Episodi

  • What Does It Mean To Reclaim What’s Lost with Kathi Crawford
    May 28 2026

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    A poetry book doesn’t just “come out” one day. It’s built in public, one reading, one community connection, and one crucial preorder at a time. Kathi Crawford joins us again at 22 Sides to share what’s changed since her last visit and to introduce her next collection, "running with the beasts", published by Finishing Line Press with preorders opening June 29.

    We talk about why the preorder period matters for authors and small presses, how her upcoming launch celebration becomes an open mic that lifts other writers up, and what a welcoming literary community can look like in Houston. Kathi also reads two poems that stay with you: one surreal and haunting meditation on time, memory, and aging, and another that riffs on Lou Reed, drums, girlhood, and the long tail of being told “you can’t” because of your gender.

    Then we get practical for anyone trying to publish poetry or submit to literary magazines. Kathi breaks down the systems that keep you sane: track submissions with a spreadsheet, submit simultaneously when allowed, read magazines to find the right fit, and watch for legitimacy so you don’t hand your work to spammers. We also dig into creative collaboration, including why working with a real artists feels more human and more interesting than defaulting to AI.

    If you enjoy poetry readings, writing craft talk, and honest advice about the creative process, hit subscribe, share this with a writer friend, and leave us a review so more listeners can find the show.

    Places to find Kathi works and more:

    Kathi: https://theworldinsideyou.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/kathicrawford/

    Event: June 7th: https://www.bloodhoneylit.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/bloodhoneylit/

    Book: Unbroken a public poetry anthology:

    https://www.penandleafpress.com/

    Book: White Wall Review Metamorphosis:

    https://whitewallreview.com/



    Find out more about Kathi Crawford here

    https://www.instagram.com/kathicrawford/

    Support the show

    We hope you will listen often.

    For more information, visit our website 22sides.com

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    36 min
  • Vote FOR JOE District C + Bring your pals like it's a party for democracy
    Apr 20 2026

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    We sit down with Houston City Council District C candidate Joe Panzarella and campaign communicator Christos Patelis to talk about why they stepped into local politics and what they are hearing from neighbors across the district. We focus on safer streets, affordability, transparency, and the small-turnout reality that makes local elections a fast way to change daily life in Houston.

    • Why first-time candidates move from organizing to running for office
    • What Houston District C includes and why its boundaries matter
    • How neighborhood culture shifts in Montrose and beyond
    • What “urbanism” means as a practical quality-of-life goal
    • Why traffic deaths drive the safer-streets agenda
    • How the high injury network can guide smarter street redesign
    • What traffic calming looks like on Houston roads
    • How “eyes on the street” can reduce fear and build trust

    Please, please go vote April 29th through May 12th. Election day is May 16th.
    You can find our social media for Joe at Joe for Houston.

    Joeforhouston.com


    Find out more about Kathi Crawford here

    https://www.instagram.com/kathicrawford/

    Support the show

    We hope you will listen often.

    For more information, visit our website 22sides.com

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    45 min
  • From Clinic To City Hall: Dr. Audrey Nath’s running for District C
    Feb 17 2026

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    What if a city council office ran like an ER—fast triage, clear priorities, and measurable outcomes? That’s the vision physician and mom Dr. Audrey Nath brings to Houston’s District C as she shares how hospital lessons translate into street-level fixes: safer roads that actually slow cars, an end to non‑safety traffic stops that drain trust and budgets, and an office that calls you back before the vote, not after.

    Audrey also shows how local leverage works on big issues. She highlights council’s role in rejecting bids reliant on unpaid prison labor, outlines seizure safety standards now under consideration for Texas jails, and explains how parents won state rules limiting smoke near playgrounds. Food deserts and resilience get equal attention—partnering with local farms to buffer shocks and get nutritious meals to kids. On civil rights, we revisit Houston’s HERO history with candor, exploring what durable protections require: broad coalitions, precise implementation guidance for businesses, and messaging that resists misinformation.

    If you care about traffic safety, construction detours, buses that arrive, parks that thrive, and libraries that lift graduation rates and wages, this conversation centers the everyday choices that make a city livable.

    Early voting for the District C special election starts March 18, with Election Day on April 4. Join us, share this episode with a neighbor, and if it resonates, subscribe, rate, and leave a review so more Houstonians can find their way to the polls.

    For more information: Audreyforhouston.com

    For voting information: HarrisVotes.com

    Support the show

    We hope you will listen often.

    For more information, visit our website 22sides.com

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    1 ora e 13 min
  • A Veteran, A Vision, And A Fight For District C
    Feb 9 2026

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    We invited Patrick Oathout, a born-and-raised Houstonian, Army armor officer veteran, and technologist working in AI safety, to make it concrete. He breaks down how a council member can actually change daily life in District C without grandstanding: organize neighbors before storms hit, clean up illegal dumping quickly, and push 311 from “addressed” to “resolved” with real-time dashboards and human accountability.

    Patrick’s story powers his approach. Fired as a teen for being gay, he learned early what it means to be shut out—and how to fight back with purpose. Years later he led a tank platoon in NATO’s battlegroup in Poland, where clarity under pressure wasn’t optional. Back home, he maps those lessons onto Houston’s needs: designate nonpartisan block captains, stock storm toolboxes, identify who has generators, and give each block a direct line to utilities. None of it requires waiting on a budget cycle; all of it builds trust neighbors can feel.

    We also dig into public safety that’s measurable, not theatrical. Think smarter camera placement that actually catches plates, noise meters that help triage, and town halls that teach residents how to collect usable evidence. Pair that with a simple, public tracker for reports—so people can see where a case sits and who owns it. On city services, he argues for a customer-service mindset: auto-updates for common trash delays, human escalation when tickets stall, and a clear standard of “resolved,” not “closed.”

    Because District C touches every other district, coalition-building matters. Patrick lays out how to work with fellow council members and the mayor to defend local control when the state tries to strip it, especially around flood control funds. He’s not promising to “fix flooding” in a year; he’s promising visible progress that earns trust today, while we build long-term infrastructure tomorrow. Along the way, he commits to inclusive town halls across the district, diverse staffing, and clear communication that meets people where they are.

    If you care about pragmatic fixes, neighbor-to-neighbor resilience, and using data without losing the human touch, you’ll find a roadmap here. Listen, share with a Houston friend, and if it resonates, subscribe and leave a review so more neighbors can find us.

    For more on Patrick Oathout for Houston City Council District C click here for more information: https://patrickforhouston.com/

    Support the show

    We hope you will listen often.

    For more information, visit our website 22sides.com

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    58 min
  • Two Friends Build A Movement That Changes Policy And Lives
    Jan 26 2026

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    A simple question—can we light City Hall for Intersex Awareness Day—turned into a global spark. That moment captures the spirit of this conversation with the founders of the Houston Intersex Society: start small, show up, and keep going until doors open. We get personal about how two teens who once sat side by side in a youth group became artists, organizers, and policy advocates who helped take intersex visibility from living rooms to HHS roundtables and even the White House.

    We unpack the early days: pizza-fueled support circles, performance art that disarmed stigma, and a decisive pivot from meetings to education when the community’s needs shifted. You’ll hear how a scrappy, underfunded nonprofit survived floods, a ceiling collapse, and a fire while running mutual aid, writing grants at night, and drafting legislative language that led to Texas bill numbers and federal engagement. The thread is persistence—asking again, showing up again, and choosing the rooms where change is possible.

    We also go inside tactics that blend creativity and leverage. The Chicago protest outside a children’s hospital used a visceral “Intersex Welcome Mat” to force acknowledgment. Parents call for help; some choose to avoid non-consensual surgeries after real conversations. During COVID, micro-grants kept people housed and fed when identity labels became barriers to aid. And today, a compact community center on a bus line offers workshops, zines, archives, a low-threshold shower, and a few bunks for emergencies. In-person time still matters: people arrive heavy, make art, and leave lighter.

    If you care about intersex rights, LGBTQ+ advocacy, medical ethics, or grassroots organizing, this story maps how visibility, policy, and direct aid can reinforce one another. It proves you don’t need perfect funding or a large team—you need courage, continuity, and a habit of asking. Listen, share with a friend who needs it, and hit follow. Then tell us: what’s one step you’ll take to make your city brighter?

    Click here for The Houston Intersex Society

    Support the show

    We hope you will listen often.

    For more information, visit our website 22sides.com

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    2 ore e 9 min
  • Where Democracy Breaks Or Heals: Down-Ballot Power with Melanie Miles
    Jan 17 2026

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    Melanie Miles for Justice of the Peace- Precinct Seven, Place 2 click here: https://milesforhouston.com/

    Courts shouldn’t feel like a maze. They should feel like a place where neighbors are heard. We sit with attorney and candidate Melanie Miles to unpack how a Justice of the Peace can turn a stressful day in court into a fair, navigable process—and why Precinct Seven, Place 2 needs that shift now. From the first “good morning” at the clerk’s window to how cases are scheduled and supported, Melanie lays out a people-first plan that treats tenants, landlords, and small-claims litigants with dignity and clarity.

    We talk brass tacks: building a resource ecosystem inside the courthouse—computers, printers, legal aid, and volunteer clinics—modeled on the best JP courts in Harris County. We also get tactical about access: adding one Saturday and one evening docket each month so working families aren’t forced to choose between a paycheck and a hearing. And yes, judges need to show up. Reliability on the bench is a form of justice.

    Policy takes center stage with SB 38, Texas’s response to squatters that also accelerates evictions. We break down the risks of four-day response deadlines, email-only notices, and default judgments, then outline practical safeguards like bold, plain‑language notices and fill‑in response forms served with the petition. The aim is balance—protect property owners while preserving due process for lawful tenants who need a real shot at being heard.

    Along the way, we swap stories about voter apathy, wellness rituals that prevent burnout, and the power of year-round civic culture—volunteering, endorsement screenings, and bringing a friend to the polls. Down-ballot races like Justice of the Peace shape daily life far more than headline offices, determining whether a crisis becomes a scar or a solvable problem. If you care about housing stability, fair hearings, and a court that actually serves the community it lives in, this conversation is your roadmap.

    Make a plan to vote, share this episode with a neighbor, and leave a review so more Houstonians find it. Your circle is your superpower—use it.


    Support the show

    We hope you will listen often.

    For more information, visit our website 22sides.com

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    48 min
  • Finding the Yummy of Yoga & Tarot with Raye Lynn Rath-Rondeau
    Dec 6 2025

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    What if peace isn’t a finish line but a muscle you train, one breath at a time? Robin sits down with Raye Lynn—teacher, studio owner, intuitive—to map a life shaped by meditation, yoga, and listening closely to that quiet inner nudge. From a fidgety seven-year-old learning to sit still in 1968, to sensing the Enron storm before it broke, to owning beloved studios and guiding hundreds, Raye Lynn shows how simple practices can reroute a lifetime.

    We unpack what beginners truly need: start where you are, speak to your teacher, and seek alignment that works for your body. Expect real benefits—better sleep, calmer focus, fewer injuries—without chasing contortionist shapes. Raye Lynn reframes meditation as dropping beneath thoughts rather than forcing silence, using a vivid ocean metaphor to help anyone find the depth beneath surface noise. For those carrying anxiety, grief, or burnout, her specialty, Yoga Nidra, becomes a transformative reset: a guided glide into the edge of sleep where the nervous system unwinds and intentions finally stick.

    Raye Lynn also opens the door to her tarot practice. The cards are a starting point, but the goal is your agency: seeing weather patterns in your life, spotting doors opening and closing, and choosing with clarity. We talk ethics, boundaries, and cadence, so guidance supports growth without dependency. Along the way, we return to community—the people who hold you when you can’t stand—and the truth that asking for help can be its own kind of strength.

    If you’re curious about Yoga Nidra, meditation, or a grounded reading, Raye Lynn offers virtual sessions and visits Houston monthly with restorative and sound bath collaborations. Subscribe for more conversations like this, share with a friend who needs a gentle nudge toward calm, and leave a review to help others find the show. Your breath is a good place to begin.

    Schedule with Raye Lynn: awakeningpresence.raye@gmail.com

    Pls write in the subject line: Yoga Nidra, meditation, yoga, or reading; add “podcast” or “newsletter” if relevant


    Body Mind & Soul bookings: bmshouston.com, 713-993-0550


    Yoga Institute Clear Lake workshops: https://www.yogainstituteclearlake.com/workshops , 281-333-1646

    You can donate to Raye directly through her email via paypal or Venmo @RayeLynn-Rath-Rondeau

    http:venmo.com/u/RayeLynn-Rath-Rondeau


    Thank you for subscribing + leaving a review + even supporting the podcast + sharing this with a friend.

    Find out more about Kathi Crawford here

    https://www.instagram.com/kathicrawford/

    Support the show

    We hope you will listen often.

    For more information, visit our website 22sides.com

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    1 ora e 27 min
  • Ghosts, Monsters, And ... Don't Feed The Gremlins After Midnight Or ... Bury That Jar!
    Nov 18 2025

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    Four voices trade ghost stories, queer horror, and cultural myths to ask what fear is really for. We swap jokes about cursed jars and rapture beds, then get serious about real danger, empathy, and how horror mirrors power and identity.

    • ghost encounters as energy, memory, and suggestion
    • Mr Aikman’s attic warning and childhood intuition
    • consciousness beyond the body and tech’s mind fetishes
    • evolution, otherness, and the roots of monster myths
    • horror reframed by queer and BIPOC creators
    • voodoo, charms, and culture without appropriation
    • Langoliers on a foggy highway terror
    • school lockdown drill stress and release
    • gremlins, rules, and moral fables in cinema
    • UFOs, multiverses, and living ghost towns
    • upcoming live art and anti‑fascist events in Houston

    Ghost stories are easy; the hard part is asking what they say about us. We kick things off with a hallway lamp that flips on by itself and a polite ghost named Mr. Aikman guarding an attic, then spiral into how memory, energy, and culture make “hauntings” feel true. From a grandmother staring down a figure at the foot of the bed to a cursed coin purse designed so something missing can never be found, we weigh belief against brain science and ask whether consciousness might reach beyond the body into a shared field the living sometimes stumble into.

    That curiosity pulls us straight into horror’s engine room. We talk evolution, otherness, and the uncanny—how old fears about difference created modern monsters—and why queer and BIPOC creators are rewriting the rules. Get Out turns suburbia into a trap. The Bride of Frankenstein turns the “monster” into an innocent. Pan’s Labyrinth makes fascism the true terror. Along the way, we swap unhinged folklore: a hex-breaking jar that absolutely should not have been dropped, the “rapture bed” that mysteriously vanished, and the eternal question of when it’s finally safe to feed a gremlin. We laugh because laughter releases the body after it locks up, whether it’s The Langoliers on a fog-choked highway or a real school lockdown alarm that was—no kidding—triggered when someone sat on the button.

    Horror thrives where we can’t say things out loud. It lets us talk about power, identity, and harm without naming names. It also reminds us that the scariest threats aren’t ghosts; they’re people who write rules, close doors, and decide whose fear counts. We close by teeing up UFOs, multiverses, and the Great Plains’ “living ghost towns,” where missile silos and abandoned plants feel like postcards from a future we’d better understand fast.

    If this conversation hit a nerve, follow and share the show with a friend who loves smart, strange stories. Leave a review to help others find us, and tell us, what’s the one horror scene you can’t shake—and why?


    November 22nd, it is the third unprecedented show. 7 p.m. at Aurora Chapel. That’s 800 Aurora Street in Houston, Texas. $10 at the door, but nobody’s turned away. Look up Fall of Freedom and if you’re local to Houston, check out Aurora Chapel

    Find out more about Kathi Crawford here

    https://www.instagram.com/kathicrawford/

    Support the show

    We hope you will listen often.

    For more information, visit our website 22sides.com

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    1 ora e 24 min