Heather Holt Podcast Host | Storytelling on Healing, Resilience & Life After Change

Inspiring stories told weekly to help change your perspective — and maybe even leave you smiling.

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    There’s something about poetry that I’ve never quite been able to explain and maybe that’s the point. Poetry doesn’t ask you to understand it, It asks you to feel it, and I’ve always loved that. Even if I don’t read it as often as I wish I did. I don’t sit down every night with Read more

  • Grief has a way of changing shape over time. At first, it feels sharp and immediate—like something you can point to, something you can name. However, as the years pass, it becomes quieter, more woven into who you are. It doesn’t leave. Instead, it settles in beside you. That’s something I’ve come to understand in Read more

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    Why Self-Worth Can’t Be Measured Online For many of us, relationships today come with an unexpected complication: social media. Thirty years ago, connection looked very different. If you wanted to talk to someone, you called them. If there was tension in a relationship, you worked through it privately. And if you needed space from someone, Read more

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    There are things we carry quietly for a long time. Not because we don’t want help.Not because we don’t know something was wrong.But because we didn’t have the words, the safety, or the permission to speak when it first happened. For me, that silence began in childhood. What happened to me didn’t come with language. Read more

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    After recording with Angie Hawkins, I was reminded why Change Happened, Then What? exists. This podcast isn’t about the host—it’s about creating a safe space for guests to share their truth and for listeners to feel seen, connected, and not alone through the power of storytelling. Read more

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    Ken’s story shows how one grandmother’s belief changed everything. In the 1970s, he was told he’d never learn to read—but she refused to accept that label. When children feel valued and supported, they don’t just become productive. They become confident, capable, and deeply valuable members of society. Read more