Episoder
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Are you a parent or an adult child who feels like you are “walking on egg shells” with each other? Are you angry or withdrawing from each other? This may be particularly true if the parent/child relationship was difficult.
Linda Nearhood and her daughter, Hope, struggled with each other for most of Hope’s childhood and their relationship was on the brink of ending when Hope reached her adult life.
In this episode, Jamie talks with Linda and Hope about the pain of their early relationship and the steps they took to, not only heal, but to find a healthy and viable relationship with each other. This episode offers practical ways to navigate healthy, long lasting relationships even when conflict arises.
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🔗 Listen to the Making Peace & Beyond Podcast and follow Jamie on all social media channels here! https://linktr.ee/makingpeaceandbeyond
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"Anyone can die but only the blessed grow old..."
Join Jamie Norton in this episode of the Making Peace and Beyond Podcast as she digs into the topic of healthy aging with special guest April Surovi, a certified dementia practitioner with over 14 years of experience. Together, they explore the importance of community, the misconceptions surrounding aging, and practical steps for maintaining mental and physical health in later years.
April shares her insights on the evolving perception of assisted living facilities and the critical role social engagement plays in preventing dementia. Discover why staying active and connected is essential for a fulfilling life after retirement and how society's fear of aging can be overcome with wisdom and a positive mindset.
Whether you're approaching your senior years or supporting a loved one, this episode offers valuable advice and heartfelt stories that inspire a new outlook on aging.
In this episode you’ll hear:
* Stereotypes vs the reality of aging
* How to know when to seek help and support
* The benefits of staying socially active and engaged
* Personal anecdotes and professional advice on thriving in old ageThanks for joining us for this enlightening conversation that aims to bring peace, joy, and freedom to all stages of life.
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We can be addicted to more than substances and recovery is more than just stopping- it is learning to truly live, love and successfully manage life’s stressors! In today’s episode, Jamie welcomes addiction medicine specialist, Raman Baishnab, MD to talk about the physiology of addictive behaviors and the complexities of recovery. Raman and Jamie talk candidly about their own struggles and give both personal and professional perspectives on successful recovery. Their stories and professional experiences offer greater understanding of one of least understood problems in our world and encourage compassion for our own or loved one's struggles.
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Are you struggling to understand the relationship of sex and love either in your marriage or your personal life? Are you puzzled about your inability to manage your body sexually? What is healthy sex anyway? How can God’s gift of sex destroy your ability to love? We live in a culture that has distorted the gift of sex in so many ways. In this episode Jamie has a frank discussion about sex with Spencer Kline, a licensed counselor and certified sex addiction therapist. Jamie and Spencer discuss the reality of sexual confusion, compulsively, and its power to enhance or destroy our relationships.
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Is your idea of yourself determined by another person’s opinion of you? Or a job? Or an achievement? Or some applause you have gotten? If so, you might be codependent! When we don’t know who we are, we become dependent on someone or something outside ourselves to tell us who we are. Unfortunately, our sense of who we are then becomes dependent on the opinion and affirmation of whoever or whatever our identity depends on. When the feedback is negative, we become anxious and try harder to regain approval.
In this episode, Jamie has a conversation with her colleague, Mary Ann Foote, about codependency and the danger of lost in another’s world and how to reclaim the your true identity.
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Blown apart by control, criticism, betrayal, and adultery; Eddie and Sarah sought divorce. They were culturally in line with the cancel culture. At the time of their divorce, neither wanted reconciliation. They were convinced that there was no way back to each other. God had other plans! Fortunately, they both sought their individual healing through Christ and healing programs offered through their church. Both loved their son and were committed to co-parenting him. Over the next couple of years, they began to become friends and eventually realized a new, more honest love and knew that they wanted to remarry. Today they describe their marriage as a relationship based on honesty, acceptance, forgiveness and vulnerability. It’s a great story of individual and marriage redemption.
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A wedding is a noun that celebrates a moment of romantic expectations. A marriage is a verb that chooses daily to share life’s blessings and difficulties with another person. All too often a wedding does not translate to a healthy marriage. Forty to fifty percent of all first marriages in The U.S. end in divorce. For second marriages the percentage jumps to 60-65%. Fairy tales, popular music, and romantic movies lead us to believe that another person can make us secure, happy, valuable and significant. What a heavy burden and unrealistic expectation to believe that another person can save us from ourselves and give us what only Christ can give!
In this episode, Jamie talks with marriage pastor, Michael Campbell, about the treasures and pitfalls of marriage and the importance of being independently mature enough in Christ to be maturely dependent on another person.
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Is your world filled with chaos, anxiety and stress? So many of our lives seem overwhelming and make us feel as if our life is unmanageable. It often seems that the more we try to find a sense of control, the more out of control life feels.
In this episode, Jamie and Heather Palisen discuss how a Christ centered adaptation of the 12-steps of recovery offers a way of managing daily life for all of us. No matter what happens in our life, this simple way of living can offer a peaceful way of living for all of us.
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None of us are exactly alike. Our histories, needs, feelings, beliefs and perceptions are different. The more time and space we share with another individual, the more individual differences we will inevitably confront. Conflict avoidance resulting from a dysfunctional or abusive history, fear of rejection, survival responses, and lack of problem-solving skills can and will destroy relationships over time. Healthy relationships are built on a foundation of love, truth, and acceptance that allows us to address conflict in a way that helps us to trust that the relationship can accommodate and grow from individual differences.
In this podcast, Jamie talks with her colleague and fellow counselor, Mark Valley, to explore common barriers and faulty beliefs that block honest communications in relationship and offer positive tools and approaches that can help to resolve and grow from individual differences.
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Life is not a mental illness. Life happens! Life hurts! Pain, loss and suffering are inevitable. God gave us the process of grief to adapt to change and to integrate loss. But we live in a world where we believe we should be “happy” all the time and we have come to think something is wrong with us when we hurt or suffer. We tend to avoid or numb pain and suffer in silence. We never embrace the painful truth or grieve it. It ultimately hardens our heart and we become angry bitter victims. Although we cannot control what happens to us, we can choose our response. During this episode, Jamie will visit with Dr. Tisha Carter to discuss healthy grieving and how embracing our pain and suffering can be an opportunity for spiritual, mental, emotional and relational growth.
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Anxious, stressed, irritable, lonely and exhausted? Ignoring your body, your spirit and your relationships? Are you working so hard to get to somewhere you are not that you never get to live where you are! Are you becoming a human doing instead of a human being? There is a place where we can live in peace, rest and relationship—it is called the present. It is the only place that we can really be alive, love, heal, grow and live in peace. We have such pressure to worry, plan, or focus on the future. Our busy-ness pulls us away from our present experience and relationships. In this podcast, Jamie and Vanesa Alcantara discuss the importance of keeping your head and body in the same place, living fully in the present and trusting the One who goes before us with our future.
Follow Vanesa and Soul Scan on Instagram @vanesaalcantara @soulscanwomen.
Register for the Soul Scan Women's Conference at the link below!
https://crossroadswired.ccbchurch.com/goto/forms/1079/responses/new -
At some point during our lifetime, we all will be victimized. Life is inevitably filled with pain and suffering. Relationships will hurt and betray us, we will experience loss and disappointment, and life will seem unfair and often brutal. Unfortunately, we have become a society that has developed a false belief that, “once a victim, always a victim.” Many develop a victim identity that leads to an angry, bitter and helpless outlook on life, keeps others at arms-length and prevents healthy relationships. Our hurtful history becomes the justification for hurting others and not working toward a brighter future. However, there is a huge difference being having been victimized and living as a victim - we CAN heal!
In today’s podcast, Jamie talks with Michele Abraham, a fellow counselor, to examine the dangers of the victim mentality and the healing necessary to move beyond painful experiences into a restored and healthy life.
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Are you tired? Are you always running, hustling, overworking, overwhelmed, stressed out, feeling like your life is on the edge of a cliff and will fall apart if you let go for a minute? You may be suffering from the “illusion of control.”
The truth is that you never had control in the first place. The illusion of control has plagued us since the beginning of man. What would happen if you released your grip on your situation. What if life was less about striving and more about surrender. What if you realized that your attempts to control what you cannot control are controlling you?
In this podcast, Jamie talks with Rose Vinci, Life Coach and Making Peace and Beyond leader, about issues of control and the gift of freedom that comes from surrender.
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Shame is the universal emotion and perhaps the most difficult to understand and manage.
Shame is more of an experience and is very difficult to define in words. It is the experience of
vulnerability, helplessness, and inadequacy. It makes us want to hide or disappear and live in
secrecy. In its’ various forms, shame isolates us from each other and prevents us from
becoming all that God gave us the potential to be. When shame permeates our life, it makes us
afraid to be known and restricts our ability to receive love.In this podcast, Jamie meets with Josiah Stumbo, the Young Adults Pastor for Grace CMA Church,
to discuss the various characteristics of shame and offer practical ways of healing. They talk
about how to find freedom from the devastating effects of shame in our lives and receive the
love of God, who already knows everything about us and loves us anyway. They point out that
finding the courage to come out of hiding and allowing ourselves to truly be known, we can
receive the love and of others and establish authentic community. -
Did you know that the number of people in the US that were diagnosed with a mental illness jumped from 600,000 (.003% of the population) in 1955 to 50 million (almost 20% of the population) in 2022. Two significant influencers for the dramatic increase have been the creation of the community mental health system and the development of psychoactive medications. Both have grown prolifically since the early 1950s. Is 20% of the population in this country truly mentally ill? Have we begun diagnosing the normal pain and suffering of life as a mental illness?
In this podcast, Jamie talks to Brock Lutz, a mental health therapist who is currently the director of health services at Hillsdale College. With a combined 65 years of experience in the field, Jamie and Brock do not deny the reality of mental illness. But could it be that the current mental health system not only fails to help people recover but often actively prevents recovery for those seeking help with life’s struggles?
While emphasizing the true healing power of Christ and community, they suggest that pain and loss are often an opportunity for spiritual, emotional, and mental growth. They point to overdiagnosis, overprescribing of psychoactive medications, the control of insurance companies, and the permanence of diagnostic labeling as problematic and often destructive. Jamie and Brock believe in personal responsibility for individual behavior and the essential nature of a relationship with God and a caring community in leading a normal and healthy personal and relational life. -
Are you still living like a victim because of something that happened to you in your past? Would you like to have the freedom to move beyond? Perhaps the biggest barrier that keeps us trapped in yesterday is unforgiveness. Unforgiveness not only keeps us stuck in the negative experiences of our lives, but it is mentally, physically, socially and emotionally damaging to us-not the other person. Forgiveness allows us to give up unrealistic hope that we can change the past and frees us from the bitterness, resentment and wasted energy spent on trying to change what we cannot change. In this podcast, Jamie Norton and Micheal Campbell will discuss some of the myths and misunderstandings about forgiveness that prevent us from embracing this amazing gift. They will help us to discover the incredible power of forgiveness that Christ died to give us.
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Do you find yourself doing some of the things your parents did even though you said you never would. Of course you do! Our first understanding of ourselves, our world, and how we fit into it are learned from our family and becomes the foundational lens through which we view ourselves and others. Whether we like it or not, our perception is influenced by the people we grew up with. We are all born into a story that is already going on. For generations, family rituals, beliefs, rules and patterns of behavior have developed the story of who and how “we” are, what “we” believe, and what is right and wrong. Unfortunately, many “family authorized” truths turn out
to be, not only false, but a dysfunctional and destructive family legacy. In this podcast, Jamie and her son, Ken, break the “no- talk” rule of dysfunctional families and talk about three generations of their family and how their family legacy of addiction influenced each of them. They examine their personal journeys into self-destruction and addiction and how a loving and gracious God offered them a new language and a new life.
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Take a moment and ask yourself: Am I enjoying fulfilling relationships and living a life filled with joy, meaning and purpose? Or am I living a life of struggle, discontentment, stress and difficult relationships? Am I doing things that I vowed not to do or condemning myself for my perceived imperfections? Am I trying to survive life as a set of problems to overcome or see experiences as opportunities for growth. Welcome to the Making Peace and Beyond podcast series where we explore and discover how to thrive instead of just survive. In this first podcast, Jamie Norton and her guest, Michael Campbell examine how our life stories are influenced positively and negatively by those who came before us and live life with us. We introduce the Making Peace and Beyond process of embracing the painful realities of life in an intentional way in order to understand them and to learn from them. Integrating our past into our present enables us to be the whole and joyful adults that God created us to be and to be a light shining in a dark world.