エピソード

  • The First Hello That Makes You Feel Seen
    2026/05/12

    Support during pediatric cancer and blood disorders rarely looks like a grand gesture; it looks like someone quietly showing up. In this episode of TayTalks, Taymeyah sits down with Sharin Nelson, a longtime leader at a family support center in Tampa, to talk about 25 years of walking alongside families through diagnoses, holidays, and everything in between. Sharin shares how their team creates moments of normalcy, a Thanksgiving scarecrow party, gingerbread “jamborees,” chair massages for exhausted parents, while also running a holiday adoption program that now serves more than 150 families with gifts, grocery cards, and practical help at home.

    They explore what has changed over the decades, from more kids being diagnosed and families pushed farther away by housing costs, to the way parents talk about the “C word” with their children. Sharin reflects on the shift from secrecy to honest conversations, and the heartbreak of watching a little girl go into surgery terrified because her parents refused to use the word cancer. She shares what families actually need from their communities, gift cards slipped into a mailbox, a lawn mowed without being asked, someone taking siblings out for an afternoon, and why “just do it” is often the most loving response when families don’t know what to ask for.

    The conversation also turns toward the hidden cost of caring: long weeks, weekend events, and the emotional weight of staying available to so many people in crisis. Sharin talks candidly about learning to practice what she preaches: therapy, sleep, walks, water, the grounding pull of the beach, audiobooks in the car, and time with her now‑grown kids as they build lives of their own. You’ll hear how it takes her days to truly unwind after the holidays, why her center closes for two full weeks so staff can actually reset, and how she keeps coming back year after year with an open heart.

    Why Listen

    • You’ll get a behind‑the‑scenes look at what long‑term support for pediatric oncology and blood disorder families really looks like, beyond hospital walls and treatment days.
    • You’ll learn what actually helps in the first months after a diagnosis and why waiting for families to “tell you what they need” often means they get nothing.
    • You’ll hear how communication around cancer has changed over the past 25 years, and why honest, age‑appropriate conversations with kids matter.
    • You’ll see how geography, gas money, and time make accessing support harder, and how creative community care can bridge some of those gaps.
    • You’ll walk away with concrete ways to show up for families in crisis, plus a more compassionate view of the people who hold space for them week after week.

    If this episode resonated

    • Share it with someone supporting a family through serious illness, a hospital social worker, or anyone dreaming of building a support space like Sharin’s.
    • Tag @taytalks_pod with your favorite quote or moment so we can see what landed and share it forward.
    • Leave a quick rating or review—your words help thoughtful, heart‑minded listeners find the show and join these conversations.
    • Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite app for more TayTalks episodes on nonlinear growth, evolving identities, and the people behind the care we receive.
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    57 分
  • Soy Milk, Santa, and the Art of Caring Differently
    2026/04/28

    Caring differently doesn’t always look soft or conventional, and sometimes it starts with soy milk and Santa. In this episode of TayTalks, Taymeyah sits down with Patryk Mikucki, a rare disease leader, “punk guy” in clinical research, and early‑rising black‑coffee loyalist, to talk about friendship, challenge, and choosing learning over doing.

    They explore what it means to be described as dynamic, intelligent, and sometimes “mean,” and how sarcasm, honesty, and emotional intensity show up at work and at home. From his daughter once believing he “employs Santa Claus” to the infamous soy‑milk request at the office, Patryk shares how small, specific asks can reveal your leadership instincts, and why he believes every individual deserves to be taken seriously, even when they’re not the majority.

    The conversation moves through what friendship actually looks like in adulthood, why “I’m here when you need me and you’re here when I need you” matters more than keeping score, and how you can care deeply about people you don’t always like in every season of their life. Patryk also reflects on why rare disease work feels like the right place for him, the tension between being told to “behave like a senior” and staying true to his own energy, and how routines, discipline, and a motorbike in the garage all fit into his version of a good life.

    Rapid‑fire, you’ll hear his go‑to coffee order, the cities and homes that ground him, the movie he recommends to everyone, and the small luxury he refuses to give up. He closes the episode with a question he hopes listeners carry into their day: not “What do I need to do?” but “What do I want to learn today?”—a quiet reframing that can change how you move through work, relationships, and your own growth.

    Why Listen

    • You’ll hear an unfiltered look at what it’s like to be seen as “too much” or “too challenging” at work, and how to turn that intensity into care, advocacy, and better leadership instead of shrinking yourself.
    • You’ll learn a grounded, non‑transactional way to think about friendship, one that makes room for conflict, distance, and change without abandoning the people who matter.
    • You’ll see how a single complaint about soy milk turned into a story about power, listening, and why it’s worth fighting for the needs of the “rare” individual in both offices and healthcare.
    • You’ll hear how discipline, punk energy, and sharp sarcasm can coexist, and what it looks like to navigate feedback like “be more senior” while staying honest about who you are.
    • You’ll walk away with a simple daily question—“What do I want to learn today?”—that can shift your to‑do list from pure output to genuine growth.

    If this episode resonated

    • Share it with a friend who’s been told they’re “too intense,” a leader in rare disease or healthcare, or someone rethinking what real friendship and care look like as an adult.
    • Tag @taytalks_pod with your favorite quote or moment so we can see what landed and share it forward.
    • Leave a quick rating or review. Your words help thoughtful, growth‑minded listeners find the show.

    🎙️ Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite app for more TayTalks conversations on nonlinear growth, evolving identities, and the people behind the paths we take.

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    1 時間 10 分
  • Many Hats, One Story
    2026/03/05

    Leaving home doesn’t mean leaving yourself, but it does mean reintroducing yourself again and again. In this episode of TayTalks, Taymeyah sits down with Urmi, a Milan-raised, Montreal-based finance professional, author, and mentor, to talk about third culture kid identity, building a life across continents, and redefining success beyond titles and timelines.

    We explore what it’s like to grow up between cultures, fall in love with finance in a male‑dominated industry, and turn lived experience into advocacy for women and South Asian communities. From squirrels and skunks in snowy Canada to the comfort of Italian coffee bars, this conversation moves through culture shock, home, mentorship, and what it really means to wear “many hats” without losing yourself.

    Why Listen

    • You’ll hear how Urmi went from “hating” her original major to discovering finance as a long-term love story, and why she sees numbers as narratives, not just spreadsheets.
    • You’ll learn how being a third culture kid shaped her sense of home, belonging, and the decision to still say “I’m from Italy” even with Canadian citizenship.
    • You’ll get an honest look at what it feels like to be one of the few women in finance, and how self-talk, boundaries, and advocacy help her stay in rooms that weren’t built for her.
    • You’ll hear tangible examples of cultural shock, from tipping culture and frozen bus stops to $6 cappuccinos, and how travel softens the transition between worlds.
    • You’ll see how mentorship can be informal and human first, and why Urmi decided to become the mentor she never had for young women considering finance.
    • You’ll walk away with a more spacious, personal definition of success rooted in internal growth, not external checklists.

    If this episode resonated

    • Share it with a third culture friend, an aspiring woman in finance, or someone navigating life between countries.
    • Tag @taytalks_pod with your favorite quote or takeaway so we can repost you.
    • Leave a quick rating or review. Your words help thoughtful, growth‑minded listeners find the show.

    🎙️ Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite app for more TayTalks conversations on nonlinear growth, evolving identities, and the people behind the paths we take.

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    51 分
  • When Growth Changes Your Circle
    2026/02/09

    Outgrowing people is one of the quietest—and hardest—parts of personal growth. In this solo episode of TayTalks, Taymeyah reflects on what it really means to grow in different directions, why growth isn’t linear, and how relationships often shift without a dramatic ending.

    This episode explores seasonal friendships, emotional balance, and the difference between self-respect and self-betrayal, especially when it comes to family, close friends, and long-standing relationships. We talk about recognizing when someone can’t be happy for you, how to distance yourself with maturity and grace, and why not every boundary needs an explanation.

    As we enter a new year, this conversation is an invitation to choose alignment over familiarity, to honor the people who were part of past chapters, and to be intentional about what—and who—you carry forward.

    Why Listen

    • You’ll hear why growth isn’t linear, and why growing apart doesn’t mean anyone failed.
    • You’ll learn how to tell the difference between a relationship you’ve simply outgrown and one that’s genuinely unhealthy (without over-therapizing normal human conflict).
    • You’ll understand why some people can support you when you’re struggling but disappear when you’re thriving, and what that tells you.
    • You’ll get language for distancing yourself from family or close friends with maturity, grace, and without a dramatic blowout.
    • You’ll be reminded that most relationships are seasonal, and that honoring a season doesn’t require carrying it into every chapter.
    • You’ll walk away with a calmer, clearer way to decide who gets access to your time, energy, and inner life in the year ahead.

    If this episode resonated

    • Share it with someone navigating a quiet shift in a relationship.
    • Tag @taytalks_pod with your takeaway so we can repost you.
    • Leave a quick rating or review! Your words help thoughtful, growth-minded listeners find the show.

    🎙️ Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite app for more TayTalks conversations on nonlinear growth, evolving identities, and the people behind the paths we take.

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    23 分
  • Navigating Care in a Broken System
    2026/01/26

    In this TayTalks episode, Taymeyah and cancer rights attorney Joanna Doran dive into what it really means to navigate care in a broken system when you’re living with cancer or a serious medical condition. Joanna shares how she found her way into the niche world of cancer rights law, what it’s like co-founding and leading Triage Cancer with her sister, and why education about insurance, employment protections, and legal rights can literally be the difference between accessing life-saving treatment or not. The conversation moves from policy to deeply human moments: invisible illness in the workplace, myths about what “having cancer” entitles you to, the emotional weight of watching patients fall through systemic cracks, and the quiet wins that come from helping someone keep their job, their coverage, or their home. Joanna also reflects on personal loss, resilience, and the reality of doing mission-driven work in a funding landscape that is anything but stable. This episode is a reminder that while you can’t control every diagnosis, law, or policy decision, you can learn the rules of the system you’re in and use that knowledge to reclaim agency, dignity, and options.

    Why Listen:

    • You’ll learn why “having cancer” doesn’t automatically grant unlimited protections at work and what actually does.
    • You’ll finally understand the basics of health insurance types (Medicaid, Medicare, employer plans, marketplace) and why they matter when things go wrong.
    • You’ll hear how education can be a powerful form of advocacy, both for yourself and for others in your community.
    • You’ll get a candid look at the emotional reality of working in oncology from the legal side, and how proximity to serious illness reshapes your view of time and priorities.
    • You’ll see why prevention, primary care, and social supports (food, housing, education) are not “extras” but integral to a functioning health system.
    • You’ll be reminded that it’s possible to build a meaningful career at the intersection of law, policy, and compassion, even in a system that often feels impossibly flawed.

    Send this to anyone you think would benefit from understanding their rights, supporting a loved one with cancer, or working in healthcare. Then tag @taytalks_pod with your takeaway so we can repost it.

    ✅ Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite app—so you never miss a TayTalks deep-dive on nonlinear paths and full-circle moments. 🎙️ Come for the science, storytelling, and systems talk. Stay for the reminder that advocacy often begins where certainty—and the system—falls short. 🤍 If this episode resonated:

    • Share it with one friend who needs to hear it.
    • Tag @taytalks_pod with your takeaway so we can repost you.
    • Leave a quick rating on Apple or Spotify—your words help more ambitious humans and caregivers find the show.
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    57 分
  • Life is about Time and Relationships
    2026/01/14

    In this TayTalks episode, Taymeyah and Greg Wasserman explore what it really means to build a career (and a life) that aligns with who you are. Greg reflects on early career experiences that shaped his leadership style, including retail “character development”, managing teams across multiple offices, and navigating constant change during his years at Yahoo.

    The conversation moves into startups versus big corporations, unpacking the myth of stability, the impact of silos, and why understanding how decisions affect people on the ground actually matters. Greg also shares openly about reaching a mental health breaking point in late 2022, what it took to ask for help, and how that moment reframed his perspective on time, relationships, and purpose.

    This episode is a reminder that you don’t have to have it all figured out, but you do have to listen to yourself, stay curious, and let people show up for you.

    Why Listen:

    • Your gut often knows before you can explain why something feels off
    • Stability is a myth; both startups and big companies change
    • Leadership is about communication, listening, and understanding motivation
    • Silos exist everywhere and knowing when to break down or embrace them, is a skill
    • Asking for help isn’t a weakness; it’s a form of self-awareness and a gift to those around you
    • Life is ultimately, as Greg beautifully puts it, about time and relationships

    Send this to anyone you think would enjoy. Then tag @taytalks_pod with your takeaway so we can repost it.

    ✅ Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite app—so you never miss a TayTalks deep-dive on nonlinear paths and full-circle moments.

    🎙️ Come for the science and storytelling. Stay for the reminder that purpose often begins where certainty ends.

    🤍 If this episode resonated:

    Share it with one friend who needs to hear it.

    Tag @taytalks_pod with your takeaway so we can repost you.

    Leave a quick rating on Apple or Spotify, your words help more ambitious humans find the show.

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    1 時間 9 分
  • You’re Not Bad at Math, You’re Just Learning
    2025/12/23

    In this episode, Tay sits down with Pouyan — an engineer, PhD researcher, and creator whose journey spans continents, careers, and deep personal loss. From growing up in Iran to building intuitive robotics systems in Montreal, Pouyan shares how immigration reshapes identity, how grief can shadow (and shape) ambition, and why lowering expectations doesn’t mean lowering your standards.

    They dive into the realities of PhD life, creativity in robotics, how AI is changing everything (and what it can’t replace), and the quiet discipline required to keep going when nothing feels certain. Pouyan opens up about losing his mother and grandmother, why he still dreams of bringing loved ones back for “just one day,” and the unexpected comfort of learning to release control.

    This conversation blends engineering, culture, nostalgia, humility, and humor — from Linkin Park to lab automation, from Middle Eastern parents to Montreal winters, from perfectionism to finding your own pace.

    Why listen:

    • Hear an honest look at robotics, AI, and what the next generation of innovators actually need.

    • Explore immigration, belonging, and the strange nostalgia for places you’ve never lived.

    • Learn how lowering expectations (while keeping high standards) becomes a form of freedom.

    • Reflect on grief, resilience, and redefining yourself beyond your work.

    • Laugh about childhood science fairs, Persian food, “inshallah timelines,” and Tay’s show recommendations.

    A grounded, thoughtful episode for anyone navigating ambition, uncertainty, creativity — or simply trying to become someone they’re proud of, one decision at a time.

    Send this to anyone you think would enjoy. Then tag @taytalks_pod with your takeaway so we can repost it.

    ✅ Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite app—so you never miss a TayTalks deep-dive on nonlinear paths and full-circle moments.

    🎙️ Come for the science and storytelling. Stay for the reminder that purpose often begins where certainty ends.

    🤍 If this episode resonated:

    Share it with one friend who needs to hear it.

    Tag @taytalks_pod with your takeaway so we can repost you.

    Leave a quick rating on Apple or Spotify, your words help more ambitious humans find the show.

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    1 時間 2 分
  • Grieving the life lost
    2025/12/02

    In this solo episode, Taymeyah unpacks one of the most quietly devastating experiences we go through: grieving the job, career, or path you desperately wanted, and didn’t get.

    This conversation goes deeper than rejection. It’s about the identity crisis that hits when the thing you believed defined you suddenly disappears. What happens to your confidence? How do you move forward? And who are you when the gold stars, titles, or next steps fall away?

    Tay shares her own story, from med-school rejections to rock-bottom MCAT cycles, to the pressure of always being “on,” to the free-fall feeling that comes when the plan dissolves and you’re left to rewrite your future in real time.

    She breaks down:

    • why losing a job or dream can feel like a death
    • how we attach identity to achievement without noticing
    • the role grief plays in growth (and why it isn’t linear)
    • why balance matters more than obsession
    • how to pivot with intention instead of panic
    • what it means to reclaim confidence after a “no”

    This episode is a reminder that you are more than what you do, more than the plan that didn’t happen, and more than the title you thought would define you. Some paths aren’t lost, they’re just rerouted.

    For anyone navigating rejection, transitions, identity shifts, or the quiet grief of “this wasn’t supposed to go this way,” this one is for you.

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    23 分