Mind Full of Everything

Agrita Dandriyal
Mind Full of Everything

Mind Full of Everything is a podcast calling for the radical healing of the self and community to outgrow the broken dominant culture of radical individualism and disconnection from our place as interdependent beings, so that we can collectively re-envision a safer, healthier and equitable world. Each episode takes a healing-centric approach to explore the embodied ways in which we can collectively restore and transform our journeys as stewards of community and earth through conversations with writers, researchers, coaches and educators, as well as reflection episodes with the host Agrita Dandriyal on her journey navigating the world as a deeply conscious, culturally-rooted and relational being. Head over to mindfullofeverything.com to inspire and revolutionise your healing journey and work, now.

  1. 5月6日

    Abby Reyes on embodied resistance in environmental justice, advocacy and allyship

    Environmental justice work speaks to the visceral nature of systemic oppression, lived through the bodies of Indigenous and local communities at the frontlines of climate crises and ecological degeneration. To defend the land, water and other natural resources is not a question of choice but survival for many communities protecting their territories from extractive industries. How do we then, as allies and advocates, choose to take the risk of offering our voices and organising with environmental defenders, in the movement to collective freedom and justice? This month, we bring onto the show Abby Reyes, an author and recognized leader in driving community climate solutions. Her first book, Truth Demands: A Memoir of Murder, Oil Wars, and the Rise of Climate Justice releases today, May 6, 2025, from North Atlantic Books. Truth Demands is a salve for anyone navigating the open waters of grief and essential reading for the emerging climate activist and those becoming more ecologically aware. The book chronicles Abby’s own healing journey and pursuit of justice after the loss of her partner and two other land rights advocates when they were murdered near Indigenous U’wa territory in Colombia in 1999.  Born and raised in Virginia, Abby began her climate work conducting rural environmental legal assistance in the Philippines, her father’s homeland, and later walked alongside the Colombian U’wa Indigenous pueblo in their fight against big oil – an experience at the center of Truth Demands. Today, she is the Director of Community Resilience Projects at University of California, Irvine, where she supports leaders from climate-vulnerable communities and their academic partners to accelerate community-owned just transition solutions. A graduate of Stanford University and UC Berkeley Law, she clerked on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, co-chaired the board of EarthRights International, and is an advisor to the National Association of Climate Resilience Planners.  Abby has been recognized as a “Model of Resistance” by Barnard’s Scholar and the Feminist Conference, has a TEDx talk on How to Come Home and has discussed her work with the Law & Political Economy Project. She lives with her family in the San Francisco Bay Area. This conversation centres the themes of Truth Demands addressing embodiment as resistance, chronic fatigue and exhaustion in environmental justice work, and body reorganisation through rest. Visit mindfullofeverything.com to access full episode shownotes, resources and archives. Connect with us on Instagram (@mindfullofeverything_pod) and Facebook (@mindfullofeverything).

    57 分鐘
  2. 4月22日

    Sharon Gardner on re-rooting Afro-Caribbean 'veganism', food justice and body re-connection

    With increasing awareness of the environmental and health benefits of plant-based food practices, what power does re-rooting the values of the western vegan movement hold in tending to the generational wound of food injustices for BIPOC communities? How can we begin to trace ancestral ways of cooking to build more sustaining connections to the land and our bodies, whilst retaining the stories and flavours of our homelands? We ground these questions in this episode with Sharon Gardner, a plant-based nutritionist, a cookery school teacher, and the founder of Core of Life (UK), and Wholistic Wellness with Sharon. Sharon holds a Degree in Health Sciences and also holds a diploma in teaching Pilates, which she uses as a tool to teach people how to use their body, so that it benefits them in their everyday life. Her work involves supporting individuals on their wellness journeys through facilitating and empowerment. As a plant-based chef and holistic wellness practitioner with Caribbean heritage, Sharon loves to share her knowledge and story through infusing the “vegan flavours of the Caribbean” in the dishes she creates and shares with all those she has the pleasure of working with.  Visit mindfullofeverything.com to access full episode resources, shownotes and episode archives. Connect with us on Instagram (@mindfullofeverything_pod) and Facebook (@mindfullofeverything).

    1 小時
  3. 3月28日

    Mary Trudeau on water as lifeforce, story and connection

    Water bears life, cleanses old wounds and carries stories of resilience and hope between generations. Water is intuitive, liquid magic that holds our hydrophilic bodies in development as children and brings familiarity to the world as adults. Yet, our reductionist scientific training strips the enchanting beauty of the element, reducing it to a “resource” that can be tested on, fragmented and controlled as a commodity. How can we then open up the sciences to alternative ways of tending to the needs of our waters and lands that hold space for stories, re-connection, pause and appreciation of inherent beauty? This month, we bring onto the show Mary Trudeau, a professional engineer specialising in water management and urban water infrastructure, and is the Director of an environmental consulting company. She is also the author of a children's book, A Tale of Two Planets, written to inspire awe and wonder for our amazing planet. Mary has worked in the environmental field for over 30 years and believes the first step to resolving our many challenges is to reconnect with the wonder and beauty of life on Earth, rekindling reverence and remembering, with humility, our place as planetary caretakers. Mary's diverse interests are reflected in her formal education, with degrees including a Bachelor of Applied Science (Civil Engineering), an Arts Degree (English Literature) and a PhD (Physical Geography). She is a part time professor at the University of Ottawa.  Visit mindfullofeverything.com to access full episode resources, shownotes and episode archives. Connect with us on Instagram (@mindfullofeverything_pod) and Facebook (@mindfullofeverything).

    51 分鐘
  4. 1月28日

    Dr Michelle Pledger on dream designing for liberatory futures

    Amidst political instability, humanitarian and ecologies crises and social fragmentation, where do we begin to create space for designing our freedom dreams for ourselves and our communities? How do we give ourselves permission to dream of a liberated future within creatively restrictive systems?  In this first episode of 2025, we bring onto the show Dr Michelle Pledger, the founder of Living for Liberation, an organisation that supports liberation of self, systems and society, and academic focusing her research on cultivating culturally responsive teaching and classroom management for culturally and linguistically diverse students. Michelle is committed to disrupting inequity in education and cultivating a community of practitioners who honour the lived experiences of all their students and educators. Her book, LIBERATE! Pocket-Sized Paradigms for Liberatory Learning is a must read for any educator who aspires to design educational experiences that are responsive to culturally and linguistically diverse young people. Whether it is through the vehicle of project-based learning, culturally responsive-sustaining pedagogy, or freedom facilitation, her hope is to develop educators and students who think critically, act empathetically, and live a life of liberation. Visit mindfullofeverything.com to access full episode resources and archives. Follow the show on Instagram (@mindfullofeverything_pod) and Facebook (@mindfullofeverything).

    1 小時 9 分鐘
  5. 2024/10/11

    Sunaura Taylor on tracing ecologies of multispecies disablement, injury and resistance

    Whilst living in realities polluted with ableist, colonial and capitalist values of human domination and subordination of the more-than-human, where can we seek inspiration and hope for manifesting alternative futures of inclusivity, vulnerability and reciprocal care? How can tracing trails of injury and resistance to generational disablement of human and more-than-human communities equip us with the necessary tools for building a disabled future that is grounded in the values of living with and caring for the body and the environment? This month, we are joined by the wonderful Sunaura Taylor, an artist, writer and author of Beasts of Burden: Animal and Disability Liberation (The New Press, 2017) and Disabled Ecology: Lessons from a Wounded Desert. Taylor has written for a range of popular media outlets and her artworks have been exhibited widely both nationally and internationally. She works at the intersection of disability studies, environmental justice, multispecies studies, and art practice. She is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management at the University of California, Berkeley. She lives in the Bay Area with her daughter Leonora, husband David, and their two cats, Rosie and Pirate.  In this heart-felt episode, Sunaura offers us ways of mapping out disabled ecologies by framing our ecological crises as a multispecies disablement that extends out to biotic and abiotic bodies, human and more-than-human life, and across generations. Using the themes of her book Disabled Ecology: Lessons from a Wounded Desert as a grounding, Sunaura sows seeds of hope and radical imagination for a disabled future, which resists ableist and colonial systems of power to foster values of alternative caregiving and meaning-making of the diversity and beauty of our worlds. Connect with us on Instagram (@mindfullofeverything_pod) and Facebook (@mindfullofeverything). Visit mindfullofeverything.com to access all episode resources, shownotes and archives.

    49 分鐘
5
(滿分 5 顆星)
3 則評分

簡介

Mind Full of Everything is a podcast calling for the radical healing of the self and community to outgrow the broken dominant culture of radical individualism and disconnection from our place as interdependent beings, so that we can collectively re-envision a safer, healthier and equitable world. Each episode takes a healing-centric approach to explore the embodied ways in which we can collectively restore and transform our journeys as stewards of community and earth through conversations with writers, researchers, coaches and educators, as well as reflection episodes with the host Agrita Dandriyal on her journey navigating the world as a deeply conscious, culturally-rooted and relational being. Head over to mindfullofeverything.com to inspire and revolutionise your healing journey and work, now.

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