Upstream - A Solstice Celebration for 2021 with Manda Scott and Nathalie Nahai
Episode Date: December 21, 2021Happy Solstice 2021! Here is our second annual solstice conversation with fellow podcasters Manda Scott and Nathalie Nahai. In this conversation we ask each other the core questions at the heart of ou...r shows, we reflect on key themes, insights, and inquiries that we have traced through our interviews and documentaries in 2020, and we give gratitude and gifts of inspiring books, practical invitations, and a beautiful closing solstice meditation. Manda Scott is an award-winning novelist, podcaster and smallholder whose life is underpinned by the shamanic dreaming she gave voice to in her Boudica: Dreaming novels. For the past two years, she has been host of the Accidental Gods podcast which originally aimed at fostering conscious evolution and is now leaning more towards finding an inspiring way through to a flourishing future. Nathalie is an international speaker, consultant and author of two books: the recently published Business Unusual: Values, Uncertainty and the Psychology of Brand Resilience, and best-seller, Webs of Influence: The Psychology of Online Persuasion. Her work explores the intersection between persuasive technology, ethics, and the psychology of online behavior. Nathalie also hosts The Hive Podcast, and contributes to national publications, television and radio on the impact of technology in our lives. This episode of Upstream was made possible with support from listeners like you. Upstream is a labor of love — we couldn't keep this project going without the generosity of our listeners and fans. Please consider chipping in a one-time or recurring donation at www.upstreampodcast.org/support If your organization wants to sponsor one of our upcoming documentaries, we have a number of sponsorship packages available. Find out more at upstreampodcast.org/sponsorship For more from Upstream, visit www.upstreampodcast.org and follow us on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and Bluesky. You can also subscribe to us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts.
Transcript
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You are listening to Upstream. Upstream.
Upstream.
Upstream.
A podcast of documentaries and conversations that invites you to unlearn everything you
thought you knew about economics.
I'm Dela Duncan.
And I'm Robert Raymond. Welcome to our second annual
Solstice conversation with fellow podcasters Mandascott and Natalie Nahai. Manda is an award-winning
prolific novelist, spiritual teacher, and the host of the accidental gods podcast, which originally
aimed at fostering conscious evolution and is now leaning more towards finding an inspiring way
through to a flourishing future.
Natalie is an international speaker, consultant, and the author of two books,
Business, Unusual, and the best-seller webs of influence. Her work explores the intersection between persuasive technology, ethics, and the
psychology of online behavior. Natalie also hosts the Hive Podcast, exploring our relationships
with technology, one another, and the natural world. In this conversation, we ask each other the
core questions at the heart of our shows. We reflect on the key themes, insights, and inquiries that we have traced through our
interviews and documentaries in 2021, and we give gratitude and gifts of inspiring books,
practical invitations, and a beautiful, closing, solstice meditation.
And now I will hand over to Manda to facilitate the first part of our conversation. Enjoy!
So welcome everybody to the traditional solstice episode of our joint podcast from Upstream and the Hive and accidental gods.
It's definitely tradition now, it's the time when daylight is least, night is longest,
when our energy sinks most deeply into ourselves,
and we can look back at the year that's been,
and look forward at the year to come,
and find the balance point between those,
and perhaps find the energy of the older,
becoming the seed of the new year.
So with that as our basis and our
impetus for making this podcast, we thought we'd start with our three core questions.
So we're going to start with Natalie because Natalie's got a core question that she asks
at the start of every hive podcast and it felt like a really fitting one to start our three-way tradition.
So Natalie, do you want to ask us your question?
Sure, thank you. So the question that I always invite people to have a shot at the beginning
is what's happening in the global human psyche right now. And it's a bit of a controversial one
because a lot of people are quick to point out
differences in opinion on how they conceive of the world, whether it's a young young perspective, a human sort of perspective, or something else, but I think it's an interesting
place from which to, I guess, un-pick some of the things and where we are
because it brings us together. So a place of community. So for you guys, what do you feel is happening
in the global human psyche right now?
One thing that I'm feeling concerned about
in the global human psyche that's really live for me right now
is our ability to focus or sense of attention
and how that is, yeah, we're finding that difficult. I'm, this is likely theme in your podcast and definitely something I'm reading about
right now in Johan Hari's book, Stolen Focus.
So it's really on my mind.
And yeah, so it's just this, like I read in his book that on average, folks are interrupted pretty much every three minutes.
And it's very unlikely for a human right now to have an hour of uninterrupted time.
And then of course, he also speaks about car accidents, I think one in five car accidents are
caused by distracted driving due to cell phones. And so I'm just right now I'm thinking
about my own ability as I watch my relationship with my phone as I'm reading this book and just
thinking about fractured attention or inability to focus. And I'm, yeah, morning that or worried about that. And then the last piece to bring in there is he says something like our inability to
focus or the fact that we're having a hard time paying attention means that our ability
to problem solve is being impacted or going down.
So I know that we'll get to the challenges of our time and their potential solutions.
So yeah, just feeling a concern for the global human psyche's attention span and our sense
of fractured attention, stolen focus, and yeah, maybe difficulty focusing on what's important
and what might need our attention right now.
Manda, what about you?
What's happening in the global psyche for you right now?
Thank you.
That's really interesting because it leads into
where I was going,
but I also just wanted to think about that a moment,
the fracturing of our attention and how fast it's happened.
And also whether our attention was ever better, I'm remembering back to when
I was a baby writer and I was talking to Val McDermott way back in the days, we were writing
on computer, but you know, Google didn't exist, Facebook didn't exist, Twitter didn't exist.
And we were talking about the fact that you could play, you know, Nots and Crosses on your computer,
and that we would write for five minutes and then we would find ourselves inevitably playing whatever it was we were playing.
And I wonder if that happened to Jane Austen or Virginia Woolf and what was it that they
stared out of the window at instead.
And whether we are actually undergoing neurogenic change, which I think is very likely and
very possible, or whether we have always just been distractable,
except under specific circumstances. So I've found I've come off Facebook, I switch off email
when I'm trying to write now, because I don't want the email pinging in, I want to be able
to focus. But it's taken me two or three months, I think, since starting the book to really
get to that point where I could, because writing a book is problem solving. It's where, how, what do I do? And when I get stuck, I don't
remember if it always took me this long to get unstuck. Everybody says each book feels
like it's just as hard as the last. So it probably did, used to take me longer or as long,
but it's, it feels like it's possible that we are becoming less able to focus except we went out
for lunch today.
We just all sat around the dinner table, nobody had their phones and we talked for an
hour, totally focused on what we were talking about.
And I think in the interhuman interactions, we can still hold focus and still follow
planes of thought and not necessarily get jumped off onto other things.
And that feels really important at the moment. So for me, that's part of where I think the global
human psyche seems to be going because we asked ourselves this last year and I'm really
interested in how much to me the splintering of humanity seems to be getting more obvious.
So far more people in my own ecosystem are openly saying we need to change the system.
Many, many more orders of magnitude more than this time last year.
But then I occasionally drift into other people's ecosystems and discover
it, holy different conversations happening. They might exist on a different planet. And
I'm wondering was that again, always the case and I just didn't have the capacity to drift
into their ecosystems, or is it that along with our attention spans shortening, we're also in the attention economy and the limbic
hijack economy and the limbic hijack is polarizing us. And if that is the case,
how are we going to depolarize? Because I don't think that as a polarized species,
we have any chance to find any way through. And what's happened this year for me is that almost everybody I know is now aware that this is it.
We are now at the turning point.
There is no way that business as usual is ever coming back.
So that feels to me, it's a moment of extraordinary opportunity because nobody's trying to pretend nothing's happening.
But I haven't yet heard the coherence of views of how we get to where we need to go that
gives me the confidence that we can do it.
If we don't have a common plan, we won't have common action and then we won't get there.
Does that make sense?
Does that kind of coherent concept?
So Natalie, what do you think's happening in the global human psyche?
You asked so many people and you hear so many interesting answers.
I think the easiest way that I can think of to answer that would probably just be a
reckoning.
I think we're going through a giant reckoning, and I think it looks different depending on
people's context, but clearly no one is untouched by the fact that we're going through an extraordinary amount
of change in what feels like a very short amount of time, even though we've known about
these issues for such a long while, you know, if you look at issues of tribalism and politicisation
of populations against one another, that you can look throughout history to track that arc,
or if you look at the climate crisis, you know, it's not new.
We've had the knowledge for a long time.
I think the felt sense now is much more visceral.
It's much more present.
It's happening now, even though people are still trying to dig their heads in the sand,
whether it's protecting themselves by thinking if you're crew enough wealth, you can just
jattison yourself to Mars, which by the way, way more bloody difficult
to set up a habitable planet with a small population
when you've just come through locked up.
Like, what you would want to aim for that
compared to what we have, you know,
a beautiful homeostasis on a planet
that we're hopefully not gonna ruin too far.
So anyways, I think there's, I think,
there's the thing that I think that is most present for me
is this sense that finally we are,
we are coming home to Conneica,
a felt realization of we need to figure out our way through this.
And alongside that, the other thing that I find quite alarming,
and this is only in pockets of the world,
but it's happening in pockets of the world
where there's the greatest wealth and potentially
the most power and influence, is this extraordinary context in which is becoming or has become and I don't
know where the tipping point lies again if it comes to sort of open back out again. But this
narrowing of public discourse, this kind of way of just shutting down conversations on some of
the most poignant, important and emotionally powerful and potent conversations that we need
to be having. So, whether we're talking about the safety and the well-being and the validation
belonging of certain groups, whatever that group identity might be, or whether we're talking
about people's decisions to get vaccinated or not to get vaccinated, you know, things that
people, you know, we sharpen the world, we make choices based on mostly an intention to be well and to do good. Like, I generally
have an optimistic view of humanity. And the fact that we now can't discuss difference
in a generative way, in a respectful way, I find quite saddening. And yet at the same
time, this year in particular, I have had so many small closed-door virtual
conversations and also physically in presence with people about how other people are also
lamenting this and actually activating conversations with people in smaller groups under this kind
of psychologically safe container where they say, okay, this is a problem we're going to
talk in a different way.
And so there's, I don't know, there's a lot of tumult happening.
And I think a lot of green shoots,
but it just feels like the green shoots are underground
and haven't yet been made visible to the broader public,
arena of social media, et cetera.
It's quite a rambly answer, but I hope that makes
some sort of career in sense.
It really does.
And it's occurring to me, actually, even as we go,
that we could just actually spend the entire podcast
discussing this one question. And it would potentially be really interesting. But I think we can also
fold it in the other questions. So, Della, your question is, what do you find when you go upstream,
which is the name of your podcast? So, take that and do with it what you will.
Yeah, this is the question. Sometimes when I ask it, I ask folks to first tune into what is
breaking your heart right now or what is a great concern for you and then and to feel into that,
to really allow ourselves to tap into that grief for that, you know, that that emotion behind it.
And then to go on a journey upstream to what are the root causes of that suffering or of that pain,
as a way of potentially unlocking some sort of insight around what we might be able to
do to alleviate that.
So Natalie, I'll start with you.
You can either pick one aspect that's concerning you or breaking your heart and then go upstream
from that or you can hold all of the
all of the difficulty or challenges of our time right now that you're witnessing and experiencing and go upstream.
And what might you see right now? What have you seen over this past year as some of the root causes?
That's such a good question.
If I think about all of the things that all the behaviors are engaging in, that are damaging,
ourselves and the living world, I think a lot of it comes down to finding ways, or be
it kind of destructive ways to cope, so to cope with a lack of belonging, a cope with
a sense of uncertainty or fear.
And I think that if we're thinking about,
well, what are the things that we're trying to cope with,
or deal with, or protect ourselves from?
There's, when you peel back the layers,
whether it's through systems or relationships or experiences,
I think that a lot of what generates these coping behaviors
that are perhaps not helpful is trauma.
So in the last year, two years, we've
heard a lot of people talk about trauma
through the experience of race, through the experience
of gender identity, through the experience of colonisation
and many, many more.
And I think that that, for me, it's kind of where
the trauma comes from is one question,
whether it's just system where the trauma comes from is one question, whether it's systematized
because of the the the choices that people have made cumulatively through generations,
or whether it's something which happened on a shorter time scale in the span of a life,
which is embedded within the systems. I think trauma is one of these key things that we need to look
at and think, okay, well, if we want to be able to have rich, imaginative, creative
lives that enable us to confront and to create a co-op, creatively come up with solutions
to the biggest problems, how do we free that and make that possible? And I think a lot
of the answer lies in naming and working with trauma on different levels to give people
the sense that they have the agency
and the capability to envision a different future
for themselves and to experience something different.
That's kind of, yeah,
that's what I've been thinking about a lot recently.
Thank you, thank you.
Yeah, bringing trauma and healing into this conversation.
Beautiful.
Amanda, what about you?
What is it that's on your heart, mind right now?
And when you go upstream, what are some root causes that you're finding and wanting to work with?
So when we talked about these questions, I had a different answer, but with asking,
what is breaking my heart right now? Then that has...
It's centered me somewhere else. I read an article in the Guardian yesterday the day before
entered me somewhere else. I read an article in the Guardian yesterday the day before about the number of species in Britain that have moved onto the red list. So, house martens,
green finches, things that when I was growing up, where everywhere, are now in danger of of extinction. And I find that desperately upsetting. And then it takes me off into, well,
yes, but the oceans are dying. And you know, the ghost paper and all of this sort of stuff
that we are so close to tipping points that we just do not understand. We don't know
where they'll take us, we have no concept.
And I've had conversations on the podcast with highly intelligent individuals who'll say
they're going, we're not actually near any real tipping point.
See, I think things might be sliding.
They might be a bit bad, but we're not actually, you know, in our lifetimes, going to see
bad stuff.
And I'm thinking bad stuff is happening now.
What are you talking about?
And so going upstream from that, the only way
I can find a place of balance, there are two.
One is simply, can lock into the web of life and go,
OK, I'm here, whatever you need for me,
I will endeavor to do it.
And hope that something much, much, much
wiser than me has a sense of a bigger pattern. But on a more
preze level, I go back to Denelamedo's 12 levers of change and how high can I go up that
list and have rational useful impact. And the second to top one is changing the paradigm,
and the top one is abandoned all paradigms.
And I'm really working on what that means
and how we might do it,
because let's assume Dunele Meadows was incredibly bright
and got it right,
anything less than that is not gonna work now.
So all of the tweaks that we might make,
I really am throwing myself into regenerative agriculture. I want the whole of this area
to be, I want to look out of the window and not see another monoculture for the rest of
my life. But that's, you know, at best midway down the list. How are we going to take our
entire species to the top of the list? Very fast. And so I'm looking
up stream at the kinds of people that I think are endeavoring to do this. And there aren't
many. I'm listening a lot to Shmashchenberger and Anderson Harris and thinking they're getting
very close and they're thinking the kinds of thoughts that I think might work. I'm looking at Daniel
Thorson and his group who are wanting to create monasteries, not necessarily Buddhist, effectively
atheist or at least agnostic monasteries, 500 around the world where people will go and train
and create someone who could step into any situation and be a source of harmony. Someone to whom any amount of power could be given
and they would use it wisely.
And that seems to me that level of thinking
is where we need to be at.
So that's when I look up stream,
that's where I'm aiming for
and everything else is falling in the water,
distal to that, really.
Yeah, thank you both.
I'll pretty much add to what you're both sharing because I really love what you both
said.
When I've mapped this journey, sometimes when I leave give in person talks or lessons,
I'll map the upstream journey as I understand it right now.
And I will include trauma and also inflammation. That was an addition this year from reading a book
called Enflamed by Rupa Maria and Raj Patel. Really wonderful book. And they connect trauma and
inflammation and inflammation on all the levels in our bodies, but also on our planet and in our
interactions with one another complex conflicts and disagreements.
So trauma and inflammation and then going upstream from that
supremacies and supremacies plural.
So white supremacy, patriarchal supremacy, capitalism,
capital supremacy over the 99 percent
and eco supremacy or human supremacy over ecology.
And then going upstream from that separation, right?
And that lack or that forgetting
of our interconnectedness and oneness.
And so I map that and that relates to what you both shared.
And then one key thing that I heard this year
that's been really impactful on this upstream question
is from Romdass, or I heard it from Romdass, the six planes of consciousness, six planes
of consciousness where they're kind of like channels that we can tune reality to.
So there's six realities that all are true and all exist.
They're just relative realities.
So the first one is the physical plane, the physical reality, the three of us are sizes, shapes, textures, a plants color, shape texture.
So the physical realm, the second is the realm of our identities. So our socially constructed
identities, you know, race, class, gender, socioeconomic status, citizenship, also our personality identities, our zodiac symbols,
are just all the ways that we categorize and differentiate,
which can be beautiful and cultural and celebratory
and can be a way of separating and judgment as well.
And then the third is that of our callings
or our mythopoetic identities, you know,
that we are true seekers or that
I'm a renegade economist, right? These kind of identities in a more poetic or mytho, you
know, or more mythic way. And then we get into the realm of the fourth, the fourth channel
is meeting being to being. So our beingness, a tree being, you too, is being. So we are
simply beings having this conversation across space.
And then the next plane, the fifth plane,
is the realm of oneness or interconnectedness,
recognizing when I look into your eyes,
I see myself looking back at me.
It's that ecological self, for example.
And then the last plane is the plane of nothingness
because oneness is the view from tunis. But within oneness is the plane of nothingness because oneness is the view from toonness, but within oneness is the sensation or experience of emptiness or nothingness.
So why I say these is because when I go upstream now, that has been really helpful to know that our physical realities, our identities, our mythopoetic callings are real.
And yet when we get stuck in them, because they're quite sticky,
when we really overly identify with that reality,
then those are the realms of separation.
And when we also recognize oneness, nothingness, and beingness,
we break ourselves out or awaken from the separation and we can live within a more
interconnected experience. So it's not to only live in those higher planes or those other planes
that would be probably very difficult to live in them every day, but to know that they exist and to recognize that we're flipping channels.
And for myself to not get stuck in the stickiness of the separation identities or planes.
So I'm just sharing that because that's a delicious insight around what happens when
you go pretty far upstream.
So the view of realities or planes or planes of consciousness.
So I just want to share that with you both.
Gosh, there is so much to on pick.
You know, honestly, next year, I think we should just do these three.
I'm never going to be else because, yeah, there's a lot we could reflect back on on that.
But if we go back to our third question, which is your question, which is mine, which
is what are you here for?
Then I think that arises for all of us probably
certainly sounds to me like it arises out of those. So, Della, do you want to carry on
straight on into that from where you got to with that? Where does that take you in terms
of what are you here for now in this solstice?
Yeah. So, one way to view this time that I appreciate and I know you both know as well is that this is the time of the great turning.
And one way to view that is turning towards life in every moment of every day and our ways of being and our internally in our systems.
And I had this thought this morning as I was contemplating our call that what if there was also a great tuning that was happening beneath
or in addition to this great turning because in order to turn one needs to tune.
And what I mean by that, it relates to the denlelemmetos, the highest leverage point that you mentioned
the, you know, being unattached to paradigms.
And it also relates to this Rome dos teaching around relative truths.
So it's like holding truths to be relative
means tuning into that which is true right now.
And just to share a story related to this,
I heard Gandhi was doing a march,
you know, a protest march against British imperialism.
And it was the first day of the march
and then after the first day,
he stopped and said, we, I no longer want to do this March. And his lieutenant said, you can't
do that. You can't stop something that's already in motion. All these hundreds and thousands
of people are already marching. And he said, he said something like, my commitment is not to
consistency. My commitment is to truth.
And I am not God, so I do not know absolute truth.
I only know my experience of relative truth,
so I am committed to relative truth consistently
as it shows up for me.
So what I'm hearing by that is like,
to be a part of the great turning in every moment and every
day and in our systems and efforts and actions, we need to tune in constantly to be able to
sense into what is right right now.
Because again, there is no absolute truth.
It's just this relative truth.
I'm exploring this in my own thinking and own mind, but I am here for that tuning in and
the turning that comes when
we tune in.
Mattical.
Thank you.
So Natalie, what are you here for just now?
I've been dreading this question because I never really know how to answer this one.
I feel like it's very much an unresolvable question in many respects.
But maybe that's part of the answer. I think part of the thing I'm here for is to seek
and to search different ways of showing up.
And I think when you're someone who has possibly multiple
ways of engaging with the art or with the world,
so I have the art, there's the music,
there's the writing, there's the speaking,
workshops and such.
I think the challenge is to figure out
what are the things
into connect these different capacities or skills or ways of creating. And this year,
kind of, it's my surprise, I think, in some ways. I haven't done much music in a long while.
I've realised that actually one of the things I enjoy the most, and I learnt this when I was actually
away on a regenerative agriculture retreat and near modesty on the south of Spain. We were there for an intensive crash course. And at the
end of the week people were showing you know how this is going to impact how they were
going to go out into their lives and some of them have very big influence in terms of the
social platforms they have or the money or the power they have. And I was sitting there
thinking oh my god what can I possibly offer? What am I here for? Why am I here on this course?
Why did I choose to bring this into my life?
And I realized actually what I'm here for is to create in some way more intimate spaces
for change making.
So to unlock whether it's through music or through the art or through conversations like
this, to unlock deep moments of intimate
change, which I might not even be conscious of, but that someone somewhere might hear a
conversation or hear a piece of music, and that that might move something in them to allow
them to wake up to something that they want to express. Because I think one of the things
that is becoming so apparent to me is that we're so busy and numb and distracted to the point that was made earlier, that it's really hard coming from that place of retreat to then plug back into the main frame of what is happening in the world right now.
How do I feel? How does the web of life feel? What's the surge that's coming through? You know, just, so I think that's part of maybe what I'm here for, is to help people
to feel that.
And I'm not really sure yet what that looks like, but I think that's kind of, that's the
answer that I'm circling towards right now.
So yeah, Amanda, how about you?
Just at this very moment, I'm here to make sure the cat doesn't tread on the keyboard and cut us all up.
Um, the joys of recording from home.
It's interesting because this is a question that I ask myself every morning.
So it's, it's my question and it, I had never thought of it as being uncomfortable.
Are we getting a sound of a cat purring on the microphone?
No, but if we did, it would be lovely. Okay, that's fine. That's not a bad sound.
So, by the time this goes out, because obviously we're recording it a little ahead of the solstice,
the answer may be different, because for us at home, what the solstice is for the winter solstice
is to sit with the fire and exactly ask that question. And this time last year,
exactly asked that question. And this time last year, what came was that I needed to find generosity of spirit, which was not a phrase that meant a whole lot to me on a tangible
level. I could kind of process it intellectually, but never are the words that come out of the
far designed to be processed intellectually. So I spent the first half of the year really
working at what generosity of spirit meant. While also studying homeopathy, quite hard, it's quite an intellectual thing. And I got to exam in July and just about two weeks ahead of
the exam, I had a shamanic experience which led to the book that I'm writing, which I couldn't start because I was studying for a
four-set exam. And I started it on the 10th of August and at the time recording I just about
hit 80,000 words, which is not bad going in for months actually. And it feels like at the moment
what I live for is the book, I get incredibly edgy when somebody requires something else
of me other than podcasting because that kind of feels what I'm here for as well.
But otherwise, you know, don't take me away from a keyboard or I might explode, becomes
quite relevant.
And I guess somebody, I thought we were going to have to go out this morning and I got
a migraine basically just with the, I can't, I can't do this, I can't, you can't
make me go out, I need to write, I spent all night working out what to do
with the last problem.
But so at the moment that, actually,
and I don't know why, it's not a book that I had imagined,
I had finished telling everybody that I was never gonna write again.
And, and yeah, exactly, famous last words,
literally two weeks before I'd had a friend come around
and they sat at the table downstairs, went in that book, so just too slow, they're
not going to change the world in time and why would I bother? And anyway, I broke doing
the last one and I don't want to break again. And this one isn't breaking me, it's good.
So at the moment what I'm here for is to finish the book. That's so exciting. Here's
actually, I love it, I love it, I really love it, even when I'm just getting
no sleep and spending hours on the same scene.
Like now, it's still, and I've no idea where it's going,
except that we are writing the revolution between us,
because I have got the, okay guys, incremental change,
not gonna happen.
You've been listening to our Solstice 2021 conversation
with podcasters
Manda Scott of accidental gods and Natalie Nahai of the hive. We'll be right back for the second half of our show.
I want to hold the hand inside you I want to take the breath that's true
I look to you and I see nothing
I look to you to see the road trip
Live your life, go in shadow
Now come apart, you're going blue
Kind of neck, to your old turnip
Others you had, what's not there
And you're into you
Straight into the world
And into the world
I think it's strange, you never know Music I'm a little too late to be Good stride, never end That was American Football covering Mazdi Stars fade into you. Now here's the second part of our Solstice conversation with Manda Scott and Natalie Nehae.
Having explored are you three core questions? I'm not going to hand over chair of the multiple
podcast to Della who has some more questions to explore. So Della, over to you.
I would love to know about where you all have come from this year in podcasting.
So what have been the threads, what have been the guiding questions, what have been some
of the highlights, the insights that you've come to?
Yeah, were there any themes or anything at all for the good of solstice and to carry
in to 2022? Natalie, I'll start with you.
We'd love to hear. Tell us about the journey that you've come to in your podcast over this past year.
So this has been a bit of a strange one for the podcast because back in January, I was
because back in January I was knee deep in writing when you book business unusual. And so as part of that research I reached out to quite a lot of people to look at how
values, changing ideas around who we want to be in the world, psychological safety, all of these
different themes are showing up in the world of business and how we might use a deeper set of
principles of guidance to create
meaningful business lives that we could be proud of. And so the
podcast started the year on the one hand recording all of this business-themed
conversation and on the other hand looking at things in the public facing podcast alongside this, like eco psychology, looking at resilience, sustainability, looking at rituals, embodied cognition, looking
at stories of transformation, surveillance, you know, it would kind of span the whole
remit from technology through to transcendence.
It was really quite a broad brush.
But one of the things that I did notice,
which was very interesting, both in the recording of the currencies and which is coming out now, and in the
more traditional episodes that, you know, longer-term listeners would be familiar with, is that a lot of the
themes that we're discussing and that you've discussed in both of your podcasts are now entering mainstream
boardrooms, mainstream consumer research and you know also behaviors that people thought might
take longer to express themselves especially when we're thinking about issues around the pandemic
so people being perhaps worried about finances and actually we're seeing that many more people
now rather than tightening their pockets or spending in a way that's just utilitarian,
a lot of them are much more keen to spend in a way that reflects who they want to be
in the world and the future that they want to build.
So I think the main theme for me has really been how do we find integration and voice to
the values that we care deeply about,
not just in our personal lives, but also in our social and our business lives?
And that's something which has given me a lot of cause for hope,
because I see these areas becoming increasingly interconnected
and the conversations bridging these different spheres.
Thank you.
So how about you, Della?
I think when I tune into thinking about the podcast, the upstream
podcast over this past year, I want to start with gratitude because first of all, Robert Raymond
is my co-person, my co-comrade in the whole journey. So I definitely want to bring his name in
and just appreciate all the conversations and work on the documentaries
that he did as well. And also, I've just been feeling recently just how grateful I am that folks
are just willing to be in conversation in the podcasts that we're doing, just really grateful for
their time and sharing their wisdom. And then of course, there are the people who listened to upstream, who have been on this
journey with us the whole time.
And we're just feeling so grateful for the messages that we've received, messages of
feedback and appreciation and suggestions, the ways that folks have shared the episodes
with their classes or schools or communities or groups.
And then the donations as well, both regular donations one time and also a crowdfunding campaign.
So we've also come into towards the end of this year,
an area of like consistency. We've wanted to do more sharing a conversation every other week
and getting into a rhythm around the documentaries.
So we were able to do four documentaries this year, one on homoachonomicus, which was
a very upstream one around who are we as humans, who does mainstream economics say we are
as humans, this homoachonomic view, rational, self-interested being, and who might we also be or be otherwise that might be more supportive for a thriving planet and people.
And that was really a deep journey and beautiful one.
Then feminism for the 99% and abolished the police were also deliciously fun.
And I learned a lot through the process and also felt more
topical, more current and I appreciated that really tapping into the global
psyche or particularly nationally in the US what's what's happening there so
that was that was really fun as well and then we ended the year with the
looking at the Occupy movement 10 years later.
And I remember one quote from that was Occupy never stopped, just caught its breath.
So just appreciating the threads over time and seeing how Occupy and, you know,
we are the 99% and criticism is our challenges to mainstream economics and
Wall Street are showing up today.
So that's been really fun.
And I'll just highlight one other big theme
from the year has been work, looking at work.
We had Devon Price come on speaking about laziness
does not exist, shared with a similar theme by Sarah Jaffy
who wrote a book called, Work Won't Love You Back, How Our Jobs Keep Us Exploited, Exhausted and Alone,
and also Ron Percer, a book on Mick mindfulness, how mindfulness became the new
capitalist spirituality. And these books were, these books and this work was,
these conversations were huge for me because I,
and part of what I do as I work is a right livelihood coach, which is where I try to make sense of
the alternative post-capitalist, new economic world, blessed stories in people's lives.
And this, all this, these conversations around work, rethinking work, challenging
perceptions of work, it just, it really made me shift some of my worldviews around work, rethinking work, challenging perceptions of work, it just, it really made me shift some
of my worldviews around work. And yeah, just hold it, hold it differently. So it's still an
alive question or conversation for me. And I think right now I'm just holding the tension.
I'm holding the tension that work can be a place of meaning and contribution
and our spirituality and action.
That's one way that I like to think about it.
And it can also be a space where a lot of folks feel
exploited, exhausted, and alone,
and how our systems really create that.
So I'm holding the both and in that regard,
but it's certainly been a big theme for me,
our relationship to work both systemically and personally.
Manda, what about you? What have been the themes of your podcast this year?
What were your guiding questions?
And yeah, what are you maybe still wondering?
So this year felt very different moving into the podcast.
We started at the Solstice
two years ago and the the early podcast was there to support
and provide a framework for the accidental gods as a wider space and I was really focused on
conscious evolution and how we could help people get there. And over time that evolved, partly it evolved because I realized that I was potentially overfacing people a little expecting them all to just leap in and evolve themselves consciously instantly.
Because some people have actual jobs, day jobs that are exhausting and leave them feeling quite isolated.
And that what I wanted the podcast to become then was to give people a sense of agency.
So one of the things that really impacted me on the first year of the podcast was Mickey
Cash Chan's analysis of our current situation as being one of scarcity separation and powerlessness.
And it seemed to me that if the podcast could bring in people who either had a view on how
that arose or more were living lives that were not that.
Then we could help people to have that sense of agency and possibility. And I didn't come to it
probably as lucidly as that, but that grew over the year. And then of course we had COP26 in October.
And it was happening in Glasgow, which is where I grew up. And so a lot of
the second half of the year seemed to focus in on COP and then focus away again of here it is,
what are we doing as we lead up to it? And then a really was that it, as we came away, that
desperate sense of just utter disappointment and devastation really, at how little was done there.
But in the meantime, being really excited
about the things that seemed to be happening on the fringes,
kind of like the occupy movement is alive in many ways.
It seems to me in what a lot of what the youth of XR are doing.
So in trying to reflect that on the podcast, I got to the point of bringing in people
who I had thought would be quite advanced in their thinking of how did we get here and where we going.
And I've realized that next year, starting now, how did we get here and the critique of the present
So how did we get here and the critique of the present is probably done? That everybody I got to, okay, yes, we get, this is broken, it's broken.
So how do you see the future?
You know, 10 years from now, we get it right, what does it look like?
And that's not clear yet.
I, you know, it suddenly becomes hand-wavy and smokin' mirrors and people start talking
about consciously evolving in community and we need to talk to each other and nobody is saying how we do that, actually how,
and then what it looks like when we've done it.
I have yet to pin somebody down to what seems, I book that I could write, you know,
give me a vision and I'll write the book about it, not happening.
And so really, for me, that's what I'm heading to, And Natalie, I think we're going to come to this now is,
where are we going?
And where we're going is, by this time next year,
when we three have this conversation again,
I want that one nailed down.
I don't obviously know all of the options,
but in no options, that we have a really clear picture
of how we could be if we get it right,
and how we get there, and what it looks like.
So does that answer your question?
It does.
Yeah, thank you.
And I just want to share one reflection to what you're saying, Manda.
I was leading a retreat recently and somebody said, gosh, why can't we live like this all the time?
You know, the singing together and meditation and learning and helpfulness
and co-creation and grief and ritual, all the things.
And it reminded me of something someone else has said
and as fellow Schumacher student who was talking about
festivals as a place where we embody the new economy.
So just one kind of maybe wondering is
when we're on retreats or in festivals,
are they ways that we start to embody
or that can to create a glimpse
of how we may want to live more generally?
And I mean the ones that are more like
there's a lot of reciprocity
and folks are sharing with one another.
So I just wanted to share that as a possible
thread for us to look at in the next year. And the thing about that is that there's no work.
Oh, there is work, but it's work that everybody chooses to do to make the festival or the retreat
or you and I both met at Schumacher, which again, I spent most of my time there going, why are we
not living like this all the time? You know, I want to live in community because this is the best that it could be.
And there was work, but it was work for the community within the community, by the community.
And isn't I think what you said earlier about work being the thing that destroys us and
breaks us is key and core and how can we change that and still have a world that moves.
So anyway, we were then going to move.
Natalie, you are going to cheer now a bit about the rest over to you.
So with all of these big questions that we're weaving into the mix,
the question for the future is what are the ones that you're going to bring into the new year?
What are your focuses in terms of your inquiry or questions?
As we turn into 2022,
Dalla, would you like to have a go?
Yeah, so a guiding question that may lead into a gift
and invitation for 2022.
One of them is I'm really deliciously exploring
enoughness and contentedness in my own life and with
coaching clients and consulting clients and also systemically one person's work who I really
want to uplift Jen Hinton from the Post Growth Institute and Donnie McClure in their book,
How on Earth, a flourishing and a not-for-profit world by 2050. So just this concept of what would it look like to have a world beyond profit or where
all profit income, you know, extra excess is harnessed and redirected to the social
good or environmental good, mission driven causes.
And that can happen on all levels, including our own personal levels.
So I'm, again, really exploring gratitude for enoughness when I do feel that and abundance.
And then also how do we create that systemically?
So I think that's a question that I'm playing with is what is enough, what is sufficiency,
what is contentiveness, and how can we recognize it, appreciate it, and then redistribute when we've gone over that?
Yeah, so that's a question for me coming into 2022 is enoughness, sufficiency, contentendous, and I guess an invitation for those listening is to explore that in their own lives.
So, okay, so building on that question, what was your gift or vision and or vision be for the near?
I think if I returned to some of the themes
of this conversation,
one gift would be quality of attention
or attention with quality,
focus, the ability to spend time with those we'd love
to spend time with or on projects or problems that we'd love to spend time with or on projects or problems
that we'd love to spend time on. So uninterruptedness, I would wish for all in 2022.
And one resource would be returning to that lesson by Ram Das, the six
planes of consciousness. I've been really enjoying the Be Here Now podcast,
which are just a series of his lectures over the years. So I would give
that gift to folks who might resonate and enjoy as I have done that podcast in those words.
Amanda, how about you, what's the question or questions that you're left with that you'd
like to bring to the New Year? I kind of went over those because my real question, I think,
Solstice notwithstanding for 2022 is, what does it look like if we get it right?
How does it feel and how did we get there? I want every bit of fiction in our worlds, our television,
the movies, novels, theatre, songs, poetry, letters to the Paris-Nese paper. I want them all to be
full of visions of a world where we get it right because otherwise what I'm surrounded
by is another cat. It's even bigger and more likely to try to look at the keyboard.
People are afraid of a future because we have been inundated
with really clear visions of how bad it could be if we get it wrong. We're very good at
those. And for all of our lives, we've had visions of consumer capitalism and everybody
knows what it looks like if you get to be super rich because pretty much everything
shows us that. Most of the heroes, in most of the things that I watched as a kid, didn't have day jobs
because they were rich enough not to. And instead, they saw in the world doing heroic and wonderful
things. And we need not to have either of those. So I really, my real push for the whole 2022 will be how can we create an entire generation
of creative people, creating visions of what will work.
So my gift for 2022 that we're working towards
is the three-topium masterclass,
which I have mentioned on the Extental Gods Podcast
more than once, and which I hope we will be able to launch
very soon after this podcast by the New Year, for sure, I'll be in well, so that we can create this, I want a hybrid between a think tank and a writing masterclass, because what I've discovered
writing the book is that I couldn't have done it without the podcast feeding me ideas,
and I want lots of more concrete ideas to feed
into the people who want to write them. And it doesn't matter that these are people who
have never written before or people who write all the time. We have to start generating
stuff that's not predicated on business as usual. So that.
So questions and gifts, I think if I was going to bring questions to the year, I mean, some of them would be similar to the ones from last year. So I guess in the
in the evolving context that we find ourselves, how do we live and work and love in such a way that
brings a sense of depth and a sense of hope and purpose? Because I think the hope aspect, especially
when we are surrounded by so much bleakness, is very easy to become
overcome and overwhelmed by a sense of loss of control, a sense of loss of agency. So hope is
really important. But then also I'm increasingly curious about asking how we can gather in meaningful
ways and draw upon our strengths as communities to drive change and envision a better future. Because
I've realised that, you know, we, one of the things that we've spoken about
in this particular conversation
is collective vision, bringing people together,
doing things at scale, when you are in retreat
or you are at a festival with their, with others.
And particularly in highly individualized societies,
it can be very tricky to make that jump from what
do I mean now need to do versus what can we do together over a longer stretch of time.
And so I think that's something that I'm really curious about. So how can we bring people
together to gather meaningfully and to draw on one another's strengths and visions and
imaginations to create possibilities that weren't there before.
And then in terms of a gift which is related to that for 2022, I've had the good fortune of
reading three phenomenal books one after the other which doesn't always happen. You know, you pick
up a book and you're like, this is going to be amazing. And then halfway through you're like,
oh, I can't get that time back. But one of the three books that I have been reading
is The Good Ancestor, How to Think Long Term
in a Short-Term World, which is by philosopher Roman
Kuznaric, and it's a very rich, practical, very inspiring
book that explores how we might reinvent everything
from democracy and culture to
economics and communities to become good ancestors. He talks about six key strategies that we
can use to think long-term, and the book is furnished with these wonderful examples of people
doing this in the real world, so it's super tangible. For me, it does give me a sense of what
can happen in community, giving hope and a sense of purpose. The other two books that I think are really worth mentioning, one which has been mentioned
by both of you, I think, in the past. Rob Hopkins from What is to What If, which is magnificent.
So if you're listening to this and you want some inspiration and hope, join the club
and read that one, it's wonderful. And the third book was The Art of Gathering by Priaparka,
which I've found to be also super interesting and practical.
So those would be my gifts for the new year.
And in terms of vision,
finding ways to gather in person and online
with a purpose, with a desire to be creative,
to speak freely and candidly,
and to explore some of these questions.
How can we do things differently?
Yes, thank you. because although we could,
I really think, spend the rest of the day
and probably the week talking to each other,
we are pretty much at the end.
But I just wanted to check before we finished.
Della, did you have anything that you wanted to say
that anything else had brought up?
Yeah, thank you for that invitation.
There is something.
One thing that you and I have spoken about Monday,
and actually was your gift to the world last year,
was a universal basic income.
When I re-listened, it was the universal basic income for all.
And one thing that we've spoken about is
fully automated luxury communism.
And I just want to uplift from a recent conversation
that actually Robert did with Cory Doctoro. He said something like, a UBI is not likely
because of the climate crisis. We're going to need so many folks to be moving entire
communities from areas that are affected by wildfire or severe drought
or ecosystem collapse or flooding. And so we're actually going to need a lot of effort and a lot of
work. And so I'm feeling called to share that yes, we need to change certain things around work.
And I also feel like there's something around our relationship to work. So finding
joy in it. And I don't mean putting on a, I don't mean mindfulness. I don't mean putting
on a happy face in an exploitative or extractive job. What I mean though is seeing our ways of
helping one another, our contributions as an area that we can have pleasure and enjoyment in.
So I was interesting, Rhonda, what you said about work,
but then you also said that when you write,
you're feeling so called the right,
and it's why you're here.
So I'm just reminded of how sometimes work feels like work,
and sometimes work doesn't feel like work.
So I guess I'm just, again, exploring that concept of work
and knowing that there's gonna be a lot of work to do as we
engage in this
just transition or the great turning have everyone we want to frame this time.
So how can we find a joy and even a pleasure or a deliciousness?
Maybe it's about seeing it as ritual or as gift giving or in the spirit of generosity,
but just wanted to share that invitation as we look to not a world where we're all going
to receive a UBI and be able to relax, not that that's not what you're saying, but that
where I want all of our needs to be met and to see that our contributions and efforts
are meaningful and enjoyable.
Natalie, did you have anything?
Not really. I'm just always happy listening to you too, quite honestly.
Now maybe there is one thing. I think one thing that I would suggest maybe, because it relates directly back to our ability to feel and to imagine and to create,
is to ask, you know, if you're listening and you're thinking, well, how do I tap into that?
I would love to offer you the invitation to just try something that you find play in.
And it could be something as simple as doing a cheeky post-reclose, which I have found.
I have an absolute rampant adoration for. Not necessarily that good, but it really makes me happy.
And it makes me feel very connected.
So something that you enjoy, that you find play in and that ignites your creativity, even
in a little way, because I think what we need is the kindling.
And so few of us lack that kindling in day to day life, that if you can start there, then
wonderful things can come.
Yay, thank you.
And we were talking about books and Delar reminded me.
I read about recently called The Hands of the Emperor
by Victoria Goddard and it's fantasy fiction,
it's huge, it's about 900 pages long,
maybe not quite that long, but it's big.
And it felt like having the most amazing holiday
because it's set in this glorious set of worlds
that she describes very beautifully
and a lot of it is in something quite akin to our South seas.
And the basic plot, and this is not a spoiler, it's on the back cover, is that an Indigenous
person from the South seas has become the senior assistant, the hands of the emperor to the person
who is the emperor of worlds and has supreme power. And this Indigenous individual wants to change the worlds
for the better.
And partway through, they bring in UBI.
And I was so happy reading this.
So somebody's actually created this huge, huge world.
And she's written multiple novels set in this world.
And they've got a UBI, and they've worked it through,
and they've talked through the problems
with all the people who really didn't want it to happen. And they're showing it
in action. And it's beautiful. So I would offer the hands of the Emperor of Victoria Goddard,
along with the much deeper things that Natalie and Ella have both authored. Because I think
this is the thing I listened to Cory Docto, who is one of my absolute superheroes.
And I thought, no, no, you've completely misunderstood UBI.
No, because first of all, you could be right.
We have to relocate every coastal city to any miles inwards, which is what he was saying.
You'd have to persuade a lot of people that that was really necessary.
And I'm kind of interested in the conversations that would lead to that.
But it would have to be done by people who chose to do it. We have to step away from
work being a former slavery, to being something that brings us joy, or there's no point.
So on that, we're going to end because it's the solstice with a small space for you listening to reflect inwards if you want to and if it's safe please if you're driving a car operating
heavy machinery or power tools, enjoy a small children anything like that switch off now
and come back later when you got some peace and quiet and time on your own.
And if you got that then settle down, make sure you can hear us clearly.
Feet on the floor, somewhere peaceful, switch your phone off because you're going to focus
for a couple of minutes.
And here we go. So settle into your physical body, feel your feet on the floor, and your seat on the chair
of your sitting.
If you're lying, feel the places that make contact with the floor and through it with
the earth.
However you make contact send roots down into the earth at this time of the dark nights.
Feel your heart connect to the heart of the earth and then both connect to the heart of the universe. You are the connection from the heavens to the
earth and the earth to the heavens. And as the sun sinks on the shortest day, as the
night rises, as the time of reflection moves in. What have you learned from the past year? What were its joys? Its sorrows. Its
moments of challenge and peace?
And for what were you absolutely grateful? And as the dark rises, as the only spark is the fire, as we settle into the peace of
the moment and this time of inward looking, what spark arises in you now? What makes your heart sing and leap?
And fill with joy and gratitude?
How can you take that out into the world
as the new year arises?
What is there that you can do,
that only you can do,
and that you can do better than anything else?
This is your gift to the world now, and it might change, but for now, how could you take
this forward? forward. At this turning point of all the worlds of all time, how can you tip your
weight on the scales as we lean towards life? As we flourish, as we thrive, as we
give our gifts to the generations yet to come.
Let your gift fill you,
and as the new dawn comes up,
as the days begin to stretch longer.
See how you can walk it out into the earth.
Sing it to the sun, dance with it under the moonlight, and find yourself in the best that you can be.
Thank you all. Thank you, fellow podcasters, for our wonderful, solstice tradition. I really look forward to meeting with you again this time next year.
Thank you, Manda. Thank you Natalie. Thank you. Thank you guys. It was so much fun.
And that's it from us, from our traditional,
deep, deep midwinter,
reconnection with dela and Natalie.
Such a pleasure. Thank you both.
You've been listening to our Solstice 2021 conversation. To learn more about Manda Scott of accidental gods, visit mandaScott.co.uk and accidentalgs.life. And to learn more about Natalie of the Hive,
visit NatalieNahai.com.
Upstream The Music was written by Robert,
and this episode was edited by Caro Churchill.
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