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Can purity be toxic? The stories we tell ourselves and our clients about health and disease can both cause harm, and can help us to integrate our illnesses with grace, and maybe even to heal. A detox can support our health, or it can deepen our disconnection from the world around us as we relentlessly pursue purity and freedom from contamination. Come with Miriam Latif and Stephanie Hazel as they veer away from the strictly Sacred and more towards the ethics and philosophy of wellness culture. Let’s pick apart some of the assumptions we have about wellness together! Miriam Latif is a herbalist who is less concerned with plants and the body, and more curious about the personal and cultural stories that define our understanding and experience of what health is in the first place.
She holds conflicting truths - wellness culture is broken, and it has much to offer us, if we can learn to be critical and curious.
Her mission is to radically change wellness culture by telling different stories about what it means to be well - stories rooted in equity, justice, relationship and the complexity of being humans, together.
She runs @___understory, and The Root Network - an online community of herbalists and naturopaths joining forces to make wellness culture a force for collective good. You can join the waitlist here: https://understory.myflodesk.com/waitlist
*BUY ME A CUPPA*
If you liked the episode and want more, a cuppa fuels my work and time, which is given for free. Leave a comment and a few bucks here: buymeacoffee.com/theeldertree
To find out more about The Elder Tree visit the website at www.theeldertree.org or follow is on socials here: Facebook / Instagram
The intro and outro song is "Sing for the Earth" and was kindly donated by Chad Wilkins. You can find Chad's music here and here.
Can purity be toxic? The stories we tell ourselves and our clients about health and disease can both cause harm, and can help us to integrate our illnesses with grace, and maybe even to heal. A detox can support our health, or it can deepen our disconnection from the world around us as we relentlessly pursue purity and freedom from contamination. Come with Miriam Latif and Stephanie Hazel as they veer away from the strictly Sacred and more towards the ethics and philosophy of wellness culture. Let’s pick apart some of the assumptions we have about wellness together! Miriam Latif is a herbalist who is less concerned with plants and the body, and more curious about the personal and cultural stories that define our understanding and experience of what health is in the first place.
She holds conflicting truths - wellness culture is broken, and it has much to offer us, if we can learn to be critical and curious.
Her mission is to radically change wellness culture by telling different stories about what it means to be well - stories rooted in equity, justice, relationship and the complexity of being humans, together.
She runs @___understory, and The Root Network - an online community of herbalists and naturopaths joining forces to make wellness culture a force for collective good. You can join the waitlist here: https://understory.myflodesk.com/waitlist
*BUY ME A CUPPA*
If you liked the episode and want more, a cuppa fuels my work and time, which is given for free. Leave a comment and a few bucks here: buymeacoffee.com/theeldertree
To find out more about The Elder Tree visit the website at www.theeldertree.org or follow is on socials here: Facebook / Instagram
The intro and outro song is "Sing for the Earth" and was kindly donated by Chad Wilkins. You can find Chad's music here and here.