The DTA Podcast

Ep. 14: Shayne's story & what C-sections, massage, and money have in common

1 h 13 min · 15. juni 2026
episode Ep. 14: Shayne's story & what C-sections, massage, and money have in common cover

Beskrivelse

Shayne Henderson is a Registered Massage Therapist from Collingwood, Ontario, who spent 25 years helping women recover from trauma—especially postpartum and C-section trauma. She's also a licensed finance broker in the insurance sector. What connects these two seemingly different careers? Her belief that everything—our bodies, our nervous systems, our relationship with money—is interconnected. She didn't plan to become a finance broker. A health scare forced her to get her own financial house in order, and what she discovered was that women are ghosting their finances the same way they're ghosting their bodies. In this episode, Shayne talks about informed consent in healthcare, why women need to start investing early, and how your nervous system shows up in every conversation you're avoiding. Key Components * How a 25-year massage therapy career revealed what postpartum care should look like, and what most women never get. * How a health scare that made her realize she needed to plan for her family's future—and caused her to become a licensed finance broker. * The nervous system connection nobody's talking about: How our bodies react to money conversations the same way they react to healthcare decisions. * Starting with $50 a month—why the shame about not having "enough" is keeping women from securing their futures. "Ninety percent of us will be in charge of the family finances at some point in our life. Right? Because our partner passes away, we're single, whatever it is, and so many of us don't have the tools or the knowledge to manage anything." Connect with Shayne on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/shayne.henderson/] Connect with Shayne on Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/ShayneLHenderson] Connect with Shayne on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@shaynehendersonwellness] 👉 Click here to join the movement at downthereaware.org [https://www.downthereaware.org/] 🩲 Subscribe, like, and share to show us you care! 🤘 Podcast produced by Binge-Worthy Studio For informational and entertainment purposes only — not medical advice. We're here to get loud, not to play doctor.

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15 Episoder

episode Ep. 14: Shayne's story & what C-sections, massage, and money have in common cover

Ep. 14: Shayne's story & what C-sections, massage, and money have in common

Shayne Henderson is a Registered Massage Therapist from Collingwood, Ontario, who spent 25 years helping women recover from trauma—especially postpartum and C-section trauma. She's also a licensed finance broker in the insurance sector. What connects these two seemingly different careers? Her belief that everything—our bodies, our nervous systems, our relationship with money—is interconnected. She didn't plan to become a finance broker. A health scare forced her to get her own financial house in order, and what she discovered was that women are ghosting their finances the same way they're ghosting their bodies. In this episode, Shayne talks about informed consent in healthcare, why women need to start investing early, and how your nervous system shows up in every conversation you're avoiding. Key Components * How a 25-year massage therapy career revealed what postpartum care should look like, and what most women never get. * How a health scare that made her realize she needed to plan for her family's future—and caused her to become a licensed finance broker. * The nervous system connection nobody's talking about: How our bodies react to money conversations the same way they react to healthcare decisions. * Starting with $50 a month—why the shame about not having "enough" is keeping women from securing their futures. "Ninety percent of us will be in charge of the family finances at some point in our life. Right? Because our partner passes away, we're single, whatever it is, and so many of us don't have the tools or the knowledge to manage anything." Connect with Shayne on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/shayne.henderson/] Connect with Shayne on Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/ShayneLHenderson] Connect with Shayne on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@shaynehendersonwellness] 👉 Click here to join the movement at downthereaware.org [https://www.downthereaware.org/] 🩲 Subscribe, like, and share to show us you care! 🤘 Podcast produced by Binge-Worthy Studio For informational and entertainment purposes only — not medical advice. We're here to get loud, not to play doctor.

15. juni 20261 h 13 min
episode Ep. 13: Lily's story and eating disorders, menstruation, and how to get help cover

Ep. 13: Lily's story and eating disorders, menstruation, and how to get help

Lily Thrope is a licensed clinical social worker and certified intuitive eating counselor with a private practice in Manhattan. She specializes in eating disorders, body image, and women's health—and she came to this work because she lived it. She got her period at 10, spent two decades battling an eating disorder that no doctor caught, and it wasn't until a friend finally named it that she began recovery. Throughout college and her early twenties, she lost her period for months at a time, saw multiple doctors, and not one of them asked the question that mattered: Are you eating enough? Now she runs a practice treating women in larger bodies, hosts free Recovery Supper Club dinners in NYC, and is passionate about one thing: the dangerous intersection of eating disorders and women's health. Key Components: * Starting her period at 10 changed everything — it was the moment her body became something to shrink instead of something to live in. * How doctors never asked the one question that mattered, and instead went through years of tests and theories while the real answer went unspoken. * Why doctors hand out weight loss prescriptions like they're candy, and what that actually does to women with PCOS, endometriosis, and eating disorder histories. * From rock bottom to building a practice where women in larger bodies actually get support: Her journey from restricting her way through college to helping others recover. "Not one doctor that I saw said, 'are you eating enough? What's your relationship with food like?' No one thought to ask those questions and I slid under the radar and was never noticed until this friend in grad school who noticed it." Check out thropetherapy.com [https://thropetherapy.com/] Connect with Lily on Instagram @thropetherapynyc [https://www.instagram.com/thropetherapynyc/]  👉 Click here to join the movement at downthereaware.org [https://www.downthereaware.org/] 🩲 Subscribe, like, and share to show us you care! 🤘 Podcast produced by Binge-Worthy Studio For informational and entertainment purposes only — not medical advice. We're here to get loud, not to play doctor.

1. juni 202649 min
episode Ep. 12: Melanie's story & the pelvic health conversation we need to be having cover

Ep. 12: Melanie's story & the pelvic health conversation we need to be having

Amy is joined today by Melanie Sutherland — the CEO and founder of Body Co, a multidisciplinary clinic in Toronto. She is also a recognized pelvic health & perinatal physiotherapist. Melanie started her clinic 12 years ago because she got tired of being shuttled between different practitioners who never talked to each other. She never planned to work in pelvic health — until a humbling moment in training made her realize her own pelvic floor wasn't what she thought it was. Now she watches women suffer from untreated perimenopause and pelvic floor symptoms because they don't know the care exists, that it's covered by benefits, or what to expect. In this episode, Melanie talks about the gap between what women need and what the system offers, why kegels aren't always the answer, and what actually happens in an appointment. Key Components * How she accidentally became a pelvic health expert: Until she realized her own pelvic floor wasn't what she thought. * The gap between Canada and other countries: Why France gets 12 paid appointments after birth and we get silence. * Why half the women doing kegels are making their problems worse: Nobody checks under the hood first. * What actually happens in a pelvic health appointment: It's not what you think. * Why saying things are "common" in pelvic health actually gives women a permission slip to not investigate further. "When you look to European cultures, like France, when you have a baby, you get 12 paid pelvic health appointments afterwards. But we're so prudish here in Canada." Check out Body Co. Toronto [https://bodycotoronto.com/] Connect with Melanie on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/bodycotoronto/] 👉 Click here to join the movement at downthereaware.org [https://www.downthereaware.org/] 🩲 Subscribe, like, and share to show us you care! 🤘 Podcast produced by Binge-Worthy Studio For informational and entertainment purposes only — not medical advice. We're here to get loud, not to play doctor.

25. mai 202650 min
episode Ep. 11: Alicia's story & the "productive rage" that's raised over $120,000 for ovarian cancer cover

Ep. 11: Alicia's story & the "productive rage" that's raised over $120,000 for ovarian cancer

Alicia Tone is a PhD in ovarian cancer biology, the Director of Research at Ovarian Cancer Canada, and the founder of Run for Her [https://runforher.ca/]—a trail running event that's raised over $120,000 since 2020. What started as a solo half-marathon fundraiser during COVID turned into something bigger: a community-driven event that brings together patient advocates, local businesses, and women who want to change outcomes for people living with ovarian cancer. In this episode, Alicia talks about what she's seeing in women's health research funding, why her work as a scientist matters less without the human stories behind it, and the productive rage that fuels everything she does. Key Components: * How a solo fundraiser became a movement, and what happens when you just share what you're doing and let people show up. * The glaring gap in women's health research funding: Why ovarian cancer is still the underdog—and what that means for outcomes. * "Poductive rage" and what happens when you channel dismissal and frustration into action. "There's been this overarching theme of dismissing women. Dismissing women who come knowing that there's something wrong in their bodies. Unfortunately, that's the overwhelming theme anytime I survey individuals who've been diagnosed with ovarian cancer." 👟 Check out Run For Her [https://runforher.ca/]  Connect with Alicia on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/aliciaatone/] 👉 Click here to join the movement at downthereaware.org [https://www.downthereaware.org/] 🩲 Subscribe, like, and share to show us you care! 🤘 Podcast produced by Binge-Worthy Studio For informational and entertainment purposes only — not medical advice. We're here to get loud, not to play doctor.

18. mai 202658 min
episode Ep. 10: Jill's story & the nervous system piece of endometriosis nobody talks about cover

Ep. 10: Jill's story & the nervous system piece of endometriosis nobody talks about

Jill Mueller is a pelvic floor physiotherapist from Hamilton, Ontario, and she has endometriosis. She had surgery to treat it... and it didn't work. Instead of accepting that, she went looking for answers and discovered something that changed everything about how she treats women with endo: the nervous system. Now she's not only treating patients but has co-founded an interdisciplinary program, Endometriosis360 [http://www.endometriosis360.ca], bringing together specialists who actually talk to each other. In this episode, Jill will challenge everything you think you know about pain, tells you what doctors don't tell us, and explains why the missing piece in women's healthcare might not be what you expect. Key Components: * Why your pain doesn't always match what doctors find, and what Jill learned when her surgery changed nothing. * What medical schools aren't teaching doctors about chronic pain * What happens when you have an endometriosis specialist, a pelvic physio, a psychologist, and a dietitian actually talking to each other and you stop working in silos * The conversation about your nervous system that you've probably never had, and why it matters that you have it now. "96% of medical schools have zero compulsory education in pain in North America for doctors. So they're not great at treating chronic symptoms and persistent pain." 👉 Connect with Jill on Instagram — @endotogether [https://www.instagram.com/endotogether/], @endometriosis360 [https://www.instagram.com/endometriosis360/], @oakvillephysio [https://www.instagram.com/oakvillephysio/] 👉 Check out the Endometriosis360 program [https://endometriosis360.ca/] — opening internationally to people who speak and understand English 👉 Visit the Healthy Balance Physiotherapy And Wellness [https://www.hbpw.ca/] clinic in Oakville, Ontario 👉 Click here to join the movement at downthereaware.org [https://www.downthereaware.org/] 🩲 Subscribe, like, and share to show us you care! 🤘 Podcast produced by Binge-Worthy Studio For informational and entertainment purposes only — not medical advice. We're here to get loud, not to play doctor.

11. mai 20261 h 8 min