Deep Dive with Dr D
Shame is a blunt instrument, and we keep swinging it like it’s going to solve addiction, mental health crises, and crime. This conversation with Joelle Dickerson flips that logic on its head and gets practical about what actually helps people change when they’re court-involved, struggling with substance use, or carrying years of untreated trauma. We talk about how one traumatic event can redirect a whole life toward service, and how Joelle’s work in victim advocacy, probation, and offender therapy shaped a trauma-informed approach that’s both compassionate and firm. You’ll hear why “shame and guilt never work” isn’t a slogan, it’s a pattern you can see from childhood labels in school all the way to adult behavior in the criminal justice system. We also dig into the idea that every behavior has a function, anger is often secondary, and real progress starts when someone feels safe enough to be honest. Then we widen the lens to community. Most incarcerated people come home, which means reentry support, behavioral health treatment, housing stability, and skill-building aren’t soft options, they’re public safety strategies. We wrestle with common misconceptions about offenders, the human cost of writing people off, and why connection is the opposite of addiction. We end with a message of hope built on small acts anyone can do, because the mental health system can’t carry this alone. If you care about addiction recovery, criminal justice reform, trauma-informed care, and building safer communities, hit play. Subscribe, share this with someone who works in helping professions, and leave a review with the biggest myth you want to see replaced. Social Media Links [https://linktr.ee/davidandkatrina] Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2440019/support]
78 episodes
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