RootStories of the Soul: Soulful Talks with Ximena

Ximena Dussan-Aya Pearson
RootStories of the Soul: Soulful Talks with Ximena

What gives a place its soul? Is it the people that live there? Or does the place have a soul already? RootStories of the Soul are soulful conversations with people all around the world on how we can reconnect or find roots again in the places we live and the places we come from. How can we live in a more soulful world? What can we do as humans beings to invite the soul of the world into our lives?

  1. 09/29/2023

    Raíces: Mother Nature Gifts to You

    In this week’s episode, Ximena talks to Maribel Valadez, single mother, Entreprenuer, and native of Aguascalientes, Mexico about how her small business, Raíces: Mother Nature Gifts to You. Raíces captures and brings the true aromas and essences of her home town of Aguascalientes, Mexico through beautiful hand-crafted soaps, shampoo and conditioner bars. Nature gifts us so many natural resources that come from the ground up. The creation of Raices comes from the natural resources that come from the roots of the earth by the Grace of God.   All the products are made with love and personally handcrafted in the beautiful state of Aguascalientes, Mexico.   The delicate elaboration process of our soap takes several days, and each soap is made with several different essential oils that release a beautiful and relaxing aroma. In addition, our soaps are specially made to heal, enhance and stimulate a natural flow of energy throughout the body. Resources for this episode: Stay tuned for the website: For more information about Raíces, please visit https://www.raícesbeauty.com/ Thank you for listening to this episode. I am so thrilled and honored to be sharing stories about the Soul of Place and what we can each do to reconnect to our roots. I would love to get your feedback and opinions. Please share this episode with anyone who may need to hear this message. Be sure to subscribe, rate, and review wherever you listen to podcasts. My name is Ximena Dussan-Aya Pearson. Until next time! Keep inviting the soul of the world into your lives!

    49 min
  2. 08/25/2023

    Roland Palencia: UNIDAD, Gay & Lesbian Latinos Unidos

    In this week’s episode, Ximena hosts professor, activist, and filmmaker Roland Palencia. We talk about Roland’s most recent documentary UNIDAD: Gay & Lesbian Latinos Unidos (GLLU), a film which chronicles the early 1980s queer Latino activism in Los Angeles. It is a conversation about the need to belong, about being uprooted from your homeland, only to find roots in a foreign land. It is a conversation of how we can find ways to share our stories that unite and glue us together and keep us together. How can future generations of gay and lesbian Latinos continue to spread their roots? Roland Palencia, MA, is a Professor at California State University Northridge’s (CSUN) -Tseng College in the Diverse Community Development Leadership MA program, and an award-winning filmmaker. He is the former Community Benefits Director and corporate trainer at L.A. Care Health Plan, the largest public health plan in the nation. He is also the former Executive Director of Clinica Monseñor Oscar A. Romero and Equality California, and former multi-County Regional Director at The California Endowment and Chief of Operations and Vice-President at the AIDS Healthcare Foundation.  In 2001, he was honored as a “Local Hero” by KCET (PBS affiliate) and Union Bank of California. In the early 1980s, he became one of the founders and a pioneer of the blossoming LGBTQ Latine movement in the greater Los Angeles area, including co-founding Gay and Lesbian Latinos Unidos (GLLU) and VIVA!, a Queer Latine artist collective. Palencia has been featured in a number of books and publications such as “Gay L.A.: A History of Sexual Outlaws, Power Politics, and Lipstick Lesbians” by Stuart Timmons and Lilian Faderman (2006). “Central Americans in Los Angeles” by Rosamaria Segura (2010); and “The Gay Revolution: The Story of the Struggle” by Lilian Faderman (2015).  The 165-page Master thesis by David Guzman, M.A., (CSUN 2014) records Palencia’s life journey as a Guatemalan political refugee and community activist. His Executive film Producer credits include “TransVisible: Bamby Salcedo’s Story,” a documentary depicting the life and activism of the nationally renowned Trans Latina activist Bamby Salcedo,“UNIDAD: Gay & Lesbian Latinos Unidos,” which chronicles the early 1980s queer Latino activism in Los Angeles, and “Art as Activism,” which depicts the history of Self-Help Graphics & Arts, the seminal East L.A. based arts organization founded in 1970. Palencia received a B.A. in History from UCLA and a Masters in Depth Psychology & Creativity from Pacifica Graduate Institute based in Montecito, CA. Thank you for listening to this episode. I am so thrilled and honored to be sharing stories about the Soul of Place and what we can each do to reconnect to our roots. I would love to get your feedback and opinions. Please share this episode with anyone who may need to hear this message. Be sure to subscribe, rate, and review wherever you listen to podcasts. My name is Ximena Dussan-Aya Pearson. Until next time! Keep inviting the soul of the world into your lives! You can find me at www.ximenapearson.com

    1h 2m
  3. 08/18/2023

    Debra Goldman:Stories of my Inner Landscape

    In this week’s episode, Ximena hosts visual artist Debra Goldman. We discuss the story of her inner landscape and how it has been shaped and informed by her relationship to nature, place, and the horizon line. Our inner landscapes continue to evolve and alter themselves by our connection to land. Debra has been a practicing visual artist for over thirty five years. Making a home in Iowa, New York, Colorado and for the past eighteen years in Washington state, has deeply informed her relationship to ‘place’ and to the symbolic language that she used in her creative work. She raised her two children on a small, organic farm in Whatcom County and has taught in Universities in three different regions of the country. Thirty years after completing her MFA from Pratt Institute, she returned to graduate school to immerse herself in the vast terrain of depth psychology. It was during this intensive study that the roots of her earliest influences became conscious to her. The evolution of her inner landscape is ongoing and has been richly informed by all of these experiences. She continues to explore how to engage in the story of these times we are living. Resources for this episode: For more information about Debra, visit: https://www.debragoldmanstudio.com/ For Debra’s upcoming workshops, visit: https://www.storyarttransformation.com/ Watch the podcast on YouTube at https://YouTube.com/@rootstoriesofthesoul Thank you for listening to this episode. I am so thrilled and honored to be sharing stories about the Soul of Place and what we can each do to reconnect to our roots. I would love to get your feedback and opinions. Please share this episode with anyone who may need to hear this message. Be sure to subscribe, rate, and review wherever you listen to podcasts. My name is Ximena Dussan-Aya Pearson. Until next time! Keep inviting the soul of the world into your lives!

    57 min
  4. 06/16/2023

    David Starr: Beauty & Ruin, A Meeting of Song and Literature

    In this week’s episode, Ximena hosts singer-songwriter David Starr. We discuss his album Beauty & Ruin released February 2020, inspired by the novel Of What Was, Nothing is Left written by David’s grandfather in 1972. We discuss David’s roots growing up in the Ozark hills of Arkansas. We touch on the universal themes tragedy, family dysfunction, and denial. We talk about the collaborative project between him, John Oates, and a number of other singer-songwriters to capture the essence of his grandfather’s story. David Starr is a Colorado-based, Americana and blues singer/songwriter with over 10 albums to his credit. The Arkansas native has honed his decades-long career touring internationally and sharing the stage with esteemed artists such as John Oates (Hall & Oates) and John McEuen, as well as opening for acts like America, Jim Messina, and more. In 2022, he was a showcasing artist at Folk Alliance International, AmericanaFest, and Southwest Regional Folk Alliance. His latest project "Better Me", features acoustic-driven songs such as the title track and “Closer To You,” and the feisty blues-rock “Poison The Water". For his 2020 "Touchstones" project, Starr covered the music that shaped his own, including "I've Got To Use My Imagination" (Gladys Knight) and "These Days" (Jackson Browne). His critically acclaimed album "Beauty & Ruin" is a collection of songs inspired by "Of What Was, Nothing Is Left", a novel written by Starr’s grandfather in 1972. Produced and arranged by John Oates, it is a southern gothic tale beautifully told through Starr’s own musical lens. His prestige extends beyond the stage, having launched Starr’s Guitars in Little Rock, before relocating to Cedaredge, CO in 2001, where it is now a beloved institution. Starr is also a founding member of the board for the Grand Mesa Arts & Events Center in Cedaredge, an intimate event space aimed at attracting musicians and visual artists to Colorado’s Western Slope. Resources for this episode For more information about David, visit https://www.davidstarrmusic.com Watch the podcast on YouTube at https://YouTube.com/@rootstoriesofthesoul Thank you for listening to this episode. I am so thrilled and honored to be sharing stories about the Soul of Place and what we can each do to reconnect to our roots. I would love to get your feedback and opinions. Please share this episode with anyone who may need to hear this message. Be sure to subscribe, rate, and review wherever you listen to podcasts. My name is Ximena Dussan-Aya Pearson. Until next time! Keep inviting the soul of the world into your lives!

    52 min

About

What gives a place its soul? Is it the people that live there? Or does the place have a soul already? RootStories of the Soul are soulful conversations with people all around the world on how we can reconnect or find roots again in the places we live and the places we come from. How can we live in a more soulful world? What can we do as humans beings to invite the soul of the world into our lives?

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