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Cinderella and the Courage to Find Joy | Kamille Bauer on Grief and Happiness

1 h 28 min · 21 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Cinderella and the Courage to Find Joy | Kamille Bauer on Grief and Happiness

Descripción

What if the most unfair thing that ever happened to you became the very thing that made you unstoppable? Cinderella shows us why. She lost everything — her mother, her father, her home — and still chose kindness and courage over bitterness. And that's exactly the choice Kamille Bauer made when her husband's rare cancer returned after 11 years in remission, leaving her a single mom of three with no roadmap for what came next. 🎯 3 Actionable Takeaways 1. Write Down What You Have – Make a list of your blessings, what you love, what's going for you right now. Then return to that list every time grief or depression pulls you under. Why it works: You can't put conditions on happiness. Gratitude anchors you to what's real and present. 2. Turn On Your Kindness Radar – Look for one moment this week to step outside your own bubble and do something specific for someone else — don't ask "how can I help?" Just do it. Why it works: Serving others is one of the fastest ways to stop wallowing and start moving forward. What you give comes back tenfold. 3. Give Yourself Grace – Stop measuring your grief against someone else's timeline. Don't beat yourself up for still hurting, for laughing, for moving forward, or for not moving forward fast enough. Why it works: Grief is not linear — it's as unique as your fingerprint. "Move forward" doesn't mean "move on." In this episode, Kamille Bauer, happiness advocate and wellness entrepreneur, joins Ryan to talk about what it actually looks like to find joy when life is genuinely, unfairly hard. Her journey mirrors Cinderella's almost step for step: fairy tale life → sudden devastating loss → years of learning to choose kindness over bitterness → emerging with a deeper capacity for empathy, purpose, and happiness than she ever had before. Using Cinderella as our lens, we explore why Cinderella's gracious response to an unfair world wasn't weakness — it was the most courageous thing she could have done. Kamille's story is the real-world version of that. She had every legal, emotional, and moral right to be bitter. She chose differently.

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27 episodios

episode Meet the Robinsons and Keep Moving Forward | Courtney Kern on Curiosity & Resilience artwork

Meet the Robinsons and Keep Moving Forward | Courtney Kern on Curiosity & Resilience

What if your biggest setbacks were secretly redirecting you to exactly where you're supposed to be? Meet the Robinsons shows us why. Lewis doesn't just lose — he fails publicly, repeatedly, and at the worst possible moments. But every failure is a forward step in disguise. That's the exact journey Courtney Kern has lived: from writing Keep Moving Forward as her college application essay to spending nearly 12 years inside the Walt Disney Company, watching ships launch and learning that curiosity — not a perfect plan — is what shapes your destiny. 🎯 3 Actionable Takeaways (Pulled directly from episode content) 1. Face Rejection Like Lewis – Lewis tracks 124 adoption rejections by name, not by shame. When you're in a job search, a pitch cycle, or a tough season, keep the tally — because the number means you're still in the game. Why it works: Rejection is data, not verdict. The right "family" is still ahead. 2. Reframe the Failure Before It Becomes Goob – When things go wrong, find someone to help you see it differently — a partner, a friend, a mentor. Goob had no one to reframe his baseball miss, and he wallowed for 30 years. You don't have to. Why it works: The story you tell yourself about failure determines whether it becomes a pivot or a prison. 3. Stay Curious, Keep Moving Forward – Don't just look at the result — ask why, like Olaf. Curiosity isn't passive; it's the active force that keeps you becoming instead of just being. Why it works: Complacency stops the clock. Curiosity keeps the path alive. In this episode, Courtney Kern — Disney Cruise Line analyst, co-host of the Disney book podcast Book of the Mouse Club, and Walt Disney Company insider — joins Ryan to unpack the underrated gem that is Meet the Robinsons. Her personal journey mirrors Lewis's story: a lifelong Disney fan who wrote Keep Moving Forward as her senior yearbook quote, then spent over a decade inside the Company that inspired that motto — even helping oversee the Disney Treasure cruise ship from naming to launch. Using Meet the Robinsons as our lens, we explore why Lewis's relentless curiosity and optimism — even in the face of 124 rejections — is what ultimately leads him home. And why Goob's inability to reframe one bad moment is a cautionary tale we all need to hear. 📚 WHAT YOU WILL LEARN IN THIS EPISODE * Why reframing failure — not avoiding it — is the actual superpower Meet the Robinsons is teaching * How curiosity functions as a career and life strategy, not just a personality trait * What it looks like to live a Keep Moving Forward philosophy through real losses, redirections, and reinventions * 👤 ABOUT COURTNEY KERN Courtney Kern is a Disney Cruise Line analyst and Walt Disney Company employee with nearly 12 years inside the organization. She co-hosted Book of the Mouse Club, a Disney-inspired literary podcast spanning 120+ episodes over seven years alongside her college friend Emily. A lifelong Disney fan and alumna of the Disney College Program, Courtney has deep expertise in Disney history, cruise operations, and the power of storytelling. She even received a shoutout in Disney historian Jim Corkus's Disney Cruise Line book under her maiden name, Courtney Guth. Views expressed are her own and do not represent the Walt Disney Company.

28 de may de 202657 min
episode Aladdin (2019) and Hopeful Resilience | Mouse Ears Movie Thoughts Siblings artwork

Aladdin (2019) and Hopeful Resilience | Mouse Ears Movie Thoughts Siblings

What if the courage to keep going wasn't about knowing the outcome — but choosing to move forward anyway? The 2019 live-action Aladdin shows us exactly why. Jasmine's refusal to accept the only two options in front of her — and her song "Speechless" — is one of Disney's most underrated portraits of hopeful resilience. Riley, Caleb, and Hannah — the three siblings behind the Disney podcast Mouse Ears Movie Thoughts — join Ryan this week to share how they built a 160+ episode show starting with one shared microphone and a "why not?" attitude. Their story mirrors Aladdin's own: starting with nothing but your voice and your content, faking it until the quality catches up, and pushing through walls to discover something bigger on the other side. 🎯 3 Actionable Takeaways 1. Set Goals by Quarter, Not by Capstone – Specific 90-day goals. Broad 5-year vision. Never let a far-out goal cap what's possible. 2. Write Down Every Milestone with a Date – Track progress so you can see how far you've come. What you measure, you can improve. 3. Reimagine Your Process When You Hit a Wall – Don't just push harder. Ask "why not?" and build a new pathway. Have a contingency plan before you need one. This episode covers Jasmine's expanded arc in the live-action Aladdin, the "why not?" philosophy from Disney Imagineering legend Bob Weiss, Simon Sinek on team trust, and a rapid-fire round featuring hot takes on Robin Williams vs. Will Smith as the Genie, favorite Disney villains, and the best food at Disneyland. ABOUT YES AND LAND: Yes And Land explores the leadership lessons, relationship dynamics, and hard choices hidden in the stories we love. Hosted by Ryan Gregerson, a family law attorney at RCG Law Group, Disney enthusiast, and business coach for law firm owners at Altium Advisors, each episode connects familiar narratives to real-world wisdom you can actually use. New episodes every Thursday. #YesAndLand #DisneyAdults #DisneyPodcast #Aladdin2019 #LiveActionAladdin #HopefulResilience #MouseEarsMovieThoughts #DisneyStorytelling 👉 Subscribe to Yes And Land with Ryan Gregerson on YouTube 👉 Listen to the full episode of Yes And Land on all podcast platforms 👉 Like, comment, and share with someone who has a creative dream they keep putting off

23 de may de 20261 h 2 min
episode Cinderella and the Courage to Find Joy | Kamille Bauer on Grief and Happiness artwork

Cinderella and the Courage to Find Joy | Kamille Bauer on Grief and Happiness

What if the most unfair thing that ever happened to you became the very thing that made you unstoppable? Cinderella shows us why. She lost everything — her mother, her father, her home — and still chose kindness and courage over bitterness. And that's exactly the choice Kamille Bauer made when her husband's rare cancer returned after 11 years in remission, leaving her a single mom of three with no roadmap for what came next. 🎯 3 Actionable Takeaways 1. Write Down What You Have – Make a list of your blessings, what you love, what's going for you right now. Then return to that list every time grief or depression pulls you under. Why it works: You can't put conditions on happiness. Gratitude anchors you to what's real and present. 2. Turn On Your Kindness Radar – Look for one moment this week to step outside your own bubble and do something specific for someone else — don't ask "how can I help?" Just do it. Why it works: Serving others is one of the fastest ways to stop wallowing and start moving forward. What you give comes back tenfold. 3. Give Yourself Grace – Stop measuring your grief against someone else's timeline. Don't beat yourself up for still hurting, for laughing, for moving forward, or for not moving forward fast enough. Why it works: Grief is not linear — it's as unique as your fingerprint. "Move forward" doesn't mean "move on." In this episode, Kamille Bauer, happiness advocate and wellness entrepreneur, joins Ryan to talk about what it actually looks like to find joy when life is genuinely, unfairly hard. Her journey mirrors Cinderella's almost step for step: fairy tale life → sudden devastating loss → years of learning to choose kindness over bitterness → emerging with a deeper capacity for empathy, purpose, and happiness than she ever had before. Using Cinderella as our lens, we explore why Cinderella's gracious response to an unfair world wasn't weakness — it was the most courageous thing she could have done. Kamille's story is the real-world version of that. She had every legal, emotional, and moral right to be bitter. She chose differently.

21 de may de 20261 h 28 min
episode Frozen and the Power of Embracing What Makes You Different | with Stephanie Dowland artwork

Frozen and the Power of Embracing What Makes You Different | with Stephanie Dowland

Frozen teaches us that the thing we've spent our lives hiding might be exactly what the world needs most. Stephanie Dowland was born with a birth defect affecting her hands — and like Elsa, she spent years concealing it. Gloves. Cotton balls stuffed in the fingers. A lifetime of quietly stepping back so no one would notice. Until the piano changed everything. 🎯 3 Actionable Takeaways 1. Let It Go (For Real) – Release one expectation you've been carrying that was never really yours. Why it works: You can't show up fully as yourself while performing someone else's version of you. 2. Discover Your Inner Olaf – Reconnect with the thing you loved before life taught you to be embarrassed by it. Why it works: That uninhibited, joyful version of you is where your best work lives. 3. Find Your Five People – Surround yourself with people whose character you want to reflect. Why it works: You become the average of who you spend the most time with — so choose intentionally. Through the lens of Frozen, Ryan and Stephanie explore what it really means to let it go — and why love, not willpower, is what sets us free. #YesAndLand #DisneyAdults #DisneyPodcast #Frozen #LetItGo #EmbraceYourDifference #PersonalGrowth

14 de may de 20261 h 1 min
episode WALL-E and Building Safe Communities | Jennica Anusua on Human Connection in the Age of AI artwork

WALL-E and Building Safe Communities | Jennica Anusua on Human Connection in the Age of AI

What happens when technology and distraction slowly replace the one thing that makes us human? WALL-E shows us the cost — a world where people float in hover chairs, screens in their faces, completely disconnected from each other. The little robot surrounded by consumed-away humanity still yearns to connect, and that spark is everything. Jennica, filmmaker and Johns Hopkins-trained health scientist, has spent her career building exactly those moments of real connection — with refugees, child soldiers, trauma survivors, and now through film. 🎯 3 Actionable Takeaways 1. Practice Presence – Turn off devices and sit for 10–30 minutes observing what's around you. Why it works: You can't build safe community with others until you have a safe connection with yourself. 2. Audit the Spaces You're In – Ask: Do I feel like myself here? What would need to shift? Why it works: You can't move toward safety until you can name what safety feels like for you. 3. Reach Out and Actually Connect – Go beyond a text. Send a voice message, make a call, or show up. Share something you're learning. Why it works: Community is built in small, consistent moments of real contact. In this episode, Jennica and Ryan use WALL-E as a lens to explore what it truly takes to build safe, authentic community. Her journey spans continents — from working with child soldiers in African war zones to Rohingya refugee women in Southeast Asia to neuropsychiatric research with teens — and now into filmmaking. She brings it all to bear on one urgent question: in the age of AI, what do we have to protect about what makes us human? You'll learn: * Why you cannot heal until you feel safe — and what that means for your team, family, and community * The real meaning of authenticity, and why "I'm just being myself" can go dangerously wrong * Why apology without repair is meaningless — and what actually rebuilds trust * How WALL-E's cautionary tale maps directly onto how we live right now About Jennica: Jennica is a filmmaker, actor, and mental health professional with a Master of Health Science from Johns Hopkins, a certificate from Harvard, and ongoing graduate study at NYU. She has led psychosocial programs for refugees and trauma survivors across multiple continents and is currently writing, directing, and starring in her own film in production in New York City. ABOUT YES AND LAND: Yes And Land explores the leadership lessons, relationship dynamics, and hard choices hidden in the stories we love. Hosted by Ryan Gregerson, family law attorney at RCG Law Group, Disney enthusiast, and business coach at Altium Advisors. New episodes every Thursday. #YesAndLand #DisneyAdults #DisneyPodcast #WALLE #Pixar #SafeCommunity #MentalHealth #HumanConnection #Authenticity #Belonging 👉 Subscribe to Yes And Land with Ryan Gregerson on YouTube 👉 Listen on all podcast platforms 👉 Like, comment, and share with someone who wonders if real human connection is disappearing — and wants to do something about it

7 de may de 20261 h 25 min