Naked Conversations: Grief, Loss, and Learning to Live Again (with John Krammer)
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Grief isn’t something we fix.It’s something we live with AND learn how to carry.
In this Naked Conversations episode, I sit down with John Krammer, founder of Guardian Angels, a reflective journaling and grief support platform created to meet people in the raw, disorienting seasons of loss. This is an unscripted, human conversation about grief as a lived experience: not a theory or a timeline.
John shares how losing three of his closest friends reshaped his life and forced him to face grief honestly, without bypassing or minimizing the pain. We talk about what it means to own your loss, allow yourself to feel what you feel, and do the difficult, ongoing work of rebuilding life after trauma and heartbreak. Guardian Angels was born not from expertise, but from necessity: because John needed help learning how to sit with grief, reframe his story, and keep living.
This conversation is for anyone navigating grief, trauma, or profound loss and feeling alone in it. There are no answers wrapped in bows here: only presence, honesty, and the reminder that healing is possible when we’re willing to face what hurts with compassion and courage.
You don’t have to rush your grief.You don’t have to carry it alone.
🎧 Listen for connection, reflection, and permission to be human in your loss.
John Krammer and Guardians Aingels can be found : https://guardianaingels.ai/
(We recognize that artificial intelligence raises real and valid concerns, including environmental impact, energy use, labor displacement, and the effect on human jobs and livelihoods. These concerns matter and deserve thoughtful consideration.
At the same time, AI is already deeply integrated into many systems we interact with daily—often without our direct choice. This space does not promote uncritical use of technology, nor does it dismiss ethical or environmental questions. It holds a both/and: we can question and challenge these systems while also caring for our mental health within the world as it exists.
Your well-being and humanity matter. If engaging with technology feels overwhelming or dysregulating, you are allowed to step back, set boundaries, and prioritize your mental health. Human connection and care should always come first.
This content is meant to support reflection and well-being, not replace human support, professional care, or ongoing ethical dialogue.)