
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this raw and reflective episode of Rich Queer Aunties, Christabel and Kachi use the hit show Severance as a powerful metaphor for the emotional fragmentation many of us endure, especially queer, Black, immigrant, and formerly religious folks.
Through deeply personal storytelling, they explore themes of reintegration, rage, community, grief, and the courage it takes to reclaim your full self in a world that rewards compartmentalization. From family estrangement to navigating therapy, medicine, and chosen family, this conversation is a reminder that healing isn’t clean, but it’s real.
Whether you’ve seen Severance or not, this episode invites you to reflect: What parts of yourself have you severed to survive? And what would it take to live from a place of wholeness?
Kachi on Instagram for more offerings and a good time!
Tune in and let’s get into it.
By Christabel Mintah-Galloway4.9
5252 ratings
In this raw and reflective episode of Rich Queer Aunties, Christabel and Kachi use the hit show Severance as a powerful metaphor for the emotional fragmentation many of us endure, especially queer, Black, immigrant, and formerly religious folks.
Through deeply personal storytelling, they explore themes of reintegration, rage, community, grief, and the courage it takes to reclaim your full self in a world that rewards compartmentalization. From family estrangement to navigating therapy, medicine, and chosen family, this conversation is a reminder that healing isn’t clean, but it’s real.
Whether you’ve seen Severance or not, this episode invites you to reflect: What parts of yourself have you severed to survive? And what would it take to live from a place of wholeness?
Kachi on Instagram for more offerings and a good time!
Tune in and let’s get into it.

27,370 Listeners

6,188 Listeners

1,858 Listeners

113,121 Listeners

56,944 Listeners

14,969 Listeners

24,585 Listeners

2,225 Listeners

15,356 Listeners

4,256 Listeners

1,105 Listeners

5,813 Listeners

13,710 Listeners

749 Listeners

428 Listeners