In the wake of the school shooting in Canada that took the lives of fifteen children, Ana offers a moral reflection on grief, anger, leadership, and collective responsibility.
This is not news commentary. It is a call to conscience.
Ana speaks directly to the societal questions emerging after the Canada school shooting: What happens when children are no longer safe in schools? What does moral leadership look like when institutions fail? Why do some people say, “It didn’t happen here,” and how does that trauma response reduce proximity of threat and normalize what should never be normalized?
In this episode, Ana addresses:
• collective grief after a school shooting
• trauma responses and societal numbness
• leadership failure and civic responsibility
• the normalization of violence
• why children’s safety is a human rights issue
• how adults can respond without collapsing into despair
Ana also offers a closing prayer for the children, families, and communities affected — a grounding moment for those carrying grief, anger, and moral shock.
If you are feeling devastated, angry, morally unsettled, or disoriented after the school shooting in Canada, this episode offers clarity, conscience, and a space to grieve without becoming numb.
This is about grief without collapse.
Anger without chaos.
And refusing to normalize violence.
Ana also offers a closing prayer for the children, families, and communities affected — a grounding, somatic moment for those carrying grief, anger, and moral shock. This prayer is an invitation to hold sorrow without collapsing, to stay human in the face of violence, and to refuse normalization.
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About Ana Mael:
Ana Mael is a genocide survivor, somatic therapist, and author of The Trauma We Don’t Talk About. She is the founder of the Somatic Trauma Recovery Center and has dedicated her career to helping survivors reclaim their identity, dignity, and self-trust.
With decades of lived experience, Ana offers a unique, unapologetic approach to healing that combines trauma justice, somatic therapy, and spiritual integrity. She advocates for vulnerability, accountability, and collective healing to dismantle the systems that perpetuate oppression and harm.
Ana’s work provides a critical lens into the trauma of marginalized communities and offers a roadmap for healing that is both deeply personal and collectively transformative.