Share

cover art for July 6 text club: Rethinking fear, affirming life

Sweet Medicine

July 6 text club: Rethinking fear, affirming life

Season 1, Ep. 5


This Sunday, I bring you a conversation I had with six people who joined the Studio Styles text club meeting on July 6, 2024. This was our third week of discussing Paolo Freire’s Pedagogy of the Oppressed.

As with all our club meetings, the conversation moved from the text and into our everyday lives to explore how we can apply the ideas to action in our lives, what changes we’d like to see in the world and how we can contribute to making that change. We went on to discuss what fear is good for, feeling the fear and protesting anyway, #EndSARS and the question of whether Nigeria is a psychopathic entity not worth dialoguing with, the intelligence of plants and the potential of spirituality and plant medicine as transformative tools of change. It was from this conversation that I picked up the practice of using ‘life-affirming’ as a metric by which I now assess my actions and beliefs.


People in the episode:

Aaliyah Ibrahim, a writer and an international development practicioner

Gbope Onigbanjo, a consultant and researcher on international affairs, peace studies, and political economy

Chiamaka Dike, a journalist

Dede Israel, a writer and research analyst

Amanda Madumere, an ed-tech entrepreneur and arts administrator

Deborah Iyalagha, a writer and nursing student

Keren Lasme, an artist and researcher and the only non-Nigerian (Ivoirian) on the call. 



01:10 Exploring Paulo Freire's Pedagogy of the Oppressed

06:35 Challenging Workplace Norms and Individual Freedom

12:03 The Limits of Dialogue in Liberation

14:58 Navigating Fear in Society

18:46 Imagining a Safe World

29:13 Life-Affirming Practices/What is the 'Human'

34:08 Spirituality and Plant Medicine as Tools for Change


#SweetMedicine #PauloFreire #socialhealing #Nigeria #fear #plant medicine #spirituality


Website: sweetmedicine.me 

Newsletter: studiostyles.substack.com.

Instagram: @ss.studiostyles


Support Sweet Medicine: https://flutterwave.com/donate/olt4tbjytsjr

More episodes

View all episodes

  • 21. “We can give the world beauty, band for band" - Oluwakemi Agbato

    24:57||Season 1, Ep. 21
    For my final guest episode, I’m with the researcher and designer Oluwakemi Agbato who lives by the question: “How can we make good things to live with?” And explores that question through her research and design studio, Studio GB and her jewellery brand RENIKEJI. This conversation was full of passion on both sides for how history continues to live with us in the objects around us.🍲04:41 James Baldwin on Suffering and Achieving One’s Own Authority15:06 The Rich History of Nigerian Silk19:34 The 1960 Nigeria Exhibition 22:16 “It becomes real, you’re the one pursuing knowledge, knowledge is not pursuing you.”🍲Website: sweetmedicine.me Newsletter: studiostyles.substack.com.Instagram: @ss.studiostylesSupport Sweet Medicine: https://flutterwave.com/donate/olt4tbjytsjr
  • 20. "It's not if I can, it's how I can." - Mobolaji Otuyelu

    28:45||Season 1, Ep. 20
    Today’s conversation is with Mobolaji Otuyelu, the founder of two startups—a kitchenware company AGBO ILÉ and Ọjà Wellness Foods, a beverage company. As an entrepreneur focused on black innovation and social change, Mobolaji is also deeply involved with the Federation of Informal Workers’ Organisations of Nigeria (FIWON), where she collaborates on member-led initiatives to provide tangible support like health insurance, mortgage opportunities, and pension schemes for informal workers. In this conversation we discuss the ties between economic development and healing—the two need each other—, the gift of now and the power of the contemporary.🍲04:02 FIWON: A Model for Informal Workers08:48 Resourcefulness in Nigerian Entrepreneurship16:15 Healing Through Money and Economic Capital25:34 The Gift of Now/Culture is Dynamic🍲Mentioned in the episode:https://www.mondragon-corporation.com/en/🍲Website: sweetmedicine.me Newsletter: studiostyles.substack.com.Instagram: @ss.studiostylesSupport Sweet Medicine: https://flutterwave.com/donate/olt4tbjytsjr⁕Consider joining or supporting Kwanda <https://kwanda.co/>From the founder of Kwanda, Jermaine Craig: "I'm focused on making the world a more generous place. I'm interested in the potential of the collective, not the individual. I want to get future philanthropists started earlier by gathering as 'Micro Philanthropists'. A blocker to generosity is a lack of transparency and trust, so I'm building Kwanda. This platform brings diasporans together to pool capital and fund local-led projects in Africa. The platform is financially transparent and allows members to decide how funds are spent."
  • 19. Chapter 6: Why Take Ownership? What Are Our Bodies Good For?

    24:18||Season 1, Ep. 19
    I've spent the past seven weeks discussing why social healing, why the humanities when people are starving, what do we do with History, what are Nigerian nervous conditions, what kind of society is Nigeria and why was Nigeria made in the first place. I set up these questions to give a sense of what the problem is, and how the centuries before now led us here.With all this information, how can we work towards these resilient, compassionate and responsible futures? My suggestions: take ownership and pay attention to our bodies.This episode includes an excerpt from this talk, What Kids Can't Do: Youth, Historical Agency, and Authority, by Abosede George (Associate Professor of History, Barnard College and Columbia University) at Wolf Humanities Center's 2020-21 Forum on Choice, March 17, 2021. 🍲03:21 Is agency all that matters? Abosede George on foregrounding other dimensions of being human10:04 Connection comes with risk of loss and failure, connect anyway12:47 My body’s my buddy / Body go tell you18:24 Denying our self-sovereignty🍲Website: sweetmedicine.me Newsletter: studiostyles.substack.com.Instagram: @ss.studiostylesSupport Sweet Medicine: https://flutterwave.com/donate/olt4tbjytsjr
  • 18. "How do we practice landscape democracy?"- Tobiloba Akibo

    37:23||Season 1, Ep. 18
    In this episode, Tobiloba and I talked about transformative environmental justice in Nigeria, Lekki as prime example of land dispossession in Lagos in the name of capitalist modernism, the challenges that come up in translating and applying current popular Western frameworks of social justice in Nigeria, and why we need more Nigerians, individuals and institutions alike, to fund social research. 🍲01:19 Lekki, Lekki, Lekki07:29 Wetin concern me concern government property?11:56 ‘We were only four in my Landscape Architecture class.’20:54 Landscape for the people by the people29:49 Elsewheres: Transformative environmental justice practices in Nigeria🍲Mentioned:Dispossess: Evictions for ‘Development' (Immaculata for Heinrich Böll Foundation, 2021)Lagos Urban Development Initiative (LUDI) hFactorFabulous UrbanFolu Oyefeso🍲Website: sweetmedicine.me Newsletter: studiostyles.substack.com.Instagram: @ss.studiostylesSupport Sweet Medicine: https://flutterwave.com/donate/olt4tbjytsjr
  • 17. "Conflict always leaves people transformed." - Gbope Onigbanjo

    31:35||Season 1, Ep. 17
    In this episode, I speak with Gbope Onigbanjo, a researcher and consultant working in the fields of international affairs, peace studies, and political economy with a geographical focus on Africa. Our conversation centred around Nigeria’s role as Big Brother in West Africa and how that has bred skepticism among other states in the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS). This is a unique episode in this project in that it zooms out a bit from the individual and communities of individuals to look at Nigeria’s relationship with its mates: other countries in West Africa.🍲01:32 Exploring Liberal Peace-Keeping03:50 ‘Healing’ as Peace and Security05:59 Understanding Peace in African Contexts12:25 ECOWAS and Nigeria23:18 Elite-based/State Peace vs Local Peace27:30 Russian flag in Kano?🍲Website: sweetmedicine.me Newsletter: studiostyles.substack.com.Instagram: @ss.studiostylesSupport Sweet Medicine: https://flutterwave.com/donate/olt4tbjytsjr
  • 16. Chapter 5: Why Nigeria in the first place? (Guns and Spirits)

    21:36||Season 1, Ep. 16
    This episode is six years in the making. Many of us know the Berlin Conference of 1884, otherwise known as the scramble for Africa which was where European leaders decided how to share Africa like moi moi among themselves. But a lesser-known but equally important conference was the 1890 Brussels conference that King Leopold II organised as an anti-slavery conference. The agreements made at the conference were enshrined into an act titled: The Convention Relative to the Slave Trade and Importation into Africa of Firearms, Ammunition, and Spiritous Liquors.This episode is about firearms, ammunition and spirits–what these objects that were so central to the slave trade can tell us about why Nigeria was made. It follows the line from the Transatlantic slave trade to the Scramble for Africa, down to the Prohibition in the US, to the Iva Valley massacre in Enugu and general police brutality in colonial Nigeria. And it takes the ‘social life of things’ route to get from point A to point Z. 🍲01:28 The lesser-known 1880s B* conference 03:39 ‘Firearms, Ammunition, and Spiritous Liquors‘08:50 Negotiating power and identity/Local Agency vs. Colonial Control15:11 The Iva Valley Massacre🍲Website: sweetmedicine.me Newsletter: studiostyles.substack.com.Instagram: @ss.studiostylesSupport Sweet Medicine: https://flutterwave.com/donate/olt4tbjytsjr
  • 15. "I think that art should live and die." - Obayomi Anthony

    50:42||Season 1, Ep. 15
    In this episode, I speak with Obayomi Anthony, an award-winning documentary filmmaker, photographer, and visual artist. Our conversation began with a discussion about his background and journey to becoming an artist, with a focus on the project that put him in the limelight: Bonafide Squatters. Then we went on to talk about his recent research project on Nigeria’s colonial origins where he went into the archives at the Lagos Museum to ask what motivated the Nigeria-creation project. I believe with him that art is a space for conversations, and that art should live and die. Art should live and art should die. 🍲01:07 Living with Graphic Designers, Becoming an Artist09:39 Becoming a Documentary Photographer13:17 Bonafide Squatters: Addressing Student Housing Issues20:15 Art is a Space, not a Thing, a Space where Souls Connect30:06 Cognitive Dissonance in Nigeria35:12 Technology for what?43:20 The birds that left home; seeing Nigeria from top to bottom🍲Website: sweetmedicine.me Newsletter: studiostyles.substack.com.Instagram: @ss.studiostylesSupport Sweet Medicine: https://flutterwave.com/donate/olt4tbjytsjr
  • 14. “There are no small roles, only small actors.” - Israel Meriomame Wekpe

    27:18||Season 1, Ep. 14
    In this episode, I speak with Mr Israel Meriomame Wekpe, an all-round theatre practitioner. He is a lecturer in Theatre Arts at the University of Benin and directed a play I was a part of in secondary school in memory of the 60 students that died in the 2005 Sosoliso plane crash. This was a conversation about the challenges of teaching in Nigerian universities today, the art and spirituality of theatre, theatre as a reflection of society, the role of play in education and stories from his past as a student, including a stint as Maggi Cook of the Year in 1995 as a 300-level student.🍲Chapters03:36 Meeting Mr Israel/in memory of the 60 Angels05:56 Challenges in Nigerian Higher Education12:30 The Art & Spirituality of Theater20:16 The Role of Theater in Society22:06 Personal Tragedy and Its Influence25:05 Socialization and Responsibility in Nigeria🍲Website: sweetmedicine.me Newsletter: studiostyles.substack.com.Instagram: @ss.studiostylesSupport Sweet Medicine: https://flutterwave.com/donate/olt4tbjytsjr
  • 13. Chapter 4: Nigeria, the family

    22:04||Season 1, Ep. 13
    This episode is best summarised with the following quote from an essay by adrienne maree brown in YES! Magazine:"The way I think of it now is in the framework of the imagination battle: there is a war going on for the future—it is cultural, ideological, economic, and spiritual. And, as in any war, there is a front line, a place where the action is urgent, where the battle will be won or lost. The world, the values of the world, are shaped by the choices each of us makes. Which means my thinking, my actions, my relationships, and my life create a front line for the possibilities of the entire species. Each one of us is an individual practice ground for what the whole can or cannot do, will or will not do.”🍲03:48 Denzy’s ad06:29 The Role of Individual Responsibility in Social Healing12:06 Cynicism and Hope in Nigeria16:22 Individual Practice Ground For the Whole🍲Website: sweetmedicine.me Newsletter: studiostyles.substack.com.Instagram: @ss.studiostylesSupport Sweet Medicine: https://flutterwave.com/donate/olt4tbjytsjr