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Wednesday, October 29, 2025

Inner Freedom: 7 Powerful Lessons for Authentic, Joyful Living

 

Inner Freedom isn’t a slogan—it’s a daily practice that reshapes how we think, lead, love, and recover our peace. In this Rosabel Unscripted conversation with Executive MAP (Make Anything Possible) Coach and occupational therapist Barbara Palmer, we explored what it really takes to heal from the inside out and live on purpose. Below are seven takeaways you can put to work today, plus how MAP coaching empowers lasting change.

1) Inner Freedom begins with awareness—not approval

When you stop outsourcing your worth to other people’s opinions, you create space for clarity. Barbara reminded us that cultures have endless labels and narratives, but Inner Freedom grows when you choose presence over performative approval. A simple first step: build a short morning check-in before touching your phone. Ask, “What do I notice in my body, thoughts, and emotions right now?” Jot down three words. Repeat tomorrow. Awareness compounds.

2) MAP coaching: a neuroscience-based path to Inner Freedom

MAP (Make Anything Possible) is a gentle, consent-based method that works with the conscious, subconscious, and what Carl Jung called the “superconscious” to neutralize old triggers and limiting beliefs. Picture the mind like an iceberg—the conscious tip above water, the vast subconscious below. MAP helps release outdated protective strategies (the “rubber band” snap-back) so new choices actually stick. Sessions typically last around 90 minutes and are tailored to your goal, whether that’s leading with calm, healing people-pleasing patterns, or creating boundaries that hold.

External resources: Learn more about the Jungian concept of the superconscious and how evidence-based coaching and therapy frameworks support behavior change. For MAP session details or to book a discovery call, visit bplifecoach.com (Barbara’s site).

3) Trade judgment for compassion—especially toward yourself

Many of us extend grace to others and withhold it from ourselves. Barbara shared how she shifted from self-sacrifice to self-respect. The result wasn’t selfishness—it was strength. A fast reframe practice: when you catch harsh self-talk (“I always mess this up”), pause and ask, “What’s the kindest truthful sentence I can say instead?” Compassion doesn’t lower standards; it lowers shame so growth can happen.

4) The ABCs of Inner Freedom (Barbara’s quick anchors)

  • A — Aware: Be the observer. Notice sensations, thoughts, and triggers without labeling.
  • B — Believe: Believe change is possible for you, not just others.
  • C — Compassion: Offer yourself the tone you’d use with a dear friend.
  • D — Dreams: Treat your desires as data. Ask each morning, “What’s one small step toward my dream today?”

5) Reset often: your nervous system needs it

Computers need reboots—and so do we. Micro-resets protect your energy and preserve your perspective. Try a 4-4-6-4 breath (inhale 4, hold 4, exhale 6, hold 4) for five cycles. This quick reset supports the calm focus that Inner Freedom requires. If you’re a caregiver or clinician, explore the difference between burnout and compassion fatigue so you can intervene earlier.

6) Lead from wholeness, not comparison

Barbara has spent decades around leaders—from faith communities to boardrooms—and her message is consistent: comparison costs clarity. Inner Freedom widens the gap between stimulus and response so you can choose wisdom over reactivity. Lead from values, not from the scoreboard. Sustainable influence comes from congruence.

7) Make space for miracles (and stop forcing outcomes)

When you’re constantly “making it happen,” you can miss what’s trying to find you. Barbara’s invitation: hold the vision, take the next right step, and allow timing to surprise you. Try a 60-second visualization each night—walk through the scene of a dream fulfilled (the room, the sounds, the conversation) and feel it as “already done.” Imagination isn’t escapism; it’s rehearsal for reality.


How MAP Coaching accelerates Inner Freedom for leaders

Leaders carry layered pressures: people to serve, targets to hit, families to love. MAP helps dissolve the inner friction—old vows, protective parts, and fear-driven habits—so you can operate with ease. Expect “breakthrough clarity”: once resistance softens, insight and innovative solutions surface. That’s why so many clients feel different during the session itself.

What a MAP journey can look like

  • 90-minute sessions focused on a specific goal (performance, boundaries, healing a trigger).
  • Consent-based guidance that respects your pace and your nervous system.
  • Gentle, lasting shifts that stop the “stretch-and-snap-back” cycle.

Curious if MAP fits your season? Explore Barbara’s work here: bplifecoach.com.


Start today: a 10-minute Inner Freedom routine

  1. 1 minute — Notice: Sit quietly. Name three sensations or emotions without fixing them.
  2. 3 minutes — Breathe: Do five rounds of the 4-4-6-4 breath.
  3. 3 minutes — Ask: “What’s one kind action I can take for myself today?” Write it down.
  4. 3 minutes — Imagine: See one dream as fulfilled. Feel it. Thank it.

Repeat for seven days and track how your energy, patience, and creativity shift. That’s Inner Freedom taking root.


Internal resources to keep going


Final word: Inner Freedom is an inside job

Every good thing we want—peace, joy, love, meaningful work—starts within. When you trade judgment for compassion, comparison for congruence, and hurry for presence, Inner Freedom stops being an idea and becomes your operating system.

Call to Action: If this resonated, share it with a friend who needs encouragement today, subscribe to the Rosabel Unscripted podcast, and consider a MAP discovery call with Barbara at bplifecoach.com. Your next chapter wants your attention, not your permission.

Sunday, October 19, 2025

Hydrogen Water – 9 Powerful Benefits You’ll Feel Fast (Plus a Red Light Bonus)

 

Special Offer for Readers:
You can learn more about Echo Hydrogen Water and receive 10% off your purchase using my promo code ROSABELUNSCRIPTED10.
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By Rosabel Zohfeld, APRN, MSN-Ed, NP-C

Hydrogen water isn’t a fad—it’s a simple, science-backed way to help your body do what it’s designed to do. In my recent Rosabel Unscripted interview with Dr. Paul Barattiero, CEO and Founder of Echo Hydrogen Water, we explored how hydrogen water may lower oxidative stress and chronic inflammation—the two drivers behind many health problems—and why that matters for energy, brain clarity, sleep, gut health, and more. He also shared how targeted light (red/infrared/UVB) can complement these effects. Here are the biggest takeaways (and how to get started safely).


What is Hydrogen Water—and Why Now?

Dr. Paul Barattiero, CEO and Founder of Echo Hydrogen Water, began his research journey nearly two decades ago while seeking relief for his wife’s severe anemia and monthly debility. After noticing dramatic improvements with water that changed the gut environment, he engineered a way to keep therapeutic hydrogen gas dissolved in water, birthing Echo Water in 2011 (the brand is now 16 years old). According to him, the big promise is straightforward: hydrogen can help reduce oxidative stress and chronic inflammation—cornerstones of many disease models.

1) Hydrogen Water May Support Brain Clarity and Mood

Hydrogen appears to stimulate gastric ghrelin, which communicates with the hippocampus, hypothalamus, and brainstem—regions tied to focus, coordination, and emotional regulation. In practice, many people report sharper thinking and steadier mood.

2) It Can Help Recalibrate the Gut “Terrain”

Your microbiome thrives in a slightly negative electrical environment. Echo’s hydrogen water typically measures about −400 to −600 mV oxidation-reduction potential (ORP), which Dr. Barattiero notes favors anaerobic, beneficial microbes and can discourage sugar-craving, anxiety-linked imbalances that flourish under the opposite conditions.

3) Skin, Hair, and Healthy Aging Benefits

By tackling oxidative stress and potentially stimulating collagen, hydrogen water may improve skin elasticity and tone. Some users even report positive hair changes over time.

4) Exercise Performance & Recovery

Athletes like hydrogen water for a reason: less lactate buildup and better mitochondrial function can translate into less fatigue, faster recovery, and stronger performance—benefits Dr. Barattiero says show up in both elite and everyday movers.

5) Better Sleep Quality

In a recent webinar, Dr. Barattiero highlighted studies where participants fell asleep faster and experienced higher-quality sleep when drinking hydrogen water compared to placebo. Given how profoundly sleep impacts hormones, metabolism, cognition, and stress tolerance, this single shift can be life-changing.

6) Daytime Energy—Without the Crash

Some comparisons suggest hydrogen water may boost perceived energy more than coffee, minus the 20-minute crash many coffee drinkers know too well. If you love the ritual, keep your latte; if you rely on it to “switch on,” hydrogen water could be your gentler gear-shift.

7) Hydration That Actually Sticks

Most of us are chronically dehydrated, and that alone drags down energy, mood, and metabolism. Dr. Barattiero recommends a simple target: about half your body weight in ounces daily (e.g., 100 lbs → 50 oz) and notes large cancer-risk reductions when people simply drink enough water regularly.

8) Kidney Comfort & Stone-Formers

Hydration is the cornerstone of kidney stone prevention. Hydrogen water adds potential anti-inflammatory support for the kidneys and pancreas—helpful for people prone to stones, alongside adequate fluid intake.

9) Safe for All Ages (and Even Pets)

From babies to older adults—and yes, dogs and cats—hydrogen water is presented as broadly safe in the studies Dr. Barattiero cites, including during chemotherapy, where it may support better outcomes in some contexts. (As always, consult your clinician about your specific situation.)

Red Light Therapy Bonus: Light Your Way to Better Health

Beyond hydrogen water, Dr. Barattiero—also the visionary behind Luma Nova—focuses on red/infrared and UVB light devices with protocols for skin, muscle recovery, and even vitamin D production. Their newest bed targets six wavelengths and includes 63 presets; they also offer compact options and a UVB device designed to raise vitamin D levels with short daily exposures. If you live north of ~37° latitude or spend most days indoors, this can complement hydrogen water nicely.

Buyer Beware: Not All “Hydrogen” Bottles Are Real

According to Dr. Barattiero, many low-cost bottles (and even some pricey ones) don’t actually deliver therapeutic hydrogen—and some can generate chlorine instead (yikes). Look for IHSA (International Hydrogen Standards Association) certification, which Echo products hold, and be cautious with generic imports. Echo Hydrogen Water devices are also HSA/FSA eligible—handy if you’re optimizing your health budget.

How to Start (and Succeed) with Echo Hydrogen Water

  • Make it daily: Consistency beats intensity; aim for a steady intake across your day.
  • Track your wins: Echo’s connected flask/app logs water and hydrogen intake so you can correlate with energy, sleep, and workouts over time.
  • Scale up if you love it: Many people begin with a travel-friendly flask, then add an under-sink or whole-home solution for convenience.

Trusted Resources & Next Steps

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Final Word

Hydrogen water won’t replace sleep, whole foods, movement, and sunlight—but it can be a remarkable ally for your cells. From clearer thinking and calmer mood to better recovery and sleep, the benefits can be both felt and measured. If you’re ready to experiment, start simple, stay consistent, and take notes. Your future self (and maybe your skin, runs, and sleep score) will thank you.

Exclusive Reader Discount

As a thank you for being part of the Rosabel Unscripted community, you can receive 10% off any Echo Hydrogen Water product using the promo code ROSABELUNSCRIPTED10 at checkout.

Shop Echo Hydrogen Water here →


Written by Rosabel Zohfeld, APRN, MSN-Ed, NP-C — Neurology Nurse Practitioner and host of the Rosabel Unscripted Podcast. To download health tools and printable guides, join the free Rosabelievers Membership. Once you’re inside, you’ll gain access to the Rosabelievers Resource Center for exclusive PDFs and wellness resources.

Saturday, October 11, 2025

Yielding Warrior: 7 Powerful Lessons for Mindful Strength (That Last)

 

In a world that glorifies hustle and constant motion, the Yielding Warrior mindset offers a refreshing counterbalance. In this inspiring episode of Rosabel Unscripted, I sat down with Jeff Patterson—martial artist, teacher, and founder of The Yielding Warrior—to explore how mindfulness, meditative arts, and the principle of yielding can transform not only how we move, but how we live. With more than 36 years of experience, Jeff has dedicated his life to teaching the art of awareness through movement, helping thousands across the world find peace through practice.

In this conversation, we unpack the seven key lessons that define the Yielding Warrior way—a path that blends martial arts discipline, emotional awareness, and everyday mindfulness into one powerful philosophy of living.

1. Yielding Warrior Principle: Yielding Is Strategic, Not Passive

One of Jeff’s most profound lessons is that yielding is not the same as weakness. A Yielding Warrior doesn’t surrender; they adapt. In martial arts, when your opponent pushes, you don’t fight back with equal force—you redirect that energy. The same applies to life. When we stop resisting the inevitable, we gain clarity and power. Yielding becomes a strategy, a conscious choice to move with life rather than against it.

“The more we resist,” Jeff says, “the more we lose touch with awareness. Yielding brings us back to center.” It’s a reminder that flexibility and wisdom often outperform force and control.

2. Meditation: The Heartbeat of the Yielding Warrior

For the Yielding Warrior, meditation isn’t about emptying the mind or escaping reality—it’s about returning to center. Jeff emphasizes that every time you notice a distraction and bring your attention back, you’re strengthening the muscle of awareness. That repetition builds resilience and emotional balance, allowing you to stay calm under pressure.

As Jeff puts it, “Meditation trains you to return to stillness even when life keeps spinning.” This practice can be done anywhere—between meetings, during stressful moments, or even while standing in line. The goal is consistency, not perfection.

3. The Five Pathways of the Yielding Warrior

People come to mindfulness and meditative arts through many doors. Jeff identifies five main pathways within the Yielding Warrior philosophy:

  • Performance: To enhance focus and excellence in any craft or sport.
  • Therapeutic: To heal and restore emotional and physical balance.
  • Medical: To support recovery and stabilize the nervous system.
  • Philosophical: To expand awareness and understand human nature.
  • Spiritual: To connect deeply with one’s inner purpose and peace.

No matter your starting point, the outcome is universal: greater awareness, intention, and the ability to live in harmony with yourself and others.

4. The Three Commitments: Why, Consistency, and Guidance

Jeff encourages every Yielding Warrior to reflect on three key commitments before embarking on their journey:

  1. Know your why. Purpose fuels persistence. Without it, practice fades.
  2. Be consistent. It’s not about perfection—it’s about progress, even five minutes a day.
  3. Find a guide. A teacher or mentor can help you correct mistakes and go deeper.

He illustrates this with the story of the stonecutter: each strike may seem to do nothing, but the final blow breaks the stone—not because it was strongest, but because it was consistent. That’s what being a Yielding Warrior means—steady, mindful effort over time.

5. Awareness Before Action: The Power of Presence

Every emotion has a physical footprint. The Yielding Warrior learns to notice these early—tightness in the chest, clenched jaw, shallow breath—and to release them before they spiral. Through awareness, we move from reaction to response, from chaos to choice. Jeff reminds us that awareness is not passive; it’s the most powerful act of presence we can cultivate.

6. Ground the Body, Free the Mind

To think clearly, the body must feel safe. Grounding practices like Tai Chi, Qigong, or mindful walking signal to the nervous system that we’re not in danger. For the Yielding Warrior, this grounding creates stability—physically, emotionally, and spiritually. Once rooted, we can respond to life’s challenges with clarity and compassion instead of fear.

Modern neuroscience supports this principle: practices that combine breath, awareness, and slow movement improve emotional regulation and focus. As Harvard Health notes, Tai Chi is “meditation in motion” that strengthens both the body and brain (source).

7. Practice Daily: The Yielding Warrior Routine

Jeff offers a simple 10-minute daily practice to embody the Yielding Warrior mindset:

  1. 1 minute: Breathe deeply through the nose, relaxing your shoulders.
  2. 2 minutes: Stand with soft knees, feeling the ground beneath you.
  3. 3 minutes: Move slowly, shifting weight with awareness.
  4. 3 minutes: Sit quietly and observe thoughts without judgment.
  5. 1 minute: Set an intention like “I will yield without breaking.”

This brief but powerful practice trains your nervous system to stay calm, present, and open. Over time, it becomes less of a routine and more of a way of being—the essence of the Yielding Warrior.

More from Jeff Patterson

Explore Jeff’s full teachings, online programs, and his 81-Day Yielding Challenge at TheYieldingWarrior.com. You can also find him on YouTube and Instagram.

Watch the Full Interview

For the complete conversation with Jeff Patterson, visit Rosabel Unscripted on YouTube. Subscribe for weekly episodes exploring purpose, resilience, and transformation.

Disclosure: This article includes educational links to trusted sources. External links like Harvard Health are do-follow for reference accuracy. All internal links connect to verified Rosabel Unscripted content.

Monday, October 6, 2025

Mindset Transformation: 7 Powerful Ways DK Kang Turned Pain into Purpose

 

In life, there are moments that break us—and moments that make us. For DK Kang, author, martial artist, and wellness advocate, the turning point came when his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer and he lost his job within the same month. That season of heartbreak could have ended in defeat, but instead, it became the foundation for a powerful journey of mindset transformation and faith.

DK’s story, shared on the Rosabel Unscripted Podcast, is one of resilience, discipline, and deep faith. Through unimaginable challenges, he discovered that mindset transformation begins not with circumstances but within the mind—and that even in the darkest valleys, growth is possible.

1. Choosing Faith Over Fear

When DK’s wife received her diagnosis, their world stopped. Yet instead of asking, “Why us?”, they asked, “Why not us—and who can we help through this?” That question reframed everything. It shifted their pain into purpose and became the foundation of his bestselling book, Mindset Metamorphosis.

They faced medical bills exceeding $80,000, uncertainty about the future, and the loss of their income. Still, they leaned on faith. One verse from Psalm 34 carried them forward: “The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.” That truth anchored them through sleepless nights and endless hospital visits. For DK, faith was not an escape—it was his strength training for the soul, an early step in his mindset transformation.

2. From Setback to Mindset Transformation

During those months of unemployment and chaos, DK began journaling every day. What started as scribbled notes of frustration turned into reflections about growth and gratitude. Those pages evolved into Mindset Metamorphosis—a book about how we can train our minds just as we train our bodies.

He explores the difference between a fixed mindset—where fear and limitation dominate—and a growth mindset, where learning and faith open doors to possibility. “If the caterpillar never moves,” DK writes, “it never transforms. The same is true for our minds—if we stop learning, we stop evolving.”

His goal is simple: to help readers take small, consistent steps toward renewal. Because mindset transformation doesn’t happen overnight; it happens one decision, one prayer, and one act of courage at a time.

3. Nutrition, Healing, and the Mind–Body Connection

As DK and his wife researched how to support her body during treatment, they found a deep connection between nutrition and mindset. Inspired by the book Chris Beat Cancer, they switched to a whole-food, plant-based diet. They focused on organic produce, juicing, and reducing processed foods as part of their overall mindset transformation toward intentional living.

“Would you rather pay ten dollars for organic carrots or eighty thousand for one chemotherapy session?” he asks. That question reframed how they viewed food—not as restriction but as nourishment. Their choice to live intentionally led to renewed strength, and in 2025, his wife was declared cancer-free.

DK later wrote The Kimchi Connection Cookbook, exploring how fermented foods and gut health affect mood, focus, and immune strength. He believes that what we eat fuels how we think—and that a healthy gut often leads to a healthier mind. This holistic approach became another layer of his mindset transformation journey.

4. Discipline: The Bridge Between Intention and Action

Discipline, DK says, is the bridge between intention and transformation. As a lifelong martial artist, he learned early that real growth comes from daily practice, not bursts of motivation. Each punch, kick, and breath became a metaphor for perseverance—and for mindset transformation through consistent effort.

“When life punches you,” he says, “you can block, you can move, or you can hit back—but you must respond.” Martial arts taught him that the fight isn’t against others but within ourselves: against doubt, fear, and complacency. That lesson carried him through cancer, unemployment, and the hardest days of his life.

5. Community and Connection in Healing

Healing doesn’t happen in isolation. DK and his wife found strength through their church and friends who provided meals, grocery cards, and emotional support. When they faced infertility and loss, community reminded them that they weren’t alone. Their shared stories and prayers became an integral part of their ongoing mindset transformation.

“Find people who get it,” DK advises. “Healing happens together.” Whether through church groups, online support communities, or honest conversations, connection is often the soil where transformation takes root.

6. Running the Race of Life

In 2023, DK took on a 50-kilometer Spartan Race—32 miles and 60 brutal obstacles. He injured his hands, lost his gloves, and nearly quit halfway. But he finished the race in 12.5 hours because his mind refused to give up. “Feed your mind, fuel your actions, find your fire,” he says. “Your brain is always listening.”

That moment became symbolic of everything he believes about mindset transformation: success begins with the thoughts we allow and the actions we take. When we tell ourselves we can, we open the door to miracles.

If you enjoyed DK’s story of resilience, you may also like From PTSD to Purpose, another powerful journey of overcoming adversity and rediscovering faith through action.

7. Transforming Your Own Mindset

DK Kang’s journey is a living reminder that transformation begins within. Whether you’re facing illness, loss, or uncertainty, the invitation is the same: start with your mind. Choose faith over fear. Discipline over doubt. Hope over despair. This is where mindset transformation begins—and where purpose is found.

For more inspiration, visit DK Kang’s official website or explore his powerful book Mindset Metamorphosis. You can also read more about cultivating a resilient Mindset and From PTSD to Purpose on Rosabel Zohfeld’s blog, where faith, purpose, and personal growth come together in real stories of courage and authenticity.

Connect with DK Kang

To learn more about DK Kang’s work, upcoming projects, and wellness resources, visit his official website at www.dkkang.com. You can also get his book Mindset Metamorphosis on Amazon and subscribe to his newsletter for a free first chapter download and practical insights on building mental resilience.

Connect with Rosabel on YouTube

If this episode inspired you, connect with me, Rosabel Zohfeld, host of the Rosabel Unscripted Podcast. Subscribe to my YouTube channel at Rosabel Unscripted for more empowering interviews, behind-the-scenes moments, and meaningful conversations about faith, mindset, purpose, and resilience. Don’t forget to hit the bell icon so you never miss a new episode!

“Continue to live life unscripted.”

Sunday, October 5, 2025

Unbroken: 7 Powerful Lessons of Hope and Healing from Adriene Caldwell’s Life Outside the Lines

 

In a deeply moving episode of the Rosabel Unscripted Podcast, host Rosabel Zohfeld sat down with author Adriene Caldwell, whose memoir Unbroken: Life Outside the Lines brings readers face to face with unimaginable pain, yet also unwavering strength.

From childhood trauma to emotional rebirth, Adriene’s story captures what it truly means to live unbroken — to rise from despair, embrace healing, and ultimately inspire others to do the same.

1. “Unbroken” Begins with Owning Your Story

Adriene’s life was far from ordinary. From a very young age, she faced poverty, homelessness, and abuse. But Unbroken is not a story of tragedy — it’s a declaration of survival. As she shared on the podcast, her life “didn’t fit neatly into one picture.” Instead, it colored outside the lines, messy and raw, yet still beautiful.

That realization became the foundation of her title: Unbroken: Life Outside the Lines. It’s a reminder that healing begins when we stop hiding our scars and start honoring the story they tell.

2. Unbroken Strength Is Forged in Adversity

When asked when she realized how abnormal her life was, Adriene reflected on being only twelve years old when she became aware of her family’s extreme poverty and instability. Her days were filled with survival — from sleeping on floors to using dish soap as shampoo.

Despite it all, she turned to education and books as her refuge. Reading became her escape and her form of freedom. Through learning, she built a bridge between the life she knew and the one she hoped for.

“School was where I got positive affirmation. It’s where I felt seen.”

That kind of resilience is what Unbroken embodies — the strength to create beauty even from brokenness.

3. Writing as a Path to Healing

Caldwell began writing Unbroken about four years ago, after finally opening a box of documents from her childhood — court reports, therapist notes, and records from foster care. The process, she admitted, was “absolute hell.”

Yet writing became her way of reclaiming power over memories she had long buried. The act of writing forced her to confront her pain, process it, and transform it into purpose. For readers and listeners alike, her journey reveals that healing doesn’t come from forgetting the past — it comes from facing it.

4. Hope: The Heart of Unbroken

When Rosabel asked what message she most wanted to leave her readers with, Adriene didn’t hesitate: “Hope.”

She explained that hope can literally mean the difference between life and death — the thread that keeps people moving forward when everything else feels impossible. Her message is especially powerful for teens and young adults in crisis: even when you can’t control your present, you can shape your future.

“Your situation is not permanent. You can make choices that change your life.”

This central truth — that life can change for the better — is what makes Unbroken more than just a memoir; it’s a roadmap for survival.

5. From Broken Past to a Purposeful Present

Today, Adriene lives a life she once couldn’t have imagined. After years of instability, she found love, became a mother, and built a life grounded in gratitude.

Her journey wasn’t without loss. She became disabled at 35 and lost her first husband the same year. Yet she continues to live unbroken — not because life is perfect, but because she chooses gratitude over bitterness.

“It hasn’t been perfect, but presently, it’s amazing. I’m just so grateful.”

6. Gratitude Changes Everything

Rosabel connected deeply with Adriene’s message, sharing her own reflections about the power of gratitude and faith through hardship. Together, they explored how gratitude reframes pain, turning suffering into wisdom and fear into peace.

In fact, gratitude became such a recurring theme that Rosabel later announced the creation of a Gratitude Journal — a free resource for listeners to begin practicing this transformative habit.

To learn more about resources like this, visit Rosabel’s Free Resources.

7. Living Unbroken Means Living with Purpose

At its core, Unbroken teaches us that healing is not about erasing the past — it’s about transforming it into purpose. Adriene’s courage to speak openly about trauma breaks the silence for countless others still searching for their voice.

“Stay positive, stay hopeful. Hope can be the difference between surviving and not surviving.”

That message rings true beyond trauma — in every human struggle. Because to live unbroken is to live with faith that your story isn’t over yet.

Her memoir Unbroken: Life Outside the Lines is available now at:

To explore more inspiring conversations like this, visit the Rosabel Unscripted Podcast Library for more episodes about resilience, courage, and purpose.

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Rosabel Zohfeld, APRN, MSN-Ed, NP-C

Rosabel Zohfeld is a neurology nurse practitioner, educator, and host of the Rosabel Unscripted Podcast. Through authentic storytelling and faith-driven insight, she helps listeners find hope, resilience, and clarity in the midst of life’s challenges. Her mission is to empower others through meaningful conversations that connect science, spirit, and everyday purpose.

Follow Rosabel on YouTube, Instagram, and LinkedIn.

Monday, September 29, 2025

Emotional Resilience in Children: 7 Powerful Lessons Every Parent Needs

 

Emotional Resilience in Children: Childhood is often described as the foundation of who we become as adults. Yet, in today’s fast-paced and disconnected world, many children struggle to navigate their big emotions. Parents frequently ask: How can I support my child’s emotional health? This question is at the heart of my conversation with Jacintha “Jay” Field, founder of Happy Soul Kids. Her story is both deeply personal and universally inspiring—a journey through hardship, healing, and ultimately building a platform to help children everywhere. At the center of her mission is one clear goal: teaching emotional resilience in children.

Why Emotional Resilience in Children Matters

Emotional resilience is the ability to cope with stress, adapt to challenges, and bounce back from setbacks. For children, it’s more than just a skill—it’s a survival tool that shapes their self-confidence, relationships, and mental well-being for life.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, access to mental health services became more limited than ever. Families often waited 6–12 months for appointments with psychologists. As Jay explained, children were left without support while facing overwhelming emotions, leading her to design creative tools to fill the gap through art therapy, play, and mindfulness—core pillars of building emotional resilience in children.

Lesson 1: Every Emotion Has Its Place

Children need permission to feel. Anger, sadness, frustration, and joy are all valid. Instead of suppressing emotions with distractions like sugar or screen time, Jay encourages families to help children move through their feelings. Whether through drawing, movement, or simply naming emotions, kids learn that their inner world is both normal and safe.

Lesson 2: Connection Comes First

In a world where technology promises endless “connection,” families often feel more disconnected than ever. Authentic presence—not just physical proximity—is the foundation of emotional resilience in children. When parents and children share mindful practices together, whether journaling, storytelling, or play, they create bonds that strengthen both emotional security and trust.

Lesson 3: Play Is the Language of Children

Traditional talk therapy isn’t always effective for kids. Play therapy, art, and gamification help children express themselves in ways that feel natural. Jay shared how simple activities like drawing circles with her son opened doors to conversations about sadness, anger, and disappointment. Through play, children can safely externalize feelings that might otherwise overwhelm them.

Lesson 4: Parents Must Heal Too

Building emotional resilience in children starts with parents. Too often, we unconsciously repeat patterns from our own upbringing. If we don’t address perfectionism, people-pleasing, or unresolved trauma, our children inherit those cycles. By practicing mindfulness and self-compassion, parents become healthier role models for their kids.

Lesson 5: Resilience Is Built in the Mud

Jay describes the hardest seasons of life as “the mud.” Separation, betrayal, or loneliness can feel unbearable, yet these experiences often produce the deepest growth. For parents navigating tough times, it’s important to recognize that children watch how we respond. Choosing growth over bitterness teaches them that resilience is possible, even in the darkest moments.

Lesson 6: “I Am Enough”

Many mothers, especially, battle the feeling of never doing enough—cleaning, cooking, working, parenting, all while trying to appear “perfect.” Jay found healing in a simple mantra: I am enough. Teaching this truth to children is revolutionary. When kids internalize that their worth is not based on performance or perfection, they build resilience from a foundation of self-love.

Lesson 7: Practical Tools for Everyday Parenting

Resilience isn’t just an abstract idea—it’s built through daily habits. Try these at home:

  • Journal feelings together to normalize emotional language.
  • Create a “feelings jar” to release emotions safely and visibly.
  • Practice mindfulness through short meditations or breathing.
  • Encourage physical outlets for anger, like running or dancing.
  • Use storytelling and gamification to teach self-regulation.

These simple practices allow parents and children to face life’s challenges with courage and compassion while steadily strengthening emotional resilience in children.

Building a Global Vision for Emotional Resilience in Children

Happy Soul Kids is more than a program—it’s a movement. Jay’s vision is to reach 100,000 children by 2027, giving families worldwide the tools they need to thrive. By blending mindfulness, play, and storytelling in a gamified app, her platform makes resilience accessible, fun, and transformative for kids and parents to do together.

You Are Not Alone

If you’re a parent struggling to support your child’s emotions, know this: you are not alone. Emotional resilience in children begins with small, intentional steps. And while professional help is important, there are tools you can start using today to create safety, trust, and healing at home.

For another story of overcoming adversity and finding purpose, read Aaron Burros’ journey from PTSD to purpose. His story, like Jay’s, is a reminder that resilience is possible for all of us.


Ready to Help Your Child Build Emotional Resilience?

If today’s conversation with Jacintha Field inspired you, take the next step to connect with her.

  • Visit happysoulskids.com to explore the Happy Soul Kids platform.
  • Email Jacintha directly at hello@happysoulskids.com.
  • Follow her journey on Instagram, LinkedIn, Facebook, and TikTok for practical insights and resources.

Your child’s emotional resilience can begin today—with small steps, mindful practices, and the right support.

7 Powerful Truths About Your Relationship with Food That Will Change Everything

 

Our relationship with food is one of the most complex and emotional parts of being human. In a recent conversation with Jessica Setnick, an eating disorder specialist, author, and international speaker, we explored the myths, cultural baggage, and hidden truths about how we eat and why it matters.

If you’ve ever felt guilty about your food choices or wondered why food seems tied to emotions, identity, and even morality, this article will shed light on the seven truths that can transform how you think about eating.

1. Your Relationship with Food Is More Than What You Eat

Jessica explained that your relationship with food isn’t about nutrients—it’s about the beliefs, feelings, and values you attach to eating. Pizza doesn’t actually “make you guilty,” nor do french fries cause shame. Those emotions are mirrors reflecting how you already feel about yourself.

This insight shifts the focus away from labeling foods as “good” or “bad” and back onto self-awareness.

2. Childhood Messages Shape How We Eat Today

Nearly everyone remembers being told, “Finish everything on your plate, there are starving children in [insert country].” While often meant as lessons of love, these inherited rules can harm our ability to listen to our bodies.

Jessica calls her mission healing your inner eater,” which means examining not just your childhood habits but also the food experiences of the people who raised you. Cultural history—war rationing, poverty, or scarcity—gets passed down as eating behaviors, often unconsciously.

3. Ignoring Hunger Cues Steals Body Autonomy

Many children are told, “You can’t be hungry yet” or “Eat now because it’s dinner time.” This overrides their natural hunger cues and teaches them not to trust their own bodies.

Respecting food boundaries builds confidence. The same child who says, “I’m not hungry” may one day be the teen who confidently says “No” to peer pressure. Honoring body autonomy at the table builds resilience for life.

4. Food Is Cultural, Emotional, and Personal

From Thanksgiving dinners to family recipes, food evokes powerful memories. But as Jessica reminded us, those associations aren’t universal. For one person, Thanksgiving is warm and comforting; for another, it’s linked to family conflict or loss.

Your relationship with food is uniquely yours. That’s why blanket diets and one-size-fits-all nutrition rules are not just misleading—they’re harmful.

As Jessica put it: “There are literally no two people who need the exact same things with eating.”

5. Diet Culture Profits from Fear

From “red, yellow, green food lists” to influencers pushing miracle supplements, the diet industry thrives on fear. Jessica called many of these programs predatory because they tell you what not to eat without ever showing you how to nourish yourself.

Freedom with food doesn’t mean eating cookies all day—it means releasing guilt, embracing balance, and choosing foods that both nourish and satisfy.

For a deeper dive into how food culture exploits fear, see this Harvard Health article on diet myths.

6. Thoughts About Food Are Just Thoughts

One of Jessica’s most freeing insights: “Don’t believe everything you think.”

Guilt after eating? That’s a thought, not truth. Fear of carbs? Also just a thought. Writing down these thoughts—whether in a journal, on sticky notes, or in your phone—creates distance. It helps you see that feelings aren’t reality, they’re temporary.

This simple practice can be a first step toward healing your relationship with food.

7. What You Eat Doesn’t Make You a Good or Bad Person

Perhaps the most powerful truth of all: your worth has nothing to do with what you eat.

Jessica ended the conversation with this reminder: “What you eat doesn’t make you a good or bad person.”

This liberates us from shame and judgment—whether it comes from strangers commenting on your grocery cart or from your own inner critic.

How to Begin Healing Your Relationship with Food

  • Write it down. Capture your food-related thoughts and feelings without judgment.
  • Seek professional help. A dietitian specializing in eating disorders can help you sort feelings from facts.
  • Challenge all-or-nothing thinking. A balanced diet allows room for both nutrient-dense foods and joyful indulgences.
  • Respect individuality. Just like fingerprints, no two food journeys are alike.

For those interested in more materials, Jessica offers a dedicated page of Free Resources designed to help individuals untangle their food stories.

Final Reflection

Food is more than fuel—it’s tied to memory, culture, identity, and self-worth. By embracing these seven truths, you can release guilt, reclaim autonomy, and rediscover joy in eating.

For more conversations like this, explore past episodes of the Rosabel Unscripted Podcast where we dive into authentic, unscripted stories that remind us we’re not alone.

Connect with Jessica Setnick

If Jessica’s insights resonated with you, don’t miss the chance to connect directly with her:

Jessica continues to create healing spaces through her speaking, writing, and workshops—helping people all over the world build healthier relationships with food.

Disclaimer

Disclaimer: The information shared on this website and in all Rosabel Unscripted or Rosabelievers materials is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical or legal advice. Always consult your healthcare provider for guidance specific to your situation.

For downloadable guides and resources, visit the Rosabelievers Resource Center.

Rosabel Unscripted

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