Mundo Perspectives

Cameron

This podcast focuses on my perspective of the world, shaped by my Indigenous background, as well as other perspectives we may have never considered or thought about, including conversations with special guests who share their own experiences. We approach these topics through “critical thinking” and open conversation. Additionally, I provide honest reviews of products, services, and travel tips, regardless of any kind of compensation. I make sure that you, the audience, receive real “critical thought” within this field. I hope you enjoy the conversation and learn something new.

Episodes

  1. 1D AGO

    Episode 8 - Your Battery Didn’t Magically Appear, Sorry

    If you enjoy Mundo Perspectives and want to support the show, consider becoming a monthly supporter. Your support helps keep the conversations going and allows us to bring more thoughtful perspectives and voices to the podcast. Support the show: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2598011/support The road to a greener future doesn’t start at the charging station—it starts at the mine. We take a clear‑eyed look at electric vehicles and the larger idea of “clean energy,” asking how we measure it, who gets to define it, and who shoulders the burdens that rarely make headlines. Without dunking on EVs or cheerleading them, we map the full life cycle—from lithium, cobalt, and nickel extraction to manufacturing, use, and end‑of‑life—and explore why a technology can reduce tailpipe emissions while still causing harm elsewhere. Along the way, we examine how narratives are built. Governments, companies, and media push compelling buzzwords that shape public trust, often faster than evidence can catch up. We bring forward an indigenous perspective to spotlight communities living near battery mineral operations, where water stress, soil damage, and ecosystem disruption are not abstract risks but daily realities. When environmental harm is distant, it’s easy to ignore; when it touches land we love, we call it urgent. Bridging that gap requires a just transition that measures what matters: life‑cycle emissions, water and biodiversity impacts, labor conditions, and real consent from affected communities. This conversation is about trade‑offs, accountability, and smarter design. We talk responsible sourcing, better metrics, and how new chemistries, closed‑loop recycling, and second‑life uses can cut the footprint of energy storage. We also explore “leapfrogging” models that let emerging regions skip dirty steps and build distributed renewables and cleaner mobility systems tailored to local needs. The goal isn’t perfection—it’s honesty. If we ask stronger questions about benefits and costs, we make better choices about where EVs fit, where transit beats cars, and how to ensure the energy transition includes everyone it touches. Mundo Mondays Support the show

    31 min
  2. MAR 23

    Episode 7 - Zombies Made Me Buy Toilet Paper Early

    If you enjoy Mundo Perspectives and want to support the show, consider becoming a monthly supporter. Your support helps keep the conversations going and allows us to bring more thoughtful perspectives and voices to the podcast. Support the show: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2598011/support A simple game changed how we move through the world. We started by asking childlike questions—Where would I go? What would I need?—and ended up with a clear, compassionate approach to preparation that kept panic at bay when 2020 upended daily life. This story threads together fatherly advice, indigenous teachings on respect and health, and practical steps anyone can take to turn awareness into resilience. We talk through the shift from autopilot to attention: scanning spaces, noting exits, and catching subtle changes we miss when routines blur our vision. Then we map how that mindset translated into action—early signals, steady supply runs, air and light considerations, and a plan for work or school disruptions. It wasn’t about stockpiling fear; it was about reducing friction and making space for calm judgment when the room gets loud. Along the way, we reflect on why communities often react late, how to distinguish panic from preparation, and why small preventive habits—seatbelts, handwashing, masks in crowded spaces—are acts of care as much as self-protection. If you’ve ever wondered how to be ready without spiraling into worst-case fantasies, this is your guide. You’ll leave with a minimal, realistic checklist for power outages, boil-water notices, winter travel, and sudden closures; a smarter way to notice exits and hazards; and a deeper appreciation for how shared responsibility keeps families and neighbors steady. Preparation isn’t a bunker mindset—it’s everyday respect, practiced early and often. If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs calm over chaos, and leave a quick review to help more people find it. Mundo Mondays Support the show

    34 min
  3. MAR 9

    Episode 5 - I Let A Dime Plan My Trip, It Was Both Chaotic And Weirdly Therapeutic

    What happens when a lifelong overplanner hands the wheel to a warped dime? I set out for a simple break and wound up on a cross-country experiment in trust—Los Angeles to Chicago by rail, a snap decision toward Seattle, and a last-minute turn to Las Vegas—while asking whether I was truly surrendering or just outsourcing my fear of the “wrong” choice. We dig into the tension between structure and spontaneity—how a coin can cut analysis paralysis yet still sit inside boundaries you quietly set. Chicago becomes a case study in practical freedom: I add just enough scaffolding with a CityPASS and simple rules to keep moving without spiraling, then let curiosity pull me to museum halls, lakeside walks, and a nighttime boat ride I didn’t see coming. On the train west, the rolling hills turn into an unexpected space to face burnout, listen for what I actually want, and admit how much safety my survival brain needs to settle down. A compressed Seattle tour with a generous Uber guide shows how fast choices can still be meaningful when your anchors are clear. Then, at the airport, a flip toward Vegas surfaces the truth: the dime never really had the power. It was a catalyst that let me claim my desires without apology. Along the way, we explore practical takeaways—set one anchor (sleep, route, exit), use tiny constraints to break indecision, and right-size control so there’s room for discovery without losing your footing. If you’ve been gripping the plan too tightly, this story offers a grounded way to test freedom without courting chaos. Hit play, then tell me: where could you loosen your hold just enough to feel more alive? Subscribe, share with a friend who overthinks, and leave a review with the one choice you’d hand to a coin. And if you'd like to support the show in a bigger way, you can tap the link for a monthly support. No pressure-just if it feels right. https://www.buzzsprout.com/2598011/support Mundo Mondays Support the show

    32 min
  4. FEB 24

    Episode 3 - How Critical Thinking Turns Packing Into A Better Trip

    What if the way you pack is shaping the way you think—and the way your trip actually feels? We dive into a practical, mindset-first approach to travel where the bag becomes a tool, not a burden. Instead of rules and checklists, we use clear questions and real tradeoffs to decide between a small backpack, a larger pack, or full luggage across flights, drives, and long-haul trains. We start with the two-question method that changes everything: What problem am I solving on this trip, and what have I learned from past trips that should change my approach? From there, we break down the time and stress costs that come with airports and checked bags, and why carry-on continuity can buy back focus at the gate, on the plane, and when you land. We get specific about backpack dimensions, compartments, and quick-access pockets, and how those choices speed you through security, boarding, and exit without waiting at the carousel. Then we shift modes. Driving offers flexibility and access, but also tempts overpacking; we frame decisions around comfort versus control and show how smart placement—layers on top, cords in bright pouches, water on the side—keeps the car organized and your mind calm. On trains, the goal may be presence and scenery or deep downtime; either way, we design the bag to match the experience, staging power, snacks, and essentials so you can watch the landscape roll by or sink into a film without rummaging. Along the way, we share lessons from three decades of travel, from overstuffed suitcases to a lean two-pack system that works for conferences, quick getaways, and cross-country routes. The takeaway is simple: stop packing for vague “what ifs” and start packing for outcomes. Ask better questions, remove one redundancy, add one stress reducer, and let your bag reflect the trip you actually want. If this helped you think differently about packing and travel, follow the show, share it with a friend who overpacks, and leave a quick review telling us your go-to carry method and why. Your feedback helps more travelers find smarter, lighter ways to move. New Episodes Every Monday! Mundo Mondays Support the show

    30 min
  5. FEB 24

    Episode 2 - Seeing Beyond The Surface

    A stranger on a moving train tried to define me in a single glance—and got it wrong. That awkward moment became a catalyst to rethink how we tie appearance and language to identity, and why our minds reach for labels before we reach for questions. We walk through the story beat by beat, then turn it into a practical guide for using critical thinking in everyday encounters. I share how rides across Los Angeles often come with a guessing game—Latino, Asian, anything but Native American—and what happens when the reveal meets silence. From there, we unpack how expectations shape our judgments, how language both signals and distorts identity, and why tribal affiliation, recognition, clan systems, and ceremony make Native identity far more layered than most people realize. Instead of lecturing, we explore small, tangible habits: ask “Where are you from originally?”, use translation tools when needed, and let people name themselves on their own terms. Along the way, we reframe critical thinking as a calm, curious pause. It is not about proving someone wrong; it is about collecting context before deciding what’s true. You’ll hear practical prompts to trade snap labels for better questions, reflections to examine your own blind spots, and stories from everyday conversations that open windows into places you may never travel. By the end, you’ll have a playbook for listening before labeling—and a reminder that identity is complex because people are complex, not because they are trying to be difficult. If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves real conversations, and leave a review with one question you plan to ask more often. Your stories help shape what we explore next. Mundo Mondays Support the show

    29 min
  6. FEB 23

    Episode 1 - Seeing The World With New Eyes

    Two people can watch the same scene and leave with different truths—so what bridges that gap? We kick off our new series by trading arguments for attention, asking how culture, place, and personal history shape what we notice, what we miss, and what we assume. As a Native American host from a federally recognized tribe, I share why belonging and borders look different from the 1% of original inhabitants, and how that vantage point challenges “us versus them” thinking without turning the conversation into a fight. Across the 1/2 hour, we lay out a simple framework: experience over opinion, context over snap judgment, and critical thinking that looks for root causes instead of easy villains. From supply chain breakdowns to everyday choices like routes home and how we speak at work versus with family, we show how systems and norms quietly steer behavior. Misunderstandings thrive where context is thin—a pill at a table, a joke out of place, a name that carries a different meaning in another language. When we slow down and ask what problem we’re really solving, better questions follow—and so do better answers. We also set expectations for what’s ahead: candid solo reflections, guest voices from varied cultures, and honest reviews of tools, travel, and services I actually use. No hype, clear disclosures, and practical tips you can test in your own life. If you’ve ever felt stuck between certainty and curiosity, this space invites you to listen first, think deeper, and let empathy do the quiet work of changing your mind. Subscribe for new perspectives, share this episode with a friend who loves a good rethink, and leave a review to tell us where your view shifted—and why. Mundo Mondays Support the show

    33 min

About

This podcast focuses on my perspective of the world, shaped by my Indigenous background, as well as other perspectives we may have never considered or thought about, including conversations with special guests who share their own experiences. We approach these topics through “critical thinking” and open conversation. Additionally, I provide honest reviews of products, services, and travel tips, regardless of any kind of compensation. I make sure that you, the audience, receive real “critical thought” within this field. I hope you enjoy the conversation and learn something new.