
🌟 Taking a Break! 🌟
Hey everyone! I am taking a short break for August to recharge and prepare exciting new content for you. I’ll be back in September with fresh episodes and engaging conversations. Thanks for your support and patience. Stay tuned for what’s coming next!
I’m excited about today’s guest because she has had a huge influence on me. I can confidently say that finding her research on self-compassion was a turning point in my healing journey. Do you need more self-compassion? Join us to learn more!
Dr. Kristin Neff is a renowned psychologist, self-care researcher, and author. Her work has had a profound impact on the field of psychology and has helped countless people cultivate self-acceptance and resilience.
Show Highlights:
How self-compassion became Dr. Kristin’s main area of research
Understanding self-esteem vs. self-compassion
The three components of self-compassion: mindfulness, common humanity, and self-kindness
How self-esteem creates comparison and social disconnection by being conditional and unstable
How self-compassion gives the gift of authenticity
The difference between fierce self-compassion and tender self-compassion
How self-compassion helps us get past our shame
Why self-compassion doesn’t mean indulgence
Pathways and blocks to self-compassion
The connection between self-compassion and psychological functioning
How self-compassion helps when we fail and make mistakes
Why the goal of practicing self-compassion is to be simply a compassionate mess who is completely human
Why the practice of self-compassion has to start small with baby steps of warmth and support (What would you say to a friend?)
A look at Dr. Kristin’s latest book, Fierce Self-Compassion
How anger fits into self-compassion
Resources and Links:
Connect with Dr. Kristin and find many helpful resources: Website
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes
8/12/2024 • 41 minutes, 33 seconds
104: The Controversy of ABA: A Discussion with Researcher Dr. Robin Roscigno
Our deep dive into ABA and autism continues in this episode. Today’s guest recently finished her Ph.D. in Education, focusing on disability studies and related research in the world of DEI. Dr. Robin Roscigno helps educate parents about neurodiversity to create a more inclusive world for neurodiverse individuals. She posts frequently on social media platforms about autism and autism therapies. Her studies and life experiences give her both a professional and personal relationship to this topic because of her brother’s childhood diagnosis of autism. Robin was also diagnosed with autism along with her young daughter and began navigating the therapy world as a parent who struggled to find therapies that are affirming. After leaving teaching to pursue her Ph.D., she now focuses on autism intervention and challenging the dominant paradigms.
Show Highlights:
Understanding what ABA therapy is and why there is such controversy around this topic
The dilemma for parents in the “explosive landscape” of ABA
Understanding behaviorism as a therapeutic approach
The old-school ABA therapy and its focus on eye contact
How current autism therapies are designed to make people appear “less autistic” and “fit in more” in the world
The need for wisdom and a harm-reduction approach in therapies
Choosing a school program for your child based on goals and techniques and not a binary (ABA:good or ABA: bad) approach
The foundation of neurotypical norms (like eye contact) in connection, relationships, and social referencing—-which we ALL need
Teaching social referencing in affirming ways that help develop skills
Looking for red/green flags in assessing specific goals and techniques from an advocacy perspective
Unrealistic expectations of autistic kids and their parents
Resources and Links:
Connect with Dr. Robin Roscigno: Website, TikTok, LinkedIn, Instagram, and TEDx Talk: “Your Autistic Child Can Have a Great Life. Here’s How”
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
8/5/2024 • 1 hour, 28 minutes, 32 seconds
103: Autism (actually) Speaks with Kerry Magro
For several recent episodes, I’ve been interviewing people with autism about their perspectives and experiences. We are discussing the DSM criteria, stereotypes about autism, and how autism affects the lives of both children and adults. An autism diagnosis can have many different nuances, and there is so much more to autism than the DSM criteria. Today’s guest, Kerry Magro, shares his experience in this episode. Join us to learn more!
Show Highlights:
Kerry’s growing up years with mostly communication and sensory-based challenges, love and support from his family, and his success as a professional certified speaker
Kerry’s various college and graduate degrees
Stereotypes about autism
Understanding autism as a true spectrum with a wide range of complexities and strengths
Kerry’s challenges with eye contact and other social norms
Understanding “autism burnout,” masking, representation, and “honoring” the disability
Kerry’s perspective on autism and relationships
“Repetitive and restricted behaviors” in adulthood
Kerry’s experience as an adult, dealing with sensory sensitivities and learning to speak up for accommodations
Kerry’s experience with autism and physical touch
Advice for parents
Resources and Links:
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
8/2/2024 • 48 minutes, 47 seconds
102: The Controversy of ABA: A Discussion with an ABA Practitioner
If you heard our episode from a couple of weeks ago, you know we discussed Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA). Today, we are looking at the controversy surrounding ABA, why many people are in favor of it, and why many people oppose it. I personally want to take an objective look at this modality and try to understand more about it. My guest, Taylor, is a BCBA, a board-certified behavior analyst, so let’s discuss this topic and learn more from her.
Show Highlights:
An explanation of ABA and the role of a BCBA
The language of ABA: desired behaviors, undesired behaviors, behavior contrast, punishment, replacement behaviors, injurious behaviors, tantrum behaviors, etc.
Taylor’s story about going to an ABA conference
The historical harm that ABA has done to autistic children
The dehumanizing aspects of ABA
Is the goal of ABA to make an autistic child seem less autistic?
Therapies covered by health insurance for an autistic child: speech, occupational, and ABA
The side of ABa that no one talks about
ABA: helpful, traumatizing, or distressing?
Taylor’s path to becoming a BCBA
An autism diagnosis does NOT mean that you need ABA.
A look at a typical ABA session (even though each session is highly individualized to the needs of each person)
Taylor’s top three things that can be done to better serve autistic people
Resources and Links:
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
7/29/2024 • 1 hour, 25 minutes, 41 seconds
101: Bonus Episode: Autism (actually) Speaks with Kathleen Walker
As we continue with our series on autism, I’m joined by Kathleen Walker for today’s bonus episode. We discuss the basic criteria for autism, her experience as a child with an early diagnosis, what it’s like for an autistic person to “play by the rules” of business etiquette in the workplace, and her advice for parents of autistic children. Join us to learn more from Kathleen!
Show Highlights:
The first criteria for autism: “persistent deficits in social communication and social interaction”
Kathleen’s perspective on her social communication and interactions as an early-diagnosed child
Examples of how an autistic person might “miss things” in interaction and communication
Challenges for the autistic person in a professional career vs. in personal relationships
Masking and modified behaviors to be accepted
Kathleen’s suggestion for rewriting the DSM criteria based on communication/interaction
Helping autistic kids feel comfortable and navigate the world in their own ways
Kathleen’s experience with social difficulties around conversations, nonverbal cues, and anxiety
For an autistic person, connection in relationships might not be a top priority in life.
Kathleen’s experience with “repetitive and restrictive interests, rituals, and schedules
Kathleen’s advice for parents of autistic children
Resources and Links:
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
7/26/2024 • 49 minutes, 59 seconds
100: The Controversy of ABA: A Discussion with a Psychologist
In this episode Psychologist Lesley PsyD discusses Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) therapy, particularly in the context of autism, during Autism Awareness Month. This conversation aims to provide a neutral and factual overview of ABA, exploring its principles, applications, and the diverse perspectives surrounding it. Lesley explains ABA's focus on understanding and modifying behavior through reinforcement and environmental adjustments. They address the benefits and risks of ABA, emphasizing the importance of individualized approaches and naturalistic learning. The conversation highlights the need for nuanced understanding and compassionate support for neurodiverse individuals.
Show Highlights:
Overview of Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) therapy and its relevance to autism.
Clarification of ABA terminology and its practical applications.
Discussion of the emotional and controversial nature of ABA therapy.
Examination of the challenges parents face in accessing appropriate therapies for children with autism.
Importance of understanding behavior in context, including antecedents and consequences.
Exploration of the benefits and risks associated with ABA practices.
Critique of the focus on compliance and neurotypical standards in ABA.
The role of reinforcement in behavior modification and its implications for intrinsic motivation.
Discussion of the need for individualized approaches to therapy that respect children's unique experiences.
Advocacy for a compassionate and nuanced understanding of autism and behavior analysis.
Resources and Links:
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
7/22/2024 • 1 hour, 9 minutes, 52 seconds
99: Bonus Episode: Autism (actually) Speaks, An Interview Mashup
In today’s episode, you’ll hear from three guests about their autism experience and their perspectives on common stereotypes about autism around communication, relationships, and more. This is a bonus follow-up to our most recent episode about autism with Kaelynn Partlow. Join us as we explore autism further with Syd, Atlas, and Sapphire. I’m happy to have them here to share their insights.
Show Highlights:
Meet Syd, a 22-year-old post-grad student who is self-diagnosed as autistic and ADHD:
Thoughts on relationships, unmasking, and “quality over quantity”
Being yourself in a world that isn’t always welcoming to your kind
Cultivating a special (and rare!) interest in learning and education
Meet Atlas, who was self-diagnosed at age 16:
Identifying with autistic characters on a favorite TV show
What it’s like to pick up on other people’s perceptions of your weirdness
Autistic traits that Atlas recognized from childhood about obsessive routines
Meet Sapphire, who was identified as autistic in 5th grade but not diagnosed until age 19:
Nuances around communication, conversations, and awkward silences
The common misunderstandings about what a relationship with an autistic person can be like
Using an “Excel spreadsheet in my brain” to catalog each person
Relationships and the need for “alone time” to decompress
Sapphire’s advice to parents who are hesitant to have their child tested/diagnosed
Resources and Links:
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
7/19/2024 • 33 minutes, 26 seconds
98: Autism (actually) Speaks with Kaelynn Partlow
Happy Autism Awareness Month! Yes–I know that was in April, but I have ADHD and am easily distracted. I’ve procrastinated for more than a year on doing some really great episodes about autism because I want to do justice to this topic. I’m starting with an amazing TikTokker, Kaelynn Partlow. I’ve followed her for quite a while, but you might know Kaelynn from Netflix’s Love on the Spectrum. Kaelynn shares about autism from her personal experience and her professional work with autistic kids. She is a therapist who was diagnosed at age 10 with autism, dyslexia, dyscalculia, and ADHD. Her background provides a unique perspective on advocacy that is worth our attention. Join us!
Show Highlights:
Specific criteria (from the DSM) for autism—and Kaelynn’s experience with each one
Persistent deficits in social communication and interaction
Restrictive or repeated behavior
Kaelynn’s experience in making and maintaining friendships while growing up and now
Masking: What it is and what it feels like
The nuances of eye contact: not enough or too much?
All autistic behaviors ARE human behaviors.
Stimming from an autistic perspective and a non-autistic perspective
Kaelynn’s special interests, routines, and self-imposed “rules”
Kaelynn’s experience with sensory issues: noises, fabrics, etc.
Kaelynn’s perspective on physical touch (Most autistic people don’t like physical touch.)
Kaelynn’s diagnosis at age 10 (after the assumption that she was genius-level intelligent.)
Autism is NOT an invisible disability!
Kaelynn’s reflection on her childhood and helpful therapies and treatments
Kaelynn’s thoughts on common ADA controversies
Kaelynn’s advice to those who might fear being “labeled” if they pursue testing for themselves or their child
What Kaelynn sees as the biggest misunderstanding about autism today
Resources and Links:
Connect with Kaelynn Partlow: TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, and Facebook
**Look for Kaelynn’s book, Life on the Bridge, to be released this summer!
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
7/8/2024 • 1 hour, 11 minutes, 22 seconds
97: In Defense of Video Games (for parents of gamers) with Derrick Hoard, LMFT
We are back for Part 2 of a fascinating discussion with Derrick Hoard, a licensed marriage and family therapist, TikTokker, and video game aficionado. We left off in last week’s episode talking about how some people rely too heavily on gaming for their coping skills in life and how “mindful gaming” can go beyond simply pushing buttons and help in many ways. The conflict over video games extends beyond partner relationships and definitely leads to challenges for parents and their kids. Let’s explore this topic with Derrick!
Show Highlights:
Myths and misconceptions about video games from a parent’s perspective
Being mindful means using as many of the five senses as possible and being purposeful.
Video games can lead to emotional connection, learning, and many problem-solving skills.
Derrick’s perspective on gamers who play a variety of games: good or bad?
Thoughts on the benefits of games like Skyrim and Mass Effect
The value of a collaborative approach by parents who get involved in a child’s gaming life respectfully and appropriately
The benefits of video games for neurodivergent kids, overall mental health, and therapeutic approaches
The key for parents of gamers: accepting video games as ways to promote mindfulness, deep conversations, true interest, growth, skill development, curiosity, and maturity
Resources and Links:
Connect with Derrick Hoard: Website, TikTok, and the Mindful Gaming Podcast
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
6/24/2024 • 41 minutes, 45 seconds
96: In Defense of Video Games (for partners of gamers) with Derrick Hoard, LMFT
Welcome to Struggle Care, where we talk about all things individual and systemic that affect your life, wellness, and mental health. Joining me is Derrick Hoard, a licensed marriage and family therapist, TikTokker, and video game aficionado. I’ve followed him since 2020, and I love his thoughts and perspectives. Today’s topic, video games and relationships, stirs up some strong reactions and opinions, but you will walk away from this episode with a fresh and thoughtful view of the hobbies we all enjoy in our lives. Let’s get into it!
Show Highlights:
Video games are misunderstood and not recognized for what they are—the most beautiful, immersive forms of storytelling that exist.
Men can get in touch with emotions through playing video games.
Video games get unjustly blamed for communication problems in relationships.
Video games comprise a safe space of non-judgment where one can feel confident and competent.
Thoughts about men in therapy, gender dynamics, and emotional labor
Consideration and honesty in relationships about our hobbies
Society’s expectation of productivity leads us to feel shame and guilt about our hobbies. This is so wrong!
Understanding how to have honest and authenticity in our relationships—from the start
Red flags to look for when video games (or other obsessive hobbies) become our ONLY coping skills in life3
Resources and Links:
Connect with Derrick Hoard: Website, TikTok, and the Mindful Gaming Podcast
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
6/17/2024 • 40 minutes, 13 seconds
95: How to Bring Sexy Back with Lindley Gentile, LMFT
Do you want to bring sexy back into your life? This concept encompasses much more than actual sex, but it reaches to the inner depths of a woman’s core identity, vitality, and attitudes about life. This episode was prompted by the response to a recent TikTok in which I commented about how I’ve rediscovered things about myself here in my late 30s as my kids are a bit older and I have more time to myself. The response was big, with many questions about what I’ve done. I hate to say that there really is no big secret, but this topic is well worth exploring, so I’m bringing in my good friend, Lindley Gentile, a licensed marriage and family therapist. She is an expert who works specifically with women around rediscovering their sexiness, or perhaps, learning to discover it for the first time.
Show Highlights:
Contributing factors to why women lose their individuality and sexiness
The roles women fall into throughout life’s phases—without any renegotiation with their partner
Sexiness in identity is about MUCH more than having sex.
Being “turned on” is about aliveness, vitality, positivity, and a vibration of your soul.
Care tasks create a barrier to pleasure.
Sex is like a playground for fun and pleasure, and the aging woman can have more fun at the playground.
Aging women, what they wear, and feeling sexy
Sexiness is about energy and how you feel.
False messages from society around fatphobia, suppression, and ideology
Fantasy is a gift and a power that can overcome our tendency to overthink.
Lindley’s starting point with women who want to rediscover their sexiness
Lindley’s recommended reading for every woman: Come As You Are by Emily Nagoski
Resources and Links:
Connect with Lindley Gentile: Website, TikTok, and Austin Couples Concierge Counseling
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
6/10/2024 • 40 minutes, 37 seconds
94: Making the Outdoors Inclusive with Parker Bushman
As usual, we are talking about all things mental health, wellness, and topics that matter to us both individually and systemically. I’m excited to be joined by Parker Bushman, the founder and CEO of Ecoinclusive Strategies and the Inclusive Journeys Guide. Ecoinclusive Strategies is a consulting firm that works with conservation-based organizations, environmental organizations, and nonprofits around diversity, equality, and inclusion. Join us!
Show Highlights:
Nature should be free and accessible to ALL!
The existing disparities in neighborhoods, tree cover, park access, and open spaces
Racist roots of the conservation movement
Messages of elitism among “outdoorsy” people
Things that have been baked into our ideas about who gets to be outside and enjoy it–We need to break down the barriers!
Thoughts about able-ism and outdoor spaces
Parker’s consulting work with organizations doing wildland restoration, community engagement, and DEI work
Building community through engagement, information, collaboration, and empowerment
Systemic issues that prevent outdoor access
Parker’s advice to everyone about finding outdoor activities that you enjoy
Resources and Links:
Connect with Parker Bushman and Ecoinclusive Strategies: Website, Instagram, Facebook, and TikTok
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
6/3/2024 • 46 minutes, 42 seconds
93: Trad Wives and the Leisure Class with Professor Neil Shyminsky
We are continuing with the topic of trad wives, but we are taking a different angle in this conversation. I’m joined by Professor Neil Shyminsky, who is an English professor at Cambrian College in Sudbury, Ontario. He doesn’t teach a lot about literature but likes to focus on media studies, gender/sexuality studies, and socio-political thought. We begin with a clip of Professor Neil explaining the concept of the “leisure class” as it relates to trad wife content. Join us!
Show Highlights:
The “other” side of trad wife content: an idealized performance of domesticity and romanticization of a woman’s role
Professor Neil defines “the leisure class.”
Don’t always believe the story the camera shows! (It’s all carefully curated content!)
Social signals in how we “perform” our gender
Trad wives as the moral purity status symbol of their husband’s godliness and enjoyers of God’s richest blessings from living a life of submission
Thinking critically is key to understanding the truth about the values they promote.
The difference between liking traditionally feminine things and being a content creator who makes active choices about how they present their enjoyment of traditionally feminine things
The comparison between trad wife content and MLMs
Professor Neil’s advice: “Be thoughtful and self-reflective in what you consume.”
Resources and Links:
Connect with Professor Neil Shyminsky: TikTok, Instagram, X, and LinkedIn
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
5/28/2024 • 50 minutes, 32 seconds
90: How to Feed Yourself When the World is Burning Down Around You with Amy G.S.A. Brooks
If you have felt the pressure to put meals on the table that adhere to the expectations of others, even when you could barely function in life, this episode is for you. I’m joined by Amy G.S.A. Brooks of Wandering Ames. She’s one of my favorite content creators who posts about the OK Kitchen. There is more to life than succumbing to societal pressure to prepare perfect, five-star meals. Join us!
Show Highlights:
● The beginnings of the OK Kitchen and the forming of a new community
● Food insecurity and diet culture during the pandemic
● Messages surround us everywhere about how we feed ourselves and fuel our bodies.
● Thinking about preparing food for three meals every day seems like never-ending labor!
● Meal plans can be a helpful tool–but should be set aside when needed.
● Wasteful in food or wasteful in being unkind to ourselves? Which is worse?
● Be willing to break the rules: dinner doesn’t have to be a big meal or a fancy production, and food plans should be simple and flexible.
● The point of meals is to get what our bodies need.
Resources and Links:
Connect with Amy G.S.A. Brooks: TikTok
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
5/6/2024 • 28 minutes, 27 seconds
88: Therapists on TikTok (will sometimes be mean to you) with DeeDee Wednesday, LPC-S
Today’s episode is all about mental health, therapy, and being online as a therapist. We are diving in with my guest, DeeDee Wednesday, who has created a space for intentional healing and empowerment through therapy and leadership coaching. Join us to learn more!
Show Highlights:
● An overview of DeeDee’s work as a therapist in Louisiana
● Traditional therapy is NOT today’s therapy.
● An open mind, a balancing act, and showing up as an authentic therapist
● Navigating the tricky world of TikTok (or any social media platform) as a therapist
● DeeDee’s work to show up as a therapist when entitlement, racism, and white supremacy are at play
● Understanding how moral perfectionism causes some people to act
● Having a line that you won’t cross to “do no harm”
● What it means to be self-aware
● Dealing with difficult people
● “Power is really the ability to choose.”
Resources and Links:
Connect with DeeDee Wednesday: Website, TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, and Pinterest
Connect with KC: Website, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes.
4/22/2024 • 46 minutes, 39 seconds
47: Best of Gentle Organizing with Alison Lush
Do you have too much stuff? As you look around your home, is it crowded and cluttered? Does your space make you feel burdened, unhappy, and frustrated? If you said–or shouted–YES, you can’t miss today’s show. Join me to learn more about gentle organizing.
Alison Lush is a Certified Professional Organizer, Certified Virtual Organizer, and Master Trainer. After a 20-year catering career, Alison knew she needed better organization and management skills for her home and personal comfort. She learned to live and shop intentionally, creating and protecting the space in her home. Now she puts her expertise to work in helping others by empowering them and teaching them to put themselves at the center of their organization efforts.
Show Highlights:
How Alison became an organizer with a gentle spirit
Why our interactions with our home, space, time, and belongings form the foundations of our lives
Why Alison’s focus is on “organic organizing”
Alison’s answer to a question sent in by Samantha about dealing with clutter, letting things go, and the functionality of her space
How to organize your space by using Zone 1, Zone 2, and Zone 3—and consider the frequency of access for each item
Ways to keep, honor, and display memorabilia by identifying the risk level in letting items go
How to consider the purpose of items in our lives in deciding to keep them or let them go
Alison’s answer to a question from Kitty about decorating, a sense of style, and learning to feel good about her space
How to reframe what might look crappy and rundown to you as a life well-lived, meaningful, and full of love
Why your decor should fuel you and recharge your batteries
Alison’s answer to a question from Aria about separating and managing work life and home life
How to legitimize, categorize, and systemize your space for the best functionality
Why the professional organizing industry has the reputation of telling people to “just get rid of your stuff”
Resources:
Connect with Alison: www.alisonlush.ca and TikTok
Connect with KC: TikTok and Instagram
Get KC's Book, How to Keep House While Drowning
8/28/2023 • 58 minutes, 9 seconds
46: Best of Is Too Much Self-Compassion a Bad Thing? with Dr. Lesley Cook
In our first episode, you heard my conversation with Dr. Lesley Cook about executive functioning. Because she has so much great information and wisdom to share, I decided to bring her back to discuss self-compassion. Is it a bad thing to have TOO MUCH self-compassion? Join us for the conversation with Dr. Lesley!
Dr. Lesley Cook is a psychologist who does a lot of work with ADHD and other neurodivergencies. Born and raised in Hawaii, she now lives in Virginia and works with children, adolescents, adults, couples, and families.
Show Highlights:
How to find the balance between the message of self-compassion and the need for better life management and progress
A basic understanding of self-compassion from Dr. Kristin Neff’s writings
A closer look at shame and how we experience it in relation to self-compassion
How to gently shift shame into self-compassion
How self-compassion can become a learned behavior that we pass down to our children
Resources:
Connect with Dr. Lesley: TikTok and Instagram
Connect with KC: TikTok and Instagram
Get KC's Book, How to Keep House While Drowning
8/21/2023 • 28 minutes, 9 seconds
45: Best of You can't save the rainforest if you're depressed with Imani Barbarin
I’m excited to introduce you to today’s guest. Imani Barbarin is a disability rights and inclusion activist and speaker who uses her platform for conversations around the disability community. I’ve followed her for a while on TikTok and appreciate the way she expresses her opinions and helps educate the rest of us. Come join us now!
Show Highlights:
How Imani explored and discovered her passion for advocacy for disability and inclusion rights
How climate change and disability are linked
Why environmental ableism is a real thing
How people have become victims of their non-nuanced thinking, only wanting to be on the “right” side
Why the COVID pandemic has become a “mass-disabling” event, especially regarding mental health
Examples of ways in which the environmental movement has left those with disabilities behind
Why society has a general disdain for disabled people and believes that they don’t (or won’t) contribute to society
How the luxury of abled people trumps the necessity of the disabled
What the function of capitalism is on disabled bodies
How disabled people are used as pawns in the pro-choice/pro-life debate
Why there is inherent racism in the pro-life movement
What laziness is and is not
Resources:
Connect with Imani: Website and Instagram
Resources mentioned: https://www.sinsinvalid.org, https://disasterstrategies.org, https://www.americanprogress.org
Connect with KC: TikTok and Instagram
Get KC's Book, How to Keep House While Drowning
8/14/2023 • 50 minutes, 28 seconds
44: Best of Executive Functioning with Lesley PsyD
Today, we are diving into executive functioning, which is a popular term being bounced around in mental health communities. I want to take a closer look at what it means and how it shows up in people’s lives. Join me to learn more from today’s guest!
Dr. Lesley Cook is a psychologist who does a lot of work with ADHD and other neurodivergencies. Born and raised in Hawaii, she now lives in Virginia and works with children, adolescents, adults, couples, and families. Dr. Lesley and I met on TikTok, and I’m happy to have her here today!
Show Highlights:
A common-language definition and explanation of executive functioning
How executive function deficits show up in someone’s life
How shame, guilt, and inconsistent performance are clues to executive function problems
The difference between motivation and task initiation
Why the underlying issue with lack of motivation is more about what a person values
How a person’s sense of self is affected when they believe their authentic self is “bad”
Why external supports are necessary when an internal system is down
Why rhythm is better than routine for those with executive function disorder
How neurotypical people experience interruptions with executive functioning on a regular basis because of overload and anxiety
How blips in executive function occur in neurotypical people with predictability and response to intervention—as opposed to someone with a diagnosis
How someone with ADHD can have incredible deficits in executive function on days when everything is going their way–and won’t respond reliably to normal interventions
How to build into each day differing levels of acceptable outcomes–and give yourself permission to choose what fits your needs at that moment
Lesley’s advice to those who think they have executive functioning issues
Resources:
Connect with Dr. Lesley: TikTok and Instagram
Connect with KC: TikTok and Instagram
Get KC's Book, How to Keep House While Drowning
Find great resources about executive functioning:
www.understood.org, www.psychologytoday.com, and www.chaad.org
8/10/2023 • 51 minutes, 20 seconds
43: Codependency Doesn’t Exist with Shahem McLaurin
"Dear Listeners,
"We want to inform you that this episode marks the end of our current season. We would like to take a break during the month of August to recharge and prepare exciting new content for you. We will be back with fresh episodes in September, filled with engaging discussions and insightful interviews. We appreciate your support and look forward to reconnecting with you soon"
-KC Davis
Codependency is one of those buzzwords often used in therapy and mental health around relationships. Today’s guest has provoked a lot of feedback by challenging people’s views on this subject. Join us for this intriguing conversation.
I’m joined by one of my favorite people on TikTok, Shahem Mclaurin, a social worker in Brooklyn, NY, with over 500,000 followers on social media. Shahem is self-described as a person who is “queer as hell, Black as hell, and loud as hell.” They use their platform to address a wide range of social and mental health issues impacting people of color, patriarchy-impacted people, and members of the LGBTQ+ community.
Show Highlights:
● How Shahem’s view of codependency has challenged the worldview of many people
● Why Shahem got a lot of blowback from his thoughts on codependency when he began to challenge popular worldviews
● Why we need to differentiate between attention-seeking and connection-seeking behaviors
● Why people get defensive when their “codependency identification” is challenged
● How the term codependency originated as part of popular therapeutic language
● How our culture sees having empathy for someone and expecting accountability from them as opposites that can’t both be true at the same time
● Thoughts on codependency, outside validation, connectivity, and feeling emotionally safe
● How to take a look at your unique journey “in the pool”
Resources and Links:
Connect with Shahem: TikTok and Instagram
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes
7/24/2023 • 45 minutes, 16 seconds
42: Self-Esteem Sucks. You Need Self-Compassion with Dr Kristin Neff
I’m excited about today’s guest because she has had a huge influence on me. I can confidently say that finding her research on self-compassion was a turning point in my healing journey. Do you need more self-compassion? Join us to learn more!
Dr. Kristin Neff is a renowned psychologist, self-care researcher, and author. Her work has had a profound impact on the field of psychology and has helped countless people cultivate self-acceptance and resilience.
Show Highlights:
How self-compassion became Dr. Kristin’s main area of research
Understanding self-esteem vs. self-compassion
The three components of self-compassion: mindfulness, common humanity, and self-kindness
How self-esteem creates comparison and social disconnection by being conditional and unstable
How self-compassion gives the gift of authenticity
The difference between fierce self-compassion and tender self-compassion
How self-compassion helps us get past our shame
Why self-compassion doesn’t mean indulgence
Pathways and blocks to self-compassion
The connection between self-compassion and psychological functioning
How self-compassion helps when we fail and make mistakes
Why the goal of practicing self-compassion is to be simply a compassionate mess who is completely human
Why the practice of self-compassion has to start small with baby steps of warmth and support (What would you say to a friend?)
A look at Dr. Kristin’s latest book, Fierce Self-Compassion
How anger fits into self-compassion
Resources and Links:
Connect with Dr. Kristin and find many helpful resources: Website
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes
7/17/2023 • 38 minutes, 33 seconds
41: Breaking Free from Self-Improvement with Frankie Simmons
I’m so excited to have my first in-person guest on the podcast! Frankie Simmons is here, and she’s literally sitting right next to me. I love Frankie’s TikTok content, and I resonate with so much of what she says. I feel like she is a younger version of me, as we have similar backgrounds and healing journeys. I hope you will join us for this conversation!
Show Highlights:
Get to know Frankie and our thoughts on being fellow Texans
How Frankie exited her background in Christianity and fear and began to explore the world
Why Frankie does TikToks about her functional responses to trauma and finding self-trust
The journey from fear and insecurity into feeling worthy and accepted
How Frankie experienced a mind-blowing shift in her approach to life
Why Frankie has chosen to be sober–and how that has changed her life and relationships
Frankie’s journey to understand herself as a confident introvert
How we can experience a different version of life when we accept ALL of ourselves
What things are like in Frankie’s relationship with love and acceptance
How it harms us to be taught that we should feel guilty if life is “easy” and not a constant struggle
How Frankie and KC describe their current relationship with Christianity, faith, and spirituality
Resources and Links:
Connect with Frankie Simmons: TikTok and Instagram
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes
7/10/2023 • 1 hour, 24 minutes, 59 seconds
40: Anti-Capitalist Financial Planning with River Nice
Our topic today is intriguing, so I can’t wait to learn more from my guest. I’m joined by River Nice (they/them), who was originally in a tech job they hated. After using their skill set to help their partner with debt from her gender transition, River found their calling: to help queer people with their money. Now, they run their own financial planning firm, Be Intentional Financial LLC (BIF), to serve their clients and community and help to dismantle oppression in all its forms. Join us to learn more!
Show Highlights:
Misconceptions people have about the term “anti-capitalist financial planner”
A look at the harmful and inaccurate mainstream financial advice in our world
Why we live in fear and worry about our financial survival in a capitalist society
A look at white privilege and how we can make the world a better place under oppressive systems
What “redistribution of wealth” looks like, practically speaking
How River helps clients with investing for long-term financial security
A charity giving model vs. creating an interdependent community
How River teaches financial emergency preparedness to clients
How anti-capitalist financial planning is a holistic view of life, money, values, and relationships
River’s advice about specific financial scenarios around debt management, living paycheck to paycheck, planning for the future, and accumulating wealth
Resources and Links:
Connect with River Nice: Website, Instagram, and TikTok
Check out River’s Website for FREE resources and a FREE 30-minute consultation!
Also mentioned: the Mint app and the Honeydue app for couples
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes
7/3/2023 • 42 minutes, 19 seconds
39: Life Coaching: the Good, the Bad, & the Ugly
Coaching is an interesting field with many nuances, and we hear a LOT of buzz about coaching right now. There are coaches for literally EVERY aspect of life. While there are things to appreciate about the field of coaching, there are definitely things to look out for, as well. I’m joined by my good friend, Heidi Smith, who is a Licensed Professional Counselor.
In Part 2 of this conversation, I’m joined by Rachel Ambrose for a coach’s perspective. Rachel is a coach for neurodivergents who has been diagnosed with ADHD and autism. As someone who holds multiple coaching certifications, she is here to give us a better look at the coaching field. She talks about the bounds of coaching and her personal experience around green and red flags in the industry. Rachel shares tips to help people know how to find a helpful coach and be more knowledgeable about the coaching field.
Show Highlights:
How Heidi partners with clients and coaches in her counseling work
Why there are legitimate questions about the training and oversight in the coaching field
Why coaching is, by definition, a less intimidating relationship than with a therapist but is like “paying for a friend”
How coaching and therapy embody very different relationships, lanes, and ethics
What to consider in questions about licensure and certifications
The ethical rabbit hole around the client’s relationship with therapists and coaches
Why the coaching field is like the Wild West right now
Pitfalls in the coaching industry around sexual integrity, case management, interventions, and narcissism
KC’s experience in researching ADHD coaching
The vagueness around a “spirituality coach”
The bottom line about coaching: “Do your research and be aware of potential drawbacks.”
Part 2 from Rachel Amrose:
Green and red flags around coaching around the following:
Power dynamics in the relationship
“I have the cure/the magical answer for your problem!”
Concrete, actionable items
How to know if a coach’s training is worthwhile or not
How to gauge a coach’s willingness to refer out–and stay in their lane
Resources and Links:
Connect with Rachel Ambrose: Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes
6/26/2023 • 59 minutes, 19 seconds
38: Interview with the White Woman Whisperer
Racism. You may think you know what it is and in what ways it exists in our society, but it is a deep and multi-faceted topic. We could spend hours trolling the depths of language, attitudes, behaviors, and nuances that are influenced by race. We are attempting to explore and learn more in today’s show. I’m joined by Rebecca Slue, also known as the White Woman Whisperer. You may know her from TikTok, which is where I found her. We connected when I took an anti-racism course and reached out to her for help, and I’ve already learned a lot from her. Join us for more from Rebecca’s perspective.
Show Highlights:
An example of how KC got into a quandary over comments on social media and the fear of being labeled as a racist
How amazing conversations are happening when we aren’t concerned about perfectionism in our words
What we need to understand about white supremacy
How Rebecca uses a caste system model of values to understand the behaviors that perpetuate white supremacy
Why our understanding of anti-racism is a journey and not a destination
Rebecca’s experience of racial identity as she grew up the child of Jewish and Jamaican parents
How Rebecca’s experience played out when she entered corporate America
How she became the White Woman Whisperer
How racism created a holistic layer of chronic stress for Rebecca
How Rebecca uses a metaphor to explain white fragility, white privilege, and the pinata of white supremacy
Resources and Links:
Connect with Rebecca: Website and Podcast, Instagram, TikTok
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes
6/19/2023 • 52 minutes, 11 seconds
37: Technology Aids for ADHD with Kat Hunt
Technology can be challenging for those with ADHD, and I’ll admit that I’ve struggled at times in this area. If you are someone who responds better to tactile and visual learning, you can probably relate. There are many tools and hacks available to help with executive functioning issues, and I’m excited to learn more in today’s show. I’m joined by technology expert Kat Hunt, who is raising a neurodivergent daughter. Let’s learn more about technological aids that can be helpful for ADHD. Join us!
Show Highlights:
Three specific areas in which neurodivergent struggle and technologies that can help:
Time blindness
Solutions: Apps like Calendly, Artful Agenda, and Taskly
Data loss/overwhelm
Solution: Migrating events/tasks into Google Calendar
Dopamine-seeking or dopamine-resisting behaviors
Solution: Forest app
Why mobile access to these tools is preferable over a physical tool, especially for those who travel or move from home to office frequently
How Kat uses Alexa technology to her advantage in time management with her family and at her office
How the Due app forces you to pay attention to notifications for events and tasks
How parents can use Alexa features with neurodivergent kids to increase independence and self-efficacy while still having parental structure in place
Resources and Links:
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes
6/12/2023 • 28 minutes, 38 seconds
36: ADHD & Sex with Catie Osborn
As you can probably figure out from the title, this is NOT the show to listen to around children! I’m joined by Catie Osborn, better known as @catieosaurus on TikTok–with an average of 30-50 million monthly views. She is an actor, podcaster, sex educator, adult performer, and mental health and disability advocate based in Atlanta. We are diving into the interesting intersection of ADHD and sexuality. If you are curious to hear more, join us!
Show Highlights:
How growing up in a very conservative and religious household gave Catie an interesting perspective on sex that was based on shame
How Catie became interested in kink, received an ADHD diagnosis, and became a sex educator
Why sex is a “fragile moment”
Why sexual dysfunction and sexual disappointment are NOT the same things
How ADHD makes it difficult to stay focused during sex because of overthinking
How neurodivergent people struggle to articulate their needs–especially with intimacy
Why sex shouldn’t be in terms of obligation, duty, and service but in terms of being authentically ourselves in surrender to the experience
How our sex lives are influenced by layers of white supremacy, capitalism, trauma, and heteronormative values that need to be unpacked and investigated
What kink is at its core–and why it has saved Catie
Why conversations about sex and intimacy connect you to your partner, breed trust and vulnerability, and lead to better sex!
Why Catieosaurus’ TikTok series, “Burnt Out Gifted and Talented Submissive Brat with a Praise Kink,” has been hugely popular
How kink allowed Catie to be the one who calls the shots and feels safe and supported–for the first time
Resources and Links:
Connect with Catie: Website, Podcast, Instagram, and TikTok
Book mentioned: Come As You Are by Emily Nagoski
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes
6/5/2023 • 1 hour, 7 minutes, 10 seconds
35: Discouraged with Self-Care with Taylor Elyse Morrison
Self-care is a term we hear EVERYWHERE right now, and you’ve heard me talk about it over and over again. Today’s discussion is around the disillusionment of the self-care industry that I’m feeling, along with many others. I’m joined by Taylor Elyse Morrison, the author of Inner Workout: Strengthening Self-Care Practices for Healing Body, Soul, and Mind. Taylor is a founder, facilitator, coach, and serial entrepreneur, and she uses her coaching, mindfulness, and movement training to meet people where they are and offer actionable steps toward avoiding burnout. I’m putting Taylor on the spot by asking questions and picking her brain about common self-care struggles, and she is up for the challenge! Let’s see how this turns out!
Show Highlights:
How the consumeristic quality of today’s self-care movement ignores the marginalizations and barriers that many people experience that bring distress and hopelessness
Why Taylor urges us to ask, “Is it the Self, or is it the System?”
Why Taylor created a self-care assessment to give people “practical starting points”
How Taylor’s self-care assessment is based on the five yogic dimensions
Why self-care is often confused with pleasure as the hard work of self-care is overlooked
Why part of self-care is holding onto yourself in the presence of other people
Why wisdom is a part of self-care, along with the components of presence, self-trust, and aligned action
How curiosity and self-compassion play into effective self-care
Why Taylor is satisfied with the feedback she is getting from her book
Resources and Links:
Connect with Taylor: Website, (Buy her book, take the free self-care assessment, and join her newsletter group.) TikTok, and Instagram.
Find Taylor’s book on Amazon: Inner Workout: Strengthening Self-Care Practices for Healing Body, Soul, and Mind.
Find Inner Workout on TikTok and Instagram.
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes
5/29/2023 • 32 minutes, 21 seconds
34: The Problem with Professional Organizing with Professional Organizer Alison Lush
Can you afford the services of a professional organizer? Most people can’t, and that’s one of the big problems with the industry. Many professional organizers have come up with alternative ideas that allow them to reach more people with their services. Join us to learn more!
I’m happy to welcome back to the show Alison Lush, a Certified Professional Organizer who specializes in chronic disorganization. Alison last joined me for Episode 5 about Gentle Organizing. Today’s discussion is about the problems with professional organizing and how the industry is evolving to be accessible to more people. The good news is that there are different levels of help available more than ever before for organizing and decluttering your spaces!
Show Highlights:
Why a main problem with the professional organizing industry is that the services are not accessible for most people
How the pandemic massively impacted professional organizers in beneficial ways that are far more economical for clients
How Alison’s focus has changed to educating and empowering the individual to get unstuck
Why there is a spectrum of disorganization in which most people exist somewhere in the middle
Highlights of new gap-filling services that some innovative professional organizers are offering (See Resources and Links)
Why Accountability Groups and Body Doubling have become the cornerstone of Alison’s work with clients
Why the biggest question for professional organizers to ask regarding the client is, “What do they need?”
The difference between being unwilling and being overwhelmed in organizing and decluttering
Alison’s advice about finding a professional organizer
Resources and Links:
Connect with Alison: Website and TikTok
JUDITH KOLBERG
Conquering Chronic Disorganization book – emotion-based decluttering and organizing strategies
https://www.judithkolberg.com/
HAZEL THORNTON
Go With the Flow!: The clutter flow chart workbook https://www.org4life.com/
SUSAN GARDNER
The Focus Project “If your possessions interfere with your quality of life, The Focus Project is a way to look at them through a different lens.” Frame, Value, Edit. Exercises that promote looking at your belongings from a different angle. Reflection, partnering, creativity are encouraged, along with curiosity about the root causes of clutter. – Self-directed
LYNNE POULTON
Declutter GO! by Lynne Poulton - Once you start, you’re on a roll. Declutter GO! GAME NIGHTS – Group body doubling – weekly guided activities, prompts – group body doubling or autonomous -
JONDA BEATTIE AND DIANE QUINTANA
Release-Repurpose-Reorganize CARDS
https://releaserepurpose.com/?fbclid=IwAR3UkkdN6FdroVrQ260VV17XqvA2MnuMl5Hf9DHfzdMD_OaiYLz8tFbyYag - Self-directed – focused areas – systematic
VICKIE DELLAQUILA
Ophelia the Organizer – Follow her adventures and hear her organizing advice
https://www.opheliatheorganizer.com/
JULIET LANDAU-POPE
Organizing Bootcamp (5x15 minute sessions over weekdays) https://jlpcoach.com/
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes
5/22/2023 • 29 minutes, 22 seconds
33: What Stress Animal are You? with Dr Lindsey Cooley
**Content Warning: This episode references school shootings and the murder of George Floyd.
Stress is a word we throw around regarding many aspects of life, and we all know what it is to feel stress, but how much do we truly understand about it? Stress can take any able-bodied, able-minded person and bring them to a whole new level, whether or not they have a diagnosed condition. As we break down the topic of stress, each person has different responses, personality styles, and primary goals. Join us to find out which stress animal you are!
I’m joined by Dr. Lindsey Cooley, who posted a TikTok about stress, and I knew we had to have this conversation on the podcast. She is a Licensed Clinical Psychologist who specializes in school-aged children/teens, emotional and behavioral disorders, LGBTQ youth, ADHD, and autism spectrum disorder.
Show Highlights:
Why we should be kind to ourselves–even if we don’t have a diagnosis
What is stress? (THE million-dollar question!)
The phases of stress (alarm, resistance, and exhaustion) and how prolonged stress can cause diseases of adaptation
How our culture normalizes “too much stress”
How stressful life events can affect executive functioning, relationships, energy, and more (The Holmes and Rahe Stress Scale and Adverse Childhood Experience are well-known measurement tools.)
Why we need to legitimize that most of our stress is caused by normal reactions to dysfunctional systems
The medical model of disease vs. the social model of disease
Common symptoms of being in a prolonged stress cycle
Differences in acute stress, chronic stress, and traumatic stress
How traumatic stress occurs when we watch something like the murder of George Floyd and school shootings
How the “stress animals” (eagle, turtle, chameleon, and lion) concept came from Lynn Lott's Top Card Activity
How your personality style and stress response help determine your stress animal
How we can learn to care for ourselves in the middle of stress
Resources:
Connect with Dr. Lindsey Cooley: TikTok
Mentioned in this episode: Lynn Lott's Top Card Activity, the Holmes and Rahe Stress Scale, the ACE Scale, and "Kids Are Suffering from Toxic Stress" LA Times article
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes
5/15/2023 • 48 minutes, 37 seconds
32: Book Chat: Real Self Care with Dr Pooja Lakshmin
If you follow me at all, you know that I really don’t like the word self-care. But today, I’m giving you an entire episode about Real Self Care!
My guest today is Dr. Pooja Lakshmin, a perinatal psychiatrist, writer, and CEO of Gemma, a women's mental health community, has a fresh perspective on self-care. In her debut nonfiction book, Real Self Care, Dr. Lakshmin challenges the conventional concept of self-care, which is largely full of empty calories and devoid of substance. She argues that the game is rigged, and faux self-care only keeps us looking outward, comparing ourselves with others or striving for a certain type of perfection, which means it's incapable of truly nourishing us in the long run. Her insights on self-care are particularly relevant in the current times, when many people feel overwhelmed, overburdened, and burnt out.
Show Highlights:
The difference between a “system” and “philosophy”.
There is no one right answer, there are hundreds of answers.
Hope as a skill, not a new concept.
A boundary is the process you went through where you decided that you were worthy of standing up for what you want.
You know how to practice real self-care when you suffer from a mental health condition.
There is no one answer for recovery from religious trauma.
Links and Resources:
Connect with Dr. Pooja Lakshmin: Instagram, Twitter
Real Self Care, Dr. Pooja Lakshmin
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes
5/8/2023 • 43 minutes, 37 seconds
31: Wait. Am I ADHD? with Dr. Sasha Hamdani
Many adults, like me, are diagnosed with ADHD later in life. It is fascinating to hear the stories of how this diagnosis is missed in their childhood years. I’m joined by Dr. Sasha Hamdani, a board-certified psychiatrist and ADHD clinical specialist who just happens to spend some of her spare time on TikTok. Let’s get the facts from an expert! Join us for this interesting conversation!
Show Highlights:
The basics: What is ADHD?
Why reframing is helpful for adults diagnosed with ADHD
Why many of us do self-diagnosis, especially in today’s social media-driven world
Factors that can cause a child to fly under the radar and go undiagnosed
Why ADHD can be described as “an interest-based nervous system”
How most people with ADHD have an “I’m dumb” moment because of how their brains process information and overlook details
Why ADHD diagnosis is overlooked in so many people because of the ways they learn to compensate for symptoms
Why people with ADHD mask their internal symptoms by learning to respond to their external environment
Dr. Sasha’s advice about educating yourself and learning more about ADHD
How to decide whether or not to take ADHD medication as an adult
Dr. Sasha’s advice about noticing red flags in dealing with your healthcare provider
Resources:
Connect with Dr. Sasha: TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, Book, Self-Care for People with ADHD, and the Focus Genie App
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
5/1/2023 • 51 minutes, 57 seconds
30: Fat Talk with Virginia Sole-Smith
Do you agree that we live in a world that equates body size with a person’s value? What is our society teaching our kids about fat, body size, and a person’s worth? If you experienced body-size shaming as you grew up, don’t you want to do a better job with your children? Parenting around these topics is not easy, and my guest today wrote a book to help us understand more. I’m excited for this conversation with Virginia Sole-Smith, author of Fat Talk: Parenting in the Age of Diet Culture and host of the Burnt Toast podcast. Join us to learn more!
Show Highlights:
Why parents struggle with fears and concerns around their kids’ body sizes
Why the goal is to have kids who don’t feel anxious about their relationship with food
Why we need to think about health as MUCH more than a number on the scale
Why, to embrace body diversity, we need to challenge what we’ve been trained to think about health, beauty, and morality
How weight distribution matches up with “thin privilege” and anti-fat bias
How focusing too closely on our personal weight struggles causes us to reinforce and perpetuate fat bias in the world
How our children receive messaging around body types and sizes from healthcare providers, sports coaches, etc.
How to have healthy conversations with kids about bodies, fat, diets, etc.
Why parents need to give counter programming to the default settings our kids receive from society about topics such as body shaming and racism
Why Virginia included in her book a chapter called “Straight White Dads on Diets”
Resources:
Connect with Virginia Sole-Smith: Website, Instagram, Twitter, TikTok, Burnt Toast podcast, and Fat Talk book
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes
4/24/2023 • 38 minutes, 15 seconds
29: How to Get Dope Therapy with Shani Tran
Getting therapy and finding the right therapist is super intimidating! Most people aren’t even sure how to begin the process. Besides the fear and stigma associated with seeking help for mental health, therapy can be scary when you don’t know what to expect. One of my friends from TikTok has written a book with tons of practical information and advice about the basics of therapy. Join us to learn more!
Shani Tran is a licensed therapist in Minnesota and Arizona. She wrote the book, Dope Therapy: A Radical Guide to Owning Your Therapy, to validate the anxiety that can arise around seeking counseling. Through her book, she offers guidance for navigating the uncomfortable conversations that can come up in therapy. In her professional work and on TikTok, Shani focuses on education around cultural humility and helping people of color, who have historically been underserved by the mental health community.
Show Highlights:
Why Shani wanted to write her book to make the therapy process less intimidating
How Shani’s book breaks down the therapy process, including all the financial information that people need to know
Why it is important to be direct in your questions to a therapist
How to reframe your thinking around, “Therapy didn’t work for me.”
Why it’s OK to tell your therapist how you really feel (they WANT you to advocate for yourself!)
Shani’s advice about firing a therapist (Hint: Ghosting them is OK!)
Why the therapy room is a great place to practice new communication skills in a safe place
Why your relationship with your therapist is different from every other human relationship
How teletherapy brings new elements to the therapy process to improve accessibility
Why Shani wants to be noticed for her diverse skills as a clinician and not just her work with the BIPOC community
The difference in cultural competency and cultural humility
Resources:
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website: www.strugglecare.com/promo-codes
Connect with Shani: Dope Therapy book (also available at other booksellers), TikTok, and Instagram
Mentioned by Shani: The Gift of Therapy by Irvin D. Yalom
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
4/17/2023 • 49 minutes, 47 seconds
28: The Magic of the Wash & Set with Heidi Smith, LPCS
Small things can make all the difference, and each person gets to decide for themselves what those little steps are that uplift our spirits and lighten our load. These little things are NOT the same for everyone! A simple thing, like having her hair washed and styled twice weekly, helps energize today’s guest and makes her feel that she can take on the world–and she doesn’t need to make excuses for it. Join us to hear my conversation with Heidi Smith.
Show Highlights:
How Heidi decided that having someone “do her hair” twice each week is a BIG deal for her mental health
Why we have to decide for ourselves how to spend our emotional energy, which is in limited supply
Why it is ridiculous that women put so much pressure on themselves to be presentable because of external motivation
Why our self-care routines should serve us and have a place in our functionality
How parenting responsibilities evolved for Heidi to finally allow her to take time for yourself
Why the best advice around self-care tasks is to find what works best for YOU
Resources:
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
4/10/2023 • 18 minutes, 44 seconds
27: The Sex Ed You Should Have Gotten with Rachel Coler Mulholland
Today, we are covering an important topic today, but maybe not in the way you expect. I’m joined by Rachel Mulholland (aka Shug CM), a therapist whom I met on TikTok because of her incredible content around sex education for children. Today’s focus is on how our lives as adults are impacted if we don’t get comprehensive sex education as children. Join us for the conversation!
Show Highlights:
How KC’s story from her teenage years illustrates the gaps that most people have in their education about sex and the fact that sex ed is NOT a one-time conversation
How “purity culture” is impacting teenagers in certain places in the US in damaging ways
How even most comprehensive sex ed doesn’t address the pleasurable side of sex–and (for females) that the pleasure doesn’t have to come from another person
How sexual predators take advantage of the lack of information in sex ed from SAFE places
Why parents have real fear about talking to their kids about sex ed
The effects of NOT educating kids that sex and pleasure don’t always go together
Rachel’s Four Pillars of Safe Sex: confirmation, communication, lubrication, and enthusiastic participation
Why parents should be aware when their kids are ready to hear and learn–and begin at the most basic level appropriate for their age
How to answer those first little-kid questions around, “Where do babies come from?”
Why curiosity is a foundational part of body talk for kids–not just around sexuality
How parents can work through their own feelings around sex ed with their children
Why Rachel’s next project is a book about body talk
Resources:
Connect with Rachel: TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, and Website (coming soon!)
Recommended by Rachel: How Do You Make A Baby by Anna Fiske
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
4/3/2023 • 42 minutes, 44 seconds
26: How to Find a Good Therapist
If you’ve thought about finding a counselor or therapist, you know it can seem overwhelming. Remember that those first few sessions are essentially a time for YOU to interview the therapist to see if there are good vibes and a good fit for you. Don’t be intimidated by the process! I’m breaking it down with tips and advice about finding the right therapist for you. Join me for this episode!
Show Highlights:
The basics: What is the difference between therapy and counseling?
A breakdown of different providers and what they do: psychiatrist, psychologist, therapists, and counselors
How to find a provider–with and without insurance (Visit my Shop at www.strugglecare.com to download my FREE pdf file, Finding a Therapist.)
How to contact a provider when you’ve chosen one and what to say (Hint: It matters whether your private insurance is a PPO or HMO.)
What to ask during the first phone call about scheduling constraints, experience with your specific issue, typical sessions, etc.
Why it is OK to go into the first session with questions of your own
What you should communicate to the provider during the first session
How to ask the provider about their supervision, cancellation policies, emergencies sessions or phone calls
How to tell the provider that they aren’t a good fit for you
Probing questions you can ask to determine any biases/prejudices your provider might have around religion, spirituality, interventions, faith, LGBTQ people, gender identity, sexuality, psychiatric medications
How to figure out the therapist qualities that matter most to you
Safety resources in the US (See Resources below for details.)
Resources:
If you are in a domestic violence situation and need safety now, call the 24-hour hotline 1-800-799-7233.
If you are under 18 and need help, safety, counseling, or services, text “Safe” with your address, city, and state to 44357.
The Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network (RAINN) is America’s largest anti-sexual violence organization. If you’ve been assaulted and need help, call their hotline at 1-800-656-HOPE.
Lifeline Suicide Help can be reached at 1-800-273-8255. They provide 24-hour free and confidential support to people in distress who need crisis resources.
The Trevor Project is a chat, text, and phone support line for LGBTQ youth in crisis. They provide peer programs and resources. Reach them at www.thetrevorproject.com.
NEXT Distro is an online and email-based harm reduction service designed to reduce the opioid overdose death rate, prevent injection-related disease transmission, and improve the lives of those who use drugs. Find them at www.nextdistro.org.
Never Use Alone can be reached if you choose to use drugs alone. Their operator will stay on the line with you while you use and notify emergency services if you stop responding. Find them at www.neverusealone.com and 800-484-3731.
Connect with KC:
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website (Find the FREE pdf, Finding a Good Therapist, under the “Shop” tab.)
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
3/27/2023 • 26 minutes, 21 seconds
25: Low Energy Self Care with Amanda Dodson
We are focusing on one particular aspect of self-care today with therapist and professional organizer Amanda Dodson of Nesting Your Life. I love learning more about how these two roles intersect in helping people with real-life problems. Join us to learn more from Amanda!
Show Highlights:
Why Amanda became interested in “low-energy care of self”
Why it is difficult to accept that you aren’t physically, mentally, and emotionally capable of doing the things you want to do
How Amanda explains the “Spoon Theory” of energy
An explanation of diminished energy and the blame and frustration that come with it
Why resources for self-care should think outside the box regarding the unseen rules we live by
Why budgeting your energy differently requires a sort of “mourning” the death of your able-bodied self as life changes occur
How societal messages about dealing with low-energy cater to the well people
Why neurodivergent people tend to have off-balance eating habits
How Amanda helps her clients aim for regular eating routines to be in touch with their hunger and fullness cues
Where to start if your home is not functional (Just take the first step!)
How sensory issues factor into low-energy self-care—and how to address them
Why motivation pairing can be a real game-changer in making undesirable tasks more tolerable
Why Amanda sees it as an important part of her work to help men become more involved in the care of their homes
Resources:
Connect with Amanda Dodson: TikTok and Website
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
3/20/2023 • 43 minutes, 14 seconds
24: Collaboration: Mental Note & Struggle Care
Today’s episode is a conversation in which Ellie Pike, host of the Mental Note podcast (this episode first aired on 2/27/23), and I discuss my adult ADHD diagnosis and the workarounds I’ve learned to get things done and function in my life. Join us!
Show Highlights:
KC’s background as a messy person whose life changed dramatically when her two children were born
How KC had to learn how to keep a functional home in a totally new phase of life
How an ADHD diagnosis as a young mother made sense of her whole life
Why KC’s ADHD diagnosis was “missed” during childhood and youth because she didn’t “fit the mold”
Why ADHD is NOT simply the inability to pay attention
How success in school changed for KC during college when most of the work was to be done outside of class
How ADHD affects what is going on in the brain, regardless of external behavior that may appear normal
What KC has put in place to help her finish necessary tasks, even when they don’t interest her
The difference between motivation and task initiation–and why we treat them differently
How ADHD medication changed everything for KC
Why late-diagnosed adults with ADHD usually hit some kind of barrier, event, or transition that brings everything to a crisis point
The connection between KC’s depressive episodes and isolation, under-stimulation, and boredom
KC’s advice for listeners about creating systems that work WITH your brain: “Do a little, and do it as a person that deserves to function.”
Why KC’s message is that “care tasks are morally neutral” and have nothing to do with someone being a worthwhile human being
Resources:
Connect with Ellie Pike and find out more about the Eating Recovery Center and Mood and Anxiety Center: www.mentalnotepodcast.com
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
3/13/2023 • 42 minutes, 55 seconds
23: The Color of Care Tasks with Danita Platt
I’m excited to have Danita Platt on the show today. I didn’t know anyone of color in the field of care tasks until I met her. Her content resonates with me and my views around care tasks, so I hope you’ll enjoy hearing more from Danita!
Show Highlights:
Who Danita is and how she became an expert on gentle care tasks
How our society over the last two generations has moralized care tasks and tied them to the worth of a woman
Why we need to rethink our views about care tasks and “being a good woman” that go back to the founding of the US, historically speaking
How the concept of “invisible labor” has carried over from colonial days even to today
How many white people were able to live the lives they did because of the cheap, exploitable labor of Black women
How the Great Migration happened to move many Black families to northern cities from the South
How the shift happened to push Black (and white) women to work industrial jobs while men were away during the war
How the push is recurring for 1950s homemaking to be viewed as the superior role for women
What we DON’T talk about in the fulfilling life of a homemaker
How Danita chooses to honor the Black women who had to wash clothes, clean house, and cook meals under duress–with no freedom or choice of their own
What Danita would say to women who want to live more joyfully in their homes and experience more freedom and quality of life
Resources:
Connect with Danita: TikTok and Instagram
Mentioned in this episode: Sisters in Hate: American Women on the Front Lines of White Nationalism
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
3/6/2023 • 44 minutes, 2 seconds
22: Moral Perfectionsim
I’ve never been a perfectionist. I’ve never cared if my bed is made or my handwriting is neat or if a picture on the wall is hanging perfectly. I’m not bothered by things being a little “out of place.” So imagine my surprise to discover that my whole life is run by perfectionism–a different kind of perfectionism. That’s today’s topic on the show. Join me to find out more!
Show Highlights:
How an 18-month-stint as a teenager in a long-term rehab facility turned me into a moral perfectionist
How a militaristic 12-step program and an evangelical church forced me to examine every daily decision for pure, altruistic motives
How this type of perfectionism told me that I had to be “good enough” to be loved and accepted
How even self-improvement is approached differently with moral perfectionism
Why it’s impossible to live with moral perfectionism
The first step toward change: recognizing that I am a moral perfectionist who is trying to earn my worth through altruism and unselfishness
Why you are not alone if you feel like a moral perfectionist
An excerpt from my book, How to Keep House While Drowning, chapter 3
Resources:
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
2/27/2023 • 16 minutes, 47 seconds
21: Wait. Am I in a Cult? with Chris Wilson
Today’s discussion is about high-control groups. If you aren’t familiar with this phrase, think of it as the clinical term for a cult, and most of us are familiar with that word. Let’s talk about it with my guest, Chris Wilson, who has spent many years studying this topic. She has a Bachelor’s degree in Sociology, a Master’s in Religion, and is working on a Master’s in Industrial and Organizational Psychology. Join us to learn more from Chris!
Show Highlights:
Why a high-control group is usually toxic, with the abuse of power and control that induces trauma in people
How Chris witnessed abuse and experienced trauma in her religious upbringing–and became passionately determined to help others
KC’s story of teenage drug addiction, rehab, and exposure to high-control groups
How a recovery group that helps a person can also be a high-control group
What makes a group a high-control group
They use control tactics and don’t teach coping mechanisms.
They prioritize predatory collectivism.
Why not all religions with strict rules and regulations are high-control groups
How high-control groups function with behavior control and punishment
How high-control group tactics can show up in the toxic workplace
How high-control groups implement information control and use thought-stopping cliches to stop people from evaluating what is happening to them
How high-control groups remove a person’s ability and opportunity to make all decisions about even the most mundane things in daily life
Tips from Chris and KC for joining a group and being aware:
Balance your passion with rationality.
Connect with others in the group and ask specifically about the “downsides” of the group.
Beware if the group touts themselves as the ONLY ONE doing things right.
Beware if the group leader claims to be clairvoyant, infallible, or claims to know you better than you know yourself.
Resources:
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
2/20/2023 • 54 minutes, 4 seconds
20: Disingenuous Communication: the Ace of Spades with Heidi Smith
Games people play: we’ve all been guilty at one time or another, whether intentionally or not. I’m referring to the disingenuous forms of communication we use in daily life. There are various reasons why we alter our communication in certain situations, and it’s usually because we want something from another person. I’m joined by Heidi Smith, LPC, and one of my best friends, who just happens to be my former supervisor when I was learning to be a therapist. Let’s dive deep into games, manipulation, boundaries, and relationships. Join us for the conversation around this fascinating topic!
Show Highlights:
Is it disingenuous communication, manipulation, or something in-between?
Why attention-seeking behavior might really be connection-seeking behavior
The “games” people play: The trump card, (the “Ace of Spades”), is the issue, trauma, circumstance, or affliction that someone believes gives them carte blanche to never have to change and to always be accommodated by others.
Examples: ADHD, PTSD, a serious illness
Some people learn the script to say that excuses them from accountability, like “I’m working on it.”
Even with their objectionable behaviors, people deserve and want to be loved and accepted.
Why, in our relationships, we have to be well and not allow others’ behaviors that damage us
How different people have different tolerance levels for discomfort in relationships
The most powerful, insidious trump card: “If you do/don’t do _______, I will kill myself.”
Resources:
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
2/13/2023 • 35 minutes, 53 seconds
19: How to Clean Everything with Ann Russell
Today I’m joined by one of my favorite TikTok creators, Ann Russell. She has 1.9 million followers and is the author of How to Clean Everything: A Practical, Down to Earth Guide for Anyone Who Doesn’t Know Where to Start.
Show Highlights:
Why we all deserve to feel safe in our homes and unjudged on standards that we don’t deem important
How Ann has come to know how to clean everything
Why every cleaning task follows the same process: “Find the solvent that dissolves the stain without damaging the surface.”
How Ann creates a safe space for people to ask their cleaning questions without shame
Why much of our care/cleaning task knowledge is bound up in the romanticization of our identity
How Ann approached housekeeping tasks at home when her four children were young
How Ann responds when her career as a professional cleaner is belittled
Why basic cleaning tasks shouldn’t cost a lot of money or take a lot of time
How consumption and capitalism impact how we feel about our homes
Why keeping a perfect home doesn’t protect you from bad things in life or bring success and happiness
How “Cleanliness is next to godliness” has been used as a big stick against certain groups of people
Why people grow up thinking they are “bad people” when they cannot keep house
How to tackle old crayon marks off walls
Resources:
Connect with Ann Russell: TikTok
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
2/6/2023 • 47 minutes, 36 seconds
18: Q&A: Housekeepers and Messy Boyfriends
Today’s episode is a Q & A. While you listen, I invite you to relax and unwind or use the time to care for yourself gently in whichever way you prefer.
I received questions from a working neurodivergent mom struggling to maintain a functional space, grappling with whether or not she should hire a housekeeper, and from someone living with a messy boyfriend with ADHD, looking for a way to establish a cleaning routine without creating resentment.
I share some strategies to help people with ADHD become more functional and explain that struggling to keep your home clean and tidy has nothing to do with your character, work ethic, or who you are as an individual. Let’s get into it!
Show highlights:
Is it beneficial or detrimental to hire a housekeeper if you’re working full-time and struggling with ADHD, RSD, anxiety, and major depression?
Why paying someone to keep your home clean does not make you a failure.
How taking a different perspective can make asking for help much less distressing.
How can you establish a cleaning routine without resentment when your partner has ADHD and often forgets his promises to clean up?
What happens in the brain when someone has ADHD?
What is working memory?
Why is it sometimes hard for people with ADHD to complete one-off under-stimulating tasks?
How task-bundling and ritualization helped me (someone with ADHD) become more functional.
How isolating the bottleneck, or the step in a task they dread most, can help people with ADHD become more functional.
Links and resources:
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
Get KC’s decluttering workbook when you sign up for her newsletter
1/30/2023 • 22 minutes, 40 seconds
17: Table Bedrooms and Other Rule-Breaking Room Ideas with Julie Lause
Julie Lause, AKA the Bossy Mom, joins me today! She and I met and became friends on TikTok.
Most new parents face the pressure of trying to make sense of things and figuring out how to get everything done. When Julie had her daughter, she was a school principal three years into a school turnaround project. Yet she still managed to keep her home organized by setting up systems. The Bossy House project started because she had friends who were bosses at their jobs, but things at home were a mess. So they needed help.
Julie is a Co-founder and Chief of Schools of a small charter school organization in New Orleans. She does the Bossy House project on the side to help families put systems in place at home. Let’s dive into how she does that!
Show highlights:
How the Bossy House started.
The conflicting feelings Julie had after becoming a mom.
How Julie’s daughter’s “table bedroom” came about.
How the pandemic inspired many of those who took Julie’s Be the Boss of Your Home course re-imagine their homes in the wackiest of ways!
The life-changing benefits of customizing your home in any way you choose!
What keeps most people from making creative and functional changes to their houses?
What you need to consider when re-imagining your house.
How Julie helps moms develop the courage and confidence they need to create a personal area in the home that allows them to feel calm and happy.
How Julie deals with people who have anxiety around clutter and clearing up.
Why I believe that anxiety disorders are underdiagnosed in women.
Links and resources:
Connect with Julie: TikTok (@The Bossy House) and website
Send in your email to get Julie’s free workshop on setting up and customizing your command center at your house.
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
Get KC’s decluttering workbook when you sign up for her newsletter
1/23/2023 • 47 minutes, 55 seconds
16: Decluttering Sentimental Items
Clutter is something we all have to deal with at times. The biggest problem with clutter is not the item itself, but it’s in the emotional attachment we feel. This episode comes in response to a recent question I received: “Do you have any advice for going through boxes of stuff I’m emotionally attached to?” Let’s take a closer look at this important part in your functional space journey.
Show Highlights:
The only reason to declutter
How to identify what you can do with items you don’t plan to keep
Why your decluttering goals are important–and may differ from someone else’s
The steps to decluttering by categories:
Is it broken, expired, incomplete, or unusable?
What do I want to keep?
When it comes to keeping or getting rid of items, which is more important to me–the freedom of having it gone or the security in knowing it’s there?
For sentimental items:
Will this person know I’ve gotten rid of this item?
If I get rid of this item, will I feel guilty momentarily or for a long time?
Is the guilt I feel for getting rid of this item heavier than the weight I feel from having it around?
Why you have to honor your emotional context while aiming for functionalism
When you might need extra support in decluttering
Why it’s better to keep sentimental items out of joy–not guilt
Workable solutions for excessive sentimental items
What I’ve learned about getting rid of clothes
Resources:
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website (Click the “Hygiene” tab under “Resources” for more information about teeth brushing!)
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
1/16/2023 • 19 minutes, 59 seconds
15: When Brushing Your Teeth is Hard with Dr. Taylor McFarland DDS
Dental hygiene is a Struggle Care issue that elicits very strong feelings, as evidenced by the number of responses I receive to any social media post on this topic. Why do so many people feel strongly about brushing their teeth? Let’s talk about it with today’s guest!
Taylor McFarland is a pediatric dentist, wife, and mother who creates content on social media about dental care. She and I follow each other on TikTok, and I knew she was the perfect person to help us dive into the problem of why brushing teeth is a big Struggle Care topic for many people.
Show Highlights:
How Dr. Taylor, as a pediatric dentist, came to the unique viewpoint of understanding why mental health issues cause people to struggle with teeth brushing
Why everyone who experiences this struggle thinks they are THE ONLY ONE
Helpful tips on how to find a dentist who will most likely be more understanding
Why it helps to be honest about your specific barriers to brushing
The purpose behind brushing—and why it’s OK to skip the toothpaste!
How to “pick the pain” that will increase your functioning
The purpose of toothpaste–(Fluoride is the key!)
Why sodium lauryl sulfate is usually the ingredient that bothers most people who have toothpaste sensitivity
Dr. Taylor’s tips for people bothered by toothpaste, and toothbrush bristles
How apps can make brushing more tolerable, especially with electric toothbrushes
Why it sometimes helps to brush your teeth in a different place, like in the shower or the kitchen
Why charcoal toothpaste is NOT the best option for daily use
Resources:
Connect with Dr. Taylor: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website (Click the “Hygiene” tab under “Resources” for more information about teeth brushing!)
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
1/9/2023 • 46 minutes, 26 seconds
14: Weaponized Incompetence with Dr. Lesley Cook
Today’s topic is weaponized incompetence. If you aren’t familiar with the term, stay tuned and learn more with us. I’m thrilled to be joined again by Dr. Lesley Cook, who is a psychologist and good friend. She lives in Virginia and works mostly with neurodivergent kids, adolescents, and adults. Join us for the conversation!
Show Highlights:
An explanation of “weaponized incompetence” and what it means
How weaponized incompetence applies to the division of household labor
The key to analyzing weaponized incompetence: Why is it happening?
Why this is a tricky topic, especially for those who are neurodivergent and feel challenged
Why dignity should be preserved in these conversations with a partner
Why it’s OK to set boundaries even if someone is unintentionally hurting you
Ways to solve problems without shame or blame
The difference in functional barriers and weaponized incompetence
How to talk through solutions and support for a partner
How “maternal gatekeeping” plays into the dynamic
Why couples need to have conversations about care tasks, household chores, and childcare BEFORE they have kids
Why there is a difference between weaponized incompetence and learned helplessness
Dr. Lesley’s tips: “Approach your partner in good faith, open up the conversation, and ask for collaboration in finding something that works better for BOTH partners.”
Why the question should be, “Is exploitation happening?”
Why you can’t go on appearances regarding a division of labor
How to begin the approach with a partner or child: “This isn’t working for me; how can we figure this out together?”
Resources:
Connect with Dr. Lesley: TikTok and Instagram
Connect with KC: TikTok and Instagram
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
Helpful resources mentioned in this episode:
How Not to Hate Your Husband After Kids by Jancee Dunn
Fair Play by Eve Rodsky
The Sensory Child Gets Organized by Carolyn Dalgliesh
Ready for Take-Off by Theresa E. Laurie Maitland and Patricia O. Quinn
A Radical Guide for Women with ADHD by Sari Solden, Michelle Frank, and Ellen Littman
12/19/2022 • 1 hour, 4 minutes, 22 seconds
13: Q&A: Building Routines for Self-help Rejects
Today’s episode is a Q & A, so chill out while you listen, and take the time to do something kind for yourself, whatever that may be. I’ve been asked for advice about habits and discipline for neurodivergent people, which may be difficult for neurotypical people to understand. My message is that you are not broken if you haven’t yet found what works best for your brain. Let’s talk about it.
Show Highlights:
Why we need to begin with an explanation of the terms neurodivergent and neurotypical
Why it is very common for self-help motivation to fall short for neurodivergent people
How a neurodivergent person approaches routines and habits in different ways
Why I (as an ADHD person) am motivated by pleasure, projects, pressure/panic, patterns
Why it’s OK to realize that morning routines don’t work best for you
Why there is a difference between routine and rhythm/pattern
How I work around my house in patterns–not routines that are time-bound
How patterns can help circumvent “executive dysfunction” (Want to know more? Check out Episode 1 with Dr. Lesley Cook at www.strugglecare.com.)
What to look out for when your care tasks always require “pushing a boulder up a hill” energy
How I can make myself more “disciplined” when I have structure
Why you are NOT a self-help reject if you haven’t found what works best for you
Resources:
Connect with KC: TikTok and Instagram
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
12/12/2022 • 19 minutes, 1 second
12: When Parenting is Hard with MommaCusses
Parenting has its moments. Some are good, some are bad, some fill you with heart-melting fuzziness, and some make you ask, “What in the world was I thinking?” We all have visions of our parenting ideal, but real life gives us way too many opportunities to turn into the kind of mom we don’t even recognize. To sum it up, parenting is hard! If you are that parent who needs encouragement today, join us for today’s episode–and I welcome you to join us even if you are not a parent. You might learn something valuable, too!
I’m joined by Momma Cusses, aka Gwenna Laithland. She got her start as a writer at the age of 18 and soon branched out into content marketing and has worked with museums, professional sports teams, accounting firms, and universities to help refine their content. She started Momma Cusses in 2020 in hopes of normalizing modern motherhood and giving moms a place to connect and feel less alone.
Show Highlights:
Gwenna’s story: her history of parenting in reactive mode as a young mom who came out of an abusive relationship–and the realization that hit her about what she was doing to her daughter
Why there is not a magic answer or therapy tool for those reactive parenting moments when you lose your mind
The difference in responsive vs. reactive parenting
Gwenna’s advice about handling endless questions from your kids
How our past personal issues determine the behaviors that send us into “Reactive Parent Mode”
Why gentle parenting is NOT about how you parent but about how you regulate yourself
Why “gentle childing” should NOT be what you want for your child
How to do “offline work” with your child when emotions are not elevated
How to gain a new perspective on parenting under stress
Why there is immense value in a parent who can say, “I’m sorry”
Why we should stop demonizing screen time and teach our 21st-century kids to use devices responsibly
Why it’s healthy to realize that you do not have to accept every “invitation” from your child
How to find the “middle ground” when you are reparenting yourself while parenting your child
Resources:
Connect with Momma Cusses: Website, YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, and Facebook (Look for Gwenna’s book coming in Fall, 2023!)
Connect with KC: TikTok and Instagram
Get KC's Book, How to Keep House While Drowning
12/5/2022 • 48 minutes, 56 seconds
11: Q&A: How to Study (When No One Taught You)
I’m joined today by Dr. Lesley Cook as we tackle some listener questions around various topics. Come and join us now!
Show Highlights:
Tips for someone with no energy due to chronic illness: take care of the basics, conserve your energy, and use whatever hacks work for you
Tips for someone who struggles to cook dinner every night: switch things up, identify your mountain, and realize that a bowl of cereal for dinner is OK!
Tips for how to study when no one ever taught you: experience the information in different ways, make a memory game, and share the information back and forth with a study partner
How to study when you don’t know what’s important to study
How to use accommodations that are available to you
How to ask a teacher or professor for study help
How to take notes and encode the information in meaningful ways
How fidget toys, drawing, and doodling can help you listen and learn
Resources:
Connect with KC: TikTok and Instagram
Get KC's Book, How to Keep House While Drowning
11/28/2022 • 34 minutes, 16 seconds
10: You Can't Save the Rainforest if You're Depressed with Imani Barbarin
I’m excited to introduce you to today’s guest. Imani Barbarin is a disability rights and inclusion activist and speaker who uses her platform for conversations around the disability community. I’ve followed her for a while on TikTok and appreciate the way she expresses her opinions and helps educate the rest of us. Come join us now!
Show Highlights:
How Imani explored and discovered her passion for advocacy for disability and inclusion rights
How climate change and disability are linked
Why environmental ableism is a real thing
How people have become victims of their non-nuanced thinking, only wanting to be on the “right” side
Why the COVID pandemic has become a “mass-disabling” event, especially regarding mental health
Examples of ways in which the environmental movement has left those with disabilities behind
Why society has a general disdain for disabled people and believes that they don’t (or won’t) contribute to society
How the luxury of abled people trumps the necessity of the disabled
What the function of capitalism is on disabled bodies
How disabled people are used as pawns in the pro-choice/pro-life debate
Why there is inherent racism in the pro-life movement
What laziness is and is not
Resources:
Connect with Imani: Website and Instagram
Resources mentioned: https://www.sinsinvalid.org, https://disasterstrategies.org, https://www.americanprogress.org
Connect with KC: TikTok and Instagram
Get KC's Book, How to Keep House While Drowning
11/21/2022 • 52 minutes, 31 seconds
09: Q&A: A Traumatically Clean House
I have the perfect person to answer a question about “trauma cleaning” as a result of being raised by a parent who was emotionally and verbally abusive about keeping a clean house. This question came from Maria, a TikTok follower, and I’m jumping into this topic in today’s episode with my guest, Amanda Dodson. Join us!
Show Highlights:
Why this is a common feeling for many people when they sense barriers around care tasks
A good first step: Try to separate the behavioral home care task from the interpersonal problem with the parent
Why you have to decide how YOU want your home to be for your own comfort and safety–not how your parent would want it to be
Why it’s important to have compassion for yourself and awareness of what you need in your space to function well
How to identify what you need from your space and use a triage approach to get there
How to have your environment and emotions “meet” at a halfway point
How to take small steps toward organizing that work for you and your family
Connect with KC: TikTok and Instagram
Get KC's Book, How to Keep House While Drowning
11/14/2022 • 17 minutes, 47 seconds
08: When Creators Collide, Part II with Kate Leggett
If you joined us for Episode 7, you heard the beginning of my series with Kate. If not, you can listen to Part 1 on the Restoring Relationships Podcast. Kate and I met because of our differing viewpoints as we interacted through TikTok videos. We have since taken the time for discussion, proving that disagreements, conflicts, and drama are part of normal life that should be approached with mutual respect and understanding.
I’m continuing the conversation with Kate Leggett, a student in her final semester of graduate school to be a Marriage and Family Therapist. Kate uses her TikTok channel to help restore relationships. Even though our relationship didn’t begin well, we are making strides in communicating with respect and understanding around disagreements and conflicts. The ability to gain a fresh perspective and engage with another person in the face of disagreement is an important topic in today’s world! Listen in and be the “fly on the wall” as we model real-life conflict, relationships, and reconciliation. Join us for a closer look!
Show Highlights:
Why KC’s initial reaction to Kate was aggravation
The idea behind KC’s context: “How people treat you when they are angry is more revealing than how they treat you when they are happy.”
The idea behind Kate’s context: “Anger isn’t necessarily the issue, but the lack of repair after the anger is the issue.”
What our backgrounds and upbringings teach us about anger, hurt, abuse, relationships, and our worthiness
Why it’s different trying to communicate to the masses, like online, rather than on a one-to-one basis in a relationship
What Kate wishes she had done differently in her initial exchange with KC
Why we should be able to expect creators, especially those with expertise, to be accountable for their words
Why it’s tricky to make mental health content on social media
Why therapy content can’t replace in-person therapy
Thoughts on relationship boundaries, “gray areas,” and why “people are not disposable”
The difference in “Setting boundaries” vs. “Being boundaried”
Resources:
Connect with Kate: Website, TikTok, Podcast
Connect with KC: TikTok and Instagram
Get KC's Book, How to Keep House While Drowning
11/7/2022 • 41 minutes, 20 seconds
07: Teaser: When Creators Collide
I’m offering up an appetizer–because today’s show is a teaser for an upcoming two-part episode. Disagreements, conflicts, and drama are part of normal life, but there CAN be mutual respect and understanding at the same time.
I’m talking with Kate Leggett, a student in her final semester of graduate school to be a Marriage and Family Therapist. Kate uses her TikTok channel to help restore relationships, and we became aware of each other because of a video exchange on TikTok. Our relationship certainly didn’t begin well, but we are making strides in communicating with respect and understanding around disagreements and conflicts. Come along as we model real-life conflict, relationships, and reconciliation. Join us for a closer look!
Show Highlights:
How Kate felt the need to fill in the gray area in relationships around boundaries and toxic relationships
How online interactions can be transactional, personal, and very different with someone with whom you have a prior relationship
A look at the TikTok videos that started the interaction between Kate and KC–and the thoughts behind the comments
How people hold conflict in different and vulnerable ways
How KC and Kate made space for deeper conversations around their conflict
The difficulties around communication and conflict in the social media space
An overview of Kate’s podcast, RR The Podcast, which you can find on YouTube and Spotify (Part 1 of Kate and KC’s conversation is up now!)
Kate’s perspective on the much-used phrase, “You teach people how to treat you.”
How to listen to the rest of our “respectful drama”
Resources:
Connect with Kate: Website, TikTok, Podcast
Connect with KC: TikTok and Instagram
Get KC's Book, How to Keep House While Drowning
10/31/2022 • 28 minutes, 41 seconds
06: Is Too Much Self-Compassion a Bad Thing? with Dr. Lesley Cook
In our first episode, you heard my conversation with Dr. Lesley Cook about executive functioning. Because she has so much great information and wisdom to share, I decided to bring her back to discuss self-compassion. Is it a bad thing to have TOO MUCH self-compassion? Join us for the conversation with Dr. Lesley!
Dr. Lesley Cook is a psychologist who does a lot of work with ADHD and other neurodivergencies. Born and raised in Hawaii, she now lives in Virginia and works with children, adolescents, adults, couples, and families.
Show Highlights:
How to find the balance between the message of self-compassion and the need for better life management and progress
A basic understanding of self-compassion from Dr. Kristin Neff’s writings
A closer look at shame and how we experience it in relation to self-compassion
How to gently shift shame into self-compassion
How self-compassion can become a learned behavior that we pass down to our children
Resources:
Connect with Dr. Lesley: TikTok and Instagram
Connect with KC: TikTok and Instagram
Get KC's Book, How to Keep House While Drowning
10/24/2022 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
05: Gentle Organizing with Alison Lush
Do you have too much stuff? As you look around your home, is it crowded and cluttered? Does your space make you feel burdened, unhappy, and frustrated? If you said–or shouted–YES, you can’t miss today’s show. Join me to learn more about gentle organizing.
Alison Lush is a Certified Professional Organizer, Certified Virtual Organizer, and Master Trainer. After a 20-year catering career, Alison knew she needed better organization and management skills for her home and personal comfort. She learned to live and shop intentionally, creating and protecting the space in her home. Now she puts her expertise to work in helping others by empowering them and teaching them to put themselves at the center of their organization efforts.
Show Highlights:
How Alison became an organizer with a gentle spirit
Why our interactions with our home, space, time, and belongings form the foundations of our lives
Why Alison’s focus is on “organic organizing”
Alison’s answer to a question sent in by Samantha about dealing with clutter, letting things go, and the functionality of her space
How to organize your space by using Zone 1, Zone 2, and Zone 3—and consider the frequency of access for each item
Ways to keep, honor, and display memorabilia by identifying the risk level in letting items go
How to consider the purpose of items in our lives in deciding to keep them or let them go
Alison’s answer to a question from Kitty about decorating, a sense of style, and learning to feel good about her space
How to reframe what might look crappy and rundown to you as a life well-lived, meaningful, and full of love
Why your decor should fuel you and recharge your batteries
Alison’s answer to a question from Aria about separating and managing work life and home life
How to legitimize, categorize, and systemize your space for the best functionality
Why the professional organizing industry has the reputation of telling people to “just get rid of your stuff”
Resources:
Connect with Alison: www.alisonlush.ca and TikTok
Connect with KC: TikTok and Instagram
Get KC's Book, How to Keep House While Drowning
10/17/2022 • 59 minutes, 38 seconds
04: Q&A: A Housekeeper and an Organizer Walk Into a Bar…
Today, we start with my take on a question that I get asked almost every day about how to keep from losing motivation to complete tasks, especially those simple ones like cleaning a room. If you’ve beaten yourself up over this struggle, then join me for a fresh perspective on cleaning your space!
Show Highlights:
Why losing motivation to clean a room comes down to not realizing that tidying, organizing, and cleaning are three different projects
What is required to “tidy a room”: a five-step method
How organizing differs from tidying and cleaning
What the cleaning process entails
Why there’s nothing wrong with being a neat or messy person, but a functional level of organization is essential
How the tasks of tidying, organizing, and cleaning bring emotional barriers, especially for those with executive function disorders
Why we need to remember that these care tasks are morally neutral–and the only reason to do them is so we can function better
Resources:
Connect with KC: TikTok and Instagram
Get KC's Book, How to Keep House While Drowning
10/10/2022 • 12 minutes, 39 seconds
03: Eco-Shame with Rebecca Gray
You have probably heard me say, “You can’t save the rainforest if you are depressed.” The truth is that eco-shame and eco-perfectionism can get in the way of our taking steps toward better functioning. If you have ever felt guilty for not being “eco-friendly enough,” this episode is for you!
Rebecca Gray is an environmental epidemiologist. With her master’s degree in public health, she studies disease, the patterns of disease, and health at population levels within communities and countries. She also studies how factors in the environment impact health by causing and promoting disease. Rebecca works with government agencies like the EPA and CDC to develop water guidelines to keep pollutants out of the water supply.
Show Highlights:
How Rebecca has experienced forms of eco-shame in her profession
How some people push the environmental movement in ways that are able-ist
The trap we fall into to “embody the archetype” of the space we occupy
How social media plays into the eco-perfectionism pressure we feel
Why functionality matters more than the morality of what we do in care tasks, eating, the environment, etc.
Rebecca’s view of today’s environmental movement
Why we should ask ourselves how an eco-behavior affects our health and well being
What really does need to happen to prevent climate change
How our capitalistic society colors what we can do to be eco-friendly
How differing narratives make us feel pressured to make individual changes and collective changes to “save the world”
How to identify what we need to function well, fill in gaps with eco-friendly behaviors, and learn how to conserve our energy
How to take a more reasonable–and less stressful–view of sustainability swaps
Actions that have the least impact and the most impact on environmentalism
Rebecca’s advice about letting ourselves off the hook for the decisions we make
Resources:
Connect with Rebecca: LinkedIn
Connect with KC: TikTok and Instagram
Get KC's Book, How to Keep House While Drowning
10/3/2022 • 44 minutes, 51 seconds
02: Q&A: ADHD, Kids, & Care Tasks
Welcome to another episode of Struggle Care! In our first episode, you heard my conversation with Dr. Lesley Cook about executive functioning. Because she has so much great information and wisdom to share, I decided to bring her back to discuss how to navigate care tasks specifically for ADHD adults and kids. Join us for the conversation with Dr. Lesley!
Dr. Lesley Cook is a psychologist who does a lot of work with ADHD and other neurodivergencies. Born and raised in Hawaii, she now lives in Virginia and works with children, adolescents, adults, couples, and families.
Show Highlights:
How to find the balance between the message of self-compassion and the need for better life management and progress
A basic understanding of self-compassion from Dr. Kristin Neff’s writings
A closer look at shame and how we experience it in relation to self-compassion
How to gently shift shame into self-compassion
How self-compassion can become a learned behavior that we pass down to our children
Resources:
Connect with Dr. Lesley: TikTok and Instagram
Connect with KC: TikTok and Instagram
Get KC's Book, How to Keep House While Drowning
10/3/2022 • 34 minutes, 35 seconds
01: Executive Functioning with Lesley PsyD
Today, we are diving into executive functioning, which is a popular term being bounced around in mental health communities. I want to take a closer look at what it means and how it shows up in people’s lives. Join me to learn more from today’s guest!
Dr. Lesley Cook is a psychologist who does a lot of work with ADHD and other neurodivergencies. Born and raised in Hawaii, she now lives in Virginia and works with children, adolescents, adults, couples, and families. Dr. Lesley and I met on TikTok, and I’m happy to have her here today!
Show Highlights:
A common-language definition and explanation of executive functioning
How executive function deficits show up in someone’s life
How shame, guilt, and inconsistent performance are clues to executive function problems
The difference between motivation and task initiation
Why the underlying issue with lack of motivation is more about what a person values
How a person’s sense of self is affected when they believe their authentic self is “bad”
Why external supports are necessary when an internal system is down
Why rhythm is better than routine for those with executive function disorder
How neurotypical people experience interruptions with executive functioning on a regular basis because of overload and anxiety
How blips in executive function occur in neurotypical people with predictability and response to intervention—as opposed to someone with a diagnosis
How someone with ADHD can have incredible deficits in executive function on days when everything is going their way–and won’t respond reliably to normal interventions
How to build into each day differing levels of acceptable outcomes–and give yourself permission to choose what fits your needs at that moment
Lesley’s advice to those who think they have executive functioning issues
Resources:
Connect with Dr. Lesley: TikTok and Instagram
Connect with KC: TikTok and Instagram
Get KC's Book, How to Keep House While Drowning
Find great resources about executive functioning:
www.understood.org, www.psychologytoday.com, and www.chaad.org
10/3/2022 • 52 minutes, 46 seconds
Welcome to Struggle Care
Meet KC Davis! Struggle Care is a podcast about self-care by a host that hates the term self-care. Therapist KC Davis, author of the book How to Keep House While Drowning talks about mental health, care tasks, and more!