• Episode 8: Building Boundaries. Identity, Wellness, and Community Care with Jay Shawana
    Jun 15 2026

    “You can’t know where you’re going if you don’t know who you are.”

    In this episode of Rekindling the Fire, host Rachel Robinson sits down with Jay Shawana — an Anishinaabe social worker from Wikwemikong First Nation, former competitive hockey player, and founder of Four Hills Athlete Development — to explore the importance of boundaries, identity, and balance in Indigenous wellness work.

    Drawing on his experiences in sport, youth development, leadership, and community-based services, Jay reflects on the challenges of supporting others while maintaining personal wellbeing. From navigating dual roles as both helper and community member to recognizing the early signs of burnout, he shares practical insights on how healthy boundaries allow us to show up authentically and sustainably for those we serve.

    Together, Rachel and Jay discuss the importance of knowing your values, protecting your energy, and creating workplace cultures that prioritize connection, trust, and wellness. At the heart of the conversation is a simple but powerful idea: understanding who you are is the foundation for understanding where you're going.

    Jay Shawana is Anishinaabe from Wikwemikong First Nation and serves as Executive Director of NPAAMB Indigenous Youth Employment and Training. He is also the founder of Four Hills Athlete Development, a Brantford-based practice that supports athletes, families, and organizations through culturally grounded approaches to leadership, wellness, and personal development.

    Fast Four Reflections

    Hope: The resilience of Indigenous youth

    Home: Stepping onto the ice with skates and a hockey stick

    Meaning: The prospect of potential

    Gift: Showing that things don't have to be done the way they've always been done

    Credits

    Rekindling the Fire is produced for the First Peoples Wellness Circle by David McGuffin and Graham McGuffin. Music by Nagamo Publishing. For more on the work of the First Peoples Wellness Circle, please visit FPWC.ca.

    Listener Care Notice

    This episode discusses burnout, workplace stress, intergenerational impacts of colonial systems, and challenges faced by those working in helping professions. Please take care while listening and access support if needed.

    Support Resources

    National Indian Residential School Crisis Line: 1-866-925-4419

    Hope for Wellness Helpline: 1-855-242-3310

    Talk Suicide Canada: 1-833-456-4566

    9-8-8 Suicide Crisis Helpline: Call or text 988

    Show More Show Less
    48 mins
  • Episode 7: Harm Reduction is Healing - Community, Care, and Connection with Dr. Carol Hopkins
    May 25 2026

    “It’s not about feeding the addiction. It’s about helping people get connected to life.”

    In this episode of Rekindling the Fire, host Rachel Robinson sits down with Carol Hopkins — a member of the Lenape Nation at Moraviantown and CEO of the Thunderbird Partnership Foundation — to explore harm reduction through an Indigenous lens grounded in relationship, compassion, and connection.

    Drawing on decades of work in First Nations mental wellness, addictions treatment, and community healing, Carol reflects on how culture-based care, family involvement, and spirit-centered approaches can transform the way communities respond to substance use and the toxic drug crisis. From sacred fires and ceremony to practical community action, this conversation challenges stigma and reframes harm reduction as an act of care, dignity, and collective responsibility.

    Together, Rachel and Carol unpack the impacts of colonization, the importance of belonging and identity, and why healing begins not with shame, but with connection.

    In this Episode:

    • Reframing harm reduction through Indigenous values and worldview
    • Why connection and relationships are central to healing
    • The role of family, ceremony, and community in wellness
    • How colonization disrupted identity, belonging, and care systems
    • Practical examples of community-led harm reduction initiatives
    • Understanding addiction through compassion rather than shame
    • The importance of culture, spirit, and identity in recovery
    • Why communities need local, culturally grounded supports and services

    Dr. Carol Hopkins is the CEO of the Thunderbird Partnership Foundation and a member of the Lenape Nation at Moraviantown, Ontario. She has dedicated more than 20 years to the field of First Nations addictions and mental health and is internationally recognized for her leadership in Indigenous mental wellness, harm reduction, and culture-based healing approaches. She was appointed an Officer of the Order of Canada in 2018.

    Fast Four Reflections

    Hope: Identity that can never be taken away

    Home: Community and the land

    Meaning: Language, culture, and identity

    Gift: Sharing knowledge to inspire healing and change

    Credits

    Rekindling the Fire is produced for the First Peoples Wellness Circle

    by David McGuffin and Graham McGuffin (ExploreProductions.ca)

    Music by Nagamo Publishing.

    For more on the work of the First Peoples Wellness Circle please visit fpwc.ca

    Listener Care Notice

    This episode discusses substance use, colonial impacts, intergenerational trauma, and the toxic drug crisis. Please take care while listening and access support if needed.

    Support Resources

    National Indian Residential School Crisis Line: 1-866-925-4419

    Hope for Wellness Helpline: 1-855-242-3310

    Talk Suicide Canada: 1-833-456-4566

    9-8-8 Suicide Crisis Helpline: Call or text 988

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 17 mins
  • Episode 6: Community Centered Healing Practices with Barb Martin
    May 4 2026

    “Don’t ever feel that this is insurmountable—it isn’t. Let’s play the long game, because our ancestors played the long game.”

    — Barb Martin

    In this episode of Rekindling the Fire, host Rachel Robinson sits down with Barb Martin—a Mi’kmaq leader and lifelong advocate—to explore healing, leadership, and what it means to carry the work forward across generations. Drawing on more than 40 years of experience, Barb shares how Indigenous approaches to wellness—grounded in culture, land, language, and relationships—can reshape both community care and broader systems. Together, they unpack cultural safety, Two-Eyed Seeing, and the importance of strength-based, community-led approaches. This conversation invites listeners to reflect on connection, courage, and our shared responsibility to support future generations.

    In this Episode:

    • “Playing the long game” in wellness and systems change
    • The role of Elders and intergenerational knowledge
    • Two-Eyed Seeing: balancing Indigenous and Western approaches
    • Why cultural safety is defined by those receiving care
    • The importance of land, language, and community connection
    • Strength-based approaches to healing and resilience

    Barb Martin is a Mi’kmaq leader from Eskasoni First Nation with over four decades of experience in Indigenous wellness, advocacy, and systems change. Her work bridges Indigenous knowledge and Western practices, grounded in relationships, respect, and community care.

    Fast Four Reflections

    Hope: Youth

    Home: On the land, in ceremony

    Meaning: Her work and spirituality

    Gift: Grounded strength

    Credits

    Rekindling the Fire is produced for the First Peoples Wellness Circle

    by David McGuffin and Graham McGuffin (ExploreProductions.ca)

    Music by Nagamo Publishing.

    For more on the work of the First Peoples Wellness Circle please visit www.fpwc.ca

    Listener Care Notice

    This episode discusses colonial impacts and intergenerational trauma. Please take care while listening and access support if needed.

    Support Resources

    • National Indian Residential School Crisis Line: 1-866-925-4419
    • Hope for Wellness Helpline: 1-855-242-3310
    • Talk Suicide Canada: 1-833-456-4566
    • 9-8-8 Suicide Crisis Helpline: Call or text 988

    Show More Show Less
    58 mins
  • Episode 5: Youth Perspectives – Building the Future of Wellness with Connor Lafortune
    Apr 13 2026

    “Life promotion is about picking up life—rekindling it, grounding it in kindness, balance, and the gifts we all carry.”

    In this episode, host Rachel Robinson sits down with Connor Lafortune—a poet, activist, and life promotion advocate from Dokis First Nation—to explore how Indigenous youth are reshaping the future of mental wellness.

    Connor shares his journey from aspiring law student to community-based wellness leader, grounded in culture, land and storytelling. Together, they unpack the difference between reactive approaches like crisis response and proactive approaches rooted in life promotion—a strengths-based, culturally grounded way of nurturing wellness from the start.

    This conversation invites listeners into a deeper understanding of balance, belonging, and the importance of reconnecting with culture, community, and self.

    In this Episode:

    What “life promotion” means and how it differs from Western mental health models

    • Why language and culture shape how we understand wellness
    • The role of land, community, and storytelling in healing and identity
    • How Indigenous youth are reclaiming space, asking questions, and leading change
    • The importance of intergenerational connection—learning with and from elders
    • How art, poetry, and creativity can ground us and connect us to spirit
    • Why wellness isn’t individual—it’s deeply rooted in community care

    Connor Lafortune is an Anishinaabe, queer, and Francophone artist and advocate whose work spans life promotion, harm reduction, Indigenous education, and the arts. Through poetry, storytelling, and cultural programming, Connor creates spaces for healing, reflection, and imagining new futures.

    Fast Four Reflections

    • Hope: His nephew
    • Home: Out on the land, in community
    • Meaning: The work he does and the people he’s with
    • Gift: Storytelling

    Rekindling the Fire is produced for the First Peoples Wellness Circle by David McGuffin and Clare McGuffin of ExploreProductions.ca

    Music by Nagamo Publishing

    www.fpwc.ca / info@fpwc.ca / Facebook / X.com / LinkedIn

    Listener Care Notice:

    This episode includes discussions of colonial impacts, including language loss and intergenerational trauma. Listeners may feel activated by some of the content. Please prioritize your wellbeing and access support if needed.

    Support Resources:

    1. National Indian Residential School Crisis Line: 1-866-925-4419
    2. Hope for Wellness Helpline: 1-855-242-3310 | https://www.hopeforwellness.ca/
    3. Talk Suicide Canada: 1-833-456-4566 | https://talksuicide.ca/
    4. 9-8-8 Suicide Crisis Helpline: Call or text 9-8-8 | https://988.ca/
    Show More Show Less
    51 mins
  • Episode 4: Reclaiming Language and Identity and Mental Wellness with Opolahsomuwehs (Dr. Imelda Perley)
    Mar 23 2026

    “Language is more than words — it is life, spirit, and the medicine that brings us back to ourselves.”

    In this episode of Rekindling the Fire, host Rachel Robinson sits down with Opolahsomuwehs (Dr. Imelda Perley) — respected Wolastoqey Elder, language keeper, ceremonial leader, and educator — for a powerful and grounding conversation about reclaiming language, identity, and holistic wellness.

    Together, they explore how Indigenous language is not just a tool for communication, but a living system of relationships — connecting us to land, ancestors, and each other. Opolahsomuwehs shares teachings from her lifelong journey, from growing up immersed in storytelling and ceremony to leading naming ceremonies, language revitalization, and cultural healing practices across generations.

    At the heart of this episode is a profound reminder: nothing has happened to the language — it still lives within us and around us. What is needed is the courage and commitment to awaken it.

    From spirit naming ceremonies and traditional birthing practices, to bringing language into schools, health systems, and even digital spaces like apps and gaming, Opolahsomuwehs reflects on innovative and culturally rooted ways to reconnect youth and communities with their identity. She speaks candidly about the impacts of colonization, the loss of language, and the importance of shifting from systems of deficit toward strength, belonging, and relationality.

    This conversation also offers powerful teachings on:

    • Language as medicine for mental, emotional, physical, and spiritual wellness
    • The importance of naming, identity, and connection to ancestors
    • Reframing healing spaces through Indigenous language and worldview
    • The role of ceremony in everyday life — from water teachings to daily practices of gratitude
    • Supporting youth, neurodiverse children, and future generations through love and cultural grounding

    Through stories of water ceremony, community transformation, and intergenerational learning, A Blossom Was reminds us that healing is not about moving forward alone — it is about returning to what has always been within us.

    This episode is an invitation to rekindle that fire — to remember who we are, where we come from, and how we carry that forward.

    Rekindling the Fire is produced for the First Peoples Wellness Circle by David McGuffin and Clare McGuffin of ExploreProductions.ca

    Music by Nagamo Publishing

    www.fpwc.ca / info@fpwc.ca / Facebook / X.com / LinkedIn

    Listener Care Notice:

    This episode includes discussions of colonial impacts, including language loss and intergenerational trauma. Listeners may feel activated by some of the content. Please prioritize your wellbeing and access support if needed.

    Support Resources:

    1. National Indian Residential School Crisis Line: 1-866-925-4419
    2. Hope for Wellness Helpline: 1-855-242-3310 | https://www.hopeforwellness.ca/
    3. Talk Suicide Canada: 1-833-456-4566 | https://talksuicide.ca/
    4. 9-8-8 Suicide Crisis Helpline: Call or text 9-8-8 | https://988.ca/

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 5 mins
  • Episode 3: Strength in Peer and Collective Care with T'anchay Redvers
    Mar 2 2026
    T’áncháy Redvers (they/them) is a Dene and Métis two-spirit storyteller, writer, and advocate from Deninu Kųę́ First Nation in the Northwest Territories. They are the co-founder of We Matter, a national Indigenous-led organization dedicated to life promotion and hope for Indigenous youth. Through public speaking, media, and community work, T’áncháy centers Indigenous joy, mental wellness, and two-spirit visibility, inspiring young people across Turtle Island and beyond.
    Show More Show Less
    57 mins
  • Episode 2: Honoring Ancestral Strength and Cultural Resilience in Care with Tina Armstrong
    Mar 2 2026
    Tina Armstrong is Caribou Clan and a proud member of Bearskin Lake First Nation in Nishnawbe Aski Nation territory. She is a residential school survivor with over 35 years of experience in the social work field, working alongside grassroots community members and leadership teams in empowerment, restoration, reconciliation, and reclamation.
    Show More Show Less
    58 mins
  • Episode 1: The Journey Begins – Centering Wellness in First Nations Care with Dr. Brenda Restoule
    Mar 2 2026
    Dr. Brenda Restoule is Ojibwe from Dokis First Nation and a registered clinical psychologist with over 25 years of experience supporting First Nations communities. She is the CEO of First Peoples Wellness Circle, an Indigenous-led national organization advancing healing and wellness through culture, traditional knowledge, and Two-Eyed Seeing. Her work spans community mental wellness, addictions, crisis response, and systems leadership.
    Show More Show Less
    55 mins