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The Kundalini Chronicles Gets Its Own Podcast (Separate From the Optimistic Advocate)

January 20, 2021


This is Scott Bryant-Comstock with the Optimistic Advocate podcast and the Kundalini Chronicles podcast. Wait, wait, what? Two podcasts?Yes!I made the decision to split out the Kundalini Chronicles, which has pretty much dominated the last almost 30 episodes of the Optimistic Advocate podcast.For those of you who are interested in just focusing on my experiences with awakening, and the lessons learned from that, but more importantly tips and strategies for your own personal self development, you will want to visit The Kundalini Chronicles.The Kundalini Chronicles podcast is available on just about every podcast player there is whether it’s Apple, Spotify, Google, just go into your podcast player of choice, type in the Kundalini Chronicles, it’ll bring it up, hit the subscribe button, and you are good to go.To subscribe to the Kundalini Chronicles: (We will add more host providers as they populate the show)

The Optimistic Advocate podcast will stay true to its original focus on interviews with some pretty amazing advocates from around the United States and around the world. We’ve been branching out and doing some really fine interviews. We have a stack of interviews ready to go. We’ll start rolling those out next week.Thanks, as always, for your continued support! Scott Bryant-Comstock

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About the Author

Scott Bryant-Comstock

Hello, I’m Scott Bryant-Comstock, CEO and founder of the Children’s Mental Health Network. For the past 40 years, my journey as a mental health advocate has traveled from volunteering at a suicide and crisis center, professional roles as a therapist in an outpatient clinic, in-home family therapist, state mental health official, Board Chair for a county mental health program, and national reviewer of children’s mental health systems reform efforts. As the founder of the Children’s Mental Health Network, I lead the Network’s efforts to grow a national online forum to exchange ideas on how to improve children’s mental health research, policy, and practice.

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