a podcast for helping professsionals
Soul Embodied Conversations
with SOMATIC PSYCHOTHERAPISTS TAJAH SCHALL & rachael collins
An experiential podcast for helping professionals, activists, and those who yearn for reconnection - with each other, the natural world, and spirit. Listen in as we contemplate how to connect across differences in an embodied way. We invite you to feel, move your body, engage and be inspired.
Rituals That Remember: Grief, Lineage & the Courage to Gather Differently
This episode of Soul Embodied Conversations invites listeners to explore the intricate nature of rituals in everyday life and during holiday gatherings. Tajah and Rachael discuss their personal experiences with rituals, ranging from childhood memories to present day practices. They address the complexities of traditional celebrations and advocate for infusing these occasions with authenticity and intentionality. Through sharing their own stories, they encourage listeners to engage with rituals as spaces for healing, connection, and transformation, fostering a deeper understanding of the balance between honoring the past and creating a future aligned with personal and collective values.
Where Grief Meets the Sacred: Listening to the Land, Listening to Each Other
Tajah and Rachael explore the practice of connecting to land, emphasizing its aliveness and the grief that often accompanies this exploration. Through an immersive, contemplative approach, listeners are invited to embrace the natural elements around them and to recognize the histories carried by the land they stand on. This episode guides the audience in establishing a present, meaningful relationship with their surroundings, touching upon the importance of recognizing indigenous histories and embodying mindfulness in every aspect of life, creating a heartfelt dialogue with the world.
Dancing with our Wounds: Practicing Presence in the Messy Middle
Tajah Schall and Rachael Collins, hosts of Soul Embodied Conversations, invite listeners into an introspective journey of healing through story. Leaving behind their roles in academia, they focus on nurturing authentic connections, exploring how differences in identity, such as race and sexual orientation, impact relationships. In an illuminating discussion, they recount their shared experience at a grief tending retreat in Colorado, where they confronted their personal wounds. The episode highlights the importance of understanding and embracing one's wounds, and how this acceptance can lead to profound healing and connection within diverse circles.
Can white and Black women really be friends?
This engaging episode invites listeners into the realm of somatic psychotherapy with hosts Tajah Schall and Rachael Collins. They discuss their shift from academic roles to fostering environments that cultivate deep relationships with 'hard things.' By sharing personal experiences and cultural narratives, the duo underscores storytelling's powerful influence in bridging human connections. They reflect on their journey of overcoming initial perceptions to form a lasting friendship, using their story as a testament to the profound impact of vulnerability and openness in transcending societal projections and assumptions.
How Do We Stay Relational Amidst Massive Destabilization?
Can we stay in contact with self & other during destabilizing times? Making space for an imperfect process…
In this episode, Rachael and Tajah discuss ways to stay present, embodied and relational with others in this intensely unstable moment in the United States.
Claiming Our Medicine
In this episode, Rachael and Tajah discuss their ongoing journey of identifying and claiming their soul medicine, both separately and together. This is a tender one. Listen in and get a taste of how Rachael and Tajah support one another in their collaborative endeavors. How can we each honor the gifts that come to us naturally - instead of being pulled only towards what capitalism says we should be doing.
Is Therapy Enough?
In this episode, Tajah and Rachael explore how helping professionals can begin to contemplate the ways in which individual therapy spaces aren’t enough for our current paradigm of collective suffering. Listen in and practice along side of them. Their deep invitation and challenge for us all is to get curious to engage outside of the norm as helping professionals, while staying rooted in our embodiment.