Loam Listen is an expression of our belief at Loam that creative community can be a catalyst for resilience and reimagination in the heart of climate chaos. As the systems surrounding us collapse, it feels especially vital to nurture new ways of being through creating spaces for radical artists, act…
How might we collapse a world rooted in extraction and nurture one built on reciprocity? What can decomposition teach us about seeding sustainable futures? Join us as queer Hoodoo, earth tender, and living ancestor Jordan Alexander Williams contemplates the liberation of land, ourselves, and our communities from “radical individualism” in this soul-stirring conversation with Amirio Freeman. From meditating on a week spent at the revolutionary Soul Fire Farm to exploring the beauty of mycelial networks, Williams walks us through possibilities for planting world(s) worth growing into. GUEST: Jordan Alexander Williams (they/them) is a queer Hoodoo, earth tender, and living ancestor. Jordan was born and raised in the so-called Chicagoland area of Illinois, lands stewarded by many peoples and lineages including: the Potawatomi, Miami, Ho-Chunk and at least a dozen more Indigenous Nations, and Hoodoos / Black African peoples of Turtle Island (so-called North America). In 2016, Jordan graduated from the University of Illinois (a land-grab university) with a degree in environmental science and a concentration in human dimensions of the environment. They have since collaborated with human and more-than-human beings across Turtle Island to: develop the collective visions and leadership of environmental changemakers; facilitate organizational culture shifts towards anti-racism and cooperative leadership; cultivate food, climate, and ecological justice; and build liberatory practices, relationships, and spaces with Two-Spirit, Queer, and Trans / Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (2SQT/BIPOC). Jordan trusts that the liberation and regeneration of people and planet will come by dancing in the moon and sunlight, getting our hands in the soil, caring for each other, and reclaiming and evolving the earth-sourced wisdom(s) of our ancestors. RESOURCES: Soul Fire Farm Soul Fire Farm BIPOC Farming Immersion Farming While Black: Soul Fire Farm's Practical Guide to Liberation on the Land Hoodoo Mojo Workin': The Old African American Hoodoo System by Katrina Hazzard-Donald Ep. 25 Mama Rue Breaks the Juju Down (A Little Juju Podcast) Nested Wholes & Fractals The Regenerative Life: Transform Any Organization, Our Society, and Your Destiny by Carol Sanford Regenerative Design for Change Makers by Abrah Dresdale Emergent Strategy: Shaping Change, Changing Worlds by adrienne maree brown
In the face of compounding crises, the work of multidisciplinary, multidimensional folk healer Richael Faithful is a call back into healing justice. Tune in as host Amirio Freeman and Faithful explore community organizing, connection to ancestral healing traditions, care work, and the birthing of new selves in this heart-filled episode. As Richael reminds us, there are many ways to heal, love, connect, and care. How can we make space for our multitudes? How can we nurture new possibilities for worldbuilding into being? GUEST: Richael Faithful (they/them) is a Black trans southern multidisciplinary, multidimensional folk healer, culture worker, strategist, and creative rooted in Washington DC / Piscataway ancestral lands / Chocolate City. RECOMMENDATIONS: Web: www.richaelfaithful.com, IG: @richaelfaithfulfolkhealer, FB: @faithfulfolkhealer Together at the Edge of the World: On Healing Justice Tell us about your healing justice and care work The Black Trans Prayer Book (Lambda Literary Award Winner, featuring "My Black Soul Absorbs Every Shade of Being") On Grief, Land and Ritual with Revenge of the DandeLions Griot Collective
With Earth in Color, sustainability scientist and designer Darel Scott is reclaiming the relationship between Blackness and Greeness through vibrant, community-oriented media. In the face of a mainstream environmental movement rooted in the erasure of the lived experiences of Black folx, Earth in Color is a call to reimagine, reclaim, and regenerate. Tune in as host Amirio Freeman connects with Darel to talk about creating spaces that center and celebrate Black connections to Earth, holding histories of harm, and activating meaningful allyship in Black-led spaces. Guest: Darel Scott is a designer, sustainability scientist, and the founder of Earth in Color, an emerging media platform and creative studio focused on Black culture, community healing, and the natural world. Through creative storytelling and nature experiences, Earth in Color celebrates Black culture connections to nature and helps us heal with the Earth. Darel is on a personal mission to cultivate collective healing, spark Earth curiosity, and nurture deep joy in the Black community. She is a tea fanatic and loves developing plant-forward recipes. You can check out those recipes and so much more @earthincolor.co! Resources: Radicle Magazine “Black Nature: Four Centuries of African American Nature Poetry” by Camille Dungy “Emergent Strategy: Shaping Change, Changing Worlds” by adrienne maree brown “Braiding Sweetgrass” by Robin Wall Kimmerer
During an era when our bodily autonomy is under increasing threat, doulas — for birth, for death, for abortion, and more — are essential to supporting our collective capacity to meet change. In this vital episode, host Amirio Freeman talks with abortion doula Michelle Loo about their experiences with full-spectrum carework. Through situating the work of abortion doulas within a long history of communities innovating systems of care, Amirio and Michelle unpack the link between abortion access and diverse movements for liberation. GUEST: Raised by Chinese-Malaysian immigrants in New York City and Philadelphia, and now residing in DC, Michelle Loo is an East Coast baby who is grounded by eating good food and building expansive networks of care. They are a queer and leftist trainer, educator, and doula. They like to ask good questions, listen, and make art. RESOURCES: The Radical Doula Guide by Miriam Zoila Perez DIY Doula Self-Care for Before, During, and After Your Abortion by the Doula Project
As we explore (and expand) our understanding of matriarchy at Loam this year, this conversation with activist, healer, and creator extraordinaire Twiggy Pucci Garçon offers insight into how the Ballroom community redefines and reimagines nurturing relationship through creating unique spaces of care, support, and expression. From reflecting on queerness to excavating the link between spirituality and self, Loam Listen host Amirio Freeman and Twiggy dive deep in this world-building conversation. GUEST: Raised in a southern, religious, Black community, Twiggy is a proud non-binary member of the LGBTQ+ community. As an activist, producer, healer and creator, Twiggy attributes the balance of struggle and strength they witnessed and experienced, early in life, to their ability to maneuver through spaces of power and represent for people without. Praising literary greats like James Baldwin to the women in their family, Twiggy is quick to credit their ancestral warriors and pathmakers for the elevation of their own voice in a way that ultimately leads to progress. Since finding support in the Ballroom community at a very crucial moment in their life, Twiggy leverages every opportunity to generate conversations around equity for LGBTQ+ young people and create quality spaces for them to be centered in making decisions and solutions around the issue of homelessness. With over 15 years of experience, both personally and professionally, Twiggy has collaborated with artists, filmmakers, academics and policymakers to increase visibility of both creative and sociopolitical agendas.
How can shaping new narratives on sex, climate, and community rewire our worldview? Tune in as educator Melissa Pintor Carnagey of Sex Positive Families reflects on the role of pleasure-centric, narrative-weaving strategies to practice with our young people at home and elsewhere in conversation Loam Listen Host Amirio Freeman. Guest: Melissa Pintor Carnagey (she/they) is a Black and Latinx, Austin-based sexuality educator and licensed social worker who founded Sex Positive Families on the belief that all children deserve holistic, comprehensive, and shame-free sexuality education so they can live informed, empowered, and safer lives. Melissa provides puberty workshops for families and educational content for parents on topics of talking to kids across stages about pleasure, consent, and online porn. Melissa is a sex-positive parent to three young people ages 21, 11, and 7. They are the constant inspiration for the work. Resources: Pleasure Activism by adrienne maree brown Sex Positive Talks to Have With Kids by Melissa Pintor Carnagey, LBSW In Case You're Curious: Questions about Sex from Young People with Answers from the Experts by Planned Parenthood Vaginas and Periods 101: A Popup Book by Christian Hoeger and Kristen Lilla These Are My Eyes, This is My Nose, This is My Vulva, These Are My Toes by Dr. Lexx Brown-James The Sex Ed of Blackfolk Podcast by Dr. Tracie Q. Gilbert Six Minute Sex Ed Podcast by Kim Cavill
In our Season 3 inaugural episode, Loam Listen host Amirio Freeman connects with embodiment counselor tayla shanaye for an immersive conversation on somatics, semantics, and creation. This episode is an invitation into experience and so we suggest you tune into it when you have the time to truly ground (and get messy)! Guest: tayla shanaye is a cis-gendered woman of color, a mother, a healer, a researcher, and a living body. She holds a Masters in Psychological Studies with a concentration in somatic psychology from the California Institute of Integral Studies, where she is currently pursuing her PhD in Women's Spirituality. She lives in the occupied Anishinaabek lands of the so-called Upper Peninsula of Michigan with her sun, partner, and elder 4-legged. She is committed to a loving relationship with the Living Earth, so that the land, waters, and seasons can do their good work of shaping her body and humbling her mind. You can find her @taylashanaye and at taylashanaye.com Recommended Resources: Revolutionary Mothering: Love on the Front Lines edited by Alexis Pauline Gumbs, China Martens, and Mai'a Williams Nourishing the Nervous System by tayla shanaye
The last episode in our Homespace listening series is a deep dive between Amirio Freeman and Farah Jesani of One Stripe Chai into chai, authenticity, origin, and identity. This episode has everything—reflections on history and homespace from Farah, a sublime recipe for One Stripe Chai goodness from Amirio—and we can't think of a better conversation to curl up to during these colder days. Guest: Farah Jesani started One Stripe Chai with the simple goal of bringing chai back to its South Asian roots after realizing that the chai being served in coffee shops was nothing like what she grew up with at home. Since its inception, One Stripe Chai has evolved into a South Asian beverage company that continues to re-introduce classic South Asian drinks, such as haldi doodh. Farah's goal is to use One Stripe as a platform to reclaim the drinks that reflect her South Asian heritage and upbringing.
This illuminating conversation between Loam Listen host Amirio Freeman and forager Alexis Nikole Nelson is affirmation that you have a right to earthly joy and connection—wherever, however, and whoever you are. From reflecting on the boundary between "carefree" and "careful" that Black folx have to walk (Garnette Cadogan) to meditating on the meaning of play, Alexis Nikole Nelson's brilliant and bighearted spirit will inspire you to truly bloom where you're planted. Guest: Alexis Nikole Nelson is a social media manager by day, TikTok forager by night. A perfect pair of professions to confuse her Boomer-aged parents. She's always championed fostering a connection with your surroundings, and now teaches others to appreciate their local ecology with her TikTok and Instagram pages. You can find her @blackforager on IG and @alexisnikole on TikTok!
What shapes can community organizing take as we navigate this era of pandemic and protest? Community organizer E.N. West shares reflections on relationship building in times of crisis in this expansive and engaging conversation with Loam Listen host Amirio Freeman. Brimming with heart and inspiring lessons, E offers us all a blueprint for how to take care of each other when the world surrounding us is shifting. Guest: E.N. West, affectionately known as "E" (they/E), proudly hails from the DC metropolitan area, by way of Alexandria, Virginia. They graduated from William & Mary with dual degrees in American Studies and Government. E deeply believes "we are uninhibited when we know our power" and is committed to co-creating a world where everyone intimately knows how powerful they are and directs that power toward collective liberation. They are many things, but at the heart of all of them, they are a community organizer based in Seattle, Washington. E feels called to community organizing as both a vocation and way of life. They are also deeply committed to lifelong leadership formation. To those ends, they're currently: Building toward a Black queer feminist future at Surge Reproductive Justice. Learning nonprofit leadership as a Community Impact Fellow through RVC. Organizing around faith land and equitable development with The Church Council of Greater Seattle. Serving on the board of and organizing with Got Green, a BIPOC-led environmental justice organization rooted in South Seattle. In their moments of play and rest, E enjoys reading social justice literature, listening to podcasts of all kinds (especially those featuring QTPOC) & being the queer jock of their own dreams (boxing, capoeira, biking & training for a 10k). Recommended Resources: Emergent Strategy - adrienne maree brown Pedagogy of the Oppressed - Paolo Freire Jubilee (Leviticus 25 & Luke 4:18) Yes! Magazine Puget Sound Sage CREST Cohort - Seattle, Washington Leaven Community Land & Housing Organizing - Portland, Oregon Equitable Development Initiative, Office of Planning & Community Development - Seattle, Washington Hayoa Miyazaki // Studio Ghibli Animal Crossing Song: Saturn - Stevie Wonder Album: What's Going On - Marvin Gaye, song: “Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology)” & “What's Going On”
This transporting episode will take you to haunted homes and shifting coasts with our two Scorpios—Loam Listen host Amirio Freeman and art critic Jessica Lynne—at the helm. "What are the ghosts that have been following me?" Jessica asks in this potent excavation of family, sites of silence, homespace, and community. Guest: Jessica Lynne is a writer and art critic. She is a founding editor of ARTS.BLACK, an online journal of art criticism from Black perspectives. Her writing has been featured in publications such as Art in America, The Believer, BOMB Magazine, The Nation, Frieze, and elsewhere. She is the recipient of a 2020 Graham Foundation Research and Development award and is currently at work on a collection of essays about love, faith, art, and the U.S. South. Jessica lives and works in coastal Virginia. Recommended Resources: La Bastarda by Trifonia Melibea Obono trans. By Lawrence Schimel The Adrienne Kennedy Reader Tales from the Haunted South by Tiya Miles Woman Warrior by Maxine Hong Kingston Cane River by by Horace B. Jenkins Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants by Robin Wall Kimmerer Missy Elliot Supa Dupa Fly La cabeza mató a todos by Beatriz Santiago Munoz
In this conversation with Amirio Freeman, holistic design strategist Denise Shanté Brown asks: "How can we design flows, spaces, time together, in a way that involves us leaning into our whole selves to show up? Making space for black womxn to show up fully? And that includes the rage, the fear, the anxiety, our sense of imagination and possibility [...] and all of that without the burden of needing to wonder how comfortable or uncomfortable someone in that space is..." From reflecting on liberation to exploring wellbeing, Denise offers us a beautiful blueprint for seeding new futures in this powerful podcast episode. GUEST: As a queer disabled entrepreneur, holistic design strategist, writer and creative healer, Denise brings forth abundant possibilities for wellbeing through collaborative creativity and community-led practices. She’s the Founding Director of Black Womxn Flourish, a design for wellbeing collective that’s shaping the future of Black womxn’s health and healing to redefine what it means to be well and conjure creative spaces where Black womxn can bring more just, pleasurable and flourishing futures into existence. In 2019, Denise was invited to be a panelist at Harvard’s Black in Design conference, “Black Futurism: Creating a More Equitable Future” to share her work on creating spaces for wellness and joy. This year, she began co-organizing on the Design Justice Network steering committee where they use design to imagine and build the worlds we need to live in and are committed to rethinking design processes so that they center people who are too often marginalized by design and systems of power. With roots in the Shenandoah Valley, Denise currently lives and works in Baltimore where she continues to be guided by her life’s work mantra, “design can facilitate healing, healing is a creative process, and creativity blooms new futures.” Recommended Resources: Meet Black Womxn Flourish, Shades Collective Artist Highlight on self-recovery, bell hooks If We Want Design to be a Tool for Liberation, We’ll Need More Than Good Intentions, Design Justice Network Design Justice: Community-Led Practice to Build the Worlds We Need, Sasha Constanza-Chock Designing Futures with Care: Finding Our Way to Different Worlds Together, Tara Campbell + Ariana Luutterman To Work and to Love, dorothee solle Poetry is Not a Luxury, audre lorde Vibe Watch & Life Is a Flow of Love (spotify playlists by Denise) Tibetan Singing Bowl Sound Meditation by Nicole Windle
Meet our new Loam Listen host, Amirio Freeman! In this transitional episode, Loam Creative Director Kate and Amirio explore a fresh vision for this podcast that is responsive to this moment. Amirio is a Black, queer Southerner and a food systems advocate and artist. Amirio is the founder of Being Green While Black, a “visual archive of the constellations of greenness within the vast cosmos of blackness” that ultimately serves as a “digital spell to conjure socially, politically, economically, and ecologically just futures where blackness isn’t marginalized.” Currently based in Washington, D.C., Amirio is an advocacy specialist for a domestic hunger-relief organization; there, they use policy, art, and community to envision and manifest a healthier and more equitable food system in the U.S. Amirio’s life and work are propelled by the belief that “[w]hen we love the Earth, we are able to love ourselves more fully.” (bell hooks)
In the last episode in our Weaving New Worlds listening series, we connect with Milla Prince of The Woman Who Married A Bear to explore the intersections of herbalism, community care, and political activism. In the midst of wildfire season and political crisis, Milla's meditations on reweaving relationship to Earth and reframing "expertise" are truly a balm for the soul. Follow @thewomanwhomarriedabear for ancestral animist herbalism, remembrance medicine, and reflections on resilience.
How do we (re)member ourselves back into reciprocal relationship in the Anthropocene? Sam Edmondson and Lauren Hage of Weaving Earth Center for Relational Education reflect on the ideological migration that this moment we're living through is asking of us in this conversation for our Weaving New Worlds listening series. Dive deeper into the work of Weaving Earth through their programs. Citation note from Lauren: "The guiding question that I speak to at the end of the interview 'What happens when we make our liberation work ecological?' is in reference to brontë velez’s practice and exploration of 'ecologizing our liberation.' brontë velez is an educator and board member at Weaving Earth and creative director for Lead to Life."
As part of our Weaving New Worlds listening series, Loam Creative Director Kate Weiner connects with community activist and rites of passage guide Justine Kiva Epstein to explore her poignant & powerful essay on longing as compass. Follow @juice_steeeen for further reflections on healing from inherited historical systems of colonization, white supremacy, cisheteropatriarchy and global capitalism through integrated, holistic community practices, prayer and storytelling.
In this special episode—part of our Weaving New Worlds listening series—geographer and poet Teju Adisa-Farrar shares an excerpt from her immersive essay, We Are the Weavers: Black Mermaids, Geography As Intervention, Roots of Imagining. By braiding together poetry and praxis, Teju connects readers with the resources to recognize that "we are the weavers of the new world. It is we who conceptualize it, who build it, who make it real, who map it." Dig deeper into Teju's work online for powerful poetry and engaging essays.
After taking the space as a team to grieve, rest, and organize, we are returning to our Weaving New Worlds listening series to share some of the incredible voices from this year's annual magazine. In this episode, wild food forager Sunny Savage offers insight into emergent ecosystems as well as how to make space for multiplicity in our relationship to "invasive" species. Follow @sunnysavageofficial for reflections on wild food foraging and access to the inspiring Savage Kitchen app.
Follow Zuri @sensualecology and be sure to visit Loam to snag a copy of Weaving New Worlds!
Follow @sashaduerr for studies in plant-based color and place-based recipes.
Follow @alluviamag for stories that center BIPOC voices in the environmental movement.
Follow @re_constitute for tools to develop consciousness and culture for our climate generation. And be sure to check out A Paradise Built In Hell by Rebecca Solnit as well for recommended reading during these dark days.
Follow @taylashanaye for inspiring practices & perspective shifts.
Follow @chelsea_call for beautiful art therapy offerings.
Visit The Wildfire Project to learn about their movement building strategies in service of a transformative culture shift.
Follow @thefarwoods to discover artworks by The Far Woods rooted in a love of land and community. And be sure to check out Mending Life for a vibrant guide to repair!
Follow @aquietpractice for meditations on slow and sustainable living.
Follow @noyekim for notes on BEEN Media & nourishing meditations on imagination.
Follow @aditimayer for notes on social justice, style, and sustainability.
Snag a copy of “Compassion in Crisis” at this link and explore the work of Daily Acts for inspiration on how we can weave together permaculture and civic activism to cultivate resilient communities.
To explore Amelia’s musings on holistic sustainability, craft, and transparency in business, follow @ameliawrededavis.
Follow @beinggreenwhileblack for a digital archive devoted to reclaiming the greenness of blackness.
For artist and therapist Chelsea Call, creativity is our birthright. In this conversation with Loam Creative Director Kate Weiner, Chelsea shares creative practices with us to help infuse our everyday with meaning, nourish resilience, and process climate grief.
To dive deeper into the magic of functional mushrooms, follow Danielle on Instagram.
Follow Lea @lealeathomas for album updates as well as inspiring explorations of activism and art.
Follow @re_constitute on Instagram to learn more about Lucía’s work transforming consciousness and culture for a just, equitable, and ecologically vibrant world.
Visit Earth Is ‘Ohana as well as follow @earthisohana to learn more about Kailea’s vision for a regenerative future. Recommended Resources:Zucked by Roger McNameeDigital Minimalism by Cal NewportHow To Not Always Be Working by Marlee Grace