December’s Healing Series - Strong Enough to Begin Again cover art

December’s Healing Series - Strong Enough to Begin Again

December’s Healing Series - Strong Enough to Begin Again

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

Caregiving reshapes a person at every level — physically, emotionally, spiritually.
And when it ends, most caregivers don’t feel “strong.”
They feel emptied out. Unsteady. Disconnected from their bodies. Unsure how to start again.

This episode is for anyone in that place.

In Part 2 of December’s Healing Series, Thérèse guides you through what real strength looks like in The After — not the strength you were praised for during caregiving, but the kind of strength that grows quietly, steadily, and compassionately as you rebuild your life from the inside out.

You’ll explore:

• The myth of being “strong” during caregiving
• What strength actually looks like when survival mode ends
• How caregiving imprints itself on the body — and how to begin repairing that relationship
• The emotional strength required to tell the truth about how you feel
• A micro-bravery challenge to gently rebuild confidence and momentum
• Why strength in The After begins with listening to yourself, not pushing yourself

Thérèse also shares her own journey of rebuilding strength — and how her upcoming solo pilgrimage to Rome is a sacred step in her healing and a powerful reminder that growth always happens outside the comfort zone.

This episode is your permission slip to begin again, exactly where you are.

If this episode spoke to your heart, I invite you to follow along all December as we continue The Healing Series.
Follow us on social media at NewYorkGirlAgain, share this with another caregiver in The After, and help grow this community of brave, resilient hearts who are learning how to live again.


No reviews yet
In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.