Sorta Sacred

How to Be An Ally: Addiction and Recovery with One Eighty

53 min · 6. mar. 2026
episode How to Be An Ally: Addiction and Recovery with One Eighty cover

Beskrivelse

What does it actually mean to stand by someone battling addiction? Not to fix them, not to enable them — but to truly love them? Jenny Halupnik and Dakotah Smith of One Eighty join us to help us understand addiction without judgment, support without losing ourselves, and hold onto hope even when it's hard to find. Thanks to the incredible production team of Sorta Sacred: Music: Brian Schou  Design: Lauren Brown  Merch: Allison Winter

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til at kommentere

Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af Sorta Sacred-fællesskabet!

Kom i gang

2 måneder kun 19 kr.

Derefter 99 kr. / måned · Opsig når som helst.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle episoder

17 episoder

episode How to Be An Ally: Race, Faith, and the Work in Front of Us cover

How to Be An Ally: Race, Faith, and the Work in Front of Us

In this episode, Jess and Mark sit down with the Reverend Kenneth W. Wheeler — retired ELCA pastor, public theologian, preacher, and author of US: The Resurrection of American Terror. Rev. Wheeler grew up under Jim Crow segregation in Jackson, Mississippi, and has spent seven decades as a Black man in America bearing witness to the through-line of white supremacy — from the lynching tree to January 6. Rev. Wheeler talks about what white people don't have to think about, what genuine allyship requires (and what it doesn't), the difference between guilt and action, and what it means to be made in the image of God in a country still reckoning with its original sins.  "Anger has to be acknowledged and grief has to be honored for growth to happen." Thanks to the incredible production team of Sorta Sacred: Music: Brian Schou  Design: Lauren Brown  Merch: Allison Winter

15. maj 20261 h 0 min
episode From the Ground Up cover

From the Ground Up

What can a bowl of spinach tell you about community, belonging, and what it means to truly welcome a neighbor?  Ann McGlynn, founder and executive director of Tapestry Farms in Davenport, Iowa, joins Mark and Jess to share how a simple gift of homegrown food from a refugee family sparked a nonprofit urban farm system that has now served over 130 families and grown tens of thousands of pounds of fresh produce across the Quad Cities.  They talk about the intersection of farming, dignity, and healing — and why the word flourishing means something different when you've had to leave everything behind to start over.  A conversation about roots, in every sense of the word. Thanks to the incredible production team of Sorta Sacred: Music: Brian Schou  Design: Lauren Brown  Merch: Allison Winter

1. maj 202658 min