A Contagious Smile Podcast

How Matthew Dixon Recovered From Schizophrenia And Biked Across Canada

52 min · 18 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio How Matthew Dixon Recovered From Schizophrenia And Biked Across Canada

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2071161/fan_mail/new] A schizophrenia diagnosis can feel like your life has been rewritten without your consent, and the hardest part is often the unknown: Will I get better, will I ever feel like myself again, and who will still see me as me? We talk with Matthew Dixon, who answers those questions with uncommon honesty, detail, and calm. He shares what it was like to go from university life to suicidal thoughts, psych ward stays, and years of disorienting mental pain and confusion, and how he kept going minute by minute when the days felt endless. Matthew also breaks down what schizophrenia can actually feel like from the inside, including disorganised thinking, cognitive chaos, and a sense of being disconnected from your own life. We dig into stigma and the fear people carry, including the myth that treated schizophrenia automatically means violence, and why simple curiosity and better questions can change how we relate to mental illness. He explains why telling trusted people about his diagnosis sometimes brought relief rather than rejection, and we touch on relationships, community, and real resources that help. Then the story opens up in a way you won’t forget: Matthew bicycled across Canada not once, but twice, with the second ride coming after years of slow recovery and a surprising turning point when his symptoms stopped. We also explore MindAid, his platform connecting mental health support groups and basic care options in developing countries, and the urgent realities of global mental health, including places where people are still chained due to lack of treatment. If you care about schizophrenia recovery, suicide prevention, mental health advocacy, and practical hope, this conversation belongs in your queue. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review so more listeners can find stories like Matthew’s. Support the show [https://gofund.me/01c59071]

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394 episodios

episode Five Hard Truths About Caregiving Rights And Advocacy artwork

Five Hard Truths About Caregiving Rights And Advocacy

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2071161/fan_mail/new] “HIPAA” gets blamed for everything, families get shut out, and a loved one in crisis gets reduced to a label and a sedative. We’re not doing that. Michael Makniak and Victoria Cure unpack the real-world misconceptions that derail caregiving and fiduciary decision-making, especially when mental illness shows up as episodes, psychosis, and emergency room chaos. We talk about why mental health treatment cannot be treated like “any other illness” and why medication can take weeks or months to dial in. Then we get practical: how to advocate when your loved one is not at baseline, why evaluations done under heavy sedation can mislead, and what to say to clinicians so they actually hear you. We also untangle HIPAA myths and share an easy script you can use on the phone when a hospital won’t confirm or deny anything but still needs critical history, allergies, and context. On the legal side, we clarify what guardianship and conservatorship mean in different states, how person versus estate authority works, and why “having power” rarely equals “forcing compliance”. We also address a hard truth families bump into: a lawyer’s ethical duty is to represent what the client wants, even when the family is convinced it’s not in the client’s best interest. The thread through all of it is least restrictive support, better documentation, and calmer leverage instead of louder conflict. If you’re a caregiver, advocate, or provider, you’ll leave with concrete tools you can use today, plus resources through Care Coalition and our Mental Health Resource Network. Subscribe, share this with someone who keeps hitting the HIPAA wall, and leave a review with your biggest question so we can tackle it next. Support the show [https://gofund.me/01c59071]

1 de jun de 202645 min
episode Breaking The Silence On Abuse artwork

Breaking The Silence On Abuse

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2071161/fan_mail/new] A lot of people say they want survivors to “speak up” until the story gets messy, angry, and specific. We go there. We talk about domestic violence and coercive control the way it actually shows up: not as a single incident, but as a system of fear, manipulation, and escalating harm that can follow you into the ER, the workplace, and the courtroom. We also zoom out to the global reality of intimate partner violence, including cultures where reporting abuse brings stigma instead of protection. Michael shares what he learned in law enforcement, and Victoria shares lived experience from a military marriage where status and uniforms didn’t create safety, they created cover. We get honest about how institutions fail even when there are visible injuries, witnesses, medical records, and audio proof, and why victims often stay, return, or go silent when the consequences of leaving can be deadly. You’ll hear us unpack the psychology of abusers, the cycle of abuse, and the questions we should be asking instead of “why didn’t you leave?” We also talk about the legal reality of restraining orders, termination of parental rights, and the mindset of doing whatever it takes to keep a child safe. Along the way, we mention Victoria’s memoir, Who Kick First, and why telling the truth still matters even when justice feels capped, limited, or delayed. If you care about mental health, survivor advocacy, military spouse support, trauma recovery, and real accountability, hit play. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review so more people find the conversation. Support the show [https://gofund.me/01c59071]

1 de jun de 202641 min
episode Trauma Recovery Through Laughter and Honest Marriage Talk artwork

Trauma Recovery Through Laughter and Honest Marriage Talk

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2071161/fan_mail/new] Caregiver resilience stories come alive when you laugh through the hard moments. Your body can outpace your mind, and when sciatic nerve pain hits while life demands everything, standing tall means honest marriage talk, real laughter, and asking for help. Join us as we check in from the chaos of caregiving life, navigating trauma recovery one day at a time. Your body can change faster than your mind can catch up, and sometimes it takes a mix of laughter, honesty, and a whole lot of standing up through pain to keep moving. We’re checking in from a busy stretch of life with a new recliner we can barely use, real talk about sciatic nerve pain, and the kind of marriage banter that only works when you actually like each other. Then we get into a weight loss journey update that’s equal parts celebration and reflection. We talk about emotional eating as a response to disability and chronic pain, what it feels like to hit major milestones, and why tools like GLP-1 medication are only one part of a bigger story about coping, identity, and consistency. If you’re navigating weight loss, body image, or simply trying to feel like yourself again, you’ll hear the messy middle, not just the highlight reel. One of the most powerful moments is a family tattoo story that turns into a lesson on resilience. We share our daughter Faith’s stunning guardian wings tattoo, the symbolism of walking through the storm, and why her asking for Victoria’s handwriting to be tattooed on her hits so hard. We also talk memorial tattoos and honoring a grandmother through a signature and a deeply personal phrase, plus a shoutout to great work done by a trusted artist. We wrap with community and connection: inviting you into our free mental health resource network Facebook group for caregivers and people living with anxiety, depression, ADHD, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, PTSD, and CPTSD, and sharing how simply talking to strangers led us to a ventriloquist, veterans with unforgettable stories, and reminders that support can come from unexpected places. If this resonates, subscribe, share the episode with someone who needs it, and leave a review so more people can find the community. Support the show [https://gofund.me/01c59071]

28 de may de 202622 min
episode Surviving Financial Crisis | The Resilience Story You Need to Hear artwork

Surviving Financial Crisis | The Resilience Story You Need to Hear

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2071161/fan_mail/new] When Anil Gupta's wife heard "we're homeless," she smiled. That single reaction becomes the foundation for trauma recovery, not from abuse, but from the identity collapse of financial ruin. In the 2008 crisis, Anil lost everything and convinced himself he was a failure. Her belief in him when his own mind wouldn't listen reveals what caregiver resilience truly means. A powerful story on rebuilding identity after devastation. He told his wife they’d be homeless and had lost everything. She smiled. That single reaction flips the entire story, and it’s where our conversation with Anil Gupta begins: not with hype about success, but with what it takes to come back from the edge when your own mind keeps repeating “I’m a failure.” Anil walks us through the 2008 stock market collapse that shattered his finances and identity, and the moment love and perspective stopped the spiral long enough for a new life to start.  We get intensely practical about mindset, resilience, and emotional tools that work under pressure. We talk forgiveness as a real pathway to freedom, how to stop “giving your happiness away” to everyday triggers, and why the goal isn’t chasing happiness but building fulfilment from the inside. Anil shares his “orange squeeze” question, a simple way to check what you’re holding internally, plus a reframing practice that can change how you respond to your kids, your partner, and your own past.  Anil also breaks down his 3G Happiness Formula (Give, Gratitude, Grow) and proves it with a raw story about a sudden injury that tanked his “happiness score” and how he rebuilt it in minutes. We round out with his three-way test for relationships (integrity, loving behaviour, and overall health), guidance for people leaving violent situations, and a short but powerful story about meeting the Dalai Lama and choosing to be the light instead of fighting darkness. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs a reset, and leave a review with the one tool you’re going to try first. Support the show [https://gofund.me/01c59071]

25 de may de 202634 min
episode Navigating Addiction, Mental Illness & Trauma | Civil Rights with Mark Astor with special guest Mark Astor artwork

Navigating Addiction, Mental Illness & Trauma | Civil Rights with Mark Astor with special guest Mark Astor

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2071161/fan_mail/new] When love alone won't stop the spiral, families need answers. A parent's worst nightmare: substance use disorder and mental illness collide, triggering crisis calls, involuntary holds, and court battles. Trauma recovery isn't just emotional; it's legal. Florida attorney Mark Astor reveals how families navigating addiction, mental health emergencies, and special needs crises can protect their rights and understand the system before it's too late. Real talk for caregivers facing the legal crossroads. A parent’s most frightening moment is realizing love alone will not stop a spiral. When substance use disorder and mental illness collide, families get pushed into a world of crisis calls, involuntary holds, court filings, and treatment programmes that do not always communicate or cooperate. We sit down with Florida attorney Mark Astor, who leads a mental health and addiction law practice built around one goal: saving families when a loved one cannot or will not choose help. We get specific about the tools people search for late at night: the Marchman Act in Florida for involuntary substance abuse assessment and treatment, the Baker Act for acute mental health crises, and the limits of guardianship and conservatorship when you still cannot find a bed or physically get someone to care. Mark explains why “30 days and done” is a dangerous myth, how relapse prevention depends on daily recovery work, and why enforceability is the hinge that determines whether a court order changes anything at all. We also unpack the hard civil liberties questions, the county-by-county reality of different judges, and what happens when mental health systems become a black box with limited oversight. If you’re a parent, partner, or advocate trying to navigate crisis intervention, outpatient commitment, HIPAA barriers, and cross-state guardianship problems, this conversation will give you clearer expectations and a better vocabulary for asking the right questions. Subscribe for part two, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review with the biggest system gap you want fixed. Mark, an attorney since 1994, was born and raised in the UK and began his legal career as a Palm Beach County Assistant State Attorney before entering private practice. He served as Chief of two County Court Divisions and later worked in a felony trial division, handling thousands of cases from misdemeanors to capital murder. Admitted to the Florida Bar in 1994, Mark later gained admission to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida (1995), the District of Columbia Bar (2005), and the Massachusetts Bar (2022), where he opened a Boston office. Mark holds a BA from the University of Michigan (1990), a JD from Nova Southeastern University (1994), and an LLM from American University (2005). In 2016, Mark founded Drug and Alcohol Attorneys, a service for individuals and families affected by substance abuse and mental health disorders. In 2017, he co-founded Astor Simovitch Law with his wife, Audra Simovitch, a firm dedicated to saving families whose loved ones are suffering from substance use, mental health disorders, and failed attempts at recovery. In 2020, he founded Baker Act Attorneys, advocating for individuals wrongfully detained in the State of Florida’s mental health system. Mark has successfully litigated against hospitals and facilities violating rights under the statute and is known for his relentless commitment to securing releases, day or  night. Support the show [https://gofund.me/01c59071]

22 de may de 202652 min