Show notes
Thanks for listening to TSC Talks with Dedee Culley. With over 20 years of nursing experience, she is the co-owner of 2 Leaf Nurses, which provides alternative & holistic health services from Springfield, Missouri. Culley loves home health for its opportunity to connect with patients and their environment. Culley is incredibly blessed and she was able to gather up courage and strength to pursue her passion in nursing while stepping out of the ordinary medicinal ways of these modern days and encourage others to be safe and successful at taking care of their bodies from the inside out with natural approaches. She has a loving attitude and an open mind to seek and research various holistic methods to reach a significantly positive result. She has also dealt with personal health issues within her family and has seen significant changes when she chooses to ASK QUESTIONS and be in the loop of the available options and their side effects.
This is her background and mission:
(Dedee Culley and her business partner Angela Huff)
“I am a registered nurse for over 20 years now; a variety of backgrounds. And there came a point when I said, you know what, enough is enough, there's more to our lives than just ‘the doctor said’, and we do this and we do that. We need to be able to heal our own bodies and we need to work on our own bodies to get them healthy. So, I started a company called 2 Leaf Nurses. And our focus is on the education of patients, as well as businesses, healthcare professionals (our own health care professionals have to have education, bless their hearts), as well as the community. That's what we really focus on, powering everybody.”
Whenever I meet someone that's in the cannabis industry from, you know, more than Midwest, I'm like, it's got to be a whole different. You know, different, awkward struggle just to get to be legit and it's hard anywhere just because we're so ingrained in our way of understanding medicine that it's hard to get back and I think that as Culley shares her story, what I found is the people that are in the industry is particularly the great nurses. I'm so grateful. I asked her about what made her take this approach:
“So yes, I am in southwest Missouri. We are seven generations deep in this area. My great-great-grandma was actually known as a medicine woman around here because one we didn't have a whole lot of doctors and those doctors cost money which our farmers didn't have. So I spent a lot of time with my grandma, and we had to utilize plants and things that we would now call ‘alternatives’. It opened up a world for me that just seemed natural. My grandma used rosewater and glycerin. And so those were all normal to me. It just was normal.”
Dedee Culley says she realized that there are two types of people, the ones that accept what the doctors say and what they say goes, and the ones that question things and wonder if there are better ways to go about something. She is definitely the type that questions, and wonders, and researches and tries to find the best way to solve something and the best way to certainly narrow down a diagnosis. She stated:
“People like me who go, ‘Well, wait a minute, why are we doing this? Why do we have to do that? Why do we have to cut both ends off a ham when we cook it? Why do we do that?’ Those are the kind of things I'm always asking. And I always have gotten in trouble many times for asking why. People take that as you are questioning them, you're questioning their integrity and their character and their knowledge. And I'm like, No, I'm just asking the question. Because when we get right down to it, there might be another way.”
A doctor once told her to not apologize for asking questions. She was motivated to do so and to dig deeper every time.
She expected to have a simple life, ‘get married, raise a family, and bake some cookies’. But for her, there was more to life than...
This is her background and mission:
(Dedee Culley and her business partner Angela Huff)
“I am a registered nurse for over 20 years now; a variety of backgrounds. And there came a point when I said, you know what, enough is enough, there's more to our lives than just ‘the doctor said’, and we do this and we do that. We need to be able to heal our own bodies and we need to work on our own bodies to get them healthy. So, I started a company called 2 Leaf Nurses. And our focus is on the education of patients, as well as businesses, healthcare professionals (our own health care professionals have to have education, bless their hearts), as well as the community. That's what we really focus on, powering everybody.”
Whenever I meet someone that's in the cannabis industry from, you know, more than Midwest, I'm like, it's got to be a whole different. You know, different, awkward struggle just to get to be legit and it's hard anywhere just because we're so ingrained in our way of understanding medicine that it's hard to get back and I think that as Culley shares her story, what I found is the people that are in the industry is particularly the great nurses. I'm so grateful. I asked her about what made her take this approach:
“So yes, I am in southwest Missouri. We are seven generations deep in this area. My great-great-grandma was actually known as a medicine woman around here because one we didn't have a whole lot of doctors and those doctors cost money which our farmers didn't have. So I spent a lot of time with my grandma, and we had to utilize plants and things that we would now call ‘alternatives’. It opened up a world for me that just seemed natural. My grandma used rosewater and glycerin. And so those were all normal to me. It just was normal.”
Dedee Culley says she realized that there are two types of people, the ones that accept what the doctors say and what they say goes, and the ones that question things and wonder if there are better ways to go about something. She is definitely the type that questions, and wonders, and researches and tries to find the best way to solve something and the best way to certainly narrow down a diagnosis. She stated:
“People like me who go, ‘Well, wait a minute, why are we doing this? Why do we have to do that? Why do we have to cut both ends off a ham when we cook it? Why do we do that?’ Those are the kind of things I'm always asking. And I always have gotten in trouble many times for asking why. People take that as you are questioning them, you're questioning their integrity and their character and their knowledge. And I'm like, No, I'm just asking the question. Because when we get right down to it, there might be another way.”
A doctor once told her to not apologize for asking questions. She was motivated to do so and to dig deeper every time.
She expected to have a simple life, ‘get married, raise a family, and bake some cookies’. But for her, there was more to life than...



