PODCAST · society
Grown Between Worlds
by Forouz Salari & Miranda Ramnarayan
Grown Between Worlds is a podcast exploring the lived experiences of adult children of immigrants and their partners.Hosted by therapist & consultant Forouz Salari (she/her) and geographer Miranda Ramnarayan (she/her), the show features reflective conversations about identity, migration, belonging, family expectations, diaspora life, and intercultural relationships. We also explore themes of queerness, neurodivergence, disability, and navigating love across cultures, ethnicities, faiths and generations.Guests share stories, insights, and community-rooted wisdom about what it means to live between cultures and identities.Community Guidelines: We are committed to respectful, anti-oppressive dialogue. Hate speech, harassment, or dehumanizing rhetoric will not be tolerated.Disclaimer: This channel shares stories and educational conversations and does not provide therapy or professional advice.Visit our Website to Join our Newsletter, Share your Feedback, Apply to be a Guest, or Inquir
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Too Much, Too Loud, Too Brown: Xenophobia in the "New World”
Tracey Jastinder Mann (she/they) reflects on a multi-generational experience of migration and the emotional, political and cultural forces that shape identity and belonging.They speak to the pressure to assimilate, the weight of navigating multiple identities, and the lasting impacts of colonialism, capitalism and racism on migrant lives.This episode is a powerful reminder that migration is not just personal. It is structural, collective, and deeply tied to healing, resistance and liberation.Episode hosted and recorded by Forouz Salari (she/her) in Jan. 2026 - edited & mixed by Miranda Ramnarayan (she/her).Guest Bio:Tracey Jastinder Mann (she/they) is a practicing psychotherapist in Ontario, Canada and a queer femme of colour who is working to support collective healing and liberation through their offerings of individual counselling, group facilitation and workshops: https://healingforeverybody.ca/Their work is centred in an intersectional feminist approach to therapy and facilitation.Their focus is on creating a healing space where individuals can explore the emotional dimensions of life changes, experiences of trauma, grief and loss, while also attempting to understand how experiences of marginalization, privilege and power influence our lived experiences.
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Embracing Queer Arab Identity post 9-11
Rayan Anton (he/him), a queer and trans Palestinian, reflects on growing up as the child of immigrants while navigating identity, belonging, and life in a new country.He speaks about queerness, cultural inheritance, grief, and the weight of returning to a homeland shaped by distance and loss.This episode is a powerful conversation about self-definition, fluid identity, and making space for all the parts of who you are.Episode hosted and recorded by Forouz Salari (she/her) in Jan. 2026 - edited & mixed by Miranda Ramnarayan (she/her).Guest Bio:Rayan Anton (he/him) is a queer, trans Palestinian man and the child of an immigrant family who moved to Canada in the early 1990s.He is a Registered Social Worker and Psychotherapist in Ontario, Canada, working predominantly with queer and trans youth of colour - many of whom also come from immigrant families: http://www.rayananton.comHe is also a parent to a young child and is often thinking about what it means to hold on to cultural identity for himself and to pass it on to his son, in a society that is determined to erase Palestinian culture and identity.
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Who Gets to Belong? Cultural Negotiations in the Diaspora
Nikoo (Nikki) Sedaghat (she/her) reflects on growing up as the child of first-generation Iranian immigrants and the layered experience of identity, belonging and cultural heritage.She shares what it means to move between cultures, navigate Islamophobia, and carry the protective habits shaped by expectation, pressure, and the need to fit in.The conversation also touches on body image, beauty standards, connection to land, and changing ideas of success within immigrant communities.It’s a thoughtful episode about cultural humility, emotional intelligence, and learning how to connect more honestly.Episode hosted and recorded by Forouz Salari (she/her) in Feb. 2026 - edited & mixed by Miranda Ramnarayan (she/her). Guest Bio:Nikoo (Nikki) Sedaghat (she/her) is the founder of Sedâ Psychotherapy, a virtual practice in Ontario, Canada, supporting individual mental health and relational wellbeing: http://www.sedapsychotherapy.comAs a Registered Psychotherapist, Nikoo's work is shaped by her lived experiences as a queer, neurodivergent, diasporic Iranian who grew up in Canada as the child of first-generation immigrants.These identities inform her strong commitment to anti-oppressive practice and her belief in the transformative power of authentic connections that embrace the full spectrum of the human experience.
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What Does It Mean to Grow Between Worlds? The Identities We Inherit & Choose
In this opening episode, Forouz Salari (she/her) and Miranda Ramnarayan (she/her) reflect on identity, belonging, and their experiences as first- and second-generation immigrants.Through personal stories, they explore cultural negotiation, inherited expectations, and the influences that have shaped their lives.They also share why they created Grown Between Worlds: to hold space for thoughtful, honest conversations that honour the complexity of immigrant experiences and amplify voices too often left out of the wider narrative.Episode recorded in Dec. 2025 - edited & mixed by Miranda Ramnarayan (she/her). Explore the Grown Between Worlds website: https://www.grownbetweenworlds.comLearn about Forouz Salari’s work: https://www.forouzsalaritherapy.ca/Learn about Miranda Ramnarayan’s work: https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/eb40ec43d2314486a3607066060ca03d
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Grown Between Worlds - Season 1 Trailer
Ever felt caught between cultures or worlds? You're not alone!This podcast is for anyone navigating the immigrant experience.Introducing "Grown Between Worlds" - a podcast that dives deep into the stories of adult children of immigrants (people who immigrated as kids / teens, or were born into immigrant families after settlement) and their partners.We talk about the complexities of identity, belonging, and the often unseen struggles that come with living between worlds.This isn't just about trauma; it's about resilience, humour, and the beauty of diverse experiences.Join us as we explore insightful conversations with guests who share their personal connections to immigration and offer wisdom for those on similar journeys.Launching April 15, 2026!Your story matters, your voice matters, and you are not alone.Follow us for updates and subscribe to dive into these meaningful discussions!Share this with a friend or loved one who may need to hear this!#GrownBetweenWorlds #AdultChildrenofImmigrants #ImmigrantVoices #CulturalIdentity #PodcastLaunch #Resilience #InterCulturalPartnerships #IdentityandBelonging
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Grown Between Worlds is a podcast exploring the lived experiences of adult children of immigrants and their partners.Hosted by therapist & consultant Forouz Salari (she/her) and geographer Miranda Ramnarayan (she/her), the show features reflective conversations about identity, migration, belonging, family expectations, diaspora life, and intercultural relationships. We also explore themes of queerness, neurodivergence, disability, and navigating love across cultures, ethnicities, faiths and generations.Guests share stories, insights, and community-rooted wisdom about what it means to live between cultures and identities.Community Guidelines: We are committed to respectful, anti-oppressive dialogue. Hate speech, harassment, or dehumanizing rhetoric will not be tolerated.Disclaimer: This channel shares stories and educational conversations and does not provide therapy or professional advice.Visit our Website to Join our Newsletter, Share your Feedback, Apply to be a Guest, or Inquir
HOSTED BY
Forouz Salari & Miranda Ramnarayan
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