We open with a story told by David Foster Wallace: two young fish swimming along, greeted by an older fish who remarks on the quality of the water. One young fish turns to the other and asks — what is water? It's the perfect entry point into a conversation about what we are so immersed in that we can no longer see. We explore the four classical elements — earth, water, fire, and air — not as abstract philosophy, but as mirrors for understanding ourselves and how we move through life. We share our personal attractions and resistances to each element, and what those preferences might reveal: fire as energy, courage, and directed action; water as emotional depth, flow, and the capacity to let go; earth as rootedness, stability, and authenticity; air as clarity, creativity, and the space between stimulus and response. We discuss what happens when any element falls out of balance — too much fire and you're heading for burnout; too little water and emotions go underground; too much earth and life starts to feel stuck. We introduce the Japanese practice of Shinrin-yoku — forest bathing — as a way of bathing the senses in nature one by one, and explore the science behind why time in nature so reliably restores us. We close with a simple invitation: notice which element you're drawn to right now, and consider what that pull might be telling you about where you are — and what you might need.
Information
- Show
- FrequencyUpdated Bimonthly
- PublishedJune 26, 2026 at 7:58 AM UTC
- Length30 min
- RatingExplicit
