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Race, Climate Change And The Moral Complicity Of Capitalism | Climate Researcher and Educator Joycelyn Longdon
Climate change is a reality that every single one of use will have to deal with. There is a universality to it, a global truth, that in theory, should transcend all the things that divide us.
But it doesn’t and it hasn’t. In huge part, because the people who are already feeling the impacts of climate change are mostly people of colour or are from parts of the world with significantly less power than the largest polluters. Climate change is doing a version of what we saw with the pandemic this year, instead of being a great equaliser in suffering, it is only deepening already existing inequalities.
This week’s guest is Joycelyn Longdon, the founder of Climate in Colour, which brings together conversations and information around the intersection of climate change and race, not only in the UK but around the world. Joycelyn does many things, which we get into during our chat, including currently studying Artificial Intelligence in relation to climate change at Cambridge.
Show notes:
You can find Joycelyn on Instagram here and Climate in Colour here
Sign up for the newsletter here (the most recent edition has information about the Environmental Research Doctoral Training Partnership at Oxford University to provide more opportunities, and most importantly, 💸funding💸 for BIPOC in environmental research.
And for some hope, the Drawdown Review 2020
Send host Lisa Golden your thoughts about the show on
Twitter @lisajozi or @storytellerpod1
Instagram @lisagoldenjozi or @storyteller_pod
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8. Millennials Seeking Spirituality | Former Chosen Chief of The Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids Philip Carr-Gomm
49:19||Season 2, Ep. 8Do you consider yourself a spiritual person? This week on Storyteller, host Lisa Golden speaks to author, psychologist and former Chosen Chief of The Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids, Philip Carr-Gomm, about what modern spirituality looks like for those who've moved away from the formal religions of their childhoods. In this wide-ranging topic they cover the background and foundation of the modern Druid order, if more millennials are seeking religion after the isolation and reconnection with nature brought on by the pandemic, and why Carr-Gomm describes himself as an "incurable optimist."The Love Interest | Storyteller Basics
30:33||Season 2Are you ready for some storytelling school? Today's class - the love interestQueer Creative's founder Cathie Swan takes us on a deep-dive into how the deepest human desire to find love has been used to write some truly terrible love interests over the years. Using 2007's blockbuster hit Next starring Nicolas Cage and Jessica Biel, Cathie guides us through this peak of speechless, directionless female love interests in big Hollywood movies. Lisa and Cathie discuss how love interests can be sufficiently developed alongside a protagonist when time and attention is limited, the cheesy awfulness of 2000s movie trailers and if in general love interests are getting more interesting in the 2020s. All the links you could possibly want below:Storyteller websiteStoryteller InstagramStoryteller TwitterLisa InstagramLisa TwitterQueer Creatives websiteQueer Creatives TwitterQueer Creatives InstagramCathie Twitter7. The Evolving Meaning Of Burnout | Professor Gail Kinman
48:39||Season 2, Ep. 7Are we all burnt out?The term became so ubiquitous during the pandemic it came close to losing its meaning. However for many people struggling to managing the stresses of lockdown, childcare, demanding jobs and economic uncertainty, it became a way to communicate something quickly and with limited vulnerability. "I'm burned out" became a way to say many other things. Burnout does have a clear definition though. This week on the podcast, occupational health psychologist and researcher Professor Gail Kinman guides us through what we mean we we say burnout. Host Does using it as a catch-all phrase make is meaningless? What is emotional labour? And very importantly - what's going on when we cry at work?You can follow Prof Kinman on Twitter hereFor more episodes of Storyteller or to drop us message, go to https://www.welcometostoryteller.uk/Storyteller is back! (An apology)
03:40||Season 2Hello fellow Storytellers!This is a quick updates and apology for the pause in interviews. Lisa is back next week with some of the world's most interesting and dynamic storytellers, as well as new episodes of Storyteller Basics where we can all learn more about the craft of storytelling. Thank you for your patience and please check out the new website for the show.Onwards!The Hero’s Journey with The Matrix | Storyteller Basics
35:22||Season 2We’re trying something new over at Storyteller HQ! After the success of the Story Spine episode, host Lisa Golden and Cathie Swan from Queer Creatives UK are back to cover some of the most interesting storytelling basics!This week we dig into The Hero’s Journey. This storytelling framework is part theory, part philosophy.Lisa takes Cathie through the 12 steps of the Hero’s Journey, using the 1999 blockbuster hit The Matrix as an example. How does one of the most famous storytelling tools show up in Hollywood, why do our mentors need to be mystical and is this all linked to psychedelics or the Men’s Rights Movement?6. The Stories Of Our Panic Years | Writer Nell Frizzell
56:22||Season 2, Ep. 6The story of motherhood is one of the most powerful narratives in women’s lives from a very early age. Whether you dream of a large brood or are determined to never have kids, the question becomes magnified when you reach your late twenties and early thirties. Writer Nell Frizzell has written about the pressure of this period in her and other women’s lives, aptly naming them, The Panic Years. In this episode of Storyteller, Frizzell shares her process of writing the book, how the pandemic has increased these pressures on many people and the wonder of both giving birth and then writing it in all its vivid, heroic glory.Show notes:Buy The Panic Years at Bookshop.org (support independent book shops!), Waterstones or Amazon.Find out more about Nell Frizzell on her website, follow her on Twitter and listen to her podcast. Listen to Storyteller anywhere you get podcastsFollow Storyteller on Instagram @storyteller_pod and on Twitter @storytellerpod1Follow host Lisa Golden on Instagram @lisagoldenjozi and Twitter @lisajoziEmail the show at storytellerpod[@]gmail.com5. What's Your Money Story? | Pennies To Pounds Founder Kia Commodore
32:36||Season 2, Ep. 5Do you find it hard to talk about money? In the household where you grew up, did the adults talk about money? Was it a source of stress, or a source of power?Money can sometimes seem like it’s not from the world of storytelling. It’s cold, hard. Lines on a sheet. Digital transactions whooshing around the globe. But the stories we learn and we tell about money dominate a huge portion of our lives. For some, it measures our worth. For others, our vulnerability. Issues around money can be deeply interwoven with shame, secrecy. If money is unfeeling, transactional, clinical, our feelings are anything but. Which is why I was so glad to have Kia Commodore on the podcast this week. Kia is the founder of Pennies to Pounds, a financial literacy platform which makes learning about money straightforward, clear and manageable. I first heard Kia on her podcast of the same name. I was impressed by her caring directness, and the engaged and excited reaction she was getting online showed that she had tapped into something that a generation that is living in an ever-more complex world of financial tools was desperate for someone to guide them through. So whether you're struggling or a financial whizz, I hope you can take something away from Kia’s cool-headed, but warm-hearted approach to finances. Show notes:Pennies to Pounds WebsitePennies to Pounds TwitterPennies to Pounds InstagramKia Commodore on LinkedInKia Commodore on TwitterKia Commodore on InstagramListen to Storyteller anywhere you get podcastsFollow Storyteller on Instagram @storyteller_pod and on Twitter @storytellerpod1Follow host Lisa Golden on Instagram @lisagoldenjozi and Twitter @lisajoziEmail the show at storytellerpod[@]gmail.com4. Can You Challenge Your Perceptions? | Writer, Podcaster and Coach Tiffany Philippou
42:44||Season 2, Ep. 4How can we challenge our perceptions around work, love and life that may not be serving us?Writer and podcast host Tiffany Philippou bases her various forms of storytelling from this perspective. From taking on the messy parts of work on her podcast Is This Working?, to her weekly newsletter, to working as a coach, Tiffany is looking for ways to make life better for all of us. We speak about Tiffany’s upcoming memoir, Unspoken: what one person’s death taught me about life, which covers the tragic death of her boyfriend in university by suicide and the decade that followed. Show notes:Learn more about Tiffany Philippou at her websiteLearn more about her upcoming memoir, Unspoken: what one person’s death taught me about life Follow Tiffany on Instagram here and on Twitter hereListen to Is This Working? hereSign up for The Tiff Weekly hereIf you or anyone you know needs to speak to someone, you can phone the Samaritans in the UK at 116 123. If you’re in the US, The Naitonal Suicide Prevention Hotline is 1-800-273-8255And here is the handy Pomodoro timer! If you want to listen to last week's podcast with Sam Furness, have a listen here. Listen to Storyteller anywhere you get podcastsFollow Storyteller on Instagram @storyteller_pod and on Twitter @storytellerpod1Follow host Lisa Golden on Instagram @lisagoldenjozi and Twitter @lisajoziEmail the show at storytellerpod[@]gmail.com3. Sparking Your Creative Curiosity | Artist and Channel Twelve Founder Sam Furness
49:39||Season 2, Ep. 3How do you cultivate creativity in your everyday life?This week on the pod, founder and quest leader at Channel Twelve, Sam Furness, tells us about his journey to becoming a “parallel pather”. Alongside his work as a music artist manager at Everybody’s Management, Sam started experimenting with ways to bring curiosity and creativity into his everyday life. Lisa and Sam talk about his love of songwriting, what it means to hold space for people to explore and finding inspiration in Zen Buddhism and Eclecticism.Show notes:Find out more atChannel Twelve websiteChannel Twelve on InstagramTo find out more about the creative quests sign up for the newsletter hereSam Furness websiteSam Furness InstagramListen to Storyteller anywhere you get podcastsFollow Storyteller on Instagram @storyteller_pod and on Twitter @storytellerpod1Follow host Lisa Golden on Instagram @lisagoldenjozi and Twitter @lisajoziEmail the show at storytellerpod[@]gmail.com