Tending Our Roots
This week we’re Tending Our Roots with Susan Beaulieu, an Anishinaabe woman and citizen of the Red Lake Nation who has spent two decades working with Indigenous communities and the last decade supporting healing from collective, ancestral, and individual trauma. A facilitator, teacher, and student of Life, Susan reminds us that healing begins within, where we hold the most power and responsibility. In this episode, Susan offers tools for reconnecting body, mind, heart, and spirit, guiding us toward re-membering — bringing ourselves and our communities back into balance. Her teachings call us to the ongoing, courageous work of healing, not only for ourselves, but for the generations yet to come. Interested in hearing more from Susan? Hear more from her here [https://www.hoffmaninstitute.org/podcast/s6e8-susan-beaulieu/]. Tending Our Roots is co-hosted by Drs. Miigis Gonzalez [https://cih.jhu.edu/team/miigis-gonzalez/] (Lac Courte Oreilles Ojibwe) and Jill Fish [https://www.fishpsychotherapy.com/] (lineal descendent of the Tuscarora Nation). This podcast was funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation [https://www.rwjf.org/] and supported by the CIRCLE P50 Center of Excellence [https://cih.jhu.edu/circle/] funded through the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health (Award Number P50DA058619). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health. Production was completed by Solar Powered Studios in St. Paul, MN. Podcast artwork was completed by Marlena Myles [https://marlenamyl.es/], a Spirit Lake Dakota, Mohegan, Muscogee artist. The song, “The Best of Me” is used with the permission of Anishinaabe and First Nations singer-songwriter, Leonard Sumner [https://www.leonardsumner.com/].
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