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Sorry To Podcast This STPT is archived at anchor.fm/stp-this

Season 3 of   💕 55 Episodes!!
23/10/2021

Season 3 of 💕 55 Episodes!!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JaTiq2rqrd4Nkem Ndefo's Resilience ToolkitNkem Ndefo joins   this week in conversation w...
12/10/2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JaTiq2rqrd4

Nkem Ndefo's Resilience Toolkit

Nkem Ndefo joins this week in conversation with Danielle Holland. Here she speaks on reclamation, adaptation and listening, or, the questions that led to her creation of the Resilience Toolkit.

"The reclamation of Joy, in an embodied way, is a such a fierce form of resistance in its absolute gentleness and compassion and celebration and silliness." - Ndefo

Full episode airs on all streaming platforms 10/13/21 and at sorrytopodcastthis.com

Learn more on Nkem and her work at https://lumostransforms.com/ - Lumos Transforms

Nkem Ndefo joins this week in conversation with Danielle Holland. Here she speaks on reclamation, adaptation and listening, or, the questions that led ...

Jen Marley speaking on Indigenous People's Day - Democracy Now!
12/10/2021

Jen Marley speaking on Indigenous People's Day - Democracy Now!

We continue our look at Indigenous Peoples’ Day with Jennifer Marley, a citizen of San Ildefonso Pueblo and a member of the grassroots Indigenous liberation organization The Red Nation, which helped lead a campaign in 2015 to officially recognize Indigenous Peoples’ Day in Albuquerque, New Mexic...

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/Reparations-and-Worldmaking-w-Olfmi-O--Tw-e18cfopReparations and Worldmaking (w/ Olú...
06/10/2021

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/Reparations-and-Worldmaking-w-Olfmi-O--Tw-e18cfop

Reparations and Worldmaking (w/ Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò)

This week on , Danielle Holland and Puja Datta discuss the state of ever increasing abortion restrictions that have swept across the country over the past year. They break down who these laws most affect, what the dangerous impacts are, and what you can do to help financially or in volunteer action to support those seeking to obtain access to health care, either in rural states or for traveling across state lines.

Then they are joined by philosopher Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò. Táíwò is an Assistant Professor at Georgetown University, working on social political philosophy. His book, Reconsidering Reparations: Worldmaking in the Case of Climate Crisis, connecting climate justice and racial justice, comes out this fall via Oxford University Press.

Together they dive into reparations as a worldmaking project in response to racial injustice. Addressing what reparations should accomplish towards changing the global social structure, they tie in labor, climate justice, migration and land back as core issues.

Come worldmake with us in our post f***s society. Power concedes nothing without a demand.

Avail on all streaming platforms + sorrytopodcastthis.com
(More at Olufemi.com)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f3IO84SaxV4Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò: On ReparationsOlúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò joins   in conversation th...
06/10/2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f3IO84SaxV4

Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò: On Reparations

Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò joins in conversation this week with Danielle Holland and Puja Datta. Here he breaks down what he means by "reparations is a worldmaking project."

"That's what I think reparations is. It should be changing the global social structure we all live in." - Táíwò

Full episode airs 10.6.21 on all streaming platforms.
More at sorrytopodcastthis.com + olufemiotaiwo.com

Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò joins in conversation. Here he breaks down what he means by "reparations is a worldmaking project." "That's what I think reparations ...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zZq6JoaH9CcOlúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò on WorldmakingOlúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò joins   this week in conver...
05/10/2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zZq6JoaH9Cc

Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò on Worldmaking

Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò joins this week in conversation. Here he speaks to large scale social change, the work of worldmaking, and why appeals to empathy and decency won't cut it.

Full episode airs 9/6/21 on all streaming platforms and at sorrytopodcastthis.com

Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò joins this week in conversation. Here he speaks to large scale social change, the work of worldmaking, and why appeals to empathy and...

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/Loving-Expansively-w-Junauda-Petrus-Nasah-e181rrdLoving Expansively (w/ Junauda Petr...
29/09/2021

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/Loving-Expansively-w-Junauda-Petrus-Nasah-e181rrd

Loving Expansively (w/ Junauda Petrus-Nasah)

This week on , Danielle Holland and Bryan Barnett II hold conversation with writer, pleasure activist and filmmaker, Junauda Petrus-Nasah. Centering the conversation on Junauda's The Stars and The Blackness Between Them, they explore the deep potency, possibility and melancholy within adolescence. Junauda shares her experiences in writing with care, compassion and cognizance towards healing before and on the written page. From asking what abolition within oneself actually feels like, to slipping into liminal spaces of q***r desire, this weeks episode is dedicated to all of the rest of you pleasure activists. Stay hydrated, rest well, ma******te, and enjoy.

Junuada is a writer, a soul sweetener, runaway witch, and performance artist of Black-Caribbean descent, born and working on unceded Dakota land in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Her work centers around wildness, q***rness, Black-diasporic-futurism, ancestral healing, sweetness, shimmer and liberation. Her first YA novel, The Stars and The Blackness Between Them received a Coretta Scott King Honor Award. She is the co-founder with Erin Sharkey of Free Black Dirt a Black, experimental healing art collective. She is currently working on her second novel, set in the 90s about a young, Black woman training in circus.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CP4jx8K0w4M&t=1sJunauda Petrus-Nasah: On AdolescenceThis week on  , Junauda Petrus-Nasah...
29/09/2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CP4jx8K0w4M&t=1s

Junauda Petrus-Nasah: On Adolescence

This week on , Junauda Petrus-Nasah joins the conversation, speaking to the potent possibility and melancholy of adolescence. Here she reflects on her process of writing adolescent trauma with care, compassion and self-nurturance, to bring to life a character more healed onto the page.

Full episode airs on 9/29/21 on all streaming platforms and at sorrytopodcastthis.com

This week on , Junauda Petrus-Nasah joins the conversation, speaking to the potent possibility and melancholy of adolescence. Here she reflects on her p...

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/Reclaiming-The-Wild-w-Gina-Rae-La-Cerva-e17mqdlReclaiming The Wild (w/ Gina Rae La C...
22/09/2021

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/Reclaiming-The-Wild-w-Gina-Rae-La-Cerva-e17mqdl

Reclaiming The Wild (w/ Gina Rae La Cerva)

This week on , Danielle Holland and Puja Datta discuss the media outpour and allocation of local, national and federal resources towards the tragic search for Gabby Petito. Taking in the larger national context of missing and murdered women, they share some key thoughts from their recent conversation with Roxanne White, nationally recognized for her work on issues related to Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and People. “Nobody is searching for us, except for us” White shared about the erasure, invisibility, and devaluing of in this country. We invite listeners to support White’s work by donating to MMIP and Families at Unkitawa.

Then, award-winning writer, geographer, and environmental anthropologist, Gina Rae La Cerva joins the show. La Cerva speaks to a reclaiming of ourselves as part of the wild, exploring how we can tend to nature and one another with support and connection. It is through this survival of connections, as we face a future of uncertainty, that La Cerva reminds us “We have to release this trauma, we have to start processing it. And it’s not individual, it’s always going to be collective.” Drop into this week's lush conversation, as they forage through capitalism, conservation history, and reconnection to pleasure. Let us all find our small joys in this fu**ed up world.

Gina Rae La Cerva is an award-winning writer, geographer, and environmental anthropologist originally from Santa Fe, New Mexico. An avid adventurer, La Cerva has researched tsunamis in Indonesia, crossed the Pacific Ocean on a sailboat, and traced the wild meat trade from the forests of the Congo Basin to the streets of Paris. Her first book, Feasting Wild: In Search of the Last Untamed Food was selected for the New York Times Summer Reading List, and chosen by Amazon as a Best Non-Fiction Book of 2020.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UR4vU0Ofhk8Gina Rae La Cerva: On Resilience and AdaptabilityGina Rae La Cerva joins   th...
20/09/2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UR4vU0Ofhk8

Gina Rae La Cerva: On Resilience and Adaptability

Gina Rae La Cerva joins this week in conversation. Here she explores how we think about the ideas of resilience and adaptability as we look towards a future of great uncertainty.

Full episode airs Wednesday September 22nd on all streaming platforms and at sorrytopodcastthis.com

Gina Rae La Cerva is an award-winning writer, geographer, and environmental anthropologist originally from Santa Fe, New Mexico. An avid adventurer, La Cerva has researched tsunamis in Indonesia, crossed the Pacific Ocean on a sailboat, and traced the wild meat trade from the forests of the Congo Basin to the streets of Paris. Her first book, Feasting Wild: In Search of the Last Untamed Food was selected for the New York Times Summer Reading List, and chosen by Amazon as a Best Non-Fiction Book of 2020. More at ginaraelc.com

Gina Rae La Cerva joins this week in conversation. Here she explores how we think about the ideas of resilience and adaptability as we look towards a f...

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/Language--Love--and-Belonging-w-Anne-Liu-Kellor-e17cgnuLanguage, Love, and Belonging...
15/09/2021

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/Language--Love--and-Belonging-w-Anne-Liu-Kellor-e17cgnu

Language, Love, and Belonging (w/ Anne Liu Kellor)

This week on , Danielle Holland is joined by returning guest, Rokea Jones (she/her) to dive into TX SB8, reproductive rights and how adverse medical outcomes are inextricably linked to the experience of racism in the US. "We are literally fighting for our lives." Rokea shares specific ways we can give voice to the voiceless and be of service in this world.

Rokea Jones is Director of Doula Services at Open Arms Perinatal Services, public service experts, and a maternal health specialist. Her diverse work experience over the years has covered providing advocacy, education, direct social services and extensive civic engagement and policy advocacy.

Then, Anne Liu Kellor (she/her) joins Holland in conversation centered around Kellor's memoir debut, Heart Radical: A Search for Language, Love, and Belonging, out now via She Writes Press. Anne and Danielle explore embodied states of love, inherited silences, and coming home to ourselves. From little t to big T Trauma, dissolving shame, and sharing the conflicts of her mixed race experiences, Anne offers herself to be seen in her multitudes as an inspiration to us all.

Ride with us this week, in the Heart Radical.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-TLxMbxD5tURokea Jones: On WeatheringDirector of Doula Services at Open Arms Perinatal S...
14/09/2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-TLxMbxD5tU

Rokea Jones: On Weathering

Director of Doula Services at Open Arms Perinatal Services, public service expert, and maternal health specialist, Rokea Jones returns to getting into with host Danielle Holland.

Here Rokea dives into how adverse health outcomes for Black and brown women are linked to weathering and experiencing racism in this country.

Rokea’s diverse work experience over the years has covered providing advocacy, education, direct social services and extensive civic engagement and policy advocacy. Check out the full episode on any streaming platform 9/15/21 or at sorrytopodcastthis.com

Director of Doula Services at Open Arms Perinatal Services, public service expert, and maternal health specialist, Rokea Jones returns to getting into...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0oxxadwnhfEAnne Liu Kellor: On ShameThis week on  , Anne Liu Kellor joins the conversati...
13/09/2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0oxxadwnhfE

Anne Liu Kellor: On Shame

This week on , Anne Liu Kellor joins the conversation. Here she dives into dismantling shame, dissolving silence and engaging in hard conversations.

Full episode airs Wednesday 9/15 on all streaming platforms and at sorrytopodcasthis.com. Anne and host Danielle Holland discuss Anne's memoir (now out via She Writes Press) HEART RADICAL: A SEARCH FOR LANGUAGE, LOVE, AND BELONGING. From love to language and resilience, they get into it all.

This week on , Anne Liu Kellor joins the conversation. Here she dives into dismantling shame, dissolving silence and engaging in hard conversations. Ful...

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/Name-The-Things-That-Matter-e172e5fName The Things That Matter Danielle Holland, Moi...
08/09/2021

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/Name-The-Things-That-Matter-e172e5f

Name The Things That Matter

Danielle Holland, Moises Nuñez, Kimi Lee King and Maryam Arshad kick off this week with an roundtable. Diving into definitions of the self within the context of community and humanity, they explore language, accountability, and perception. These four question how to turn off the background noise and get into intentional alignment, all while flying high on Bowenian altitude training and soaking with generational trauma bath bombs™. For laughter, for love, and for your consideration.

Avail on all streaming platforms + at sorrytopodcastthis.com

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dg79tkDbaCcSTPT: How Do You Define Self?On   Roundtable, Moises Nuñez, Kimi Lee King, Ma...
05/09/2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dg79tkDbaCc

STPT: How Do You Define Self?

On Roundtable, Moises Nuñez, Kimi Lee King, Maryam Arshad and Danielle Holland join in conversation. Here they dive into how does one define self, as the beginning point in examining how we remain community and humanity centered in our lives and relationships.

Full episode dropping on all streaming platforms 9/8/21 and at sorrytopodcastthis.com

On STPT Roundtable, Moises Nuñez, Kimi Lee King, Maryam Arshad and Danielle Holland join in conversation. Here they dive into how does one define self, as th...

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/We-Stand-In-Resilience-With-Our-Ancestors-w-Roxanne-White-e16o7jtWe Stand In Resilie...
01/09/2021

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/We-Stand-In-Resilience-With-Our-Ancestors-w-Roxanne-White-e16o7jt

We Stand In Resilience With Our Ancestors (w/ Roxanne White)

This week on , Danielle Holland and Puja Datta dive headfirst into boundaries, discussing how they impact and inform our relationships with ourselves, one another, and our greater community. Then, they are joined by Roxanne White (she/her), Grass Roots Organizer and Social Justice Advocate who has dedicated her work to Indian Country.

Roxanne and hosts discuss and why the missing aunts, sisters, and daughters become stories that remain siloed within Native communities. Roxanne shares that for every Sacred person they search for, march for, grieve for, is another person whom law enforcement disregarded, devalued, dehumanized. That every Border Town and city ignored, abused, abducted, and trafficked in. These people become the stories that news media refuses to tell, the cases that legal systems do not prosecute for, and that white feminists write up resolutions that will travel no where with.

Roxanne shares the work she does, the hard work of fighting for answers, for a semblance of justice, and for the lives of so many Indigenous peoples. Within this heavy work, White brings hope, be it in her visions from the Ancestors, to her new ideas and imaginings of reparations and resilience.

We offer you this weeks conversation, that together we may stand in solidarity. Donate to MMIP at unkitawa - (Select MMIP Families from Dropdown).

Learn more Missing and Murdered Indigenous People & Families
______
Roxanne White is of Nez Perce, Yakama, Nooksack and Aaniiih Nations. She is recognized nationally for her work on issues related to Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and People and for her work with Native families and communities seeking justice and healing. She is also known her work on human trafficking in Native communities. Roxanne works to amplify the voices of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women across North America. Roxanne is also a grassroots organizer, standing on the front lines for Indigenous rights and environmental justice. She embodies vibrant Indigenous leadership through the resilience of culture and ceremony and a lens of historical trauma. Roxanne is a family member of MMIWG, as well asa survivor of human trafficking, domestic violence, childhood abduction, and sexual abuse. She draws on her personal experience to empower and support survivors in Native communities. Roxanne has been featured on HuffPost, the Canadian Broadcast Channel, CNN, Al Jazeera TV, Seattle Times, and a variety of local and national media.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IJcvq6WvBiMRoxanne White On Broken TreatiesThis week on  , grass roots organizer and soc...
30/08/2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IJcvq6WvBiM

Roxanne White On Broken Treaties

This week on , grass roots organizer and social justice advocate who has dedicated her work to Indian Country, Roxanne White, joins the conversation. Here she dives into history of broken treaties on this land.

Photo Credit: Dillon Nockideneh

Learn more about Roxanne's work with MMIP at https://www.facebook.com/mmipandfamilies

Support financially at https://unkitawa.org/donate and select MMIP Families.

This week on , grass roots organizer and social justice advocate who has dedicated her work to Indian Country, Roxanne White, joins the conversation. He...

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/We-Need-Mass-Movements-w-Jen-Marley-e16du6uWe Need Mass Movements (w/ Jen Marley)Thi...
25/08/2021

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/We-Need-Mass-Movements-w-Jen-Marley-e16du6u

We Need Mass Movements (w/ Jen Marley)

This week on STPT, Danielle Holland and Maryam Arshad dive into political antics regarding Afghan women and transnational feminisms. Then, they are joined by Jennifer Marley (she/her) citizen of the San Ildefonso Pueblo, PhD student, q***r Indigenous feminist and organizer with The Red Nation.

Marley and hosts dive into Native art extraction for tourist economies, US Imperialism and War On Terror, and global Indigenous solidarity. Join us this week as we glimpse into the world we can build, the world we can co-create and tend to, fertile grounds for a revolutionary moment. Land Back.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=syKU-Lgqg6QJen Marley - We Need Mass MovementsJen Marley joins   in conversation, speaki...
24/08/2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=syKU-Lgqg6Q

Jen Marley - We Need Mass Movements

Jen Marley joins in conversation, speaking on the importance of mass collective movements to address climate change, resource extraction, and capitalist exploitation.

Full episode airs 8/85/21 on all streaming platforms and at sorrytopodcastthis.com

Jen Marley joins in conversation, speaking on the importance of mass collective movements to address climate change, resource extraction, and capitalis...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KJeV7lGqTd0Jen Marley on The Red DealJen Marley joins   this week in conversation. Jen d...
23/08/2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KJeV7lGqTd0

Jen Marley on The Red Deal

Jen Marley joins this week in conversation. Jen dives into The Red Deal, discussing our relations with non-human relatives, Indigenous land stewardship, and re-framing climate justice politics.

Full episode airs Wednesday 8/25, and you can learn more about The Red Deal at https://therednation.org/

Jennifer Marley is Tewa, from the Pueblo of San Ildefonso, she has been a member of The Red Nation since 2015. Jennifer is currently a Ph.D. student in the American Studies department at the University of New Mexico.

Jen Marley joins this week in conversation. Jen dives into The Red Deal, discussing our relations with non-human relatives, Indigenous land stewardship...

Digital Alchemy (again) w/ Moya BaileyDanielle Holland and Maryam Arshad are joined by Moya Bailey in week 3 of 3 of   s...
18/08/2021

Digital Alchemy (again) w/ Moya Bailey

Danielle Holland and Maryam Arshad are joined by Moya Bailey in week 3 of 3 of summer replays. They dive into misogynoir, Black womens’ intersections with both medical racism and advancements, and the development of digital alchemy as tools for building the world we want.

Moya Bailey is Assistant Professor of Africana Studies and the program in Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Northeastern University. Her work focuses on marginalized groups’ use of digital media to promote social justice as acts of self-affirmation and health promotion, and she is interested in how race, gender, and sexuality are represented in media and medicine. Bailey currently curates the Tumblr initiative in Digital Humanities. She is also the digital alchemist for the Octavia E. Butler Legacy Network. She is an MLK Visiting Scholar at MIT for the 2020–2021 academic year.

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/Digital-Alchemy-again-w-Moya-Bailey-e1634fe

Living In Good Relations (again) w/  Danielle Holland and Bianca Blanco-Jimenez are joined by Nick Estes in week 2 of 3 ...
11/08/2021

Living In Good Relations (again) w/

Danielle Holland and Bianca Blanco-Jimenez are joined by Nick Estes in week 2 of 3 of STPT summer replays. They dive into colonialism, capitalism, and climate change. Nick Estes invites our collective imagination as we work towards decolonization and a radical shift to our relations to the natural world.

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/Living-In-Good-Relations-again-w-Nick-Estes-e15oj19

On all streaming platforms. Please like, follow, subscribe + review!

Citizen of the Lower Brule Sioux Tribe, Dr. Nick Estes is an Assistant Professor of American Studies at the University of New Mexico. He is a historian, journalist, and host of The Red Nation Podcast. Estes also is a founding editor of Red Media Collective, which publishes books, podcasts, and stories highlighting Indigenous intelligence in all its forms. His writing and research engage decolonization, Indigenous histories, environmental justice, and anti-capitalism and have been featured in The Baffler, The Guardian, The Nation, High Country News, Indian Country Today, Jacobin, NBC News, and The Intercept. In 2019, Estes was awarded the Lannan Literary Fellowship for Non-Fiction.

Estes is the author of the book “Our History is the Future: Standing Rock Versus the Dakota Access Pipeline, and the Long Tradition of Indigenous Resistance.” He is a co-author of two books coming out in 2021 on police abolition and Indigenous environmental justice, and is currently working on a book on the history of Red Power.

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/Our-Impact-Is-Immeasurable-again-w-Anna-Hansen-e15evhbOur Impact Is Immeasurable (ag...
04/08/2021

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/Our-Impact-Is-Immeasurable-again-w-Anna-Hansen-e15evhb

Our Impact Is Immeasurable (again) w/ Anna Hansen

Danielle Holland and Sharayah Lane are joined by Shίshάlh Nation & Ilocano Elder, facilitator, consultant and therapist, Anna Hansen, in week 1 of 3 of STPT summer replays.

Anna Hansen carries over 40 years’ experience working in communities using an energetic, visionary and caring approach to help sustain wellbeing, healing and healthy connections. Her specialty areas include historical trauma and recovery, loss & grief, cultural humility/competency, and compassionate recovery.

Hansen holds space with your co-hosts, to talk in a circle around naming ceremonies, the power of Indigenous languages and rituals. Together they weave through time, building upon generations of action, resilience, and work. Hansen and Lane speak from the lens of those who experience settler colonialism in mind, body and spirit, to this day. Together they listen to the body and listen to one another. They witness. They invite us all to witness. For healing, for recovery, and for evolution.

This episode reminds you that "Tears will come before the understanding" so find a safe, warm space to be and to feel this conversation.

All show notes and a place in our heart at sorrytopodcastthis.com

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fBLQJVn9-fk&feature=youtu.beSharayah Lane on what Native People Have To HoldSharayah Lan...
29/07/2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fBLQJVn9-fk&feature=youtu.be

Sharayah Lane on what Native People Have To Hold

Sharayah Lane on the process of grief, trauma and healing from the boarding school atrocities. Hear more in full episode (What A Time To Be Alive) on all streaming platforms or at sorrytopodcastthis.com

Sharayah Lane on the process of grief, trauma and healing from the boarding school atrocities. Hear more in full episdoe (What A Time To Be Alive) on all str...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CyNDyDHJuwwSharayah Lane on SolidaritySharayah Lane on Solidarity. Full Episode (What A ...
29/07/2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CyNDyDHJuww

Sharayah Lane on Solidarity

Sharayah Lane on Solidarity. Full Episode (What A Time To Be Alive) is available on all streaming platforms and at sorrytopodcastthis.com

Sharayah Lane on Solidarity. Full Episode (What A Time To Be Alive) is available on all streaming platforms and at sorrytopodcastthis.com

What A Time To Be AliveDanielle Holland, Sharayah Lane, Puja Datta and Agi Brown kick off this week with an STPT roundta...
28/07/2021

What A Time To Be Alive

Danielle Holland, Sharayah Lane, Puja Datta and Agi Brown kick off this week with an STPT roundtable. They dive into conversation on grief and dying, living an authentic life, and the challenges of living in true solidarity. Addressing boarding school trauma and healing, life as the struggle and death as a gift, and the revolutionary act of experiencing joy, this week’s episode is filled with a range of thoughtful and compassionate reflections on what it means to be alive.

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/What-A-Time-To-Be-Alive-e154aj0

Now on all streaming platforms + at sorrytopodcastthis.com

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ctAExwYQbFQParenting Is A Verb w/ Yolanda WilliamsJoining   in conversation this week is...
23/07/2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ctAExwYQbFQ

Parenting Is A Verb w/ Yolanda Williams

Joining in conversation this week is Yolanda Williams, from Parenting Decolonized. Here she dives into the relationship between child/caretaker as a co-creation. Full episode avail on all streaming platforms and at sorrytopodcastthis.com

Sorry To Podcast This + Parenting Decolonized

Joining in conversation this week is Yolanda Williams, from Parenting Decolonized. Here she dives into the relationship between child/caretaker as a co...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YiB0UbMWNPgYolanda Williams on  Yolanda Williams, of Parenting Decolonized,  joins STPT ...
22/07/2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YiB0UbMWNPg

Yolanda Williams on

Yolanda Williams, of Parenting Decolonized, joins STPT this week in conversation. Here she dives into communication, boundaries and self-discovery in romantic relationships.

Full episode (Parenting Is A Verb) on all streaming platforms and at sorrytopodcastthis.com

Yolanda Williams, of Decolonizing Parenting, joins STPT this week in conversation. Here she dives into communication, boundaries and self-discovery in romant...

Parenting Is A Verb (w/ Yolanda Williams)This week on  , Danielle Holland and Damithia Nieves dive into the generative p...
21/07/2021

Parenting Is A Verb (w/ Yolanda Williams)

This week on , Danielle Holland and Damithia Nieves dive into the generative practice of imagining, centering intentions in joy, and how the contemplation of death can help us live the s**t out of our lives. Then, Host of the podcast Parenting Decolonized
and Positive Discipline Coach, Yolanda Williams (she/her) joins the show. Yolanda and hosts explore colonial constructs in parenting, engaging with boundaries, and preparing one another for a liberated world. Download this week's conversation to unpack how colonization impacts our most intimate relations, and how we can imagine outside of those constraints.

Full episode on all streaming platforms + at sorrytopodcastthis.com

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/Parenting-Is-A-Verb-w-Yolanda-Williams-e14pgst

The Speed of Empathy (w/ Siila Watt-Cloutier)This week on  , Danielle Holland is joined by Inuit leader and activist and...
14/07/2021

The Speed of Empathy (w/ Siila Watt-Cloutier)

This week on , Danielle Holland is joined by Inuit leader and activist and one of the world’s most recognized environmental, climate change and human rights advocate, Siila Watt-Cloutier (she/her). Watt-Cloutier was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for her advocacy work in showing the impact global climate change has on human rights and is author of The Right to Be Cold: One Woman's Story of Protecting Her Culture, the Arctic, and the Whole Planet.

Siila Watt-Cloutier sums up her work by saying: “I do nothing more than remind the world that the Arctic is not a barren land devoid of life but a rich and majestic land that has supported our resilient culture for millennia. Even though small in number and living far from the corridors of power, it appears that the wisdom of the land strikes a universal chord on a planet where many are searching for sustainability.”

Siila and Danielle dive into conversation, addressing the context of historical trauma in relation to residential schools, finding imaginative solutions within Indigenous culture and knowledge, and the intertwined connection of human and planet trauma. Take pause this week. Rest and listen to the creative wisdom and inspired leadership of Siila Watt-Cloutier.

Climate change is a human rights issue, and the Revolution begins with personal transformation. At the speed of empathy. At the speed of trust.
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Watt-Cloutier is an Officer of the Order of Canada, and the recipient of the Aboriginal Achievement Award, the UN Champion of the Earth Award, the Norwegian Sophie Prize, the Jack P. Blaney award for Dialogue, and the Right Livelihood Award. Watt-Cloutier gave a TEDx Talk in 2016 titled “Human Trauma and Climate Trauma as One." Siila Watt-Cloutier works tirelessly on transforming public opinion into public policy. Experienced in working with global decision-makers, Watt-Cloutier offers a new model for 21st century leadership. She speaks with passion and urgency on the issues of today — the environment, the economy, foreign policy, global health, and sustainability — not as separate concerns, but as a deeply interconnected whole. At a time when people are seeking solutions, direction, and a sense of hope, this global leader provides a big picture of where we are and where we’re headed.

https://anchor.fm/stp-this/episodes/The-Speed-of-Empathy-w-Siila-Watt-Cloutier-e14dmmk

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Re6QGuJ2hkSiila Watt-Cloutier on The Context of Historical TraumaSheila Watt-Cloutier, ...
13/07/2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Re6QGuJ2hk

Siila Watt-Cloutier on The Context of Historical Trauma

Sheila Watt-Cloutier, Inuit activist and author of The Right to Be Cold, joins in conversation. Here she dives into her experience in residential schools and shares the importance of the context of historical trauma for our learning and healing.

Full episode drops on all streaming platforms on 7/14/21 and at sorrytopodcastthis.com

Sheila Watt-Cloutier, Inuit activist and author of The Right to Be Cold, joins STPT in conversation. Here she dives into her experience in residential school...

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08/07/2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dyWnh7Xt4BY

Alex Moshchevitin on Masculinity

Alex Moshchevitin shares his perspective of masculinity in the US from an immigrant lens.

Full episode (Not Cool Bro: Engaging with Masculinity) on all streaming platforms and at sorrytopodcastthis.com

Alex Moshchevitin shares his perspective of masculinity in the US from an immigrant lens. Full episode (Not Cool Bro: Engaging with Masculinity) on all strea...

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