it’s nothing. I’m fine.

Still in the Game: How 700 Women Over 50 Found Their People on the Court

44 min · I går
episode Still in the Game: How 700 Women Over 50 Found Their People on the Court cover

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What happens when 700+ women over 50 put on bloomers, hit the court, and refuse to be invisible? You get the Granny Basketball League — and apparently, you get one of the most quietly revolutionary communities in the country. This week, I'm sitting down with Barb, the founder of the Granny Basketball League, and Corrie, a player who found something there she didn't know she was looking for. We talk about how a league built on 1920s rules (no running, no jumping, two dribbles — and yes, the bloomers are mandatory) has become a lifeline for women navigating the second half of life. We get into the origin story — how Barb's father's memories of early women's basketball in Iowa sparked something that grew into 53+ teams across the country. We talk about what those "gentler" rules actually do for women's bodies and spirits, why the "granny" framing might be more liberating than it sounds, and what it means to be seen, to play, and to belong when culture keeps telling you it's time to step back. Corrie gets honest about the part of her that was nervous to show up — and what she found on the other side of that door. We talk about friendship, bodies, purpose, and the weird magic of a parking lot conversation that changes everything. If you've ever thought that sounds amazing, but not for me — this episode is for you. www.grannybasketball.com

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24 Episoder

episode Still in the Game: How 700 Women Over 50 Found Their People on the Court cover

Still in the Game: How 700 Women Over 50 Found Their People on the Court

What happens when 700+ women over 50 put on bloomers, hit the court, and refuse to be invisible? You get the Granny Basketball League — and apparently, you get one of the most quietly revolutionary communities in the country. This week, I'm sitting down with Barb, the founder of the Granny Basketball League, and Corrie, a player who found something there she didn't know she was looking for. We talk about how a league built on 1920s rules (no running, no jumping, two dribbles — and yes, the bloomers are mandatory) has become a lifeline for women navigating the second half of life. We get into the origin story — how Barb's father's memories of early women's basketball in Iowa sparked something that grew into 53+ teams across the country. We talk about what those "gentler" rules actually do for women's bodies and spirits, why the "granny" framing might be more liberating than it sounds, and what it means to be seen, to play, and to belong when culture keeps telling you it's time to step back. Corrie gets honest about the part of her that was nervous to show up — and what she found on the other side of that door. We talk about friendship, bodies, purpose, and the weird magic of a parking lot conversation that changes everything. If you've ever thought that sounds amazing, but not for me — this episode is for you. www.grannybasketball.com

I går44 min
episode Speed Dating Disasters, Self-Love Detours, and Why We Should Probably Just Start Our Own Matchmaking Service cover

Speed Dating Disasters, Self-Love Detours, and Why We Should Probably Just Start Our Own Matchmaking Service

Katie went speed dating. The men were older than advertised. One of them slipped her his number anyway — against the actual rules. And somehow, this became the perfect jumping-off point for everything. Michelle and Katie — two women in their 40s navigating the wildly weird world of midlife dating — are back for round two, and this episode goes deep. They talk about what it actually means to love yourself before you look for love from someone else (spoiler: it's not just a bumper sticker), how emotional self-regulation is the skill nobody taught us and everybody needs, and why building a secure attachment with yourself is the real foundation under every relationship you'll ever have. They also roast the apps. Extensively. With joy. And yes — by the end of this episode, they will have half-seriously proposed starting their own dating service. You'll understand why. In this episode: * Katie's speed dating recap, including the men who were definitely not her age range * Why rule-breaking romantic gestures aren't cute — they're just rule-breaking * Learning to self-regulate before you expect a partner to do it for you * Secure attachment as a personal practice, not just a relationship dynamic * The app experience: what's broken, why it's broken, and what we'd do instead * The business idea that might actually make sense If you're dating after divorce, re-entering the dating scene in your 40s or 50s, healing your attachment patterns, or just trying to figure out who you are before you find someone to be with — pull up a chair.

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episode The Love Story Nobody Writes Songs About cover

The Love Story Nobody Writes Songs About

What happens when a panic attack at the happiest place on earth becomes the beginning of a beautiful friendship? Mary and Kelsey tell the story of the moment that fast-tracked their bond — a full-on meltdown in the middle of Disneyland, and a friend who didn't flinch. Kelsey's calm, steady presence in that moment said everything: you are not too much, and I am not going anywhere. In this episode, Amy sits down with two platonic best friends who have built something rare — a relationship that actually feels safe. They get honest about their attachment styles (Mary is anxiously attached and married to avoidant Chad; Kelsey is single and avoidantly attached herself), and how that unlikely pairing has become one of the most clarifying relationships in Mary's life. Because sometimes the person who helps you understand your spouse... is your avoidant best friend. They dig into what emotional regulation actually looks like in real friendship, why co-regulation isn't just a couples thing, and how the people around us can either escalate our nervous system or bring it back down. Spoiler: Kelsey is very good at bringing it back down. And because these two contain multitudes — they also happen to be adventurous, outdoorsy women who can go from hiking boots to heels without skipping a beat. This one's for anyone who has found their person in an unexpected place, who has been caught mid-panic by someone who didn't make it weird, or who just needs a reminder that the right friendships can change the way you see everything — including your marriage. Kelsey Kurtis: @kelseymkurtis Kelseykurtis.com   Mary Morris Solomon- @marygold.tales www.marygoldtales.com [http://www.marygoldtales.com]   amyprieb.com [http://amyprieb.com/] insta: @amypriebtherapy facebook: amy prieb lmft

30. juni 20261 h 0 min
episode Yurtism #5: Stop Interpreting Your Partner Through Your Own Lens — They Aren't You cover

Yurtism #5: Stop Interpreting Your Partner Through Your Own Lens — They Aren't You

When your partner does something that bothers you, what's your first instinct? To ask what they meant — or to assume you already know? Most of us interpret our partner's behavior through the lens of our own personality, our own wiring, our own history. It feels like logic. If I did that, it would mean this — so that must be what it means when they do it. The problem is you are not in a relationship with yourself. You are in a relationship with someone fundamentally different from you, and that filter is going to get you into trouble almost every time. In this episode, Amy explores one of the most common — and most avoidable — sources of conflict in relationships: the moment we stop being curious about our partner and start assuming we already understand them. Spoiler: we usually don't. In this Yurtism, you'll explore: * Why interpreting your partner's behavior through your own personality is a recipe for misreading them * How our individual wiring quietly shapes the assumptions we don't even realize we're making * What it looks like to replace assumption with genuine curiosity about your partner's inner world Your partner is not a version of you. Getting that wrong is costly. Getting it right changes everything.   amyprieb.com [http://amyprieb.com/] insta: @amypriebtherapy facebook: amy prieb lmft

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episode It's Not Nothing: One Woman's Cancer Journey Through Chemo, Community, and Coming Out the Other Side cover

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What happens when the person who holds everything together has to let herself be held? This week, Amy sits down with Jennifer Chipperfield, who, at 53, found herself in the middle of something she couldn't manage, fix, or push through alone — a lymphoma diagnosis that interrupted life as she knew it and asked her to do the one thing that doesn't come naturally to most of us: receive. Together, long-term friends Amy and Jenni talk about what it actually looks like to go through chemotherapy while still showing up for your kids, your work, and your relationships. About the particular loneliness that can live inside a crowded room full of people who love you. About the moment you stop saying "I'm fine" — and what comes after. This conversation is about mortality without being morbid, about community without being sentimental, about friendship and how we show up for each other, and about the strange, tender territory on the other side of treatment — where the chemo is done but the uncertainty isn't.   amyprieb.com [http://amyprieb.com/] insta: @amypriebtherapy facebook: amy prieb lmft

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