Small Stones Podcast
Episode Summary What happens when one conversation with a patient leads to a community-wide movement? In this episode, Andrew Schory talks with Dr. Shannon Holt, an OBGYN in Elizabethtown, KY, about her journey into medicine, what it was like joining (and eventually taking over) her father's decades-old practice, and the moment that sparked the Pink Dot Project — a local initiative tackling period poverty head-on. Dr. Holt breaks down what period poverty actually means, why it affects far more people than most realize, and how a single small action turned into a movement now supplying thousands of dollars in period products to nonprofits across the community every month. In this episode you'll learn: • What period poverty is and why it affects an estimated 2 in 5 women in the U.S. • How a single patient conversation sparked the Pink Dot Project • Why "don't overthink it" became the guiding philosophy for distributing donations • How the government's classification of feminine products affects the availability of needed products. • Practical ways businesses and individuals can get involved Guest Information Guest Name: Dr. Shannon Holt, OBGYN Bio: Dr. Shannon Holt is an OBGYN in Elizabethtown, KY. After undergraduate studies at Transylvania University, medical school at the University of Kentucky, and her OBGYN training in Cincinnati, she returned home about 19 years ago to join her father's private practice, founded in 1978. Beyond her clinical work, Dr. Holt is the founder of the Pink Dot Project, a community initiative addressing period poverty in the Elizabethtown area, operated in partnership with Heels Together under the Central Kentucky Community Foundation. Pink Dot Project: https://ckcf4people.org/pink-dot-program/ [https://ckcf4people.org/pink-dot-program/] Episode Outline From Music Major to OBGYN: Joining Her Father's Practice (00:10) Dr. Holt shares her path from a music and broadcast journalism major to becoming an OBGYN — and what it was like to join her father's long-established Elizabethtown practice (founded 1978), eventually working alongside him until his retirement in 2020. She reflects on the unique dynamics of working with a parent and the mentorship that came with it. The Business Side of Medicine: A Gap in Training (03:01) Andrew and Dr. Holt discuss a gap common across professional fields: deep technical training with little to no education on running the business side. They talk about why private practice is becoming less sustainable, and the value of having a mentor who has "made payroll" before. What Is Period Poverty? (06:45) The conversation pivots to the story that changed everything: a patient who couldn't afford basic period supplies, and didn't qualify for help through WIC or SNAP. Dr. Holt shares the eye-opening statistics — 2 in 5 women in the U.S. can't afford period products, 1 in 4 students miss school because of it, and many women miss work as a result. How a Coffee Conversation Became the Pink Dot Project (12:40) What started as a grant conversation about menopause education turned into something else entirely once Dr. Holt shared her patient's story. The grant was eventually awarded to the local free clinic in 2023 — which then lost its funding. Thanks to Beth Avey and the team at Heals Together, the project was revived and officially launched in October 2025 with two permanent donation sites: The Gathering Bakery in Radcliff and Hub House downtown, plus Dr. Holt's own office. Keeping It Sustainable: Donations, Drives & the Tampon Tax (19:35) Dr. Holt explains how local businesses sponsor donation drives, the Amazon wishlist that ships directly to her office, and the monthly distributions — about $8,000 worth of supplies delivered to 22 nonprofit organizations each month. She also covers Kentucky's classification of period products as "luxury items" subject to sales tax, an issue that's seen multiple failed legislative attempts (2019, 2023, 2024), and the push toward reusable supplies like period underwear and menstrual cups and discs. Speed Round Highlights (25:31) Books & Resources Mentioned • The Boys in the Boat by Daniel James Brown — On perseverance, teamwork, and the 1936 U.S. Olympic rowing team • The Correspondent — Shannon's current read, a novel about an elderly woman and a lifetime of letters Host & Show Info Host: Andrew Schory, Business Coach About the Host: Andrew Schory is a business coach dedicated to helping leaders build momentum through small, intentional actions. Each episode of the Small Stones Podcast features conversations with business and thought leaders to uncover the habits and decisions that move life and business forward — one small stone at a time. Podcast Website: smallstonespodcast.com [https://smallstonespodcast.com] Community • Support the Pink Dot Project: Donate, sponsor a drive, or shop the Amazon wishlist at https://ckcf4people.org/pink-dot-program/ [https://ckcf4people.org/pink-dot-program/] • Rate & Review on Apple Podcasts — The most impactful way to support the show and help other listeners find it. • Work with Andrew: Interested in one-on-one or group business coaching? Visit smallstonespodcast.com [https://smallstonespodcast.com] to schedule a session. Share this episode with someone who could use a reminder that one honest conversation — and one small action — can grow into something that helps an entire community.
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