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Hope Mississippi

Hope Mississippi

By: Dawn Beam
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A bimonthly podcast educating Mississippians about the needs of fellow citizens, encouraging residents to work together to change the trajectory of our families and children, and sharing success stories.

© 2026 Dawn Beam
Economics Management Management & Leadership Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Dan Hall | I Can't Scratch My Nose
    Jun 15 2026

    In this episode of Hope Mississippi, Dawn Beam sits down with leadership coach, speaker, and longtime friend Dan Hall for an honest conversation about resilience, relationships, and the moments that can change a life forever.

    Drawing from decades of experience helping churches, businesses, and organizations move vision into action, Dan shares practical insights on leadership and communication. He explains the differences among visionaries, strategists, and tacticians—and why understanding these roles can make or break a team.

    The conversation also explores the importance of asking better questions, building stronger relationships, and creating meaningful dialogue across difficult divides. Dawn and Dan reflect on race relations in Mississippi, the value of staying at the table during hard conversations, and why empathy matters now more than ever.

    Dan also shares his deeply personal journey through a life-altering medical crisis that left him paralyzed from the neck down. With honesty, humor, and hard-earned perspective, he opens up about disability, dependence, perseverance, and the relationships that continue to sustain him.

    This episode is a reminder that leadership is personal, healing happens in connection, and hope often grows through the people willing to walk beside us.

    🎧 Subscribe, share this episode with a friend, and help spread hope across Mississippi and beyond.

    Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.

    Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

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    31 mins
  • Matt Nalker | The ARC of Mississippi
    Jun 1 2026

    When someone you love has a disability, a crisis rarely arrives with a roadmap or between the hours of 8 - 5 Monday through Friday. More often than not, it shows up alongside long waitlists, confusing paperwork, and the overwhelming question: Where do we even begin?

    On this episode of Hope Mississippi, Dawn Beam sits down with Matt Nalker, Executive Director of The Arc of Mississippi, to talk about what families truly need in difficult moments: clear information, practical support, and someone willing to walk beside them beyond the first phone call.

    Matt shares how The Arc of Mississippi serves individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities, mental health needs, physical disabilities, and families navigating unexpected challenges. We explore how local chapters create meaningful community through respite care, camps, after-school programs, and creative outlets like pottery and the arts, building confidence, connection, and independence along the way.

    We also discuss the life-changing impact of crisis intervention, where help often begins around a kitchen table and grows into real solutions: housing, counseling, support systems, and hope. Matt shares a deeply personal story about his daughter (Brooke) and explains how Medicaid Home and Community Based Services (HCBS) Waiver supports can help families access supported housing and around-the-clock care.

    Together, Dawn and Matt unpack the importance of “warm handoffs," connecting people to support through trusted relationships—as well as the growing role of supported decision-making, an empowering alternative to guardianship that helps individuals maintain independence while receiving the care they need.

    If you care about disability advocacy in Mississippi—or simply want to better understand how communities can serve one another with compassion—this conversation offers practical wisdom, encouragement, and hope.

    If this episode encouraged you, subscribe, share it with someone who may need these resources, and leave a review to help more Mississippi families find support.

    Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.

    Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

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    22 mins
  • Every Day And Every Way - The Replay!
    May 1 2026

    This is a replay - a BEST OF if you will - of episode 10 from Season 1. It was our most downloaded episode so far. PLEASE share it with a friend and help us reach 500 downloads for this episode!

    Former band director David Willson shares the transformative teaching philosophy that changed countless lives over a long career, including 32 years at Ole Miss. From humble beginnings in Jackson, Mississippi, Willson's journey reveals how music education became his pathway out of poverty and into a life of purpose.

    He was our host, Dawn Beam's band director, and she proclaims that he was such an incredible leader, she would have followed him off the proverbial cliff!

    Willson candidly discusses how he revolutionized his teaching after discovering he was "tired of yelling at students." His turning point came when he found Dale Carnegie's "How to Stop Worrying and Start Living" at a thrift store for 25 cents—a book he read twice despite not being "a reader." This sparked the development of his signature "Every Day in Every Way" philosophy centered on goal-setting, positive reinforcement, and consistent enthusiasm.

    What sets Willson's approach apart is his deep empathy for students' circumstances. "You have no idea what that student has been through from the moment they woke up till they get to your classroom," he explains. This understanding led him to shift responsibility away from blaming students to examining his own teaching methods. When students struggled, Willson concluded, "I either didn't teach them exactly what I needed them to do or I didn't motivate them to want to do it."

    As a university educator, Willson trained future band directors with practical tools rather than abstract theories. His mentorship extended beyond graduation, as he maintained relationships with former students, checking in on their progress and offering support. This dedication created a ripple effect, with Willson's influence reaching thousands of young musicians through his students, who went on to become educators themselves.

    Willson's powerful closing thought serves as both a challenge and inspiration: "One person is going to be that pivotal moment in somebody else's life. Just one little word of encouragement, one arm around somebody, and just saying 'we're going to get this. I won't give up if you won't give up." His story reminds us that educators aren't just teaching subjects—they're shaping lives.

    Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.

    Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

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    35 mins
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