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These are overwhelming, turbulent times, but that also means there is major potential to fill the cracks with new ideas and to transform these destructive systems.
There are specific root causes for problems and holistic solutions everywhere. There is room for prosperity, there is room for regeneration and a shift in values.
Another reality is possible and that is what we're exploring here today.

Welcome to Sage Talking๐ŸŒ๐ŸŒŠโ˜€
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[This podcast is recorded in German]What is the root of hatred, greed and a false sense ofseparatism in this world?Doesnโ€™t it always start with the connection to ourselves?Someone who is in peace, who feels centered and is connectedto themselves and earth, attuned harmoniously to the world around them will notengage in wars, coups, betrayal or inclined to divide and spread hatred.So it starts with us.Imagine if politicians before parliamentary session took a5-minute meditation together to ground themselves, served each other tea andcoffee as acts of service and connected to one another in meaningful ways -only 5 minutes a dayโ€ฆThe world would be a different place.Whether it is yoga, any devotional practice or spiritualpath, these practices are powerful tools beyond what we sometimes imaginepossible.Widespread engagement with spiritual practices and personalreflection, work and the deep connection and attunement to the inner and outerworld would change our societies deeply, sustainably and meaningfully.We create our lived realities, individually andcollectively. It takes hard work, that is often uncomfortable, that is deep andrevealing, but what happens on the other side of that is deeply healing forourselves and the entire planet if we choose this path.The creation of harmony within creates harmony without.The harmonious will seek and create harmony โ€“the distraught will seek destruction.We muse on these topics in this episode which is the firstGerman episode on this podcast ๐Ÿ™๐ŸผThank you for listening to this episode โ˜€๐ŸŒŠ๐ŸŒwhich came alive through the voices ofHannah Puchertand your host Stella Sage ๐ŸŒฟ
Nikki (@girl_on_gaia) is a special soul who is one of thosepeople defining herself, her purpose and place and this earth in multi-faceted,earth-connected and freedom seeking ways.In this episode we speak about what different ways ofrelating to earth within the current socio-economic systems might look like.New ways of generating an income that are independent from this system butstill utilizes its tools and offer chances to be financially stable all the way tofinancial freedom, while making a positive impact and being able to connect deeply to earth.Nikki is a glowing woman who really walks the talk. Havingmoved from South Africa to Europe at 19 years old in order to explore this partof the world, she moved from years of working hard out of necessity, withoutpurpose, in ways that deteriorated her well-beingto living a slow, purposeful, abundant life in Spain withher partner who shares her values.Many of us are finding out that being disconnected fromearth and hustling all day within a system that funnels our generated energy,monetary or material creations straight up the line to the company we work for,the CEOs and boards and governments of the countries we live in โ€“ is simply not it!Let us explore different ways of living that utilize modern tools but also connect us back to more ancestralways of๐ŸŒฑ living off the land, of being present and integrating a slowness backinto our lives that makes our days feel long and full again.๐Ÿ’šNikkiโ€™s message from the heart in this conversation is: โ€œthe medicine of the world is, that humanity starts seeing itself aspart of the earth again. It is a community. Youโ€™re not just a community withthe people around you. You are in community with the trees. You are incommunity with the animals, everything, all the elements in nature [โ€ฆ] and thatis the medicine, the solution for going to the next level, the next dimension,the next frequency where we are all working towards the โ€˜new earthโ€™. โ€œThank you for listening to this Talk โ˜€๐ŸŒŠ๐ŸŒwhich came alive through the voices ofNikki (@girl_on_gaia)and your host Stella Sage๐ŸŒฟ
Tess van Zalinge, a designer from the Netherlands, started her brand in 2016 with the urge to make sustainable couture. What makes her brand unique is that Tess and her Team create entire collections made from waste materials, crafting truly extraordinary pieces that prove that sustainability never diminishes the beauty of fashion but only adds to the allure because it was designed consciously by closing waste streams and using finite resources smartly and respectfully. Tessโ€™s main inspiration comes from Dutch traditional craftsmanship which at its core, like most old traditional ways was inherently sustainable only that it was done out of practicality, financial reasons or emotional reasons, leading to continued repair and care for long lasting garments over decades as the norm. Her way of looking at textiles is influenced by the way her ancestors, repaired, upcycled and re-used garments until the very last thread which is an ecological and simply smart way of looking at any โ€œresourceโ€ also beyond fashion. The beauty lies in re-discovering those traditional, artisanal techniques and practices that if utilized and highlighted can find their way back into the here and now. We can all get inspired by smart designing that combines traditional and contemporary technologies to combat and make redundant the craziness of todayโ€™s industries that often produce double the waste that it took to produce the intended items! On a planet where SO much clothing exists that it will last to clothe the next SIX generations, there is more than enough material to go round without any company having to produce another single new item for the next hundred of years! ย  Re-think, re-cycle, re-design, re-use. We hope you get inspired for your own work to look into ancestral crafting if you havenโ€™t done so yet to harness that knowledge and intention that stems from a time where humans grew and produced without waste and for sustenance. ย  Thank you for listening to this Talk โ˜€๐ŸŒŠ๐ŸŒ which came alive through the voices of Tess Van Zalinge and your host Stella Sage ๐ŸŒฟ
Stop Ecocide Internationalโ€˜s goal is to create a new international Crime of Ecocide (long-standing, wide-sclae, severe damage to the environment) within the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court where it would sit alongside the crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and crimes of aggression as one of the โ€œcrimes against peaceโ€, which are those crimes which are considered to be most serious by humankind. Sue Miller is Head of global networks where her distinctive role is to help seed and socialize the concept of โ€œEcocideโ€ in as many communities as possible. Sue explains that when people are introduced to the term โ€œEcocideโ€ and its meaning they canโ€™t believe that this doesnโ€™t exist anyway โ€“ that there is no law that protects earth from large scale damage already. So why do crimes against earth, which at the end affect every single one of us, take much more hard work and push to be acknowledged as the crimes they are? Perhaps the lack of political will and the assumption that environmental protection will somehow detract from peopleโ€™s lives? ย  You will also find out what happens once countries decide to include Ecocide into their legislature and rules of law. Let us imagine the changes and shifts that would be happening in a world/economies/societies where crimes against Earth are recognized, tried in courts of law and made an ARRESTABLE offenseโ€ฆ While you will never be able to bring round all companies it is hopeful to hear that more and more are realizing that business as usual is not an option anymore โ€“ change seems to be happening. ย  We hope you enjoy this Talk โ˜€๐ŸŒŠ๐ŸŒ which came alive through the voices of Sue Miller and your host Stella Sage ๐ŸŒฟ
Ange Chakana is a permaculture & Montessori school teacher as well as a forest educator. She was also one of my own teachers during my Permaculture Design Course this summer. Ange started Earth Keepers camps two years ago after leaving the US and struggling to find good ways to teach permaculture to children in the school system. We speak about how permaculture is so much more than just land management but a pathfinder and guide in life that allows us to (re-)connect to ourselves, our roots, our skills and abilities which is so transformative in a majorly disconnected world where many humans suffer from โ€œmistaken identitiesโ€. Permaculture is about a shift in vocabulary, a shift in language, a shift in the way we relate to ourselves and the world around us. We speak about the capacity, the capabilities we have as people to take responsibility and actively BE the living, breathing, tangible, local transformations, each and every one of us in our own rights. โ€œI think thatโ€™s what is needed right now, that we move from being consumer driven to being PRODUCERS and also to realize our ECOLOGICAL IDENTITY.โ€ -starting by questioning our actions and the ways we are living our lives. We explore the question of why โ€œsitting in silence together and deep listening in community has the potential to transform societiesโ€. Ange also shares some practical ways to re-connect, to engage in permaculture, one of them being to live with the seasons โ€“ and helps us understand better how we can do this. To experience Angeโ€™s offering for permaculture kids courses visit her website https://www.earthkeepers-camps.org/ or send her a mail for more information as well as offers for adult courses and learning at info@earthkeepers-camps.org PS if the story Ange shared about the community intersection in Portland you can find more information about this or inspiration and support for transforming your home town here https://cityrepair.org/ Thank you for listening to this Talk โ˜€๐ŸŒŠ๐ŸŒ which came alive through the voices of Ange Chakana and your host Stella Sage ย 
This episode features Andreas Koch, founder of Tourythm which is about creating a new rhythm in the tourism industry to help the people in it to regenerate the world and themselves. A business sector that needs a lot of impulses towards more conscious, earth-aligned practices โ€“ the travel and tourism industry -which produces 10 % of GDP and employs 10 % of humans on the planet. Andreas works with hotel Teams to become more sustainable from the ground up. Being holistic and inclusive he connects the localities, local businesses, farmers etc. with hotels or event sites to help weave a web of interconnection and mutual support. Inviting farmers to join forces with hotels to create events in collaboration that may include regenerative wine/olive oil tastings or bringing hotels together with engineering experts to redesign energy flows. โ€œSustainability may mean, doing less harm to nature. Where we want something of a balance sheet between economic, social and ecological activities โ€“ and I feel that is not enough. [โ€ฆ]The system is asking for change. [โ€ฆ] I always describe climate change as being burnout on the outer and depression on the inner landscape. When I heard about regeneration, about permaculture, I felt as a biologist this is something I can apply to the economic world.โ€ A sustainable hotel for Andreas is one where every relationship inside and outside the hotel, everything that it is connected with (infrastructure, food, suppliers, cleaning, personnel,โ€ฆ) feels regenerative. -Employees as ambassadors for regeneration -Suppliers that regenerate the region through what they are producing -Giving back to visitors so they feel regenerated and can relax and renew in meaningful ways and so much more. We talk about what resilience looks like in this industry and why creating redundancies is important, exploring questions like: โ€œhow can we serve not just the clients but also the employees, the land, the culture..?โ€ ๐Ÿ’ก Andreas' TIP: Explore socialbnb, traveling to unique accommodations around the world that support local projects, communities and ecosystems for your next meaningful holiday. Thank you for listening to this Talk โ˜€๐ŸŒŠ๐ŸŒ which came alive through the voices of Andreas Koch and your host Stella Sage ๐ŸŒฟ
Claire Murigande is the host and executive producer of the "Narratives of Purpose Podcast" in which she speaks to global changemakers about social impact topics that are aimed to inspire action. Claire is a scientist (life sciences), speaker and podcast host, with a mission to amplify the voices of changemakers around the world. In this wonderful conversation we are speaking about her connection to nature which is centered much around trying to be self aware through connection to nourishment like taking time out of her day to cultivate different kinds of Kefir in peace and silence : ) We speak about the importance of slowing down especially when things are going fast. Exploring the significant role of "boredom" when it comes to problem solving, idea cultivation and feeding our creativity in an overstimulated world. We speak about the beauty of how placing all our attention and focus on the present moment brings satisfaction and clarity, serving as a remedy to a wide spread "distraction epidemic". ย  Practical tips from Claire and me to help focus attention and experience more aware, rich moments in our everyday lives to eliminate boredom and to experience the world around us differently. Claire shares some of the common threads she sees within all the changemakers she interviews in terms of creating change and taking responsibility for their actions and the impact they all wish to make. -> The power of taking responsibility โ€œIf itโ€™s to be itโ€™s up to me.โ€ ๐Ÿ“ฃListen to the "Narratives of Purpose Podcast" here ย  Thank you for listening to this Talk โ˜€๐ŸŒŠ๐ŸŒ which came alive through the voices of Claire Murigande and your host Stella Sage ๐ŸŒฟ
In this episode I am joined by the beautiful Amy Jane Storrรธnning who ventures out alone into the wild as a way to re-connect.In the spirit of the saying โ€œWe can only truly receive when we are emptyโ€ Amy has found a way for herself to strip away the impositions of the world and society when she needs a break and a recharge.Discomfort is radical.Silence is radical.Finding peace within is radical.Sitting with our discomfort, truly feeling ourfeelings and taking responsibility for them is radical.In this episode we discuss the blessings,gratitude and transformation we receive when we engage with and sit with discomfort.We speak about the urgency and beauty of becoming aware again. Of walking through our days, neighborhoods, streets,homes, forests, beaches, with open eyes, ears and hearts. Of being present and attuned to our surroundings.To see them for what they are and to be less distracted on our walk through life.Amy shares what growing up in the rainforest meant for her development and how it meant understanding that ecosystem and placing trust in earth at a very early age.She speaks about how she is grounding into โ€œreal lifeโ€ and how you can still hold spiritually and sensitivity while working a 9 to 5 and being embedded into regular society.After all, life is the crossing of manydifferent realities, everyday, everywhere.I want to leave you with something that touchedme deeply that Amy said towards the end of the podcast:โ€œI feel like everything as it is, is perfect right now. I donโ€™t feel that anything is wrong. [โ€ฆ] If itโ€™s still here there is still something for us to learn from it. If there was nothing left to learn then we would have learned from, transmuted and moved through it and weโ€™d be in a different iteration of reality.โ€ย If you would like to get to know Amy better or experience her Gene Key readings and more, feel free to visit her site and offerings here.ย Thank you for listening to this podcast๐ŸŒŠโ˜€๐ŸŒwhich came alive through the voices of Amy Jane Storrรธnning and your hostStella Sage ๐ŸŒฟ
You want to know more about the world of sustainable investing? About the opportunities, obstacles, how reliable ESG criteria are and what it would potentially take to overpower the harmful investments which are still ruling the industry - then this is the episode for you. Karen Wendt is the CEO of ECCOS Impact, ECCOScience Researcher and Lecturer, Editor for the Springer Nature Series "Investment Reinvented" Investment Banker, Positive Impact Investor and Serial Impact Entrepreneur. She is honest and knowledgeable and shares her very objective opinions about the current state of the sustainable investment management industry. What is the Impact of the EU Taxonomy Directive in comparison to filtering by ESG guidelines? How may large sums of money be divested from dirty funds to truly sustainable ones without hurting pensioners ? Karen explains the current significance of Infrastructure Finance and what decoupling (constructing economic growth without using more planetary resources) is all about. Next to the need for a global Societal Contract in Sustainable Finance we also talk about the turn off topic of politicians and conventional economics - DEGROWTH. How may we reshape the industry and shift it towards truly meaningful, plentiful and sustainable investments and opportunities without creating financial and political upheaval and division while also closing the gap of already deeply engrained national and global inequalities.... Let's dive into it together! this episode came alive through the voices of Karen Wendt and your host Stella Sage ๐ŸŒ๐ŸŒŠโ˜€๐ŸŒฑ
-Midwifery care that bridges the sacred and the scientific- Melissa Chappell has been helping babies enter this world in holistic ways for many years and is a vessel of knowledge when it comes to preserving the naturally induced physiological state women go into during the birth process that is vital for a natural birthing scenario. She got her licensure in 2016 and opened her first birth birth center in 2018. She has since opened another birth center and with her team served over 500 families! Melissa has had the opportunity to travel the world doing birth work in Haiti, Costa Rica, Kenya, and Ethiopia. She is a wonderful person to speak and listen to, full of knowledge and love for the process of birth and connecting it back to its natural roots. In this episode we debunk some myths surrounding birth that are very common. Melissa talks us through some of the ways of how the setting for a safe, holistic delivery can be created and why she isn't a fan of in-hospital births if not absolutely necessary. We speak about the importance of re-establishing trust. In oneself in earthly processes, the knowledge that birth is natural to us and that our body knows how to navigate it if we let it. Partially, this episode was very emotional. Honestly, although it is a long way ahead, I could already picture myself feeling very safe under Melissa's guidance to support my own birth process one day. ๐Ÿฆ‹If you are located in Provo or Utah county and feel called to contact Melissa to have her and her Team guide you on your path to and through a holistic birth process, find her website here You have been wanting to take a doula or widwifery training? Great news! Melissa offers courses to carry on this sacred knowledge and practice๐Ÿ‘ผ๐Ÿผ๐ŸŒฑ Thank you for listening to this Talkโ˜€๐ŸŒŠ๐ŸŒ which came alive through the voices of Melissa Chappell and your host Stella Sage๐ŸŒฟ
10 % of American women are diagnosed with Endometriosis. That is millions of women! Worldwide, fertility issues and inflammation related diseases are extremely relevant topics. In this episode Matilda Rosengren is sharing her personal experiences with fertility and Endometriosis and her motivation to start her online platform Mind and Womb which offers tools and support to those women trying to conceive. This episode is not only for female ears! Fertility issues are wide spread and equally distributed between men and women. The understanding regarding women's cycles and the need for rest and slowing down in work and personal life especially, but not only, when dealing with Endometriosis and the toll it can take on body and mind, can definitely be improved. Matilda shares the rad to her diagnosis, treatments she has undergone and how she has used self-practices like yoga and womb massages to re-connect to her body. Thank you for listening to this Talk๐ŸŒŠ๐ŸŒโ˜€ which came alive through the voices of Matilda Rosengren and your host Stella Sage๐ŸŒฟ Sources/Resources: National Geographic article on men's fertility: https://www.nationalgeographic.co.uk/science-and-technology/2022/11/sperm-counts-worldwide-are-plummeting-faster-than-we-thought Mind and Womb: https://mindandwomb.com/
Erik G. Turner has a background in chemical and process engineering and started his career in the Pharma industry. Currently working for Neustark, an ETH spin off which works in the carbon removal space, transforming old concrete and CO2 into recycled concrete, he is contributing to the transformation of one of the largest waste streams in the world. Erik got interested in sustainability in 2018, joining the NGO YES Europe, a youth led initiative focusing on a sustainable energy transition. His thoughts center around identifying leverage points we have as a society to make change happen, around complexity and ambiguity and about "living the questions", which is very much what this episode is about. We explore the topics of "tools" (which will we be choosing to address different crisis), the "simple solutions trap" presented by politics and industry and why Erik's honest answer to: which solutions he is seeing at the moment - is quite shockingly "none!" This is an episode of exploration and questioning and we do hope you enjoy listening๐ŸŒฑ Thank you for listening to this Talk๐ŸŒŠ๐ŸŒโ˜€ which came alive through the voices of Erik Turner and your host Stella Sage๐ŸŒฟ
Cate Zoltan is CEO of the Undo App, which is designed to activate self-healing through deep body meditations. In this episode we discuss how Cate found her way to the concept of natural meditation, what it means to live a more "natural life" and how we can re-connect with our "original self" through meditation, which requires slowly carving our way back to who we are at our core, seeing through the experiences, information and all else that is imposed onto us throughout our lives and daily. We ask how important TRUST is and why the lack of trust in our capabilities, in the world, in each other may be informing much of the un-kindness, insecurity or even hatred that is also present at these times. We answer the question, why all of this matters - This internal work, the attention to mental health, deep connection, emotional intelligence... If not simply for our own sakes, think of the farmer providing your food, a teacher or a supreme court judge. All of their decisions and impacts, no matter how big or small will be informed by their worldview, their relationship and connection to themselves, their biases and morals. This will impact their town, a nation, in a wider sense, the world and might mean the difference between: Petrochemicals or farming with the rhythms of nature. Providing safe spaces for children to thrive or pushing for discipline and silence. Verdicts informed by a drive to exert power and having a distrust towards certain cultures or verdicts motivated by the will to make a positive change, to build trust in the law and make people's lives easier, not harder. It always starts with us, whether we think us important or not - we are. Every living being has an impact on their surroundings and the world and how we tread this earth matters greatly. Our healing journey will have ripple affects. Our connection to ourselves will impact our external connections. If you are presently embarked on a healing journey, we are sending our loving wishes, if you would like to try another tool or take new steps towards healing, maybe you will find it with Undo feel free to use the code STELLA24 for a 14-day-free-trial in the App. Thank you for listening to this Talk๐ŸŒŠ๐ŸŒโ˜€ which came alive through the voices of Cate Zoltan and your host Stella Sage๐ŸŒฟ
Lydia Afriyie - Kraft was born and raised on a farm in Ghana, she holds a Bachelor in silviculture and forest management and a master of international management of forest industries. Currently she is providing consultation to European Wood Importers and on timber trade regulation. Her father, a cocoa farmer, cultivated land not only for cocoa, but also for palm oil production and growing food for the family to live off. Lydia shares memories and experiences from her childhood, inviting us to walk to the water well in the morning, on to a school she was grateful to have been able to attend, from school back to one of the plots of land that needed working on, back to her house at night, guided by the light of the moon and finally studying in the light of a kerosene lamp. Our conversation also takes us to her work in the regulation and certification of sustainable forest management in Germany. Here, mine and Lydia's differing backgrounds, worldviews and influences show, as we discuss sustainable resource use and our views on what sustainably managed forests looks like. We realize here that the two of us have quite different ways of relating to earth and forests in particular. It holds so much value and is very expansive to share perspectives and realize that you and the person you are sitting across are both relating to a topic informed by your own personal beliefs and experiences. ๐ŸŒฑThese conversations are becoming more and more important as we are aiming to sit together, cross reference, develop and exchange in order to create local, national, communal, international pathways for positive, regenerative changes. Thank you for listening to this Talkโ˜€๐ŸŒŠ๐ŸŒ which came alive through the voices of Lydia Afriyie-Kraft and your host Stella Sage๐ŸŒฟ
Four extraordinary days in the Engiadin Valley in La Punt, Switzerland. Nestled in between mountains, next to a river where cool, clear water flows steadily is where [y]our2040 found its place for the third time since 2020. I was so very blessed to be part of the Team that delivered [y]our2040 in the summer of 2023 and it had me absolutely hooked. Four days of incredible conversations around all topics mainly centered around regeneration. Regeneration of communities, natural habitats, connections, communication, spirit, systems, oceans, soils, economies... Critical, challenging, loving, discussions and sharing of opinions. Around 100 participants coming together to work on over 10 different projects that should serve a regenerative purpose, carried out and nurtured far beyond the gathering. Music in the background, painting, writing, dancing, laughter, tears, ideas. People from different backgrounds with different mind sets and visions, yet at a closer look fundamentally similar, walking barefoot from one tent to the next, forming a community that feels like family after only a couple of days. I recorded tiny live conversation snippets with about 30 people to put them together into one episode that explores the outlooks on the concept of regeneration that must be central to our present and future actions. One word, many interpretations. This is explored in this episode of SageTalking with a foreword from one of the founders, Jonelle Simunich ๐ŸŒฑ Thank you for listening to this Talkโ˜€๐ŸŒŠ๐ŸŒ which came alive through the voices of participants of the [y]our2040 gathering and your host Stella Sage๐ŸŒฟ
Tobias Luthe is a professor at ETH Zurich, teaching in the fields of resilience and complex systems, systemic design and regenerative systems, traveling and adventuring through different countries and landscapes. Powered by a passion for outdoor sports, exploration and the active participation in regeneration. Tobias grew up in a very natural setting, immersed in nature and being introduced to building, making firewood and winter sports in particular in his childhood, setting a foundation of deep trust in one self and life, described as "Urvertrauen" (deep trust) in the German language. Tobias recognizes that this groundedness set him up to be creative, adventurous and entrepreneurial as an important skill set when engaging in regeneration. In this episode we also touch on his work at Mon Viso Institute in the Italian Alps in the village of Ostana which is a University Mountain Campus acting as a real world lab in the fields of sustainability and regeneration. Tobias shares a story of accidental de-generation of soil at the Campus and the journey of learning, questioning and exploring that never stops and highlights the importance of "playing in the un-plannability of the real world"๐ŸŒ๐ŸŒฟ Thank you for listening to this Talk๐ŸŒ๐ŸŒŠโ˜€ which came alive through the voices of Tobias Luthe and your host Stella Sage๐ŸŒฟ
Who we are as people, how we feel and receive ourselves, the state of our health, purpose, connection to nature and community determines our interactions, beliefs, choices in regards to the ways we act towards earth, other people etc. Nathan Maingard describes himself as having been a misfit in our society at a young age. Not fitting into the boxes that school, society, government, predetermined, which all seemed a skin too tight for him. In this episode he shares how he transformed from thinking he was the problem, acting out and feeling out of place, to living his truth and supporting other people in that journey as well. We reflect on the way many of us feel out of place or forced into structures and the fallacy of "this is just the way things are". Nathan argues that we ARE ALL already FREE. That with the decisions to show up for ourselves and making choices from the moment we get up in the morning that set ourselves up for peace and well-being, we are freeing ourselves. There is a place for everyone to bring value to themselves and community. We need to foster a society and atmosphere that let's everyone contribute, because everyone CAN. There is no useless or valueless person. We all have hands, feet, mouths, eyes, ears and brains to use. Each in their own way and we must let go of the constraints that say that there are only certain predetermined and economically imposed ideas that determine which inputs are worth anything. This way we can let go of feelings of uselessness of not being enough of being "misfits" in a society of essentially a majority of "misfits" that are struggling along, working against themselves and natural cycles and rhythms. "people sitting around a fire with their families, who are at peace with themselves, who have purpose and connection and live with the rhythms of nature won't even look up to listen to that pained, disconnected person coming along, proposing to start a war or plunder another family's home." The ME reflects the WE and it starts with I ๐ŸŒฑ We are 100 % capable of creating a different reality and making change one person, one family, one community, one city, one nation, one world....at a time - One that flourishes and harmonizes a hell of a lot more than it does right now๐ŸŒ๐Ÿ’š Catch up with Nathan here: Instagram:ย http://instagram.com/nathanmaingard Podcast:ย https://alreadyfree.me/podcast Morning Practice Challenge:ย https://alreadyfree.me/yes Thank you for listening to this Talk๐ŸŒ๐ŸŒŠโ˜€ which came alive through the voices of Nathan Maingard and your host Stella Sage๐ŸŒฟ
John Fullerton imagines a world where we are not breaking the planet's boundaries with our economics. He argues that we have a superbly functioning model of living systems around us, which is regenerating all the time, that we could orientate ourselves toward. In this episode we Talk about clear design principles and processes that are important for us to consider in order to create a global regenerative economy. To read more about John's ideas feel free to dive into the 8 principles of a regenerative economy After a 20 year career as a managing director on Wall Street, John has seen the violence that can occur when it comes to the world of finance and business. We Talk about the mindset shift that happened for him and his path to exploring alternatives to the neoclassical economy. Does it work to speak to the consciousness of investors and shareholders alike? If we offer different alternatives that align more with natural rhythms will they be welcomed or do people stick to what they know? What does the regenerative economy look like, respecting cultural, geological and other differences? Possibly you will find an example of a regenerative economy at your town's very own farmers market which in John's eyes already IS the regenerative economy ๐Ÿฅฆ๐Ÿ‰๐ŸŒผ "We're not going to have one model that everyone replicates. There will be expressions of this that will happen organically all over the world." ๐Ÿ“ฃWe want to encourage you to ask yourselves and family members the question: "What does a regenerative economy look like, to me?" At first it can be a micro economy only including your own household or a small town - if you like you can go national or even global. โœ‰Fell free to share visions in the Q & A section of this episode Thank you for listening to this Talkโ˜€๐ŸŒŠ๐ŸŒ which came alive through the voices of John Fullerton and your host Stella Sage๐ŸŒฟ
The more innovative and "developed" societies become, the more complex the issues within them - and today every issue seems to make its way to span the globe, asking for ever more complex solutions to ever more confusing problems that seem to be well stocked. Have we become too innovative for our own species to handle the issues that arise from all the developments? Or have many societies reached a point of so much wealth and comfort that we are now simply creating problems? - or innovations first, that create problems to then have to solve them? Thinking about this too long feels like mentally doing the splits on a bicycle, but me and Nelly really had the need to try and unpack this and through honest conversation get closer to some of the root causes and closer to core truths (if there are any). *disclaimer here: many issues touched on in this podcast might be misinterpreted, not all you say in a flow of conversation is completely 100 % refined and planned or will be understood by a third party exactly as it was meant since use of language differs and is spontaneous in a flow of conversation + just because we don't agree with the craziness, confusion and division sown around different topics does not mean we don't agree they are generally important or that all people (unless they show they deserve otherwise) should be treated with respect and kindness* We touch on the topics like political correctness and political affiliation, identity markers and the issues that arise form putting people into categories and boxes that overlook all other facets and nuances that we humans bring with us. We try to discover if it were the case that we could strap away much of the BS and generally treat one another and earth with respect - could we begin focusing on the things we KNOW fulfil the basic, biological needs of human beings, the things that are important to ALL of us...? ๐ŸŽจ๐Ÿ‘จ๐Ÿผโ€๐ŸŒพ๐Ÿ‘ฉ๐Ÿผโ€๐ŸŒพcommunity, collaboration, working and living with the rhythms of nature, connection, intellectual pursuit and conversation, creativity, self-sufficiency, family, realization of physical and intellectual potential, exploration...๐Ÿฅ—๐Ÿ‰๐Ÿฅฆ๐ŸŒณ๐Ÿฅ€ We invite you to try and listen to this Talk as a neutral observer - to see where it takes all of us and not let it quickly confirm a bias or highlight disagreement -- then literally or figuratively open your eyes at the end of the Talk and see where your mind is at and which pathways of thinking it has taken you on๐ŸŒผ maybe this approach could be an antidote for all of us in this time where quick judgement and narrow categorization of people and information is very prevalent Thank you for listening to this Talk๐ŸŒโ˜€๐ŸŒŠ which came alive through the voices of Nelly Cyprichova and your host Stella Sage๐ŸŒฟ
Marc Buckley is the founder of ALOHAS Regenerative Foundation, an Ecological Economist, Regenerative Futurist, and Solarpunk. He wrote the SDG Manifesto for the United Nations and has been working with the UNFCCC since 2019 on the next set of goals that come after the SDGโ€™s the Resilient Development Goals through UNFCCC and Resilience Frontiers. Marc takes a systems view of life and addresses all facets of complex systems in order to solve human suffering and our global grand challenges. As a longtime student of Ecological Economics, Regenerative Futurism, and Systems Science Marc has been involved in Climate and Environmentalism for a long time and would love to show you how to run faster than climate change by being an impactful and exponential human being. One of the first to be trained by Al Gore as a Climate Speaker he has made getting through the Climate Crisis towards Regenerative Desirable Futures his lifeโ€˜s work. ย  On top of all of this I have found Marc to be an extremely likeable, humble person who is genuine to the core. In this episode we unpack many different questions (as it seems there is nothing you canโ€™t talk about with him when it comes to environmental issues;) ...from the way he structures his days being involved in so many different projects and tasks at the same time, to the question of which ways of farming are the ones going forward, a short history of mankind and what it looks like inside the World Economic Forum or the United Nations โ€“ We made sure there is something of interest for everyone. One of the main motivators for Marc to be an active participate in changing some of the ways the world functions was the realization that most of the systems in place today create emissions, food scarcity and malnutrition, poverty, bad economic models and policies and suffering. Every day he sets out to change that and he is optimistic about the powerful, positive impacts humans can have once they set out to create systems that are conducive to a thriving existence on planet earth. Thank you for listening to this Talk๐ŸŒŠ๐ŸŒโ˜€ which came alive through the voices of Marc Buckley and your host Stella Sage๐ŸŒฟ
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