What makes us human: The case for tenderness
January 3, 2019
Hosted by Leanh Nguyen, Ph.D.
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Episode Description
Dr. Nguyen gives a retrospective of the series. In her review of what has been gleaned from her conversations with guests, the host highlights the basic fact of the human condition and speaks of the current breakdown in mutual recognition and connection in human intercourse. This episode circles back to her debut hour and makes an impassioned argument for kindness and tenderness.
On Living
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What does it mean to be human? What do we make of this life? How do we hurt, and heal, one another? What does it take to love? What does it cost to hate? How do we stay fully alive to our humanity? How do we find the means to behold beauty and kindness? How do we live fully and authentically?
Through this series of intimate, thought-provoking conversations, you will have a chance to reflect on questions about survival, fulfillment, connection, living and dying well. We encounter a deep place of questioning and, ultimately, awaken toward the powerful questions and ambitions that lay unbidden in our daily existence.
Dr. Nguyen brings 25 years of engagement with trauma survivors, refugees of war and persecution, immigrants from all over the world, and patients from all walks of life. As with her work, this show is an opportunity to explore the meaning of being alive and to support people in the ambition toward a life fully lived.
Leanh Nguyen, Ph.D.
Born and raised during the Vietnam war, Dr. Leanh Nguyen came of age in Europe as a refugee of communism. For 20 years she has dedicated herself to those whose lives have been derailed and whose minds crushed by adversity and trauma, with the mission of helping people hold onto to their humanity and reclaim their inherent right to live their fullest, truest self.
Her patients have been the most severely mentally ill as well as survivors of human rights abuse. She has worked in the poorest areas of NYC, but also has consulted for prestigious law firms and international agencies. Her presence has made an impact on victims of civil war in refugee resettlements in Africa or the Middle East as well as on asylum seekers and illegal immigrants in American detention centers and immigration courts. A tireless advocate and extremely effective expert witness in federal courts, she has helped win over 500 asylum grants for people fleeing persecution.
Her psychotherapy and life coaching practice is open to people from all over the world, across socio-economic spheres, across cultures, ages and sexual orientations. Her calling is to support people to be their most human and live their fullest. She works and lives according to that passion. In this show, as in her practice, she invites you to join her in the journey to find the question and passion that drive our brief, wonderful time on this Earth.