Episodios

  • Ep 94: Two White Women Talking about DEI
    May 20 2025

    In this vital episode, Julie and Ginger dive into the intersection of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) with trauma-informed practices. As DEI comes under political and cultural scrutiny, the hosts make the case that there is no trauma-informed approach without embracing DEI.

    • DEI is not optional for trauma-informed practice—it is essential.

    • Diversity includes more than race: gender, neurodiversity, age, ability, and lived experience.

    • Equity means adjusting systems and supports so everyone can thrive.

    • Privilege isn’t shameful—it’s an opportunity to advocate and build awareness.

    • Systems can either heal or harm—it's up to us to make them more inclusive.

    Diverse environments enhance safety, fairness, innovation, and connection.

    📚 Referenced Research & Resources:

    1. Merriam-Webster Definitions

      • Diversity: “The condition of having or being composed of differing elements.”

      • Equity: “Fairness or justice in the way people are treated.”

    2. SAMHSA’s Three E’s of Trauma

      • Event, Experience, and Effect

      • Source: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), Trauma and Violence

    3. Greater Good Science Center – UC Berkeley

      • Article: Why Diversity Matters

      • Summary: Diversity enhances well-being, social connection, and community resilience.

      • Website: https://greatergood.berkeley.edu

    4. uvonen et al. (2018) – UCLA Study on School Diversity

      • Title: Diversity and Peer Relations in Schools

      • Finding: Diverse classrooms foster safety, reduce loneliness, and encourage cross-race friendships.

      • Citation: Juvonen, J., Kogachi, K., & Graham, S. (2018). Psychological Science, 29(2), 230-241.

    5. Kenneth Braswell -https://www.kennethbraswell.com/

    • Website: https://www.attachmenttraumanetwork.org

    • Facebook: facebook.com/AttachmentTraumaNetwork

    • Email: info@attachmenttraumanetwork.org

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    41 m
  • Ep 93: Using the Arts as a Healing Tool
    May 6 2025

    In today’s episode of Regulated & Relational, Ginger Healy and Julie Beem are joined by a special guest, Cally Flox, a teaching artist, educator, and the lead author of A Teacher’s Guide to Resilience Through the Arts. Cally is the founding director of the BYU ARTS Partnership, where she works to enhance student learning and school culture by providing professional development for educators. With a wealth of experience teaching creative dance, integrated arts, and more, Cally brings a unique perspective to the conversation about supporting children impacted by early childhood trauma through arts education. Tune in to hear her insights on resilience, brain-compatible learning strategies, and the power of the arts in fostering healing and growth.

    Harvard’s Thinking Routines

    https://pz.harvard.edu/thinking-routines

    Cally’s summer art conference

    https://education.byu.edu/arts/arts_express

    Brain Gym

    https://breakthroughsinternational.org/programs/the-brain-gym-program/

    Cally’s Book-Teachers' Guide to Resiliency Through The Arts

    https://a.co/d/diaJrQU

    Resources Cally would like to share:

    https://advancingartsleadership.com/

    The Arts Playbook

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    54 m
  • Ep 92: Learning About and Celebrating Neurodiversity
    Apr 22 2025

    In this insightful episode, we sit down with educator, writer, and advocate Meghan Ashburn to explore how we can better support autistic students—both in and out of the classroom. Meghan shares her journey from teacher to autism advocate and how listening to autistic voices reshaped her entire approach.

    We dive into:

    • Why general education teachers are crucial allies for autistic students

    • How schools can become more neuro-affirming and inclusive spaces

    • The importance of centering autistic perspectives in both parenting and education

    • Shifting away from behavior-focused strategies to more compassionate, neurodiversity-affirming support

    📚 Resources Mentioned:

    • Beyond Behaviors by Dr. Mona Delahooke

    • Uniquely Human by Barry M. Prizant

    • The Reason I Jump by Naoki Higashida

    • Meghan’s website: Not an Autism Mom

    • The Au-some Book Club – a community for learning alongside autistic voices

    📝 Read Meghan's Articles:

    • "Gen Ed Teachers Hold the Key" – a powerful call to action for inclusive education

    • "Make the School Library More Accessible to Autistic & Disabled Kids"

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    49 m
  • Ep 91: Insights into Self-Compassion from TSS2025
    Apr 8 2025

    In this episode of Regulated & Relational, Julie Beem and Ginger Healy discuss the concept of self-compassion, drawing insights from Dr. Kristin Neff's work. Dr. Neff, a researcher in the field, defines self-compassion as treating yourself with the same kindness you'd offer a close friend. She breaks it into three elements: mindfulness (being aware of struggles), connection (understanding we're not alone in challenges), and kindness to self (responding with warmth instead of self-criticism).


    Julie shares her own struggles with self-compassion and how it can be difficult to confront pain, often either ignoring it or fighting it. Self-compassion, according to Dr. Neff, allows people to pause, acknowledge the difficulty, and respond with care.


    Dr. Neff emphasizes that self-compassion isn’t just a feel-good idea; it literally rewires the brain by activating the parasympathetic nervous system and increasing emotional regulation. It improves mental and physical health, supports decision-making, reduces stress, and enhances resilience.

    Julie and Ginger also provide five practical ways to incorporate more self-compassion into daily life, including mindfulness, self-care, journaling, connection with loved ones, and positive self-talk.


    Supporting Resources

    Dr. Kristin Neff

    https://self-compassion.org/

    Dr. Neff’s books

    https://www.amazon.com/s?k=dr+kristen+neff&crid=218H6KXMNYTJ&sprefix=dr+kristin+neff%2Caps%2C145&ref=nb_sb_noss_1



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    47 m
  • Ep 90: Brain Development Basics
    Feb 4 2025

    Join Ginger and Julie as they wrap up the season by talking about brain lessons.

    A little basic brain knowledge can go a long way in understanding behaviors and supporting children in your home or the classroom. Understanding brain development enables us to respond compassionately and helps children—and adults—thrive.

    Brains grow from the bottom up and the inside out. Although babies are born with brain structures in place, the development and activation of areas of the brain happen sequentially - from the bottom up and inside out.

    Brain development occurs sequentially, from the bottom up and inside out. Neural growth depends on environmental experiences, relationships, and developmental readiness—stages cannot be skipped. Chronic stress and trauma can disrupt this process, wiring the brain to expect stress and react to it intensely. However, due to neuroplasticity, the brain can adapt, heal, and reorganize itself, offering hope for those affected by trauma.

    Building resilience involves managing stress through deep breathing, meditation, proper sleep, hydration, nutrition, and healthy relationships. Caregivers play a vital role by offering responsive, nurturing care that supports neural tuning (strengthening) and pruning (removing unused connections). These processes help children learn trust, self-regulation, and efficient learning. Storytelling also fosters brain development by soothing stress responses and enhancing connection.

    Supporting Resources

    Dr. Wendy Suzuki

    https://www.wendysuzuki.com/

    Good Anxiety

    https://a.co/d/7jsv01N

    Dr. Lisa Feldman Barrett

    https://lisafeldmanbarrett.com/

    7 ½ lessons on the brain book

    https://a.co/d/fq0zTlx

    Dr. Bessel Van der kolk -Trauma Research Institute

    https://traumaresearchfoundation.org/programs/faculty/bessel-van-der-kolk/

    Jessica Sinarski- Light up the Learning Brain

    https://a.co/d/fR1gXhb


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    43 m
  • Ep 89: Adult Nervous Systems
    Jan 21 2025

    Join Julie and Ginger as they speak with Dr. Lori Desautels


    Dr. Lori Desautels has been an Assistant Professor at Butler University since 2016, teaching undergraduate and graduate programs in the College of Education. The Applied Educational Neuroscience Certification, created by Lori in 2016, is specifically designed to meet the needs of educators, counselors, clinicians, and administrators who work with children and adolescents who have experienced adversity and trauma.


    https://revelationsineducation.com/

    Lori has written 6 books

    https://revelationsineducation.com/the-book/


    Register for her symposium here

    https://www.butler.edu/education/education-neuroscience-symposium/


    Register for her summer cohort certification in educational neuroscience here

    https://www.butler.edu/education/graduate-programs/applied-educational-neuroscience/


    Dr. Lori will be doing a 3-hour deep dive during our Academy Day/Pre-Con at our Creating Trauma-Sensitive Schools Conference in Feb in Atlanta! Register now!


    Here are a couple of favorite takeaways from our episode that Lori beautifully teaches.

    “Touchpoints are moments of connection that, when any of us feel heard and seen, just changes our biology. When someone sees, feels, or hears us…wow, that’s a lift. A dopamine hit or a serotonin hit. It feels so nourishing to us. “


    “We have this beautiful nervous system, which is the brain and body, in constant communication; there’s this bi-directional highway. Our nervous system’s priority is survival. Anytime we sense or feel something in our environment, relationship, or experience that feels threatening or unsafe, our nervous system goes into a state of protection.”

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    35 m
  • Ep 88: Let's Inspire, Inform, Instruct and Include Students
    Jan 7 2025

    Join Julie and Ginger as they speak with Anashay Wright, a national award-winning educator, speaker, consultant, and ​​founder of Authentic Disruption and Disruptive Partners, a community-based leadership development program.


    https://www.anashaywright.com/


    Anashay describes her journey by telling a story of inclusive school leaders who surrounded her family with community resources when they were in need. She says that school and district leaders prioritized people over policy, which led to Anashay falling in love with helping children, and she is now paying it forward.


    Here are some great takeaways from Anashay:


    The curriculum can’t save you.


    Brainwash them into greatness.


    Use the community as a connector.


    Use tech and AI to educate.


    Kids don’t need Saviorism; they need servant leaders.


    Kids can read! They read what they want. You can drive solutions with what kids CAN do. If they argue, teach them to argue like an attorney.


    Beware of the cycle of impoverished thinking.


    Give them the power to express themselves, and then listen to them.


    Beware of deficit thinking that shames people.


    What are the gifts and talents that you bring into the space?


    Let them dream. Lead with what’s possible. It starts with the adult dreaming.


    Make their vision your mission.


    Lead with radical, disruptive love.


    The question isn’t how we protect kids from trauma; it’s how we help them respond to it when they encounter it.


    Our favorite quote from Anashay:

    When we start to lead with what’s possible and the promise, shift our thinking, and actually believe in ourselves and then in our children, we will disrupt the system. Disruptive Innovation means building something better and ignoring what we currently have. In a classroom, that means if all the other teachers are writing kids up, I’m not going to write kids up. I’m simply gonna ask kids, “What’s wrong, what’s the solution, and how are you feeling?” The big and small moves you make every day when nobody is looking disrupt the system.


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    35 m
  • Ep 87: Understanding Interoception: The Mind-Body Disconnect
    Dec 24 2024

    Join Julie and Ginger in speaking to Occupational Therapist, Kelly Mahler about Interoception and the body-mind disconnect.


    Kelly teaches that as caregivers and educators, we should be curious without expectation of a response from the children we work with.


    She also explains that we all have different internal experiences; our first step is to believe others and their experiences.


    Kelly tells us that before we start working on helping and healing the body-mind connection, we really need to work towards a place of regulation and help that person feel safe in their body and environment.


    Check out her website here:

    https://www.kelly-mahler.com/


    And her Big Book of Interoception Games (and other resources) here:

    https://www.amazon.com/Books-Kelly-Mahler/s?rh=n%3A283155%2Cp_27%3AKelly+Mahler

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    40 m
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