Upstream - A Winter Solstice Celebration for 2022 with Manda Scott and Nathalie Nahai

Episode Date: December 19, 2022

Happy Winter Solstice! In the 3rd year of this annual tradition, Upstream host and producer Della Duncan joins two friends to reflect on the past year. Manda Scott is a novelist, podcaster, regenerati...ve economist, and host of the Thrutopia Masterclass, which aims to help writers across all forms weave credible narratives that will lead us forward from exactly where we are, to a  flourishing future we would be proud to leave to the generations that come after us.  Her award-winning novels have been published in over 20 languages and have been best-sellers across the world. Now, she is turning from historical writing to Thrutopian fiction and her new book West of the Sunset, North of Tomorrow is due out in 2023.  This fast-paced thriller embraces all of the ideals explored in the Accidental Gods podcast and membership project.  She lives in the English Marches on the border with Wales, dreams of Scottish Independence, and shares her life with a wife, assorted four-legged friends and a community of dreamers intent on forging a flourishing future.  Nathalie Nahai is an author, keynote speaker, and host of The Hive Podcast, a series that enquires into our relationship with one another, with technology, and with the living world. With a diverse background in human behavior, persuasive tech and the arts, she brings a unique vantage point from which to examine the complex challenges we face today. She is also the author of bestselling books: Webs Of Influence: The Psychology of Online Persuasion and Business Unusual: Values, Uncertainty and the Psychology of Brand Resilience. Upstream theme music was composed by Robert Raymond. This episode of Upstream was made possible with support from listeners like you and by the Guerrilla Foundation and Resist Foundation. 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 social media: Facebook.com/upstreampodcast twitter.com/UpstreamPodcast Instagram.com/upstreampodcast You can also subscribe to us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Before we get started on this episode, if you can, please go to Apple Podcasts and rate, subscribe, and leave us a review there. You can also go to Spotify to leave us a review there too. It really helps us get in front of more eyes and into more ears. We don't have a marketing budget or anything like that for Upstream, so we really do rely on listeners like you to help grow our audience and spread the word. And also, Upstream is a labor of love. It's really important for us to keep our bi-weekly conversation series and quarterly documentaries free of charge and accessible to anyone who's interested. But it all takes a lot of time and resources. If you can, if you're in a place where you can afford to do so. And if it's important for you to keep this content free and sustainable,
Starting point is 00:00:46 please consider going to upstream podcast.org forward slash support to make a one-time or recurring monthly donation. Thank you. It's so interesting to think about how busy and full our lives get. And of course, I think about how capitalism really finds new things for us to do and new products for us to buy and new things to consume our time and focus and attention. So I think one thing in our global psyche that I'm also noticing is just a busyness, a fullness, and the never-ending to-do lists and things like that. At least I'm sensing that in myself. And yeah, I think the deeper question there is, how do we seek enoughness? How do we find sufficiency or find contentedness?
Starting point is 00:01:52 And this, of course, goes to the degrowth conversation too. So it's on all scales, our individual lives, collective and planetary. You're 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 Robert Raymond. And I'm Della Duncan. Happy winter solstice. In the third installment of this annual tradition, Della will be joining two friends to reflect on the past year.
Starting point is 00:02:24 tradition, Della will be joining two friends to reflect on the past year. Manda Scott, based in Northern England, is a prolific novelist and the host of the podcast Accidental Gods, which explores the intersections between science and spirituality, philosophy and politics, and art and activism. Natalie Nahai, based in Spain, is the host of The Hive podcast, which focuses on psychology, technology, and human behavior. Together, they explore the core questions of our podcasts, share stories and insights from the last year, and create invitations and intentions for the year to come. Here's Della in conversation with Manda Scott and Natalie Nahai. Welcome to our December solstice conversation.
Starting point is 00:03:33 I'm Della Duncan. I'm here with Manda Scott from Accidental Gods and Natalina Hai from The Hive. And today we are going to reflect, reminisce, and share stories and insights from this past year, and also go into some invitations and insights as we go forth into 2023. So happy solstice, everyone, and grateful to be with you both. So Natalie, let's start with you. Do you want to introduce yourself? Just share a little bit about The Hive, what's going on in this year in particular, what have been some themes and some insights that you've come to just by way of welcoming you into this conversation? Sure, thank you. Well, it's so nice to be here with you again. I can't believe it's been a whole year. So this year on The Hive, there's been a few different
Starting point is 00:04:20 themes. We kicked off the year with themes from my book, Business Unusual, looking at different ways of creating businesses that are values-driven and sustainable and ethical, and then moved into a different kind of place where we started looking at things like systemic change, entanglement, activism, the radical potential for rest and what that looks like and what it means to come into our agency and power and then there was a long summer break which was very needed and in the season that we're just currently traversing through the main theme that I've been exploring is around integration so whether you're coming at that through the lens of psychedelic facilitation or looking at ways in which to think about economics or ways in which to think about rewilding and land
Starting point is 00:05:12 restoration what is it that brings everything together how can we create a sense of connection and wholeness while facing into some of the more difficult things. So really thinking about that as the core theme. How about you, Della? What have you found to be the most interesting or rich themes within the podcast throughout your year? Yeah, thank you. Well, one thing I'll say is that this was the first year that we produced interviews at a regular schedule, so every other week. And so it actually felt like a very full, abundant, beautiful year for us. And I say us because I do want to call in Robert Raymond, my co-host, co-producer, just because he did half the conversations at least and really does produce it with me in all the ways. And we also did documentaries. And so the documentaries this year were on
Starting point is 00:06:06 indigenous stories of resistance and regeneration. And then the last two were a two-part series on the green transition. And that was really inspired by a call that I was in with comrades from the Global South who said, a green transition for the Global North means an open casket for the Global South. And I wanted to know more about that and follow those threads. And that led to our two-part series on the green transition and Green Deal for the People. And I would say like the major themes of the conversations were definitely climate change. We had a lot of folks around climate change and around green capitalism as well, and around decolonization. I would say that was the other really big theme for this year. But yeah, really, really grateful for the
Starting point is 00:06:58 variety of conversations. We're all trying to be related to economics, but it's just, conversations all we're all trying to be related to economics but it's just you know peripherally related and also the balancing of evergreen conversations like around rethinking economics or around liberation psychology or around green capitalism but also being very topical like we had a conversation around a socialist perspective on abortion for example so So we did try to be both topical and evergreen, which was a fun balancing to enact. So really a delightful year and feeling so filled with gratitude and insights and so excited to talk about all of this with you both. So Manda, what about you? Would you give us an introduction to your podcast and what were the key themes for this year for you? Thank you. Yes. And both of your podcasts have been so inspiring this year. They're always
Starting point is 00:07:51 inspiring, but I've learned so much listening to both of you this year. It feels to me as if 2002 has been a turning point year. And I think it's going to be more clear looking back what exactly was turning and where from and where to. For me, the overarching theme of the year was taken over when we did the Thrutopia Masterclass, which kind of ran in parallel. And I began to populate the Accidental Gods podcast with people who would be complimentary to the people that were getting to speak in there, because it became increasingly clear to me. I think also I was writing the book. This time last year when we spoke, I'd got something like 40,000 words. And I handed in the finished book at 181,000 in October. Yay. And the early part was the easy part because it was setting up the scene and the rest was trying to work out actually, how do we get from here to there where there is somewhere we would be proud to leave to the future generations and that has become the guiding light of my life and the podcast is how do we actually get there
Starting point is 00:08:55 in a time frame that's actually going to work and so that question has really begun to influence everything that I'm doing. The themes on the podcast, economics is still a big theme. Regenerative farming has become a bigger theme as I'm becoming more embroiled in things here and trying to actually make the land here different. Then different ways of crafting the narrative such that it will actually get through to people. Because it seems to me now, listening particularly, Della, to your economics, most recent one, the two-parter, and reading Max Isles' book, A People's Green New Deal, and then reading John Alexander's book on citizens, and Natalie, listening also to you interviewed a gentleman whose name I could never pronounce who was part of Kate Raworth's Donut Economics Lab. Ah, Erin Sahan. Thank you, yes. And we have the answers now. I think much more than this time last year it seems to me we actually know what needs to be done and we kind of know the ways that we could do it. We just need to find the political and social and cultural and narrative structures that allow it. And that's a really big change from this time last year. And therefore, what we need to do now is to work on how do we create the structures that allow it rather than how do we work out what to do.
Starting point is 00:10:25 then how do we work out what to do? So we each have our own podcasts and we each tend to ask a similar themed question each time. And Natalie, you ask pretty much the same question. And I'm always in awe of the depth and clarity of the answers that your guests have. So bringing this here, what is your question and how has it changed in the last year for you, both as a question and in terms of its answers? That's such a nice reflection to consider. So the question I've been leading with for a long time and have gone back to because I love it is, what do you think is going on in the global human psyche? And the reason I left it for a short while was because when I was interviewing people for the book about business and values-driven organizations, one or two psychologists said, well, it's too context-dependent.
Starting point is 00:11:10 I don't believe that it's a question that I can answer. And I thought, that's interesting. And for some reason, I kind of thought, well, maybe I'll let it go. And then I started working more into themes around entanglement and archetypes. And I've been listening to an amazing podcast called This Jungian Life, which is just phenomenal. And I started thinking, hang on, the question itself is interesting in that it assumes interconnection. perspective and you start from a position of we're here together entangled and that's the foundation then one of the answers can be it's not specific enough or it's not contextual enough or an answer can be well I sense it at this level or at a different level and it suddenly creates the possibility for much more of a mosaic to emerge and as soon as I understood that I thought now I do want to ask this question again, because it feels like it's coming from maybe a richer understanding of what it can hold. So with that in mind, I'd love to ask you, Manda, what do you think is going on in the global human psyche right now?
Starting point is 00:12:22 This could be answered on so many different levels. And it depends on where I am in my own center as to where I send the feelers out. And I think we asked this last year, it feels very different this year. There feels to be more of a sense of a vessel fracturing. I think last year there was a sense of the fear that the fracturing was going to happen and the trying to hold. last year there was a sense of the fear that the fracturing was going to happen and the trying to hold and different sets of tensions and the different tribal groupings that are in the world as everybody hunkered down into the tribes and became more and more vociferously tribal. And it feels now as if, to me, there's more of a sense that we all know that everything is breaking apart and there is no point in trying to pretend it isn't.
Starting point is 00:13:06 And that leads to both that kind of existential vertiginous terror of you are Wile E. Coyote out over the canyon and you've just looked down and you know you're going to fall, but also if everything that we know breaks apart, what else could arise? And it feels oddly sparkly hopeful in ways that I really wasn't expecting and I don't know if I'm projecting this hugely that's also entirely possible but yeah it feels different and partly I think okay so I'll stop talking in a moment but
Starting point is 00:13:39 when Twitter was taken over by Musk I moved on to Mastodon. And I could feel the limbic change of not being in that really toxic environment. I obviously spent way too much time on Twitter. It was my only source of news. When the whole Liz Trust falling apart thing was happening, Faith and I were learning about it in real time from Twitter. And then I just stopped doing Twitter and went on to Mastodon, where everybody's just being really kind to each other and their content warnings everywhere and it's all peaceful and the world feels like such a different space. And I wonder whether that's
Starting point is 00:14:14 just unique to us or whether there is a degree of that happening around the world. So thank you for the question. I guess we now pass it on to Della. Fantastic answer. Fours for four. Yeah, and when I think about what's happening in the global psyche, something that happened a few days ago comes up for me. I was sitting at a dinner party with folks who listen to a lot of podcasts and even someone who was a radio show host. And the person who was on the radio show host said,
Starting point is 00:14:42 I want to start a project where it's just solutions focused. And they were remarking on how often or what percentage podcasts or talk shows focus on the problem and what percentage they talk about the solution. And obviously, solutions and problems is something that we're aware of on our podcast, but I hadn't really made it visible of how much time, like which percentage. And I was just listening and watching the dinner party guests and they were talking about things like, oh, well, I think it should be 60% solutions, 40% problem. And then someone else was like, actually, it should be 80% solutions and 20% problems. And somebody else was like, how about no problem and just solution? It was just really interesting.
Starting point is 00:15:29 And it really connects with how you, Mondo, was describing 2022 and just what you're noticing. And so I was just thinking about, is one thing in the global psyche, maybe more of a awareness or a knowing of the pain of the world and a hunger for more solutions-oriented thinking and inspiring stories of alternatives. Like I'm thinking of the podcast, What Could Possibly Go Right? Or the work about, you know, moral imaginations that a lot of folks are doing, like Rob Hopkins and Thrutopia, right? The idea of imagining other futures and visioning, the power of visioning. So, yeah, I'm thinking of maybe something in the global psyche as a hunger for more solutions-oriented focus. And it was an interesting thing, and I was just thinking about which of the conversations
Starting point is 00:16:28 that we had really focused on the problems. And there were several. We had one on the war on cash with Brett Scott. We had one on fortress conservation with Prakash Kashwan. So we had a lot of, yeah, like the problem with certain areas. But we also did have some really interesting solutions oriented conversations. Like we had one on fully automated luxury communism. We had a degrowth conversation with Jason Hickel. We had the not for profit economy model with Jennifer Hinton. So we had a, we had kind of a mixture
Starting point is 00:17:03 and, but yeah, just something that I'm more aware of now starting the new year and reflecting in this conversation. And then the other thing, when I think about the global psyche, I'm aware that the last time we spoke, the conversation or the book that was really on my mind was with Johan Hari on Stolen Focus. I remember I spoke about that a lot. And now coming into this conversation, what was really on my mind is the book 4,000 Weeks by Oliver Berkman. It's called 4,000 Weeks Time Management for Mortals. And it's so delicious. I'm really enjoying and excited to speak with him. And one of the things that he brings up is that John Maynard Keynes said in the 1930s, oh, you know, in 100
Starting point is 00:17:46 years, we humans will only be working about 15 hours, because we'll just have all this, you know, benefits to efficiency and how we work, that we'll only be working about 15 hours each, and we'll just have so much free time, that the problem will be what do we do with all our free time? And, of course, that's not the case. And it's so interesting to think about how busy and full our lives get. And of course, I think about how capitalism really finds new things for us to do and new products for us to buy and new things to consume our time and focus and attention. focus and attention. So I think one thing in our global psyche that I'm also noticing is just a busyness, a fullness, and the never-ending to-do lists and things like that. At least I'm sensing that in myself. And yeah, I think the deeper question there is, how do we seek enoughness? How do we find sufficiency or find contentedness? And this, of course, goes to the degrowth conversation too. So it's on all scales, our individual lives, collective and
Starting point is 00:18:51 planetary. So that's another thing that's on my mind right now. And just one quick, one little more antidote on that. I was having a dinner with a friend who works in a tech company who said that he only, or that his company gives them a bonus for taking five consecutive days off and they get paid, they get paid, paid time off. And, and it was because they so rarely take vacation at this company that the company has to incentivize them taking paid time off by giving them a bonus. And that was just absurd to me. So it's like, we're so full and we won't even take the free time that we're allotted. Not all of us, but so just bringing in fullness and solutions focused.
Starting point is 00:19:46 But Natalie, we also want to hear your answer because we know you've been interviewing lots of folks. So please share with us, what do you sense is going on in the global psyche right now? So I think one of the things that comes up a lot in these conversations, which I think is really interesting in terms of the answer from others it's kind of like if you think of it as a diamond and everyone picks a facet that relates to them or that resonates most closely to them and they use that as a lens through which to see the whole I think one of the things I've noticed in almost all of the answers that I've gathered from others and so it reflects in my question is a sense of fracturing back to use manda your word the sense that
Starting point is 00:20:26 there is now somehow more possibility to make change happen it's like a shaking loose and i think that is impacting people in various different ways so in some folks it's this sense of denial which you know you see in a lot of people who just don't want to give up the golden handcuffs or whatever it might be um in others it's a question of right i'm here i've gone through the pandemic i've experienced isolation i don't want to be alone how can i focus on community that is a word that's coming up so much in so many conversations around me at the moment another is also around the quality of our feeling lives so how do we feel into a sense of connection and joy and so I've noticed that when we're thinking about
Starting point is 00:21:14 difficult things one of the answers is to tap into this sense of longing like how can you long for something different and to have the sense of longing you have to connect with the sense of love and that means traveling often through grief so there's I think there's a lot in the mix it feels like there's kind of a crack that's opened we've got access to this rich kind of fertile painful ground beneath and people are starting to plant seeds there and I'm starting to see people coming together to tend to these plants and say okay what is it that we want to grow how do we do it in a way that is joyful and together as well as realistic and facing into the scale of things to come so it there's for the first time in a long while i feel a sense of possibility um and that actually maybe
Starting point is 00:21:59 i mean it depends on where you are in the world of course but when we're thinking about the possibility of disruption to our lives we look at the ways in which other people's lives have already been devastated or having to be rebuilt. I feel like people are now stepping into greater agency and saying, okay, well, we're not just going to ignore that anymore. What can we do now? And how can we do it together? Yeah. So, Della, on that note, do you want to dive into your provocative, meaningful question? by drowning. So you jump in to save them, pull them to shore, you look up, you see other people floating down the river drowning. So eventually you call for help and you get others involved, and a group of you have to go upstream to figure out why is everyone falling in in the first place. And so we have this metaphor to guide our show in order to look at the challenges of our time, political, economic, social, ecological, and then to ask our guests to go upstream with us to what are the root causes. And then the root causes, hopefully there is where we can see some solutions, some invitations, some ways of living
Starting point is 00:23:18 and thinking and being differently. So, I'd love to ask you, Manda, when you go upstream, maybe take, you know, maybe a problem that you're, or a challenge that you're, that's breaking your heart right now, or really concerning you, or a whole host of them, and then take us upstream. What are you noticing? What have been some of the insights from the guests that you've had, and the conversations that you've had around what are some of those upstream root causes. And then to add the solutions focused piece, when you realize those root causes, what solutions open up from that space? So, Amanda, I'll hand over to you and then let's ask Natalie as well. Okay, thank you. It's such a rich and deep and fascinating question. And before I start,
Starting point is 00:24:06 I just want to say that part of the book that I'm writing, I needed to create a movement, I needed to give it a name. And that movement in the book is currently called the Upstream Movement. And I used exactly this metaphor because it seems to me to encapsulate everything that we need. And it's also not yet the name of a movement around the world there were other names that I looked at and they'd all people were using them and that didn't feel right so I'm very wedded to the idea of going upstream and very much like Natalie's question it depends where I am and I could get very spiritually focused on this one, but I think
Starting point is 00:24:46 on a slightly more practical note, I'm much clearer this year that right at the heart of everything that is devastating us is capitalism, predatory capitalism and its innate colonialism. Max Isle's book has really clarified things for me of the degree to which the violence inherent in capitalism and the way that it has been imposed on the world and its need for growth. Capitalism needs to keep us consuming because it needs to keep growing because it's this giant Ponzi scheme that will fall over if anybody steps back. There's a total catastrophe happens if we all stop consuming and we go into what they call recession. And I was very struck, Della, by something that somebody said almost in passing in your recent podcast documentary, which was that Musk, Elon Musk,
Starting point is 00:25:43 had said on a tweet that he deleted but obviously Twitter lives forever in the cloud, we will coup whoever we like, get over it. And that just, I had to stop listening and go for a long walk at that point. Apart from the fact he's using the word coup which I take to be a noun as if it were a verb, and the guy's obviously an idiot. But leaving that aside, we will coup whoever we like. We will impose whatever we want in order to continue to be the kind of people who can buy Twitter from the petty cash and not care if it doesn't make any money. It was very interesting, but the fact that that's been spoken aloud, the quiet thing is now stated, I think it makes it much clearer to me anyway, and much easier than to consider what do we do?
Starting point is 00:26:31 And that's how do we change? Because we have this system where predatory capitalism is the economic system, but it's bolstered by business, and business owns politics, and business also owns the media. And we've got this kind of stable structure of economics, business, politics, and the media that hold everything. And it's this structure that is falling apart. And then the question is, what can we do? And I very recently spoke to Julia Steinberger, who's one of the key authors of the IPCC report. And I asked her, it's politics. How can we change the politics in
Starting point is 00:27:05 time? And she quoted Donald Rumsfeld. And I thought she was going to say the known knowns and the unknown unknowns and all that sort of thing. And she said, he said, you go to war with the army you've got. And she said, you have to fix it with the politicians we've got. And she is much wiser than I am and much more deeply embedded, but I don't think that will work. I just don't think we can. Biden introduced the IRA, which is fascinating because he's Irish, the Inflation Reduction Act, which is basically a way of palming off large amounts of money
Starting point is 00:27:37 to the fossil fuel industry while spanning some greenwash. And the spamming of greenwash is getting worse, and business is moving into these areas so that the narrative sounds right and the impact is carrying on getting worse. I was very struck this year by Simon Michaud, who spoke on Nate Hagen's podcast, and I've got him coming on Accidental Gods in February, all about supply, the material supply chains, and the fact that nobody seems to be doing the arithmetic. He said, and I don't know where he gets his numbers, that if every car in Europe were to become an electric vehicle tomorrow, it would take 16,000 years to mine all the lithium. It's not going to happen. And even if it does, as was really clear from Della's two-part documentary, it will annihilate the global South.
Starting point is 00:28:27 So we can't do that. This idea that we'll just change our power source and then carry on the business as usual is not going to work. So I am wholly invested and I don't have the answers. We need a peaceful revolution because the use of power is the old paradigm. We cannot use power to change things. We have to change from the ground up. So finding movements like something that we could call upstream that are connected and have integrity seems to me absolutely the priority. I have one friend who was on the podcast earlier this year, Ross Savage, who is now potentially going to stand to be an MP for one of the three major parties, simply in order to have that sense of integrity beginning to enter into our House of
Starting point is 00:29:12 Commons. And that's a holding pattern. In Joanna Macy's three pillars of the great turning, that's fine as a holding pattern, but I think we need the structural change. So I don't know exactly what it looks like, but I know that's what needs to happen so over to Natalie when you look upstream what do you see and what solutions do you find well I think it's interesting going after you speaking about all these systemic issues that we face and it's something that I'm very interested in but I think the question that comes to me also upstream is given that there are so many factors at play, one of the answers, I think, to going upstream
Starting point is 00:29:52 and finding how we can affect change is, where is it that I can best contribute? So I think there's this question of, what's the most pressing question? Like, each of us will see different bodies floating down the river, as well as some others. There's going to be some of the same issues we encounter but there'll be some of them that call our attention more than others and so I think part of the question summons up in me this this
Starting point is 00:30:15 response which is okay you can't drag them all out you can't change all the problems maybe there's five problems upstream that are all interconnected and maybe you can't fix or seek to transform or address every single one so then the question is where are you best placed and so when I bring that into the question the thing that I think I'm most attracted to in terms of the fundamental issues that cause many of the others is this sense of of just complete disconnection which of course factors into the ways in which a more extractive capitalist rapaciously hungry consuming culture isn't is sort of enables itself to continue so it's either because there's also, it exists because there's an existing lack of connection and then it perpetuates by fostering greater lack of connection
Starting point is 00:31:10 through various systems such as social media platforms, which you mentioned, you know, the dynamics of some are different to the dynamics of others. But I think there's also this sense of, and I've witnessed something very exciting here if we're thinking also about the solution side, there's also this sense of numbing out that happens as an option when we feel disconnected which consumption plays into and if we find a way to not numb out and to not placate ourselves then we can travel
Starting point is 00:31:38 to where it is that needs the most healing in that moment so instead of kind of eating five pizzas and a ben and jerry's tub you know I like pizza and I like Ben and Jerry's um you go okay wait I'm feeling really alone so maybe I want to go and spend some time singing with my friends tonight and then that gives you the reflection to be able to talk about things again personally going upstream it might be small t or big t traumas and what I've been really struck by this year in particular certainly in my circle is how many people and actually watching the world cup this is something that's really or big t traumas and what i've been really struck by this year in particular certainly in my circle is how many people and actually watching the world cup this is something that's really struck me how many people are actually talking about trauma and pain i'm watching i know it's a very
Starting point is 00:32:15 complicated ecosystem it's a shit show and also it's a forum for men to express support about things that are deeply difficult for many people to stand up for. So one of the things that struck me about that as well was men holding each other when they're crying, men kneeling to support inclusivity, men wearing armbands to promote education for all, regardless of where you're born or what your gender is. So there's everywhere I see a light being shone on people fighting with love to reveal sources of disconnection and trauma and to make it more visible and more possible to discuss so that then together we can start healing
Starting point is 00:32:59 and have the strength and the integrity and the wholeness to then be resilient to change the systems that will need courage and effort to change. So I think there's that really key point. And I think the connection to the trauma bit then inevitably, for me, leads back into our connection with nature. The fact that we see trees as objects in a city as opposed to seeing them as a species or better still as individuals there's
Starting point is 00:33:26 kind of this sense of beinghood that I think we also need to kind of repopulate our imagination with the fact that we are living with all these other beings that most of the time go unseen and unnoticed yeah so I think that it's where is the trauma how do we find ways to to to reach into it and to witness one another and to help one another so that we can have the fortitude to grow together and build the strength to challenge the current system and build regenerative ones? I hope that that made some sense. Sure did. Della, back to you with your own question. Where does that question take you? When you go upstream, where do you land?
Starting point is 00:34:04 question. Where does that question take you? When you go upstream, where do you land? Yeah, thank you. And thank you both for your answers. I love it. And one thing, Natalie, I love that your invitation got personal. Like, I love who you asked about, you know, yourself in that upstream question. And it just reminds me of how I just love bringing in invitations for listeners into conversations. And so what I'm hearing is like, go upstream, but also like, where are you in that going upstream? Like, you know, that what breaks your heart, peace is critical. And I'm thinking of that Frederick Buechner quote that we are called to the place where the world's deepest hunger meets our deepest gladness. And that's a good foreshadowing for our last question, I think too too but so just appreciating
Starting point is 00:34:46 you Natalie for bringing in that piece and then Manda your big systemic perspective I'm loving that and I'm just again thinking of folks who've brought some solutions or alternatives that have been inspiring this year to predatory capitalism as you said I'm thinking of again the not-for-profit economy model, imagining a world without profit with Jennifer Hinton. That was really inspiring when I thought about the profit imperative and greed and growth within capitalism. And then the degrowth thing, again, with Jason Hickel, finding that frame and that, again, the widening circles of that. So that on our individual lives and our
Starting point is 00:35:25 collective communities and our globally, what that would give for us as a solution. And then finally, this liberation psychology, which is kind of the theme right now for me in this last conversation we released in the first one of the new year, just thinking about ways that we can awaken or create liberation in our therapeutic models, which I know is also related to what you're saying, Natalie, around trauma and working with individuals and healing. And I have this map that I've visualized over the years, and it has the problems or challenges of our time. And then the second stop on the river, as you go upstream upstream are supremacies. So human supremacy over nature, patriarchal supremacy, hetero supremacy, supremacy of capitalism, white supremacy,
Starting point is 00:36:14 right? And then when I go even further upstream from those supremacies, I have found disconnection, which is what you're saying, Natalie, or separation. So separation from ourselves and our bodies, separation from one another, and separations from the more than human world. And then upstream from that is exactly what you're saying around beingness. It's our perception of self and who we are and our relation with others, whether we see ourselves as an interconnected part of a web of life, an eco-self, so to speak, or a separate, you know, disconnected entity. And then coming back downstream from that, you know, thinking of the solutions, it would be remembering, you know,
Starting point is 00:36:58 remembering who we are or remembering this more interconnected ecological eco-self worldview. or remembering this more interconnected ecological eco-self worldview. And then going back downstream from that, we have more solidarity and mutual aid and reverence and respect. So just to say that's kind of the map that I'm holding when I think of this question over the years. And one thread that stood out to me this year was around Christian supremacy, which was really interesting. We got to speak with Vanda Nashiva,
Starting point is 00:37:25 and she brought this up around what are the traditions, the ecological spiritual traditions beneath Christianization, particularly for folks in Europe. She said something, she said, Europe was colonized before the Americas. We can see this in the papal bull and the witch burnings. And I know, Manda, particularly this is a big theme for you with your amazing work in the UK with what you're doing. But just to say that that theme of like, how do I see Christian supremacy? How is that unhelpful? And then going upstream and then back downstream from that, where are the helpful invitations or the solutions in that realm? And David Loy, a writer-thinker, really helped me with this. He said, religions or spiritual traditions are unhelpful when they have cosmic duality and individual salvation. Cosmic duality meaning there's this earth and
Starting point is 00:38:20 then there's another. So, we can mistreat this one because there'll be another. And then individual salvation is like my own individual salvation is the ultimate goal. And then what's helpful is when they have cosmic unity, so earth reverence, or that this earth is sacred and important and beautiful, and collective salvation, collective liberation. So, that's just one little upstream journey that I've been excited to go on, And I'm excited to explore more in the new year. So I'm wondering, first, if either of you have anything you want to add or share to each other's shares, and then I'll then hand over to Amanda. So anything you want to just add or uplift? I really love the way that you wove together uh both manda's and mine and well both manda and my responses i think sometimes it
Starting point is 00:39:10 can feel like these lenses the kind of the the systemic vast scale entangled lens down to kind of the the micro what can i do me in my life by myself or with my friends and then widening that circle they can feel like they live quite far apart from one another so I really appreciate how you just connected those together uh I enjoyed that Amanda what are your reflections I was very struck by that last bit about cosmic duality versus cosmic unity and then everything that Natalie said about the need for us to somehow reconnect with the web of life and I'm wondering I also I haven't really got it totally in for Elon Musk at the moment but I am aware there's this kind of tech bros taking over the world there's this whole we should be eating food that's created in a you know a stainless steel vat rather than
Starting point is 00:40:05 something you grow in the garden and we should be living on the metaverse because then we can all basically live in concrete hatches and consume everything and live in a different world and this seems to be as we hit the technological singularity as well as the kind of economic capital singularity and all the other singularities of our world, that there's an enhancement of the disconnect. And I keep going back to Musk, who long before he was sending rockets into space, I think in a TED Talk, certainly in one of these platforms that's online, said that the chances of this being base reality are so small that it can't be. So we have someone who has enough money that he could order a coup on most of the global south if he decided that their governments
Starting point is 00:40:54 were not doing quite what he wanted, who basically believes that he's in a computer simulation. And it's essentially a game as far as I understand it, and that if he just manages to level up out of this one, he'll get all the leveling up stuff that you get and he'll get into a new level where everything will be completely different. And that level of disconnect with the living world
Starting point is 00:41:15 has never been joined with that much power in the whole of human history, I don't think. So then the question is, how do we help the reconnection of the world so that level of disconnect isn't there, so that we can heal the traumas that require us to insulate ourselves from the magic of the world? So that was a rather lengthy answer. Beautiful. I think it connects to your question, Manda, as to your question around what makes our hearts sing and where does that take us? That points to this reconnection. So,
Starting point is 00:41:54 we'd love to hear the question and explore it together. Yeah. So, this is a bit of a cheat because this is going to be my question for 2023 rather than my has having been my question and it loops both of you together it's the upstream and it's the personal of what makes your heart sing so natalie because we know that you have to go probably quite soon what makes your heart sing and where does that take you i love this question and actually the reason i'm going is because i'm about to go do something which makes my heart sing and it's singing to make my heart open. Tonight, the night that we're recording this is a full moon and I've been attempting, because I live in a city, to find a way to stay in rhythm with the natural world
Starting point is 00:42:35 and so sometimes, not always, I hold gatherings on the full moon and I decided to do it in my art studio. Two weeks ago I ended up quite unusually having two gigs back to back with friends and new friends with fellow musicians and poets really heartfelt wonderful evenings and so I thought well I'll just do a full moon gathering on the oak moon bring people together and it's going to be a kind of collective offering and that's something which after years of doing it in rather a different way I find that every time I do this I attend someone's gathering or come together and voice is there magic happens and it's I can't explain what it is but it's there's an unlocking that happens with these little gatherings that um that makes my heart sing and they make people open to one
Starting point is 00:43:25 another and the sense of community is huge and it's something that I've never really had contact to until coming here and I think there's a real hunger for it so that's one thing is being together with people everyone bringing their own drinks nibbles having some candles doing an opening ceremony and then singing songs together. The second thing is, and there are many things, the second thing is painting, which I've been valiantly struggling to carve out time to do. And I've been painting in a different way recently and it's all about working with,
Starting point is 00:44:02 let's just call them dreams, I guess, that I have and translating that into image. And the reactions that they create in me as I paint them seem to be quite healing. They're kind of narratives almost. And so that's something else which has been really precious. And these are two aspects of my life that I haven't really allowed myself to surrender into. And it's been so liberating to actually give myself the time and carve that out. And the third thing that makes my heart sing is gathering people together and asking questions that unlock deeper conversation
Starting point is 00:44:35 because people are desperate for connection, desperate and hungry and thirsty for connection. And all you have to do, so actually that's my invitation to you listening pick the three of our questions host a dinner get people to bring hummus and dips and whatever doesn't have to be fancy and create a gathering where you can dive into some of this and see what happens um you'll be yeah you'll be surprised and hopefully amazed in a very beautiful way so i'm gonna bring the question back over to you two. Who would like to go first? Della, would you like to dive in?
Starting point is 00:45:10 Della Yeah, and first I want to say this, you know, going the Christian supremacy going upstream piece, like you are embodying the solution in a way by coming into rhythm with the moon and by gathering and singing, you know, gathering with song, and also that we are also celebrating the solstice. So, I just want to appreciate the, you know, what are the neo-pagan or eco-spiritual traditions that we all can tap into and connect with in a way that's not cultural appropriation, right? So, I just want to really appreciate that you are embodying that. Okay, so what makes my heart sing and where does that take me? One of the most beautiful teachings I've received this year was a Buddhist teaching that was the most important thing is to know
Starting point is 00:45:58 what is the most important thing. And I've just dropped that in time and time again wherever I am and so it's less what makes my heart sing more generally and more in this moment what is the most important thing and if I can just ask myself that question it helps me orient to the most the most important thing or what makes my heart sing and helps me turn towards you you know, more life-sustaining, more life-thriving, more loving ways of being. And another thing that's been helpful is I've been really into Buddhism and appreciated the root cause, you know, the going upstream of greed, hatred, and delusion being the root causes. And in my, you know, meta practice, I've been like, oh, you know, may we be free from greed, hatred, and delusion. And then I heard that Ram Dass, in his spiritual tradition, had reframed it to instead of the negative, and again, this problem and solution is really becoming a theme of our conversation,
Starting point is 00:46:55 but instead of freeing ourselves from greed, hatred, and delusion, he said, let us love, let us serve, and let us remember. The love being the antidote to the hatred, the serve being the antidote to the greed, and remember being the antidote to delusion or forgetting or disconnecting. So, I'd say, you know, what is making my heart sing is any time when I can remember and drop that question in what is most important right now and then how can I turn towards loving serving and remembering in every moment of every day and that is also what then guides any action when I recall it when I remember it so may I have more moments of you know remembering and if that's useful, may you take it with you?
Starting point is 00:47:46 Manda, over to you. Thank you. This is making my heart sing, actually listening to you guys taking that question and making it so rich. And so what is making my heart sing at the moment is proximity to death. at the moment is proximity to death. I ran a gathering at Shaowen, which is the point in the year in our calendar where the veils between the worlds are thinnest. And I had just finished writing a book, all of which is told from the perspective of someone who has died. So I spent the year in my bandwidth space in that place between life and death. And then I taught the course and it had a very different feel to it. And as you guys will know, and possibly quite a lot of people
Starting point is 00:48:33 listening, that when you're leading a gathering, you have to do the work. When you're just on Zoom watching, fundamentally, you don't have to. But when you're leading it, you don't get to not. you don't have to but when you're leading it you don't get to not and it really changed me that one and now my dog is dying I have a student in Scandinavia who's dying there's a number of people in my close friendship circle and my dog who is probably other than faith the closest thing I have and at the last solstice, the summer solstice, the instruction that I had when I said, what do you need of me was learn to fall in love with living. And it's taken me till this solstice, I think, you know, we're recording a little ahead of time, but come the solstice, I will sit with the fire. And I don't expect the instruction to change because this feels like a very slow unfolding of understanding what falling in love with living really means.
Starting point is 00:49:33 And I think for me it means living with that awareness of death being a hair's breadth away. And when that is there, then the magic of life unfolds. then the magic of life unfolds. I have never in many decades, now four decades of shamanic work felt the web of life so alive as I do just now. And that, connecting with that, feeling the textures of that, feeling a sense that I've come home to myself of finally getting a sense of what i am when fully connected with the web of life is feels magical and and it's it's beyond heart saying um so yeah that what did i get to from that i don't know i get to just celebrating life and giving thanks i'm really much more connected this year with my sense of my ancestors of blood and of spirit lineage and on the opposite polarity of that on the wheel that we work with,
Starting point is 00:50:31 the generations yet unborn and of me standing in the centre in the now moment, balanced between these two, and of the responsibility to the generations yet unborn that extends backwards so that I don't have to feel it's only me fixing everything, which I can tend to get into the saver complex if I have to fix the world, but really looking down the timeline to the generations yet unborn and going, what do you need us to do? In this moment, this moment, what do you need us to do? in this moment, this moment, what do you need us to do? And connecting that with the aliveness of the dream lines feels a little short of miraculous, I think,
Starting point is 00:51:10 and maybe one of the reasons why this year feels so much more sparkly. Last year felt a bit as if it was very held, and this year feels as if it's full of potential, this solstice. So yeah, that. So with that, guys, where does that take take us where does it leave us do you think either of you feedback go natalie well i think something i'd like to ask you too before i have to head off my singing is into that fertility and possibility and space of becoming, if you had to ask people listening a question that you'd like them to dwell with or reflect on this solstice, what question might that be?
Starting point is 00:51:59 Della, what do you feel in response to that? do you feel in response to that? Well, one question that I'm asking myself, and again, it comes from a Ram Dass talk that I listened to, is what would love have me do today, or what would love have me do right now? And I think that connects with what Manda shared of sitting by the fire and asking about falling in love with living. So, I don't know. I'm finding that to be a helpful thing. So, to ask others, I mean, I think we've come up with a lot of questions, right? What would you do when you go upstream and where are you in that? What do you think is happening in the global psyche? What makes your heart sing and where does that lead you? How do you fall in love with the living world? And also, what is the most important thing and then I'll just add
Starting point is 00:52:46 this question around yeah what would love have you do right now Mondo what about you what question would you ask folks going forward I think my question for now is if this were the last moment of your life how would you choose to live it and and then live as that. Because it clears away a lot of the clutter of the planning. And what this year is teaching me is that a lot of that planning is not going to happen. So if this was your last moment, who would you choose to be? And how best can you bring that into the world? Natalie, as you go to sing, what would your question be? Natalie as you go to sing what would your question be um probably something like what do you need to feel rooted what gives you strength how can you
Starting point is 00:53:36 root in because I think we need to find that sense of connectedness, I guess metaphorically, but also physically to the living ground, to be able to have the fortitude to kind of lean into the difficult things, but also feel that sense of support and then support with the rest of the forest of folks and beings around us. So I think for me, that's kind of where my mind goes is what makes you feel rooted? How can you find a sense of belonging to this earth with others? Perfect. Beautiful. Guys, I think that might be a wrap. I think we could carry on talking for another hour quite easily. But fortunately, Natalie has to go singing. So I love that.
Starting point is 00:54:19 I hate music. I can't stand it. But I love being part of music being made. I just can't cope with it when it's electronic. It does really bad things to my head. But being part of it, you're right, it creates so much sense of solidarity and connection and tribe. It's beautiful. Natalie, go, because you've got a minute.
Starting point is 00:54:38 So go, and then Adele and I can do a quick solstice thing. It's been so good. Thank you, guys. I love our tradition. I hope it lasts for many, many years. And it's the full moon out there. It's been so good. Thank you guys. I love our tradition. I hope it lasts for many, many years. And it's the full moon out there. It's just glorious. So yeah, go and sing to the moon. Thank you. So we're coming to the solstice. For those of us in the north, we're coming to the deepest dark, the moment of deepest introspection,
Starting point is 00:55:06 Coming to the deepest dark, the moment of deepest introspection, the longest night and the shortest day. Those of you in the south are coming to the obverse of that, the longest day and the shortest night and the moment of most agency. So this is a meditation on the turning point of the year. We're going to start with a chime and end with a chime. Please don't do this if you're driving a car or otherwise operating heavy machinery, any of those things. Take some time for you to simply sit, close your eyes, feet on the floor and follow where we go. So really bring yourself into your physical body. Feel your feet on the floor, your seat on the chair. Send roots down into the earth, however far that is beneath you. Roots from every part of you that is in contact with the earth, send them down through the topsoil, through the subsoil, through the rock layers, through the magma layers, and deep down into the white hot molten metal at the heart of the earth.
Starting point is 00:56:28 Connect your heart to the heart of the earth. And through the crown of your head, send another root up to the heights of the sky. So there's a three-way connection. From the heart mind of the universe through your heart to the heart of the earth and from the heart of the earth through your heart up to the heart of the sky. And with that level of connection
Starting point is 00:56:59 bring your sense inwards to your own heart space. If it helps to put the heel of your hand over your breastbone so that you can feel the steady rhythm of your heart, then do that. And bring your attention in. Let your breath go into your heart space. Have a sense of your breath expanding the width and the breadth and the height of your heart,
Starting point is 00:57:37 so that the energy of it feels bigger within your chest. As you breathe in, as we head towards the turning point of the earth, as all of the energies tilt and come into stillness and then start to shape in the other way in that moment of stillness as you stand in balance between day and night, action and reflection, inner looking and outer looking. What says the voice of your heart? What does it yearn for? What are its connections? What feeds you? What feeds you?
Starting point is 00:58:47 What do you reach for? Who are you in this space of balance? What has your learning been of the last half year? And if you were to leave things behind behind like the shed skin of a snake and move forward into the new half of the year what would you leave behind and what would you take with you
Starting point is 00:59:16 as you connect through your roots to the earth and up to the heart mind of the universe, what do you draw from each of these, from below and from above? And as you breathe into your heart space and these questions settle, have a sense of warmth, of your breath expanding the warmth until it fills not only your chest, but all of your body. Up to your head, down through your torso, through your hips, through your legs, to your feet. Out, past your collarbones, to your shoulders, down your arms, to your fingers.
Starting point is 01:00:22 Send the warmth of your heart-mind to every part of your body and out into the world beyond. As the tilt of the earth changes wherever you are, however it changes, let there be the learning from the year half gone, and let there be wisdom carried forward into the half year yet to come. And if there is one idea, one image, one thought, one feeling that you want to carry forward, let it fill you now. So that as you bring your awareness to the rest of your body, to your feet on the floor and your seat on the chair,
Starting point is 01:01:22 that feeling or that thought or that image or that sound can stay with you to carry through into the year that is starting to be your lodestone and your star and your guiding light and your anchor and your source of energy for the next half of the year. Go well into 2023 and find who you could become if you bring the best of yourself to each day of the year. So really connect your seat on the chair, your feet on the floor and open your eyes and with a very soft gaze look around the room to anchor yourself back in this time and this place.
Starting point is 01:02:33 And if there was a feeling, a thought, an image, a sound and you want to write it down so that you can remember take the time to do that now before you carry on into the quiet of your solstice day. Thank you. You've been listening to an Upstream conversation with Manda Scott of Accidental Gods and Natalie Nahai of The Hive. Thank you to the Accidental Gods team for editing and mixing this episode. Upstream theme music was written by me, Robbie.
Starting point is 01:03:18 Support for this episode was provided by the Guerrilla Foundation, the Resist Foundation, and listeners like you. was provided by the guerrilla foundation the resist foundation and 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 upstream podcast.org forward slash support and because we're fiscally sponsored by the non-profit independent arts and media all donations to upstream in in the U.S. are tax exempt. Also, if your company or organization wants to sponsor one of our upcoming episodes, we have a number of sponsorship packages available. Find out more at upstreampodcast.org forward slash sponsorship.
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