The Liminal Space

theliminalspacepod

Welcome to The Liminal Space Podcast, an audio podcast foregrounding the narratives of humans living in Cape Town, South Africa. Through conversational dialogue with our guests, we explore the lived experience of those living in a city marked by liminality - where beauty, inequality, imagination, pain, and embodied hope all exist together. Together with our guests, we explore rehumanising stories which can help us belong, dream, and reimagine - as we discover, and walk on, new pathways towards a better city and world. The Liminal Space is co-hosted by Tristan Pringle and Rashid Epstein Adams.

  1. TLS x CG: What Becomes Possible When We Listen Beyond Ourselves with Tristan and Rashid

    -2 ДН.

    TLS x CG: What Becomes Possible When We Listen Beyond Ourselves with Tristan and Rashid

    This is the seventh and final episode in our series of short-form episodes, produced in collaboration with The Common Good Collective. In this closing episode, we step back to reflect on what seven episodes of storytelling from Cape Town have revealed. We revisit the arc of the series, from grounding ourselves in our bodies with Bongeka and Aphiwe, to the critical hope of Ashley and Helene, the courage of Ncedisa, the radical imagination of Leila, and the belonging found at Charlie and Barry’s dinner table. We explore the power and danger of stories, drawing on Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s The Danger of a Single Story and James Cone’s call for a global analysis of liberation. We ask what it means to tell stories from the Global South without claiming to speak for it, and challenge the ways resources and power are still gate-kept by those claiming to want change. The episode opens and closes with collectively written poems on the role of stories in making a new world. Themes Reflection. The danger of a single story. Global South and Global North. Collective liberation. Interrogating our own narratives. Stories as world-making. Power and resources. Invitation to the listener. Featured Voices Tristan Pringle is a life and executive coach, facilitator, and poet based in Cape Town. Rashid Adams is a musician, songwriter, music producer, and ethnomusicologist based in Cape Town. Credits Produced by Rashid Epstein Adams Music by Rashid Epstein Adams (AKA Arkenstone) and Pursuit A collaboration between The Common Good Podcast and The Liminal Space Podcast Links Podcast: linktr.ee/theliminalspacepod Substack: theliminalspacepodcast.substack.com Instagram: @theliminalspacepod

    17 мин.
  2. TLS x CG: Belonging at the Table with Charlton and Barry

    15 АПР.

    TLS x CG: Belonging at the Table with Charlton and Barry

    This is the sixth in our series of seven short-form episodes, produced in collaboration with The Common Good Collective. In this episode, we start by reflecting on how we became friends, and introduce two unlikely friends of ours: Charlton Alexander, a tour guide and facilitator who invites people to connect with the city and its stories, and Barry Lewis, an architect from the UK who has spent decades building sandbag homes alongside communities in Cape Town’s townships through his organisation UBU (Ubuhle Bakha Ubuhle / Beauty Builds Beauty). Through a clip from the original Liminal Space episode, Charlie and Barry speak about a community dinner in Muizenberg where there is no queue, no power dynamic, and a really good meal. People keep coming back not for the food but for the contact time. Barry challenges us to throw out the lazy questions that aren’t generating anything new, and Charlie reframes homelessness by pointing out that people living on the streets do have a home, they just don’t have a house. We then reflect on what it means to create spaces of belonging and how that might change a neighbourhood, a city, and eventually a world. Themes Community dinners. No queue, no power dynamic. Belonging through a meal. Lazy questions. Houselessness vs homelessness. Contact time. Friendship across difference. Creating spaces of belonging. Listen to the Full Episode This episode features clips from The Liminal Space Season 1, Episode 5: Kinship, Assimilation and Making Home in the Colonial City with Charlton Alexander and Barry Lewis. The full conversation is available on all podcast platforms. Listen on Apple Podcasts Listen on Spotify Watch on YouTube Featured Voices Charlton Alexander is a tour guide and facilitator based in Cape Town. He invites guests to the city to connect with the people and land in experiences that are life altering. Barry Lewis is the director of UBU (Ubuhle Bakha Ubuhle / Beauty Builds Beauty), a company focused on developing the technology of sandbag housing in low-income communities in South Africa. Tristan Pringle is a life and executive coach, facilitator, and poet based in Cape Town. Rashid Adams is a musician, songwriter, music producer, and ethnomusicologist based in Cape Town. Credits Produced by Rashid Epstein Adams Music by Rashid Epstein Adams (AKA Arkenstone) and Pursuit A collaboration between The Common Good Podcast and The Liminal Space Podcast Links Podcast: linktr.ee/theliminalspacepod Substack: theliminalspacepodcast.substack.com Instagram: @theliminalspacepod

    16 мин.
  3. TLS x CG: Reorienting Towards Community and Radical Imagination with Leila

    8 АПР.

    TLS x CG: Reorienting Towards Community and Radical Imagination with Leila

    This is the fifth in our series of seven short-form episodes, produced in collaboration with The Common Good Collective. In this episode, we begin with a wide-ranging exploration of shared consciousness, ubuntu, and the Hebrew concept of tzedakah, before introducing Leila Kidson, a social systems researcher, facilitator, and designer who co-founded the social design studio OCTOPI. Through a clip from the original Liminal Space episode, Leila paints a picture of radical imagination that is refreshingly honest. Not a world where everyone is happy, but one where we have the capacity to sit across from someone we disagree with and recognise their humanity. She asks what happens when survival needs are met, when communities are modular rather than insular, when walls become picket fences. We then reflect on the impediments to even simple human connection, from visa hierarchies to the way wealth privatises our lives, and close with questions about neighbours, kindness, and bridging the distance from your front door to theirs. Themes Ubuntu. Radical imagination. Communal vs individual living. Any two people at a table. Shared consciousness. Picket fences, not walls. Future generations. Tzedakah and right standing. Listen to the Full Episode This episode features clips from The Liminal Space Season 2, Episode 13: Reorienting Ourselves Toward Community and Building Bridges with Leila Kidson. The full conversation is available on all podcast platforms. Listen on Apple Podcasts Listen on Spotify Watch on YouTube Featured Voices Leila Kidson is a social systems researcher, facilitator, and designer focused on better integrating grassroots voices into systems design, advocacy and action. She is co-founder of OCTOPI, a South African social design studio. Tristan Pringle is a life and executive coach, facilitator, and poet based in Cape Town. Rashid Adams is a musician, songwriter, music producer, and ethnomusicologist based in Cape Town. Credits Produced by Rashid Epstein Adams Music by Rashid Epstein Adams (AKA Arkenstone) and Pursuit A collaboration between The Common Good Podcast and The Liminal Space Podcast Links Podcast: linktr.ee/theliminalspacepod Substack: theliminalspacepodcast.substack.com Instagram: @theliminalspacepod

    17 мин.
  4. TLS x CG: Music, Courage and Resisting Collusion with Ncedisa

    1 АПР.

    TLS x CG: Music, Courage and Resisting Collusion with Ncedisa

    This is the fourth in our series of seven short-form episodes, produced in collaboration with The Common Good Collective. In this episode, we explore the role music plays in grounding us, reminding us of our humanity, and giving us the courage to resist. We introduce Ncedisa Nkonyeni, an African-centred systems change and field learning partner, who reminds us about morality and what courage looks like in the face of systems that dehumanise. Through a clip from the original Liminal Space episode, Ncedisa shares a story about a Tori Amos lyric that gave her the courage to walk away from a scholarship when she realised the research she was being asked to do was fundamentally afrophobic. We then reflect on what it means to negotiate our own complicity within unjust systems, and whether giving, in all its forms, could become an act of laying down power rather than exercising it. Themes Music as resistance. Non-collusion. Ethical courage. Complicity and the status quo. Giving as laying down power. Joy as humanising. Systems change. Listen to the Full Episode This episode features clips from The Liminal Space Season 2, Episode 10: Systems Thinking and Rehumanising Narratives with Ncedisa Nkonyeni. The full conversation is available on all podcast platforms. Listen on Apple Podcasts Listen on Spotify Watch on YouTube Featured Voices Ncedisa Nkonyeni is an African-centred systems change and field learning partner. She teaches systems change, helps organisations apply it to their strategies, and partners with collectives committed to discovering organisational well-being. Tristan Pringle is a life and executive coach, facilitator, and poet based in Cape Town. Rashid Adams is a musician, songwriter, music producer, and ethnomusicologist based in Cape Town. Credits Produced by Rashid Epstein Adams Music by Rashid Epstein Adams (AKA Arkenstone) and Pursuit A collaboration between The Common Good Podcast and The Liminal Space Podcast Links Podcast: linktr.ee/theliminalspacepod Substack: theliminalspacepodcast.substack.com Instagram: @theliminalspacepod

    16 мин.
  5. TLS x CG: Critical Hope and the New Imagination with Ashley and Helene

    25 МАР.

    TLS x CG: Critical Hope and the New Imagination with Ashley and Helene

    This is the third in our series of seven short-form episodes, produced in collaboration with The Common Good Collective. In this episode, we unpack the idea of critical hope, drawing on the work of Jeff Duncan-Andrade and a powerful quote from Paulo Freire’s Pedagogy of Hope. We introduce Ashley and Helene Visagie, founders of Bottom Up, a Cape Town youth organisation that equips teenagers with tools of critical thought to question the systems around them rather than simply plugging gaps. Through clips from the original Liminal Space episode, Ashley describes the shift from fixing broken toilets to asking why they’re broken in the first place, and how capitalism alienates us from our work, each other, and the environment. Helene speaks about telling kids the truth without leaving them stranded in despair, and what it takes to move forward together. We reflect on when we first encountered critical thinking, and why imagining a new world requires us to question the imagination behind the current one. The episode closes with a guided imagination exercise inviting listeners to picture their neighbourhood 20 years from now. Themes Critical hope. Democratising critical thought. Stop plugging gaps. Alienation under capitalism. Education as liberation. Imagination as action. Youth as co-constructors of change. Listen to the Full Episode This episode features clips from The Liminal Space Season 1, Episode 3: Critical Hope and Being Human with Ashley Visagie. The full conversation is available on all podcast platforms. Listen on Apple Podcasts Listen on Spotify Watch on YouTube Featured Voices Ashley & Helene Visagie are the founders of Bottom Up, a Cape Town-based youth organisation that develops socially engaged leaders who can critically analyse how political, economic, and cultural systems produce inequality, and then organise to change them. Tristan Pringle is a life and executive coach, facilitator, and poet based in Cape Town. Rashid Adams is a musician, songwriter, music producer, and ethnomusicologist based in Cape Town. Credits Produced by Rashid Epstein Adams Music by Rashid Epstein Adams (AKA Arkenstone) and Pursuit A collaboration between The Common Good Podcast and The Liminal Space Podcast Links Podcast: linktr.ee/theliminalspacepod Substack: theliminalspacepodcast.substack.com Instagram: @theliminalspacepod

    18 мин.
  6. TLS x CG: A Safe Space in a Not-So-Safe Place with Bongeka and Aphiwe

    18 МАР.

    TLS x CG: A Safe Space in a Not-So-Safe Place with Bongeka and Aphiwe

    This is the second in our series of seven short-form episodes, produced in collaboration with The Common Good Collective. In this episode, we head to Khayelitsha, where two young founders, Bongeka and Aphiwe (Qhama), have created something remarkable: Thembisa Ratanga, a community space they describe as “a safe space in a not-so-safe place.” Through a clip from the original Liminal Space episode, we hear them reflect on the deep connection between nature, spirituality, and the body. Yoga poses that imitate trees and birds. Sunsets you don’t plan but can’t avoid. The quiet gift of a wetland on the edge of a township. We then unpack what it means to “just be” in a world that demands we constantly produce or consume, and ask whether rest itself might be a revolutionary act. Themes Coming home to our bodies. Being vs doing. Nature asteacher. Rest as resistance. Spatial apartheid and its legacy. Yoga in the township. Eliminating economic isolation. Listen to the Full Episode This episode features a clip from The Liminal Space Season 2, Episode 11: What happens when we reclaim our stories and find home in our bodies? with Bongeka and Aphiwe. The full conversation runs about an hour and is available on all podcast platforms. Listen on Apple Podcasts Listen on Spotify Watch on YouTube Featured Voices Bongeka & Aphiwe (Qhama) are the founders ofThembisa Ratanga, a Khayelitsha-based NPO that uses education, art, and sport as tools for community development and self-empowerment. Their space has been dubbed “a waterfront in the township.” Tristan Pringle is a life and executive coach, facilitator, and poet based in Cape Town. Rashid Adams is a musician, songwriter, music producer, and ethnomusicologist based in Cape Town. Support Thembisa Ratanga Bongeka and Aphiwe are currently running a BackaBuddy campaign to support day-to-day logistics and building improvements for the kids in their community. If you’d like to contribute, visit the link below. Donate on BackaBuddy Credits Produced by Rashid Epstein Adams Music by Rashid Epstein Adams (AKA Arkenstone) A collaboration between The Common Good Podcast and TheLiminal Space Podcast Links BackaBuddy: backabuddy.co.za/campaign/tembisa-ratanga Podcast: linktr.ee/theliminalspacepod Substack: theliminalspacepodcast.substack.com Instagram: @theliminalspacepod

    16 мин.
  7. Bonus: What Took Root During Our Hibernation with Tristan and Rashid

    25.12.2025 ·  БОНУСНЫЙ КОНТЕНТ

    Bonus: What Took Root During Our Hibernation with Tristan and Rashid

    As we mark the end of 2025, we created a brief episode to share some lessons learned during our recent “hibernation” period. During this time of quiet, seeds of possibility have been germinating underground. We’ve been slow-cooking a couple of possible collaborations, letting new ideas soften and deepen, and giving space for a few new people joining our team to find their footing. More on all of that in due course. For now, we’re choosing to stay in this liminal space intentionally: not quite “away”, not quite “back”, and not rushing either. We feel so grateful that we could record again this year, as we put together the 8 episodes which comprised season 2 of our podcast. The conversations, the questions, the moments of honesty, and the way the show kept teaching us how to listen is what keeps us excited about what's next. The two small offerings mentioned in this episode: A poem by Tristan; see the full text on our substack. A neat collation of themes from season two — a small map of the terrain we’ve explored. It’s there for your wandering on lazy afternoons. We won’t say too much; part of the fun is discovering what it shows you. See link here.  Thank you for being here with us, on the threshold. We’re looking forward to what comes next, and we’re letting it arrive in its own time. The music in this episode is composed and arranged by Rashid Epstein Adams / Arkenstone.

    10 мин.

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Welcome to The Liminal Space Podcast, an audio podcast foregrounding the narratives of humans living in Cape Town, South Africa. Through conversational dialogue with our guests, we explore the lived experience of those living in a city marked by liminality - where beauty, inequality, imagination, pain, and embodied hope all exist together. Together with our guests, we explore rehumanising stories which can help us belong, dream, and reimagine - as we discover, and walk on, new pathways towards a better city and world. The Liminal Space is co-hosted by Tristan Pringle and Rashid Epstein Adams.

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