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What if home isn’t a place you return to, but a strength you learn to carry? That’s the question we trace with Liz, whose life spans North Carolina and India, bridge-building across cultures—and then surviving an unlawful detention that forced her family into hiding before they made it back to Colorado. Her new memoir, Home in Exile, turns lived crisis into hard-won Clarity about faith, belonging, and the courage to speak when silence protects the powerful.
We get honest about the shape of faith under pressure. Liz describes how exile did not erase identity; it refined it, pushing her toward practices that grounded her body and mind: prayer, scripture, counseling, and the quiet discipline of journaling. We also look squarely at the politics that target communities, from Hindu nationalism to the erosion of press freedom, and how “polite” silence can become complicity. Yet the heart of this conversation is hope—how grace steadies a nervous system, keeps bitterness from rooting, and opens space to heal without losing sight of truth.
Family runs through every scene as both refuge and responsibility. From late-night conversations to early-morning prayers, Liz shows how a shared spiritual life can rebuild what fear fractured. We talk about dignity over ideology, finding common ground across difference, and the small glimmers that signal you’re still held: a baby’s laugh in a grocery aisle, a break of sun through clouds, a double rainbow after a brutal week. If you feel displaced in faith, family, or identity, you’ll leave with simple first steps to re-anchor—start small, tell the truth, and protect each other’s humanity.
Listen for a powerful reading from Home in Exile, vivid moments from the night of detention, and a reminder that freedom is a gift that calls for courage. If this conversation moved you, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs it, and leave a review so others can find their way back to solid ground.