Help The People

Amputated Soul

13 min · 11. apr. 2026
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Beskrivelse

In this episode of Help the People, Shannon Riley explores the idea of an “amputated soul” the emotional and spiritual disconnection that comes from trauma, survival, and silence. This isn’t just about pain; it’s about what was lost, what was buried, and the difficult work of becoming whole again. If you’ve ever felt numb, disconnected, or like you’re not fully present in your own life, this conversation will meet you where you are and challenge you to begin reclaiming yourself.

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Alle episoder

32 episoder

episode Selective Urgency cover

Selective Urgency

In this episode of Help the People, Shannon Riley explores the growing call for Black athletes to boycott Southern colleges following recent Supreme Court decisions surrounding congressional districts and voting rights. But beneath the headlines lies a deeper question: why are young Black men so often asked to carry the burden of protest while many of the everyday crises devastating Black communities receive far less organized urgency? This episode examines selective outrage, the economics of opportunity, and the pressure placed on Black athletes to sacrifice scholarships, careers, and mobility for political causes. Shannon also challenges the absence of African American male sports figures from the conversation and asks why issues like violence, addiction, poverty, fatherlessness, poor education, mental health, and community trauma rarely spark the same level of national mobilization. Raw, reflective, and thought-provoking, this conversation wrestles with protest, power, responsibility, and the uncomfortable contradictions surrounding justice in America.

27. maj 202613 min
episode Podcast Episode: “Two Brothers, Two Traumas, Two Different Outcomes” cover

Podcast Episode: “Two Brothers, Two Traumas, Two Different Outcomes”

Podcast Episode: “Two Brothers, Two Traumas, Two Different Outcomes” Episode Description In this deeply personal episode of Help the People, Shannon explores the lives of two brothers who survived catastrophic trauma but traveled vastly different emotional paths afterward. One brother suffered burns over 80% of his body and rebuilt his life through resilience and determination. Another survived being shot six times and living with paralysis, but later died by suicide. This episode examines trauma, hopelessness, identity, masculinity, resilience, post-traumatic growth, and the hidden emotional cost of survival. Blending personal storytelling with psychological insight, Shannon asks one haunting question: What helps one person continue living psychologically after life shatters physically?

11. maj 202615 min
episode I get to ! cover

I get to !

Episode Description: “I have to” kept me in survival mode. “I get to” changed everything. In this episode, Shannon Riley breaks down the quiet but powerful shift in language that reframes life from burden to privilege. Rooted in real loss, lived pain, and hard-earned sobriety, this conversation challenges the way we speak about everyday responsibilities and what those words reveal about how we see our lives. This isn’t about pretending things are easy. It’s about recognizing that many people didn’t get another chance and you did. Through honest reflection, Shannon connects this mindset shift to healing, fatherhood, presence, and purpose. Whether it’s walking the dog, showing up for your children, or simply waking up in the morning, this episode invites you to move from obligation to gratitude. Because you don’t have to live this life. You get to.

1. maj 202610 min
episode Bubble Bee cover

Bubble Bee

In a culture that rewards cynicism and calls belief “naive,” this episode challenges a growing mindset: that hope is weakness. Shannon breaks down the difference between hope and delusion, showing how pain, trauma, and repeated disappointment condition people to abandon belief as a form of self-protection. Drawing from personal experience and cultural insight, this conversation explores how many people mistake emotional shutdown for strength and why living without hope quietly leads to stagnation, disconnection, and survival mode. This episode reframes hope as something far more powerful: a conscious, disciplined decision to move forward with clarity, not blindness. It’s about seeing reality for what it is and still choosing growth, healing, and purpose anyway. If you’ve ever felt like believing in something better makes you look foolish, this episode is a reminder: hope isn’t naive it’s rare, and it might be the very thing that separates those who stay stuck from those who become something more. Walk into the room like God sent you.

23. mar. 202611 min