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Fireside with Blair Hodges
Blair Hodges
30 episodes
22 hours ago
What does real support for trans kids look like in this fraught political moment? Ben V. Greene audaciously but persuasively suggests taking a joy-centered approach. Greene, noted author and educator, talks with Blair Hodges about the challenges and joys of affirming transgender youth. They explore what parents and other loved ones can do when they’re scared or uncertain about how to be there for trans kids, and why compassion—not perfection—makes all the difference. They also discuss what affirming therapy really is (and isn’t), how belonging improves mental health, and why love and understanding—not panic—save lives. A hopeful, human conversation for anyone trying to support a trans child or teen. Full transcript available at relationscapes.org. ABOUT THE GUEST: Ben V. Greene is author of the book, My Child Is Trans, Now What? A Joy-Centered Approach to Support. As a transgender man, Ben works as an LGBTQ+ inclusion consultant who has dedicated his career to spreading empathy, awareness, and understanding about the transgender community. He is active on the speaking circuit, with audiences ranging from the UK’s Diversity Live! to NASA. Ben is a guest lecturer on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion at Cornell University in addition to serving on the board of the Tufts Master’s Degree in Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. He resides in St. Louis, Missouri.
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Religion & Spirituality,
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What does real support for trans kids look like in this fraught political moment? Ben V. Greene audaciously but persuasively suggests taking a joy-centered approach. Greene, noted author and educator, talks with Blair Hodges about the challenges and joys of affirming transgender youth. They explore what parents and other loved ones can do when they’re scared or uncertain about how to be there for trans kids, and why compassion—not perfection—makes all the difference. They also discuss what affirming therapy really is (and isn’t), how belonging improves mental health, and why love and understanding—not panic—save lives. A hopeful, human conversation for anyone trying to support a trans child or teen. Full transcript available at relationscapes.org. ABOUT THE GUEST: Ben V. Greene is author of the book, My Child Is Trans, Now What? A Joy-Centered Approach to Support. As a transgender man, Ben works as an LGBTQ+ inclusion consultant who has dedicated his career to spreading empathy, awareness, and understanding about the transgender community. He is active on the speaking circuit, with audiences ranging from the UK’s Diversity Live! to NASA. Ben is a guest lecturer on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion at Cornell University in addition to serving on the board of the Tufts Master’s Degree in Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. He resides in St. Louis, Missouri.
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Religion
Religion & Spirituality,
Society & Culture
Episodes (20/30)
Fireside with Blair Hodges
Relationscapes: “How to Support Trans Youth,” with Ben V. Greene
What does real support for trans kids look like in this fraught political moment? Ben V. Greene audaciously but persuasively suggests taking a joy-centered approach. Greene, noted author and educator, talks with Blair Hodges about the challenges and joys of affirming transgender youth. They explore what parents and other loved ones can do when they’re scared or uncertain about how to be there for trans kids, and why compassion—not perfection—makes all the difference. They also discuss what affirming therapy really is (and isn’t), how belonging improves mental health, and why love and understanding—not panic—save lives. A hopeful, human conversation for anyone trying to support a trans child or teen. Full transcript available at relationscapes.org. ABOUT THE GUEST: Ben V. Greene is author of the book, My Child Is Trans, Now What? A Joy-Centered Approach to Support. As a transgender man, Ben works as an LGBTQ+ inclusion consultant who has dedicated his career to spreading empathy, awareness, and understanding about the transgender community. He is active on the speaking circuit, with audiences ranging from the UK’s Diversity Live! to NASA. Ben is a guest lecturer on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion at Cornell University in addition to serving on the board of the Tufts Master’s Degree in Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. He resides in St. Louis, Missouri.
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1 day ago

Fireside with Blair Hodges
Relationscapes: “Surviving the ‘Cure’ of Conversion Therapy,” with Lucas Wilson
He was told he was broken. He was promised a cure. It was all a lie.  Lucas Wilson, author of "Shame-Sex Attraction: Survivors' Stories of Conversion Therapy," takes us inside the real experiences of queer people forced to try and change their so-called "same-sex attraction." Lucas shares both his own story and those of survivors, revealing the psychological, moral, and spiritual harms of conversion therapy. He also explains why stories, not just statistics, are the most powerful way to confront the discredited practice. As the U.S. Supreme Court gears up to overturn conversion therapy bans, these stories matter now more than ever.  ABOUT THE AUTHOR Dr. Lucas Wilson is a SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellow at University of Toronto Mississauga. As a former evangelical and a survivor of conversion therapy, he is the editor of Shame-Sex Attraction: Survivors’ Stories of Conversion Therapy (JKP Books, 2025). He is also the author of At Home with the Holocaust: Postmemory, Domestic Space, and Second-Generation Holocaust Narratives (Rutgers University Press, 2025), which received the Jordan Schnitzer First Book Publication Award. He is also the co-editor of Emerging Trends in Third-Generation Holocaust Literature (Lexington Books, 2023), a collection of academic essays about the writings of grandchildren of Holocaust survivors, which has been named an “essential” title by Choice Reviews. His public-facing writing has appeared in The Advocate, Queerty, LGBTQ Nation, and Religion Dispatches, among other venues, and his academic work has appeared in Modern Language Studies, Canadian Jewish Studies, Flannery O’Connor Review, Journal of Jewish Identities, and Studies in American Jewish Literature and in edited collections published by The MLA, SUNY Press, The University of Alabama Press, and DIO Press. He is currently working on two interrelated monograph projects that examine evangelical homophobia and transphobia in the U.S.
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1 week ago

Fireside with Blair Hodges
Relationscapes: “Kids or No Kids? Rethinking Parenthood in Uncertain Times,” with Anastasia Berg and Rachel Wiseman
Should people bring children into today’s world? Between climate change, economic strain, political conflict, and growing uncertainty about the future, more people today say they feel ambivalent about parenthood, especially progressive people. Philosophers Anastasia Berg and Rachel Wiseman—authors of What Are Children For?—explore the personal, political, and philosophical stakes of having kids. From the tedium and vulnerability of early parenting to the profound meaning and joy it can bring, this conversation opens space for anyone wrestling with one of life’s biggest decisions.  Full transcript available at relationscapes.org.  About the Guests Anastasia Berg is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at University of California, Irvine. She serves as editor of ​The Point magazine, a Chicago-based literary magazine that publishes philosophical writing on everyday life and culture. Rachel Wiseman is managing editor of The Point. Together they wrote "What Are Children For?: On Ambivalence and Choice."
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3 weeks ago

Fireside with Blair Hodges
S’mores (Bonus Episode)—Tara Boyce on Hope
She dreamed of being a mother. Reality had a wakeup call for her.
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2 years ago
53 minutes 50 seconds

Fireside with Blair Hodges
Joy, with Ross Gay
Not your happy-go-lucky discussion of joy here. Ross Gay brings something different.
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2 years ago
1 hour 10 minutes 16 seconds

Fireside with Blair Hodges
Invisible, with Meghan O’Rourke
As a silent epidemic of chronic illnesses afflicts tens of millions of Americans, Meghan O’Rourke calls for revolution.
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2 years ago

Fireside with Blair Hodges
Transitions, with Susan Stryker
A trans scholar makes history writing trans history.
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2 years ago
1 hour 35 minutes 22 seconds

Fireside with Blair Hodges
Mission, with Kathryn Gin Lum
The word “heathen” has fallen out of use, but the racist ideas behind it persist in the White American imagination.
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2 years ago

Fireside with Blair Hodges
Shell Play, with Toni Jensen
America's legacy of firearm violence through the eyes of a Métis woman.
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2 years ago

Fireside with Blair Hodges
Hope, with Tom Whyman
A father wonders if it's ethical to bring children into this world.
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2 years ago

Fireside with Blair Hodges
The Fire, with Danté Stewart
A young Black Christian writer discovers the holiness of rage.
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2 years ago
1 hour 29 minutes 37 seconds

Fireside with Blair Hodges
Heritage, with Masha Rumer
The challenges of parenting second-generation immigrants.
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2 years ago

Fireside with Blair Hodges
Monsters, with David Livingstone Smith
When we fight monsters, we risk becoming monstrous ourselves.
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3 years ago
1 hour 6 minutes 1 second

Fireside with Blair Hodges
Voices, with Jeff Chu
After Rachel Held Evans unexpectedly died, her friend Jeff Chu made sure her last book was completed.
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3 years ago
58 minutes 1 second

Fireside with Blair Hodges
Margins, with Fatimah Salleh and Margaret Olsen Hemming
How can scripture be inspiring if it's also racist, misogynist, and otherwise problematic?
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3 years ago
58 minutes 38 seconds

Fireside with Blair Hodges
The Books, with Vanessa Zoltan
The novel 'Jane Eyre' was ahead of its time, but many years later it bears the marks of its age. Are these older canonical books worth saving?
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3 years ago
58 minutes 50 seconds

Fireside with Blair Hodges
Civility, with Alex Zamalin
The virtue of civility has been used for generations to silence the voices of marginalized people in the United States.
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3 years ago
49 minutes

Fireside with Blair Hodges
Hidden, with Ayala Fader
Ultra-Orthodox Jews living as hidden heretics within their communities try to make it work.
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3 years ago
1 hour 31 minutes

Fireside with Blair Hodges
S’mores (Bonus Episode)—Let’s Talk, with Anna Sale
How to talk about hard things like death, sex, money, and more.
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3 years ago
29 minutes 44 seconds

Fireside with Blair Hodges
Options, with Taylor Petrey
Shifting beliefs about gender and sexuality in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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3 years ago
1 hour 32 minutes 1 second

Fireside with Blair Hodges
What does real support for trans kids look like in this fraught political moment? Ben V. Greene audaciously but persuasively suggests taking a joy-centered approach. Greene, noted author and educator, talks with Blair Hodges about the challenges and joys of affirming transgender youth. They explore what parents and other loved ones can do when they’re scared or uncertain about how to be there for trans kids, and why compassion—not perfection—makes all the difference. They also discuss what affirming therapy really is (and isn’t), how belonging improves mental health, and why love and understanding—not panic—save lives. A hopeful, human conversation for anyone trying to support a trans child or teen. Full transcript available at relationscapes.org. ABOUT THE GUEST: Ben V. Greene is author of the book, My Child Is Trans, Now What? A Joy-Centered Approach to Support. As a transgender man, Ben works as an LGBTQ+ inclusion consultant who has dedicated his career to spreading empathy, awareness, and understanding about the transgender community. He is active on the speaking circuit, with audiences ranging from the UK’s Diversity Live! to NASA. Ben is a guest lecturer on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion at Cornell University in addition to serving on the board of the Tufts Master’s Degree in Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. He resides in St. Louis, Missouri.