Real Talk with Tina and Ann

When Systems Fail

58 min · 27. Mai 2026
Episode When Systems Fail Cover

Beschreibung

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2123315/fan_mail/new] A Mother’s Day drive turns into a hit-and-run with a drunk driver, and we walk through the shock of trying to keep our kids calm while the help we expect never arrives. We connect that crash to a separate crisis where mental health funding collapses without warning, and we ask what families are supposed to do when broken systems hold the power. • a rear-end collision that flips a normal day into survival mode • the trauma of being dismissed by 911 and left waiting with injured kids • documenting evidence and pushing a police department to take action • the emotional whiplash of gratitude alongside anger and heartbreak • a mental health safety issue triggered by sudden funding cuts • special needs services and why families keep getting denied support • insurance fights, medication delays, and the cost of healthcare barriers • accountability, advocacy, and staying functional when you are depleted • kindness from strangers and why compassion changes outcomes Feel free to send us your stories Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2123315/support]

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Episode The Voice Beneath the Silence with Ann Cover

The Voice Beneath the Silence with Ann

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2123315/fan_mail/new] Your voice is more than the words that come out of your mouth. It tells the story of what you learned was safe, what you learned would be punished, and what you believed would finally make you seen. Sometimes "finding your voice" isn't about becoming more confident. It's about healing the parts of yourself that learned it was safer to stay silent. In this deeply personal episode, Ann reflects on her conversation with voice expert Barbara McAfee and the powerful idea of creating a "vocal autobiography" looking back at the experiences that shaped not only how we speak, but why we speak the way we do. She explores how trauma, shame, secrecy, and fear can live in our voices through held breath, tight throats, quiet words, or silence, and how healing often begins by uncovering the voice that has been there all along. Ann also shares her own journey of growing up autistic, learning to communicate in a world that often misunderstood her, and discovering that maybe the problem was never her voice—it was that the world wasn't always listening in her language. This preamble to Barbara's episode gives insight and invites us to consider a powerful question: Which voice gets the microphone in your life? The inner critic that says you're not enough, or the quieter, truer voice beneath the fear? Whether your voice is expressed through words, writing, art, music, boundaries, or simply asking for help, this episode is an invitation to stop hiding the parts of yourself that have been waiting to be heard. Because healing isn't about becoming someone new. It's about remembering who you've been all along. If you've ever felt misunderstood, silenced, or afraid to take up space, this conversation is for you. Listen now, subscribe, leave a review, and share this episode with someone who needs the reminder that their voice matters. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2123315/support]

6. Juli 202614 min
Episode What If We Stopped Making Children adapt to a One-Size-Fits-All School and Started Building the System Around Them? Cover

What If We Stopped Making Children adapt to a One-Size-Fits-All School and Started Building the System Around Them?

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2123315/fan_mail/new]  Erin Simpson on Trauma-Informed Education, Mental Health, Autism, ADHD, and Helping Every Child Thrive  A child melts down in class and the adult response is almost automatic: calm down, make a better choice, try harder. We want better outcomes, but those words often land on a nervous system that’s already in fight, flight, or freeze. Today we’re joined by Erin Simpson, principal of Grizzly Academy in the Wadsworth City School District in Ohio, to talk about what changes when a school stops forcing kids to fit the system and starts building the system around the child. Erin shares the real story behind Grizzly Academy, a relationship-based, trauma-informed public school program created for students who struggle in traditional settings. We dig into what the day actually looks like: a calmer start with dedicated transportation, fewer transitions, consistent routines, multi-age groupings, small class sizes, and intentional staffing that keeps learning going even when a student needs support. We also talk academics, including flexible skill-based grouping and Orton-Gillingham literacy instruction, plus what it takes to help older students stay on track for graduation. The conversation goes deeper into student mental health and the gaps families face when they need resources fast. Erin breaks down co-regulation and the Three Rs framework: regulate, relate, reason, along with why behavior is communication and how tools like functional behavior assessment can replace guesswork with clarity. We also name the human side of the work, including staff burnout, triggers, and the power of a team that checks in and taps out when needed. If you care about supporting kids with anxiety, trauma, autism, ADHD, and big emotions, this one is for you. Subscribe, share with a parent or educator, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2123315/support]

1. Juli 20261 h 0 min
Episode The Longer You Hold onto Things, the Heavier They Get: What can you put down? Cover

The Longer You Hold onto Things, the Heavier They Get: What can you put down?

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2123315/fan_mail/new] A single quote sparks a hard truth: the longer we hold on to pain, the heavier it becomes. We talk through emotional weight, how survival and masking become habits, and why healing starts when we decide some things no longer belong on our shoulders.  • the quote that frames the whole message: holding on makes things heavier  • emotional weight we carry: shame, fear, resentment, disappointment, pressure to perform  • how trauma and grief become “normal” when we adapt for years  • what writing Loving Differently reveals about carrying responsibilities, secrets, and shame  • living with diagnoses like autism, ADHD, dyslexia, fetal alcohol and the cost of masking  • choosing to stop adapting to survive and start living  • lessons from my children: needs are not weakness, vulnerability can be safe, love can look different  • perfectionism as an extra burden that blocks real connection  • why we cling to anger, guilt, and shame and what we fear letting go means  • letting go without erasing the past and carrying pain in a healthier way  If today's episode spoke to you, I hope that you'll share it with someone who may be caring more than they realize.  Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2123315/support]

29. Juni 20269 min
Episode The Things We Carry After We Leave: Part 2 with Anna Hebra Flaster Cover

The Things We Carry After We Leave: Part 2 with Anna Hebra Flaster

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2123315/fan_mail/new] A family gets 48 hours to leave Cuba and suddenly everything becomes a decision made under fear. We sit down with author and journalist Anna Hebra Flaster for Part 2 of her story, and what unfolds is equal parts heartbreaking and darkly funny, from translating “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” to realizing how quickly a new country can turn “difference” into a test you have to pass. We talk about the powerhouse women who carried the family forward, including the unforgettable moment Anna’s aunt smuggles her educational credentials out of Cuba so she can rebuild a career in the United States. We also dig into the loud, loving chaos of a home where politics divide people and still don’t break the bond. Along the way, Anna gives us a real portrait of her father, a tough, hardworking man shaped by scarcity, racism, and an honor code that doesn’t always translate to American life, yet still full of tenderness and devotion. The conversation doesn’t stop at survival. We go into identity and shame, the sting of being reminded you’re “not from here,” and what it takes to reclaim pride in your language and culture. Anna also opens up about motherhood, postpartum depression, and the moment a psychiatrist names what she couldn’t: losing your home, world, and voice overnight is trauma, and it can echo decades later. We close by looking at Cuba today, ongoing repression, and why migration stories deserve more humanity than politics. If this moved you, subscribe, share it with someone who cares about immigration and freedom, and leave a review so more listeners find these stories. What part of Anna’s journey hit you the hardest? Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2123315/support]

24. Juni 20261 h 5 min
Episode Beside Every Struggle is a Gift: The Art of Neurodivergence Cover

Beside Every Struggle is a Gift: The Art of Neurodivergence

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2123315/fan_mail/new] What if the very things we've been taught to hide are actually our greatest strengths? For so long, neurodivergence has been viewed through the lens of deficits, delays, and difficulties. But what if we looked at it differently? What if, beside every struggle, there was also a gift? In this solo episode, Ann explores the beauty, complexity, and strengths that often accompany neurodivergence. From autism and ADHD to FASD and learning differences, this conversation challenges the idea that being different means being less than. Drawing from her own experiences as a neurodivergent woman, adoptee, and mother of neurodivergent children, Ann shares how she learned that our differences are not something to overcome but something to understand. This episode is about seeing beyond labels and behaviors and recognizing the incredible gifts that often live right beside the struggles. It's about shifting from asking, "What's wrong?" to asking, "What strengths are we overlooking?" Because neurodivergence is not a flaw to fix. It is a different way of experiencing the world. And sometimes, the very thing that makes life harder is also the thing that makes life more beautiful. 🎙️ Join us as we celebrate the art of neurodivergence and discover why our differences may be our greatest gifts. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2123315/support]

18. Juni 202616 min