Jordan Peterson has spoken about his wife's podcast in a rare public comment about his spouse.

The Canadian psychologist and author took to X, formerly Twitter, to promote Tammy Peterson's eponymous podcast.

"Women and particularly young women: Consider my wife @Tammy1Peterson's podcast if you might be interested in an alternative to the demoralizing utopian hedonistic power-worshipping blandishments of the feminists," he wrote on Wednesday.

"She and her guests focus on exploring productive sustaining meaningful alternatives. It sure beats the sad and angry hopelessness that constitutes the envious and resentful postmodern/Marxist story."

Tammy Peterson's podcast has more than 73,000 subscribers on YouTube and is described as focusing "on the Divine Feminine: the dark and the light side of womanhood, practically and symbolically."

"My guests and I investigate and discuss motherhood, marriage, family, the issues facing boys and men in a feminist world, education, gender, environmental hysteria, post-modern philosophy and health," she says in the description.

Peterson, who has been married to his wife for more than 30 years, does not speak about his family often but opened up about his wife's cancer a few years ago. She was diagnosed in 2018 with a Bellini tumor, a rare type of kidney cancer, and given just 10 months to live.

Jordan Peterson addresses students at Cambridge University in England on November 02, 2018. He has promoted his wife's podcast on social media. Jordan Peterson addresses students at Cambridge University in England on November 02, 2018. He has promoted his wife's podcast on social media. Chris Williamson/Getty Images

"My wife is very ill," he told The Times in 2019. "She's had two surgeries in the last two months and is suffering from severe complications from the last one."

Earlier this year, Tammy Peterson spoke about having cancer and her path to converting to Catholicism.

"We went into [the doctor's] office and he started handing me papers to sign, and his hands were shaking," she told The National Catholic register in February. "And I thought, this isn't good news."

"He said, a Bellini tumor, they are very rare and they grow so fast that the only way they're diagnosed is after someone passes away."

While praying with a friend during her cancer treatment she felt a calling to Catholicism.

"I really didn't put up any defense or questioning at all until I saw my son, and then I felt this peace just fill me and knowledge that I didn't have before," Tammy Peterson told the publication. "And I said to my son, 'You know that doctor—he's a man, and he has an opinion. Maybe he's right. Maybe he's not right. The only way we'll know is God, because God will decide when I'm going to die.'"

She added: "I wouldn't let the fears of the next day or whatever was coming bother me. I would just pray. And I continue to do that now. I don't let myself worry."

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