Riffin' About Life: A Healing Reunion
A family reunion in Moldova is but a sample of this dynamic discussion with Stella Tudor.
(Previously hosted on YouTube, I’ll be creating episodes for Substack from here on out).
When Brian and Stella reunited for their long-overdue conversation, it wasn’t just a catching-up session; it was a masterclass in vulnerability, lineage, and emotional leadership disguised as a podcast interview.
The episode opened like an old friendship picking up mid-sentence. No awkward preamble. Just immediate warmth.
“Oh my God, it’s been forever,” Brian said, grinning through the mic.
“Ages,” Stella agreed, already laughing.
Brian had recently undergone a major health transformation, sparked by a dietary overhaul he and his wife tackled together. It wasn’t a hero’s journey, he insisted, just two people falling off the wagon occasionally, and always climbing back on. “It’s one of the hardest things to practice consistently,” he admitted. “But we’re doing it. Imperfectly, but together.”
That sense of showing up for something bigger than yourself became the invisible thread of the entire conversation.
What unfolded next was something that couldn’t have been scripted.
Brian, surprised and curious, brought up a social media post Stella had made about a trip back to her homeland—Moldova. He’d never met anyone from there before and asked the kind of question only someone genuinely interested in you would ask: How did returning home change you?
Stella didn’t hold back. She described leaving Moldova during Soviet times, living in Romania, then moving to the UK. But her identity didn’t travel neatly across borders. It got layered, reshaped, tangled.
“I was born during the Soviet Union. My birth certificate still says so. I’ve seen my country collapse, rebuild, redefine itself. And I had to do the same, inside myself.”
Her recent return to Moldova wasn’t a nostalgic vacation, it was a reckoning. She had missed weddings, funerals, and entire chapters of her family’s life. So she decided to write her own. Stella organized a family reunion—an event that wasn’t about any one person, but all of them. A tribute to the living, the dead, and the bonds stretched thin by distance and silence.
People were confused at first. “What are we celebrating?” they asked.
“Everyone,” Stella told them. “We’re celebrating everyone.”
She spoke with the kind of conviction that makes people forget they were hesitant. And they came. Cousins she hadn’t seen in 20 years. Aunties. Uncles. Even skeptics. They shared food, photos, and (unexpectedly) deeply buried stories.
One moment she described felt like a scene straight out of a healing parable. Stella had everyone go around the table and build an imaginary story, sentence by sentence. It started as play… and turned into testimony. Childhood memories poured out. Stories of war. Of survival. Of abandonment and reunion. Things no one had ever spoken aloud before.
“You don’t call it a healing event,” Brian said. “But that’s exactly what it was.”
He shared how, in contrast, his own extended family had drifted apart. Generational trauma had bred emotional distance. Holidays were the extent of their connection. “We could’ve had an incredible support network,” he said. “But we’re just… not connected.”
Stella didn’t preach. She didn’t offer easy fixes. But she did offer something else: hope grounded in action. She walked the cemetery rows with her parents. Asked about her ancestors. Found out her great-grandmother was killed in the war, that trauma had migrated silently through her DNA for decades. The nightmares, the visions, the weight—suddenly, they made sense.
Brian nodded, visibly moved.
“Imagine how long someone can carry something until someone finally asks.”
That, they agreed, was the key: Show up. Ask. Be willing to feel awkward or unsure. Be willing to not know what will happen.
Stella’s voice softened:
“It’s underestimated, just showing up. But it can change everything.”
By the end of the conversation, Brian framed it simply:
“Gratitude is the healing side of grief. They’re two sides of the same coin.”
No fancy credentials. No awards. Just two people talking. And in doing so, modeling exactly the kind of healing they were advocating for—one story at a time.
Reader takeaway:
Maybe you don’t need to fix the world. Maybe you just need to ask your aunt about her childhood. Maybe healing starts with showing up, and trusting that something beautiful will unfold.
Hosts:
Brian R. King is a storyteller, coach, and communication expert who helps neurodivergent individuals and families build stronger, more authentic relationships. As an autistic man with ADHD and the father of three autistic sons, Brian brings both personal experience and professional insight to his work. He’s the author of several books and the creator of AuDHD in Translation, where he uses metaphor, humor, and emotional honesty to put words to what often goes unspoken in neurodivergent life. He also hosts the podcast Riffin’ About Life, where real talk meets real growth.
Stella Tudor is an intuitive guide, healer, passionate to create spaces for soul-led transformations.
Born in Moldova during a time of great change, Stella’s journey took her through Romania and eventually to the UK, where she rebuilt her life from scratch and deepened her connection to her spiritual path. From early on, she experienced prophetic dreams and inner guidance that revealed a deeper calling - one rooted in ancestral wisdom, healing, and helping others remember who they truly are.
Through her work, Stella blends future and past life exploration, NLP, intuitive readings, and shamanic practices to support others in reconnecting with their inner truth and unlocking the gifts already within them. Her mission is to help people live more authentically, from a place of peace, purpose, and deep inner knowing.
She believes that healing happens when we stop running from our shadows - and begin to meet ourselves with love.
Connect with Stella