- Activism Allyship
- Ancient Ice
- Climate Change
- Climate Solutions
- Colonial Violence
- Conservation Restoration
- Cultural Strategy
- Decolonization
- Deep Ecology
- Deeply Rooted
- Design+Strategy
- Direct Action
- Earthly Reads 1
- Fat of The Land
- Food Sovereignty
- For The Forests
- Global South
- Globalization
- Grassroots Herbalism
- Homage
- Homebound
- Illuminating Worldviews
- In The Field
- In the Company of Humpbacks
- Indigenous Sovereignty
- Media Art
- More Than Human Kin
- Multispecies Justice
- Plant Intelligence
- Plants Are Political
- Political Ideology
- Racial Equity Justice
- Radical Imagination
- Sacrifice Zones
- Sexual Body Liberation
- Shore Ocean Communities
- Spirituality Theology
- The Cost of Capitalism
- Theory Scholarship
- Transition Transformation
- Wisdom Keepers
In Chronological Order–
MALCOLM HARRIS on the Globalization of Forgetfulness /324
Malcolm offers well-rooted thought touching on the history of Stanford University, the internet, Palo Alto’s military connections, and reveals the values of understanding our material realities and the structures that support society as it stands.
FRANCESCA LIA BLOCK on Finding Rhythm Through Word /323
Moving through the depths of empathy, pleasure, and presence, Francesca considers passion as a practice of gratitude to the world around us and offers us an escape from mindless distraction through the power of imagination and literature.
EPISODE SWAP: How to Survive the End of the World / All About Love
adrienne and Autumn discuss the joys of witnessing love in the face of despair, the accountability that comes with true love, and the growth and nourishment made possible through love, they impart deep wisdom about how to cherish this world for all it has given us.
SAMUEL BAUTISTA LAZO on Handmade Futures /322
Samuel Bautista Lazo brings listeners into an insightful conversation on the value of craftwork that connects us to the past and plants seeds for the future emphasizing the radical act of creating connection and meaning with the objects we need to sustain life.
ALYNDA MARIPOSA SEGARRA on Life on Earth /321
Alynda speaks on the complexities that come with wanting and needing to run away from oppressive systems while simultaneously confronting what is happening right in front of us, emphasizing the urgency of action and compassion as we work to end systems of detainment and punishment.
JOSUÉ RIVAS on Throwing a Glitch in the Social Media Matrix /320
Josué invites us to challenge extractive and colonial lenses by embracing the overwhelming force of the creative urge. How might we break apart from the constant pressure of social media to envision the new modes of creation and creativity that these stories need in order to be told?
JAROD K. ANDERSON on Reclaiming Limits /319
Jarod (@cryptonaturalist) reminds us, limits are nourishing within poetry, and can be a virtue in life. If we accept the messy, twisted, and gnarled realities of life, we can escape the cold and dead store bought narratives about who we are supposed to be and instead lean into real freedom.
TRICIA HERSEY on Deprogramming from Grind Culture /318
Tricia Hersey joins Ayana to unwind the complicated ties of exhaustion and exploitation. Tricia’s words serve as incantations against the brainwashing of grind culture as she and Ayana investigate the systems that benefit from keeping us stagnant.
VEDA AUSTIN on Water as Source /317
Veda calls us to investigate our liquid selves – the tears and sweat that make us human, the rituals of baptism and bathing that connect us to that which lies beyond. As Veda states, water is always in search of itself. How might understanding water begin to help us in our search for ourselves?
END OF YEAR UPDATE (2022)
Beginning in January all episodes released to the public via our website, digital streaming services, and radio syndicates will be standard episodes under an hour. Episode that exceeds an hour in length will be available on Patreon…
TIFFANY LETHABO KING on The Black Shoals [with brontë velez], Part Two /316
Part two of the conversation between brontë and Tiffany spans further inquiry into shoals, the physical desire to belong to Earth, agency, eros, spiritual correction, the pleasure and potential of failure, and that which cannot be translated, but instead has to be experienced or co-witnessed to be understood.
TIFFANY LETHABO KING on The Black Shoals [with brontë velez], Part One /315
brontë and Tiffany explore sacred laughter, Black and Indigenous feminism, sexuality, liberation, ceremony, and protocol. This simultaneously intimate and expansive dialogue allows us to rethink the stories and structures we’ve been told regarding Black and Indigenous relations.
THENMOZHI SOUNDARARAJAN on Annihilating Caste Systems /314
Speaking to the ways that carrying the trauma of caste manifests within the body, Thenmozhi emphasizes the importance of slowing down to process the grief and pain caused by mindless oppression. She offers important context to the conversation about caste, emphasizing the ways caste discrimination manifests within global schemes of technology and power distribution.
SLOW STUDY: We Will Dance With Mountains: Into the Cracks!
This Slow Study Course is a series of lectures and practice prompts from Bayo’s 2021 edition of We Will Dance With Mountains: Into the Cracks! wherein 1000+ people gathered. It is a carnivalesque course in postactivism, a matter of fissures, fault lines, cracks, openings, seismic shifts, endings, and fugitive marronage.
MAYA KHOSLA on What the Forest Holds /313
Maya introduces listeners to the science behind forest fires and urges us to see fire as not simply “destructive,” but rather as one of the many cycles of earth. From practices of cultural burning to current studies on post fire diversity, the creative and regenerative power of the forest cannot be overlooked.
SOPHIE STRAND on Myths as Maps /312
Sophie invites us to embrace rot and decay, to welcome our demons to the dinner table, and to prepare for uncertain futures with tenderness. Sophie provides a route to overcome the death-trap that is self-righteousness, instead prioritizing humble complexity and surrender to relationality.
Dr. VANDANA SHIVA on Diverse Expressions of a Living Earth /311
Vandana and Ayana piece apart the threads of our global culture that lead to exploitation and extraction - focusing on the policies of division and distraction that keep us from each other. The divisions that world-leaders focus so much time on are created in order to dominate and exploit the nature on which the earthly community depends.
DORI MIDNIGHT on Spinning Webs of Support /310
Dori discusses magical and liberatory practices, ancestral Jewish healing traditions, and the necessity of reclaiming Judaism from Zionism in the name of collective liberation. She shares sweet stories of garlic and cedar, the generosity of belonging, and the blessing of our collective and intricate work.
ISMAIL LOURIDO ALI, J.D. on Post-Prohibition Realities /309
Ismail guides listeners through an overview of where we are in our relationship with drugs in the American context, and how this relationship is indicative of our relationship with the Earth and with humanity broadly encouraging us to move beyond the black and white view that some drugs are medicine while others are criminal.
SLOW STUDY: Bayo Akomolafe's We Will Dance With Mountains: Into the Cracks!
This Slow Study Course is a series of lectures and practice prompts from Bayo’s 2021 edition of We Will Dance With Mountains: Into the Cracks! wherein 1000+ people gathered. It is a carnivalesque course in postactivism, a matter of fissures, fault lines, cracks, openings, seismic shifts, endings, and fugitive marronage.