The Rose Woman

Christine Marie Mason
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Aug 3, 2020 • 1h 4min

Gina Pell on Curiosity, Truth, and the Best Fiction for 2020

Guest Bio: About Gina PellGina Pell is an award-winning Creative Director and tech entrepreneur. She is currently Content Chief of The What, a fast-growing email newsletter with five eclectic, curious things you should know about every week--from books to health, life, style, travel, and tech. In 2016, she coined the term Perennials to describe ever-blooming people of all ages who continue to push up against their growing edge, always relevant, and not defined by their generation. Pell also founded Splendora.com in 1999, a style and culture innovator in the online fashion space which was acquired by Joyus in 2011. Pell served as Chief Creative Officer of Joyus until 2013. Gina graduated Phi Beta Kappa from UC Berkeley before completing the Painting and Print Making program at Università Internazionale dell'Arte - Venezia in 1997.Highlights:What is a PerennialEvolving MissionsReading a Book a DayFiction and LifeFreedom and Authenticity and Social MediaThe Importance of Local Investigative JournalismTips for Staying Interested and CuriousLinks and things mentioned in this episode:theWhatGina's 2020 best fictionIda Craddock- sex pioneerSabrina Oren Mark in the Paris ReviewPlague of CorruptionProPublicaCenter for Investigative Reporting - RevealNews.orgCarla Ruben Creative Edge PartiesThomas HublKate Zambreno's DriftsThe Peregrine by JA BakerThe End of the Ocean by Maja Lunde Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Aug 3, 2020 • 54min

Coach Cora Darlington on Self-Nurture, Asking for Help and the Coaching Process

HighlightsCaretaking others and taking care of yourselfDo you actually want it to be easy?Asking for helpYour meditation is showingGetting the tools you needNurturing yourself like a newborn childMimicking the coaching process at homeHelpful resources:Gary Zukav: The Untethered SoulSteven Covey: Seven Habit of Highly Effective PeopleYou can find out more about Cora and the work she does at her website and follow her on Instagram at @CoraDarlingtonCoach.Guest bio:Cora Darlington has spent over 20 years of her life coaching and mentoring women to take their self-care, joy and effectiveness to a whole new level. She is a fully qualified Life coach, Executive Coach, CBT and NLP therapist as well as a qualified Meditation and Yoga instructor. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Jul 28, 2020 • 53min

Dr. Janeane Anderson: Better Answers from Our Doctors

Find @janeanenicole on Instagram, or by email jande163@uthsc.eduGuest Bio:Dr. Janeane N. Anderson is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Health Promotion and DiseasePrevention in the College of Nursing at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center in Memphis, Tenn.She earned a Ph.D. and a Master of Public Health (MPH) from the University of Southern California. Dr.Anderson’s research targets the relationship between patient-provider communication practices and clinical and quality of life outcomes among women and adolescents of color. She studies the ways in which patients and medical care providers share power and responsibility to achieve patient health goals in sexual health and chronic disease management. She has been the co-investigator for two federally funded studies to examine patient-provider sexual communication and sexual quality of life among women with early-stage, hormone receptor-positive breast cancer. She has also conducted research to explore how adolescents use social media for health information seeking and sexual risk reduction.  Dr. Anderson’s research program also includes HIV/STI prevention interventions for people of color,specifically Black women, adolescents, and sexual minorities. She has participated in several community-based research projects to develop and refine HIV risk-reduction interventions for Black men who have sex with men, homeless Black mothers, teenaged mothers of color, post-incarceration substance users, and high school-aged teens in urban environments.Highlights:Sexual health challenges impact personal perceptions of beauty and femininity; may lead to internalized stigma and decreased satisfaction in romantic/sexual relationshipsBreast cancer survivors, regardless of race, express willingness to discuss sensitive topics (e.g, sexual health concerns); however, Black women report those discussions made their providers feel uncomfortable.Black women with breast cancer are more likely to experience poorer communication with healthcare providers than White women, which may be improved by technology and advocates.Lesbian, bisexual, and queer women experience complex, hard-to-navigate communication environments with healthcare providers; sexual health information-seeking and patient-provider interactionsProviders are not initiating sexual health conversations with their patients: Here are some reasons why.Longstanding, supportive patient-provider relationships, especially with female providers, facilitate candid sexual health conversations.Peers (power of sisterhood) are underutilized social support and sexual information resourcesHelpful links and notes from this episode:ISSWSH conference University of Tennessee Health Science Center Patient Centered MedicineSexual Schema and Self SchemaBreonna TaylorOncology Patients and SexRacial Bias in Medicine Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Jul 18, 2020 • 1min

Introducing The Rose Woman

This is a little intro to Christine's new pod! Please join us! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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