Epiphany Communications Coach Vanessa

14.7K posts

Epiphany Communications Coach Vanessa banner
Epiphany Communications Coach Vanessa

Epiphany Communications Coach Vanessa

@vanessadenha

Culture & Leadership Coach, Communication Consultant & Strategist, Trainer, Facilitator, Speaker. Host of Epiphany on Ave Maria Radio 12 pm ET

Katılım Temmuz 2009
1.7K Takip Edilen1.7K Takipçiler
Ave Maria Radio
Ave Maria Radio@AveMariaRadio·
On #Epiphany, EWTN's Joan Lewis joins @vanessadenha to celebrate 40 years covering Vatican News! Michael New with the Charlotte Lozier Institute weighs in on the United States Supreme Court temporarily blocking the Telehealth Abortion Ban. Listen at Noon EDT on Ave Maria Radio!
Ave Maria Radio tweet media
English
1
2
2
59
Eric Daugherty
Eric Daugherty@EricLDaugh·
🚨 HOLY SMOKES. DOJ report just dropped a bombshell: The Biden DOJ aggressively targeted and harassed Christians, privately called them "CULTISTS" and sought out HARSH prison sentences for peaceful protests Even worse: They used the SPLC to do it! This is outright Christian persecution, right on American soil! LOCK UP everyone who carried this out. "That went beyond disagreement and moved to punishing Christians who held conservative religious beliefs in conflict with the administration's pro-choice gender ideology agenda." "The report found the Biden DOJ brought multiple cases against pro-life activists, many of them Christians, under the FACE Act, the freedom of access to clinic entrances." "Email correspondence shows prosecutors privately mocked Christian pro-life views as culty and pursued more severe charges and harsher sentences for peaceful protests or pro-life defendants." "In contrast, following the Dobbs decision in 2022 that overturned Roe v. Wade, there was a wave of vandalism and arson targeting churches and pregnancy resource centers. But the Biden DOJ pursued comparatively few prosecutions under the same FACE Act." "Christian colleges and institutions were scrutinized and penalized for holding traditional views on gender, accusing them of Title IX violations and threatening school funding and accreditation." "The report also cited the infamous FBI memo out of the Richmond Field Office that warned of radical traditionalist Catholics as extremists." "The memo was withdrawn after public backlash, but the DOJ revealed it relied on the now-disgraced Southern Poverty Law Center's list of hate groups."
English
669
9.1K
18.8K
391K
Epiphany Communications Coach Vanessa
“I was working to forgive someone who was not even sorry,” Dr. Sam Goodwin reflecting on being wrongfully imprisoned.
Ave Maria Radio@AveMariaRadio

On #Epiphany, @vanessadenha talks with Dr. Sam Goodwin of SGI Ventures about how he survived nine weeks in a Syrian prison! EWTN's Erik Rosales was at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner when shots rang out. He shares his experience. Listen at Noon EDT on Ave Maria Radio!

English
0
0
1
46
Epiphany Communications Coach Vanessa
So, you just got promoted to manager… but your team isn’t exactly buying into your new leadership role. Why is that? Here’s the truth: you might have the title, but do you have the skills?
English
0
0
0
17
Juanita Broaddrick
Juanita Broaddrick@atensnut·
Video going viral of kids going to their pastor’s home asking for prayers after seeing something upsetting.
English
2.2K
11.8K
54.1K
1.2M
Epiphany Communications Coach Vanessa
Work friendships matter. @Gallup research shows that having a best friend at work links to higher engagement, stronger collaboration and better performance. Yet for leaders, this is often difficult to engineer. There is no simple formula for creating best friends at work. Employees differ in how close they want to be, how much they share and where they draw boundaries. However, when employees describe their strongest work relationships, a clear pattern emerges. These partnerships are not defined by personality or preference, but by the conditions that sustain them — how trust develops, how understanding grows and how commitment shows up in the work. The strongest partnerships take root in cultures that build trust and accountability on purpose. Strengths give teams a shared language to support those relationships. Explore the research: on.gallup.com/4kUq7GH
English
0
0
0
24
Epiphany Communications Coach Vanessa
From a coaching perspective, this is a clear example of how communication directly shapes interpersonal relationships, public perception, and even broader cultural dynamics. The way messages are delivered — and interpreted — can create clarity or confusion, connection or tension. Moments like this remind us that communication isn’t just about the words themselves, but the mindset, assumptions, and emotions behind them. It’s a powerful reminder of why intentional, self‑aware communication matters in every context. @Pontifex @POTUS ewtnnews.com/world/us/donal…
English
0
0
0
12
Anna Lulis
Anna Lulis@annamlulis·
This is so powerful. Atheist Astronaut Reid Wiseman reveals he broke down crying after returning to Earth and seeing a Cross "I'm not really a religious person, but there was just no other avenue for me to explain anything..." Jesus is the answer. ✝️
English
406
4.8K
34.6K
628.8K
Epiphany Communications Coach Vanessa retweetledi
Uche is a girl
Uche is a girl@UcheMaryOkoli·
“The world is sick because it no longer listens to God.” - Cardinal Sarah ❤️
Uche is a girl tweet media
English
64
657
4K
31.9K
Epiphany Communications Coach Vanessa
This is such a powerful reminder of something we often overlook: human beings are wired to express, not suppress. What these studies show is that when we bring our inner experiences into the open — through writing, movement, art, or music — something shifts inside us. The body responds. Stress eases. Clarity emerges. Whether it’s journaling, painting, dancing, singing, or simply creating for the sake of creating, we’re engaging the mind and body in a way that restores balance. It quiets the stress response, lifts our mood, and reconnects us to parts of ourselves we often ignore in the rush of daily life. In my work as a coach and in the master classes I lead, I see this all the time. When people finally put words to their experiences — when they create, reflect, or express what they’ve been carrying — something unlocks. Insight shows up. Perspective shifts. The noise quiets long enough for them to hear themselves again. It’s a reminder that healing isn’t always found in pushing harder, but in making space — space to create, space to feel, space to process, space to breathe. And the best part? As the research shows, it’s not about being good at it. It’s about showing up. It’s about giving yourself permission to express what’s been held inside. Creativity isn’t a luxury. It’s a pathway to wholeness.
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka

In 1986, a Texas psychologist told 46 students to write about the worst thing that ever happened to them, 15 minutes a day for 4 days straight. Over the next 6 months, those students went to the doctor half as often as the kids in the control group. The psychologist was James Pennebaker. He repeated the experiment, and so did other labs. Same answer every time: writing about pain in a notebook was changing something inside the body. Follow-up studies found improved immune cell counts, faster wound healing after surgery, lower HIV virus levels in blood tests, and better lung function in people with asthma. For years the mechanism was a puzzle. Pennebaker had stumbled onto a much bigger pattern than he realized. Making things of any kind does something to the body. Take painting. A 2016 study at Drexel University handed 39 random adults some markers, clay, and collage paper and told them to make whatever they wanted for 45 minutes. No rules, no skill required. 75% of them walked out with lower cortisol (the main stress hormone) in their saliva. Beginners and experienced artists got the same drop. Take dancing. Doctors at Einstein College of Medicine tracked 469 seniors over a 21-year period in a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2003. People who danced a few times a week were 76% less likely to get dementia than people who rarely did. That was the largest protective effect of anything they tested. Crosswords came in at 47%, reading at 35%. Swimming and cycling did nothing for the brain at all. Take singing. In 2004, researchers in Germany measured antibodies in a choir's saliva before and after rehearsal. The antibody count (the stuff that fights off colds and flu) rose significantly. A follow-up study on cancer patients and their caregivers found that one hour of group singing dropped cortisol and switched on their immune systems at a measurable, blood-test level. And just going to see art helps. University College London tracked 6,710 British adults over age 50 for 14 years. People who went to the theatre, a museum, or a concert every few months were 31% less likely to die during that window. Even going once or twice a year dropped the risk by 14%. Wealth, education, and starting health were all accounted for. The mechanism seems to live in a brain circuit called the default mode network, the part that wanders when you daydream. When you fall into the zone of making something, that network hooks up with the one that holds your attention, and the brain's stress system quiets down. Cortisol falls, dopamine climbs, and the slow-burn inflammation that eventually kills most of us calms down too. None of it depends on the quality of what you make. The Spanish tweet sounded like hyperbole. 40 years of peer-reviewed data says it's roughly right.

English
0
0
1
30
Epiphany Communications Coach Vanessa
This is such a powerful reminder of something we often overlook: human beings are wired to express, not suppress. What these studies show is that when we bring our inner experiences into the open — through writing, movement, art, or music — something shifts inside us. The body responds. Stress eases. Clarity emerges. Whether it’s journaling, painting, dancing, singing, or simply creating for the sake of creating, we’re engaging the mind and body in a way that restores balance. It quiets the stress response, lifts our mood, and reconnects us to parts of ourselves we often ignore in the rush of daily life. In my work as a coach and trainer, I see this in clients. When people finally put words to their experiences — when they create, reflect, or express what they’ve been carrying — something unlocks. Insight shows up. Perspective shifts. The noise quiets long enough for them to hear themselves again. It’s a reminder that healing isn’t always found in pushing harder, but in making space — space to create, space to feel, space to process, space to breathe. And the best part? As the research shows, it’s not about being good at it. It’s about showing up. It’s about giving yourself permission to express what’s been held inside. Creativity isn’t a luxury. It’s a pathway to wholeness. I just might create a Master Mind Group around this concept.
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka

In 1986, a Texas psychologist told 46 students to write about the worst thing that ever happened to them, 15 minutes a day for 4 days straight. Over the next 6 months, those students went to the doctor half as often as the kids in the control group. The psychologist was James Pennebaker. He repeated the experiment, and so did other labs. Same answer every time: writing about pain in a notebook was changing something inside the body. Follow-up studies found improved immune cell counts, faster wound healing after surgery, lower HIV virus levels in blood tests, and better lung function in people with asthma. For years the mechanism was a puzzle. Pennebaker had stumbled onto a much bigger pattern than he realized. Making things of any kind does something to the body. Take painting. A 2016 study at Drexel University handed 39 random adults some markers, clay, and collage paper and told them to make whatever they wanted for 45 minutes. No rules, no skill required. 75% of them walked out with lower cortisol (the main stress hormone) in their saliva. Beginners and experienced artists got the same drop. Take dancing. Doctors at Einstein College of Medicine tracked 469 seniors over a 21-year period in a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2003. People who danced a few times a week were 76% less likely to get dementia than people who rarely did. That was the largest protective effect of anything they tested. Crosswords came in at 47%, reading at 35%. Swimming and cycling did nothing for the brain at all. Take singing. In 2004, researchers in Germany measured antibodies in a choir's saliva before and after rehearsal. The antibody count (the stuff that fights off colds and flu) rose significantly. A follow-up study on cancer patients and their caregivers found that one hour of group singing dropped cortisol and switched on their immune systems at a measurable, blood-test level. And just going to see art helps. University College London tracked 6,710 British adults over age 50 for 14 years. People who went to the theatre, a museum, or a concert every few months were 31% less likely to die during that window. Even going once or twice a year dropped the risk by 14%. Wealth, education, and starting health were all accounted for. The mechanism seems to live in a brain circuit called the default mode network, the part that wanders when you daydream. When you fall into the zone of making something, that network hooks up with the one that holds your attention, and the brain's stress system quiets down. Cortisol falls, dopamine climbs, and the slow-burn inflammation that eventually kills most of us calms down too. None of it depends on the quality of what you make. The Spanish tweet sounded like hyperbole. 40 years of peer-reviewed data says it's roughly right.

English
0
0
2
40
Epiphany Communications Coach Vanessa
This is such a powerful reminder of something we often overlook: the human person is created to express, not suppress. What these studies show scientifically, our faith has taught spiritually for centuries — that when we bring what’s inside of us into the light, healing begins. Whether it’s writing, painting, dancing, singing, or simply creating for the sake of creating, we’re engaging the mind, body, and soul in a way that restores us. It quiets the stress response, awakens joy, and reconnects us to the deeper parts of ourselves. In my work as a coach and trainer, I see this in clients - When people finally put words to their experiences — when they journal, reflect, or create something meaningful — clarity emerges. The Holy Spirit often speaks in those quiet, creative spaces where our defenses come down and our hearts open up. It’s a beautiful reminder that clarity isn’t always found in doing more, but in making space — space to create, space to feel, space to process, space to pray. And the best part? As the research shows, it’s not about being good at it. It’s about showing up. It’s about giving yourself permission to express what’s been held inside. Creativity is not a luxury. It’s a God‑given pathway to wholeness.
English
0
0
5
229
Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
In 1986, a Texas psychologist told 46 students to write about the worst thing that ever happened to them, 15 minutes a day for 4 days straight. Over the next 6 months, those students went to the doctor half as often as the kids in the control group. The psychologist was James Pennebaker. He repeated the experiment, and so did other labs. Same answer every time: writing about pain in a notebook was changing something inside the body. Follow-up studies found improved immune cell counts, faster wound healing after surgery, lower HIV virus levels in blood tests, and better lung function in people with asthma. For years the mechanism was a puzzle. Pennebaker had stumbled onto a much bigger pattern than he realized. Making things of any kind does something to the body. Take painting. A 2016 study at Drexel University handed 39 random adults some markers, clay, and collage paper and told them to make whatever they wanted for 45 minutes. No rules, no skill required. 75% of them walked out with lower cortisol (the main stress hormone) in their saliva. Beginners and experienced artists got the same drop. Take dancing. Doctors at Einstein College of Medicine tracked 469 seniors over a 21-year period in a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2003. People who danced a few times a week were 76% less likely to get dementia than people who rarely did. That was the largest protective effect of anything they tested. Crosswords came in at 47%, reading at 35%. Swimming and cycling did nothing for the brain at all. Take singing. In 2004, researchers in Germany measured antibodies in a choir's saliva before and after rehearsal. The antibody count (the stuff that fights off colds and flu) rose significantly. A follow-up study on cancer patients and their caregivers found that one hour of group singing dropped cortisol and switched on their immune systems at a measurable, blood-test level. And just going to see art helps. University College London tracked 6,710 British adults over age 50 for 14 years. People who went to the theatre, a museum, or a concert every few months were 31% less likely to die during that window. Even going once or twice a year dropped the risk by 14%. Wealth, education, and starting health were all accounted for. The mechanism seems to live in a brain circuit called the default mode network, the part that wanders when you daydream. When you fall into the zone of making something, that network hooks up with the one that holds your attention, and the brain's stress system quiets down. Cortisol falls, dopamine climbs, and the slow-burn inflammation that eventually kills most of us calms down too. None of it depends on the quality of what you make. The Spanish tweet sounded like hyperbole. 40 years of peer-reviewed data says it's roughly right.
444 𖤐@poyoetc

No pretendo exagerar pero el arte va a salvar tu vida. la música, la pintura, la cerámica, la escritura, el tallado, el tejido… el acto de CREAR te va a salvar.

English
37
1.3K
5.2K
353.9K
Epiphany Communications Coach Vanessa
Meet the voices leading the revival From bishops to religious to dynamic evangelists, each speaker brings a powerful witness to the hope, healing, and renewal found in the Eucharist. Their words are rooted in experience, guided by the Spirit, and aimed at igniting hearts for mission.risingrevival.regfox.com/rising-from-th…
English
0
0
1
15