Sideline Sisters Podcast Por Jenny Cheifetz arte de portada

Sideline Sisters

Sideline Sisters

De: Jenny Cheifetz
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Sideline Sisters is a show for no-bullshit women in midlife, middle years, 40s, 50s, confusion, perimenopause, menopause, transition years, purgatory, whatever you want to call it. This podcast is for moms, girlfriends, sisters, ladies who want to escape the mundane routine of their lives and be captivated by conversations that are fun, relevant, and juicy.
These interviews will take you into the lives of relatable women who've gone on a journey and lived to share the lessons. They will be funny, sad, scary, wise, encouraging, and real.
These are the conversations you want to hear.
This show is your invitation to take back your power, reignite your passions, and step off the sidelines!
LFG!Jenny Cheifetz
Desarrollo Personal Éxito Personal
Episodios
  • 79 - Nicole Graev Lipson exposes the challenges of motherhood
    Jun 11 2025

    🌐Check ⁠Jentle Coaching website⁠

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    Nicole Graev Lipson is the author of the memoir in essays Mothers and Other Fictional Characters. Her writing has appeared in The Sun, Virginia Quarterly Review, LA Review of Books, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, and Marie Claire, among other venues. Her work has been awarded a Pushcart Prize, shortlisted for a National Magazine Award, and selected for The Best American Essays anthology. Originally from New York City, she lives outside of Boston with her husband and children.

    Nicole's Notes from the Sidelines:

    1. Needing an income paves a career path for women that takes them away from creative pursuits, and that career can become their identity.
    2. Trying to be the kind of mother who doesn't mess up her kids, is patient, self-sacrificing, and doting leads to a loss of her creative side.
    3. Mothers have been taught that the child's growth and success is linked to their every move and that there's no room for error, making it difficult for them to be creative.
    4. Nothing makes a woman realize life is fleeting like parenthood. Time is finite, so use it the way your heart wants.
    5. Many of our experiences prove valuable and impactful even when we don't realize it at the time.
    6. The art of writing helps bring understanding to confusing topics.
    7. There's nothing more dynamic than parenthood. We're growing, our kids are changing, and the world is in constant flux.
    8. "Unspeakable topics" are only unspeakable until someone has the courage to speak them.
    9. Safety makes vulnerability and complexity possible.
    10. "Maternal Solitude Deficit" explains mothers wanting to be there for their kids and wanting to be alone.
    11. It is incumbent upon mothers to act differently; we have a role we have in creating conditions around us.
    12. Say NO to things you don't want to do.
    13. Be forgiving with oneself, even if it's hard to resist societal pressures. Go easy on yourself.


    Want a beautiful signed bookplate? ORDER HER BOOK!

    Nicole's Instagram

    Nicole's Facebook

    **The information provided on this podcast does not, and is not intended to constitute legal or medical advice; all information, content, and material on this site are for general informational purposes only. This podcast contains links to other third party websites. Such links are only for the convenience and enjoyment of the user.

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    1 h y 8 m
  • 78 - Laura Cohen defines "healthy" and explains fatphobia
    Jun 4 2025
    🌐Check ⁠Jentle Coaching website⁠👉Follow ⁠@jentlecoaching on Instagram⁠📣Join ⁠Sideline Sisters Facebook Group⁠ ☎️⁠Book a CONNECTION CALL⁠ ⭐️Get the ⁠newsletter⁠🌿🧘🥑Save 10% on your next CANYON RANCH TRIP⁠📝Fill out the COACHING APPLICATION🥵Save 10% on your HOT OR JUST ME? orderWhen the world shut down in 2022, Laura Cohen’s world turned upside down in a much more personal way - her 16-year-old daughter was diagnosed with an eating disorder. As a former Registered Dietitian, Laura found herself navigating unfamiliar and emotionally challenging terrain, seeking answers far beyond clinical training. What she discovered sparked a transformation - not just in how she supported her daughter, but in how she viewed food, “wellness”, and the broader culture around both.Today, Laura serves as a Lead Family Mentor with Equip, helping other families find their footing during some of the most challenging moments of their lives. She has shifted both personally and professionally from a background rooted in traditional dietetics to embracing an anti-diet, recovery-informed approach. Laura holds a Bachelor of Science in Coordinated Dietetics from Syracuse University, a Master of Science in Food and Nutrition from NYU, and an Associate’s Degree in Culinary Arts from Johnson and Wales University.Laura brings both lived experience and professional insight to the conversation—grounded, compassionate, and always learning alongside the families she serves.Laura's Notes from the Sidelines:What is "healthy"? Get in touch with what feels good in your body. Healthy is not defined by social construct. Someone else's definition is BS.Weight is not a health marker.Society and medical world are fatphobic. They shame, ignore, and dismiss people who are fat, overweight, or larger-bodied. Changing habits should not be linked to a number on the scale. If you want to change to healthy habits, do it because you want to, not because someone shames you.Smaller body does not equal healthy. Having a smaller body does not have anything to do with you how you feel. Anorexia does not mean a small body.Social determinants of health are: connection, sleep, safety, access to food with nutrients, healthcare, stress management, and joyful movement.Body autonomy means doing what you want for your body, and knowing what and why you're doing it.Eating disorders increase in middle age, which is a step backwards from all the work women have done over the years to learn to appreciate our bodies.As you age, your body changes. It's natural, so why are we told by society that it's a bad thing??You choose what's important to focus on when you're aging, but make sure you're choosing for you and not for someone else.Instead of soothing emotions with food and drink, try: personal growth, DBT skills, self-talk, being honest with self, play online games, exercise in a way that feels good, fresh air, be with dogs, binge watch shows, and read.Find connection... somewhere... with likeminded people. Online friends are great!Find peace within yourself somewhere. You don't need external validation. Enjoy being with your thoughts.Jenny and Leah from Anti-Diet Life PodcastJenny's appearance on a menopause podcastLaura's websiteAnti-Diet book by Christy Harrison**The information provided on this podcast does not, and is not intended to constitute legal or medical advice; all information, content, and material on this site are for general informational purposes only. This podcast contains links to other third party websites. Such links are only for the convenience and enjoyment of the user.
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    1 h y 1 m
  • 77 - Hunter Clarke-Fields on cultivating close relationships through mindful parenting
    May 28 2025

    🌐Check ⁠Jentle Coaching website⁠

    👉Follow ⁠@jentlecoaching on Instagram⁠

    📣Join ⁠Sideline Sisters Facebook Group⁠

    ☎️⁠Book a CONNECTION CALL⁠

    ⭐️Get the ⁠newsletter⁠

    🌿🧘🥑Save 10% on your next CANYON RANCH TRIP⁠

    📝Fill out the COACHING APPLICATION

    🥵Save 10% on your HOT OR JUST ME? order

    Hunter Clarke-Fields is the host Mindful Parenting Podcast (Top 0.5% podcast ), global speaker, number 1 bestselling author of “Raising Good Humans” and “Raising Good Humans Every Day,” Mindfulness Meditation teacher and creator of the Mindful Parenting Course and Teacher Training.Hunter has over 20 years of experience in meditation and yoga practices and has taught mindfulness to thousands worldwide.

    Hunter's Notes from the Sidelines:

    1. "How to respond" advice sucks. To parent mindfully, you must have a foundation of self-care and awareness of your needs, which will help you be less reactive, use your whole brain, and not just freak out. And, you need skillful communication.
    2. When a kid has a problem and goes into fight, flight, or freeze, what they need is to feel seen and for us as parents to acknowledge what they're saying and feeling. Offering solutions and advising creates a barrier to communication and builds resentment.
    3. Instead of offering solutions and advising, try reflective listening, asking, "What do you need from me?"
    4. Shaming, blaming, ordering, and offering advice aren't welcome. Instead, try I messages. Tell the child how their behavior makes you feel.
    5. Culture tells us a lie that teens are supposed to hate their parents so we give up on trying. You are in a relationship with your kids, and you want to cultivate closeness.
    6. Win-win problem solving offers the opportunity empowering conversations. Say, "This is what needs to happen. Help me solve the problem." Best done over ice cream.
    7. It's never too late to work on your relationship with your kids. Sure, it's hard to learn a new language, and you'll mess up. You have permission to be human. What you practice grows stronger.


    Hunter's Instagram

    Hunter's website

    **The information provided on this podcast does not, and is not intended to constitute legal or medical advice; all information, content, and material on this site are for general informational purposes only. This podcast contains links to other third party websites. Such links are only for the convenience and enjoyment of the user.

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    49 m
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