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Beth Berry is an author, coach, teacher, adventurer, mother of four daughters, and hopelessly hopeful human.
In this podcast we talk about:
motherwhelm and why we things feel so hardreimagining our conceptualisation of motherhoodstarting a revolution from homere-valuing care and examining unmet needsnew world thinkingdeveloping intimacy with natureand so much more.
To learn more about Beth - https://revolutionfromhome.com
To see my upcoming journeys or pre-order your copy of Wilder - www.megberryman.com
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I have a chinwag with Wellfolk Revival's Sarah Stutzman, chatting about:
nature as teacherhomesteadinglooking at income different waysbuilding resilience and communitythe symbiosis between the way we look after land and bodiesknowing our limitationsand so much more.
For more info on Sarah's work - https://www.wellfolkrevival.com
For all our upcoming offers - www.megberryman.com
For our consulting work - www.regenerativeways.org
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We finally catch up for a chinwag and chat about:
navigating financial stress in businessneurodiversitybuilding resilient communitieshomeschoolingpivoting and adapting work and lifeAnd so many more things.
For more details on what's coming up - www.megberryman.com
For more details on our consulting work - www.regenerativeways.org
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Briony Penn is a naturalist, writer, educator, and broadcaster well known for her indomitable spirit and tireless devotion to protecting endangered species and sensitive ecosystems in her native British Columbia, Canada.
In this episode, Dave chats with Briony about:
acting in service to the earthdecolonizing and acting counter-culturallythe politicisation of nature education barefoot mappingwhy we don't act reconnecting to a past we can be proud of fostering courage to stand by what you know in your bonesFor more information on Briony:
https://www.brionypenn.com
For more information on Meg's upcoming journeys: www.megberryman.com
For more information Dave and Meg's consulting work: www.regenerativeways.org
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A senior yoga teacher, Mei Lai Swan is a certified Embodied Flow™ teacher, with years of study and practice in Ashtanga, Vinyasa and Anusara yoga. From Melbourne, Australia, but now based on the road, she teaches in-depth workshops, retreats and international teacher trainings around the world, with a special focus on nada (sound) yoga, somatic and trauma-informed practices.
A trained Doula, she is the founder, previous CEO and ongoing Board Director of Birth for Humankind, a non-profit organisation providing free birth support to women in disadvantaged circumstances.
In this conversation we chat about:
- Mei Lai's perspective on post-crisis regenerative recovery and repair from her experience working in flooded-affected communities
- the importance of community and co-regulation in times of crisis
- health and wellbeing as the cornerstones of regeneration
- mobilising and shifting systems for regeneration and recovery
- how trauma impacts repair and recovery
- community-driven responses to crisis
- regenerative leadership.
For more information on the Northern Rivers Community Healing Hub -
https://www.nrchh.org/
To learn more about Mei Lai - https://meilaiswan.com/about/
To learn more about our upcoming retreats and events - https://www.instagram.com/megjberryman/?hl=en
For more information on Mei Lai -
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Artist as Family (Meg Ulman and Patrick Jones) live in Daylesford, Australia on Djaara Country on a quarter-acre permaculture plot, home to their School of Applied Neopeasantry at Tree Elbow University. They practice a unique form of performance art, comprising how they live, get their food and medicine, and move around; performing modes of life making they call permacultural neopeasantry.
Meg and Patrick are bloggers, fermentors, writers, public speakers, goatherders, gardeners and video makers who also make music, but mostly they're a family who belong to a bloody great community and a beautiful small patch of sacred forest, and therefore they're much more than the sum of our parts.
In this episode we talk about:
Meg and Patrick's vision for the worldusing grief and sorrow as fuel toward living differentlyde-schoolingliving communally and resolving conflictstepping into young eldershipneopeasantry and using the way we live as activismembodied leadership and regenerative livingfinding our way back toward indigenous wisdomAnd so much more.
For more info on Artist as Family:
https://artistasfamily.is
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Dr Bayo Akomalafe is a philosopher, writer, activist, professor of psychology, and executive director of the Emergence Network.
In this chat, Dave talks to Dr Bayo about:
unschooling and non-schoolingcommunity as an organism trauma as an invitation to reimagine rupture and repair - individually and collectivelysurrendering to the non-human worldlocalisationAnd so much more.
To learn more about Bayo - https://www.bayoakomolafe.net
To learn more about Regenerative Ways - www.megberryman.com
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I chat with Author of the Art of Frugal Hedonism Annie Raser-Rowland about:
how to consume less and live morewhy frugality and hedonism aren't a contradictionwhy we're afraid of having and consuming less - and how to overcome itorienting communally and relationallyfinding sensory pleasure in our mammalian bodieswhat our bodies are saying about the systems we live inand how to find compassion for yourself and others wherever you are in your regenerative journey.To buy the book - https://www.frugalhedonism.com
To see what we're up to - www.megberryman.com
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Emily Sims and her partner Alex are first generation farmers in their fifth year of running a small-scale regenerative farm business in Victoria, Australia. They are passionate about ethical animal husbandry, understanding local ecology, enhancing soil and pasture health and building relationships along the way. They believe locally grown, wholesome food is at the heart of healthy communities.
In this chat we talk about:
how Emily came to farming and what she learned through mentorshipwhy farming is healing overcoming challengeslearning in relationship to the landher experiment to ditch social media and focus on in person relationshipscreating diverse and reciprocal relationshipsand so much more.
To learn more about Hand to Ground- https://www.handtoground.com.au/
To subscribe to Emily's blog and seasonal newsletter - www.savourtheseasons.com
To enrol in our signature course Small is Beautiful - www.megberryman.com
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Ella Noah Bancroft is Bundjalung woman born in Australia. She is a descendant of the Bundjalung peoples of Northern NSW, and also has blood lines to Scotland and England.
She is a Connection Therapist, Mentor, activist and creative, carbon neutral event co-ordinator. She is passionate about re-wilding the world and the feminine force.
In this chat we talk about:
choosing a technological or nature based futureslowing the f*** downhealing through connection and in relationship rewilding and finding our way home local futures and creating regenrative communitiesand so much more.
To learn more about Ella - https://www.ellanoahbancroft.net
To enrol in Unbound and spend three months learning the art of regenerative leadership and business - www.megberryman.com/journeys/unbound
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Becca is the host of the Belonging podcast, the author of Root & Ritual and a facilitator of women’s gatherings both virtually and in person. She speaks on the nature of belonging and what it means to be alive in the Age of Loneliness and holds retreats to help women reconnect with their rooted sense of self.
She currently lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with her partner, child, two cats, and five chickens, where she gardens, cooks, mothers, and gathers with the ebb and flow of the seasons.
In this medicinal conversation, we chat about:
honouring our inner winters living seasonally building community and re-villagingreimagining the village in a way that honours the past and looks to the futureorienting relationally in life and businesschanging our relationship to chaosand so much more.
For more info on Becca - visit https://beccapiastrelli.com
To learn the principles of regenerative business and leadership including living and working seasonally - www.megberryman.com/journeys/unbound
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Laura Storm is the Founder of Regenerators and has spent her entire career working in the intersection of sustainability, organizational development, climate change policy and the intelligence of nature.
In this conversation, Laura and I chat about:
regenerative leadership and why it's time for a new conceptualisation of leadershipworking within systems to transform themhonouring cycles and seasons in work and lifeLaura's journey of regenerationregenerative businesswhy the way we do things matterswhat is giving us hopeand much more.
For more information on Laura - https://laura-storm.com/
To join me for our three month regenerative business immersion - www.megberryman.com/journeys/unbound
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Arrowyn Ambrose is an Advanced Certified Facilitator of The Resilience Toolkit, Certified Teaching Artist, and Certified Race Equity and Healing Justice Facilitator. She has studied Viola Spolin’s long-form organic improvisation, creative writing, addiction, and group dynamics. With a background in the creative and performing arts, Arrowyn believes in the healing power of story and is passionate about ethical storytelling along with trauma-informed and resilience-oriented recovery, parenting, and social justice.
In this conversation we talk about:
why we do what we do when we know what we knowaddiction, recovery and regenerationtrauma and the bodywhy we are all in recovery from culture creating rituals of repair in relationshipAnd so much more.To learn more about Arrowyn and the Resilience Toolkit - https://lumostransforms.com/team/arrowyn-ambrose/
To join our upcoming regenerative business community, Unbound -
www.megberryman.com/journeys/unbound
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I interview New-Zealand based doula/daughter Chloe Holloway - @oh_mwanawanga about how our culture of birthing reflects the disconnections we see in our everyday - and how we can tend to this rite of passage with reverence, inclusion and radical support in order to step toward a more regenerative tomorrow.
We talk about:
* birthing cultures globally and how they differ
* what respectful care looks like and why we can extend this beyond the birthing room
* feeling safe to move in the world in different ways
* respecting traditions in antenatal, birth and postnatal care
* finding belonging
* being a death doula and what we can learn from death
* finding different expressions of activism
and so much more.
For more information on Chloe - https://www.ohmwanawanga.com
For more information on our upcoming programs and evergreen courses - www.megberryman.com
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Jonathan Mooney is a dyslexic writer and activist who learned to read when he was 12-years-old. He since earned an honors degree in English Literature at Brown University and has written and published three books including Learning Outside the Lines and Normal Sucks.
In this compelling and uplifting conversation, we chat about:
the origin of normal and why it sucksdisrupting normal and the link with cultural regenerationuncovering our gifts and being loved for who we arewhy folks with atypical brains and bodies are wisdom keepers of regeneration...and so much more.
For more info on Jonathan - https://www.jonathanmooney.com
To enrol in our latest program - embodied regeneration - www.megberryman.com/journeys/embodied-regeneration
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I give listeners a little update about what's been going on here... strap in for a wild ride!
To enrol in together - www.megberryman.com/journeys/together
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In this chat I speak with death doula Zenith Virago about living and dying well, befriending grief and what it all has to do with creating a more regenerative tomorrow.
Zenith is a marriage celebrant, death walker, celebrant, educator and consultant - bringing contemporary, natural and holistic awareness to death, ceremony and loss. You can learn more about Zenith - https://www.zenithvirago.com
And about our courses and events - www.megberryman.com
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Ashia Ray is an Autistic, multiracial (Chinese/Irish) 2nd-generation settler raising two children alongside their partner on the homelands of the Wampanoag and Massachusett people. Their goal with Raising Luminaries is to collaborate with families and educators in raising the next generation of kind & courageous leaders, so we can all smash the kyriarchy together.In this episode we chat about the difference between kind and nice, how to have and encourage courageous conversation, ableism, starting the work close in and so much more.Whether you are raising little people or not, this episode is essential listening for any folks committed to cultural regeneration and transformative justice.
For more information about Ashia - https://booksforlittles.com/info/about/
For more previous episodes - www.megberryman.com/podcast
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Dave and I catch up over a cuppa (in lockdown #6) and share where we are now, three months on from the miscarriage. We chat about:
* community and local living* homeschooling and wildschooling* our endless pursuit of working less and living more* our wild brumby * regenerative relationships * and why ultimately, small is beautiful.To enrol in Small is Beautiful - https://regenerativeways.thinkific.com/courses/small-is-beautiful
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I chat with Futuresteading podcast hosts and all round stellar humans Catie Payne and Jade Miles from Black Barn Farm about all things futuresteading, regenerative living and the challenge of living within systems as we try and disrupt and rebuild them.
For more info on the Futuresteading podcast - https://www.futuresteading.com.au
To enrol in Small is Beautiful - https://regenerativeways.thinkific.com/courses/small-is-beautiful
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