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Sounds of SAND

Science and Nonduality
Sounds of SAND
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  • Sounds of SAND

    Transforming Colonization, Extractivism & Socio-Ecological Injustice: Casey Camp-Horinek, Osprey Orielle Lake, Abby Reyes & Rae Abileah

    21-03-2026 | 1 u. 3 Min.
    Recorded live at SAND's Wisdom of the Ancestors event for the launch of the film series The Eternal Song, four powerful voices converge to address colonization, extractivism, and ecological injustice — and what it takes to move toward healing. Moderated by Rae Abileah, social change strategist, Jewish faith leader, and co-creator of the global Climate Ribbon art ritual.

    Abby Reyes, author of Truth Demands and Director of Community Resilience at UC Irvine, shares her harrowing personal story of the 1999 murders of her partner and colleagues near U'wa territory in Colombia, and a landmark recent Inter-American Court victory for Indigenous collective rights. Osprey Orielle Lake, founder of WECAN International and author of The Story Is in Our Bones, brings a worldview-shifting lens to the climate crisis as a justice and relational emergency. And Casey Camp-Horinek, elder, actress, and Hereditary Drumkeeper of the Ponca Nation, grounds the conversation in Indigenous sovereignty and the Rights of Nature. Together they call for community-rooted action, mutual aid, and what they name "post-traumatic growth."

    Topics:

    00:00 Host Welcome and Land Acknowledgment

    03:12 Session Theme and Intentions

    04:48 Meet the Panelists

    08:10 Why We Are Here

    18:59 Indigenous Rights and Knowledge

    25:14 Casey on Nature and Purification

    34:29 Abby Story and Legal Victory

    43:56 Meaningful Action and Getting Started

    50:32 Community Practice and Post Traumatic Growth

    57:58 Closing Reflections and Thanks

    Resources

    Rae Abileah

    CreateWell — Website

    Beautiful Trouble Bio

    Abby Reyes

    Website

    Truth Demands — Penguin Random House

    UC Irvine Community Resilience

    Osprey Orielle Lake

    WECAN International

    The Story Is in Our Bones — New Society Publishers

    Casey Camp-Horinek

    Movement Rights Bio

    SAND Feature

    Connect with more talks from The Wisdom of the Ancestors in the SAND film Series The Eternal Song

    Support the mission of SAND and the production of this podcast by becoming a SAND Member
  • Sounds of SAND

    Reading As Resistance: Patty Krawec

    12-03-2026 | 53 Min.
    Patty Krawec is Ojibwe Anishinaabe, a retired social worker, and author of Becoming Kin and her new book Bad Indians Book Club. In this conversation she explores kinship beyond blood, land as ancestor, and why reading together — slowly, in community — might be one of the most quietly radical things we can do right now.

    Topics

    00:00 Introduction

    00:56 Meeting Patty Krawec

    02:00 Land Lineage Roots

    04:17 Becoming Kin Origins

    06:43 Bad Indians Book Club

    10:12 Reindigenizing The Future

    14:55 Reclaiming The Word

    20:28 Reading Together Power

    25:06 Attention In The Feed

    25:27 Relearning Deep Reading

    26:10 Notebook Trick for Focus

    26:54 Building a Genre Mosaic

    29:00 Indigenous Horror and Futures

    31:53 Read Widely Use Libraries

    32:18 Curated Lists and Book Browsing

    34:26 Bookstore Serendipity

    36:30 AI Pushes Us Offline

    38:18 Books as Time Alchemy

    41:58 Ghost the System Together

    44:10 Deep Time Reading Lineage

    47:14 New Projects and Ojibwe Stories

    49:59 Thanks and Farewell

    Resources

    a thousand worlds

    Medicine for the Resistance

    Why We Are Both Oppressed and Oppressor: Patty Krawec



    Becoming Kin

    Bad Indians Book Club






    The Eternal Song



    Support the mission of SAND and the production of this podcast by becoming a SAND Member
  • Sounds of SAND

    Block by Block, Heart by Heart: Dr. Lyla June, Kaira Jewel Lingo, Rabbi Jessica Rosenberg & Rae Abileah

    05-03-2026 | 1 u. 17 Min.
    Recorded from a live SAND Gathering (February 2026). From Los Angeles to Minneapolis, communities are turning toward one another in a time of uncertainty, remembering that care begins close to home. Beyond public action, quieter networks of support are taking root: block-by-block relationships grounded in land, lineage, and love.

    This gathering explores how spiritual practice, trauma-aware care, and neighborhood organizing are being woven together as living traditions. We ask what it looks like to shift our energy from reactive mobilization toward steady, proactive organizing that can sustain us for the long haul. Drawing from Indigenous memory, Black freedom traditions, diasporic Jewish practices of care, and contemporary grassroots work, we reflect on how mutual care—feeding one another, tending grief, protecting children, honoring the dead—can be reclaimed as daily sacred practice.

    This is a conversation about blending spiritual practice and movement practice; about thinking smaller, closer, and more relational; and about learning from quiet, resilient forms of organizing that move people from isolation into coordinated courage.

    This conversation invites attunement: How do we stay grounded in grief without collapsing? How do we strengthen relationships across differences? How do small, steady acts of care help communities move from fear toward shared courage?

    This is an invitation to listen to the wisdom already alive in our histories, our bodies, and our neighborhoods.

    Topics

    00:00 Welcome and Context

    02:33 Grounding Breath Practice

    03:22 Why We Gather Now

    05:19 Meet the Speakers

    07:36 Lyila June on Collapse

    09:12 Chaco Canyon Lesson

    12:36 Kaira Jewel on Flow

    16:39 Rejoicing and Ancestors

    20:04 Rabbi Jessica in Minneapolis

    24:54 Sacred Geography and Duty

    29:59 Lyla June on Forgiveness

    36:22 Liberation for Everyone

    37:32 Grace and Sobriety Story

    39:06 Jewish Wisdom and Mutual Care

    41:27 Feasting Fuels Mutual Aid

    45:53 Spirituality Is Not Neutral

    49:11 Sacred Criticism and Fierce Love

    53:49 Mycelium and Small Acts

    59:51 Resources and Community Questions

    01:03:30 Heart Practice for Overwhelm

    01:06:17 Reweaving Interdependence

    01:08:46 Warrior Love Closing

    01:14:31 Final Announcements and Farewell

    Decolonial Mental Health Practice: Clinical and Ethical Insights from Palestine with Dr. Samah Jabr (March 1, 8, 15 & 22, 2026 • 9:00 – 11:00am PST online with SAND)

    Please consider donating to Rabbi Jessica’s GoFundMe campaign in support of students at Roosevelt High School in Minneapolis. The students are using creative arts to process the trauma of recent encounters involving ICE and U.S. Border Patrol.

    In collaboration with local artists, they are developing an art installation intended to uplift and inspire both the school community and their neighbors, while continuing to advocate for justice and safety for all. This project offers a meaningful way to strengthen community bonds and foster collective healing.

    Support the mission of SAND and the production of this podcast by becoming a SAND Member
  • Sounds of SAND

    Medicine in Our Wounds: Liza Rankow

    26-02-2026 | 1 u. 6 Min.
    Dr. Liza J. Rankow, author of Soul Medicine for a Fractured World, explores healing justice in a time of social and ecological upheaval. She names oppositional dualism and domination as the root fracture of our world and invites a shift toward lived non-duality as the ground of lasting transformation. The conversation touches the “crucible of the in-between,” apocalypse as death and renewal, grief as medicine, and the movement from commodified self-care to soul care rooted in spirit, community, and nature. The conversation emphasized deep listening, silence, and relationship with the living world. Today’s episode closes with a simple guided breath practice for self, loved ones, and the world.

    Topics

    00:00 Opening

    01:20 Why This Book Now

    03:41 What’s Fracturing Us

    07:21 Crucible of the In Between

    14:52 Medicine in the Wound

    20:11 Grief as Collective Wisdom

    26:28 Soul Care vs Self Care

    32:02 Mystic Activism and Oneness

    34:57 Breath And Service

    35:59 No Spiritual Bypass

    37:00 Oneness With Perpetrators

    39:18 Mysticism And Justice

    41:08 Nature As Practice

    44:23 Purpose And Gifts

    47:44 Deep Listening

    53:25 Silence And Reckoning

    56:13 Darkness As Source

    58:20 Closing Practice And Book

    Resources

    LizaRankow.org

    Soul Medicine for a Fractured World





    “Mysticism and Social Action” by Dr. Howard Thurman

    Soul Work for Times of Uncertainty - SAND Podcast with Francis Weller

    Engaged Contemplation - SAND Podcast with Fr. Adam Bucko

    Glissando of Consciousness - SAND Podcast with Andrew Holecek

    Support the mission of SAND and the production of this podcast by becoming a SAND Member
  • Sounds of SAND

    "If I Must Die": Samah Jabr & Mays Imad

    19-02-2026 | 1 u. 26 Min.
    Recorded live at a SAND Community Gathering (Feb 2026)

    Dr. Samah Jabr, a Palestinian psychiatrist and author of Radiance in Pain and Resilience, joins Dr. Mays Imad (with questions from the audience chat) for a conversation about what it means to stay human when the structures meant to protect people are the ones doing the harm. Drawing on decades of clinical work inside the occupation, Dr. Jabr moves past the “sanitized” versions of trauma to speak directly to the heart of colonial harm in Palestine.

    Central to this dialogue is an exploration of the deep ontological differences between Western psychiatric models and Palestinian lived experience. While Western frameworks often pathologize the individual through the lens of PTSD, Dr. Jabr introduces the concept of iptila—viewing tribulations through a framework of agency, faith, and collective endurance. She challenges the frequent romanticization of sumud (steadfastness), reframing it not as a poetic trope, but as a grueling relational practice and an ethical refusal to disappear when everything conspires toward Palestinian erasure.

    In a reality where the harm never ends, memory becomes a battlefield, grief a form of testimony, bearing witness an active refusal to normalize the unacceptable, and storytelling a vital survival infrastructure against the assassination of memory.

    Join Dr. Samah Jabr · March 1, 8, 15 & 22, 2026 • 9:00 – 11:00am PST
    Decolonial Mental Health Practice: Clinical and Ethical Insights from Palestine
    A four-part webinar presented by SAND

    Topics

    00:00 Welcome & Why We Need a New Framework for Trauma and Justice

    02:15 “If I Must Die”: Carrying Memory, Refusing Normalization

    03:13 Introducing Dr. Samah Jabr’s Work: Pain, Power, and a Counter-Narrative

    07:55 A Childhood Lesson in Naming: Robinson Crusoe and Colonial Language

    10:10 Clinic Stories: When Political Reality Shapes Symptoms

    14:14 Beyond Western Psychiatry: Language, Resilience, and Context as the ‘Pathology’

    17:19 The ‘Fear of Dogs’ Case: History, Colonial Violence, and Clinical Meaning

    20:40 When Systems Collapse: Gaza’s Crushed Mental-Health Response & Organic Community Care

    25:04 Collective Healing & the Kite Intervention: Building Agency and Connection

    29:31 From Mobilization to Organization: Global Solidarity and Liberation

    34:31 How to Keep Working: Hope, Spirituality, and Protecting Health Workers

    41:58 Meaning-Making in Crisis: The Palm Tree Story and Spiritual Grounding

    45:22 Spirituality as Resilience: Listening for What Helps Each Person

    47:13 Scaling Mental Health Support in Palestine: Training Community Helpers

    49:00 Creating “Healing Spaces”: Group Support for Journalists, Youth & Displaced Women

    53:22 Reporting Gaza From Afar: Citizen Journalism, Narrative Control & Ethical Witnessing

    59:44 How to Support Palestine Sustainably: Remote Mental Health, Publishing & Advocacy

    01:05:37 Colonialism, Patriarchy & Horizontal Violence: When Trauma Damages the Social Fabric

    01:10:03 Meaning-Making Under Protracted Trauma: Tila, Agency & Shattered Belief Systems

    01:15:16 Diaspora Palestinians: From Helping Family to Leading Global Political Solidarity

    01:21:55 Closing Charge: Being Human After Mass Violence + Upcoming Webinars & Films

    Resources



    Dr. Samah Jabr’s book

    Art by Fernando Martí and Jess X. Snow, inspired by Huda Suboh’s quote:

    “In the heart of Gaza, where the echoes of war reverberate through the streets… each day, glimmers of hope that dance across the sky—kites.” — Rafah, 2024

    Support this conversation by donating to Sumud Network for Mental Health and Healing for Gaza



    Where Olive Trees Weep (Film by SAND on Palestine (2024) with more Resources and a course on Palestine)

Meer Kunst podcasts

Over Sounds of SAND

Sounds of SAND invites listeners into a contemplative journey through the infinite cycles of existence - from its raw beauty to its deepest mysteries, from its intricate complexity to its profound wonder. Through intimate conversations, thought-provoking interviews, poetic readings, and carefully curated music, we weave together ancient wisdom with lived experience, creating a tapestry of sound that honors the great questions of being
Podcast website

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