A Cautionary Tale - The Wild, Sometimes Unhinged Musings of a Therapised Delight cover art

A Cautionary Tale - The Wild, Sometimes Unhinged Musings of a Therapised Delight

A Cautionary Tale - The Wild, Sometimes Unhinged Musings of a Therapised Delight

By: Danielle Eve
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About this listen

This isn’t a polished podcast. It’s sometimes raw, messy, and totally me. These are the stories I’ve carried: the funny ones, the heavy ones, and the ones that still ache when I speak them. Some episodes may make you laugh, some may sit heavy in your chest, but beneath the grit the point is connection. The truth is complicated. That’s why some of the most tender or unfiltered pieces stay behind paid doors, where they can be held more carefully. But this podcast will always be a space for honesty, for laughter, for grief, and for remembering that none of us are really alone.Danielle Eve
Episodes
  • Are Our Threads
    Aug 21 2025

    If this lands for you, buy me a coffee on Ko-fi, your support does more than you know, and makes this work possible. Thank you.

    MVP poem episode — under 5 minutes. Poem (2021) → very short reflection. Minimal edit; offered live and with care. TL;DR: Poem | Reflection. Crisis supports & ShelterSafe link in notes. (Ko-fi link up top.)

    This episode is literally a poem I wrote in 2021. It’s short — under three minutes — and then I say a few things about what I hear in the poem now: someone trying to figure things out, sometimes getting it wrong, sometimes figuring it out a bit better. No analysis, just a poem and a human voice you can fold into your pocket.

    What to expect
    • 0:00–~4:30 — the poem (read).
    • ~4:30–~5:00 — a tiny post-script: what I notice now and why I’m sharing it.

    Trigger note: this episode includes mentions of my personal experience in an abusive relationship. If anything here raises alarm bells for you, please pause and reach out for help — you don’t have to do this alone.

    If you need local help in Canada (or Toronto): call 9-1-1 in an emergency. For shelter/find-help tools and local services, ShelterSafe helps you find shelters and supports across Canada. ShelterSafe
    Assaulted Women’s Helpline (Ontario) offers 24/7 confidential support: GTA 416-863-0511 or toll-free 1-866-863-0511. https://www.awhl.org
    Victim Services Toronto can help with immediate crisis response and referrals. victimservicestoronto.com


    Support my work on Ko-fi, or commission something personal. Your support funds ongoing research and support, and a portion of donations goes to The Redwood Emergency Shelter (Toronto)


    — Dani Eve

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    1 min
  • Soft Edges: Grief, Suicide, & Gratitude Practice
    Aug 21 2025

    If this landed for you, I’d be so grateful for your support on Ko-fi (more details in the show notes).

    I recorded this the morning I heard about a recent death by suicide connected to a close friend. I didn’t know the woman, and still — I have been her. That’s what this episode is about: the strange intimacy of grief and how tiny practices help me stay with it. This is about company, not spectacle.


    What’s inside (quick)
    • A short, honest piece of my story: why I make these practices and what suicidal thinking looked like for me.
    • A plain grounding practice + a gratitude micro-exercise (not fake sunshine — specific, tiny things to hold).

    Why a tiny gratitude practice? Short answer: it helps. Research shows structured gratitude exercises (think “counting blessings” or short gratitude meditations) reliably nudge mood, lower anxiety/depression symptoms, and help attention shift toward what’s nourishing. PubMedPMC
    There’s also neuroscience that links gratitude and related practices to activity in brain regions tied to reward, value, and connection — basically, practicing gratitude helps your brain notice and value connection more often. PMCFrontiers

    A few things to be very clear about
    • This is not therapy and not a crisis intervention. It’s a short, companion practice recorded as an MVP — minimally edited, offered now because “now” matters.
    • If you feel like you might harm yourself, call emergency services (9-1-1) immediately. For anyone in Canada, call or text 9-8-8 for 24/7 suicide crisis support. Canada.ca 9-8-8: Suicide Crisis Helpline
    • For Toronto local support, Distress Centres of Greater Toronto are available at 416-408-4357 (408-HELP). Distress Centres Of Greater Toronto

    If this helped (or didn’t) — please tell me. A short rating, a DM, or a line on Ko-fi helps shape the next episode and keeps this work ethical and human. If you can, support me on Ko-fi , or commission something personal. Your support allows for me to do what I love, and gives sliding-scale access for listeners who can’t afford to donate.

    Thanks for being here. I’ll keep making these small practices, as messy and human as they are. — Dani Eve (therapised, messy, stubbornly hopeful)

    Quick research reads (short list in notes): Emmons & McCullough (counting blessings experiment); systematic reviews/meta-analyses of gratitude interventions (see 2023 review); accessible neuroscience summaries on gratitude and reward network changes. PubMedPMC+1PMC+1

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    17 mins
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