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PODCAST · society

Find Your Freaks

Ever felt too weird, too loud, too soft, too real — or just too complicated to belong?This podcast is your proof that you’re not alone.Find Your Freaks features raw, unfiltered conversations with people who are building belonging in unexpected places — and doing it by showing up exactly as they are. Hosted by community strategist Tonya Kubo, this show digs into the messy, beautiful truth of what it takes to find your people.New episodes on Thursdays starting June 2025.Come for the stories. Stay for the humanity.And if something hits home? Tell your weirdest friend and visit Ever felt too weird, too loud, too soft, too real — or just too complicated to belong?This podcast is your proof that you’re not alone.Find Your Freaks features raw, unfiltered conversations with people who are building belonging in unexpected places — and doing it by showing up exactly as they are. Hosted by community strategist Tonya Kubo, this show digs into the messy, beautiful truth of what it takes

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    023 – When the Mask Comes Off

    Why people don’t stop hiding because they want to, but because it finally feels safe to be seen.Most communities don’t fail because people stop caring.They fail because too much care is required from too few people.In this solo episode, Tonya Kubo explores what actually makes a community sustainable and why the traditional, leader-centered model quietly sets communities up to collapse. What looks like strong leadership often creates hidden fragility, where everything depends on one person showing up, holding it together, and carrying the weight.Drawing on Stacey’s real-world example from a military spouse community, Tonya breaks down what happens when belonging is built into the structure instead of assigned as a responsibility. Instead of hosting and managing every event, Stacey’s model distributes ownership, allowing members to create, lead, and sustain connection themselves.Tonya also challenges one of the most common assumptions in community-building: that disengagement is caused by apathy. In reality, it is often the opposite. People care, but when the burden is too high or the ownership is not shared, they step back instead of stepping in.If your community feels dependent on you, or if you have ever wondered whether what you are building could last without you, this episode offers a powerful reframe of what it takes to create something that actually endures.You’ll hear how:Communities don’t fail from apathy, but from uneven distribution of laborBurnout in leadership is often a design flaw, not a personal failureSelf-sustaining communities differ from self-running onesStacey’s model distributes ownership without losing structureCommunities built around personality are inherently fragilePurpose-driven communities create continuity beyond the founderDelegating tasks is not the same as transferring ownershipShared responsibility creates stronger, more resilient belongingEpisode Highlights[01:40] The realization that Tonya had been wearing a mask without noticing[03:50] Why we hold back when something doesn’t feel “worth the effort”[06:30] The difference between fitting in and actually being seen[08:45] The shift that happened after discovering Ellie Trier’s work[11:10] The story of a friend whose honesty revealed something deeper[13:50] What happens when someone doesn’t try to fix or reframe your truth[16:20] Why you can’t force someone to remove their mask[18:30] How safety changes the cost of being honest[20:40] What it looks like to model real acceptance[22:10] The invitation to show up fully so others can do the sameResources & MentionsEpisode 022 – Neurospicy and Never Alone with Eli TrierZuzu’s House of CatsMeet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist, marketing consultant, and rebel with a cause: helping people find the place where they truly belong. For nearly two decades, she’s built online spaces that feel less like comment sections and more like chosen family. She’s the fixer you call when your Facebook group has gone straight-up Lord of the Flies and the bouncer at the door of internet nonsense. As the host of Find Your Freaks, Tonya brings together unconventional thinkers and bridge-builders who know “normal” was never the point. Her favorite spaces? The ones where the freak flags fly high.Support the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, help us keep it ad-free by buying us a coffee (or two!). Every dollar goes to production so more weirdos can find their people.You can purchase Find Your Freaks merchandise online through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextWe love to talk about community. How to build it, grow it, sustain it. But next time, we’re going somewhere a little unexpected. Tonya sits down with bestselling mystery author Michelle Chouinard to explore the minds of people who obsess over red herrings, stay up all night chasing clues, and cannot rest until they solve the puzzle. But this conversation is not just about mystery writing. It is about curiosity, connection, and the way stories bring people together.

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    022 – Neurospicy and Never Alone with Eli Trier

    What if the thing that makes you feel like an outsider is actually the key to real belonging?We spend a lot of time talking about how to build community — how to grow it, structure it, and sustain it. But we don’t talk nearly enough about what it feels like to be the person on the outside of it. The one who doesn’t quite fit, who feels like “too much,” or who has learned to edit themselves just to stay in the room.In this episode of Find Your Freaks, Tonya Kubo sits down with Eli Trier — artist, writer, and self-described “dopamine dealer” — to explore what it means to live as an outsider and how that experience can become the foundation for something powerful. As a neuroqueer, AuDHD creator, Eli doesn’t just make art. She creates spaces where people who have always felt different finally feel seen and understood.Eli shares how years of feeling “too much” shaped her work and her perspective on belonging. Instead of trying to fit into spaces that never quite worked, she began building her own — spaces where otherness isn’t something to hide, but something to celebrate.Together, they challenge a common assumption about community: that belonging comes from fitting in. Because in the end, real belonging isn’t about being tolerated. It’s about being recognized.In This Episode, We ExploreWhat it actually feels like to move through the world as an outsiderThe hidden cost of trying to “pass” as normalWhy being “too much” is often a context problem, not a personal flawHow Eli uses art to create emotional refuge and recognitionThe difference between being included and truly belongingWhat community builders get wrong about inclusionHow showing up fully creates permission for others to do the sameEpisode Highlights[03:15] Why Eli’s “freaks” are the weird, creative, non-traditional souls[09:40] What it means to be neuroqueer and AuDHD in a world built for sameness[17:20] The experience of being “too much” and learning to self-edit[26:10] Why fitting in can feel safer… but costs more than we think[34:45] How Eli’s art creates a sense of recognition and belonging[42:30] The difference between inclusion and true belonging[51:00] Why community builders need to rethink what “safe space” actually means[1:02:15] The power of showing up fully and going firstMeet Our GuestElinor Trier is a neuroqueer AuDHD artist, writer, podcaster, YouTuber, dopamine dealer, and founder of Elinor Trier Studio and Zuzu’s Haus of Cats, where she creates artwork that celebrates “otherness,” reminding you that you’re not the “odd one out,” you’re “one of a kind.” Her work lives in private collections worldwide and has been featured in multiple media outlets, including the Nautilus Silver Award-winning book Creatrix: She Who Makes. She reads ten books a week, snorts when she laughs, and might actually be a pile of cats in a sparkly trench coat.Meet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist, writer, and rebel with a cause: helping people find the place where they truly belong. She’s spent nearly two decades building online spaces that feel more like chosen family than comment sections, and she’s not afraid to call out the fluff in favor of real connection. As the founder of Find Your Freaks, Tonya brings together unconventional thinkers, builders, and bridge-makers who believe that “normal” was never the point. When she’s not hosting the show, she’s raising two daughters, leading client communities, and making meaning out of the mess.Key Quotes“You’re not the odd one out. You’re one of a kind.” — Eli Trier“Being ‘too much’ usually just means you’re in the wrong room.” — Eli Trier“Belonging isn’t about being tolerated. It’s about being recognized.” — Eli Trier“The goal isn’t to become more palatable. It’s to find the places where you already make sense.” — Eli TrierResources & MentionsElinor Trier StudioZuzu’s Haus of CatsCreatrix: She Who MakesSupport the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, consider buying us a coffee to keep the show ad-free. Every dollar supports production so more weirdos can find their people.Find Your Freaks merchandise is available through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextThe spaces that feel safest aren’t the ones where everyone fits in. In the next episode, Tonya explores what it really means to go first, why being the “freakiest” one in the room sets the tone for everyone else, and how showing up fully creates the kind of permission real belonging is built on.

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    021 – The Community That Runs Without You

    Why the strongest communities aren’t built around leadership but around shared ownershipMost communities don’t fail because people stop caring.They fail because too much care is required from too few people.In this solo episode, Tonya Kubo explores what actually makes a community sustainable and why the traditional, leader-centered model quietly sets communities up to collapse. What looks like strong leadership often creates hidden fragility, where everything depends on one person showing up, holding it together, and carrying the weight.Drawing on Stacey’s real-world example from a military spouse community, Tonya breaks down what happens when belonging is built into the structure instead of assigned as a responsibility. Instead of hosting and managing every event, Stacey’s model distributes ownership, allowing members to create, lead, and sustain connection themselves.Tonya also challenges one of the most common assumptions in community-building: that disengagement is caused by apathy. In reality, it is often the opposite. People care, but when the burden is too high or the ownership is not shared, they step back instead of stepping in. If your community feels dependent on you, or if you have ever wondered whether what you are building could last without you, this episode offers a powerful reframe of what it takes to create something that actually endures.You’ll hear how:Communities don’t fail from apathy, but from uneven distribution of laborBurnout in leadership is often a design flaw, not a personal failureSelf-sustaining communities differ from self-running onesStacey’s model distributes ownership without losing structureCommunities built around personality are inherently fragilePurpose-driven communities create continuity beyond the founderDelegating tasks is not the same as transferring ownershipShared responsibility creates stronger, more resilient belongingEpisode Highlights[02:00] The question that reveals whether your community is built to last[06:30] Why communities don’t actually fail from apathy[12:15] How Stacey’s model distributes ownership from the start[18:40] What happens when everything depends on one leader[25:10] The difference between self-sustaining and self-running communities[31:45] Why personality-driven communities are fragile[38:20] How purpose creates continuity beyond the founder[45:00] Delegation vs. true ownership and why it matters[51:30] One simple shift to start redistributing responsibility[57:00] The question every community leader needs to answerResources & MentionsEpisode 020 – Interview with Stacey MorganMargaret Marcuson, Sustainable MinistryThe Secret to Thriving Online Communities (Facebook Group)Clutter-Free Academy by Kathi LippMeet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist, marketing consultant, and rebel with a cause: helping people find the place where they truly belong. For nearly two decades, she’s built online spaces that feel less like comment sections and more like chosen family. She’s the fixer you call when your Facebook group has gone straight-up Lord of the Flies and the bouncer at the door of internet nonsense. As the host of Find Your Freaks, Tonya brings together unconventional thinkers and bridge-builders who know “normal” was never the point. Her favorite spaces? The ones where the freak flags fly high.Support the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, help us keep it ad-free by buying us a coffee (or two!). Every dollar goes to production so more weirdos can find their people.You can purchase Find Your Freaks merchandise online through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextTonya sits down with Eli Trier, an artist, writer, podcaster, and self-described dopamine dealer whose work is a love letter to weirdos and misfits. As a neuroqueer, AuDHD creator, Eli shares what it means to build spaces where being different is not just accepted, but celebrated—and why belonging starts with making room for the outsider.

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    020 – The Courage to Go First with Stacey Morgan

    What happens when the system meant to create community quietly disappears?For decades, military spouse networks functioned as powerful support systems. They helped families navigate deployments, relocations, and the emotional weight of military life.But as cultural expectations changed — and the volunteer structures holding those networks together disappeared — many military families found themselves facing a new challenge: isolation.In this episode of Find Your Freaks, Tonya Kubo sits down with Stacey Morgan, a U.S. Army spouse of 25 years and leadership coach with The MomCo, to explore what happens when community breaks down and how everyday people can rebuild it.Stacey shares how moving to a new duty station revealed just how fractured military spouse networks had become. Instead of waiting for someone else to fix it, she and two other spouses created a radically simple model for rebuilding community: no dues, no drama, and member-led interest groups.Their approach flips traditional leadership models upside down and reminds us of something simple but powerful: Community isn’t something we consume. It’s something we create.And sometimes the bravest thing you can do is go first.In This Episode, We ExploreWhy traditional military spouse support networks have collapsed in many placesHow isolation impacts military families and even military retentionThe surprising role community plays in resilience during deploymentsStacey’s radically simple model for rebuilding communityWhy waiting to be rescued keeps people lonelyHow small interest groups can spark real connectionThe courage it takes to introduce yourself firstEpisode Highlights[02:10] Why Stacey’s “freaks” are military spouses and the unique bond they share[08:30] How traditional military spouse support systems quietly fell apart[15:00] Why community connection impacts military family retention[26:00] The hidden gaps created when volunteer support systems disappeared[33:00] Stacey’s new model for community: “No dues, no drama”[41:30] How small interest groups spark real connection[53:00] The story behind Stacey’s book The Astronaut’s Wife[1:03:00] The life lesson that changed everything: no one is coming to rescue you[1:07:20] Where to start if you want to build community in your own lifeMeet Our GuestStacey Morgan is an Army spouse of 25 years, mom of four, speaker, and author of The Astronaut’s Wife: How Launching My Husband into Outer Space Changed the Way I Live on Earth. Stacey serves on staff with The MomCo as an executive leadership coach, membership manager, and lead for military and online groups. She and her family are currently stationed at White Sands Missile Test Range in New Mexico.Meet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist, writer, and rebel with a cause: helping people find the place where they truly belong. She’s spent nearly two decades building online spaces that feel more like chosen family than comment sections, and she’s not afraid to call out the fluff in favor of real connection. As the founder of Find Your Freaks, Tonya brings together unconventional thinkers, builders, and bridge-makers who believe that “normal” was never the point. When she’s not hosting the show, she’s raising two daughters, leading client communities, and making meaning out of the mess.Key Quotes“There’s no rescuer coming for you. And as sad as that sounds, there’s freedom in it.” — Stacey Morgan“You can’t wait for someone to show up and tell you what to do. Community has to be built by the people who want it.” — Stacey Morgan“The future of community has to be light, nimble, and member-led.” — Stacey Morgan“Enough of this culture of complaining about what doesn’t exist. If you want it, be willing to host it.” — Stacey Morgan“You have to get out of your house. No one is going to come knocking on your door.” — Stacey MorganResources & MentionsThe Astronaut’s Wife: How Launching My Husband into Outer Space Changed the Way I Live on Earth by Stacey MorganStacey Morgan (official website)The MomCoBlue Star FamiliesMilitary Spouse Advocacy NetworkMarco Polo AppSharon McMahonSupport the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, consider buying us a coffee to keep the show ad-free. Every dollar supports production so more weirdos can find their people.Find Your Freaks merchandise is available through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextThe strongest communities aren’t built around one person. In the next episode, Tonya explores why the best communities are designed to survive their founders, how Stacey’s model flips leadership on its head, and what happens when belonging becomes part of the structure instead of the job description.

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    019 – The Intentional Design of Belonging

    Why strong communities aren’t built through activity, but through shared responsibility and trust.Most communities don’t fail because of bad content, the wrong platform, or even the wrong people.They fail because of design.In this solo episode, Tonya Kubo explores why many communities appear active but still feel shallow or fragile. High engagement doesn’t always mean people feel connected—and connection alone doesn’t guarantee belonging. What actually sustains a community is interdependence: the sense that members rely on one another and that their presence truly matters. Using business strategist Gwen Bortner’s client ecosystem as a real-world example, Tonya breaks down the design decisions that create durable belonging. Instead of organizing people by stage, industry, or hierarchy, Gwen curates for shared values, protects the culture of the container early, and intentionally encourages members to rely on each other—not just on the leader.Tonya also addresses a harder truth: communities often fail because leaders unintentionally centralize power. When everything flows through one person, the group may look lively but remains fragile. True belonging only emerges when leadership distributes trust and members become necessary to one another.If your community feels loud but lonely, engaged but disconnected, this episode offers a powerful reframing of what it actually takes to build spaces where people matter.You’ll hear how:Communities often fail due to design, not engagement levelsConnection is required for belonging—but they are not the same thingBelonging forms through interdependence, not proximityCurating for shared values strengthens cohesion more than grouping by stageProtecting the container early preserves culture laterMember-to-member reliance deepens trust and relational densityOver-centralized leadership creates dependency instead of belongingSustainable communities distribute trust and shared ownershipTimestamp Highlights0:00 – 4:45 Why most communities fail due to design, not engagement4:46 – 9:20 Connection vs. belonging—and why the distinction matters9:21 – 16:40 How Gwen Bortner unintentionally designed belonging into her client community16:41 – 23:10 Curating members by values instead of business stage23:11 – 28:45 Protecting the container and maintaining culture through selection28:46 – 33:30 Why member-to-member reliance creates relational density33:31 – 40:10 The danger of leader-centered communities40:11 – 46:00 When control replaces stewardship—and communities collapse46:01 – 52:30 Why belonging comes from being necessary, not visible52:31 – 57:10 Designing communities where trust transfers and leadership distributesResources & MentionsEpisode 18 – Small Circle, Big Impact with Gwen BortnerThe Business You Really Want PodcastClutter-Free Academy by Kathi LippRachel Allen – Community support for spouses of incarcerated individualsNikki James Zellner – Carbon monoxide safety advocacyMeet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist, marketing consultant, and rebel with a cause: helping people find the place where they truly belong. For nearly two decades, she’s built online spaces that feel less like comment sections and more like chosen family. She’s the fixer you call when your Facebook group has gone straight-up Lord of the Flies and the bouncer at the door of internet nonsense. As the host of Find Your Freaks, Tonya brings together unconventional thinkers and bridge-builders who know “normal” was never the point. Her favorite spaces? The ones where the freak flags fly high.Support the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, help us keep it ad-free by buying us a coffee (or two!). Every dollar goes to production so more weirdos can find their people.You can purchase Find Your Freaks merchandise online through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextTonya talks with Stacey Morgan, an Army spouse of 25 years, mom of four, speaker, and author of The Astronaut’s Wife. Stacey shares how launching her husband into space reshaped the way she approaches fear, leadership, and going first. Together, they explore what it means to build connection and lead with courage in communities shaped by constant change.

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    018 – Small Circle, Big Impact with Gwen Bortner

    Why shared values matter more than size when building real communitySome freaks build massive platforms.Stages.Email lists.Follower counts.And then there are the freaks who build quietly — curating small circles rooted in shared values, deep trust, and sustainable connection.In this episode of Find Your Freaks, Tonya Kubo sits down with business strategist and operations expert Gwen Bortner to explore what community looks like when you opt out of hype, funnels, and “bigger is better” messaging — and choose intentional depth instead.Gwen has spent over four decades building businesses, forming networks, and supporting women entrepreneurs. And while she doesn’t run a massive membership or chase viral growth, she has cultivated something many people secretly crave: meaningful, values-driven connection that sustains itself.Together, Tonya and Gwen unpack what makes a community truly work, why shared values matter more than shared industries, and how defining success on your own terms changes everything.If you’ve ever felt pressure to scale bigger when what you really want is deeper — this conversation offers a grounded, confident alternative.Episode Highlights[04:15] Why being “smart” doesn’t mean being smart at everything[11:30] How shared values create stronger connection than shared revenue levels[18:40] Why curated small groups bond faster than large memberships[24:10] The confidence required to build “small on purpose”[31:55] Why sustainable success matters more than being the best[39:20] What happens when communities connect independently of the leader[46:05] How to ask better questions than “What do you do?”[52:30] One simple shift to help you find your people offlineWhen Smaller Becomes StrongerGwen challenges the assumption that community must be massive to matter.Her approach is simple but powerful: curate small groups around shared values — not shared industries, revenue levels, or status.In her quarterly planning retreats, women from wildly different business models and financial stages gather. What binds them isn’t similarity in structure — it’s alignment in values. Creativity. Kindness. Integrity. A desire to leave the world better than they found it.The result? A community that sustains itself — even outside the container Gwen creates.Private chats flourish. Partnerships form. Support extends beyond the structured event.Not because it’s engineered.Because it’s aligned.Success Defined by YouOne of the most liberating themes in this episode is Gwen’s clarity around success.She doesn’t chase being the biggest.She doesn’t need to be the best.She doesn’t measure her worth by follower counts.Instead, she focuses on being consistently good — and building a business she can sustain without burnout.In a world obsessed with scaling up, Gwen reminds us that confidence comes from knowing your own definition of success — and refusing to borrow someone else’s metrics.The Power of Values in ConnectionPerhaps the most practical takeaway from this conversation is this:If you want to find your people, stop asking what they do.Ask what they love about what they do.That one question reveals values. And values are the fastest way to determine alignment.Community doesn’t form around résumés.It forms around meaning.Meet Our GuestGwen Bortner is a business strategist, operations expert, and trusted advisor with more than 40 years of experience across multiple industries. She helps women entrepreneurs define what they truly want and build sustainable businesses that reflect it — without chasing trends or sacrificing themselves in the process.You can learn more at EverydayEffectiveness.com and listen to her co-hosted podcast, The Business You Really Want.Meet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist and marketing consultant known for building digital spaces that feel like chosen family. As host of Find Your Freaks, she brings together unconventional thinkers who know “normal” was never the point — and who believe that belonging is built through honesty and human connection.Key Quotes“Shared values matter more than shared industries.” — Gwen Bortner“You don’t have to be the best to be consistently good.” — Gwen Bortner“If it isn’t sustainable, it isn’t success.” — Gwen Bortner“Confidence builds on itself.” — Gwen Bortner“Ask people what they love about what they do — that’s where the real connection starts.” — Gwen BortnerResources & MentionsEveryday EffectivenessThe Business You Really Want PodcastNever Split the Difference by Chris VossSupport the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, consider buying us a coffee to keep the show ad-free. Every dollar supports production so more weirdos can find their people.Find Your Freaks merchandise is available through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextSmall circles matter. But what makes them sustainable? In the next episode, Tonya explores the hidden structural flaw inside most communities, why designing everything around the leader creates fragility, and what it takes to build belonging that can thrive long after one person steps back.

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    017 – More than Participation, Belonging is Permission to Matter

    Why activity isn’t the same thing as impact—and why belonging begins where responsibility starts.Belonging doesn’t come from being visible.It comes from knowing that if you weren’t there, something real would be missing.In this solo episode, Tonya Kubo reflects on a moment from her conversation with Jeff Yoshimi that wouldn’t let her go: people stay engaged when their effort actually changes something.From that insight, Tonya unpacks a distinction many communities get wrong—the difference between participation and contribution. Liking posts, showing up to meetings, and staying active can create the appearance of belonging without ever creating real agency. And when communities confuse visibility for value, people drift—not because they don’t care, but because nothing they do seems to matter.This episode explores why participation is safe and scalable, why contribution is risky and uneven, and why belonging forms not through sameness, but through shared responsibility. Tonya also speaks directly to community builders and leaders, examining what it ethically demands to steward spaces—especially when you’re managing communities you’re not personally part of.If you’ve ever felt invisible in a crowded room, burned out in a highly “engaged” space, or frustrated that your efforts never seem to change the outcome, this episode names what’s really happening—and why it’s not a personal failure.You’ll hear how:Participation measures presence, but contribution changes systemsVisibility can be mistaken for value—and why that erodes belongingPeople disengage when effort has no consequenceBelonging forms through trust, not inclusion aloneUneven impact makes contribution emotionally riskyCommunities fail when they protect comfort instead of meaningEthical community stewardship centers member agency over controlBelonging doesn’t require sameness—it requires responsibilityTimestamp Highlights0:00 – 4:30 Why engagement doesn’t equal belonging4:31 – 9:10 The insight from gaming that reframed everything9:11 – 14:45 Participation vs. contribution—and why we confuse them14:46 – 19:30 Why people drift when nothing they do matters19:31 – 25:20 The emotional risk of uneven impact25:21 – 31:40 Designing communities where effort has consequence31:41 – 38:10 Stewardship, power, and managing communities you’re not part of38:11 – 43:50 Protecting pathways for agency instead of comfort43:51 – 48:30 Why belonging is responsibility—not samenessResources & MentionsEpisode 16 - Gaming Cancer: Belonging Beyond the Boundaries with Jeff YoshimiGaming Cancer: How Building and Playing Video Games Can Accelerate Scientific Discovery by Jeff YoshimiUniversity of California, MercedMeet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist, marketing consultant, and rebel with a cause: helping people find the place where they truly belong. For nearly two decades, she’s built online spaces that feel less like comment sections and more like chosen family. She’s the fixer you call when your Facebook group has gone straight-up Lord of the Flies and the bouncer at the door of internet nonsense. As the host of Find Your Freaks, Tonya brings together unconventional thinkers and bridge-builders who know “normal” was never the point. Her favorite spaces? The ones where the freak flags fly high.Support the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, help us keep it ad-free by buying us a coffee (or two!). Every dollar goes to production so more weirdos can find their people.You can purchase Find Your Freaks merchandise online through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextTonya talks with Gwen Bortner, a business strategist and longtime collaborator, about creating connection outside the usual community models. No platforms, no funnels—just small, intentional relationships and what it looks like to build belonging off the grid.

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    016 – Gaming Cancer: Belonging Beyond the Boundaries with Jeff Yoshimi

    How play, science, and grief come together to create unexpected communitySome freaks show up in obvious places.Labs. Universities. Gaming consoles.And then there are the freaks who live at the intersections — where research meets play, grief meets creativity, and community forms in unexpected ways.In this episode of Find Your Freaks, Tonya Kubo sits down with philosopher, cognitive scientist, and systems thinker Jeff Yoshimi, a professor at University of California, Merced, to explore how video games and citizen science can do more than entertain — they can save lives.Jeff’s book Gaming Cancer was born out of personal loss, professional curiosity, and a refusal to accept helplessness as the final answer. After cancer touched his family in devastating ways, Jeff began asking a radical question:What if everyday people — gamers, designers, artists, marketers — could meaningfully contribute to cancer research without needing a lab coat?Together, Tonya and Jeff explore how games tap into our deep wiring as problem-solving creatures, why motivation works differently when the challenge is the reward, and how belonging can form when people from wildly different worlds come together around a shared mission.If you’ve ever felt powerless in the face of a massive problem — or wondered whether your skills could actually matter — this conversation offers a hopeful, grounded, and deeply human reframe.Episode Highlights[05:40] Why humans are wired to solve problems — and how games activate that instinct[10:55] How game design creates intrinsic motivation (and why homework can’t compete)[16:30] The moment Gaming Cancer was born during a sleepless night at Stanford[22:45] Citizen science explained: how everyday players can contribute to real research[28:10] How the RNA-design game Eterna helped advance vaccine research[35:20] Why designers and marketers are essential to scientific progress[41:50] What happens when grief, play, and purpose exist in the same space[49:05] Why trying something — even without guaranteed success — still matters[55:40] What to do if you want to help but don’t know where to startWhen Games Become a Way to Fight CancerJeff explains that games aren’t just distractions — they’re beautifully engineered systems that reward curiosity, persistence, and creative problem-solving.When scientific challenges are embedded into game mechanics, players can unknowingly contribute to real discoveries simply by doing what humans do best: trying to solve the puzzle in front of them.One powerful example comes from Eterna, a game where players helped design RNA molecules — contributions that played a role in developing coronavirus vaccines stable at room temperature. That’s not hypothetical impact. That’s real science shaped by collective effort.From Helplessness to ActionCancer often leaves people searching for something they can do.Fundraising. Awareness. Advocacy. Prevention.Jeff suggests a fifth path: contribution through skill.Artists can design.Marketers can attract players.Developers can build systems.Gamers can play — and solve.Instead of asking people to leave their talents behind, citizen-science games invite them to bring all of who they are into the fight.Why Trying Still Matters (Even Without Guarantees)One of the most grounding truths in this conversation is simple:You don’t need certainty to justify action.Jeff is clear — most scientific progress is incremental. But reframing problems through games can spark new perspectives, increase scientific literacy, and sometimes unlock breakthroughs no one could have predicted.At the very least, everyone involved learns more. And sometimes, that’s how progress begins.Meet Our GuestJeff Yoshimi is a philosopher, cognitive scientist, and professor at the University of California, Merced. His work spans neural networks, visualization, and systems thinking. After cancer deeply impacted his family, Jeff wrote Gaming Cancer to explore how games, citizen science, and collective intelligence can accelerate research and restore a sense of agency in the face of overwhelming problems.Meet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist and marketing consultant known for building digital spaces that feel like chosen family. As host of Find Your Freaks, she brings together unconventional thinkers who know “normal” was never the point — and who believe that belonging is built through honesty and human connection.Key Quotes“We are problem-solving creatures — games tap directly into that instinct.” — Jeff Yoshimi“You don’t have to be a scientist to contribute to science.” — Jeff Yoshimi“Even if it doesn’t lead directly to a cure, learning more is never wasted.” — Jeff Yoshimi“Belonging can happen when very different worlds collide around a shared purpose.” — Tonya KuboResources & MentionsGaming Cancer — Jeff YoshimiEterna — RNA-design citizen science gameZooniverse — Citizen science platformiNaturalist — Community-powered biodiversity trackingSupport the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, consider buying us a coffee to keep the show ad-free. Every dollar supports production so more weirdos can find their people.Find Your Freaks merchandise is available through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextSome freaks play for fun. Others play to change the world. In this episode, Tonya explores how belonging deepens when people are invited to matter, not just participate, and what becomes possible when effort actually changes something.

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    015 – Holding It Together Is Not the Same as Having It Together

    Why looking “fine” can be the loneliest place to be.Some of the freakiest people you’ll ever meet don’t stand out at all.They blend in. They’re competent, reliable, polished. The ones everyone depends on.And quietly, they’re barely holding it together.In this solo follow-up episode, Tonya Kubo reflects on her recent conversation with Rachel Alexandria to explore the hidden cost of being the strong friend, the capable leader, the one who never seems to need help.This episode is for the high performers who carry what Rachel calls “secret messes”—the overwhelm, anxiety, and emotional labor hidden behind competence and credibility. Tonya unpacks the difference between having it together and holding it together, why competence often becomes armor, and how looking fine can train people not to check on you.If you’ve ever been praised for being “so put together” while quietly falling apart, this one is for you.You’ll hear how:Holding it together often looks exactly like having it together—until it doesn’tCompetence can become a coping mechanism, not a sign of stabilityHigh performers are often invisible inside their own excellenceHyper-responsibility is learned early and rewarded later (at a cost)The strong friend rarely asks for help—and why that’s not a character flawYou don’t have to collapse to deserve careMaking yourself easy to say no to can help others feel safe saying yesOne honest sentence can open the door to real supportTimestamp Highlights0:00 – 3:10 Holding it together vs. actually being okay3:11 – 6:45 The curse of competence and hiding in plain sight6:46 – 10:30 Why the “responsible one” rarely gets checked on10:31 – 14:50 Competence as armor, not stability14:51 – 19:20 Hyper-responsibility and growing up in emotional chaos19:21 – 23:40 Why strong friends wait for someone to notice (and why it rarely happens)23:41 – 27:30 “I need help” even when you don’t know what that help is27:31 – 32:10 Being easy to say no to as a path to real connection32:11 – 36:45 Gentle check-ins vs. pressure, pity, and forced intimacy36:46 – 41:00 You don’t have to fall apart to deserve support41:01 – 45:30 A simple practice for strong friends—and for the people who love themResources & MentionsEpisode 14: The Freaks Who Look Fine with Rachel AlexandriaLonely at the Top — Rachel’s podcastRachelAlexandria.comMeet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist, marketing consultant, and rebel with a cause: helping people find the place where they truly belong. For nearly two decades, she’s built online spaces that feel less like comment sections and more like chosen family. She’s the fixer you call when your Facebook group has gone straight-up Lord of the Flies and the bouncer at the door of internet nonsense. As the host of Find Your Freaks, Tonya brings together unconventional thinkers and bridge-builders who know “normal” was never the point. Her favorite spaces? The ones where the freak flags fly high.Support the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, help us keep it ad-free by buying us a coffee (or two!). Every dollar goes to production so more weirdos can find their people.You can purchase Find Your Freaks merchandise online through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextTonya talks with Jeff Yoshimi, a professor at University of California, Merced whose work spans philosophy, cognitive science, and neural networks. His book, Gaming Cancer, invites us to ask what becomes possible when we stop compartmentalizing who we are and let our whole selves lead the way.

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    014 – The Freaks Who Look Fine with Rachel Alexandria

    Why high performers can be the loneliest people in the room.Some freaks are easy to spot.Dyed hair. Tattoos. Bold opinions. Loud joy.And then there are the freaks who look fine.In this episode of Find Your Freaks, Tonya Kubo sits down with former psychotherapist turned soul medic Rachel Alexandria to talk about the hidden loneliness of high performers — the people who appear successful, capable, and unshakeable… while quietly unraveling inside.Rachel works with executives, founders, and leaders who carry immense responsibility while suppressing their own humanity. Together, Tonya and Rachel explore why competence can become a mask, how perfectionism and people-pleasing are often survival strategies, and why asking for help feels so dangerous when everyone assumes you’re “the strong one.”If you’ve ever felt invisible because you seem too capable to worry about — or if you love someone who looks like they have it all together — this conversation will help you see what’s really going on beneath the polish.Episode Highlights[04:15] Why high performers are often the most isolated people in the room[08:42] The difference between having it together and holding it together[13:30] How family dynamics and gaslighting disconnect us from our inner knowing[18:55] Burnout, perfectionism, and people-pleasing as survival skills[25:10] How perimenopause, ADHD, and long COVID complicate high achievement[31:40] Why leaders can’t afford to “fall apart” — and what they do instead[38:22] The hidden cost of excellence: “Other things suffered.”[45:05] Why asking for help feels so inconvenient — and so necessary[52:10] How to be a safe person for someone who looks like they don’t need help[58:30] What to do if you’re the one silently strugglingWhy High Achievement Can Be So LonelyRachel explains that many high performers learned early that competence equals safety.Being capable, polished, and self-sufficient became a way to survive — not a sign that they don’t need support.When everyone assumes you’re fine, your pain goes unseen.And when vulnerability feels risky, loneliness becomes the price of success.The Cost of Excellence“There is no gaining of a high level of skill or success without loss.”In this episode, Tonya and Rachel unpack the uncomfortable truth that achievement always comes with tradeoffs — time, relationships, rest, or health. Burnout often happens when we try to pretend those costs don’t exist.Slowing down, grieving what’s been lost, and choosing what matters most isn’t weakness.It’s wisdom.Asking for Help Without Knowing What It Looks LikeOne of the most powerful moments in the conversation centers on this truth:You don’t need to know how someone will help — only that you need help.Rachel shares why trying to solve everything alone eventually stops working, and how naming “I don’t know what I need, but I can’t do this alone anymore” can open the door to real healing.How to Support the People Who “Look Fine”If you’re worried about someone who always seems okay, Rachel offers simple, human ways to show up:Initiate connection without analysisSend a “you’ve been on my mind” textOffer practical care (meals, errands, presence)Make it easy for them to say no — so yes feels safer laterCompassion doesn’t require fixing.It requires noticing.Meet Our GuestRachel Alexandria is a former psychotherapist turned soul medic who helps high performers clean up their “secret messes” — anxiety, perfectionism, burnout, and loneliness hidden beneath competence. She is the host of the podcast Lonely at the Top and the author of three books exploring conversation, criticism, and stress relief.Meet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist and marketing consultant known for building digital spaces that feel like chosen family. As host of Find Your Freaks, she brings together unconventional thinkers who know “normal” was never the point — and who believe that belonging is built through honesty and human connection.Key Quotes“Some of the loneliest people are the ones everyone thinks are fine.” — Rachel Alexandria“There is no gaining success without loss. Other things always suffer.” — Rachel Alexandria“What got you here can’t get you to the next place.” — Rachel Alexandria“You don’t have to know what help looks like to ask for it.” — Rachel AlexandriaResources & MentionsLonely at the Top — Rachel’s podcastRachelAlexandria.comJennifer Arezio — spiritual teacher and mentor mentioned in the episodeSupport the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, consider buying us a coffee to keep the show ad-free. Every dollar supports production so more weirdos can find their people.Find Your Freaks merchandise is available through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextSome freaks stand out. Others blend in so well they disappear. Next episode, Tonya explores what it means to be seen when your freakiness is hidden — and why looking fine doesn’t mean you don’t deserve care, community, and connection.

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    013 – Making Space for Craft in a Convenience Culture

    Everyone is in a rush to publish, to launch, to ship – to get something, anything, out into the world as fast as possible. But what if slowing down isn’t a liability? What if it’s actually your superpower?In this solo episode, Tonya reflects on her conversation with book coach and ghostwriter Candice L. Davis to explore why craft matters now more than ever. In a world where AI churns out endless content and “quantity over quality” has become the norm, choosing depth is its own quiet act of rebellion. This one’s for the writers, creators, builders, and beginners. Anyone trying to make meaningful work in a frantic world.Tonya breaks down how thoughtful craft becomes an expression of care, why community accelerates mastery, and how taking the long road can help your people feel seen, valued, and held.You’ll hear how:Craft is care, it’s how you show your people they matterSlowing down honors the work and the audience you’re making it forDepth beats velocity (and why rushing just adds to the noise)Community is the secret ingredient to better books, better ideas, and better outcomes“Pre-published” is still a real identity, you don’t have to wait to belongAI can speed things up, but it can’t give you context, nuance, or discernmentCreating in public helps you refine the work while finding your perfect peopleYour pace and process might be your greatest rebellion in a culture obsessed with speedTimestamp Highlights2:38 – 5:22 The myth of the “Stephen King cabin fantasy”11:56 – 15:02 Deadlines, urgency, and the fear of “running out of time”18:21 – 21:12 A-plus vs. C-minus work: knowing what deserves your depth24:41 – 28:30 Craft as hospitality (Mary’s studio) vs. craft as language (Candice’s work)28:31 – 32:05 Owning your identity before you feel “ready”32:06 – 35:30 Why beginners need community more than information38:51 – 42:33 Creating in public without rushing the processResources & MentionsEpisode 12: Writing for Belonging, Not Algorithms with Candice L. DavisNothing But the Words — Candice’s podcastCandiceLDavis.comEpisode 10: Visibility Isn't Vanity with Mary WilliamsMeet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist, marketing consultant, and rebel with a cause: helping people find the place where they truly belong. For nearly two decades, she’s built online spaces that feel less like comment sections and more like chosen family. She’s the fixer you call when your Facebook group has gone straight-up Lord of the Flies and the bouncer at the door of internet nonsense. As the host of Find Your Freaks, Tonya brings together unconventional thinkers and bridge-builders who know “normal” was never the point. Her favorite spaces? The ones where the freak flags fly high.Support the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, help us keep it ad-free by buying us a coffee (or two!). Every dollar goes to production so more weirdos can find their people.You can purchase Find Your Freaks merchandise online through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast Hub

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    012 – Writing for Belonging, Not Algorithms with Candice L. Davis

    Why thoughtful, human writing still matters in an AI-obsessed worldMost people dream of writing a book — fewer are willing to sit with the depth, discomfort, and time it truly requires. In this episode, Tonya Kubo and award-winning book coach Candice L. Davis unpack the cultural obsession with rushing: rushing to publish, rushing to create, rushing to get something “out there” before it’s ready.Together, they explore what’s lost when we try to shortcut the writing process — context, originality, and the true human connection readers crave. Candice shares why literary excellence still matters, how AI can support (but never replace) deep thinking, and why thoughtful books can’t be manufactured on demand.If you’ve ever felt “behind,” ashamed of your pace, or tempted to publish before you’re ready, this conversation is the permission slip you didn’t know you needed.Episode Highlights[02:10] Why rushing books has always been a problem — long before AI[06:25] What we lose when speed replaces substance[10:40] Why so many “books” are really blog posts in disguise[14:55] Where AI genuinely helps — and where it undermines authorship[20:12] The myth of the urgent publishing deadline[26:48] How writing communities fuel courage and creativity[31:30] Letting go of artificial timelines so real work can begin[44:22] How to know if your writing community is actually helping[50:40] A message for anyone ashamed of their unfinished bookWhy Slowing Down Creates Better BooksCandice explains that thoughtful writing isn’t elitist — it’s generous.When we slow down long enough to think, question, revise, and refine, we create work that offers readers context, clarity, and true value.Speed produces noise. Depth produces belonging.When AI Supports — and When It DerailsAI can assist with accessibility, workflow, and structure, but it cannot replace your ideas.Using AI to think for you leads to derivative, recycled copy.Using AI to support your thinking leads to clarity.The difference is integrity.How Community Ignites CreativityWriting isn’t meant to be solitary.Candice and Tonya discuss how co-writing, workshops, and writing circles keep writers grounded, encouraged, and accountable — something no algorithm can provide.Meet Our GuestCandice L. Davis is an award-winning writer and book coach who helps experts move past surface-level content to uncover their deepest, most meaningful ideas. Through private coaching, writer cohorts, and her podcast Nothing But the Words, she guides authors toward creating books with clarity, craft, and lasting impact.Meet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist and marketing consultant known for building digital spaces that feel like chosen family. As host of Find Your Freaks, she brings together unconventional thinkers who know “normal” was never the point — and who believe that belonging is built through honesty and human connection.Key Quotes“Some ideas are bigger than a blog post. That’s why we have books.” — Candice L. Davis“If AI is doing the thinking for you, it’s pulling from other people’s ideas.” — Candice L. Davis“Your depth is your power. And you have more time than you think.” — Tonya Kubo“Once your book is out there, it represents you forever.” — Candice L. DavisResources & MentionsNothing But the Words — Candice’s podcastCandiceLDavis.comSupport the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, consider buying us a coffee to keep the show ad-free. Every dollar supports production so more weirdos can find their people.Find Your Freaks merchandise is available through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextEveryone’s in a rush to publish, launch, and “ship it,” but rushing doesn’t create belonging — it creates noise. Next episode, Tonya explores why slowing down isn't a weakness. It’s craft. And craft is care.

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    011 – Show Up Like You Mean It

    Why showing up isn’t about ego, it's about belonging.You might think being visible means being vain — that wanting to be seen, heard, or recognized is somehow selfish. But what if visibility isn’t about attention at all? What if it’s the key to helping your people find you?In this solo episode, Tonya reflects on her conversation with her biz bestie and creative collaborator Mary Williams of Sensible Woo (010 - Visibility Isn’t Vanity) to explore what visibility, craft, and focus really mean in a noisy world.This one’s for the creators, community builders, and quiet leaders who want to show up with heart — not hustle.You’ll hear how:Visibility connects us to belonging (and why it’s not the same as fame)Craft isn’t about polish. It’s about care and respectFocus will always beat frenzy in a distracted, omni-channel worldAuthentic consistency builds more trust than constant postingYou can’t foster community if you’re hiding from itTimestamp Highlights0:00 – 2:30 What “visibility” actually means (and why it’s not vanity)7:07 – 9:30 The difference between wanting to be seen and wanting fame9:31 – 14:13 Craft as community care. How intention shows respect14:14 – 16:32 Why people leave communities when they don’t feel valued16:33 – 21:12 Focus over frenzy — you don’t need to be everywhere to make an impact21:13 – 23:35 Social media myths and the truth about “omni-channel” burnout23:36 – 28:26 Showing up with depth and consistency = belonging28:27 – 30:00 Final takeaway: your freaks can’t find you if you’re hidingResources & MentionsEpisode 10: Visibility Isn’t Vanity with Mary WilliamsSensibleWoo.comSasquatch Media Grounds — Mary’s full-service production studioSchool of Moxie PodcastMary on InstagramMary on LinkedInMeet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist, marketing consultant, and rebel with a cause: helping people find the place where they truly belong. For nearly two decades, she’s built online spaces that feel less like comment sections and more like chosen family. She’s the fixer you call when your Facebook group has gone straight-up Lord of the Flies and the bouncer at the door of internet nonsense. As the host of Find Your Freaks, Tonya brings together unconventional thinkers and bridge-builders who know “normal” was never the point. Her favorite spaces? The ones where the freak flags fly high.Support the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, help us keep it ad-free by buying us a coffee (or two!). Every dollar goes to production so more weirdos can find their people.You can purchase Find Your Freaks merchandise online through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextTonya and book coach Candice L. Davis, host of Nothing but the Words, explore how writing communities make better books — and better humans.

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    010 - Visibility Isn’t Vanity with Mary Williams

    Most of us want to be noticed. Fewer of us are willing to admit it. In this candid conversation, Tonya Kubo and content strategist Mary Williams dismantle the shame surrounding visibility and ambition in the online business world. Together, they explore what it really takes to be seen for the right reasons and why “wanting to be famous” doesn’t make you fake.Mary argues that craftsmanship, consistency, and a willingness to show up before anyone’s watching are what separate performative influencers from true professionals. From burnout-era marketing myths to the power of in-person community, this episode pulls no punches about what visibility costs — and what it’s worth when you claim it on your own terms.Episode Highlights[03:55] Why so many entrepreneurs secretly want fame but won’t admit it[09:55] Why you should think like you’re going to be famous (even if you’re not)[11:32] Craftsmanship as the real key to sustainable visibility[19:18] Showing up at “eleventy billion percent” when nobody’s watching[23:13] Finding your freaks in person — and why it matters[29:00] The mechanics of genuine human connection[40:37] How acting classes can make you a better marketerSay the Quiet Thing Out LoudWhen Mary Williams says, “Just admit you want to be famous,” she’s not talking about vanity. She’s talking about honesty.At a time when performance seems rewarded over depth, she challenges entrepreneurs to own their ambitions without shame. Because wanting to be seen doesn’t make you shallow. It makes you human.Craft Over CloutMary reminds us that visibility built on imitation crumbles fast. Craftsmanship — the art of making something meaningful even when no one’s watching — is the foundation of lasting recognition. Fame fades. Skill doesn’t.Human First, Marketer SecondFrom Portland’s Feral Book Club to the PechaKucha-inspired community she co-hosts, Mary shows how in-person connection reignites creativity and keeps our online personas grounded in real humanity. Her mantra? “If you don’t human enough in the real world, it shows.”Meet Our GuestMary Williams is the founder of Sensible Woo and owner of Sasquatch Media Grounds, a full-service production studio in Vancouver, Washington. A former Hollywood professional turned systems coach, she blends storytelling, structure, and soul to help solopreneurs make media that matters. Mary is also the host of the School of Moxie podcast and a leader in several creative Portland communities, including Feral Book Club and Hustle Hard, Slide Faster.Meet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist, marketing consultant, and rebel with a cause: helping people find the place where they truly belong. For nearly two decades, she’s built online spaces that feel less like comment sections and more like chosen family. She’s the fixer you call when your Facebook group has gone straight-up Lord of the Flies and the bouncer at the door of internet nonsense. As the host of Find Your Freaks, Tonya brings together unconventional thinkers and bridge-builders who know “normal” was never the point. Her favorite spaces? The ones where the freak flags fly high.Key Quotes“Say the quiet thing out loud — you want to be famous. And that’s okay.” — Mary Williams“Visibility isn’t vanity. It’s the courage to be seen for who you actually are.” — Tonya Kubo“If you don’t human enough in the real world, it shows.” — Mary Williams“Fame fades. Craftsmanship lasts.” — Mary WilliamsResources & MentionsSensibleWoo.comSasquatch Media Grounds — Mary’s full-service production studioSchool of Moxie  PodcastMary on InstagramMary on LinkedInSupport the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, help us keep it ad-free by buying us a coffee (or two!). Every dollar goes to production so more weirdos can find their people.You can purchase Find Your Freaks merchandise online through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextMary’s episode asks us to confront the real motives behind our desire to be seen. In the next episode, Tonya unpacks why craftsmanship and connection—not perfection—are the only sustainable routes to authentic visibility in a fame-driven world.

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    009 – Different Families, Same Fight

    Why our differences matter less than we think — and curiosity might be the cure.You can look at someone’s family, politics, or religion and think it’s nothing like yours. But underneath, most of us are fighting for the same things: safety, belonging, and a shot at raising the next generation, or at least leaving the world a little better than we found it.In solo episode, Tonya unpacks her conversation with parenting coach Jen Gerardy (Episode 8: Becoming Who You Were Waiting For) to explore how labels, scripts, and moral judgments keep us divided when shared humanity could bring us together. This one’s for anyone who’s ever wondered if belonging is possible across differences. Spoiler: it is, if you lead with curiosity instead of judgment.You’ll hear how:Parenting “off script” can teach us to question inherited beliefsCuriosity opens doors that judgment shutsShared goals connect families with very different valuesChosen family models belonging in actionMost of us are fighting the same fight, just from different anglesTimestamp Highlights0:48 – 2:23 The surface differences that distract us from shared humanity6:23 – 9:13 Parenting “off script” and redefining what works for your family9:14 – 11:12 Political, faith, and cultural scripts we inherit — and how to rewrite them (if you want to)11:13 – 13:57 Chosen family as a model of community care15:42 – 20:50 Labels, dehumanization, and curiosity as a leadership skill20:51 – 23:28 Compassion across difference: seeing the same fight in others29:03 – 31:42 The heart of it all: different families, same fightResources & MentionsEpisode 8: Becoming Who You Were Waiting For with Jen GerardyEpisode 5: Whose Suffering Counts?MomCo (formerly MOPS) – a ministry supporting mothers of young childrenMeet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist, marketing consultant, and rebel with a cause: helping people find the place where they truly belong. For nearly two decades, she’s built online spaces that feel less like comment sections and more like chosen family. She’s the fixer you call when your Facebook group has gone straight-up Lord of the Flies and the bouncer at the door of internet nonsense. As the host of Find Your Freaks, Tonya brings together unconventional thinkers and bridge-builders who know “normal” was never the point. Her favorite spaces? The ones where the freak flags fly high.Support the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, help us keep it ad-free by buying us a coffee (or two!). Every dollar goes to production so more weirdos can find their people.You can purchase Find Your Freaks merchandise online through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextTonya and her biz bestie, Mary Williams of Sasquatch Media Grounds, discuss the quest for fame among creators and how it might not be such a bad thing.

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    008 - Becoming Who You Were Waiting For with Jen Gerardy

    What happens when your family doesn’t fit the template; and you stop trying to force it? In this candid conversation, holistic family consultant Jen Gerardy joins Tonya to talk about parenting as a queer, non-monogamous, neurodivergent-embracing human — and why the goal isn’t to “fix” yourself or your kids, but to design relationships that work for the people who live inside them. We unpack best practices for talking to kids about adult relationships, the difference between cheating and ethical non-monogamy, and the relief that comes when you refuse to pathologize who you are. If you’ve ever felt like you had to hide parts of yourself to be welcomed in a parenting space, this one’s a deep breath.Episode Highlights[00:00] “Who are your freaks?” — Jen’s people and why questioning norms can make you a better parent[07:08] Judgment, protection, and why compassion (even for the judgy folks) matters[11:16] Coming out to yourself as non-monogamous while parenting: what changed (and what didn’t)[17:06] Best practices 101: secrets vs. surprises, introducing partners, and centering child wellbeing[25:28] Rethinking “the village”: expanding who cares for a child beyond narrow roles[29:13] Stop pathologizing people: challenges ≠ you being the problem[31:29] The line to remember: “If the world isn’t set up for you, you’ll face more challenges — and you’re still not the problem”Leading with Curiosity (Not Compliance)Ditch the scripts. Much of our parenting comes from inherited rules that don’t fit our families. Jen invites us to swap “what should I do?” for “what helps everyone thrive here?” That shift — from compliance to curiosity — changes everything.Secrets are never child-sized. If your structure asks a child to keep a secret about an adult relationship, that’s a red flag. Jen’s rule: surprises are fine; secrets aren’t developmentally appropriate.Design for real people. Whether you’re monogamous or not, widen your idea of “the village.” Ask: which trusted adults help this child feel loved, safe, and supported — and how can we make that care intentional?Building Belonging for Poly Parents (Why It’s Different and Needed)Ethically non-monogamous (ENM) or polyamorous parents often have to censor core parts of their identity to access mainstream parenting spaces. Jen’s community flips that: no pathologizing, no moral litmus tests. Just child-centered, consent-based support.Psychological safety first. Clear norms (curiosity over judgment, “secrets vs. surprises,” no advice-dumping) create room to be fully seen without bracing for backlash.Privacy without hiding. Parents can be out about structure inside the group while choosing their comfort level outside it. No asking kids to carry adult secrets.Designed for real life. Twice-monthly Zooms welcome “life-in-progress” (headphones while making dinner, cameras off, kids nearby) so participation is actually doable.Best-practice scaffolding. Gentle guidance on introducing partners, language for kids, and school/admin logistics centers child wellbeing and consent.Expanded village. The community normalizes broader caregiving constellations (aunts, partners, close friends) and helps families design intentional roles and boundaries.The result: fewer shame spirals, more resourced parents, and kids who grow up with clear language, consistent care, and a community that fits the family they actually have.Meet Our GuestJen Gerardy is a holistic family consultant who helps queer, non-monogamous, and neurodiverse families build joyful, connected relationships without shame and without erasing any part of who they are. She leads an online community for ENM/poly parents, offers coaching and workshops, and creates practical resources that center compassion, consent, and child wellbeing.Meet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist, marketing consultant, and rebel with a cause: helping people find the place where they truly belong. For nearly two decades, she’s built online spaces that feel less like comment sections and more like chosen family. She’s the fixer you call when your Facebook group has gone straight-up Lord of the Flies and the bouncer at the door of internet nonsense. As the host of Find Your Freaks, Tonya brings together unconventional thinkers and bridge-builders who know “normal” was never the point. Her favorite spaces? The ones where the freak flags fly high.Key Quotes“If the world isn’t set up for you, you’ll face more challenges—and it’s not because you’re the problem.” — Jen Gerardy“Cheating and ethical non-monogamy are not the same thing. Consent is the difference.” — Jen Gerardy“Secrets aren’t developmentally appropriate for children. Surprises are fine. Secrets are not.” — Jen Gerardy“Design the family you have. Not the one a book imagined.” — Tonya KuboLinks & MentionsJen Gerardy — Holistic Family Consultant (coaching, groups, resources)Free Workbook: Getting Your Needs Met (mentioned at ~43:16)Humane Marketing by Sarah Santacroce — a kinder way to do business (Jen’s shout-out)Polyamory Parenting 101 — YouTube video series with Jen and psychologist Dr. David PasCale HagueIf any link is missing, ping us and we’ll connect you directly with Jen.Let’s Stay Freaky👥 Facebook Group: https://tonya.link/group💼 LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/tonyakubo📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tonyakubo/🌐 Website: https://findyourfreaks.comSupport the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, help us keep it ad-free by buying us a coffee (or two!). Every dollar goes to production so more weirdos can find their people.You can purchase Find Your Freaks merchandise online through Abilities and Attitudes.What’s NextJoin Tonya next time to unpack how to apply this episode to your own life and the spaces you lead.

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    007 - If You’ve Lived It, You’re Ready

    Why your lived experience is the most important credential you’ll ever need.Movements rarely begin with experts or institutions. They begin with ordinary people who decide that “enough is enough.” In this episode, Tonya explores how lived experience — not degrees, titles, or training — qualifies you to take the next right step toward change.You’ll hear how everyday advocacy can look like:Naming harm and creating safety for your peopleTurning personal heartbreak into community actionChallenging the “I’m just a…” mythWhy Nikki James Zellner’s story (Episode 6) proves you don’t need to be an expert to make an impactTonya’s own lived experiences with neurodivergence, clutter, and motherhood (and how they shaped her advocacy)Advocacy isn’t about doing it all forever. It’s about starting. And if you’ve lived it, you’re ready.Timestamp Highlights0:00 – 1:23 Movements start with lived experience, not credentials.1:24 – 6:00 Busting the “I’m just a…” myth.6:01 – 12:30 Nikki James Zellner’s daycare safety advocacy story.12:31 – 17:40 Lived experience as a qualifier for leadership.17:41 – 23:00 Why solutions must come from the people living the problem.23:01 – 27:01 The cost of advocacy and setting healthy boundaries.27:02 – 27:20 Final takeaway: If you’ve lived it, you’re ready.Resources & MentionsEpisode 6: Not on My Watch with Nikki James ZellnerThe Watchdog Way (coming 2026)CO Safe SchoolsMeet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist and fractional CMO/COO who helps founders and organizations turn connection into a competitive advantage. She’s the host of Find Your Freaks, a podcast about belonging and building spaces where people can show up as they really are, and co-host of The Business You Really Want with Gwen Bortner. Tonya believes what makes you weird makes you wonderful—and that normal was never the point.Support the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, help us keep it ad-free by buying us a coffee (or two!). Every dollar goes to production so more weirdos can find their people.You can purchase Find Your Freaks merchandise online through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast Hub

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    006 - Not on My Watch with Nikki James Zellner

    What if the thing that shakes your world isn’t an abstract issue or a headline, but something that happens to your kids? That was the case for brand strategist and creative advisor Nikki James Zellner. When her children’s daycare had a carbon monoxide leak that left dozens of kids and staff poisoned, she stumbled into a safety loophole that would change the course of her life.In this episode, Nikki shares how she went from “just a mom” to a watchdog for systemic change. She explains the four “dog” archetypes of advocacy, the power of lived experience, and why the difference between visibility and impact matters more than ever. Whether you’ve ever felt too small, too unqualified, or too tired to make a difference, Nikki’s story is proof: if you’ve lived it, you’re ready.Episode Highlights[03:39] The daycare carbon monoxide leak that changed everything[07:38] From one phone call to a statewide (and national) problem[16:05] Lap dogs, guard dogs, attack dogs, and watchdogs explained[24:42] “If you’ve lived it, you’re qualified to lead it”[29:31] Visibility vs. impact at the community level[38:50] Fighting burnout and redefining wins[44:45] Output vs. outcome: measuring what you can controlLived Experience as LeadershipNikki’s story starts with an ordinary daycare drop-off that ended with fire trucks and ambulances. Her kids survived carbon monoxide poisoning, but the near-tragedy revealed a gaping loophole in state safety law. Instead of staying silent — or suing — she chose to step up. What she discovered? Lived experience isn’t a liability, it’s a credential.The Four Dogs of ChangeNot everyone who cares creates change. Nikki breaks down four archetypes: lap dogs, guard dogs, attack dogs, and watchdogs. Most of us cycle through all four at different points, but watchdogs are the ones who ask questions, gather data, and stay at the table long enough to make an impact.Impact Over CreditFrom calling governors to handing out carbon monoxide detectors, Nikki’s focus has never been on taking credit. It’s been on creating change. Along the way, she’s built resources that ripple far beyond her own story, equipping other parents and communities to lead change where they are.Meet Our GuestNikki James Zellner is a brand advisor, creative strategist, and citizen advocate who turned a near-tragedy at her children’s daycare into a movement for carbon monoxide safety. She’s the founder of The Watchdog Way and the forthcoming book of the same name (early 2026), which helps everyday people take small steps to create big change in their communities.Meet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist, marketing consultant, and rebel with a cause: helping people find the place where they truly belong. For nearly two decades, she’s built online spaces that feel less like comment sections and more like chosen family. She’s the fixer you call when your Facebook group has gone straight-up Lord of the Flies and the bouncer at the door of internet nonsense. As the host of Find Your Freaks, Tonya brings together unconventional thinkers and bridge-builders who know “normal” was never the point. Her favorite spaces? The ones where the freak flags fly high.Key Quotes“If you’ve lived it, you’re qualified to lead it.” — Nikki James Zellner“We confuse visibility with impact. The watchdog makes the change, even if nobody notices.” — Nikki James Zellner“A win doesn’t mean setting your life on fire. A win is steady, small progress.” — Nikki James Zellner“Belonging isn’t about fitting in. It’s about showing up with your story and finding your people.” — Tonya KuboLinks and MentionsThe Watchdog Way QuizGreat Work by Dr. Amanda CrowellNikki’s upcoming bookSupport the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, help us keep it ad-free by buying us a coffee (or two!). Every dollar goes to production so more weirdos can find their people.You can purchase Find Your Freaks merchandise online through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextNikki reminded us that lived experience is often the spark for change, if we’re willing to act. But it also raised a deeper question: whose experiences count, and who do we listen to when the story isn’t so easy to hear? Episode 7 explores advocacy from another angle, and why sometimes the most powerful leaders are the ones who never planned to lead at all.

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    005 – Whose Suffering Counts?

    Why Some Lives Are Grieved and Others IgnoredWhat makes one person’s suffering worthy of compassion while another’s is dismissed as deserved? In this solo episode of Find Your Freaks, host Tonya Kubo wrestles with the haunting question: Whose suffering counts?Building on her conversation with Rachel Allen in Episode 4, Tonya explores how society decides whose pain deserves acknowledgment, and whose lives are treated as disposable. From incarceration and addiction to miscarriage and clutter, she traces how secrecy, shame, and the us-vs.-them mindset shape our capacity for compassion.At the heart of the conversation is belonging: every human has the right to be seen and valued. But when we withhold grief from some lives, we shrink our own humanity in the process.Episode Highlights[03:09] The haunting question that keeps Tonya up at night[08:05] Us vs. them: How we assign compassion[14:25] Why belonging must include criminals[20:10] How society teaches us whose lives are “grievable”[24:27] Propaganda, dehumanization, and historical echoes[37:16] Serving in your lane: belonging through gifts and talents[40:23] A reminder if you’ve been told your pain doesn’t matterWhose Pain Deserves Compassion?From childhood, Tonya noticed contradictions in how adults talked about life and death: pro-life but pro-death penalty, condemn an abortion but dismiss an execution. These contradictions sharpened into a lifelong question — whose suffering counts, and why?Dehumanization Then and NowDrawing on history — from WWII propaganda to modern prison conditions — Tonya shows how entire groups are stripped of humanity so their suffering feels less urgent. Whether it’s incarcerated people, immigrants, unhoused neighbors, or people in the throes of active addiction, society quietly decides their pain doesn’t warrant compassion.But every story deserves witnesses. Every life deserves grief.Pull Quotes“Perspective is what separates compassion from condemnation.” — Tonya Kubo“Every story deserves witnesses. Every life deserves grief.” — Tonya Kubo“Community is an act of resistance against systems that say some people don’t count.” — Tonya KuboMeet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist, marketing consultant, and rebel with a cause: helping people find the place where they truly belong. For nearly two decades, she’s built online spaces that feel less like comment sections and more like chosen family. She’s the fixer you call when your Facebook group has gone straight-up Lord of the Flies and the bouncer at the door of internet nonsense. As the host of Find Your Freaks, Tonya brings together unconventional thinkers and bridge-builders who know “normal” was never the point. Her favorite spaces? The ones where the freak flags fly high.Links & MentionsEpisode 4: Belonging Behind Bars with Rachel AllenFrames of War: When Is Life Grievable? by Judith ButlerLess Than Human by David Livingstone SmithBeyond Broken podcast by Rachel AllenEngineering Consent in 1940s America: The Role of Propaganda in the Japanese-American Internment by Tonya KuboEpisode 3: Kindness First, Clutter SecondSupport the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, help us keep it ad-free by buying us a coffee (or two!). Every dollar goes to production so more weirdos can find their people.You can purchase Find Your Freaks merchandise online through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextNext week, we’ll talk about how finding your people doesn’t always mean starting a group. It can also mean using your unique gifts on behalf of others. Stay tuned for Episode 6.

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    004 - Belonging Behind Bars with Rachel Allen

    What we owe the incarcerated — and the communities holding on outsideWhat if the punishment wasn’t the prison sentence itself, but the isolation that follows? In this raw and unflinching conversation, writer and podcaster Rachel Allen joins Tonya Kubo to pull back the curtain on life behind bars — not only for those incarcerated, but also for the families left standing in fluorescent visitation rooms.Rachel shares how she lost nearly everyone in her life when her husband was incarcerated, the hidden community that forms in waiting rooms, and the burden of secrets she carried until she found safe places to speak them. Together, they tackle the uncomfortable truth: our prison system isn’t just broken, it’s designed to dehumanize. And yet, in the darkest corners, belonging still finds a way.Episode Highlights[03:23] Growing up “othered” and the soft spot it created for outsiders[07:08] The fear of revealing her husband’s incarceration — and losing everyone[12:19] Creating Beyond Broken and exposing systemic abuse[17:38] Why visitation is anything but “pleasant”[20:21] Finding fragile community in visitation waiting rooms[26:10] But don’t criminals get what they deserve?[35:58] How to know who deserves grace[39:29] First steps for rethinking incarceration[41:05] Why you are not as alone as you thinkBelonging Stolen, Belonging RebuiltWhen her husband entered the federal prison system, Rachel’s life imploded. Nearly everyone she knew disappeared overnight, leaving her shattered and alone. Out of that devastation, she built new forms of belonging — both in the fragile, fluorescent-lit visitation community and in her work giving voice to those society would rather erase.The Hidden Labor of FamiliesPrison doesn’t just punish the incarcerated; it punishes their families. Rachel exposes the endless advocacy work, bureaucratic battles, and humiliating visitation processes that spouses (usually wives) endure just to stay connected. Survival demands community, even in places designed to keep people apart.Grace, Humor, and HumanityDespite the heaviness, Rachel insists on humor and grace as survival tools. From the woman unknowingly carrying a “Sooie, Run, Pig” purse into visitation, to the deep compassion she extends even to those branded “undeserving,” Rachel reminds us that belonging is about humanity, not perfection.Meet Our GuestRachel Allen is an Appalachian-born writer and host of Beyond Broken, a podcast that dares to look straight into the brokenness of the U.S. prison system and imagine something better. A journalist-turned-marketer-turned-memoirist, Rachel has written for global brands, tiny nonprofits, and everyone in between. Her essays and upcoming memoir, Batshit, dig deep into the uncomfortable, beautiful truth of what it means to be human and still fight like hell to belong.Meet Our HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist, marketing consultant, and rebel with a cause: helping people find the place where they truly belong. For nearly two decades, she’s built online spaces that feel less like comment sections and more like chosen family. She’s the fixer you call when your Facebook group has gone straight-up Lord of the Flies and the bouncer at the door of internet nonsense. As the host of Find Your Freaks, Tonya brings together unconventional thinkers and bridge-builders who know “normal” was never the point. Her favorite spaces? The ones where the freak flags fly high.Key Quotes“On any given day I could be talking to an eight-figure entrepreneur or a homeless person—both are equally valuable to me.” — Rachel Allen“There is nothing someone can do that makes me see them as less than human.” — Rachel Allen“Belonging isn’t about being included. It’s about being expected: Of course you’re here. We’ve been waiting for you.” — Tonya KuboLinks and MentionsHeather Pirtle and the First NetworkRachel’s upcoming memoir BatshitBeyond Broken on SubstackRachelCatherineAllen.comRachel on InstagramRachel on LinkedInSupport the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, help us keep it ad-free by buying us a coffee (or two!). Every dollar goes to production so more weirdos can find their people. You can purchase Find Your Freaks merchandise online through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextRachel’s interview left me wondering about whose suffering matters, and which lives we consider worthy of grieving. Episode 5 explores the idea of dehumanization further and how it affects beliefs about those who look, believe, live and choose differently from ourselves.

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    003 - Kindness First, Clutter Second

    Why belonging beats shame every timeMost people who join Clutter Free Academy don’t show up with cheerful introductions. They arrive calling themselves lazy, terrible, bad moms, bad wives. They expect judgment. Maybe rejection.Instead, they’re met with kindness. Sometimes aggressively so.In this solo episode of Find Your Freaks, I go deeper into my conversation with Kathi Lipp (Ep 2) and explore how Clutter Free Academy became one of the kindest corners of the internet — not through rules or chore charts, but through belonging. Clutter may look like a housekeeping issue, but it’s really about overwhelm, perfectionism, and shame. What people need most isn’t motivation. It’s safety. And safety starts with kindness.This episode is about the mechanics of creating community around sensitive struggles: why guardrails matter, how to universalize pain so no one feels alone, and why exclusion is a feature, not a flaw.Episode Highlights[03:51] Kathi’s trust: building on free rein[07:20] Guardrails that made Clutter Free safe[09:21] Tonya’s story of clutter, hoarding, and healing[12:29] Insisting on kindness—even toward yourself[17:55] Universalizing struggles to normalize experience[20:15] Aggressive kindness in practice[25:40] Why exclusion is part of belonging[27:37] Belonging before beliefLeading with KindnessNew members often introduced themselves with harsh self-talk: “I’m lazy. I’m terrible. I’m the worst.” My first response was always the same: “Whoa, whoa, whoa. We are the kindest corner of the internet. That means you must be kind to yourself.”Kindness wasn’t optional. It was the baseline that told people they already belonged.Guardrails That Create SafetyWe didn’t open Clutter Free to everyone. “Born organized” types who came to gawk or critique were kept out. Guardrails weren’t about control—they were about creating safety so vulnerability could thrive.Universalizing StrugglesClutter might show up as messy homes, but for many it’s cluttered calendars or cluttered thinking. By naming clutter as part of a universal human struggle, members realized they weren’t defective—they were human.Belonging Before BeliefYou can’t shame people into belonging. Whatever your community’s focus—health, parenting, creativity—the same truth applies: people must belong before they can believe.Meet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist, marketing consultant, and rebel with a cause: helping people find the place where they truly belong. For nearly two decades, she’s built online spaces that feel less like comment sections and more like chosen family. She’s the fixer you call when your Facebook group has gone straight-up Lord of the Flies and the bouncer at the door of internet nonsense. As host of Find Your Freaks, Tonya brings together unconventional thinkers and bridge-builders who know “normal” was never the point.Support the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, help us keep it ad-free by buying us a coffee (or two!). Every dollar goes to production so more weirdos can find their people.You can purchase Find Your Freaks merchandise online through Abilities and Attitudes.Links and MentionsClutter Free Academy Facebook GroupThe Clutter Free Academy PodcastLet’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextNext week, we’ll tackle how finding your people doesn’t always mean starting a group. It can also mean using your unique gifts on behalf of others. Stay tuned for a conversation about secrets, support, and the unexpected ways belonging shows up.

  22. 4

    002 - The Kindest Corner of the Internet with Kathi Lipp

    What if your clutter isn’t a housekeeping problem — but a heartbreak problem? In this honest conversation, bestselling author, speaker and creator Kathi Lipp joins Tonya Kubo to unpack the emotional weight of “too much stuff” and the radical act of building a community where shame isn’t welcome, but you are.Together, they trace the roots of Clutter Free Academy — a Facebook group that grew from a six-week Bible study into a sanctuary for thousands of people who thought they were too messy to belong anywhere. What emerged is one of the kindest corners of the internet, built not on judgment but on compassion, humor, and relentless kindness.Episode Highlights[03:28] Who Kathi’s “freaks” really are — and why clutter makes us feel less than[06:50] From books to Bible study to community: how Clutter Free began[09:48] The biggest misunderstanding about “cluttery people”[13:09] Fear, guilt, and shame — and how they keep us stuck[20:35] Do cluttery people isolate themselves, or is it survival?[27:54] How the Clutter Free Facebook group was born (and why it never closed)[32:51] The power of kindness as the first step to transformation[36:59] Freak Flags Fly: Kathi on humor, chickens, and McDonald’s Diet CokeLeading with Kindness and CompassionClutter Isn’t About StuffKathi reminds us that clutter is rarely just about misplaced belongings. It’s about the emotions attached to them: fear of needing something someday, guilt over who gave it to us, and shame over money spent. When we treat clutter like a moral failing, we only dig people deeper into isolation.The Kindness CureUnlike programs that shame or overwhelm, Clutter Free Academy is built on what Kathi calls “assaulting people with kindness.” It’s a space where compassion disarms self-criticism, and where belonging becomes the first step toward transformation.Community as SurvivalMany people who struggle with clutter avoid in-person church groups or workshops focused on home organization because signing up feels like outing themselves. Online community created a safer alternative. The Clutter Free Academy Facebook Group is a place where anonymity lowers the barrier to entry, and kindness keeps people coming back.Built for Cluttery People, by Cluttery PeopleKathi and Tonya both know clutter intimately, and that shared vulnerability has been Clutter Free Academy’s foundation for trust. In this conversation, we see how naming our mess — literal and emotional — creates space for grace, and how building communities on acceptance instead of performance can turn shame into solidarity.Meet Our GuestKathi Lipp is a bestselling author, speaker, podcaster, and the heart behind Clutter Free Academy. Her books (including Sabbath Soup and The Accidental Homesteader) and communities have helped thousands ditch overwhelm and make room for what matters. Whether wrangling chickens or gathering writers at her Red House, Kathi leads with humor, grace, and the kind of real talk that makes you feel like maybe, just maybe, you’re not alone after all.Meet Our HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist, marketing consultant, and rebel with a cause: helping people find the place where they truly belong. For nearly two decades, she’s built online spaces that feel less like comment sections and more like chosen family. She’s the fixer you call when your Facebook group has gone straight-up Lord of the Flies and the bouncer at the door of internet nonsense. As the host of Find Your Freaks, Tonya brings together unconventional thinkers and bridge-builders who know “normal” was never the point. Her favorite spaces? The ones where the freak flags fly high.Key Quotes“Clutter isn’t a housekeeping problem. It’s fear, guilt, and shame stacked in a pile.” — Kathi Lipp“Kindness is the first step to transformation.” — Kathi Lipp“You don’t have to earn acceptance by cleaning up. Move the laundry aside and sit down anyway.” — Tonya KuboLinks and MentionsClutter Free Academy Facebook GroupThe Clutter Free Academy PodcastClutter Free by Kathi LippClutter Free Home by Kathi LippSupport the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, help us keep it ad-free by buying us a coffee (or two!). Every dollar goes to production so more weirdos can find their people.You can purchase Find Your Freaks merchandise online through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextNext week, I’m going even deeper on the subject of clutter. I’m unpacking the roots of shame, imperfection, and radical acceptance. We’ll explore why clutter is never just about “too much stuff,” and what it teaches us about building compassionate communities.

  23. 3

    001 - Belonging Is More Than a Buzzword

    A hospital bed, a message board, and the power of finding your peopleWhat we call “lonely” often hides in plain sight. You can be surrounded by people and still feel like you could vanish without anyone noticing. In this kickoff to Find Your Freaks, I share the story of being 29, healing from emergency surgery hours from home. Visible on paper, invisible in reality. Until a stranger showed up with socks, lip balm, and a loud laugh that made the room feel human again. This episode reframes belonging: it isn’t about being included; it’s about being expected: “Of course you’re here. We’ve been waiting for you.” We’ll also talk about why affinity groups matter, and what this show will explore as we hunt for the places where your weird isn’t the cost of entry — it’s the common ground.Episode Highlights[00:58] Proximity without presence: why people ≠ belonging[01:13] Attention without connection (and what it costs us)[03:26] The hospital-bed moment: visible, yet unseen[04:04] Punk bands & care without a manual: don’t take space at someone else’s expense[06:50] A message board, then a stranger: showing up changes everything[08:17] Belonging isn’t inclusion; it’s being expected[09:14] Why affinity groups exist (moms, survivors, creatives, neurodivergent folks)[10:00] What this show will be: honest stories about finding your peopleLeading with HumanityProximity ≠ Presence — You can be in a crowded space and feel utterly alone. Belonging requires presence, not just bodies in a room.Care in Unexpected Places — Years before the hospital, touring punk bands asked whether I’d feel safe with them crashing on our floor.The Debbiie Lesson (with two i’s) — A stranger saw me and kept showing up. She didn’t fill a seat; she made me feel wanted. That’s belonging.Why Affinity Groups Matter — Sub-communities aren’t about exclusion; they’re about relief. They’re containers where the mask can come off and the exhale is safe.What This Show Is About — Interviews with people who found belonging in unexpected places and solo reflections on the mechanics of connection.Key Quotes“Belonging isn’t about being included. It’s about being expected.” — Tonya Kubo“You can have proximity without presence.” — Tonya Kubo“You’re not too weird or too much. You just haven’t found your freaks yet.” — Tonya Kubo“Our weird isn’t the cost of entry. It’s the common ground.” — Tonya KuboMeet Your HostTonya Kubo is a community strategist, marketing consultant, and rebel with a cause: helping people find the place where they truly belong. For nearly two decades, she’s built online spaces that feel less like comment sections and more like chosen family. She’s the fixer you call when your Facebook group has gone straight-up Lord of the Flies and the bouncer at the door of internet nonsense. As host of Find Your Freaks, Tonya brings together unconventional thinkers and bridge-builders who know “normal” was never the point.Support the ShowIf Find Your Freaks matters to you, help us keep it ad-free by buying a coffee (or two!). Every dollar goes to production so more weirdos can find their people.You can purchase Find Your Freaks merchandise online through Abilities and Attitudes.Let’s Stay FreakyFacebook GroupLinkedInInstagramPodcast HubWhat’s NextNext week, I’m sitting down with Kathi Lipp to unpack clutter, shame, and the power of kindness. And why “too much stuff” is rarely about stuff at all.

  24. 2

    Find Your Freaks - Trailer

    Ever felt too weird, too loud, too soft, too real — or just too complicated to belong?This podcast is your proof that you’re not alone.Find Your Freaks features raw, unfiltered conversations with people who are building belonging in unexpected places — and doing it by showing up exactly as they are. Hosted by community strategist Tonya Kubo, this show digs into the messy, beautiful truth of what it takes to find your people.New episodes drop Thursdays starting June 2025.Come for the stories. Stay for the humanity.And if something hits home? Tell your weirdest friend.🔗 More from Find Your FreaksWebsite + Show Notes Connect on IGJoin the convo on FBSay hi on LinkedIn🎤 Want to be a guest or have a media inquiry? Email: [email protected]

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Ever felt too weird, too loud, too soft, too real — or just too complicated to belong?This podcast is your proof that you’re not alone.Find Your Freaks features raw, unfiltered conversations with people who are building belonging in unexpected places — and doing it by showing up exactly as they are. Hosted by community strategist Tonya Kubo, this show digs into the messy, beautiful truth of what it takes to find your people.New episodes on Thursdays starting June 2025.Come for the stories. Stay for the humanity.And if something hits home? Tell your weirdest friend and visit Ever felt too weird, too loud, too soft, too real — or just too complicated to belong?This podcast is your proof that you’re not alone.Find Your Freaks features raw, unfiltered conversations with people who are building belonging in unexpected places — and doing it by showing up exactly as they are. Hosted by community strategist Tonya Kubo, this show digs into the messy, beautiful truth of what it takes

HOSTED BY

Tonya Kubo

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Find Your Freaks have?

Find Your Freaks currently has 24 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Find Your Freaks about?

Ever felt too weird, too loud, too soft, too real — or just too complicated to belong?This podcast is your proof that you’re not alone.Find Your Freaks features raw, unfiltered conversations with people who are building belonging in unexpected places — and doing it by showing up exactly as they...

How often does Find Your Freaks release new episodes?

Find Your Freaks has 24 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Find Your Freaks?

You can listen to Find Your Freaks on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Find Your Freaks?

Find Your Freaks is created and hosted by Tonya Kubo.
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