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Thriving After Trauma: An Interview with Karen Nowicki, Phoenix Business RadioX® and Deep Impact Leadership Coaching & Consulting

February 23, 2023 by John Ray

Karen Nowicki
North Fulton Studio
Thriving After Trauma: An Interview with Karen Nowicki, Phoenix Business RadioX® and Deep Impact Leadership Coaching & Consulting
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Karen Nowicki

Thriving After Trauma: An Interview with Karen Nowicki, Phoenix Business RadioX® and Deep Impact Leadership Coaching & Consulting

What do you do when trauma hits you without warning? How do you recover personally? How do you hold it together for the clients you work for in your services practice? How do you get to a point where you can thrive again? Karen Nowicki, Phoenix Business RadioX® and Deep Impact Leadership Coaching & Consulting, joined host John Ray to discuss the trauma of her husband’s suicide attempt, what she did to cope with her own mental health challenges that followed, her decision to share her journey in detail, how she managed her two businesses through those difficult times, and much more.

The Price and Value Journey is presented by John Ray and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

Phoenix Business RadioX®

Since 2017, Phoenix Business RadioX® has successfully launched, promoted, and produced over 1500 podcast episodes covering topics from BioScience Careers to High Tech Lending …and just about everything in between.

Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram

Karen Nowicki, Owner, iNudge LLC, Phoenix Business RadioX® and Deep Impact Leadership Coaching & Consulting

Karen Nowicki, Owner, iNudge LLC, Phoenix Business RadioX® and Deep Impact Leadership Coaching & Consulting

Karen Nowicki is the Owner of iNudge LLC, the parent company to Phoenix Business RadioX and Deep Impact Leadership Coaching & Consulting.

Executive Leaders and Business Owners hire Karen to accelerate their intrapersonal / interpersonal relationships and harness the power of a growth mindset.

Karen has spent over 30 years in corporate, small business and educational leadership roles and for the past 10 years has held an impressive private client list that includes c-suite leaders in a variety of industries, including: technology, medical, higher education, hospitality, and finance.

Karen is an impeccably trained Integration Coach with certifications in communications, facilitative leadership, mindfulness, trauma integration, tao healing, talent management, and strategic planning.

LinkedIn

TRANSCRIPT

John Ray: [00:00:04] And hello, everyone. I’m John Ray on The Price and Value Journey. And I am delighted to welcome Karen Nowicki. Karen is with Phoenix Business RadioX and Deep Impact Leadership Coaching and Consulting. And just a way of introducing Karen, what do you do if, not only in your professional services practice but in your life, trauma comes right out of the blue and drops right in your lap? And how do you hold it together and recover? And that’s what we’re going to be talking with Karen about today.

John Ray: [00:00:40] Karen is a successful author, speaker. She has her own coaching practice, as I mentioned. The name of that practice is Deep Impact Leadership Coaching and Consulting. Karen’s been an expert guest on regional television and radio shows. She’s a regular contributor to many print and online magazines, blogs for both business and education. And where I intersect with her proudly is that she and I are colleagues in the Business RadioX Network, and Karen’s the much smarter studio partner than I am, but she runs the Phoenix Business RadioX Studio. And Karen Nowicki, it’s just a pleasure to have this time to chat.

Karen Nowicki: [00:01:29] I’m excited to spend time with you, John. It’s usually a quick text or a phone call, how are you doing this, what’s going on here, between either one of us. And we have yet to ever meet in-person, but we’ve got to change that in 2023.

John Ray: [00:01:42] I look forward to that. Yeah. I want to correct that. So, let’s put that on our list for 2023. I like that.

Karen Nowicki: [00:01:52] Did I say ’23, too, I think? I meant 2023. If I said ’22, I can’t keep up.

John Ray: [00:01:58] Well, let’s get each other the right year. I’m not sure I said the right one. But I gave a little bit of an overview of you and your work. But like me, you have two different professional services businesses, so give everyone a little bit of an overview of that work.

Karen Nowicki: [00:02:16] Sure. Again, thank you for having me be with you and your listeners today or viewers. I have been referred to, for years, as the ultimate problem solver and solution finder. For the past 24 years, I’ve acquired advanced training and certifications in executive leadership, trauma integration, Tao Healing, and then organizational and personal development.

Karen Nowicki: [00:02:40] And it just made sense that while I was running my coaching practice – which you’ve mentioned a little bit – almost six years ago to open Phoenix Business RadioX and run that alongside it. And I’ll talk about why that was so important in a moment.

Karen Nowicki: [00:02:54] My greatest strength is the ability to help people understand what they need, what they want, and how to have that come together on a consistent and daily basis. Most of the time, it’s telling people and showing them how to get out of their own way. And I know the business of business as well as the business of people. And so, let’s face it, in any business, we’re always dealing with people.

Karen Nowicki: [00:03:19] And so, it just made sense, Business RadioX was a wreath on my door and an opportunity for me to kind of elevate my exposure as a leader when it comes to personal and professional development. And I haven’t ever looked back and regretted the decision. It’s been hard to run both businesses at times, especially these last couple of years. But I’m doing it and I’ve got the right team to help me now.

John Ray: [00:03:45] Yeah. That’s terrific. I’m curious for you – and we’ve talked a little bit about this, but for our listeners – why later on Business RadioX specifically, and that work among all the other things you could have done next to your coaching practice?

Karen Nowicki: [00:04:03] It’s a great question. I think it’s an important one for you and I when we encourage people to take on podcasting or B2B radio in their businesses, because not everybody understands why at Business RadioX we do the things that we do it or the way we do it.

Karen Nowicki: [00:04:18] So, six years ago I had sold a business, and it gave me the leverage to hire a coach and think about how do I want the next layer of my career to be. And, also at the same time, gave me the leverage to open an auto mechanic shop for my then husband. So, I went to my coach and I said I continue to work with professionals. These were attorneys, doctors, successful entrepreneurs and business owners, typically highly visible in their industries and was coaching them at a very soulful, personal, and professional level. And yet they weren’t referring me like other people were, the general laypeople.

Karen Nowicki: [00:04:58] And I knew that I was making a huge difference in their lives because I was always the one they were texting saying, “Thank you. I finally solved that problem at work. I finally hired the right teammate. My husband or my wife and I are getting along better. I had you sit on my shoulder when I had those conversations.” Like, all that acknowledgement told me that they were stepping into their life and leadership in an incredible way and I got to be the catalyst and the help to kind of either nudge or shove them into that depending on what they needed. And yet they weren’t referring to me.

Karen Nowicki: [00:05:32] And so, my coach said, “Well, go ask them. These are people that you’ve gotten to know and they really care about you. And clearly, you’re making a difference.” Their feedback to me, John, was, “Well, why would I tell anybody you’re my best kept secret. Like, you’re my secret weapon.” And they weren’t interested in telling me.

Karen Nowicki: [00:05:47] And that was difficult for me to hear because at that time my coaching practice was referral only, which is a mistake, but it’s how I built it. I didn’t understand marketing and advertising nor did I want to do it. And I really have never liked the sales part of things.

Karen Nowicki: [00:06:06] And so, my coach challenged me to maybe consider a podcast. And at first I thought that was an awful idea. I quickly, within two hours of research, came across Business RadioX. And I could just tell that they were or we are doing things differently. It’s about the story and shine the spotlight on someone else. So, I thought, I can do that.

Karen Nowicki: [00:06:28] And within a week, was in Atlanta visiting with Stone and Lee, following them around and paying attention to what they’re doing. And by the time I flew home about four days later, I had made the decision to open Phoenix Business RadioX so that I could show up among our leaders in the Metro Phoenix area, have conversations about what’s important to them, their industries, their verticals, their decisions, their initiatives. And in exchange, have an opportunity to get to know them at a really deep level. And then, in turn, be able to say, “Here’s what I do outside of Business RadioX. If you know anybody who’s struggling with personal growth or professional development or leadership or finances, whatever it is, have them have a conversation with me.”

John Ray: [00:07:13] You know, it’s amazing what you can do with a mic, isn’t it? I mean, that’s terrific. Well, I want to get right into your story, Karen, or the reason we’re doing this show in terms of the trauma that hit you and your now former husband, Mike. I want you to share whatever piece of that you want to share and how you want to share that story.

Karen Nowicki: [00:07:38] Yeah. It’s not an easy conversation to share and it’s also not very easy for people to listen to. Back in 2019, my then husband attempted suicide and survived gunshot wound through his head. It was a total surprise to me. We closed his auto shop and we unraveled the mystery of how did this all happened while he was lying in the trauma intensive care unit for the first month of his recovery. I came to see that there was addiction and gambling and just really a lot of mental health challenges that weren’t as evident as they were. We had been together for 15 years, the love of my life.

Karen Nowicki: [00:08:27] And I struggled to get up everyday. I struggled to help our then 12 year old kind of make his way through it. I have two older kids as well who very much loved and cared for Mike and they were trying to make sense out of it. They were living out of the house, already adults.

Karen Nowicki: [00:08:45] And being so visible in our community already because I have had Business RadioX up and running for then almost two-and-a-half years, and the way in which I show up in social media even before this, is kind of I’m visible, here are the situations, the struggles, the challenges that I go through, I decided that I was going to tell the story while it was happening.

Karen Nowicki: [00:09:10] That was, I’ll say, a divine download. I woke up one morning and what was on my heart and in my head was you will tell this story as it’s happening. And I thought, “Oh. You can’t ask me to do that.” I was in trauma. I was in crisis. I wanted to just pull the sheets over my head and just disappear. And yet the next thought that I heard was, “I’ve prepared you your whole life for this.” And I thought, “Well, that’s a crappy way. Why would that ever be part of my story?” Because I pride myself on knowing people so well, and helping people, and getting really clear about soulful self-reliance and deep impact leadership, how could I end up with a partner who went to bed with me every night, that was the love of my life, end up wanting to take his own life?

Karen Nowicki: [00:09:59] So, long story short, Mike and I are no longer together. He wasn’t willing to or wasn’t capable of, I think is more more appropriate to say, to do the work it required to be a healthy whole unit between he and I and then, of course, our son. And it just made more sense safety-wise, mentally, physically, emotionally for Ivan and I to be on our own. I do know that he is now with his family in a different state. They’ve chosen not to have anything to do with us, which is heartbreaking. And at the same time, I continue to recover from that, all the while keeping both businesses open and being very vocal about my own mental health journey throughout this chaos and trauma and that of my sons.

John Ray: [00:10:46] Wow. A lot there. Let’s talk about the processing, the idea that all this was going on with your life partner and you had no idea. I mean, in terms of just the mental health struggles and then the financial issues and other issues that you talked about that were going on, how did you process just getting hit by this out of the blue?

Karen Nowicki: [00:11:16] I would like to say people will tell me that I processed it really well. And my first reaction is, “No. No. I didn’t.” When we fall into trauma or chaos, we go into the fight, flight, or freeze, or fawn mode and we’re now using a different part of our brain just for survival. So, a lot of it really, John, is a blur. Even though I was writing daily on our CaringBridge page and then, of course, on social media, it was really a therapeutic opportunity for me to try to make sense out of everything.

Karen Nowicki: [00:11:47] Mike and I were both building our businesses at the same time. Phoenix Business RadioX was brand new, so is his auto shop. And one business alone for a family is difficult in those early startup days, you and I both know that, let alone two. So, while I felt like we were grounded and corrected – excuse me – grounded and connected, he had his set of challenges and expenses and I had mine. And so, I knew he wasn’t feeling well physically. I was oblivious to – because he wasn’t willing to share it – what was going on mentally.

Karen Nowicki: [00:12:21] And I think that’s the most important call out here for our listeners and our viewers. Not everybody, one, knows when they’re struggling mental health-wise. And even if they do, there’s so much stigma and so much fear about saying to somebody I am not well, I am not doing well and I need help. Like, for Suicide Prevention Month and even just mental health awareness, we always say I’m there for you, be on the lookout for clues and that sort of stuff.

Karen Nowicki: [00:12:53] And I will tell you, I think we are very good at hiding that stuff, which is part of why I’ve told my story so vocally and so visibly, because my story is no longer Mike’s story, nor was it even when it was happening. I had to deal with my own mental health. And so, I just got really good about asking for help and being very candid, “I feel like crap right now” or “I don’t even know which way is up.”

Karen Nowicki: [00:13:20] And always continue to have faith. I said to you earlier today before we got on the interview that the universe always has my back. And I believe that for all of us. If we can hold on to hope, we can get through anything. And I always knew that at some point beyond that threshold of chaos and craziness and be, fortunately, where I am today, even though the fog has just finally lifted the last couple of months.

John Ray: [00:13:44] Well, I want to dive into that a little more, the universe has my back. What are the beliefs that underlie that statement that you have?

Karen Nowicki: [00:13:55] For me, it’s faith-based. I don’t attend a church any longer. I grew up Catholic and have always been a very soulful, spiritual person, very led by a belief in a higher power. And even though life has proven to give me challenge after challenge, business and career, and marriages, and even challenges with kids, and health, and all that stuff, I continue to give that over to a higher power. And when I say the universe has got my back, I don’t know that it matters what faith we have or if we have any faith as long as we believe that there is something better on the other side of a challenge.

Karen Nowicki: [00:14:37] And so, every time I have a challenge, small, medium, or large, I just know where’s the growth, where can I learn more about me, learn more about me and how I show up in the world that I can take into this next iteration of where I’m going after, this stuff is behind me.

John Ray: [00:14:56] So, when all this happened with Mike, you decided pretty quickly that your response needed to be journaling, sharing what you had. And we’re not talking about private journaling. I mean, we’re talking, really, about online journaling. You can explain more about what I mean by that. But what was the genesis of that decision for you?

Karen Nowicki: [00:15:21] Again, I will tell you that it wasn’t my decision. I know that might sound crazy. But in my meditation practice and the way in which I just am very soulfully self-reliant, I listen very deeply to what my soul needs and how I’m supposed to show up in the world. So, I know that gets a little bit woo, but there you go. So, very early on within three or four days, again, I woke up and I just knew that I was being called from a higher place to journal and share publicly what was going on for me. And it was a survival mode.

Karen Nowicki: [00:16:04] My son said it recently that it was a way for me to survive and thrive versus a way for me to story tell and get attention. It doesn’t fit with everybody’s narrative. You know, there’s a handful of people, my family included, thinks I did it for attention and did it just to further my career. If that were that, I literally would have kept the sheet over my head, put a padlock on the door, and said, “I’m done. I’m out.”

Karen Nowicki: [00:16:30] And so, I asked three friends to read every entry that I wrote for CaringBridge – that, again, was repeated on social media – so that they could look at it through three layers. One, am I taking care of myself in this? Are you reading it to where you can hear that this really is me trying to find my way through the chaos and make understanding of what’s happening to the degree that I can?

Karen Nowicki: [00:16:53] Two, is it being respectful of Mike and his family and his journey? Because at the time, while I wanted us to be together forever, that was the plan, I never would have guessed that it would not have turned out that way. And yet I knew that at some point he would likely be in a position to be aware that I told the story as it was happening. So, was I respectful to him and his family and his journey? And then, the third piece was, if there could be a nugget for other people who are watching and listening and reading, is that opportunity there for someone to have a takeaway?

Karen Nowicki: [00:17:21] So, all, but I think one journal over the course of probably nine months journal entries, was there ever a sentence that came back? And my very best friend, Julie, came back and said, “This is the only sentence that I’m not sure where you’re coming from on this. It sounds more like ego than anything else. Can you reword it or pull it out?” And with that, I did. That was the only time. The rest of the time it was, “Oh, my gosh. Karen, this is what I’m getting from it and I know this is going to make a difference. And I can hear you getting better and healing as you go through this.”

Karen Nowicki: [00:17:49] So, less of a decision, John, and more of a calling. Which, I think, again, our viewers and our listeners for this particular show, if they’re entrepreneurs and business owners, even solopreneurs, we don’t come into our businesses lightly. We come into it, I think, oftentimes, because we have a calling to do something that’s bigger than us.

John Ray: [00:18:12] Right. Yeah, for sure. Now, this is the part of the story that I’m not sure that I’ve heard before, that you had three trusted friends that knew you quite well, that they sound checked it, I guess maybe is the word, right? They sound checked to make sure that the Karen they knew was speaking.

Karen Nowicki: [00:18:37] Yeah. And this was well before any of the immediate family started attacking and wanting to manage what I was saying and would rather have me be quiet. I just knew that I was fairly visible in our community anyway already. I’d already talked about post-partum depression when my kids were younger, and changing careers, and what is it like to be fairly visible and that sort of stuff, getting older, those kinds of things, even body image and those choices, and how I can grow to love myself more.

Karen Nowicki: [00:19:18] So, knowing that I had already been through all that and sharing in that way, I knew I needed to have people, not fact check, but just sound check and make sure that I was doing it from a place of, first, caring for myself; second, being respectful of Mike and his journey, wherever that would take him; and third, can people hear it from a place of what’s in it for me.

Karen Nowicki: [00:19:39] And it’s proven to be one of the most amazing things I’ve ever done. I hear, still, from people three years later how much I’ve changed their life or the lives of their loved ones. I would say, and I think only firefighters and medical professionals get to say this, I know there are at least eight people whose lives I’ve helped save because they either read or someone read to them the accounting of what I was going through as a dear casualty of somebody who wanted to leave this earth before their time.

John Ray: [00:20:15] I would love it, Karen, if you would share one of those as an example. You know, obviously, we’re not going to mention names or anything like that, any identifiers. But if you could just share an example of one of those stories.

Karen Nowicki: [00:20:30] I can. So, we’re here in Arizona. I had a high school friend reach out through Facebook and mentioned that she was going to be in town – this has been, oh, probably a-year-and-a-half ago – and would I be open to coffee. And we don’t know each other well. We see each other at reunions and, of course, on social media, thumbs up, or a little like this, like that. And I said, I’d love that. And so, I waited at the coffee shop for her to arrive maybe three or four minutes early. And as she’s walking from the parking lot, we smiled at each other.

Karen Nowicki: [00:21:00] And as she’s getting closer, I watch her face change and she starts to get teary eyed. And I was not prepared for that. We gave each other a big hug and she said, “I’m so grateful that you’re sitting down and meeting with me. I need to tell you how much you’ve impacted my life and the life of my fiancé.”

Karen Nowicki: [00:21:18] Now, we’re not spring chickens. We’re celebrating our 40th high school reunion this year, so we’re in our late 50s. And so, this is somebody that I knew as a young girl and have seen at reunions. And she’s in a relationship now. I believe they’re engaged, maybe even married now, a couple of years after we met over coffee.

Karen Nowicki: [00:21:39] And she said that her then partner was struggling with mental health, depression, suicidal ideation. And as she read what I was sharing, being his beloved partner, it was ripping her apart that that could be her and she didn’t know how to handle it. He was unwilling at the time to get professional help. And so, she started reading these entries to him aloud. And I don’t know how soon, but I think within four or five entries, he ended up agreeing to go get professional help by himself and also couples counseling for the two of them.

Karen Nowicki: [00:22:16] And she said I just knew that the anguish and the difficulty that I was sitting in, not having a clue what happened, not having known how to help, and having a partner who refused to get help until it was too late, and even now not getting the help, she just knew that she had to share that. So, I hope that’s kind of the example that you’re looking for.

John Ray: [00:22:43] Wow. That’s tremendous. And there’s no telling what has happened without you even knowing about it. And this is just what you know about in terms of the people that you have impacted by sharing your story so truly authentically.

Karen Nowicki: [00:23:03] Yes. There was no other choice. And now it’s interesting, again, I’m beyond it. We have not been married for over a-year-and-a-half now. And I want to continue to be a beacon of light for people, and it has to be authentic. So, I’m just kind of looking for what’s happening in my life that I can continue sharing.

Karen Nowicki: [00:23:26] You alluded to this, there was catastrophic financial loss that I was not even aware of had already taken place. And so, even though I’m 58 years old, it’s like I’m 23 years old, starting over again and keeping both businesses afloat. I’m so grateful for the community providing some financial support when we were in the midst of the chaos. I have a very dear friend who recently invested in my business so that I could get to the next level with teammates and that sort of thing.

Karen Nowicki: [00:23:55] And, yeah, I feel very grateful that I’ve been willing to get out of my own way and also share that part of the story to help other business owners and individuals who, again, sometimes we think that we’re the only person. I always say, people think that they’re terminally unique. And we’re not. We’re all looking for validation that we’re okay, and that we’re enough, and that we can contribute in some way. We’re all designed fairly similarly, whether we’re an introvert or an extrovert or anywhere in between, we just want to know that we’re here for a reason.

John Ray: [00:24:31] Since you brought up introvert and extrovert, we were talking about this before we came on, you know, the typical listener of this series is a solo and small professional services practitioner, most of whom are introverts as a general proposition. And I can hear the introverts saying, “I can’t believe that Karen shared what she shared.” What do you say to somebody that is thinking that and thinking I’m a private person and there’s no way I could do what you’ve done, Karen?

Karen Nowicki: [00:25:12] Well, stay private. I realized that that is one of my unique – I don’t know what it is – call it a curse or a blessing. One of the unique gifts that I bring to this world is the ability to tell people how I’m feeling as it’s happening. And not everybody can do that publicly.

Karen Nowicki: [00:25:32] However, it’s important to share your story with someone. And when people are fortunate to be in relationships, marriages, or long term friendships where they can really show up authentically as who they are and let someone know when they’re struggling and challenged and they’ve got the right support structure, that’s great.

John Ray: [00:26:16] And I don’t want to make this into something that’s a little crass like personal brand, but I think people hear that and they hear authenticity and showing up. But there’s showing up as – I’ll call it – the made up you. They’re showing up as the Real you. And I mean the capital R, Real you. That’s what you did.

Karen Nowicki: [00:26:58] Yeah. And there’s a way to do that, no matter who you are. This is not about airing your dirty laundry, just to do that, right? Just speaking authentically from a place of some of the challenges, whether it be business, or raising children, or moving to a new location, or the next level in your business, whether you’re introvert or extrovert, I don’t think that matters. As leaders, we’re called to show up authentically and everyone has their own pace and cadence for that.

Karen Nowicki: [00:27:30] That’s one of the neatest things that you and I can offer with Business RadioX, our story matters. And people want to hear what we’ve been through, what challenges do we have, what hurdles did we have to overcome, when did you think you’re going to quit and give up, and what got you through that to to be where you are today, what’s the next challenge that you’re faced with right now going into 2023. Those answers can be from the cuff and they can be from the heart.

Karen Nowicki: [00:27:57] And I think that’s one of the greatest things that Business RadioX has to offer people and with the work that you do, John, with your clients. People need to get out of their own way, myself included. So, I have coaches and guides. When it comes to sales, when it comes to marketing and advertising – I mentioned that early on – those are areas that I’m not well-equipped at and good at. And yet I show up because I’m listening and I’m learning and I’m paying attention to the people who do it better than I can. And they’re helping me learn how to do it for me in a way that it feels real and authentic to me.

John Ray: [00:28:33] So, let’s talk briefly, if we can, just the whole idea of you obviously had to hold yourself together, your relationships together, your children as they navigated this trauma that came out of the blue for them as well. But let’s talk about your businesses and just how you held it together. Because you’ve got to show up for clients and you’re a coach and you’ve got to bring something for that client that’s sitting in front of you with their own issues that may have nothing to do with what you’re dealing with. How did you do that?

Karen Nowicki: [00:29:23] I’m grateful that I had a couple different income streams. So, I think that’s important when we look at it from that perspective of we’re relying only on one avenue of income and it’s solely dependent on us, we’re in trouble. I was fortunate that I could very quickly hire someone to run the studio for me. And with very little direction, she took it over for me. So, that part of my business was handled.

Karen Nowicki: [00:29:49] I did step away from the intimate coaching for a little bit of time because I was no good for anybody, so being able to admit when I needed to step away. And, again, grateful that I had this other business running so that there was still the income.

Karen Nowicki: [00:30:07] As far as working with clients, both here at Business RadioX and in my coaching practice, I had already built enough strong enough relationships just in caring for people deeply and giving them permission to care for me back. That when I was ready to come back into the field full force, I could simply make those calls and send an email and say, “Hey, listen, I’m ready. Here’s the kind of clients that I enjoy working with. If you’re ready to come back and work with me, I’d love that. If not, if you’ll be a referral source for me.”

Karen Nowicki: [00:30:36] So, I think the theme for both of my businesses is when we care deeply for people and we allow people to care deeply for us, the universe works on our behalf. Things will come our way when we know that we are really a force for good.

John Ray: [00:30:53] You know, it strikes me as I’m listening to you talk, Karen, and again, I’m getting back to just what you decided to share. I mean, you did that as your own personal source of healing. It strikes me how generous that is, because you could have kept all that to yourself. You could have written what you wrote, pass it along to your three close friends, let them look at it, and just deep sixed it and kept it private. But there was a mission to what you were doing, and it was an act of pure generosity, it seems like to me, because you were willing to take whatever came your way in terms of the consequences of doing that, which, for you, were severe.

Karen Nowicki: [00:31:49] That’s very sweet of you to say. I don’t think I’ve ever heard anybody refer to it as generous, so thank you. It makes me a little overwhelmed.

Karen Nowicki: [00:32:00] It was a survival mechanism. It’s not something I wanted to do. I wanted to be like the rest of the world on social media and who’s visible and just the highlight reel. And, unfortunately, I didn’t get to share that. So, it was a survival technique. It was the only one that I had available to me. And I just listened.

Karen Nowicki: [00:32:26] And I think when we’re being called to do anything in our life, business or personally, and we have that – I’ll call it – nagging voice in the back of our head – mine sometimes sounds like a nag, a nag or a nudge – I’ve just learned in my life that it’s that voice and that nudge or that nag that’s constantly humming in the background that I’ve got to pay attention to. And, again, I have to just trust that I’m going to find my way through why it is that we do the things that we’re called to do.

Karen Nowicki: [00:32:57] And I love that you’ve shared that it felt generous. It makes me feel very hopeful and appreciative that you’re paying attention.

John Ray: [00:33:06] Well, thank you. Well, see, there’s a difference, to me, between help and trying to help people. Because sometimes help has strengths, right? I mean, it can come back in ways that maybe we don’t acknowledge, but it comes back in ways to benefit us. But when you’re doing what you were doing, knowing that you likely would suffer in some way from it, and you did, then that really gets beyond help into generosity, and that’s why I say that.

Karen Nowicki: [00:33:39] And my Business RadioX family or our Business RadioX family was there for me every step of the way, all of you. And we were fairly new in relationship. I’d only had the studio, I want to say, for – what? – a-year-and-a-half, maybe two years, and, again, at a great distance. I’m way over here in the Southwest and you guys are all in the Atlanta area. We’ve grown a lot since then as a team. And I never felt like there was a time that I couldn’t pick up the phone or text or email and say I need some help. And I didn’t have to rely on that very often. But when I did, everybody rose to the occasion.

Karen Nowicki: [00:34:16] Which, again, for our listeners, for this particular group of people who might be interested in a conversation like this, even though you are a solopreneur and you are at the helm, bring people in your life, invite people in your life, the coach, the guide, the mentor, possibly a partner, certainly your clients and your customers – find the win-win-win for everybody – all the stakeholders. So that, again, it’s a richer and more viable experience and it will have legs.

John Ray: [00:34:48] Yeah, for sure. And, really, one aspect of what you’re talking about is digging the well before you’re thirsty. I mean, you had that support structure before this happened. And when it happened, you were ready, you had prepared.

Karen Nowicki: [00:35:06] I have a friend who just had a 20 pound tumor removed from her stomach. We’re hoping that it’s not cancer. It doesn’t look like it’s going to be. And I just went and visited her on Sunday. Also, a business owner, a longtime solopreneur. And now she has a team of 20 people on her team, which is amazing. And she said just that, John, “I had no idea how the community and people in my life would respond when I needed help and I was laid up. And I’m so grateful that I built a business that didn’t rely just on me. That I got smart a couple of years ago and started building it so that more stakeholders could benefit in profit and we could help more people.”

Karen Nowicki: [00:35:46] And very different situation for me, but she said the exact same thing, “I am so overwhelmed by the amount of love and support and outpouring for people just being a champion of me. I can’t help but wonder why.” And we both laughed at each other and said, “Well, it’s because you show up that way for other people and that’s truly who you are.” So, yes, I love the way that you put that.

John Ray: [00:36:08] Yeah. Yeah. Wow. Shoutout to her and her healing, for sure. So, one of the things that has stood out to me recently, speaking of things we post on social media, is you’ve been using this hashtag I want to know about, so it’s #traumainformedworkplace. Now, what do you mean by that? What does that term mean? And is that looking ahead toward trauma that might occur? Is it looking backward? What are we talking about there, Karen?

Karen Nowicki: [00:36:43] So, it’s not my term. I didn’t make it up. A lot of people use it, especially now that COVID has been something that’s really knocked us all off of our A-game. And I come at trauma informed workplaces a little bit different. A lot of folks will go into companies, enterprises, medium size, small businesses, public education, wherever, and they will have hour long talks, sometimes half-day seminars, even three or four days, certification programs around how to be aware of where trauma might be impacting the way we show up in our life and businesses. That’s all well and fine. I would say that’s layer one. Let’s be aware that trauma is part of what’s happening in the background all the time.

Karen Nowicki: [00:37:34] So, the angry executive or the pissed off client or the employee who doesn’t show up for work day after day or they’re there but they’re not really high functioning, it’s likely that something traumatic has happened either recently or from the past that they haven’t dealt with. And in the work that I do with clients, I help people get the shock out of their body in a variety of different ways. But the body keeps score, and if we don’t clear the shock out of our body, it will inform our decisions. And we’re still in fight, flight, or freeze, or fawn mode. And fawn is maybe a new word for a lot of people. Fawn is an over caregiver and I’m taking care of everything but myself – that would be fawning – and kind of grappling for the attention and needing the visibility.

Karen Nowicki: [00:38:23] So, layer one is let’s just be aware of what trauma is, how it impacts our brain, and how it shows up in conflict. And let’s make sure that as a trauma informed workplace, we have a way to handle that and deal with that culture-wise and team-wise. That’s all well and fine.

Karen Nowicki: [00:38:39] And then, this next layer that I work with, with individuals and business owners that come to my practice and work with me, it’s let’s have you heal your trauma and re-integrate it so that your decisions, the way you show up in your marriage, your friendships, your business, your leadership, the way in which you work with your stakeholders, you’re standing in the present moment with all your faculties about you. You’re aware that you have a past, some of it may have been kind of sucky, some of it may have been great. But the decisions you’re making today are in alignment with who you are today. And you’re not having to look over your shoulder out of reaction or response.

Karen Nowicki: [00:39:16] Now, it’s a long winded answer, but there’s a lot to trauma, and I think we’re finally starting to have conversations about it so that we can be there at a higher level for each other, and most importantly for ourselves.

John Ray: [00:39:30] Yeah. And that shows up differently, as you said, for each of us. And the question is having conversation and being open about that and creating an environment where people can be open.

Karen Nowicki: [00:39:43] Safe, right? And we’re talking about trials. There’s personal trauma. There’s also historical trauma. There’s legacy trauma, familial, family trauma. And we all carry a little bit of that with us without even knowing it. So, we’ve got to come to better understand how does that come and show up in our communication or our lack of communication, and how can we have compassion, respect, and autonomy with each other.

John Ray: [00:40:11] So, Karen, you’ve been really generous with your time, and you’re busy, you got a lot going on.

Karen Nowicki: [00:40:18] My producer just walked by the window and was going to come in and get ready for our show, and he’s like, “Whoops. I can’t go in there yet.”

John Ray: [00:40:24] He’s like, “Hey, we got other things to do here.” But before we let you go, though, I would love it if maybe you could share one final takeaway. You know, as listeners absorb your story, what should they hold on to from your story that could help them in their personal lives and in their business lives?

Karen Nowicki: [00:40:49] So, we heard a couple of times that phrase, a couple of times, and you just said it to me as you’re kind of handing this for my final word, everybody’s story matters. Therefore, your story — like you’re lacking or you deficit, those are just stories that you tell yourself that you can change your story. Our stories and our past matter, and they don’t have to fully define us. So, take care of yourself, mental health, physical health, self-care, all of that is not underrated.

Karen Nowicki: [00:41:22] And it’s not just going to a spa once a month or getting your manicure, pedicure, or going to see your chiropractor, once a year checkup. It is daily practices that help you become the best version of you, so that when you look in the mirror everyday, you like the person that you see looking back at you. And that filters into every aspect of your life, most particularly those of us who are solopreneurs and entrepreneurs and business owners, we’ve got to get that together or we’re going to find ourselves struggling when it comes to financial wellbeing and the success of our businesses.

John Ray: [00:41:57] And, folks, if you need help with that, I know a coach that can help you. So, that gets us to the most important question, maybe, which is how folks can get in touch with you, Karen, that would like to know more maybe about your coaching practice, but just maybe they’ve got to download their own trauma around suicide.

Karen Nowicki: [00:42:20] Absolutely. I would love to help even if just a conversation. If we’re not a right fit for each other, I can refer you to other people. I do see people here in-person in the Metro Phoenix area. And I also have just as many clients – actually, maybe even more – that we do FaceTime or Zoom from the comfort of their office or their home. So, happy to be of support.

Karen Nowicki: [00:42:39] I am on LinkedIn, Karen Nowicki or Phoenix Business RadioX. I am just now finally working on a website for Deep Impact Leadership. So, the best way to reach out to me right now is through LinkedIn. Or my email address is karennowicki2007@gmail.com if you want to reach out personally. Or reach out to John and he’ll direct you to me, and we’ll have a conversation, just a discovery and see where I can best support you if I am the right person for that.

John Ray: [00:43:08] Terrific. Karen Nowicki, wow, I’m just honored to have you as a friend. And thank you so much for your great work and how you are helping people in such a generous way. Thank you.

Karen Nowicki: [00:43:23] You’re welcome, John. Thank you for letting me share this time with you.

John Ray: [00:43:26] Absolutely. Hey, folks, just a quick reminder as we wrap up here, pricevaluejourney.com is where you can find out more on this series, you can find the link to the show archive. And you can also sign up to get more information on my upcoming book coming out this summer called The Price and Value Journey – ironically enough – Raising Your Confidence, Your Value, and Your Pricing Using The Generosity Mindset Method. So, if you want to know more about that, you can sign up for updates on when that’s coming. And with that, thanks again to Karen Nowicki for joining us. I’m John Ray on The Price and Value Journey.

 

 

About The Price and Value Journey

The title of this show describes the journey all professional services providers are on:  building a services practice by seeking to convince the world of the value we offer, helping clients achieve the outcomes they desire, and trying to do all that at pricing which reflects the value we deliver.

If you feel like you’re working too hard for too little money in your solo or small firm practice, this show is for you. Even if you’re reasonably happy with your practice, you’ll hear ways to improve both your bottom line as well as the mindset you bring to your business.

The show is produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® and can be found on all the major podcast apps. The complete show archive is here.

John Ray, Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray The Price and Value Journey
John Ray, Host of “The Price and Value Journey”

John Ray is the host of The Price and Value Journey.

John owns Ray Business Advisors, a business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneur and small professional services firms on their pricing. John is passionate about the power of pricing for business owners, as changing pricing is the fastest way to change the profitability of a business. His clients are professionals who are selling their “grey matter,” such as attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, consultants, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

In his other business, John is a Studio Owner, Producer, and Show Host with Business RadioX®, and works with business owners who want to do their own podcast. As a veteran B2B services provider, John’s special sauce is coaching B2B professionals to use a podcast to build relationships in a non-salesy way which translate into revenue.

John is the host of North Fulton Business Radio, Minneapolis-St. Paul Business Radio, Alpharetta Tech Talk, and Business Leaders Radio. house shows which feature a wide range of business leaders and companies. John has hosted and/or produced over 1,700 podcast episodes.

Coming in 2023:  A New Book!

John’s working on a book that will be released in 2023:  The Price and Value Journey: Raise Your Confidence, Your Value, and Your Prices Using The Generosity Mindset. The book covers topics like value and adopting a mindset of value, pricing your services more effectively, proposals, and essential elements of growing your business. For more information or to sign up to receive updates on the book release, go to pricevaluejourney.com.

Connect with John Ray:

Website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Business RadioX®:  LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram

Tagged With: coach, Deep Impact Leadership Coaching & Consulting, executive coach, iNudge LLC, John Ray, Karen Nowicki, Phoenix Business RadioX, Price and Value Journey, pricing, professional services, professional services providers, solopreneurs, Suicide, suicide awareness, surviving trauma, thriving after trauma, trauma, value, value pricing

Suicide Prevention: An Interview with Kristen Petillo, American Foundation for Suicide Prevention

March 24, 2022 by John Ray

Suicide Prevention
North Fulton Studio
Suicide Prevention: An Interview with Kristen Petillo, American Foundation for Suicide Prevention
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Suicide Prevention

Suicide Prevention: An Interview with Kristen Petillo, American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (Episode 72, To Your Health with Dr. Jim Morrow)

On this episode of To Your Health, Kristen Petillo, Area Director of the Georgia Chapter for the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, joined Dr. Morrow to discuss suicide prevention. Ms. Petillo covered who is at risk, what the warning signs are, the mission of AFSP, their current initiatives, and much more. To Your Health is brought to you by Village Medical (formerly Morrow Family Medicine), which brings the care back to healthcare.

American Foundation for Suicide Prevention

Established in 1987, the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (AFSP) is a voluntary health organization that gives those affected by suicide a nationwide community empowered by research, education, and advocacy to take action against this leading cause of death.

AFSP is dedicated to saving lives and bringing hope to those affected by suicide. Led by CEO Robert Gebbia and headquartered in New York, and with a public policy office in Washington, D.C., AFSP has local chapters in all 50 states with programs and events nationwide.

AFSP celebrates 30 years of service to the suicide prevention movement.

Company website | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter

Kristen Petillo, Area Director, Georgia Chapter, American Foundation for Suicide Prevention

Kristen Petillo, Area Director, Georgia Chapter, American Foundation for Suicide Prevention

Kristen is a former New Yorker with 20+ years in the health and human services/non-profit space.

Kristen enjoys connecting with community and creating opportunities to empower and uplift others.
When she is not representing AFSP, Kristen can be found spending time with her husband of 21 years and their son, Jack, a senior in High School. Together, they enjoy a life filled with family, friends, travel, and endurance events.

LinkedIn

About Morrow Family Medicine, A Member of Village Medical

Morrow Family Medicine, a Member of Village Medical, is an award-winning, state-of-the-art family practice with offices in Cumming and Milton, Georgia. The practice combines healthcare information technology with old-fashioned care to provide the type of care that many are in search of today. Two physicians, three physician assistants and two nurse practitioners are supported by a knowledgeable and friendly staff to make your visit to Morrow Family Medicine, A Member of Village Medical one that will remind you of the way healthcare should be.  At Morrow Family Medicine, a Member of Village Medical, we like to say we are “bringing the care back to healthcare!”  The practice has been named the “Best of Forsyth” in Family Medicine in all five years of the award, is a three-time consecutive winner of the “Best of North Atlanta” by readers of Appen Media, and the 2019 winner of “Best of Life” in North Fulton County.

Village Medical offers a comprehensive suite of primary care services including preventative care, treatment for illness and injury, and management of chronic conditions such as diabetes, congestive heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and kidney disease. Atlanta-area patients can learn more about the practice here.

Dr. Jim Morrow, Morrow Family Medicine, and Host of “To Your Health with Dr. Jim Morrow”

Covid-19 misconceptionsDr. Jim Morrow is the founder and CEO of Morrow Family Medicine. He has been a trailblazer and evangelist in the area of healthcare information technology, was named Physician IT Leader of the Year by HIMSS, a HIMSS Davies Award Winner, the Cumming-Forsyth Chamber of Commerce Steve Bloom Award Winner as Entrepreneur of the Year and he received a Phoenix Award as Community Leader of the Year from the Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce.  He is married to Peggie Morrow and together they founded the Forsyth BYOT Benefit, a charity in Forsyth County to support students in need of technology and devices. They have two Goldendoodles, a gaggle of grandchildren and enjoy life on and around Lake Lanier.

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MorrowFamMed/

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/7788088/admin/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/toyourhealthMD

The complete show archive of “To Your Health with Dr. Jim Morrow” addresses a wide range of health and wellness topics, and can be found at www.toyourhealthradio.com.

Tagged With: AFSP, American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, Dr. Jim Morrow, Kristen Petillo, Project 2025, Suicide, Suicide prevention, To Your Health, Village Medical

MARR Addiction Treatment Centers and Author Nina Owen

April 8, 2021 by Mike

Giving Back To Gwinnett
Giving Back To Gwinnett
MARR Addiction Treatment Centers and Author Nina Owen
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Will Atkins, Nina Owen and Tom Sheldon

Will Atkins/MARR Addiction Treatment Centers

Established in 1975, MARR Addiction Treatment Centers is a private, non-profit organization that provides long-term residential addiction treatment to men and women. They are dedicated to bringing lasting recovery through intensive, high-quality, gender-specific rehab programs. They understand that the process of you or someone you love starting addiction treatment can be stressful and overwhelming. Their clients are their top priority, and they want to help identify the best options for you, even if that doesn’t mean coming to MARR. Their Clinical Assessment Team is a source of information and support during this part of your journey. They want to hear your story and help you figure out the next best step.

Nina Owen/Author of “Throwing It All Away“

Depression and suicide are at record numbers in the country. Throwing It All Away gives an uninhibited look at one family’s journey through depression, drug use, and suicidal ideation. It is written by a mother who lost her 20-year-old son to suicide. The book talks about the son’s struggle to get well, his death, the mother’s indescribable grief and guilt, and the metaphysical spiritual experiences she underwent after his death. Six of the chapters of the book have been taken – verbatim – from the son’s journals, school papers, and other documents. Suicide rips through a family and a community, leaving destruction in its wake. This book shows that suicide is not always planned, it can be impulsive and, with the right help, can be averted.

Tagged With: drug addiction, drug rehab, giving back to gwinnett, gwinnett drug rehab, gwinnett non-profits, MARR Addiction Treatment Centers, MARR inc, nina owen, Suicide, Suicide prevention, throwing it all away book, tom sheldon, will atkins

Karianna Blanchard with Parents for Suicide Prevention Julie Gustafson with JMG Consulting Karen Nowicki with Phoenix Business RadioX and Kelly Lorenzen with KLM Consulting

January 17, 2020 by Karen

Phoenix Business Radio
Phoenix Business Radio
Karianna Blanchard with Parents for Suicide Prevention Julie Gustafson with JMG Consulting Karen Nowicki with Phoenix Business RadioX and Kelly Lorenzen with KLM Consulting
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Karianna-Blanchard-with-Parents-for-Suicide-Prevention-Julie-Gustafson-with-JMG-Consulting-Karen-Nowicki-with-Phoenix-Business-RadioX-and-Kelly-Lorenzen-with-KLM-Consulting-3

Karianna Blanchard with Parents for Suicide Prevention Julie Gustafson with JMG Consulting Karen Nowicki with Phoenix Business RadioX and Kelly Lorenzen with KLM Consulting

PSPLOGO

In 2017, four moms founded the nonprofit Parents for Suicide Prevention (PSP). They were responsible for Senator Sean Bowie drafting the Mitch Warnock act requiring all school personal to have two hours of suicide prevention training every 3 years.

We are losing our teens at a high rate in Arizona and we learned our school staff was not trained in the signs of suicide to help watch out for the students and coworkers.

Karianna-Blanchard-on-Phoenix-Business-RadioX-CopyKarianna Blanchard is a  wife and a mother to a daughter and son and spent years as an Early Childhood Director for an east valley church.

When one of their families became survivors of a suicide loss of a child, she began to become more aware of her misconceptions of suicide.

As Karianna began to learn more, she realized some things. No one is immune to suicide and suicide is preventable. One caring adult can change a child’s world and the Christian community needed to have real conversations about depression and immense pain and not make people feel their belief is wavering if they feel suicidal.

Karianna feels we have to work as a community to show one another HOPE. She has made it a personal mission to learn all she can to be of help to her community.

She has completed courses in Youth Mental Health First Aid, Suicide Risk Assessment and Management, SafeTalk, QPR GateKeeper Training, CALM (Counseling on access to lethal means), Strategic Planning Approach to Suicide Prevention, Locating and Understanding Data for Suicide Prevention, Spirituality and Mental Wellness, and Community Overdose Prevention, Naloxone Training and Koru Mindfulness, Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training (ASIST), Child Psychology, Stop the Bleed, and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy.

Follow PSP on Facebook.

Julie-Gustafson-on-Phoenix-Business-RadioXJulie Gustafson is a trauma mentor with JMG Consulting who guides people through regressive therapy. She had the fortunate opportunity to train with one of the best trauma professionals in Arizona, Wayne Johnson. Suicide Prevention - Signs of Suicide

Knowing firsthand the staggering toll that anxiety and depression can have in our lives, Julie is passionate about helping others find peace in their lives.

The work Julie does focuses on personal growth by working through past and present traumas. There will be no attempt to physiologically diagnose, treat, fix, heal or change you as a person. Self discovery will act as the guide regarding behavior, thoughts, emotions and spirituality.

KarenNowickiv2Karen Nowicki is a successful author, speaker and the creator of Deep Impact Leadership™ and SoulMarks Coaching™. She is a two-time recipient of the prestigious national Choice Award® for her book and personal development retreat. Karen was crowned the first-ever “Mompreneur of the Year” Award in 2010 for the southwestern states. She was recognized for her leadership, business acumen, and work-life balance.

Karen has been an expert guest on regional TV and radio shows, including Fox Phoenix Morning Show, Sonoran Living, Good Morning Arizona, The Chat Room, and Mid-Day Arizona. She has been a regular contributor to many print and online magazines – publishing articles and blogs for business and education.

In addition to working with private coaching clients, Karen is also the Owner & President of Phoenix Business RadioX. The Business RadioX Network amplifies the voice of business – serving the Fortune 500,000, not just the Fortune 500. Phoenix Business RadioX helps local businesses and professional associations get the word out about the important work they’re doing to serve their market, profession, and community.

Of all the experiences Karen has had the privilege of participating in over her vast career, she shares that Phoenix Business RadioX is a pinnacle adventure!

Connect with Karen on LinkedIn and follow Phoenix Business RadioX on Facebook and Instagram.

About Your Hosts

Kindra-MaplesAlong with being a Spartan racer, past animal trainer and magician’s assistant, Kindra Maples has experience working with diverse crowds of all sizes, ages, and backgrounds to support them with engagement opportunities.

Kindra is a dynamic and engaging community engagement specialist with 10+ years of proven excellence across senior leadership roles leading partnership development and community outreach and engagement.

As an ambassador of Phoenix Business Radio X she is able to continue supporting community engagement through connecting business professionals to others in the community.

Kelly-Lorenzen-on-Phoenix-Business-RadioXKelly Lorenzen, CEO of KLM Consulting, is an award-winning entrepreneur with over 15 years of business-ownership experience. She is also a certified project management professional.

Kelly’s expertise is in business development, customer service, marketing, and sales.

Connect with Kelly on LinkedIn, and follow KLM Consulting on Facebook.

suicidepreventionandmentalhealthawarenessevent

 

Tagged With: energy, guiding, Mitch Legacy, Parents for Suicide Prevention, spiritual, Suicide, suicide awareness, Suicide prevention, trauma

Kyle Sanders, Let There Be Rock, Dan Solla, PTSD Foundation of America

November 13, 2019 by Beau Henderson

Business RadioX® Community
Business RadioX® Community
Kyle Sanders, Let There Be Rock, Dan Solla, PTSD Foundation of America
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Kyle Sanders – Let There Be Rock

Let There Be Rock School is a music lesson facility and rock and roll community center. Students from age 5 to adult learn to play guitar, bass, drums, keys and vocals while interacting with their peers. All students have the opportunity to join a band learning classic, current and writing original songs to perform at a real rock n roll venue!!

What Kyle and his team have so much more to offer than just music and vocal lessons…  community, likeness and spirit are developed here!

Dan Solla, JD – PTSD Foundation Of America Atlanta

 

“Hope and Healing for the Invisible Wounds of War: Support and Treatment for our Communities’ Combat Veterans”

Dan Solla is the Managing Director of the PTSD Foundation of America’s-Atlanta/North Georgia Chapter.  The PTSD Foundation of America operates an 80-bed residential treatment and interim housing facility for combat veterans, facilitates local peer-based support groups, and organizes recreational and outdoor events, outings, and challenge expeditions for veterans and their families.  Mr. Solla’s work and passion is helping other combat veterans struggling with adjustment to civilian life, combat trauma, PTSD, addiction and thoughts of suicide. 

Mr. Solla is a veteran of the United States Army Infantry, having served as a rifleman in the 1st Armored Divisions 1/36 Infantry Battalion out of Ray Barracks Freidberg, Germany.  He served 15 months as a rifleman in Iraq during the invasion of 2003-2004 and was awarded the Combat Infantryman’s Badge for actively engaging in ground combat with the enemy.  He received a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science from the University of Tennessee and a Doctor of Jurisprudence from the University of Tennessee College of Law in Knoxville.  A resident of Flowery Branch, he is a member of the American Legion Post 7 in Gainesville, a parishioner of St. Gabriel’s Episcopal Church in Oakwood and father to Jude and Zen Solla. 

 

Tagged With: criminal behavior, Dan Solla, Dr. bill lampton, Drums, education, Freidberg, ga, Gainesville, Georgia, germany, gifts, ground combat, guitar, help, individual lessons, interaction, Kyle Sanders, Lesson, Lessons, Let There Be Rock, local, local peer-based support groups, local veterans, mentoring, music, music interaction, North Ga Business Radio X, north georgia business radio, north georgia business radiox, original music, outreach, peers, piano, ptsd, PTSD Foundation of America, PTSD Foundation of America Atlanta, recreational and outdoor events, Suicide, treatment center, tribe, venue, Veterans, Vocal, vocals

Suicide Among Seniors

September 25, 2019 by Mike

Gwinnett Studio
Gwinnett Studio
Suicide Among Seniors
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Victoria Collier and Mike Sammond

Senior Salute Radio brings timely information to leading age Boomers and Seniors addressing the issues of aging, care-giving and maintaining quality of life. Learn from both professionals and regular people going through the process with their families.

This episode covers a very difficult topic, “Suicide Among Seniors”. September is Suicide Prevention Awareness Month. Listen to hear how suicide touches host Victoria Collier personally, along with her clients.

About The Estate & Asset Protection Law Firm of Victoria Collier

The Estate & Asset Protection Law Firm was established to serve the legal needs of senior citizens when their health care needs increase. The Firm focuses its entire practice on Asset Protection and Estate Planning matters, which encompasses the areas of Medicaid Planning, VA Benefits Planning, Special Needs Planning, and Estate Planning. Victoria Collier has grown her law practice through her personable nature and good management skills. The office is located in downtown Decatur, GA. The Firm makes house calls to those clients who are unable to come to the office. They understand that you might not be able to make it into the office, so they have no problem coming to you! Take comfort in knowing that it is the mission of Victoria Collier to support her clients in the creation of a long-term care plan for preserving assets, maximizing independence, and enhancing quality of life.

Tagged With: estate & asset protection law firm, estate & asset protection law firm of victoria collier, law firm of victoria collier, senior citizen suicide, senior citizens, senior suicide, Suicide, suicide among senior citizens, suicide among seniors, suicide awareness, suicide hotline, Suicide prevention, suicide prevention awareness month, suicide prevention month, Victoria Collier

Pensacola Business Radio: Aj’s Bravehearts and The Destiny Benefit Concert

July 14, 2017 by angishields

Pensacola Business Radio
Pensacola Business Radio
Pensacola Business Radio: Aj's Bravehearts and The Destiny Benefit Concert
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20170714_121302

Anthony James “AJ” Fratto is a former United States Navy helicopter search & rescue swimmer, Blue Angel crew chief number #1 & underground community leader. AJ has been a touring musician & the poster boy (guest vocalist) of highly acclaimed & respected progressive metal band Queensryche & they’re 2009 release American Soldier. AJ is the leader of 501c3 charity AJs BraveHearts.

The Mission

July 11, 2013

To bring awareness, funding & hope to Homeless Veterans, Special needs / Underprivileged Children & Animal Rescues on a local level through the love and healing power of music.

 

 

Tagged With: Leadership, marketing, music, On The Air, PBRX, Pensacola, Suicide, vinyl music hall

SkyTherapist

May 14, 2015 by angishields

Health Connect South
Health Connect South
SkyTherapist
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SkyTherapist

SkyTherapist

This week we sat down with the co-founders of SkyTherapist.  Sky Therapist, Inc is a virtual platform for mental health support addressing the major complaints of patients in their course of treatment. They offer integrative solutions for intelligent patient-therapist matching, quick initial assessment, and continuity of care.

CEO, Afshan Ali, and CFO, Keith Jones, shared their story about how they decided there must be a better way to provide patients in need with access to a mental health professional such as a psychologist or psychiatrist.

Keith talked about how as a teenager, he was present when his father died, causing him to experience great anxiety and emotional pain.  He was hospitalized for a few weeks but felt he did not receive very effective mental health care while he was there.

Afshan discussed how she developed an interest in neurology and mental health during her years in medical school before changing career paths.  The two of them looked at the landscape of how mental health is delivered and felt there was an opportunity to create a new platform that could help people in need find the therapist best suited for them.

As they got to work on building their virtual platform that incorporates telemedicine technology, they felt that a key element that would set them apart was going to be a matching algorithm, paired with carefully-chosen intake questions for the patient-to-be.  The purpose of this design is intended to make the process of linking up with a professional that is experientially suited and a fit personality-wise.

We talked about the fact that for persons in crisis, the process of trying to find that personal fit that allows them to be able to be open and get the most of their therapy can be overwhelming.  Having to go through talking about what the reason is for seeking help over and over to professional after professional, trying to find a fit can often cause patients in need to give up on finding help.

SkyTherapist is able to quickly provide several professionals for the patient to talk to who are much more likely to be a good fit for the patient.  The platform also provides for some communication through correspondence with their provider between sessions.  It also has a component that allows provider and patient to agree upon self-care activities such as exercise or others and actually track their compliance.

The company will be focusing much of its early launch (July 2015) on providing services to businesses with Employee Assistance Programs.  This will give them ability to scale more quickly while providing their client companies with much more effective and cost-efficient care to employees who need access to a mental health pro.

When you have the chance to hear how/why these experts built this healthcare platform it’s clear they are dedicated to insuring patients in need of professional mental health care, SkyTherapist is clearly providing a promising solution.

Special Guests:

Afshan Ali, CEO/Co-founder of SkyTherapist  linkedin_small1  Pinterest LOGO  facebook_logo_small3  twitter_logo_small  youtube-logo1

SkyTherapist

  • BBA, Management Information Services, Southern Methodist University Cox School of Business
  • Former Senior Consultant, Deloitt Consulting
  • Active Healthcare Consultant
  • Speaks English, Hindi, Urdu

Keith Jones, CFO/Co-founder of SkyTherapist  linkedin_small1

Keith

  • Managing Partner, HarCap Commercial Funding
  • Former Owner, Eclipse Investment Group
  • Multiple Successful Entrepreneurial Ventures

This show brought to you by:

sharewik logo Crop

Tagged With: CW Hall, Depression, Diana Keough, Health Care Radio, Health Connect South, Health Connect South Radio, health radio, Healthcare, healthcare radio, healthcare technology, Keith Jones, mental health, psychiatrist, psychiatry, psychologist, psychology, ptsd, ShareWIK Media Group, Suicide, telemedicine, virtual therapy

Dick Caillouet with Safari Club International

June 3, 2014 by angishields

Midtown Business Radio
Midtown Business Radio
Dick Caillouet with Safari Club International
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Wounded Warriors with PTSD
Dick Caillouet of Safari Club International talks about their humanitarian program for wounded warriors suffering with PTSD.

In this episode we learned about Safari Club International and the humanitarian outreach program they offer for wounded warriors who are suffering from PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder).  This program collaborates with the wounded warrior evaluation program at Fort Benning to identify veterans who are suffering significant decreased quality of life due to PTSD.  They bring them together with other similar veterans and a group of professionals and volunteers to take them on excursions to let them experience nature and positive, compassionate people who help to show them that there is value and hope in their lives; that they can return to a life that is closer to “normal” for them.  In this way these veterans begin to regain a sense of worth and purpose to carry on in spite of their past traumatic experiences.

As a non-profit organization, this program relies heavily on financial support from corporate sponsors who can help them expand the project and allow them to reach and help more of these heroes.  Great guest and information.

 

Dick Caillouet Facebook

Veteran of Viet Nam Conflict

President-Elect — Safari Club International 

Georgia Chapter & Chairman — Wounded Veterans Events

 

 

Tagged With: CW Hall, Dick Caillouet, Fort Benning, post-traumatic stress disorder, ptsd, Safari Club International, soldier, soldiers, suicidal, Suicide, Veteran, Veterans, veterans with ptsd

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