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Somewhere Between a Dream and a Door: The Knitted Together Story

54 min · I går
episode Somewhere Between a Dream and a Door: The Knitted Together Story cover

Beskrivelse

A tiny house can teach you a lot about what really matters, but Kim Kasl’s story takes that lesson somewhere unexpected: toward building a faith-based maternity home nonprofit in Minnesota. We sit down as cousins who haven’t truly caught up in years, and Kim walks us through the real timeline, from a 140-square-foot home and homeschooling dreams to a clear calling to support pregnant mothers who feel trapped and alone.  Kim shares the moment everything shifted: a strange travel job, long hours of silence, and a vision of a future home filled with women and babies, rooted in community, stability, and practical help. From there, we talk nonprofit leadership in plain language, including property hunting, renovation chaos, board development, mentorship, and why “monthly support” matters more than most people realize. You’ll also hear how Knitted Together plans to offer residential housing for moms and babies for up to 18 months, along with mentoring, structured goal-setting, and real-life pathways toward work, childcare, transportation, and long-term housing.  We also dig into the human side: what mothers actually need, how to honor women whose faith looks different, and what it means to build slowly with wisdom instead of rushing a mission into mistakes. If you care about pregnancy support, maternity homes, nonprofit startups, Christian community care, or simply what it looks like when a calling becomes a place, this conversation will stay with you.  Subscribe, share this with a friend who cares about supporting moms, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show. If you want to support the work directly, head to nitatogether.org. 0:00 Welcome And Meet Kim Castle 3:51 Tiny House Living With Real Purpose 8:52 A Strange Job Becomes A Turning Point 16:54 Finding The Property And Funding Miracles 25:32 Renovating The Trellis House For Moms 29:03 Why It’s Called Knitted Together 34:46 What Mothers Need Most Right Now 37:46 Faith Differences And The 10 Year Vision 41:30 Learning Nonprofit Life Through Mentors 46:59 How To Support And Final Reflections

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58 Episoder

episode Somewhere Between a Dream and a Door: The Knitted Together Story cover

Somewhere Between a Dream and a Door: The Knitted Together Story

A tiny house can teach you a lot about what really matters, but Kim Kasl’s story takes that lesson somewhere unexpected: toward building a faith-based maternity home nonprofit in Minnesota. We sit down as cousins who haven’t truly caught up in years, and Kim walks us through the real timeline, from a 140-square-foot home and homeschooling dreams to a clear calling to support pregnant mothers who feel trapped and alone.  Kim shares the moment everything shifted: a strange travel job, long hours of silence, and a vision of a future home filled with women and babies, rooted in community, stability, and practical help. From there, we talk nonprofit leadership in plain language, including property hunting, renovation chaos, board development, mentorship, and why “monthly support” matters more than most people realize. You’ll also hear how Knitted Together plans to offer residential housing for moms and babies for up to 18 months, along with mentoring, structured goal-setting, and real-life pathways toward work, childcare, transportation, and long-term housing.  We also dig into the human side: what mothers actually need, how to honor women whose faith looks different, and what it means to build slowly with wisdom instead of rushing a mission into mistakes. If you care about pregnancy support, maternity homes, nonprofit startups, Christian community care, or simply what it looks like when a calling becomes a place, this conversation will stay with you.  Subscribe, share this with a friend who cares about supporting moms, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show. If you want to support the work directly, head to nitatogether.org. 0:00 Welcome And Meet Kim Castle 3:51 Tiny House Living With Real Purpose 8:52 A Strange Job Becomes A Turning Point 16:54 Finding The Property And Funding Miracles 25:32 Renovating The Trellis House For Moms 29:03 Why It’s Called Knitted Together 34:46 What Mothers Need Most Right Now 37:46 Faith Differences And The 10 Year Vision 41:30 Learning Nonprofit Life Through Mentors 46:59 How To Support And Final Reflections

I går54 min
episode Soul Sisters cover

Soul Sisters

Your nervous system remembers everything, even when you swear you’re “fine.” We sit down as longtime friends who get mistaken for each other and end up tracing a surprisingly connected path: teenage rebellion, yin yoga, and why the slow work (fascia, long holds, and breath) can create the biggest release. We also nerd out on the idea that the body is mostly space, and how that changes the way we think about connection, energy, and what we carry. From there we go straight into the stuff people love to label “woo woo” and ask a more honest question: what if it’s simply not fully explained yet? We talk Reiki studies, intuition, and the growing overlap between alternative healing and modern psychotherapy. Psychedelics come up too, including microdosing, LSD, and the feeling of “wholeness” that can reset your perspective when it’s approached carefully. We keep it grounded with real cautions about mindset, set and setting, and why not every tool is for every person. The most personal part is the emotional work: anger vs sadness, learning to feel feelings, shame, shadow work, and IFS parts work as a practical map for self-understanding. We share stories about repair after oversharing, choosing vulnerability, family roles that shape authenticity, and even why using AI for heartfelt messages can feel like losing someone’s real voice. If this resonates, subscribe so you don’t miss what we’re exploring next, share it with a friend who’s doing their own healing work, and leave a review with the biggest takeaway you’re sitting with right now. 0:00 Welcome And Sister Energy 0:09 A Song That Fueled Rebellion 1:04 Yin Yoga And Fascia Release 2:08 How Much Space We Are 3:50 Reiki Research And Energy Work 4:46 Psychedelics And Future Therapy 5:55 Intuition And Generational Healing 7:19 LSD And The Feeling Of Wholeness 11:50 Microdosing And Mood Shifts 12:19 Anger, Crying, And Feeling Feelings 16:23 Light As A Feather After Death 19:22 Sensory Overload And Sensitive Brains 23:11 Third Eye Moments And Deep Meditation 27:28 Shadow Work, Shame, And Triggers 32:20 Family Roles, Authenticity, And AI 39:01 Judgment, Boundaries, And Tiny Corrections 42:37 Soul Tribes And Lifelong Connection 45:13 Summer Plans And Birthday Pivots 51:41 Purpose, Community, And Dinner Nights 54:05 Goodbye And Staying Connected

31. mai 202654 min
episode Starting From Scratch To Build A Place Worth Belonging To cover

Starting From Scratch To Build A Place Worth Belonging To

A farm can be just land, or it can become a magnet for connection. We sit down with Donnie, a former trucking-world colleague who’s now the force behind Kraby Farm Bog, a mud bogging weekend in Brook Park that has grown from a friends-only hangout into a full-blown community event with a stage, bands, camping, and hundreds of attendees. Donnie shares the real reason it works: the kind of people it attracts, the relationships that form over time, and the pride he takes in doing it in a way that respects the place and the crowd. We also go personal. Donnie talks about raising four sons into independent adults and why that success can still feel bittersweet when you miss seeing them as much. From there, we dig into giving and service, including his efforts to help a friend recover from a housing deal gone wrong. The conversation turns to expectations, grudges, and why “expectations are a happiness killer” if you want more peace in your day-to-day life. Then we get into health and habits. Donnie explains his experience with type 2 diabetes, what didn’t change for him on medication, and what he says changed quickly once he committed to a carnivore approach, including how he eats, how his energy feels, and why satiety matters for metabolic health. We close with a simple spiritual lens, plus a segment where we reflect back how the people closest to Donnie describe him, and what that reveals about building a life that brings others along. If you like thoughtful conversations about community, personal growth, parenting, volunteering, and health mindset shifts, hit subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review. What part of Donnie’s story stuck with you most? 0:00 Welcome And Guest Backstory 0:26 Karaoke Roots And Favorite Song 1:45 Krabby Farm Bog Starts Small 7:03 Raising Four Sons Into Adulthood 9:40 Giving That Cannot Be Repaid 12:15 Expectations As A Happiness Killer 15:31 Carnivore Diet And Diabetes Turnaround 24:05 Spiritual Beliefs And Feeling Awe 25:16 How Others See Donnie 28:18 What He Hopes Grandkids Learn 30:31 Emergency Response Work Today 31:44 Senior Living Fundraiser Announcement 32:27 Closing Thanks

24. mai 202632 min
episode Still Waters Build Strong Men cover

Still Waters Build Strong Men

A dream is like a river, and Shaun Joy has actually lived that line. We sit down as old high school friends and trace how an outdoors-first kid from rural Minnesota becomes a man who’s guided thousands of hours on the water, survived the oil fields, and built a career in construction GPS and heavy equipment technology sales without losing his sense of wonder. Along the way, Shaun shares the mindset that keeps him moving: expect the unexpected, give credit to every stop behind you, and treat every so-called failure like paid training.  We go deep on faith and awe, including why Alaska hit him so hard and how nature helps him feel grounded, present, and clear. We also unpack the fork-in-the-road choices so many of us face: chasing money, chasing approval, or choosing the path that actually fits your values and your family. If you’re wrestling with a toxic job, feeling stuck in comparison, or questioning what the “good life” even is, this conversation offers a practical reset built on gratitude, courage, and time.  Shaun also gets real about habits and integrity, including his decision to rethink alcohol because routine can quietly become a trap. We talk about self-trust, small daily decisions, and why being fully present with your kids and your people matters more than any checklist. If this hit home, subscribe, share the episode with a friend who needs a nudge, and leave a review with the one choice you’re making to swim upstream. 0:00 Song Choice And River Metaphor 2:29 Roots Sisters And Early Mentors 5:34 Alaska Faith And Bigger Worlds 8:59 High School To Podcast Courage 12:38 Big Fish And Choosing Growth 22:35 Guiding Handshakes And People Skills 31:26 Career Switches From Retail To Road 39:50 Oil Fields Love And Risk 49:13 GPS Tech Career And Family Priorities 56:08 Loss Gratitude And The Good Life 1:01:30 Church Service And Taking Kids Fishing 1:04:55 Alcohol Self-Trust And Small Decisions 1:13:25 How Friends Describe Sean 1:21:06 Presence Conversation And Closing Wisdom 1:30:09 Goodbye And Final Toast

17. mai 20261 h 30 min
episode Saving Myself One Small Decision At A Time - Arin cover

Saving Myself One Small Decision At A Time - Arin

A craving isn’t always “I want a drink” so much as “I don’t want to feel this.” Arin gets brutally honest about what alcohol did for him at first, what it started costing him, and what changed when he decided enough was enough. With more than 200 days sober, he walks us through the emotional roots of drinking, the triggers that still show up, and the small decision that matters most in the moment: pause before you react. We talk about the real mechanics of alcohol addiction recovery, not the highlight-reel version. Aaron describes stress cravings, feeling disrespected, and the mental tug-of-war that can hit out of nowhere, then shares the coping skills he learned in treatment that help him reset. We also get into AA and NA, why “addiction is addiction,” and how the idea of a higher power can be personal and nonjudgmental. If you’ve ever felt weird about meetings, rehab, or asking for help, this conversation gives you language that makes it feel reachable. The story expands into faith, family trauma, and rebuilding identity after survival mode. Aaron opens up about setting boundaries, the slow path toward forgiveness, and using self-affirmations to change his inner voice. We also pivot to purpose and community: his axe-throwing venture as a sober way to have fun, and his long-term dream of building a homeless shelter because he knows that struggle firsthand. If you’re working on sobriety, supporting someone who is, or trying to build a better life from a hard past, hit play, then subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with the one tool that helps you stay steady. 0:00 Welcome And Aaron's Sobriety Reset 0:13 Why "Dear Alcohol" Hits Home 4:15 Cravings, Triggers, And The Pause 6:13 A Sunday Morning Wake Up Call 10:20 Inside Treatment: Skills That Stick 12:28 AA, NA, And Higher Power 21:20 Starting Young And Finding Real Friends 23:47 Family Pain And Boundaries For Now 30:37 Faith Means Taking The Next Step 41:16 Axe Throwing As Sober Fun 44:08 How Others See Aaron Now 50:43 Affirmations And Reparenting Your Mind 56:31 Why A Homeless Shelter Matters 59:04 Final Reflections And Gratitude

10. mai 202659 min