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Belly of the Beast Life Stories & Beyond with David All

38 Episodes

23 minutes | Mar 1, 2021
Beyond: Welcome the Liminal and Rumi
In this Beyond story, we revisit one of our earlier conversations with master healer Artie Wu to help us bring to life the liminal stage in our personal transformation pattern.I know this stage well, and I was able to recognize when I was in it, and how I created a vision board to let my soul guide my next big move in life. I'm sharing instructions on how to make yours and that exact vision board on the website.Recognizing the threshold isn't a new idea. I've selected a poem that may connect to your soul from ancient Persian mystic, Rumi. We read poems dedicated to our listeners instead of advertising shills.Our stories are personal, designed for you to hear pieces of your own true nature reveal itself in every story.Wisdom for our Soul, Courage for your Journey. In Belly, we share our extraordinary life stories of personal transformation to let you know that you're not alone in yours and to inspire you to embrace every ounce of it. And Beyond stories helps us see the big picture, comprehending the patterns coming up.SHOULDER UP WITH US - 100% Advertising FreeYour podcast is a safe and judgement free space. It's free of advertising and outside influence -- 100% listener powered. We dedicate a poem to folks in our community shouldering up with us. Consider a $5 donation at BellyStory.com/support.Thank you for listening. I hope you're able to hear something meaningful.Warmly,David AllCreator, Storyteller, ProducerCO-CREATE OUR PODCASTTo submit your extraordinary personal life story or to sign-up for new episode emails visit: BellyStory.com
14 minutes | Jan 30, 2021
Beyond: The Gift of Listening and Thich Nhat Hanh
In this very personal Beyond story, I wanted to share why it's so important to me that this podcast is not for sale. Why it matters that you, dear listeners and neighbors of the world, have a safe, judgement free space to listen, and notice what comes up. To do that, I take you back through my own pattern of storytelling; how I learned to tell stories by listening deeply to others tell theirs. Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh shares that listening to others, with compassion and without offering advice or actions, is itself a healing instrument that the world needs now. Our stories are personal, designed for you to hear pieces of your own true nature reveal itself in every story.Wisdom for our Soul, Courage for your Journey. In Belly, we share our extraordinary life stories of personal transformation to let you know that you're not alone in yours and to inspire you to embrace every ounce of it. And Beyond stories helps us see the big picture, comprehending the patterns coming up.ENABLE OUR MISSION - 100% Advertising FreeYour podcast is a safe and judgement free space. It's free of advertising and outside influence -- 100% listener supported. It's not on the market, it's not for sale.A podcast where you can listen and hear what's coming up. We dedicate a poem to folks in our community shouldering up with us. Crossing the line, letting us know that we're heard with a $5 donation at BellyStory.com/support.Thank you for listening. I hope you're able to hear something meaningful.Warmly,David AllCreator, Storyteller, ProducerCO-CREATE OUR PODCASTTo submit your extraordinary personal life story, to sign-up for new episode email updates, to contact us or support our mission with a donation, visit: BellyStory.com
13 minutes | Dec 28, 2020
Beyond: Remember Auld Lang Syne and Robert Burns
In this special New Year's Beyond story, David All looks deeper into the meaning of that sweet, familiar song, Auld Lang Syne, a poem attributed to Scotland's national poet, Robert Burns. Before you turn the page and burn the book on 2020, turn around and remember the 'Good old days' and all those days in between.Wisdom for our Soul, Courage for your Journey. In Belly, we share our extraordinary life stories of personal transformation to illustrate the nature of personal transformation. Beyond helps us go beyond personal stories to comprehend the overall pattern of transformation.ENABLE OUR MISSIONYour podcast is a sacred space and judgment free zone. It's free of advertising and outside influence -- 100% listener supported.A podcast where you can feel safe to listen and know that you're not alone. Transformation is scary, but not a single butterfly has ever attempted to climb back into the cocoon.To keep us advertising free and support our mission to heal, inspire and shape lives with extraordinary personal life stories, chip-in $5 a month at BellyStory.com/support.Thank you for listening.Warmly,David AllCreator, Storyteller, ProducerCO-CREATE OUR PODCASTTo submit your story, sign-up for new episode emails, contact us or support our mission with a donation, visit: BellyStory.com
59 minutes | Nov 23, 2020
Becoming a Better Man with Corey Cepeda
Corey Cepeda's transformation to become a better man didn't happen overnight, but that journey did begin one night in a jail cell long ago.That night, on his knees on the coldest concrete floor in an intimate jail cell, he committed to ending his rough lifestyle, a typical example in the pattern of fatherlessness led him there.In the darkness of that oubliette, his soul noticed the light - his decision to forge checks meant that he would miss his first daughter's baptism. A kenshō moment where he glimpsed his true nature and like a seed that can't be unplanted, would change him forever.He grabbed the Bible, dropped to his knees, and started his process of transformation by surrendering. And asking for forgiveness from a higher power.Corey's determination and commitment to changing his life is an inspiring story of personal realization, clear awareness, and what it really takes to climb up a better man. OUR STORYHey there, welcome to Season 3 of Belly of the Beast Life Stories with David All. This third season of life is a rare collection of stories of men that grew up without a biological father around. It's helping me comprehend my own life story of fatherlessness, and showing folks that it's a pattern worth breaking to be a better man. At some point during this season, I'll share my own belly story, but until then, good men like Corey are standing for all of us to share their story, to inspire us and give us courage to reveal our own true nature.That's the purpose of this podcast as I comprehend it today: Wisdom for our Soul -- Courage for your Journey. This is your podcast for extraordinary personal life stories. Each story illustrates the nature of personal transformation. A change that forced us down into the dark, gooey stage of life where we found our purpose and climbed up a new person.ENABLE OUR MISSIONYour podcast is a sacred space and judgment free zone. It's free of advertising and outside influence -- 100% listener supported.A podcast where you can feel safe to listen and know that you're not alone. Transformation is scary, but not a single butterfly has ever attempted to climb back into the cocoon.To keep us advertising free and support our mission to heal, inspire and shape lives with extraordinary personal life stories, chip-in $5 a month at BellyStory.com/support.Thank you for listening.Warmly,David AllCreator, Storyteller, Producer CO-CREATE OUR PODCASTTo submit your story, sign-up for new episode emails, contact us or support our mission with a donation, visit:BellyStory.com
62 minutes | Nov 11, 2020
Gifted this Moment to Begin with Christian Long
At first glance, you might wonder why Christian Long, a man with multiple fathers, would be featured in a series on fatherlessness. Good question. It’s true that Christian has a biological father, but he was out of the picture before Christian was three years old and only emerged again when Christian was 25. Christian also had three stepfathers (and three different last names.) Thanks to his wife, he has a father-in-law… So there is no shortage of fathers in his life.What’s missing, though, was a dad – a safe, constant male figure in his life.The story of Christian’s father-void is still not over. At age 50, he’s still processing how his experience of fatherlessness has affected his temperament, his fears, and his relationships – especially his relationship with his own children.As he reflects, a deep, raw honesty emerges. It’s real. It’s is a place of acceptance. And it’s hopeful.By the way, here's a link to Christian's poem, "Imagining," that we discuss in the story. OUR STORYHey there, welcome to Season 3 of Belly of the Beast Life Stories. I’m David All.It’s another season of life here at the podcast. This third season is a very rare collection of stories by men who share the golden thread of growing up with an absent biological father and broke the pattern to be a good man. I’ll be sharing my own Belly story later this season. And let me tell you that a year ago, when we launched this show, I didn’t realize this was my Belly story.Wisdom for our Soul -- Courage for your Journey. Extraordinary life stories illustrate the nature of personal transformation. A change that forced us down into the dark, gooey stage of life where we found our purpose and climbed up a new person.Our podcast has a purpose — a mission to heal, inspire and shape lives with extraordinary life stories. Stand with us — Visit BellyStory.com to share your story, listen and subscribe, sign-up for episode updates and chip-in, and enable our mission. EPISODE SUMMARYPart I - Christian reflects on having multiple fathers -- stepfathers and a biological father –- yet he had a dad-void. - Christian’s childhood memories of his biological father are so few, whatever in-person memories exist happened at or before the age of two. - Christian’s first stepfather insisted on adopting him. Years later, Christian realized the adoption was not based on love for him as a child; it was nothing more than a negotiation, a poker move of sorts. - Once a year, Christian visited his paternal grandparents, and once while he was there, he spoke with his father on the phone, though at the time, he didn’t know who he was. - Anger, often suppressed or masquerading as sarcasm, has been a constant companion of Christian’s. - The threat of violence from his stepfather left Christian on edge, scared, and looking for outlets away from home. - Christian describes a difficult time in his marriage when he moved out for a couple of months and how the responsibility he felt as a father helped pull him back home.Part II - Christian shares why he believes his children are what held his marriage together through a rocky time. - Christian reflects on the lines of a poem he wrote for his daughter, Berkeley. - Christian articulates why feeling love is so difficult. - Christian describes the work of healing from being fatherless. - Christian describes his online community of men who choose to be honest and vulnerable with one another.Part III - In some ways, Christina feels like he’s just beginning -- just beginning to discover himself, to feel. It’s never too late to start. QUOTABLES“The first thing that Christian said to me about his story was that it might not be a good fit for this season, because he still feels the deep wound of fatherlessness.”“The idea of thinking of who was my dad in an intimate, emotional, close way is a moving target for me.”“I was in a constant state of discomfort and also trying to protect my mother but doing it through sarcasm or one-liners.”“While I didn't take that violence out on people I cared about, that violence becomes passive but just as detrimental in other ways.”“My kids were my salvation. When I wasn't sure about me and I wasn't sure about my career, my skills, I wasn't sure about my marriage, whether I was lovable or could love in return, my kids, even at a young age, were my salvation.”“if there hadn't been kids, I don't think there would have been a way back. I don't think, for my wife, I would have been enough to bring back, and I don't think I would have felt there was a place to go back to.”“What I felt deep, deep, deep is that those kids were the way back, that my wife and I, our relationship was possible because those kids would bring us back together as a family.”“It was like I didn't know how to exist until they arrived.”“I have spent a lot of my life assuming and feeling that the people that I was meant to love or I was meant to feel their love were going to disappear.”“I look at the kids and I'm still in awe that my daughter really deeply loves me. And I'm still super intimidated and feel a pain, like a breaking, when my son doesn't need his dad.”“That just to be in a space where good human beings will talk deeply about what guides them and what they're challenged by... It's also just a helluva lot less lonely. You're not stuck in your lane. So I keep showing up. I keep welcoming them back.”“This is the moment. The past story doesn't have to be the next story.”“Identity, I think it's out in front of me. It's time to go lay claim. It's time to feel good. It's time to say this is the life that was meant to happen.” LEARN MORE ABOUT OUR GUEST-"Imagining" poem by Christian Long discussed in story - Founder / Host of the "Oh, Sh*t" Sessions: a virtual gathering of 'good men' from around the world who come together each month to explore the "Oh, Sh*t" moments in their life -- now and in the past -- as well as to define the ways they are seeking to make a purposeful impact in their future. Interested to learn more / participate? Reach out directly via: longchristian@gmail.com - TEDx Indianapolis talk -- "Wonder, By Design": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5R68Yhd--RY - We Are Unusual talk -- "Creating the Conditions for Wonder": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZsA6LZpoJ3w - The WONDER Project (work) website: https://www.wonderproject.org/ - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/christianadamslong/ - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/christianlong/ENABLE OUR MISSIONYour podcast is a sacred space and judgment free zone. It's free of advertising and outside influence -- 100% listener supported.A podcast where you can feel safe to listen and know that you're not alone. Transformation is scary, but not a single butterfly has ever attempted to climb back into the cocoon.To keep us advertising free and support our mission to heal, inspire and shape lives with extraordinary personal life stories, chip-in $5 a month at BellyStory.com/support.Thank you for listening.Warmly,David AllCreator, Storyteller, ProducerCO-CREATE OUR PODCASTTo submit your story, sign-up for new episode emails, contact us or support our mission with a donation, visit:BellyStory.com
67 minutes | Oct 29, 2020
The Quest for Purpose with L.T. Bourne
As with so many children in the world today, Leonardo Lightbourne (L.T. Bourne) grew up with an absent father. Watching from the window as his father drove away left L.T. feeling confused and heartbroken. As he grew, he became a people-pleaser, trying to win the favor of others so that they wouldn’t abandon him. This led to a lack of boundaries and some bad decisions. Thankfully, L.T.’s best friend’s father served as a mentor and a positive influence in his life. Without his encouragement and guidance, L.T. is doubtful that he would be where he is today. Upon completing university, he struggled to find employment...for months. He felt like a failure. During this low point of his life, L.T. began journaling, realized that he was suffering from parental abandonment issues, and he determined to work through them. From there, his book, It’s Not a Man’s World: How I conquered the Sins of My Father, was born. L.T.’s journey is full of lessons about boundaries, surrender, forgiveness, and empowerment. His story is a message of hope, of embracing your life right where you are, and of taking responsibility for your own narrative, no matter how rocky your start may have been. → OUR STORY Hey there, welcome to Season 3 of Belly of the Beast Life Stories. I’m David All. It’s another season of life here at the podcast. This third season is a very rare collection of stories by men who share the golden thread of growing up with an absent biological father and broke the pattern to be a good man. I’ll be sharing my own Belly story later this season. And let me tell you that a year ago, when we launched this show, I didn’t realize this was my Belly story. Wisdom for our Soul -- Courage for your Journey. Extraordinary life stories illustrate the nature of personal transformation. A change that forced us down into the dark, gooey stage of life where we found our purpose and climbed up a new person. Our podcast has a purpose — a mission to heal, inspire and shape lives with extraordinary life stories. Stand with us — Visit BellyStory.com to share your story, listen and subscribe, sign-up for episode updates and chip-in, and enable our mission. → EPISODE SUMMARY Part I- L.T. remembers the day his father left. He was just a child. There was an argument with his grandmother; his mother was crying; and then his father drove away as L.T. watched from the window.- He knew his father was only 10 minutes away, yet he never came to visit.- L.T. felt like he must have done something wrong. This led to him developing a people-pleasing personality.- Watching family sitcoms on TV showed L.T. that he was missing something in his life, that something was lacking in his family structure.- Father’s Day was especially difficult. Having to go to church and witness the celebration of happy father-child relationships was like pouring salt in a wound.- His own birthday was difficult to celebrate too. He felt like his birth must have been a mistake. Why should he celebrate his parents’ mistake?- Thankfully, L.T.’s best friend had an intact family, and his friend’s father became a mentor and father-figure to L.T.. He nurtured and encouraged L.T.. He even let him sit in on some lectures he gave his own son.- After university, it would be months before L.T. would land a job. He felt like a failure. Part II- During that time of unemployment, L.T. started journaling. Through his writings, he recognized he had parental rejection issues he needed to work through. The book idea was born.- Writing his story helped L.T. drop the people-pleasing. Telling his story “gave me back my power as a man.”- Wisdom comes through pain. And telling our stories liberates us from the pain.- When L.T. was able to surrender to the present moment, he was able to let go of the past.- L.T. realized that holding onto resentment was an act of insanity. - Forgiving his father allowed him to live a free, happier life.- We don’t get a manual on how to do life, and we’re going to make mistakes. We’re going to hurt people as we’re trying to figure things out. We need to forgive one another so that we can all keep moving forward in our development. Part III-When others hurt you, it’s not because of something you’ve done but because of something they’re going through.- No matter what your background, whether you had an involved father or not, you can control the narrative of your life.- L.T. now embraces his journey and recognizes that his rough start just makes victory that much sweeter. → QUOTABLES “I had the fear of if I love somebody, then they're going to up and leave the minute I make a mistake or the minute I do something.” “Mentorship is a phenomenal thing. It has reaped so many benefits in my life...If that figure wasn't there, I don't think I would be in this position I am today...I definitely would have fallen victim to the environment that I was in.”  “Because I didn't feel worthy of love, I always felt like I needed to win people's love in my life. So I would always be the person you call, and I'm always there. I'm always available. I always want to go above and beyond for you because I didn't feel worthy… People would interpret this as being someone who is dedicated, who is committed, who is hardworking, but deep down, that wasn't who I was. I was suppressing my insecurities of feeling not worthy.” “The darkest period brought about my greatest blessing in that I was able to journal, and from my journal, I was able to develop the idea of writing a book about growing up without a father. So that period brought about one of my greatest blessings and gave me a story that is relatable to a lot of people globally. So even though it's one of my darkest periods, it brought about my greatest blessing.” “Writing a book gave me a voice of speaking and not worrying about what other people thought of me. I was able to be vulnerable. I was able to express myself in a way that I've never expressed myself before. And that destroyed the whole people-pleasing mindset and attitude… I'm not doing things to be accepted anymore. I'm telling my story because I want to be liberated. I want to live a life of not holding on to pain and regret. That moment of telling my story gave me back my power as a man.” “There is no greater power than being completely at one with who you are. There is no greater power than that. And I have that now.” “It just seemed like an act of insanity to be angry at my father's decision. That has already been made. But what am I going to do now about it?” “Forgiving my father and learning how to develop a strong perception of why he left allowed me to live a free, happier life. It allowed me to love him for him and not his actions because I was able to see his actions as a product of the way he was raised and his environment as opposed to the person that he was.” “People never hurt you because of what you do. They hurt you because of what they are going through.” “An individual who has fully accepted himself, who has fully loved himself will never hurt you. They will always love you because they have come to peace with who they are.” “When they show you hurt, show them love. Show them what they're missing in their lives so that one day that would gain some insight or they will have a revelation, or they will gain some introspection.” “Respond to hurt and hate with love, and you will always win in the end.” “Are you going to rise up and be victorious? Or are you going to fall down and play the victim? It's your choice — victor or victim. It's entirely in your hand.” “I know now that to whom much is given, much is required, and that the strongest soldiers usually get the hardest battles and the hardest fight. And so I embrace that knowing that God has given me a strength that is far beyond the average human being, to carry emotional trauma and overcome emotional trauma and now be a beacon of wisdom to others.” → LEARN MORE ABOUT OUR GUEST - It’s Not a Man’s World: How I Conquered the Sins of My Father by L.T. Bourne (on Amazon)- Website and blog: LTBourne.com- Twitter: @iamltbourne- Facebook: fb.com/iamltbourne- Instagram: @iamltbourne- LinkedIn ENABLE OUR MISSIONYour podcast is a sacred space and judgment free zone. It's free of advertising and outside influence -- 100% listener supported.A podcast where you can feel safe to listen and know that you're not alone. Transformation is scary, but not a single butterfly has ever attempted to climb back into the cocoon.To keep us advertising free and support our mission to heal, inspire and shape lives with extraordinary personal life stories, chip-in $5 a month at BellyStory.com/support.Thank you for listening.Warmly,David AllCreator, Storyteller, ProducerCO-CREATE OUR PODCASTTo submit your story, sign-up for new episode emails, contact us or support our mission with a donation, visit:BellyStory.com
19 minutes | Oct 24, 2020
Beyond: Fatherfullness and Joe Biden
In this Beyond story, David All brings to life the concept of fatherfullness by telling Joe Biden’s personal story of choosing the role and responsibility of fatherhood over all else, including his own ambitions in his career of public service. Wisdom for our Soul, Courage for your Journey. In Belly, we share our extraordinary life stories of personal transformation to illustrate the nature of personal transformation. Beyond helps us go beyond personal stories to comprehend the overall pattern of transformation.Stay tuned for Season 3 of Belly where we’re sharing real stories of men growing up with an absent biological father and the impact this has on their life.Fatherlessness, the antithesis of fatherfullness, is the golden thread marking a childhood of grief, anger, and missteps, it’s a difficult pattern to break out of. But for David and these other men, we see a transformation from the adult boy to the man. A climb up from being born in the hole is the overall pattern of each of these stories. These are extraordinary stories you need to hear.ENABLE OUR MISSIONYour podcast is a sacred space and judgment free zone. It's free of advertising and outside influence -- 100% listener supported.A podcast where you can feel safe to listen and know that you're not alone. Transformation is scary, but not a single butterfly has ever attempted to climb back into the cocoon.To keep us advertising free and support our mission to heal, inspire and shape lives with extraordinary personal life stories, chip-in $5 a month at BellyStory.com/support.Thank you for listening.Warmly,David AllCreator, Storyteller, ProducerCO-CREATE OUR PODCASTTo submit your story, sign-up for new episode emails, contact us or support our mission with a donation, visit:BellyStory.com
1 minutes | Sep 28, 2020
Fatherlessness, Stories of Men
Welcome to our third season of Belly of the Beast Life Stories. Growing up with an absent biological father has a particular impact on men. In Fatherlessness, I’ll tell you stories of men that share this experience. A golden thread marking a childhood of grief, anger, and missteps; a difficult pattern to break out of. But for these men, a transformation from the adult boy to the man.Their climb up from being born in the hole — that’s the overall pattern of each of these stories.ENABLE OUR MISSIONYour podcast is a sacred space and judgment free zone. It's free of advertising and outside influence -- 100% listener supported.A podcast where you can feel safe to listen and know that you're not alone. Transformation is scary, but not a single butterfly has ever attempted to climb back into the cocoon.To keep us advertising free and support our mission to heal, inspire and shape lives with extraordinary personal life stories, chip-in $5 a month at BellyStory.com/support.Thank you for listening.Warmly,David AllCreator, Storyteller, ProducerCO-CREATE OUR PODCASTTo submit your story, sign-up for new episode emails, contact us or support our mission with a donation, visit:BellyStory.com
5 minutes | Aug 25, 2020
Show Update: Calibrating Our Story
This informational bonus episode covers a few key adjustments we're making:1. Originally our theme for Season 3 focused on exploring the transformations in personal stories of folks that have faced the criminal justice system. With COVID, it's not safe to take this issue on the way we envision, so we're shifting.2. The new theme for Season 3 will be a collection of personal stories by men. We'll explore the grieving and transformation in manhood by men that grew up fatherless.3. We are merging 'Beyond the Belly' into this podcast, offering one stronger podcast with two distinct, but related streams of content. We'll re-release Beyond Episodes 1-3 in case you missed them.ENABLE OUR MISSIONYour podcast is a sacred space and judgment free zone. It's free of advertising and outside influence -- 100% listener supported.A podcast where you can feel safe to listen and know that you're not alone. Transformation is scary, but not a single butterfly has ever attempted to climb back into the cocoon.To keep us advertising free and support our mission to heal, inspire and shape lives with extraordinary personal life stories, chip-in $5 a month at BellyStory.com/support.Thank you for listening.Warmly,David AllCreator, Storyteller, ProducerCO-CREATE OUR PODCASTTo submit your story, sign-up for new episode emails, contact us or support our mission with a donation, visit:BellyStory.com
65 minutes | May 26, 2020
Blind Mother Raises Blind Children with Ashley Wayne
Ashley Wayne shares her story of facing down her fear of being blind and becoming a mother. And now, she has two blind children and a newborn. EPISODE SUMMARY Part IThe gift of sight was always seen as a luxury to Ashley up until this momentShe’s days from going to get her daughter in Bulgaria, the international adoption nearly realizedIn these early moment, a blind woman confronts being a blind mama to her blind daughterAshley was blind at birth, two detached retinas, not even a perception of lightThe darkness hadn’t slowed her down, but the simple everyday tasks of changing diapers or taking her to a friend’s house to play seemed insurmountable“It was scary; when you’re suddenly put in charge of another human being it’s very sobering"Parenting brought her to her knees, Ashley had to realize it was OK to ask for help Part IIAshley had spent a lifetime being independent, and thriving, as a blind personBut the realities of being a mother changed her perceptionShe shifted her mindsetDay by day, Ashley was successful at doing the little things and life started to return to normalNormal enough to begin (and finish) the process of adopting their blind son, who had Cerebral PalsyFaith is everything to Ashley, and she elaborates on this fundamental aspect of her lifeA Grand Canyon experience through a blind families eyesBlind people don’t have superpowers like exceptional hearingAshley has to be extremely present to experience special moments with her family4-weeks ago, Ashley birthed her first biological son, that appears to be fully sightedAshley still yearns to see, especially the little things like seeing what her infant is looking at and being fascinated by Part IIIAshley shares advice to her younger self just as she’s about to take on motherhoodShe writes a lot about the distancing she and her family experience being blind (see articles in the guest resources section) and urges folks just to treat them normal QUOTABLES"It was a very emotional time. I remember as it got closer, feeling this immense weight and wondering, am I really going to be able to take care of her? I had done a lot of things as a blind person that I think many people would imagine would be pretty difficult.  But parenting felt like it was going to be this much more insane and immense task. And I really didn't know if I could do it, but we had obviously committed and were going to adopt her." "And I didn't need sight, and I could get along just fine without it, and almost to the detrimental extreme of that end, you know, believing that sight wasn't necessary, and I was an amazing blind person who could do anything [Laughter]. I didn't need anyone's help, especially help from those the sighted people.  I think parenting really did bring me to my knees, figuratively and literally sometimes, just the realization that sight is a gift, and it would be not just nice to have, but would be preferred in a lot of cases when it comes to parenting, and that it was OK to admit that." "You know, every little task, like I kind of dreaded every diaper change, like, am I going to get her clean enough?" "You realize that things weren't quite as intense or frightening as I had originally thought. It doesn't mean that I still didn't need help or things weren't frustrating at points. But it began to feel less and less alien and yeah, just a bit more normal." Regarding faith… “It’s everything. It's what I hope to... We hope and strive for, to teach our children that there is a God. And it's, we can know him through Christ." "I've always had to rely more on my hearing. And just to dispel a myth, because I always have to take any opportunity to mention this, you know, blind people don't have super hearing." Advice to a younger Ashley… "You will figure it out. Yeah, you'll make some mistakes, but nothing so horrible that neither you or her will be scarred for life. You will figure it out together and all the things will get done." Learn more about Ashley WayneAshley’s Facebook: A Blind ViewHere are a few of Ashley’s articles:+ A blind mother’s courageous journey of parenting two blind children (profile piece)+ Learning what it means to be a blind mother+ I’m a blind mom raising blind kids, here’s what I’d like you to know ENABLE OUR MISSIONYour podcast is a sacred space and judgment free zone. It's free of advertising and outside influence -- 100% listener supported.A podcast where you can feel safe to listen and know that you're not alone. Transformation is scary, but not a single butterfly has ever attempted to climb back into the cocoon.To keep us advertising free and support our mission to heal, inspire and shape lives with extraordinary personal life stories, chip-in $5 a month at BellyStory.com/support.Thank you for listening.Warmly,David AllCreator, Storyteller, ProducerCO-CREATE OUR PODCASTTo submit your story, sign-up for new episode emails, contact us or support our mission with a donation, visit:BellyStory.com
45 minutes | May 19, 2020
The Responsibility of Fatherhood with Mathew Passy
Mathew Passy’s 4-month old daughter was diagnosed with bacterial meningitis, a rare but treatable disease, bringing immediacy to the role and responsibility of fatherhood. EPISODE SUMMARYPart I•The story opens with Mathew and his wife taking their 4-month old daughter, Hailey, into the hospital with a fever that was later diagnosed as bacterial meningitis•Meningitis is a rare disease caused by viral or bacterial infection that moves into the cerebral spinal fluid and swells the thin membranes that cover the brain and the spinal cord•This meant that Hailey would be in the hospital for two weeks for treatment•Mathew had just started a new business•Mathew and his wife took turns being at the hospital•On his first night, his daughter has a seizure in his arms for an hour•This event “knocked” Mathew "for a loop"•He describes this moment as bringing the preciousness of life into immediacy; a scary experience where his mind was racing•A self-described “control person,” not having control of the situation was hard•Although not a “religious person,” Mathew wondered if he was being “punished" •Mathew had a lot of fear about the health of his daughter, but also whether or not his business would survive •This experience matured Mathew; from being an “older kid with kids” to a father responsible for a family Part II•We learn more about how the experience changed Mathew•Hailey was released from the hospital but every time she cried or had a slight fever, Mathew and his wife were on the phones with the doctors•Mathew’s clients didn’t abandon him, in fact, they validated his “family first” decision and are still with him to this day•Being an entrepreneur has given Mathew more time to spend with his family and he has barriers, like stopping work at the end of the day to make dinner and spend the evening with the kids•Setting the health scare aside, Mathew wouldn’t take this experience back because he’s a better dad now Part III•Mathew shares his advice to his younger self•Mathew now has a sense of calm in any situation knowing that he has what it takes to get through it because he’s doing it for them QUOTABLES"And then to be in the situation in the hospital where something has to be done and you either can't get answers, or have no control over it, is so hard." "And because I had just started my own business, I didn't really have a ton of money coming in, every dollar counted. And we had just bought the house earlier that year, so it felt like it could all just crumble very, very quickly, and the life that we were projecting to lead, just felt like it could have been snatched from us at any second." "I think I was hyper-focused on Hailey and her care." "I think this whole experience matured me. These are really fully matured, responsible adults and I'm sure to a lot of people that sounds like a bunch of nonsense, but it just changed me, and just made me realize that I can't go back to pretending I'm a kid anymore, that my life is now all about them, and providing, and setting an example and ensuring that they are prepared for the world." "But my wife and I took control of the situation. And we...  you know, we dictated the terms. We had the plan. We were the ones who got through it and figured it out and and made sure that all the decisions were going through us, and it it no longer felt like we still needed our parents in the room to help us." "Every time she had a fever, every time she cried that felt a little bit off kilter, we were on the phone with doctors." "I wouldn't take it back. I think I'm probably a better Dad. I think I'm probably a more present Dad. More appreciative." "But I also have this overwhelming sense of calm that just says, "You got this. Whatever this means, whatever they're throwing at you, you'll figure it out. You'll find the solution because it's what you have to do, and not for you, but for them."Learn more about Mathew PassyThe Podcast Consultant Podcast Me AnythingCausepodsCheck out this Causepods episode with Mathew and David All discussing Belly of the Beast Life Stories and Beyond the Belly; this was David’s first interview on someone else’s podcast. ENABLE OUR MISSIONYour podcast is a sacred space and judgment free zone. It's free of advertising and outside influence -- 100% listener supported.A podcast where you can feel safe to listen and know that you're not alone. Transformation is scary, but not a single butterfly has ever attempted to climb back into the cocoon.To keep us advertising free and support our mission to heal, inspire and shape lives with extraordinary personal life stories, chip-in $5 a month at BellyStory.com/support.Thank you for listening.Warmly,David AllCreator, Storyteller, ProducerCO-CREATE OUR PODCASTTo submit your story, sign-up for new episode emails, contact us or support our mission with a donation, visit:BellyStory.com
45 minutes | May 12, 2020
Facing Miscarriage with Lorna Rose
Lorna Rose was three-months pregnant when a routine blood test revealed a genetic disorder in her unborn child which carried a high risk of miscarriage at any point in the pregnancy. The daily grieving led to finding her voice as a poet and writer.EPISODE SUMMARY Part IAs an older mother, Lorna had a blood test three-months into her pregnancy to screen for any potential problems The test came back positive for a genetic disorder, Turner’s SyndromeLorna lives in a smaller town in the state of Washington, and the medically complex cases are sent to a larger hospital in SeattleIn the week between the initial diagnosis and the first appointment in Seattle, Lorna wrote a powerful poem, "Congratulations!”She describes that week turning to grief almost immediately and even thinking that it could be best to miscarry so that the child wouldn’t have "special needs"Lorna and her husband went to Seattle for the appointment and had a deep ultrasound which did not show any markers of Turner’s Syndrome Lorna went back three other times for the ultrasound and they never saw markers for Turner’s - this gave Lorna confidence that it would be a mild case of Turner'sAnger, sadness, anxiety, you name it, Lorna felt those emotions all mashed together and intentionally sat with those feelingsHaving her son, who was 2.5 years old at the time, was helpful knowing that he was healthyLorna would “hide her bump,” not even wanting people to know she was pregnantLorna shares the critical insight that she had to live in “both worlds,” one where she could dream about a full life with her child, and the other hardened in the reality that it might not work outMiraculously, Lorna’s daughter was born healthy - the Turner’s Syndrome diagnosis was a false positive Part IIAfter six-months of believing that her daughter could miscarry, she was born healthy with no signs of any genetic abnormalitiesLorna is speechless, so much “wow,” and relief, and crying in her family with joy in this momentLorna wanted to feel ok for having every emotion, including feeling guilty, or even wishing that she would miscarry, and she wrote a lot about the experience and life in generalThrough her writing, Lorna felt connected to other women who had gone through the same experienceLorna is thankful for the experience in the sense that it helped her find her writing Lorna sheds a tear thinking back to the “Golden Hour” first hour with her child and their special connectionLorna can’t undo the experience but recognizes that through it, she gained empathy and a connection to women who have gone through similar experiencesPregnancy is complex and doesn’t always end up like it does in the movies and Lorna is hopeful that her writings will help bring the conversation into the lightThere’s a mold for pregnancy that it’s all a happy, shiny story but things can go wrong and women need to know it’s okay and ordinary Part IIILorna found her voice (poetry, writing) in the six darkest months of her lifeHer daughter is almost five years old now, and loves hearing stories, especially the story of her being bornLorna reflects on this weird, dark, strange time in her life and notes that it brought her and her husband closer because they went through it togetherThis piece of advice shows up time and time again in our stories: Don’t Google itLorna gives advice to her younger self QUOTABLES "But the result that was most devastating for me was Turner's carried a high risk of miscarriage at any point in the pregnancy. We just we didn't know anything for a week. And that's when I started that poem." "I think I was in shock for a few days and then it turned to: how do I do this? Like, how do people get through this? I don't know, it was kind of like walking on eggshells, because I just... we didn't know anything. And then I just sort of moved through the process of grief, I guess, because it was a sort of grief. And having points of, "Well, gosh, maybe it is best if I just miscarry, you know, like maybe it's best if that really happens, because then she might she won't have all these medical special needs." "I remember hiding my bump. I got a bump pretty early. Which happens with the second, subsequent pregnancies, you kind of start showing sooner. And I remember wearing, like, baggy shirts, long shirts, you know, things to hide the bump because I didn't want people to know I was even pregnant if I wasn't going to be for long. I think in our society, the mainstream is, you know, pregnancy is always a good thing. It's always happy. It's always good news, and in this case and in other cases, it's just, it's hard news, and it's not always happy. You know, it can be complicated." "I allowed myself to still have those dreams and wishes for my kid. But they weren't untethered. I mean, they were very much checked with: "Well, this might not work out." And there's not a whole lot of gray area in that, like there's really no middle ground." "I would say [goodbye] ended when she was born." "And the more I wrote about this and then other experiences, I kind of, my theme within myself I think that comes out in my writing is, well, I can't be the only one. You know, I can't be the only one that's gone through this. In fact, I know that I'm not. I can't be the only one who has sort of lived between two worlds for months, and at one point, like I mentioned, wishes I would miscarry. I know that's happened to other women. And even though I don't know these other women, I just sort of felt this connection with them through my writing, and through this experience." "I take a view, after everything was said and done, of: I don't take it back. I don't take this experience back, because I wrote a lot through this, and it helped me a lot. It was very affirming for me, that wouldn't have happened otherwise. I was able to explore feelings that I wouldn't have otherwise experienced." "And just be together, and I remember that hour as the most special hour of my life, hands down. It was emotional. Oh, my God, I'm starting to cry just thinking of it. It was emotional. It was just happy. Just bliss. It was I don't know, just really, really special." "And then also, I think at the end of the day, the experience, it just made me more human, if that makes sense? I mentioned before about being able to feel a connection with women who have experienced similar things, and sort of looking at a pregnancy maybe a little bit differently than other people do. You know, pregnancy, it's complicated. It doesn't always go as well as it does in the movies. I'd like to bring more of what I write about, in terms of my experience into the mainstream, you know, being able to talk about miscarriages, and stillbirths, and the death of a child because those things happen more... I think they're more common than people realize. And there's not really a script for talking about that stuff and I wish there were. I wish it was more accepted just as part of life, you know, that it was more part of the conversation." "I reflect quite often about this sort of weird, strange, dark time in my life, and what came out of it for me, you know, experiencing this, for me as a future mom to my daughter, and then what came out of it in terms of of my marriage. Ultimately it brought us closer, I would say." Advice to her younger self: "Dig deep. Dig into this stuff. Because it's not going away. Because this is, as hard as it is, and it's incredibly hard, this is your opportunity to get to know yourself on another level. This is your opportunity to become more human. This is your opportunity to feel whatever emotion you feel and learn that it's OK to feel it."Learn more about Lorna Rose “Congratulations!” By Lorna Rose | Published at Literary MamaWebsite and blog: www.lornarose.comTwitter: @LornaARoseFacebook: /bigthings2President, Write On The River: www.writeontheriver.org ENABLE OUR MISSIONYour podcast is a sacred space and judgment free zone. It's free of advertising and outside influence -- 100% listener supported.A podcast where you can feel safe to listen and know that you're not alone. Transformation is scary, but not a single butterfly has ever attempted to climb back into the cocoon.To keep us advertising free and support our mission to heal, inspire and shape lives with extraordinary personal life stories, chip-in $5 a month at BellyStory.com/support.Thank you for listening.Warmly,David AllCreator, Storyteller, ProducerCO-CREATE OUR PODCASTTo submit your story, sign-up for new episode emails, contact us or support our mission with a donation, visit:BellyStory.com
48 minutes | May 5, 2020
Down Syndrome, Autism and Peace with Kip Morse
Kip Morse's first daughter, Allison, was diagnosed with Down syndrome at birth and later, autism. Tremendous behavioral issues forced him into being the family's peacekeeper. Now he's finally finding peace as his daughter realizes her purpose.To me, Kip has been a mentor and the leading example of a father’s impenetrable love for his daughter. The father of three daughters and husband to Leslie for more than 30 years, he was forced into being the servant leader of the family. Many times breaking it up and standing between his daughter and the rest of the family when things got out of control. And now, as his daughter finds her own way and purpose, relief and reconnection.At the time we recorded this story, Kip was the president and CEO of the Better Business Bureau of Central Ohio which has been a client of mine for the past several years. He's now the CEO of the IABBB.EPISODE SUMMARYWe open our story at the breaking point for Kip and the entire family, including his oldest daughter, Alison. It’s Alli’s last night before she starts her journey away from the family.Tears streaming, mom and dad taking turns in the room with Alli, neighbors coming over to say bye, and even Alison is aware that her next move is the right move.At birth, Alli was diagnosed with Down syndrome, a crucial moment that forced the family to move back to Columbus, Ohio away from FloridaIn time, they realized that Alli’s Down syndrome was not typical, her behavior was extremely challengingTemper tantrums, lying on the floor of the supermarket, throwing things, taking his wife Leslie to the ground, pulling hair... Later Alli was diagnosed with autismThere was no local solution -- institutionalizing Alli was not ever an optionThe behavior caused a riff between Alli and the familyFinally, they found a solution for Alli a few hours away in Cleveland - her behavior would not be an issue to the caregivers (Monarch Center for Autism)Alli went to Monarch and Kip and Leslie drove up every single weekend for two yearsThe separation gave Kip and Leslie a chance to work on their relationship and the relationship with the other two daughtersKip realized that he had been enabling Alli’s behavior, in a way“Boy, it’s hard to get it right when you’re going through it.”Stress caught up with Kip - he nearly had a heart attackBeing independent brought the fun and joy of Alli backA few years later, Alli came back to Columbus under the care of Ability MattersLooking back, Kip is glad he didn’t know what was ahead of him in life when his daughter was diagnosed with Down syndromeIt’s purpose that lights Alli up the most these days -- that same truth has translated into the business world, as well QUOTABLES“I recall it vividly because it was constantly having communications with my daughter and my wife, and consoling one another, and tears streaming down our faces. And it was this realization that, you know, twenty-three years of trying to get Allison to be at a point where she was happy, and she was independent, and where she could live a life with with a strong self-esteem and and purpose. And we hadn't gotten there, and it wasn't within our control anymore. Your sisters all are in an apartment," and you'd see her brighten up because she wants to be just like her sisters. And so there's constantly those ups and downs with the understanding.” “And so I rushed back, and that's when the doctor came in and said, "You know, we see signs that she has... she was born with Down syndrome." And you don't know anything about that. You just know you're just looking at your new baby girl with total love and devotion. And so, yeah, we were just kind of stunned. You know, you don't know what to what to think.” “And so the diagnosis went from Down syndrome to all of these leading up to pervasive developmental disorder, which was kind of the interim period of time before they finally said that autism is such a vast spectrum that she's just on the spectrum of autistic, which carries the OCD and the anxiety and the mood disorder.” “We wanted to get her to the point where she was independent. And she was high functioning, she's capable of incredible things. And so she knew that that's not what she wanted.” “And then she would tell us, she goes, "I'll be all right when you leave. Just so you know, I'll be all right." She wanted to make sure that we weren't going to cry when we were leaving, because she understood that it was just as hard for us. And so she would always tell us, " I'm going be all right. I'll be all right. I'll see you next weekend." “It was the first time away. And it was, you know, after a while, you know, you think it'll get to some sort of normal. But really, I don't know what normal is. But, you know, I have been seen as the one that spent more time with Alli, showcased more love for Alli, because I was always the one that was having to try to reduce the amount of stress on everybody else, and break up the fighting. And what that turns into is I'm enabling. And so it was another one of those, "Boy, it's hard to get it right when you're going through it."” “And so the pain that she was feeling of leaving us, which we were feeling, she was also really excited, like any individual, like any child that's leaving to go to college or live on their own, it's like, "Finally I can live on my own." They just, you know, with with special needs, they just need a little bit more help and guidance and structure” "I'd probably ask God to take that out of my memory, because I think I don't want to go into the biggest challenge, knowing what I have in front of me. So you know the old saying, "take it one day at a time," I mean, that's the way you've got to take it because you don't know what the next day's gonna be.”“Well, I think that appreciating everybody's value, and respecting everybody is really critical to me. If you feel as though somebody doesn't respect you or doesn't love you or doesn't care about what you're saying, then you feel minimized.” “People in the business community need the same thing. They need to celebrate successes, and they need recognition, and they need to feel proud of the work that they put in meant something to somebody. And that's what, when we see that in her, especially in the last couple of years, it's just, everybody gets happy and everybody starts to feel for how much harder she's had to work to to get that recognition.”Learn more about Kip Morse@kipbbb on InstagramFacebookAbility Matters OhioMonarch Center for Autism  ENABLE OUR MISSIONYour podcast is a sacred space and judgment free zone. It's free of advertising and outside influence -- 100% listener supported.A podcast where you can feel safe to listen and know that you're not alone. Transformation is scary, but not a single butterfly has ever attempted to climb back into the cocoon.To keep us advertising free and support our mission to heal, inspire and shape lives with extraordinary personal life stories, chip-in $5 a month at BellyStory.com/support.Thank you for listening.Warmly,David AllCreator, Storyteller, ProducerCO-CREATE OUR PODCASTTo submit your story, sign-up for new episode emails, contact us or support our mission with a donation, visit:BellyStory.com
69 minutes | Apr 28, 2020
Two Children with Rare Diseases with Rachel Poysky
Rachel Poysky shares her Belly story of raising two children with rare diseases.Her greatest fears about the health of her son, Joel, were affirmed when she pulled into the driveway and her husband was waiting for her with news. Her husband, Dr. James Poysky, delivered the grave news that their son did in fact have Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD). DMD is the most common fatal genetic disorder of childhood and it likely meant that their son wouldn’t live past high school. Rachel tells us about that day -- how they went from being a "normal family" to being a "special needs family." A few years later, just as the family was regaining a sense of normalcy, their daughter was diagnosed with an even rarer disease, Kawasaki Disease. Rachel and her husband felt a calling with DMD, their family was uniquely positioned to make an impact, but Kawasaki Disease progressed rapidly and if it had not been diagnosed and treated, could have ended the life of their daughter within 24 hours. This was rock bottom.What I found particularly insightful about this story was Rachel and James’ commitment to remaining aligned and supportive to one another as husband and wife. They gave each other space to grieve separately, but they were always together. Their relationship feels extraordinary to me.The Poysky family certainly answered the call. Dr. Poysky has been instrumental in a medical leadership role serving on national boards and authoring papers. And with Rachel’s brother Brad Todd, they created the non-profit Coach To Cure MD, a partnership between the American Football Coaches Association (AFCA), a professional organization for over 10,000 college and high school football coaches and staff, and Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy, the largest national charity devoted exclusively to Duchenne muscular dystrophy. EPISODE SUMMARYThe story starts with Rachel first learning from her husband, Dr. James Poysky, that her son had been diagnosed with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD)At the time, her husband had been a neurosphychologist and suspected that it could be DMD because he had seen it in children beforeDMD is the most common fatal genetic disorder of childhood, but it’s still a rare disease since it affects less than 200,000 peopleDuchenne primarily affects boys but women can be carriers; and it can be spontaneous (genetic mutation) as was the case with Rachel’s familyRachel shares the “language of Duchenne” which is this entirely new vocabulary that comes with the territory of rare diseasesIt also means talking to your children about the disease so they have the “tools and knowledge to function”A week after the diagnosis, Rachel and her husband aligned on their purpose, that they were meant to join the Duchenne fightTwo weeks after the diagnosis they aligned on the priorities that still guide their family to this dayRachel’s daughter Hallie was diagnosed with an even rarer disease, Kawasaki DiseaseA special needs family starts out in “survival mode” but Rachel consciously made the decision to live life with her familyRachel is an expert in grieving and discusses the idea that people don’t grieve and can’t be expected to grieve in the same wayRachel discusses the origins of CoachtoCureMD.org, the charity they created to help raise funds and awareness for DMDQUOTABLES“And it's almost that moment when I pulled into the driveway, I didn't even have to ask the question why he was there at 3:00 in the afternoon. And I walked up to the door and he met me at the door. And I just said, "Is it that?" And he said "Yes." And I said, "The really bad kind?" And he said, "Yes." And that was a moment when we went from being a normal family to a special needs family, just all of a sudden.” “They're missing dystrophin which, this is simplistic, and a doctor would probably be horrified that I explained it this way, but basically dystrophin is the glue that hold your muscles together. And when you exercise, you tear your muscles and the dystrophin helps repair them. They don't have any dystrophin so their muscles can't repair, so scar tissue develops. And think about all the muscles in your body. Your tongue is a muscle. They lose strength in their tongue, the muscles around their lungs, around their heart, and eventually, you know, because their heart is a muscle that they die of cardiac failure.”  “And we always say, "The kids know something's going on. They may not have the language for what's happening, but you've got to give them the tools and the knowledge to function. And it's not your disease. It's their disease." So they need information for their disease.” “And so that first week was terrible. But the week after, we looked at each other and I said, "I think we're supposed to be in this, I think we have purpose to fight this disease." And my husband agreed. You know, we sat down probably two weeks after Joel was diagnosed. We went out to dinner and we said, "What are our new priorities? What do we want to do?" And so we made just a list of, these were our priorities for our family, and it's priorities that actually guide our family even to this day.” “And she was having these very strange symptoms, just high fever, throwing up. Her lymph nodes were so enlarged, you couldn't even see her neck. She... wherever she had a scratch, it had like blown up, just swelled. Just a little tiny scratch, had like blown up. And so we got to the hospital and spent a long time there. And they did a lot of tests. And it was really weird.” “And something in that moment helped me just gain a newfound strength, and a feeling that I can fight for my children, I can fight for other children, and I can be this advocate for them. And that was so empowering for me, to realize, you know, I think we all need to get to that place where we can be empowered to be the strength for the people that we love.”  “And that is true for a special needs family. Your fight-or-flight is always up. And I don't know, we've just tried to not let that dictate our entire lives, to try to stop and have fun, and, you know, have humor about the situation.” “I think it's just permission-giving for each person, and for your special needs child that's grieving. You know, they're grieving losses along with you.” “So I'm just trying to find where I'm being offered grace and hope and unexpected things that for me are miracles.” Learn more about Rachel PoyskyCoach2CureMD: "Help Tackle" Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy:Check out #coach2curemd hashtag on InstagramDr. James PoyskyENABLE OUR MISSIONYour podcast is a sacred space and judgment free zone. It's free of advertising and outside influence -- 100% listener supported.A podcast where you can feel safe to listen and know that you're not alone. Transformation is scary, but not a single butterfly has ever attempted to climb back into the cocoon.To keep us advertising free and support our mission to heal, inspire and shape lives with extraordinary personal life stories, chip-in $5 a month at BellyStory.com/support.Thank you for listening.Warmly,David AllCreator, Storyteller, ProducerCO-CREATE OUR PODCASTTo submit your story, sign-up for new episode emails, contact us or support our mission with a donation, visit:BellyStory.com
26 minutes | Apr 24, 2020
Finding Your Bliss with Artie Wu
Beyond the Belly takes you beyond the personal narratives in Belly of the Beast Life Stories to bring to life the wisdom found in the overall patterns of transformation. For our third episode, master healer Artie Wu of PresideLife.com talks about his own transformative journey going through his “own phases of being a caterpillar.” Those phases include a prestigious academic background at Harvard and Stanford and then building and exiting two startups in Silicon Valley prior to finding his bliss as a healer. The practice of healing is a process of self-discovery and reconciliation with the parts of you that have been stuffed down throughout life. Realigning with those parts is how you start to “follow your bliss.” Artie is a healer to more than 120,000 people throughout the world via PresideLife.com, and an advisor to both of my podcasts. He is a friend, and has been instrumental to help me develop these concepts and in helping me spiritually grow as a man. Be sure to check out episodes 1 and 2 to hear more of Artie’s wisdom. This is a brand new podcast -- ratings and reviews matter so much! If you are moved by this episode, please subscribe, rate and write a fair review about this podcast so other heroes can find it, too. Share it with two friends. And visit inourbelly.com to listen to more stories for free and to share your story with us. MORE FROM DAVID ALL Underbelly Workshops: Master your story, change your life.  I designed this story coaching platform for leadership coaches, healers, consultants and other executives who need my personal help connecting the dots in their own transformation story. Learn more about Underbelly Workshops where I’ll personally guide you to your most healing and powerful story: http://inourbelly.com/underbelly Belly of the Beast Life Stories is a firsthand history of real life transformations.  Visit http://inourbelly.com Season 2: For Love of My Child are true stories of a parent’s transformation when faced with acute challenges, chronic ills, and early endings of their child or children.    EPISODE SUMMARY - In this episode, Artie shares his “own phases as a caterpillar” and his transformation journey and finding his bliss as a healer - Artie answers an important question: what is healing? - Artie talks about the mask that society gives girls of being “good girls” and boys of being “strong and competent” (and getting a pass on being “good”) - We stuff parts of who we are down into the Belly - and healing is the act of going down to recover that lost part of you   - Artie connects how most will refuse the “call” to recover this part of who they are and then life magically “puts them through the tumble cycle” to reconcile with that part of them in the belly - Pain from a traumatic experience, like getting hit hard on the football field and crying has a secondary and deeper wound when the boy is in the car getting screamed at by his dad for crying and that “boys don’t cry” - Boys have learned to cut off their ability to express emotion - Artie shares his 7-day healing program as a way to learn the tools to go back and recover these missing parts of you on your own  - What is “following your bliss” and why it’s so crucial for you right now - Artie ends our story with this beautiful quote, “But when you know the meaning of pain you're going through, almost anything is bearable,” reminding you that you too are a butterfly and your bliss is calling you -- but it still requires going into the cocoon phase of life   QUOTABLES by ARTIE WU “You know, I've went through my own phases of being a caterpillar. Jumping through the hoops of going to the right schools and doing sort of industry work and professional stuff that would be acceptable to the expectations that I had coding in my own mind and heart.”   “So the quick view of how I think about healing is that within every single one of us as we go through life. There will be parts of us that are valid, genuine card carrying parts of who we actually are as people just as we're born. That we will feel are unacceptable to the world around us. And that's an issue. An extreme if I'm in a society where being, say, divorced or homosexual or whatever will cost me my life because I could be executed under the law of that country, then if this is part of me that is like my sexual orientation or my religious affiliation could cause me to die or be killed, then that's a part of me if I want to survive that, I have to stuff down.”   “And where you've stuffed that part of you is down in the belly, down in the deepest level of Guantanamo prison. And it can be argued that - healing is basically the act of going down into the lowest levels of the prison to recover that lost part of yourself.”   “And so there's a sort of mysterious connection between healing as this whole natural process, this spontaneous process, if you will, of going into the belly of the beast that we all experience. I don't believe there's any master sort of torturer triggering all these things -- it happens from our biology; Like a bird builds a nest and it's beautiful.”   “And the whole healing process that I teach that I take people through is this journey of like, OK, so let's figure out what it was? Where is it now? And how do we recover it back? Actually, teach this 7-day healing program where in 7 days. Oh, we don't do the full recovery, But we teach you all the tools in that seven day workshop for you to do the recovery on your own.”   “And by day three (of the 7-day healing program), they find the missing part of them. They're having this conversation with it and they've already started the recovery process.”   “That is where that road leads you is to finding and following your bliss. The thing you love to do natively even before you were born for no good reason. But when you follow it, you know it makes you happy. It unlocks all this power in you. It also, in hindsight, ends up being like you realized the meaning of purpose in your life. The reason why you're on the planet in the first place. And as a happy byproduct, it rains down blessing on the life of the world around you.”   “A caterpillar, armies of caterpillars are just like hanging out on the tree leaves and they see butterflies fly by and they're like, what the hell is that? And someone's like and some butterfly stops , Picasso stops. Where are you? Oh, that's fine for Picasso, but not for me. But that's fine for Jonah, but not for me. It's fine for Chip Conley, but not for me. Chip looks at you like, don't you get it? You are me.”   “But when you know the meaning of pain you're going through, almost anything is bearable.”   TRANSCRIPT AVAILABLE https://inourbelly.com/beyond-the-belly-episodes/artie-wu-finding-your-bliss/   RESOURCES Artie's healing website:http://PresideLife.com Preside Life on Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/presidelife @wu_artie on instagram:https://www.instagram.com/wu_artie/   SHOW RESOURCES This is a brand new podcast - a time when early reviews and ratings matter most. Please subscribe, rate and write a fair review of this podcast ♥️ so other heroes can find it, too!   My email: david@inourbelly.com   Underbelly Workshops: Master your story, change your life http://inourbelly.com/underbelly   Beyond the Belly  https://inourbelly.com/beyond   Belly of the Beast Life Stories http://inourbelly.com   @inourbelly on Instagram http://instagram.com/inourbelly   Facebook Community http://facebook.com/inourbelly   @inourbelly on Twitter http://twitter.com/inourbelly   @davidall (host) http://instagram.com/davidall   # # #
48 minutes | Apr 21, 2020
Three Children with Special Needs with Laura Hernandez
Now a mama to 10 kiddos, Laura Hernandez faced and met the overwhelming challenges when her family added three adopted children that would all eventually be diagnosed with intellectual delay (mental retardation) and fetal alcohol syndrome. After consulting friends and books and still not having the answers she needed, Laura created her own systems to manage the chaos and bring peace to her household. Laura realized a need for other mother’s facing similar challenges and started MamaSystems.net, a suite of coaching services, systems and tools to help families bring peace to their home.EPISODE SUMMARYOur story begins with Laura first learning that all three of the children that her family had adopted would ultimately be diagnosed with intellectual delay (formerly known as mental retardation) and fetal alcohol syndromeLaura and her husband adopted Andrew (4), Matthew (2 ½) and Hannah (18 mos.) after a long trial of first fostering Andrew, developing a relationship with the biological mother and her partner, and ultimately adopting all three siblings into their large family (5 biological children at the time)The overwhelm of adding three new “buddies” into the family was stressful, increasing the chaos and noise but also deeply relieving knowing that the kids were all safe and being taking care of“Ok Laura, you can do this,” was how most daily pep talks startedFor a long time there was distance, a feeling like the three adopted kiddos were strangersSpecial care and attention had to be given to the biological kids so their needs were metTony, Laura’s husband, was able to work from homeFaith has played a huge role in Laura’s decision to adopt (many signs from God) and carries her through difficult timesThe kiddos do feel attached nowPart II opens back up with the diagnosis as both a moment of realizing the children would be dependent on them for the rest of their lives but also relief in finding out what was wrongThis pattern of importance of the ‘diagnosis’ continues to emerge in our stories of a parent with children with special needsAfter reading book after book and still not having answers, Laura created systems to manage the chaos and bring peace to her householdShe founded Mama Systems, a coaching practice for mama’s and families in similarly overwhelming situationsLaura has never regretted it -- it’s an obedience and commitment thing for her QUOTABLES“I would just lay in bed at night wondering if they were safe, if they're being taken care of, if they had eaten that day. And now I knew that they were safe, and that they had been fed and had full bellies, and they were loved on, and nothing was going to happen in that room, like it was in my power. Nothing was gonna happen to them. They were gonna be safe in there.” “And I think even today, when we have really hard days, that's what gets me through, because they can be really, really hard kids. And it can feel hard to love them, and it can feel hard to just keep going and being their Mama. But I know beyond a shadow of a doubt, that this is what we were called to do.” “And no book I read could fit all of our things in a nutshell, which was really frustrating at the time, because I'd read a book, and I'd be like I really like this, but you're acting like we're at home all day and don't have people coming in and out every five minutes. So it was just very tricky to find something that fit for our family. So I finally just kind of stopped reading everything, stopped listening to everything. And I said, ‘You know what? I just need to prioritize what's important to us and schedule our lives so that it works for us.’” “‘OK, we can do this, we can thrive as a family. We've got this.’ And feeling confident in that and feeling confident as a Mama to all these people. And then shifting into not only that, but I think that I could help other people. I feel like that's that's the moment where you're like, ‘OK, I've arrived.’ “I started Mama Systems about a year and a half ago and I've been able to help over a hundred families with systems in their home. And it's been so life-giving to me to be able to help them, and to hear the life that comes back from them, and the peace that they feel in their homes because of these systems.” “And so I continually go back to: it's an obedience thing, it's a commitment thing. It's not about how I'm feeling or whether I'm enjoying parenting them or not. That has nothing to do with it. It's all about my obedience to the Lord and my commitment I made to Him and to these children. So I just I stand in that whenever we have really hard days.” “I wouldn't say that we're different, like, as in a ‘we're better than other families,’ by any stretch of the imagination; I would say that we're different in that we have been changed by this experience. I'm just realizing how much I can't do it on my own. It's been very humbling, and also very... it's created this vulnerable experience where I'm able to now freely say that, and not have fear of you judging me for not being a good Mom, or other people looking at us like we're crazy.” “But now, having these really hard kids, and feeling that overwhelm, and feeling the, ‘I just want to cry, if we can get to the end of the day, that would be amazing,’ like having that state of, ‘we've just got to survive. We've just got to get to the end of the day,’ has really given me a lot of grace and compassion for Mamas, and to be able to understand that overwhelm and meet them in that space, and give them helpful tools to get out of that, has just been a beautiful gift.” Learn more about Laura HernandezMama SystemsMama Systems on FacebookMama Systems YouTube Channel @mamasystems on Instagram ENABLE OUR MISSIONYour podcast is a sacred space and judgment free zone. It's free of advertising and outside influence -- 100% listener supported.A podcast where you can feel safe to listen and know that you're not alone. Transformation is scary, but not a single butterfly has ever attempted to climb back into the cocoon.To keep us advertising free and support our mission to heal, inspire and shape lives with extraordinary personal life stories, chip-in $5 a month at BellyStory.com/support.Thank you for listening.Warmly,David AllCreator, Storyteller, ProducerCO-CREATE OUR PODCASTTo submit your story, sign-up for new episode emails, contact us or support our mission with a donation, visit:BellyStory.com
40 minutes | Apr 14, 2020
Being A Mother with Sharon Eisenhauer
Sharon Eisenhauer had to heal the wound of her relationship with her own mother before she could break out of the mold of motherhood to find joy in her relationship with her adopted daughter.Sharon and her wife adopted their daughter and divorced a few years later. The relationship between Sharon and her daughter was joyous but also challenging and confrontational and she couldn't understand why.Sharon went to figure it out beginning a process of self-discovery and healing of her own childhood wounds with her own mother. Through distance and discipline, self-love and self-preservation, Sharon can now cherish her daughter because she cherishes herself first.EPISODE SUMMARYOur story begins in 2004 when Sharon and her former wife adopt a baby girl from JapanThe first nine months were both joyful and hellish and when Sharon’s former wife would travel for work, she felt both abandoned and being left to care for another childSharon never wanted to be a mother - at least not with the tools she was carryingBut at the age of 42, both Sharon and her wife felt like they could raise a child together and that it was the next right thing to doA few years later, Sharon and her former wife get a divorce which yields a 50/50 child responsibility role Sharon talks about things she “should do” as a mother like writing little notes in her daughter’s lunchbox and attending PTA meetings -- all things that felt unnaturalA book by Dr. Christiane Northrup called Women’s Bodies, Women’s Wisdom (https://amzn.to/2VoX2HZ) ultimately gave Sharon relief to drop so much of the guilt and shame she was carrying because she was not the mother society pressures her to beIt takes a village to raise a childSharon was in a new relationship with a man she called her “good Dad”Her daughter entering her teen years proved particularly challenging as Sharon further realized she wasn’t “the parent” or “the loving guide”Sharon decides that she needs to move and put distance between her and her daughter to reconnect with herselfThis space reinforced Sharon’s resolve to stand on her own, in her truth, to heal her past and what happened between her own mother and herIn time, the healing process transforms Sharon and her relationship with her daughter improvesSharon can cherish her daughter because she cherishes herself QUOTABLES“Well, the first formative nine months were pure hell. Our daughter, she was a joy, and she didn't sleep through the night.” “I didn't recognize it at the time, but in the dynamic between my partner and myself, I was essentially the child. And so when she would leave, on an unconscious level, it felt as though, number one, I was being abandoned. And number two, I was being abandoned in the care of yet another child. So it was a child being left to take care of a child, even though I was 40-some years old.” “Challenging. Confrontational. Heart-breaking. Joyful. Delightful.” “It was almost as though the the poison had infected her. The poison of this feeling of not being lovable, of not being worthy of receiving love.” “Well, when I was trying to be that mother, that society tells us we should be, that writes the lovely little notes in the lunchbox, and that makes late night snacks for her slumber parties, and hosts play dates, and does PTA and hosts the Girl Scout meetings, and all of those things, I thought I should be those things. I didn't know that there was any other concept of how to be a mother.And when I heard that, it gave me such a feeling of permission and it allowed me to drop away so much of the guilt and the shame I had been carrying about not being able to be the kind of mother that society told me I was supposed to be. . And coming back to the idea of it taking a village, it truly does, because to put all of that responsibility on one or two people is way beyond what we should have to carry.” “She was coming into her teen years and, you know, doing the normal teen belligerent thing. And I hated the way I interacted with her, because I was like another teenager in there fighting with her. I wasn't the parent. I wasn't the loving guide. I wasn't the steady presence for her that I wanted to be, as a mother.” “My daughter felt very abandoned by my moving away.It was about needing to be able to stand on my own, in my own truth, so that I could heal my past, my life, and ostensibly, heal what happened between my mother and me, and her mother and her, and generations before.” “Now that I'm not pressuring myself to be a mom that I'm not, I've been able to grow in the truth of what I came here to this planet to do, which I am coming to know, is as this spiritual conduit, and teacher and guide, and I wasn't able to access that piece before.” “And until I recognized my own lovability, I wasn't going to be able to do that with her, and now, I can cherish her because I cherish myself.” “I would say, "Sweetheart, this is not about you. Your mother is clearly trying so hard and yet she doesn't have the tools herself. She never learned how to parent herself, and all of the rage and all of the unhappiness that you're experiencing today is part of an old, old, unhealed story. And one day my prayer is that you'll be able to come to a place of forgiveness of yourself, and your mother, and all of the other pieces and parts that tell us that we're not worthy, that we're not lovable, that we have to do something or be something to prove our worth, because none of that is true, that you are worthy and lovable just exactly as you are." “Because that is where it all starts, is learning to nurture and nourish that kid that never got it as a child, because we can't give from an empty well.” Learn more about Sharon EisenhauerLiving with Meraki - Sharon’s podcastVoiceover work@livingwithmeraki on InstagramLinkedinENABLE OUR MISSIONYour podcast is a sacred space and judgment free zone. It's free of advertising and outside influence -- 100% listener supported.A podcast where you can feel safe to listen and know that you're not alone. Transformation is scary, but not a single butterfly has ever attempted to climb back into the cocoon.To keep us advertising free and support our mission to heal, inspire and shape lives with extraordinary personal life stories, chip-in $5 a month at BellyStory.com/support.Thank you for listening.Warmly,David AllCreator, Storyteller, ProducerCO-CREATE OUR PODCASTTo submit your story, sign-up for new episode emails, contact us or support our mission with a donation, visit:BellyStory.com
35 minutes | Apr 10, 2020
The Pattern of Transformation with Artie Wu
Beyond the Belly takes you beyond the personal narratives in Belly of the Beast Life Stories to bring to life the wisdom found in the overall patterns of transformation. For our second episode, master healer Artie Wu of PresideLife.com helps unpack the pattern of transformation coming up across all Belly of the Beast Life Stories. We use a few excerpts from Season One to help bring the stages of transformation to life. By design, every episode in Belly of the Beast Life Stories follows this same pattern. Artie is a healer to more than 120,000 people throughout the world via PresideLife.com, and an advisor to both of my podcasts. He is a friend, and has been instrumental to help me develop these concepts and in helping me spiritually grow as a man. This is a brand new podcast -- ratings and reviews matter so much! If you are moved by this episode, please subscribe, rate and write a fair review about this podcast so other heroes can find it, too. Share it with two friends. And visit inourbelly.com to listen to more stories for free and to share your story with us. Belly of the Beast Life Stories is a firsthand history of real life transformations. Please subscribe, rate and write a fair review about this podcast so other heroes can find it, too.  Visit http://inourbelly.com Season 2: For Love of My Child are true stories of a parent’s transformation when faced with acute challenges, chronic ills, and early endings of their child or children.    EPISODE SUMMARY - In this episode we’re discussing the overall pattern of transformation which follows the same pattern in all Belly of the Beast Life Stories. - The first stage is ‘forced change’ which is the event which triggers the process of transformation - We use Dr. Julian Gold’s diagnosis of cancer where he was diagnosed and days later was in the hospital for treatment - Artie notes that a health event is one category of forced change that “truly cannot be stuffed down anymore” - In the actual forced event itself -- and in your own forced change in your life -- understand the overall meaning in the event itself - Artie discusses allegory (finger wagging -- forced change must be teaching me a lesson) vs symbol to rise above wny it’s happening and understand that it is happening and how will you respond to it - From forced change, the caterpillar goes into the cocoon stage, and we use an excerpt from Chip Conley’s story to illustrate the “dark, gooey stage” which for Chip was from ages 45 to 49 - Jobi Manson’s story is used to help show the surrender stage - necessary as the final stage before climbing up into being a butterfly - Holocaust survivor Martha Sternbach’s story of erupting as a buterfly 50 years after the Holocaust ended and once she told her story, she never stopped is used to discuss transformation - Artie recalls Chip’s story of spending five years in the cocoon phase and for Martha it was nearly 50 years -- but there is no judgement passed  - Artie answers the question “Will everyone become a butterfly?”   BELLY OF THE BEAST LIFE STORIES SOURCED - Dr. Julian Gold: https://inourbelly.com/season-1/episode-2-dr-julian-gold/   - Chip Conley: https://inourbelly.com/season-1/episode-13-chip-conley/    - Jobi Manson: https://inourbelly.com/season-1/episode-11-jobi-manson/   - Martha Sternbach: https://inourbelly.com/season-1/episode-1-martha-sternbach/   QUOTABLES by ARTIE WU “And I think that health, kind of issues, health conditions. In my experience and the people I've worked with that really sort of reaches that category of things that truly cannot be stuffed down anymore. And the one thing I want to say here is that a big sort of health diagnosis is just one of many different ways you can be triggered to go into the belly of the beast.”   “The question that's more interesting and relevant to me and ultimately helpful in my experience is what is the overall meaning of this event?”   “Part of you that is in cocoon phase. Even know the rest of your life, he didn't stop breathing, he didn't stop making money and living life, paying his taxes and being with people. To all outward appearances, life continued moving. But a part of him was in this cocoon stage and he knew it.”   “The true transformative surrender is always forced. It always feels forced. If you willingly do it and try to maintain control, it's not quite the real thing.”   “So when that transformation happens... Your narrative about your self changes. And then you, in your essence, also changes.”   “I think the answer is the natural pattern is that yes, yes. You know, everyone is a caterpillar does go down to cocoon phase and does come up the butterfly. The process can be aborted, can be forced back backward even or like completely stalemated and halted. Because there are other forces within you that will say this entire shape is invalid. I reject this entire shape. I demand that I be a caterpillar and a damn good looking one driving a nice car for the rest of my life with no change whatsoever. All I want is no change. And those forces in a person can be very powerful as well to the point where they abort any cocooning that happens.“   TRANSCRIPT AVAILABLE https://inourbelly.com/beyond-the-belly-episodes/episode-2-pattern-of-transformation-with-artie-wu/   RESOURCES Artie's healing website:http://PresideLife.com Preside Life on Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/presidelife @wu_artie on instagram:https://www.instagram.com/wu_artie/   SHOW RESOURCES This is a brand new podcast - a time when early reviews and ratings matter most. Please subscribe, rate and write a fair review of this podcast ♥️ so other heroes can find it, too!    My email: david@inourbelly.com   Beyond the Belly  https://inourbelly.com/beyond   Belly of the Beast Life Stories http://inourbelly.com   @inourbelly on Instagram http://instagram.com/inourbelly   Facebook Community http://facebook.com/inourbelly   @inourbelly on Twitter http://twitter.com/inourbelly   @davidall (host) http://instagram.com/davidall   # # #
85 minutes | Apr 7, 2020
Two Children Murdered with Charlotte Austin-Jordan
The day after Mother’s Day in 1988, Charlotte's only daughter, Ja’Mee, was murdered at the age of 13 in a case of mistaken identity by five gang members. Then again in 1996, Charlotte’s 25 year-old son Corey was also killed by gang members who thought his blue work uniform represented a rival gang’s colors. Indeed Charlotte was dealt poison but made medicine going on a mission to first ensure that Ja’Mee’s killers met justice, then working through all levels of government to change criminal justice laws, notably being the catalyst and driver for the Victim’s Impact Statement which humanizes a victim at sentencing and California’s Three-Strikes Law. Charlotte has been a beacon of hope and love for her community, providing direct support and care to mothers who had lost children due to homicide; and hundreds of children consider her their mother, too. Charlotte addressed the root of the problem by creating a jobs programs for young at-risk youth to get off the streets and find meaningful work in the community. EPISODE SUMMARYOur story begins in Los Angeles in 1988Charlotte was a single mom to five children; four boys and one daughterCharlotte worked hard to make sure the family had dinner together every Sunday and maintaining a strong foundation for them as a single momIt was the day after Mother's Day in 1988 when Ja'Mee was killedCharlotte was preparing food for her youngest children when she heard multiple gunshotsPhysically she felt something drop from her - she believes it was Ja’Mee’s life leaving her bodyJa'Mee and her friend Nikki had been killed by 5 gang members who had thought the two girls were the sister of a rival drug dealer that had duped them earlierJa’Mee was hit 15 times with bullets including one through her headAt the time, “drive by shootings” wasn’t a legal offense so the five murderers were being charged under a lesser misdemeanor crime that had a likely sentence of 18-monthsThe death of Ja’Mee triggered a series of changes including having to find new homes for her foster children, fearing black men in her community, and losing her job; Charlotte’s life became a mission to represent her daughter and get justiceIn 1996, her son Corey was killed by gang members that thought he was wearing rival gang colors; Corey was wearing his work uniformIn court, Charlotte’s daughter was referred to not by her name, but as her ‘toe tag’ which is assigned in the morgue; there was also no ‘victims impact statement’ where Charlotte could tell the jury who her daughter was, what her dreams wereCharlotte is the catalyst and driver of several major criminal justice laws that are common today, including: Victims Impact Statement and Three Strikes LawThrough loss she gained so much from the community - but she still misses her babies QUOTABLES“So I built a strong foundation for [my children], even though I was single."“I got up and I went to the stove and I started preparing, warming up the meal that I had already prepared for the babies. And I heard all of this gunfire. And while I was standing at the stove, it was like a really strange feeling, like I had dropped something. And I always say it was her soul. It was like something fell for me. And I started looking for it to see what that was. at the funeral home, they said Ja'Mee had defensive wounds, and I didn't know what that was. They needed gloves. And the defensive wounds just because she saw them, and she put her hands up for protection. But that day was a horrible, horrible day for me. My only daughter. I had dreams, I was preparing for her to be a young woman, 18, the debutante balls, the classes, wanting her to be groomed, all of those things, and the life that I did not experience, I wanted to help her to be able to experience those things. And they cheated me. They cheated me. You know, it's 30 years, and it gets better, but it doesn't go away. I still miss my daughter.”“Laws, we did not have any laws on the books that talked about drive-by shooting, not even assault rifles. They purchased those assault rifles earlier that day, fully armed and ready with ammunition to fire, and that was not... there was nothing in place to stop anyone from walking in to a hardware store that sold... or a surplus store that sold ammunition and guns to buy them, fully loaded and ready to go. The law... I think they were prosecuted under a... It was a misdemeanor, which that meant they would get 18 months for a murder as a drive-by. Carjacking. No, we didn't... We had horse stealing laws, if you stole somebody's horse, but they had any... they, stealing the car, but not shooting people from a moving car. That wasn't even a law.” “I was paralyzed when I go in the house at eight o'clock at night. But I knew I had to do something to change the situation. Not... my children were gone, but I needed to protect the other children.” “In court, we're going to court, and they're trying to call her by her toe tag, which is the day you were murdered, the month you were murdered, the day you were murdered and the time. That's not her name. She had a name. She had a family. She had people who loved her. I was not able to speak to the jurors before they did a verdict to tell them. We changed it to speak before the jurors before this... they go out for deliberation. But I was able to do it when my son died. There is no Martin Luther King. There is no Captain Save-a-Person. There's only me.” “That's why I was talking to Governor Wilson about the Three Strikes Law. We're like, playing baseball here. If my kid can make it to home plate, we got a home run, but you got criminals on every base. We need to take them off those bases to give our kids a clean shot at getting home safe.” “It was times where I felt very depressed. I didn't want to be here anymore, but I had other children, and I had other things, and I had to focus on those things. And I took that poison that they gave me. And I used it for the betterment or medicine for my community. Holding rallies, bringing food to people, mothers on drugs, talking to them in the comfort of their home and helping them get off of those drugs. Going to AA meetings with them, talking to the young men in my community, showing them there is a better path. Giving people jobs, you know, not just sitting around talking about it, but be about it, 'bout it, be about it, 'bout it. Doing what I am supposed to do to help. Not myself. It's about others.” “If you can get in a car and drive there, it's one community. We have to build a strong community and it takes a commitment from all of us.” “It's kind of a double edged thing. Yes, I lost. I... that was my own child. And that was the most precious gift God could have gave me. But guess what? When I opened my school and I opened my community center and I opened up my house, I got that back. Chris Darden says, "That damn Charlotte, wants to be everybody's mom." You know, I got two hundred children, 200 girls that I deal with daily. Right? That I can pass those etiquettes to, those, how to dress, the fun things that Moms do. And that's how I treat them, like I'm their Mom. The boys, the same way. I lost Corey, but I gained hundreds of boys. And I don't feel like I was cheated out of the fact that those were my children. God gave them to me. And no one should have harmed them. But I also take great satisfaction in the fact that I was able, or am able to love many other children.” “I am a servant first and foremost. And if I can help, that's what I do. I'm not a chicken, I don't run. Somebody told me I was a firefighter. You know, a firefighter runs to the fire, and everybody else run out, but I run towards the fire, whatever the issue is, whether... I'm heading straight to confront it.” Connect with Charlotte Austin-JordanCharlotte has asked that I share her contact directly in case you have lost a child and would like to talk about it. She is also available to publicly speak at your events. (323) 303-7574 charlotteaustin.jordan (at) gmail (dot) com ENABLE OUR MISSIONYour podcast is a sacred space and judgment free zone. It's free of advertising and outside influence -- 100% listener supported.A podcast where you can feel safe to listen and know that you're not alone. Transformation is scary, but not a single butterfly has ever attempted to climb back into the cocoon.To keep us advertising free and support our mission to heal, inspire and shape lives with extraordinary personal life stories, chip-in $5 a month at BellyStory.com/support.Thank you for listening.Warmly,David AllCreator, Storyteller, ProducerCO-CREATE OUR PODCASTTo submit your story, sign-up for new episode emails, contact us or support our mission with a donation, visit:BellyStory.com
26 minutes | Mar 27, 2020
Origin and Meaning with Artie Wu
Beyond the Belly takes you beyond the personal narratives in Belly of the Beast Life Stories to bring to life the wisdom found in the overall patterns of transformation. For our first episode, I've asked master healer Artie Wu of PresideLife.com to join me to discuss the origin story and meaning of Belly of the Beast Life Stories. Artie is a healer to more than 120,000 people throughout the world via PresideLife.com, and an advisor to both of my podcasts. He is a friend, and has been instrumental to help me develop these concepts and in helping me spiritually grow as a man. Subscribe, rate and review this podcast so that other heroes find it, too. And listen and subscribe to Belly of the Beast Life Stories for free wherever you get your podcasts.  Visit inourbelly.com to be a part of our community.   EPISODE SUMMARY - Artie describes the origin of Belly of the Beast Life Stories from his perspective as a friend and advisor to David - The meaning behind the term, “Belly of the Beast” - Discussing the overall pattern of transformation using the metaphor of a caterpillar, down into her cocoon, and climbing up a butterfly - Biblical story of Jonah and the Whale - Modern examples of the Belly story pattern include Star Wars and The Matrix (films) - The difference between grief and depression and why accepting the meaning of your pain matters   QUOTABLES “And the Belly of the Beast really is an allusion to some call it 'hero's journey.' Some call it sort of transformations people go through over the course of their life cycles. And there are many ways to describe that.”   “There's a natural shape of the transformation process in a person's life in a phase they go through in nature. And, you know, one metaphor that comes up a lot is that of a caterpillar turning into a butterfly.”   “And I don't know if you've ever watched a video of a butterfly coming out of cocoon, it doesn't look like fun. It comes out. It's slimy, it's struggling. Sometimes a wing breaks. And it needs to sit there totally vulnerable for some period of time for its wings to dry out before it can even fly away. It's very precarious, dangerous, terrifying process.”   “And we always put our attention on the rainbows and unicorns aspect of being this butterfly.”   “It wasn't a metaphor that the caterpillar died, the caterpillar did die because it is gone.”   “In the Bible story, [Belly of the Beast is] an allusion to Jonah and the whale.”   “And one day, Jonah is standing on the shore. And this whale, this leviathan, comes up from the depths and swallows him. And so he's in the Belly of the Beast. But then the whale dives down underwater. Right. And the idea here is that when Jonah is down literally in the Belly of the Beast, he undergoes transformation. He's like, well, I'm gonna die anyway here. I don't know what happened. Everything I was afraid of losing -- I've basically already lost.”   “And metaphorically speaking, at some point along your journey, a whale comes up and just literally takes you down. And the idea here from classical times is that You know, you get the call, and if you refuse the call, something will come up, grab you and drag you down anyway.”   “And what's beautiful about hearing people's individual stories from Martha Sternbach (Season 1, Ep.1)  to like everyone else is that even though we all have a fingerprint, each fingerprint is unique. And to hear that, you know, the incredible stories that you've brought out in this first season, it helps us see the shape of our own fingerprint.”   “In classic Star Wars, All right. the belly of the beast is the trash compactor in the belly of the Death Star. In The Matrix, for instance, or the belly of the beast is when Neo actually physically dies and then comes back completely transformed, knowing he has his powers.”   “Like for instance, when we talk about the difference between grief and depression. Grief is when you've had a loss and you actively, willingly sit with it and just sit with the pain of a loss and you don't run away from the pain. You actively go down into the belly of the beast. You go down into grief, you go down into your cocoon phase. Depression is where you say, no, no, run away. Get away. Get away. Numb it with alcohol, numb it with drugs, with sex or whatever. And you keep running from this pain you know is coming. And eventually a hand comes up, grabs you and drags you down anyway. That's the difference.”   TRANSCRIPT AVAILABLE https://inourbelly.com/beyond-the-belly-episodes/episode-1-origin-and-meaning-with-artie-wu/ RESOURCES Artie's healing website:http://PresideLife.com Preside Life on Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/presidelife @wu_artie on instagram:https://www.instagram.com/wu_artie/   SHOW RESOURCES Subscribe, rate and write a fair review of this podcast ♥️ so other heroes can find it, too! Our team reads every single review and it’s the best way to show us that our work matters to you. Go to https://inourbelly.com/beyond-the-belly/ for more information about this podcast Explore http://inourbelly.com to learn about my other podcast, Belly of the Beast Life Stories Make a donation https://www.patreon.com/bellyofthebeast Hire us - let's build your brand http://onenineninety.com @inourbelly on Instagram http://instagram.com/inourbelly @inourbelly on Twitter  http://twitter.com/inourbelly @davidall on instagram (host) http://instagram.com/davidall
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