The Hagstone Podcast

Hagstone Podcast

Opening Perception to the Living World hagstonepodcast.substack.com

  1. Accountability, My Joyful Compass

    May 28

    Accountability, My Joyful Compass

    What does it mean to reclaim your cultural heritage in service to struggle? And what do you owe the people whose land you live on when you don’t know your own songs? This month Chaise sits down with Ben Reid-Howells — Scottish-Canadian community organizer, co-founder of Deep Roots Alba. Ben’s story begins in so-called Canada, growing up with immigrant parents and a longing to answer to the question: what are our people’s creation stories? That early hunger set him on a path that included a three-and-a-half year motorcycle journey from India to Scotland with his friend Prashant (the Vasudhaiva Ride, named for the Sanskrit phrase meaning “the whole world is one family”), a year building a grassroots climate justice center in Bihar, working with asylum seekers in the refugee camps of Lesbos, getting rooted into working-class Glasgow communities, and finally being brought into Gaelic culture by tradition bearers. Deep Roots Alba grew from all of that. The work brings together people reclaiming Gaelic and Scottish heritage at the intersection of solidarity activism, specifically in relationship with communities facing systemic oppression globally. It’s about not showing up as “hungry ghosts” — culturally empty, collecting and leaching from other traditions — but arriving with nourished Roots and something to offer: your own songs, your own protocol, your own bread to put on the table. Upcoming: Deep Roots Alba’s next gathering is Healing Across Waters: The Highland Welcome, July 1–6 at the Sheeland Collective in the north of Scotland. This gathering is designed specifically for diaspora, to grieve the rupture of disconnection and return people to culture in a grounded, powerful way. Find Ben and Deep Roots Alba: Website: deeprootsalba.org Instagram: @deep.roots.alba This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit hagstonepodcast.substack.com

    1h 18m
  2. Apr 19

    By the Working of the Work: Returning to the Earth

    Todd Elliott farms 30 acres on a ridgetop in Owen County, Kentucky, and his magical practice grows directly from that land. His book The Cunning Farmer: Agrarian Magic, Mythology and Folklore (Inner Traditions International) is the ground this conversation rises from, but the roots go much deeper. Chaise and Todd begin in the practice of utiseta, the Old Norse art of sitting out on the land at night to receive what comes, and find immediate common ground. From there the conversation moves through bird language and the ecology of silence, the intelligence that lives inside wind and weather, Scandinavian folk magic traditions including trolldom and the art of the charmer, and what it means to tend relationships with the dead on the land you work. Todd also speaks about his encounters with the ancient inhabitants of his land, the Adena and Hopewell peoples, and how those contacts have shaped his practice over years of sitting out. The episode closes on the question of who this book is really for. Todd is clear that while farming is the lens, the deeper subject is a way of seeing, an animistic worldview that runs from soil and root up through the planets and the super-celestial forces beyond them, and that almost anyone willing to attend to the world as alive and speaking will find something here to work with. The Cunning Farmer: Agrarian Magic, Mythology and FolkloreThe Cunning Farmer Substack Todd Elliott is the author of The Cunning Farmer: Agrarian Magic, Mythology and Folklore, published by Inner Traditions International. An organic farmer, father of two boys, husband, magical practitioner, earth worker, healer, and astrologer, he has been certified as a Reiki Master by Insight Holistic Health and as an Astrological Magician by Renaissance Astrology. A life-long student of organic agriculture, mythology, religion, folklore, and esoterica, he lives, writes, studies and works the land on a 30 acre ridgetop farm in Owen County, Kentucky, where he and his family run a CSA program, ethically raising vegetables, fruit, and livestock.” This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit hagstonepodcast.substack.com

    1h 14m
  3. Mar 13

    The Weird Rediscovery of the Extraordinary

    In this month’s episode of The Hagstone, Chaise Levy sits down with Dutch-based oral storyteller Simon Hodges, known as Lindenbauer, to wander the marshlands between land and fairy, cultivation and wildness, memory and responsibility. Beginning in the drowned farmlands of the Biesbosch, a tidal landscape shaped by flood, war, and beaver teeth, the conversation opens into a deeper inquiry. What happens when we slow down enough to perceive the intelligence of place? Drawing on lived encounters, landscape history, William Blake, David Abram, and the discipline of oral tradition, they explore the subtle threshold where land encounter becomes fairy encounter. The episode moves from childhood visions and ash tree vigils to hazel charms and dragon weather, asking what it means to enter into relationship with something more than human, and what happens when we fail to uphold that relationship. Throughout, storytelling emerges not as performance but as practice, a way of returning to the same place until it begins to speak through you. The teller becomes less a personality and more a threshold, someone willing to falter, to lose control, and to allow truth to move through the room. From Shakespearean stages to marsh edges, from cultivated Dutch peatlands to California’s flood prone plains, we trace how perception shifts when language becomes an organ of attention. Ultimately, the conversation gestures toward a quiet but demanding reorientation. Enchantment is not spectacle. Fairy is not novelty. Relationship requires responsibility. Story, carried mouth to mouth across centuries, may be one of the last bridges where the more than human world still waits for us to listen. New Theme Music: Taliesin, written and performed on Tenor Guitar and Mandolin by Chaise Levy Please consider leaving a rating and review on your favorite podcasting platform! For more episodes follow us at hagstonepodcast.substack.com This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit hagstonepodcast.substack.com

    1h 6m
  4. All We Ever Really Have Is Story

    Feb 19

    All We Ever Really Have Is Story

    In this month’s episode of The Hagstone, Chaise Levy sits down with Scott Richardson-Read to trace the living force of story shapes nations, roots itself in land, and moves through communities as something more than metaphor. Beginning with the claim that “all we ever really have is story,” the conversation travels from Scottish political identity to digital worlds, from local hillsides to role-playing tables, asking what holds people together when institutions falter. Drawing on folklore, landscape memory, online gaming culture, and oral storytelling practice, they explore story as a form of belonging. We track how shared imaginative space also for identity to be tested, inhabited, and transformed. The episode considers how a wide variety of otherworlds can function as contemporary mythic terrain, how communal storytelling generates a kind of “group body,” and how the teller becomes less an author than a mouthpiece for something moving through the room. Ultimately, the conversation gestures toward a radical reorientation: imagination is not escape, but participation. Story is not distraction, but ground. What would it mean to recognize narrative not as illusion, but as the medium through which reality becomes livable, contested, and enchanted? New Theme Music: Taliesin, written and performed on Tenor Guitar and Mandolin by Chaise Levy Scott Richardson-Read is a working-class writer, folklorist, and alternative cultural historian with a deep connection to Scotland’s folk heritage. As the creator of Cailleach’s Herbarium, a platform dedicated to reviving and preserving Scottish folk traditions, Scott has spent years researching and sharing the stories, practices, and beliefs that define the working-class and animistic roots of Scottish culture. His work reflects a blend of deep archival exploration, oral history, and personal experience in the landscapes of Scotland. With a background steeped in human rights, ecology, activism, and traditions, Scott’s writing bridges the past and present, offering fresh insights into the enduring significance of folk belief. Through his decades-long journey, he continues to advocate for the preservation of Scotland’s sacred sites and cultural heritage. When not writing, Scott is often found exploring Scotland’s wild spaces, old libraries, and archives, drinking tea with his cats, or engaging with the vibrant communities keeping traditions alive. You can find Scott’s work on his website Cailleachs Herbarium or in his incredible 2025 book Mill Dust and Dreaming Bread: Exploring Scottish Folk Belief and Folk Magic. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit hagstonepodcast.substack.com This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit hagstonepodcast.substack.com

    1h 8m
  5. The Sublime Dread of Faery: A Faerie Apologetics with Chad Andro

    Jan 20

    The Sublime Dread of Faery: A Faerie Apologetics with Chad Andro

    In this months episode of The Hagstone, Chaise Levy sits down with Chad Andro of Radical Elphame to explore what Chad calls fairy apologetics, a reexamination of fairy lore that pushes back against fear-based, extractive, and overly dualistic approaches to the Otherworld. Drawing from folklore, Romantic poetry, animist philosophy, entheogenic experience, and personal practice, the conversation challenges the modern tendency to demonize or sentimentalize fairies, arguing instead for a relational and ecological understanding rooted in openness and transformation. Together, they explore the collapse of strict boundaries between this world and the Otherworld, critique capitalist and colonial mindsets that seek to control spiritual experience, and trace how Romantic figures such as William Blake preserved a vision of fairy as a force of fullness that holds joy and terror, innocence and experience, creation and destruction in dynamic balance. The episode ultimately asks what it would mean culturally and spiritually to re-engage fairy not as danger or fantasy, but as a living mode of relationship with the animate world. Connect with Chad Andro Instagram: @radicalelphameSubstack: Chad Andro Podcast: Radical Elphame, available wherever you listen New Theme Music: Taliesin written and performed on Tenor Guitar and Mandolin by Chaise Levy This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit northernspirithouse.substack.com This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit hagstonepodcast.substack.com

    1h 19m
5
out of 5
6 Ratings

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Opening Perception to the Living World hagstonepodcast.substack.com

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