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By Asher Pandjiris
4.9
179179 ratings
The podcast currently has 89 episodes available.
In this episode, you will hear from beloved Kintsugi Therapist Colltive members, who participated in a group discussion about what KTC is, why it is a community that matters so much to them and why our care worker collective is a critically important space that counterbalances the extractive nature of capitalism and toxic professionalism embedded in the mental health field.
(Thank you Luca, Alice, Margee, Dani, Bec, Sebastian and Leah)
About us:
We need not be fine: A manifesto for care workers who can't go on like this
KTC Offerings (Embodied Private Practice Cohort, Mending With Gold and Barriers to Nourishment)
Hannah Moushabeck is a second-generation Palestinian American author, editor, and book marketer who was raised in a family of publishers and booksellers in Western Massachusetts and England. Born in Brooklyn into Interlink Publishing, a family-run independent publishing house, she learned the power of literature at a young age. She is the author of Homeland: My Father Dreams of Palestine (Chronicle Books, March 2023). She lives in Amherst, Massachusetts on the homelands of the Pocumtuc and Nipmuc Nations.
Hannah's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hannahmoushabeck/
Homeland: My Father Dreams of Palestine (BUY NOW)
What’s been going on with Asher?
Asher's heart and soul passion project:
https://www.kintsugitherapistcollective.com/embodied-private-practice-cohort
Asher's Private Practice Focus (Ketamine Assisted Psychotherapy): https://www.asherpandjiris.com/workwithme
To support Kintsugi Therapist Collective: https://www.patreon.com/kintsugitherapistcollective
To read this episode, subscribe to my free newsletter: https://www.livinginthisqueerbody.com/contact
All things Kintsugi Therapist Collective: https://www.kintsugitherapistcollective.com/offerings
In this conversation we hear Hannah and Zena talk about caring ferociously, macho homemaking, living life as a committed spinster, work as a trauma response and domestic embodiment.
Hannah McGregor is an academic, podcaster, and author living on the traditional and unceded territory of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh First Nations. She co-hosts the podcast Witch, Please, a critical rereading of the Harry Potter series, and she is the author of A Sentimental Education (WLUP 2022).
Hannah's website: https://www.hannahmcgregor.com/
Hannah's favourite duet: The Confrontation (Les Misérables), by Colm Wilkinson and Philip Quast
Zena Sharman is a writer, speaker, strategist, and LGBTQ+ health advocate. She’s the author of three books, including The Care We Dream Of: Liberatory and Transformative Approaches to LGBTQ+ Health (Arsenal Pulp Press, 2021) and the Lambda Literary award-winning anthology The Remedy: Queer and Trans Voices on Health and Health Care (Arsenal Pulp Press, 2016).
Zena's website: https://zenasharman.com/
Zena's favourite duet: Stay by Rihanna featuring Mikky Ekko
All the links/info about Erin and Fanny: https://www.livinginthisqueerbody.com/episodes/fanny-priest-erin-fairchild
All things Asher
Mending with Gold: Weekend Intensive
Embodied Private Practice Cohort
Embodied Testimony: Sick and Tired
Samantha Irby writes a newsletter called Bitches Gotta Eat. Her favorite duet is Patti Labelle and Michael Mcdonald's “On My Own.”
Marlee Grace is a dancer and writer whose work focuses on the self, devotion, ritual, creativity, and art making. Their practice is rooted in improvisation as a compositional form that takes shape in movement videos, books, quilting, online courses, and hosting artists. Grace’s Instagram dance project Personal Practice has been featured in the New York Times, Dance Magazine, Vanity Fair, The Huffington Post, and more.
They have a newsletter that comes out every Monday called Monday Monday. Sometimes it comes out on different days but usually it comes out on Monday. It’s always free. If you love it and want to also read the monthly advice column YES YES you become a paid subscriber.
Marlee’s most recent book is Getting to Center: Pathways to Finding Yourself Within the Great Unknown. They also wrote the book How to Not Always Be Working. Their favorite duet is “Dilemma” with Nelly and Kelly Rowland.
Weekend Intensive: Mending With Gold
December 9-11, 2022
Join KTC’s co-directors for a virtual weekend intensive with a concentrated and highly personalized curriculum designed to support care workers*. We hope to challenge the unrealistic expectations of the care work industrial complex, nurture pathways for reconnecting with pleasure and develop enlivening professional practices/strategies.
Enrolling Spring 2023:
The Embodied Private Practice Cohort is a year-long mentorship offering for clinicians who are beginning or revisioning private practice with a focus on embodiment and sustainability. Combining reality-based, capacity-conscious clinical and business consultation, mentorship will focus on the ways that therapists can be nurtured by clinical practice, avoid burnout, and commit to sustainability, self care and healing.
$$Support$$ Living in this Queer Body Podcast
More about Joseph here
Always Coming Home
Una Aya Osato (they/she/flower) is a performer, writer, sex educator, community CareBear, stripper, and clown from NYC. They are an award-winning actor and playwright who tours her original work nationally and internationally. Una is also a co-founding member of brASS: Brown RadicalAss Burlesque, a BIPOC femme burlesque collective. Una has been featured in the New York Times, Teen Vogue, NPR’s CodeSwitch, NowThis, and many other publications and platforms.
For more Una happenings find flower on IG @ThisIsUna & on patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ThisIsUna/membership
We love you Una. Please consider supporting Una and their comrades via a one time or ongoing donation via patreon. It is so important. We also love all the bodies at the margins. We are listening.
Mentioned in the interview:
Una’s long covid comrade patreon: BED COLLECTIVE
http://www.patreon.com/bedcollective
Sini Anderson Living in this Queer Body Episode:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/swimming-upstream-sini-anderson-on-late-stage-lyme/id1462086436?i=1000530764468
Care Work by Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha
https://arsenalpulp.com/Books/C/Care-Work
KINTSUGI THERAPIST COLLECTIVE
To apply for the Fall Embodied Private Practice Cohort: kintsugitherapistcollective.com
KTC MERCH
If you are not a care worker, consider purchasing some Kintsugi Therapist Collective merchandise. When you buy a t-shirt, hoodie, or tote bag, you support the sustainability of this developing business that needs a bit of a nest egg so that we can offer scholarships, send our collective members to conferences and retreats and sustain and make actionable, the radical vision of this collective.
Thank you Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, Bridget Bertrand and Dr. Jennie Wang-Hall who attempted to address the question: What does it mean to be a care worker in the third year of this global pandemic?
Thank you for the additional question.....“What happens when we are reached for, and we are the alternative system, and we are completely tapped out?” (Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha)
and
thoughts on rushing towards denial, heartbreak, disability justice, "i can't go to your party," "no vietnam war memorial for the covid dead," deep grief, being in crisis and at capacity, stuck in trauma loops, building alternative systems care, hope in abolition, connecting in rage and grief and creating and joining collectives.
Kintsugi Therapist Collective
CARE WORK: Dreaming Disability Justice By Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha
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