As a changing academic industry and labor model herald institutional breakdown, punish courageous expression, and sustain the gulf between anointed experts and everyday people, a growing number of thinkers are embracing the world of possibilities rising from the ruins. The Wild Mind Podcast presents…
In this final episode of season one, I share about a number of key concepts from the first ten episodes and explain how listeners can get involved in the new virtual platform I have built to invite more people into these conversations. Here, I discuss: (1) Key themes that have arisen over the course of this initial season including permission, creativity, resistance, emotional labor, and ancestors; (2) How you can join the broader conversation begun on this podcast through my new virtual community now open for beta testing registrations; (3) A sneak peak of what to expect during the initial weeks in the platform
In this episode, I interview Dr. Clelia O. Rodríguez, educator and author of the book Decolonizing Academia: Poverty, Oppression, and Pain and creator of Stories from El Salvador–a virtual, intergenerational learning platform for Salvadorans to tell their own stories. Here, we discuss: (1) How an early education in decolonial love set the stage for a life of creative resistance; (2) How she found the right allies to publish her radical text on her terms; (3) Why she insists on balancing outer resistance with inner work amid ongoing struggle
In this episode, I interview Gustavo Esteva, deprofessionalized intellectual and founder of Universidad de la Tierra (University of the Earth)—an alliance of collectivities engaged in learning through action based in Oaxaca, Mexico. Here, we discuss: (1) His decades-long journey from elite levels of government and the corporate world to revolutionary organizing at the grassroots (2) The complex process of recovering his indigenous self and sense of the good life (3) How he has created space for horizontal learning and continued sharing of indigenous knowledges in his native Oaxaca
In this episode, I interview Douglas Tsoi, founder of the Portland Underground Graduate School (PUGS)—a center for lifelong learning for social justice and personal empowerment with local experts in Portland, Oregon. Here, we discuss: (1) The unique financial strategy he used to retire early despite not coming from money (2) The organization he then built to facilitate radical, debt-free learning in Portland (3) The three tactics you can implement today to build the financial leverage to craft your unique community-based offering
In this episode, I interview Dr. James Padilioni, now Visiting Assistant Professor of Religion at Swarthmore College and co-host of the Always Already Podcast—a podcast that explores a range of theoretical traditions including critical theory as well as people and projects animated by such ideas. In this conversation, we discuss: (1) The inspiration for his podcast series “Epistemic Unruliness" (2) How a deep connection with the ancestors lies at the core of his scholarly work (3) How he counters scholarly misrecognition and resistance through this ancestral consciousness
In this episode, I interview Dr. Glenn Wallis, a scholar of Buddhist Studies and Founder and Director of Incite Seminars---a series of animated humanities seminars that agitate personal awareness and incite social engagement amongst the general public in Philadelphia. Here, we discuss: (1) His journeys within and beyond educational institutions (2) How political concerns have reshaped his scholarly work (3) How he is creating space for inciting, public dialogues beyond the ivory tower
In this episode, I interview Martha Beck, a Harvard-trained Sociologist and bestselling author who has become one of the "best known life coaches in America”. She has served as a trusted coach to clients including Oprah Winfrey and as a field-defining master teacher to life coaches from around the world. Here, we discuss: (1) How motherhood and mystery radically transformed her relationship to academic values (2) How she leveraged these experiences to build an authentic body of work that has touched millions (3) Key life design strategies you can implement to translate social breakdowns into breakthroughs
In this episode, I interview Dr. Bayo Akomolafe, a writer, speaker, and “walkout” academic who left the field of Clinical Psychology to pursue a “small, intense life”. He is Chief Curator and Executive Director of The Emergence Network—an earth-wide commonwealth of trickster-activist-artists inspired to rethink our patterns of responding to crises. Here, we discuss: (1) His decision to turn down a major academic promotion to prioritize authentic work and family life (2) His collaborative action-research project that is rethinking activism with Africa at the center (3) How he’s crafting critical, theoretical work for wider audiences in the form of story
In this episode, I interview Cecilia Cabellero and Yvette Martínez-Vu, co-founders of Chicana M(otherwork)—a collective of five Chicana mother-scholars revisioning care work through activism, self-care, teaching, and mothering. Here, we discuss: (1) Barriers to self-care and childcare for women of color in the academy; (2) Tools for rejecting unacceptable treatment from others and ourselves; and (3) How they’re transcending the logic of permission to do work that nourishes them and their chosen communities
In this episode, I interview Dr. Theodore Richards— philosopher, poet, novelist, and founder of The Chicago Wisdom Project. Through this innovative nonprofit organization, he and his team help youth become teachers and cultural creators through a holistic pedagogy spanning critical dialogue, creative expression, therapeutic modalities, and nature connection.