Cover image of show Balanced Not Boring

Balanced Not Boring

Podcast by Judy Daghestani (Laurus Organics) and Tamara Khoury (Teal Bakehouse)

English

Health & personal development

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About Balanced Not Boring

Welcome to the Balanced Not Boring Podcast. A safe space where wellness entrepreneurs & cohosts, Judy Daghestani (Cofounder of Laurus Organics) & Tamara Khoury (Founder of Teal Bakehouse) talk about all things Mind, Body & Soul, live from Dubai. Stay tuned to hear from our balanced babe community, certified practitioners, doctors, healers and more, to learn how to live a realistic 80/20 in today's hectic pace. It's time to debunk 'wellness' and make it inclusive, as it was always meant to be ❤️ Follow us on TiktTok and Instagram at @balancednotboringpodcast

All episodes

26 episodes

episode Why Women’s Skin Suddenly Changes in Their 30s: Perimenopause & Hormonal Aging w/ Dr. Ruba Bahhady artwork

Why Women’s Skin Suddenly Changes in Their 30s: Perimenopause & Hormonal Aging w/ Dr. Ruba Bahhady

This episode is brought to you by Laurus Organics. From the dryness that suddenly won't respond to anything… to the breakouts that make no sense on a woman in her 40s, this episode unpacks what's actually happening to your skin during perimenopause, and why so many women are told it's stress, aging, or the wrong serum when the answer is almost always hormonal. Host Tamara Khoury sits down with Dr. Ruba Bahhady, a clinical and cosmetic dermatologist with over a decade of experience treating complex and hormonal skin concerns, trained internationally and practicing across Dubai and Abu Dhabi. Known for her natural, conservative approach to cosmetic dermatology, supporting the skin through aging rather than fighting it, Dr. Bahhady brings clinical clarity to one of the most under-addressed phases of a woman's life. Together they explore how hormones like estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone shape the skin from puberty through perimenopause, why your skincare routine can stop working overnight without any obvious trigger, and what actually supports the skin during this transition versus what quietly makes it worse. This isn't about chasing the next treatment. It's about finally having the conversation most women never get to have with their doctor. If you've ever felt like your skin is betraying you for no reason, this episode will make sense of it. We dive into:  - Why skin is an endocrine organ and how hormones drive it throughout your life  - What estrogen decline actually does to collagen, hydration, and elasticity  - Why skin changes in the 30s are gradual but real and what to do now  - How hair shedding and scalp changes signal hormonal shifts before anything else  - The role of UV exposure and why 80% of skin aging comes from the sun  - Vitamin D without damaging your face, what Dr. Bahhady actually recommends  - The five key skincare ingredients that matter most during perimenopause  - Why less is more and what skin fatigue actually looks like  - How stress and cortisol show up on the skin and what to do about it  - In-clinic treatments during perimenopause, when they help and when to hold back  - Myth or fact: busting the most common skin and hormone misconceptions  - One daily habit for visible glow, the answer is simpler than you think At its core, this episode is a reminder that perimenopause isn't a problem to fix. It's a phase to understand. Your skin isn't failing you, it's communicating. And the confusion so many women feel isn't because they've done something wrong. It's because nobody explained what was changing. If this conversation resonated, send it to someone quietly struggling with skin changes right now. These are conversations women deserve to have before the panic starts. 🎧 Listen on Apple, Spotify & YouTube @balancednotboringpodcast 🔁 Share with a parent or woman who needs better answers 🔔 Subscribe to Balanced Not Boring for real conversations about modern life, wellness, and womanhood

21 May 2026 - 44 min
episode The Modern Village: Why So Many Women Feel Alone Today w/ Farah Enayeh & Zein Zurub artwork

The Modern Village: Why So Many Women Feel Alone Today w/ Farah Enayeh & Zein Zurub

This episode is brought to you by Teal Bakehouse. From the excitement of a new city and a fresh start… to the quiet ache of realising you have nobody to just call on a random Tuesday, this episode opens a conversation that so many women living away from home carry but rarely name out loud. Host Tamara Khoury sits down with Farah Enayeh, founder of Girls Who Walk, a community where women connect through movement and shared experience and Zein Zurub, co-founder of Arab Women Connect, a WhatsApp-based platform that has quietly become a real support system for hundreds of women navigating life in Dubai. Both women didn't just feel the gap of community. They built something in response to it. Together, they explore what it really means to build a village from scratch in a fast-paced city, the loneliness that creeps in slowly, the friendships that have to be intentional rather than inherited, and the small, simple things that make a bigger difference than we expect. This isn't a conversation about networking. It's about belonging, and what it genuinely takes to find your people when you're starting over. If you've ever felt like you were doing life without the support system you once had, this one will hit close to home. We dive into: - Why the gap in community hits you slowly, not all at once - How Dubai's pace makes friendships harder to build and maintain - The story behind Girls Who Walk, from one person showing up to 20,000 followers - How Arab Women Connect grew from a chicken search to 800 women strong - Why friendship as an adult has to be intentional - Supporting local businesses through community, and why it matters more now - What a modern village actually looks like in 2025 - Why showing up alone to something new is one of the bravest things you can do At its core, this episode is a reminder that community doesn't have to be big or perfect to matter. It just has to be real. And when you're building a life away from where you started, support isn't optional, it's essential. You don't need a perfect village to begin. You just need to start somewhere. If this conversation resonated, send it to someone who might need it. 🎧 Listen on Apple, Spotify & YouTube @balancednotboringpodcast 🔁 Share with a parent or woman who needs better answers 🔔 Subscribe to Balanced Not Boring for real conversations about modern life, wellness, and womanhood

10 May 2026 - 41 min
episode Growing Up Between Cultures: How to Heal Your Identity & Find Where You Belong w/ Farah Alnajar artwork

Growing Up Between Cultures: How to Heal Your Identity & Find Where You Belong w/ Farah Alnajar

This episode is brought to you by The Art of Hosting. Whether it's a birthday, a corporate event, or a dinner that deserves to be special, their team handles everything beautifully. You show up, you enjoy it. That's it. Check them out at theartofhosting.me From the quiet disorientation of never feeling fully from one place… to the grief of constantly saying goodbye to versions of yourself, this episode opens a conversation that so many women carry, but rarely find the words for. Host Judy Daghestani sits down with Farah Alnajar, a licensed therapist and certified clinical trauma professional based in Fairfax, Virginia, specializing in intergenerational trauma, complex family dynamics, and identity work. As an Iraqi immigrant and bilingual therapist working in both Arabic and English, Farah brings a deeply personal and clinically grounded lens to the question so many third culture kids quietly ask: where do I actually belong? Together, they unpack what it means to grow up between cultures, the code switching, the ambiguous grief, the identity crises that come without warning, and the deep longing for a sense of home that no single place can fully provide. This isn't a conversation about choosing between cultures. It's about learning to hold all of them, and finally finding peace in the complexity. If you've ever felt like you fit in everywhere but belong nowhere, this episode will give language to something you've been carrying for a long time. We dive into: - What ambiguous grief actually is, and why moving always involves loss - Separation, assimilation, and why integration is what research supports - Code switching as survival and how to make it conscious - The emotional gap between immigrant parents and their children - Culture vs. heritage vs. ethnicity broken down in plain language - How to raise children with multicultural identity in today's world - Why home is an internal feeling, not a destination - What therapy can offer that toughness alone cannot - Rapid fire: Arab traditions, resilience, and one piece of advice for navigating identity At its core, this episode is a reminder that not belonging everywhere isn't a flaw, it's a layered, lived experience that deserves to be understood, not just survived. With the right tools, it gets so much better. If this conversation resonated, share it with someone who has ever struggled to answer the question "where are you from?" 🎧 Listen on Apple, Spotify & YouTube @balancednotboringpodcast 🔁 Share with a parent or woman who needs better answers 🔔 Subscribe to Balanced Not Boring for real conversations about modern life, wellness, and womanhood

28 Apr 2026 - 48 min
episode Decluttering Your Home to Calm Your Mind: How Design, Color & Energy Affect Your Nervous System artwork

Decluttering Your Home to Calm Your Mind: How Design, Color & Energy Affect Your Nervous System

This episode is brought to you by Aqua Aligner.  Use code BNB10 for 10% off on your next treatment. https://aquaaligners.com/ From spaces that look fine on the outside… to homes that quietly drain us the moment we walk through the door – this episode opens a conversation about clutter, design, and the nervous system in a world where our homes are doing more jobs than ever. Hosts Judy Daghestani and Tamara Khoury sit down with two women who approach space from very different but deeply connected angles: Reem Shakarchi, founder of Wallpaper Kids, and Salam Shaban, founder of The Tidy Mess and a Marie Kondo-certified decluttering and organization expert. Together, they explore how design, color, and clutter aren't just aesthetic choices – they're emotional ones. They dig into why letting go of things feels so hard, how visual noise dysregulates us without our realizing it, and why a space can look beautiful yet still feel heavy. This isn't a conversation about perfect homes or Instagram-worthy interiors – it's about creating spaces that actually support how you feel. We dive into:  – Why our homes feel heavier now than ever before  – How color, pattern, and visual rhythm affect mood and regulation  – The emotional psychology behind why we hold on to things  – How clutter carries energetic weight – and what that actually means  – Feng shui principles applied to real, lived-in family homes  – Design choices for children's spaces that support calm, not chaos  – Practical decluttering steps that create immediate emotional relief  – The difference between organizing for perfection vs. organizing for flow  – Keep, Release, or Rethink: a rapid-fire round on common household habits If this conversation resonated, share it with someone who needs permission to let go. 🎧 Listen on Apple, Spotify & YouTube @balancednotboringpodcast 🔁 Share with a parent or woman who needs better answers 🔔 Subscribe to Balanced Not Boring for real conversations about modern life, wellness, and womanhood Timestamps: 00:00 – Intro 01:08 – Sponsor Message 01:36 – Welcome & Why This Episode 02:00 – When Space Becomes Overloaded 02:35 – Guest Introduction: Reem Shakarchi 03:00 – Guest Introduction: Salam Shaban 03:35 – How Salam Got Into Decluttering 05:00 – Practical Influence & Lasting Systems 06:00 – How Reem Got Into Wallpaper Kids 08:00 – From Aesthetics to Emotional Safety 09:00 – How Motherhood Changed How Reem Sees Space 09:35 – Do Children's Spaces Shift Their Behavior? 10:10 – Emotional Safety, Trains & Bedtime Imagery 11:00 – Why Children Build Deep Connections With Their Spaces 12:15 – How Salam Integrates Color at Home 14:00 – Do Objects Hold Energy? 14:40 – How to Decide What to Keep vs. Let Go 17:20 – One In, One Out & Charitable Giving 18:30 – Buying Better After the Decluttering Exercise 19:20 – The Emotion of Holding On: Guilt, Identity & Fear 20:30 – When Kids Overconsume – and Why It's Often the Parents 23:00 – Does Your Home Feel Like a Sacred Space? 25:00 – Creating Zones & Boundaries Within the Home 28:30 – Why Adults Are Gearing Toward Minimalism 29:20 – Step-by-Step: How to Start When You're Overwhelmed 32:00 – Why Letting Go Is Emotionally Hard 33:15 – Does Every Space Need to Be Functional? 33:50 – The Dumping Room Debate 35:00 – When Partners Have Different Clutter Styles 36:15 – Spring Cleaning: Necessary Ritual or Old Myth? 38:00 – The Clutter Cycle & Mental Clarity 38:20 – Keep, Release, or Rethink: Overflowing Storage Bins 38:45 – Keep, Release, or Rethink: "Just in Case" Items 38:55 – Keep, Release, or Rethink: Kids' Artwork 40:20 – Keep, Release, or Rethink: Pinterest-Perfect Homes 41:05 – Minimalism vs. Maximalism – There's No One Size Fits All 41:30 – Keep, Release, or Rethink: Hand-Me-Downs 42:50 – Keep, Release, or Rethink: Sentimental Clutter 43:05 – Closing Reflections: Space as Nervous System Care 43:30 – Where to Find Reem Shakarchi & Salam Shaban 44:19 – Closing Notes & Outro

9 Mar 2026 - 44 min
episode High-Achieving, Always On: How to Calm Your Nervous System w/ Constanze Witzel artwork

High-Achieving, Always On: How to Calm Your Nervous System w/ Constanze Witzel

From high-functioning burnout to quiet disconnection in the body, this episode explores why so many women feel “fine” on the outside, yet chronically tense, exhausted, or overwhelmed underneath. Hosts Judy Daghestani and Tamara Khoury sit down with Constanze Witzel, Frankfurt-born, Dubai-based trauma-informed somatic coach and breathwork facilitator, to unpack what nervous system regulation actually means, beyond trends, performative healing, or surface-level wellness. Together, they explore how stress, trauma, and modern life live in the body, why many women move through life in a state of functional freeze, and how true healing begins with safety, not force, discipline, or optimization. Constanze shares her own journey through early instability, modeling, and spiritual bypassing, and explains why embodiment, gentleness, and awareness are the missing pieces for many high-achieving women. This conversation reframes healing as a process of listening rather than fixing and offers grounded tools that can be integrated into real life, not just retreats or perfect routines. In this episode, we explore: – What the nervous system really is and how it shapes daily life – Somatic healing vs performative wellness trends – Why women burn out in their 30s despite “doing everything right” – Functional freeze, over-stimulation, and chronic tension – The role of safety in trauma-informed healing – Why intensity (ice baths, forceful breathwork) can backfire for women – Somatic breathwork explained in plain language – Micro practices that support regulation in work, family, and relationships – Technology, AI, and why human presence still matters At its core, this episode is a reminder that your body isn’t broken, it’s responding intelligently to the world around you. Healing doesn’t require becoming someone else. It starts with remembering how to feel safe inside yourself. If this conversation resonates, share it with a woman who needs permission to slow down without guilt. 🎧 Listen on Apple, Spotify & YouTube @balancednotboringpodcast 🔁 Share with a parent or woman who needs better answers 🔔 Subscribe to Balanced Not Boring for real conversations about modern life, wellness, and womanhood

17 Feb 2026 - 1 h 4 min
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