People at the Core

You Don't Have to Be in the Same Room to Feel Love: Lauren Schell on Retiring in Florida, Bartending, and Practicing Reiki on Humans AND Animals

58 min · I går
episode You Don't Have to Be in the Same Room to Feel Love: Lauren Schell on Retiring in Florida, Bartending, and Practicing Reiki on Humans AND Animals cover

Beskrivelse

Something weird happened during our Reiki sessions: our dogs got involved. Not “cute background nap” involved, but focused, locked-in, making-eye-contact, breaking-character involved and it made us ask better questions about what Reiki is and why it can feel so real even when you can’t “prove” it with your eyes. We’re joined by Lauren Schell, a respected New York City bartender who now practices Reiki for both humans and animals. We talk about what pulled her toward energy healing after years in hospitality, how bartending can turn into nervous system overload, and why Reiki feels different from the everyday energy exchange of service work. Lauren breaks down Reiki in plain English, including chair sessions, hands-on vs hands-above approaches, and why she describes herself as a conduit for universal energy rather than someone giving away her own. We also get into distance Reiki and Lauren’s best explanation for it: love. You don’t need to be in the same room to feel it, and sometimes you feel it even when someone is far away or no longer here. From there, we share what we noticed in our bodies after Reiki, why results can range from deep sleep to sudden motivation, and how animal Reiki centers consent, choice, and the bond between pets and their people. We close with rapid-fire questions about perfectionism, being “good enough,” and choosing a happy home life over a shiny career. If you’re curious about Reiki healing, animal Reiki, stress reduction, relaxation, and midlife career pivots, hit play, then subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review. What part are you most skeptical about, and what part do you secretly hope is true? Lauren Schell  Big Sigh Reiki [https://www.instagram.com/bigsighreiki/] Instagram Article: Impact of Distant Reiki on Owner Assessment of Health and Wellbeing of Adult Dogs: A Blinded, Placebo-controlled, Randomized Trial by Claudia Ruga Barbieri, DVM, MS, MBA [https://www.ahvma.org/wp-content/uploads/Vol-78-Distance-Reiki.pdf?utm_source=ig&utm_medium=social&utm_content=link_in_bio&fbclid=PAZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAc3J0YwZhcHBfaWQPOTM2NjE5NzQzMzkyNDU5AAGn_rNQLyJpbxOAUsw39zxeQ7PqD0Zthty60pvp4wY3aiydMDFDU0XJHr5jio8_aem_ifMB_saa4sioWAb4TSpoQQ] Follow us on Instagram! People at the Core Podcast  [https://www.instagram.com/people_at_the_core_podcast/?hl=en] Email us! peopleatthecorepodcast@gmail.com

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32 episoder

episode You Don't Have to Be in the Same Room to Feel Love: Lauren Schell on Retiring in Florida, Bartending, and Practicing Reiki on Humans AND Animals cover

You Don't Have to Be in the Same Room to Feel Love: Lauren Schell on Retiring in Florida, Bartending, and Practicing Reiki on Humans AND Animals

Something weird happened during our Reiki sessions: our dogs got involved. Not “cute background nap” involved, but focused, locked-in, making-eye-contact, breaking-character involved and it made us ask better questions about what Reiki is and why it can feel so real even when you can’t “prove” it with your eyes. We’re joined by Lauren Schell, a respected New York City bartender who now practices Reiki for both humans and animals. We talk about what pulled her toward energy healing after years in hospitality, how bartending can turn into nervous system overload, and why Reiki feels different from the everyday energy exchange of service work. Lauren breaks down Reiki in plain English, including chair sessions, hands-on vs hands-above approaches, and why she describes herself as a conduit for universal energy rather than someone giving away her own. We also get into distance Reiki and Lauren’s best explanation for it: love. You don’t need to be in the same room to feel it, and sometimes you feel it even when someone is far away or no longer here. From there, we share what we noticed in our bodies after Reiki, why results can range from deep sleep to sudden motivation, and how animal Reiki centers consent, choice, and the bond between pets and their people. We close with rapid-fire questions about perfectionism, being “good enough,” and choosing a happy home life over a shiny career. If you’re curious about Reiki healing, animal Reiki, stress reduction, relaxation, and midlife career pivots, hit play, then subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review. What part are you most skeptical about, and what part do you secretly hope is true? Lauren Schell  Big Sigh Reiki [https://www.instagram.com/bigsighreiki/] Instagram Article: Impact of Distant Reiki on Owner Assessment of Health and Wellbeing of Adult Dogs: A Blinded, Placebo-controlled, Randomized Trial by Claudia Ruga Barbieri, DVM, MS, MBA [https://www.ahvma.org/wp-content/uploads/Vol-78-Distance-Reiki.pdf?utm_source=ig&utm_medium=social&utm_content=link_in_bio&fbclid=PAZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAc3J0YwZhcHBfaWQPOTM2NjE5NzQzMzkyNDU5AAGn_rNQLyJpbxOAUsw39zxeQ7PqD0Zthty60pvp4wY3aiydMDFDU0XJHr5jio8_aem_ifMB_saa4sioWAb4TSpoQQ] Follow us on Instagram! People at the Core Podcast  [https://www.instagram.com/people_at_the_core_podcast/?hl=en] Email us! peopleatthecorepodcast@gmail.com

I går58 min
episode Not Shying Away From the Awful Edges: Tré Miller Rodriguez On Grief, Ghostwriting, Love and Loss cover

Not Shying Away From the Awful Edges: Tré Miller Rodriguez On Grief, Ghostwriting, Love and Loss

The night can bend a life. Tré Miller Rodriguez walks us through the moment everything changed—waking to find her husband gone—and the choice to pick up a pen before the pieces even settled. What starts as an obituary and a eulogy turns into a grief memoir that refuses to look away, from the strange etiquette of wedding rings after widowhood to the first shaky attempts at desire and dating. Along the way, Tré names “grief brain,” the fog that shields you while it steals your year, and shows how writing, friends who take clear direction, and unlikely moments of comedy make the unlivable livable. The story widens with a reunion that feels cinematic: the daughter Tré placed for adoption finds her on Facebook at eighteen. Four years later, during a 21st-birthday bar crawl, Tré meets Jorge in a hidden speakeasy and the next chapter begins. We talk about what it takes to protect a true story when Hollywood tries to sand it down—why a network-friendly version can lose the texture that makes real lives matter—and how to say no until the right partner shows up. Tré also opens a window into ghostwriting and modern media: building thought leadership, drawing boundaries around your byline, and using AI as a tool without giving up your voice. We end where joy sneaks back in: travel hacks from Tokyo to Seoul, asking bartenders for the real map, negotiating onsens with tattoos, and letting trips serve as relationship stress tests that make love sturdier. It’s a conversation about craft, honesty, and the courage to hold your own narrative—through loss, reunion, and the odd belly laugh that arrives right on time. If this resonates, tap follow, share it with a friend who needs it, and leave a review so more people can find the show. *** Listen to Tré read from her memoir Nov. 18th from 7-9pm as part of the Palace Reading Series [https://www.instagram.com/thepalacereadingseries] (206 Nassau Ave., Brooklyn NY 11222) Tré Miller Rodriguez: Splitting the Difference: A Heart-Shaped Memoir [http://splittingthedifferencebook.com/] "When Other's Day Became Mother's Day" - Huffpost [https://www.huffpost.com/entry/when-others-day-became-mothers-day_b_3247626] "A Husband Lost, A Daughter Found" NYT [https://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/13/fashion/a-husband-lost-a-daughter-found.html] ModernLoss.com [https://modernloss.com/author/tre/] Mentions: Dying For Sex - tv show [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dying_for_Sex] Dead Like Me - tv show [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_Like_Me] Rick and Morty - tv show [https://www.adultswim.com/videos/rick-and-morty] Follow us on Instagram! People at the Core Podcast  [https://www.instagram.com/people_at_the_core_podcast/?hl=en] Email us! peopleatthecorepodcast@gmail.com

31. okt. 202556 min
episode One Badass Babe: Julia Cuthbertson on How Teaching in Spain and Crashing a Wedding in Mexico Led to a Love Affair with Mezcal and the Birth of Las Chingonas Imports cover

One Badass Babe: Julia Cuthbertson on How Teaching in Spain and Crashing a Wedding in Mexico Led to a Love Affair with Mezcal and the Birth of Las Chingonas Imports

A wedding in Oaxaca. A chance meeting. A suitcase full of small-batch bottles that turned into an import company with a mission. We sit down with Julia Cuthbertson—founder of Las Chingonas Imports—to unpack how real mezcal is made, why labels can mislead, and what it takes to keep agave traditions alive without romanticizing them to extinction. Julia’s path winds from Connecticut and Spain to Brooklyn, where late nights at a mezcaleria and home tastings evolved into trusted relationships with families in Guerrero, Oaxaca, Puebla, and Nuevo León. She explains the messy truth behind certification and denominations of origin, why many ethical producers choose the “agave spirits” label, and how corruption, cost, and geography shape what ends up on US shelves. We go deep on sustainability: thirty-year tepextate, deforestation, water scarcity, and viveros that replant seedlings back into the hills. The conversation gets candid about adulteration, lawsuits, and the “tequilaization” of mezcal—plus the quiet, practical steps small producers take to protect species, like semi-cultivating wild pups on rocky home plots. Along the way, we taste what makes this world so vivid: clay-pot distilled tepextate from Santa Catarina Minas made by Perla of Pasión Ancestral, and the pulque‑fermented profile of Pecho Tierra in the mountains of Nuevo León—spirits that bend your expectations and expand what mezcal can be. If you care about terroir, craft, and honest sourcing, this one’s for you. Come for the stories; leave with a buyer’s toolkit: ask who grows the agave, how it’s roasted and fermented, and whether the family owns the brand. Then choose bottles that keep the flame honest. Like what you heard? Follow the show, leave a quick review, and share this episode with a friend who geeks out on agave. Your support helps small producer families get the spotlight they deserve. Website:  Las Chingonas Imports [https://www.laschingonasimports.com/] Mentioned: Mis Mezcales [https://www.mismezcales.mx/oaxaca]Tienda Highlighted Spirits/Producers:  Pechotierra  [https://pechotierra.com/] Gozona  [https://www.instagram.com/gozonamezcal/?hl=en] Pasión Ancestral  [https://www.instagram.com/mezcal_pasion_ancestral_/?hl=es-la] Rayo Seco [https://www.instagram.com/rayosecodvm/?hl=en] Lopez Real [https://www.lopezrealmezcal.com/] Follow us on Instagram! People at the Core Podcast  [https://www.instagram.com/people_at_the_core_podcast/?hl=en] Email us! peopleatthecorepodcast@gmail.com

3. okt. 20251 h 7 min
episode Panache, Persistence and Truth: Writer and Photographer Elyssa Maxx Goodman (a.k.a. Miss Manhattan) on Her Love of Drag, Unheard Stories, and NYC Culture cover

Panache, Persistence and Truth: Writer and Photographer Elyssa Maxx Goodman (a.k.a. Miss Manhattan) on Her Love of Drag, Unheard Stories, and NYC Culture

Ever wondered how someone builds a life around what they love? Elyssa Maxx Goodman offers a masterclass in turning passion into purpose. Born to New York natives transplanted to Florida, Goodman always felt the magnetic pull of the city where "the weirdos" gathered. By sixteen, she was already saving for her inevitable migration. The path wasn't always smooth. After losing an office job just months after moving to New York at twenty-one, Goodman faced a pivotal moment. Rather than retreat, she began cold-emailing editors and professionals she admired. "I wanted my life to be my work," she explains, a philosophy that guided her through fifteen years of successful freelance writing for publications including Vogue, The New York Times, and Vanity Fair. Throughout our conversation, Goodman reveals how her approach to journalism—particularly when covering subcultures from drag performers to sex toy testers—stems from a deep belief that knowledge dispels fear. This perspective shaped her bestselling book "Glitter and Concrete: A Cultural History of Drag in New York City," which chronicles 160 years of drag history with both scholarly precision and personal passion. What makes this episode particularly illuminating is Goodman's historical perspective on today's anti-LGBTQ+ backlash. Rather than seeing current challenges as unprecedented, she identifies them as part of a recurring cycle throughout history—one that, despite its difficulties, has seen the community gain more allies with each iteration. Whether discussing her long-running Miss Manhattan Non-Fiction Reading Series, her own performance work, or the writers who've influenced her, Goodman offers wisdom about creating authentic work and community. As she beautifully puts it, we're all "collages" who find tools in others' work but make them distinctly our own—"You go and get a hammer, but then you put rhinestones on it." Listen now for an inspiring conversation about persistence, storytelling as bridge-building, and finding your own rhinestone-covered tools. Elyssa Maxx Goodman:  Website [https://www.elyssamaxxgoodman.com/] Glitter and Concrete: A Cultural History of Drag in New York City by Elyssa Maxx Goodman [https://www.harpercollins.com/products/glitter-and-concrete-elyssa-maxx-goodman?variant=41001110634530] The Miss Manhattan Non-Fiction Reading Series [https://www.elyssamaxxgoodman.com/miss-manhattan-nonfiction-reading-series] Mentions: The Last Resort (2018) [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt7958740/] Please Kill Me: The Uncensored Oral History of Punk by Legs McNeil & Gillian McCain [https://pleasekillme.com/please-kill-uncensored-oral-history-punk-book/] Hypocrite in a Pouffy White Dress: Tales of Growing Up Groovy and Clueless by Susan Jane Gilman [https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/332961.Hypocrite_in_a_Pouffy_White_Dress] Follow us on Instagram! People at the Core Podcast  [https://www.instagram.com/people_at_the_core_podcast/?hl=en] Email us! peopleatthecorepodcast@gmail.com

25. sept. 202555 min
episode I'm Not Good Yet, But I'm Getting Better: Actor Melissa Parker Caron on Music, Motherhood and Following Fear cover

I'm Not Good Yet, But I'm Getting Better: Actor Melissa Parker Caron on Music, Motherhood and Following Fear

What happens when you finally stop letting fear dictate your choices? In this heartfelt conversation with actress, improv coach, and former rock star Melissa Parker Caron, we explore the transformative power of facing what scares us most. Melissa shares her winding path from Orlando's vibrant music scene to New York City, where she's raising a Brooklyn-savvy daughter while rekindling creative passions she once thought unattainable. After years working in record stores and playing in bands, Melissa had almost convinced herself that her childhood dream of acting would remain just that—a dream. But a chance encounter with an agent and a recurring sandwich board advertising improv classes became the universe's not-so-subtle nudge toward her true calling. The conversation flows through rich territory: the housing crisis threatening Brooklyn's sense of community, the surprising diversity of Florida beyond its stereotypes, and the special magic that keeps New Yorkers anchored despite the challenges of urban living. We laugh about the lost pleasures of midnight album releases and liner notes in a streaming world, and reflect on how parenting in the city shapes remarkably independent children. But the heart of our talk centers on that pivotal moment in midlife when fear begins losing its grip. There's a liberation in no longer caring what others think, in saying no without explanation, and in finally pursuing passions without the self-judgment that characterized earlier decades. Whether you're contemplating a creative leap, navigating midlife transitions, or simply curious about reframing the negative self-talk that holds you back, Melissa's journey offers a blueprint for turning "I'm bad at this" into "I'm not good yet, but I'm getting better." Because as she reminds us, we don't fear things we don't care about—our fears might just be signposts pointing toward what matters most. Mentions: Redlight, Redlight Brewpub [https://www.instagram.com/redlightredlight/?hl=en] Tricia Alexandro [https://www.instagram.com/triciaalexandro/?hl=en] Follow us on Instagram! People at the Core Podcast  [https://www.instagram.com/people_at_the_core_podcast/?hl=en] Email us! peopleatthecorepodcast@gmail.com

12. sept. 202553 min