The Chronic Illness Therapists Podcast

is meant to be a place where people with chronic illnesses can come to feel heard, seen, and safe while listening to mental health therapists and other medical professionals talk about the realities of treating complex medical conditions.

Want to be a guest on the podcast?

Currently accepting requests from other mental health therapists and other health professionals who specialize in chronic illness and pain.

Just fill out the form below, and I’ll reach out to you to discuss next steps!

 The Chronic Illness Therapists Podcast

Have you ever wondered how a therapist can actually help you with your chronic illness?…

Does seeing a therapist make you feel like “it’s all in your head?”

Listen in while I interview therapists across the world who specialize in chronic illness. Our goal is to demystify the therapy process, so you can finally get the help and support that you deserve.

New episodes air every two weeks on Fridays on Apple, Google, and Spotify.

Want to suggest a topic for the podcast? Just fill out this form to tell me what you'd like to hear about!

Below you'll find all my newest blog posts. I write about lots of different topics - sometimes about things I discuss in my podcast episodes, and other times just sharing thoughts and ideas that aren't connected to the podcast. Take a look and enjoy!

Wellness When You're Chronically Ill Isn't What You Think It Is
Podcast Destiny Davis (formerly Winters) Podcast Destiny Davis (formerly Winters)

Wellness When You're Chronically Ill Isn't What You Think It Is

I think in the US in particular, we really dislike being comfortable. Like we are actively against comfort. Go to your nearest grocery store and you'll see cashiers standing the whole time. That's just not how it's done in other countries. We have all of these messages that are built in, quite literally, that you should be able to stand for eight or 12 hours at a time when that's not accessible—not only to chronically ill bodies, but to a lot of bodies." In this episode, Destiny sits down with Dr. Victoria Rodriguez to talk about what wellness actually means when you're navigating chronic illness. They discuss the social model of disability, why it's easier to change your environment than your body, how to navigate accommodations both as a therapist and with clients, and the systemic barriers that make rest feel like something you have to earn. This conversation challenges everything you thought you knew about wellness and offers a radically different approach grounded in compassion, sustainability, and actually meeting bodies where they are.

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When Money Stress Meets Chronic Illness: What Financial Therapy Actually Is
Podcast Destiny Davis (formerly Winters) Podcast Destiny Davis (formerly Winters)

When Money Stress Meets Chronic Illness: What Financial Therapy Actually Is

If you've ever felt guilty about spending money on something small while medical bills pile up, or convinced yourself you're "not poor enough" to apply for assistance programs, this conversation is for you. Financial therapist Megan Stevenson breaks down the emotional blocks that show up around money when you're navigating chronic illness—from impulsive spending as a way to regain control, to the money shame that keeps you from asking for help. Because the reality is, we can't separate someone's mental health from their financial health, especially when they're navigating a chronic condition in a system that wasn't built to support them.

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Learning to Partner With Your Body (Instead of Fighting It)
Podcast Destiny Davis (formerly Winters) Podcast Destiny Davis (formerly Winters)

Learning to Partner With Your Body (Instead of Fighting It)

What if the way you relate to your body matters just as much as the treatments you try? Physical therapist Jason Therrien shares why chronic pain is more about sensitivity than damage, how to calm your nervous system before building strength, and why grace leads to growth while shame keeps you stuck in the same patterns.

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What Therapy Actually Looks Like When You Have POTS
Podcast Destiny Davis (formerly Winters) Podcast Destiny Davis (formerly Winters)

What Therapy Actually Looks Like When You Have POTS

Therapy for POTS isn't about managing anxiety or getting more coping skills right away. Dr. Laurie Dos Santos, a clinical psychologist specializing in dysautonomia, explains that the first chapter of therapy involves no strategies, no tools—just listening. When you've been dismissed by the medical system for years and told your symptoms are "all in your head," having someone finally believe you changes everything. Here's what real mental health support for chronic illness looks like.

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The Free Resource That's Helping People With Lung Disease Feel Less Alone
Podcast Destiny Davis (formerly Winters) Podcast Destiny Davis (formerly Winters)

The Free Resource That's Helping People With Lung Disease Feel Less Alone

When you're living with lung disease, doctors don't have time to teach you how to use your inhaler correctly or help you figure out who to call when you need help. Respiratory therapist Tiffany shares how the American Lung Association's free helpline fills the gaps that medical appointments can't—from navigating shame and isolation to weeding through internet "miracle cures."

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How to Actually Get Heard by Your Doctors (Without Getting Dismissed)
Podcast Destiny Davis (formerly Winters) Podcast Destiny Davis (formerly Winters)

How to Actually Get Heard by Your Doctors (Without Getting Dismissed)

You know what's wild? That we have to strategize just to get basic medical care. Registered nurse Kayla Thompson-Riviere shares the communication techniques that actually work when you're stuck on the medical merry-go-round—including the "breadcrumb technique" for getting the tests and referrals you need without being dismissed.

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Your Brain on Pain- When Chronic Pain Changes the Way We Think and Feel (Guest Spotlight)
Podcast Destiny Davis (formerly Winters) Podcast Destiny Davis (formerly Winters)

Your Brain on Pain- When Chronic Pain Changes the Way We Think and Feel (Guest Spotlight)

Chronic pain doesn't just hurt—it changes the way we think, feel, and process the world around us. Neuroimaging studies show that people with chronic pain experience measurable changes in gray matter volume, particularly in regions involved in pain processing, emotional regulation, and decision-making. Science journalist Faith Davis breaks down the neuroscience of how pain rewires the brain.

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When Your Doctor Believes You: Finding Care For EDS, POTS, MCAS
Podcast Destiny Davis (formerly Winters) Podcast Destiny Davis (formerly Winters)

When Your Doctor Believes You: Finding Care For EDS, POTS, MCAS

There is a specific, sinking feeling that happens when you leave a doctor’s appointment with a clean bill of health but no answers for your pain. You’re told the labs are "normal," but your body is telling you a different story. And suddenly, you aren't just fighting an illness; you're fighting to be believed.

I sat down with Dr. Kara Pepper, a board-certified internist who specializes in complex conditions like POTS, MCAS, and EDS, to talk about why the standard 10-minute office visit is failing chronic illness patients. Dr. Pepper shares why standard tests often miss functional diagnoses, how she creates space to actually hear her patients' stories, and why validating your lived experience is the first—and most important—step toward getting better.

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Finding Safety Despite Medical Trauma w/ Sarah Stasica LMSW
Podcast Destiny Davis (formerly Winters) Podcast Destiny Davis (formerly Winters)

Finding Safety Despite Medical Trauma w/ Sarah Stasica LMSW

When something goes wrong medically, whether it's with you or someone you love, there's this thing that happens that nobody really talks about: you stop trusting your body. And maybe you stop trusting the people who are supposed to help you too.

I sat down with Sarah Stasica, a therapist and trauma-informed yoga teacher who specializes in medical trauma, to talk about what happens when medical experiences leave lasting marks on our nervous systems. Sarah's journey into this work started when she was pregnant with her first child and found out there were medical complications. What followed was years of navigating a medical system that wasn't built for emotional processing, parenting a child through medical challenges, and slowly learning that healing doesn't happen on anyone's timeline but your own.

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