10 episodes

Conversations on status quo fatigue.

I'd love to. But I'm so tired‪.‬ Saba

    • Society & Culture

Conversations on status quo fatigue.

    Can't unknow what I now know.

    Can't unknow what I now know.

    My guest Eamonn is a 38 yr old male from mixed heritage. His father is white European and his mother is from Far East Asia - but he's never spent a significant amount of time in either of their countries as his dad's work kept the family in the Middle East. He moved back to the UK for University and after a brief period living back in Qatar with his parents, decided to move to the UK full-time. This move took him to Scotland and the oil & gas industry.



    Eamonn and I talk about unwritten guy codes, biases that can't be ignored, the rigid nature of careers and the line of an easy life that has been sold to us.



    The Myth of Meritocracy

    Sarah Everard and the U.K.'s Deadly Violence Against Women (NYT article)
    Music by DayFox from Pixabay

    • 59 min
    Where can I go from here.

    Where can I go from here.

    My guest on this episode describes herself as a daughter of the Arab Spring, relentlessly holding on to her sense of idealism. A recent European refugee, who is currently licking wounds, while routinely pointing out the political and social pollution caused by late capitalism to a small circle of friends and antagonising people to join post-George-Fluid global racial awakening. 



    My guest talks to me about existing on various points along the sympathy spectrum, the North Atlantic capitalist empire, our roles in nation state building and disenchantment with the work within the humanitarian sector. But what mostly shows through is how tiring it is to yo-yo between gratitude and feeling as though nothing is going the way it should.



    Note: some listeners may find the language offensive.

    Human Rights Watch article on Cluster Munitions

    Convention on Cluster Munitions


    Music by Lesfm from Pixabay

    • 52 min
    My idealism is not the problem here.

    My idealism is not the problem here.

    Ruth holds a Masters in Fine Arts for Creative Writing from the Vermont College of Fine Arts and is a registered nurse with two decades of experience in perinatal nursing. She is "mostly" from Chicago, but has lived in many places including Yemen, Kazakhstan and nine states in the U.S.A. She writes personal lyrical contemplative essays about birth, war and the natural world. She is a lover of aimless road trips, being a minority while aware of her own privilege in this role, cats and cozy quiet things of life like tea.



    **Note: in relation to those Alaskan Native tribes remaining - there are many tribes who were in fact moved off their lands such as tribes in the Aleutian chain of islands during WW@ who were displaced throughout Alaska to terrible living conditions to allow for military installations in their villages. Some people returned after the war, but many did not. You can find out more by visiting the State of Alaska website - https://alaska.gov/kids/learn/nativeculture.htm



    Ruth talks to me about being thrown into the real world, the exhaustion within patriarchal healthcare and unpicking the reality of white social colonisation.



    Blue Castle - L.M. Montgomery

    Third culture kids

    Maya Angelou


    Music by Oleksii Kaplunskyi from Pixabay

    • 1 hr 9 min
    We belong everywhere & nowhere.

    We belong everywhere & nowhere.

    Buthaina is a Yemeni-American, who identifies as a woman, entrepreneur and a citizen of the world. Growing up in an international community across the globe, and having to make a life for herself in St. Louis Missouri proved challenging, yet pivotal to her personal development. She has intentionally opened her life and mind to the canopy of cultural groups within the US, with much more to learn.



    Buthaina talks to me about searching for your place, how our parents imperfectly change the world through us and how falling from privilege is a privilege in itself.



    Sapiens by Yuval Noah Harari

    Ahmed Saif Yemeni medley songs 2022


    Music by

    • 53 min
    Not my weight to carry.

    Not my weight to carry.

    Mie describes herself as a daughter, a sister and friend and she is a British/Nigerian clinical cardiac physiologist with a specialism in cardiac devices.



    Mie candidly shares the layers of peoples' expectations that she's carried through the years, dusting off abusive actions thrown her way and trying to find a way to give herself more grace in a world that expects you to wear many masks.


    Music by BrentinDavis from Pixabay

    • 47 min
    Life is not binary.

    Life is not binary.

    Nneka joins me to talk about having a non-singular career, creating a life true to yourself and how music and creativity need more advocacy.



    Rest is Resistance, by Tricia Hersey

    Article on MP




    Music by Music_Unlimited from Pixabay

    • 39 min

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