Stories That Stay
How do early memories of difference live in the body? And what happens when we finally have the tools, language, and support to process them? In the Season Two premiere of Stories that Stay, Shamm Petros and Dwight Dunston welcome Stasie Maxwell for a conversation rooted in land, language, breath, and belonging. Stasie’s work sits at the intersection of land trauma and community healing, with deep ties to the Rogue Valley and intertribal community in Southern Oregon. When asked about her earliest memories of difference, Stasie shares four stories: a painful childhood comment about her appearance, unequal treatment from a beloved family member, a frightening religious message about who belongs in heaven, and a joyful friendship formed across a language barrier through basketball. Together, Stasie, Shamm, and Dwight slow down and notice what these stories stir up: grief, embarrassment, sadness, numbness, shock, connection, and joy. Stasie reflects on how qigong, psychology, breathwork, and community have helped her understand what her body knows and how healing becomes possible through practice. Listeners are invited to breathe, notice their own reactions, and consider how beauty and pain can both be held with care. Key Themes · Earliest memories of difference · How painful and joyful stories can live side by side · Land trauma, Indigenous language, and connection to place · How racial stress and identity stress show up in the body · Breathwork, qigong, and emotional regulation · The role of practice in healing · Finding connection beyond spoken language Compelling Quotes · “So much knowledge is encoded in Indigenous languages.” · “Meditation and breath work is really at the root of a lot of thinking and behavior.” · “At that time, I didn’t have people or tools to help me with the feelings that those moments brought up.” · “Even though there was this very significant difference of language barrier, we were still really close friends.” · “If you don’t have time to meditate for five minutes, you should meditate for an hour.” · “The beauty and the pain can both be held by the breath.” About Our Guest: Stasie Maxwell Stasie Maxwell is a community leader whose work focuses on land trauma, Indigenous language, community healing, and reconnection to ancestral homelands. Rooted in the Rogue Valley and the intertribal community in Southern Oregon, Stasie works with tribal communities and Native youth while helping create pathways for people to return to land, language, and cultural memory. She holds a degree in psychology and has maintained a qigong practice since her early twenties. In this conversation, Stasie reflects on how body awareness, breath, and emotional practice have shaped her healing work and her ability to hold both painful and joyful stories with care. Stories That Stay is a project of Lion’s Story [https://www.thelionsstory.org?utm_source=chatgpt.com], a nonprofit dedicated to building racial literacy through storytelling, mindfulness, and healing. Rooted in over 35 years of research by Dr. Howard C. Stevenson at the University of Pennsylvania, our work guides individuals and institutions to reclaim their stories, reduce identity-based stress, and step into authentic inclusion—not as a checklist, but as a way of being. For a full video version of this podcast, visit our YouTube page: https://www.youtube.com/@StoriesThatStayPodcast Produced and edited by Peterson Toscano [https://petersontoscano.com]. Mindful moment music by Dwight Dunston [https://sterlingduns.com]. Music by Epidemic Sound [https://www.epidemicsound.com]. Podcast site: StoriesThatStay.net [https://www.thelionsstory.org/podcast] Hosts: Shamm Petros and Dwight Dunston [https://sterlingduns.com]
10 episodios
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