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Ep. 30- In this profound interview, Candace Thompson, a licensed marriage and family therapist with 20 years of experience in the field of psychology, delves into her journey from aspiring to be a lawyer to finding her true calling in therapy. Candace discusses the importance of mental health awareness, the intricacies of work-life integration, and the interplay between faith and mental health. She shares insights into the unique challenges and opportunities presented by the digital age for mental health professionals and clients alike. Candace also explores her approach to therapy, the distinction between different mental health professionals, and her initiatives to educate both the public and other professionals about mental health. Emphasizing the importance of genuine human connection and the potential impact of therapy on personal growth, Candace's story is a testament to the power of following one's passion and the enduring importance of mental health support in today's world.We also cover: -Therapy vs. Coaching- Faith-Based Psychotherapy and Personal Growth- The Impact of Theology on Mental Health- Maintaining Personal Balance as a Therapist- The Therapeutic Process and Entrepreneurial Spirit- Advice for Aspiring Therapists- Education on Scope of Practice for Coaches- Embracing Dreams and Digital DiscernmentConnect with Candice and stay up to date with her speaking engagements and events!WebsiteLinkedInDateology PodcastThanks for listening to the Movement Soul Collective Podcast! If this conversation resonated with you, share it with a friend and consider giving us a 5 star rating and review! Your feedback matters so connect with us through the links below and and join the community! Join the MSC community @movementsoulcollectivepod Connect with Stefani on Instagram @stefani_mccullahWork with Stefani: https://www.stefanimccullah.com/
SoCandy, born Candace Thompson was raised in O'Fallon, Illinois. She grew up in a military family, constantly moved from place to place as a child, however learning many skills that would allow her to follow her dreams. She is destined to make a name in the music industry. Candy is making her way in the industry and is determined to be the voice for women all over the world. Candy has passion and is motivated to push hard and thrive for her greatness. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nalasden88/message
Joe Madison brings back Civil Rights Attorney Carol Powell Lexing and Candace Thompson as they demand legal action against the cheerleaders who bullied a 13-year-old girl cheerleader in Bryant, Arkansas.
Artist, activist, founder of C.U.R.B., Candace Thompson will change the way you see the natural world around you—if you're ready to pay attention. Candace's trained looking and researching includes an appreciation of spontaneous urban plants, known to many of us as weeds. "Those plants are the ones that are adapting to be able to survive and some of them are wild crop cousins to the plants that we eat everyday. Like black nightshade, it's the wild crop cousin to our tomatoes. At what point are we gonna need to be able to call on some of that genetic legacy and bring it back to our tomatoes?" On this episode, Candace uplifts people working directly with the land and creating abundance, from Ellie Irons and Anne Percoco at the Next Epoch Seed Library to Sheryll Durrant and Renee Keitt of Kelly Street Garden to Nathan Hunter at the Bronx River Foodway. Listen in to hear about urban foraging, optimistic ideas about climate change, and more.Want to stay up to date on the latest Speaking Broadly episodes? To hear more conversations with Dana Cowin and her fierce guests, subscribe to Speaking Broadly (it's free!) on iTunes or Stitcher. If you like what you hear, please take a moment to rate + review us on Apple's podcast store and follow Dana on Instagram @speakingbroadly and @fwscout. Thanks for tuning in!Heritage Radio Network is a listener supported nonprofit podcast network. Support Speaking Broadly by becoming a member!Speaking Broadly is Powered by Simplecast.
In this episode we had Candace Thompson of Canvases with Candace who gave us a peek into what she's been doing and how she got to where she is today. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/dothatshitscared/support
Visual artists Amy Youngs and Candace Thompson work closely with ecology and technology to create communal, joyful, and loved filled connections to each other and the more-than-human world with whom we share the planet. Respond to the uncertainty we are experiencing on a planetary scale by becoming deeply embedded in your local community and aware of the plant life around you as you forage for food in your neighborhoods throughout the changing seasons of the year. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit livablefutures.substack.com
There are edible plants all around us, but without an expert, you shouldn't go tasting random bushes. So where should you start? It may feel daunting, but the ability to find your own food, whether in urban parks or an untouched forest, opens up a world of cultural and culinary opportunities. A plant you may have considered a weed could be a salad for six the next time you have friends over. A mushroom hunting expedition could connect you to a new community. The opportunities are endless.That's why this week, we unpack foraging practices. We'll start small – literally speaking – to learn how smartphone apps are paving the way for a new generation of mushroom foragers. We hear about the significance of foraging on Indigenous North American lands, explore one entrepreneur's resourceful use of foraged ingredients. In our final segment, and offer some safety tips for budding foragers.Further Reading and Listening:Learn more about “Wildman” Steve Brill's foraging tours.Find out about the New York Mycological Society's membership and foraging walks on their website. They use the iNaturalist app to document and identify fungi. Tom Bigelow also highly recommends the app La fonge du Québec.Listeners from Massachusetts can learn more about the Nipmuc Nation at nipmucnation.org. To learn more about indigenous tribes in other parts of the U.S., visit native-land.ca. To support the I-Collective, head to icollectiveinc.org. Listen to the full episode of The Speakeasy with guest, Bianca Miraglia, here.Keep Meat and Three on the air: become an HRN Member today! Go to heritageradionetwork.org/donate. Meat and Three is powered by Simplecast.
How can we learn to forage in cities—and use Instagram to get to know the living world around us?Artist, organizer, urban forager, and social media ninja Candace Thompson (Collaborative Urban Resilience Banquet) joins Wythe and Melissa to dig into a variety of practical and visionary topics about what wild foods we can harvest in urban areas and preservation techniques from pickling to making your own beer. Candace tells us about plants that we are usually blind to in urban areas—weeds. Some weeds are not only edible but can have fewer toxins in them than store-bought foods! To educate the world about her citizen-science experiments and her unusual foods of choice, she uses Instagram to tell the stories of weeds. This episode dives into foraging in NYC, testing and cleaning up polluted soils, learning from hundreds of growers on Instagram, and how one a-ha! moment in nature led to a lifelong curiosity about the world around her. This episode goes all over the place, like a rhizome: give it a listen and subscribe for more!Heritage Radio Network is a listener supported nonprofit podcast network. Support Fields by becoming a member!Fields is Powered by Simplecast
In our previous episode, we explored the stories and experiences of two Black dance leaders, their leadership styles, how they navigate their Blackness in their workplaces, as well as ways that they advocate for their Black dancers. Today, we’re peeling back another layer, getting to know two dance leaders in dance advocacy and dance management. […]
During the pandemic, outdoor and indoor spaces are being reconceptualized to better suit new ways of living, working, and eating. In this episode we’ll explore the ways familiar spaces are shifting to become more hygienic, more profitable, and more accessible. We start with a story about the expansion of outdoor dining into New York City’s sidewalks and streets. Then we travel to outer space to learn how astronauts are abandoning freeze-dried foods for home cooked meals. We wander through a park that aims to forge a healthier relationship between people and plants. And we examine how one vertical farm has reimagined both agriculture and office space. Further Reading:Watch Candace’s explorations in urban foraging on a series of videos on the CURB’s Instagram.Learn more about food in space on Episode 45 of Meat and Three: Houston, We Have Dip n Dots. Listen on our website here or wherever you get your podcasts.Heritage Radio Network is a listener supported nonprofit podcast network. Support Meat and Three by becoming a member!Meat and Three is Powered by Simplecast.
This week, we join research studio Extrapolation Factory, Brooklyn’s Speculative Fiction Writers Group, NYC Prepper Jason Charles and other community members in charting a course for what’s next. • Brooklyn, USA is produced by Sachar Mathias, Emily Boghossian, Shirin Barghi, Charlie Hoxie, Khyriel Palmer, and Mayumi Sato. If you have something to say and want us to share it on the show, here’s how you can send us a message: https://bit.ly/2Z3pfaW • Thanks to Jaime Cho, Sharlene Chou, Chuankui Jiang, Lucas Contino, Chuck Kuan, Susan Lau, Nancy Man, Estella Natal, Linda Rose, Mauricio Ruiz, Francie Scanlon, Dominic Wong, Emily Wu, Jordan Wu, Way Zen, John Peery, Alexis Powell, Candace Thompson for participating and performing in the Speculative Design workshop, and to Ignacio Garnham Brandes, Kevin Caldwell, Yuxin Cheng, Jenny Liu, Anh-ton Tran, Jonas Voigt for facilitating. And special thanks to Judy Yenti Chu, Guido Garaycochea, Nung-Hsin Hu at the The Queens Museum New New Yorkers Program. • LINKS: Brooklyn, USA - https://www.bricartsmedia.org/Brooklyn-USA Extrapolation Factory - https://extrapolationfactory.com/ Brooklyn Speculative Fiction Writers Group - http://www.bsfwriters.com/ NYC Preppers - https://nycpreppers.com/ • TRANSCRIPT: https://bit.ly/3m6YNW2 • BRIC Events and Classes: https://bit.ly/2WV72tq • Follow us on Twitter and Instagram @BRICtv
Candace Thompson co-Host of the Disrupters talks about The Wild child 12 Pillars of Business...
The Help Show interviews three amazing women for Women History Month. Pam Fields founder of Visible Unity, a minister, scholar and activist, Candace Thompson community outreach manager at Baylor Scott and White Wellness Center at Juanita J Craft Recreation Center and Kenyatta Black LPC. NiEtta and Dr. Ken have an open dialogue about equity for all and the importance of gender equality. They also discussed how equality is beneficial to society as a whole. In economic gains can be made with the emancipation and empowerment of women. With women in the untidy center, we confront difficulties in the present working environment. In this monthly podcast, we further the conversation about men and women, equality and equity. Fairness and equality is not a female issue, it's a social and financial objective. NiEtta sits down privately with Kenyatta Black and discusses how women's rights and the feminist movement have a long, storied place in American history, and how trauma has occurred over the years because of social and economic hardship. They also talk about the # Metoo movement and how it has given women a platform to talk about mistreatment and also has held their oppressors accountable for their conduct. They also talk about modern roles of the household and wonder if duties are no longer gender driven and the importance of communication as a way to define the roles in a relationship.
Jackie has on comedian friends Carmen Morales & Candace Thompson to talk openly about issues with Men, traveling to Montreal, competition among women, people giving them unsolicited comedy advice and more!
Jackie has on comedian friends Carmen Morales & Candace Thompson to talk openly about issues with Men, traveling to Montreal, competition among women, people giving them unsolicited comedy advice and more!
Candace Thompson, Ruben Paul and Melvin Robert talk comedy, depression, becoming a comedian and everything else that comes to mind. Melvin is still searching for a name for his album. Ruben is late.
Candace Thompson, a Trinidad and Tobago native, is a dancer, choreographer, certified fitness professional and owner of Candace Dance Fitness. She's also the Artistic Director of ContempoCaribe and Founding Executive Director of Dance Caribbean COLLECTIVE. In this episode, Candace shares her experience of being a dance and fitness entrepreneur and why its important to support and preserve Caribbean Dance cultures. Read more about Candace on carryonfriends.comEnjoyed the show? Please remember to leave a rating and review on iTunes. Connect with us on Social MediaCarry On Friends - Twitter | Instagram | FacebookSupport the show (http://glow.fm/carryonfriends)