The Right Mind Media Podcast
After losing her mother as a child, journalist Mallary Tenore Tarpley wanted to stop time. If growing up meant living without her mom, then she wanted to stay little forever. But what started as small acts of food restriction soon turned into a full-blown eating disorder. Mallary joins us to talk about her new book Slip: Life in the Middle of Eating Disorder Recovery, and her research into new frameworks for understanding eating disorders."
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Jon and Abby go behind the headlines to talk about the hot topics of the month.
info_outlineThe Right Mind Media Podcast
Rehab has been the answer for so many of us suffering from our nation's drug crisis. So why do only a certain few have a real chance of recovery? Shoshana Walter, an investigative journalist and author of the new book Rehab: An American Scandal, joins us to talk about the "pitfalls into this uniquely American system."
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Gender Specialist Rebecca Minor, LICSW, joins us to talk about what parents and caregivers of trans and gender nonconforming youth need to know to help support their kids through their journey of becoming.
info_outlineThe Right Mind Media Podcast
Jon and Abby go behind the headlines to bring you the hot topics of the month.
info_outlineThe Right Mind Media Podcast
Jon and Abby go behind the headlines to bring you to the hot topics of the month.
info_outlineThe Right Mind Media Podcast
Jon and Abby go behind the headlines to bring you the hot topics of the month.
info_outlineThe Right Mind Media Podcast
Jon and Abby go behind the headlines to talk about the hot topics of the month.
info_outlineThe Right Mind Media Podcast
Jon and Abby go behind the headlines to bring you the hot topics of the month.
info_outlineThe Right Mind Media Podcast
Gentry Jones, musician and author of "Stoicism, the 12 steps, and Free-Range Spirituality" joins us to share his personal story of addiction and recovery, and how he discovered stoicism the common thread that flows through these frameworks.
info_outline"Objects of Addiction", a new exhibition at the Harvard Art Museums, explores the entwined histories of the opium trade and the Chinese art market between the late 18th and early 20th centuries. Curator Sarah Laursen joins us to talk about how opium and Chinese art, acquired through both legal and illicit means, had profound effects on the global economy, cultural landscape, and education—and in the case of opium, on public health and immigration—still reverberate today.