
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Support the show:
https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_US
One on One Video Call W/George
https://tidycal.com/georgepmonty/60-minute-meeting
đď¸đď¸đď¸Roger Duncan
https://www.amazon.com/Nature-Mind-Roger-Duncan/dp/178220377X
http://linkedin.com/in/roger-duncan-b4550b10
Aloha, my friends! Today, Iâm incredibly honored to introduce a truly visionary guest, one whose work fuses the wisdom of nature with the depth of human psychology. Roger Duncan is not only a trained biologist and Waldorf teacher but a guide of profound rites of passage in the wilderness. With thirty years of experience, Roger has walked the wild paths of both nature and human transformation, bridging the gap between our internal worlds and the natural environment that sustains us.
Rogerâs journey took him through pioneering roles at Ruskin Mill Education Trust, where he crafted therapeutic education programs for complex adolescents, immersing them in the transformative power of woodlands and wilderness settings. As a Systemic Family Therapist, Roger now works within the NHS and in private practice, guiding individuals, families, and organizations to find innovative, nature-infused paths to healing and growth.
But Roger doesnât stop thereâhe is the author of Nature in Mind, a groundbreaking book that examines the deep-seated madness at the heart of our modern world: a world that has severed its connection to the ecosystems that sustain us. His writing is a clarion call for reclaiming our indigenous relationship with nature, a topic he champions through webinars and immersive courses in eco-psychotherapy.
With a career dedicated to blending systemic thinking with ecological mindfulness, Roger is at the forefront of a movement that seeks to heal both the individual and the collective by reconnecting us to the earth. Today, he joins us to share his insights, wisdom, and the healing potential of the imaginal world.
Please welcome, Roger Duncan.
The Madness of Modernity & Ecological Crisis
 1. In Nature in Mind, you describe a âmadness at the core of the developed world.â Can you elaborate on this? How has our disconnection from nature led to both psychological and ecological collapse?
 2. Many see environmental destruction as an external issue, but you argue itâs deeply tied to human mental health. What psychological wounds mirror the wounds of our planet?
 3. How do you respond to those who say modern civilization is âprogressâ while ignoring the destruction it leaves in its wake?
Reclaiming the Imaginal & Indigenous Wisdom
 4. You emphasize the need to bring âexperiential encounters with the imaginal worldâ into mainstream culture. What is the imaginal world, and how can reconnecting with it heal us?
 5. Ancient and indigenous cultures saw the land as alive, full of spirit and wisdom. How can modern people, lost in technology and consumerism, reawaken this relationship?
 6. Do you believe Western psychology is fundamentally incomplete without an ecological and mythological perspective?
Eco-Psychotherapy & Systemic Healing
 7. How does eco-psychotherapy differ from traditional therapy, and why is nature such a powerful force in healing trauma?
 8. Youâve worked with individuals, families, and even organizations. Have you seen systemic healingâwhere reconnecting one person to nature creates a ripple effect in their community?
 9. Can you share a profound transformation youâve witnessed in someone through your work in wilderness therapy?
Rites of Passage & Personal Growth
 10. Youâve guided wilderness rites of passage. Why are initiatory experiences in nature so vital for human development, especially in adolescence?
 11. Do you think the lack of meaningful rites of passage in modern society is contributing to a generation unmoored from purpose?
 12. How can adultsâwho may have missed their own initiationâfind a path back to transformation?
The Future of Ecological Consciousness
 13. If humanity does not change its relationship with the Earth, where do you see us in 50 years? Is there hope for a return to balance?
 14. What role do you think AI and digital technology shouldâor shouldnâtâplay in our evolving relationship with nature?
 15. If you could design an ideal education system that integrates nature, imagination, and systemic thinking, what would it look like?
Personal & Spiritual Insights
 16. Have you had a personal moment in nature that profoundly shifted your understanding of yourself or the world?
 17. If you could whisper one truth into the heart of every person struggling with modern disconnection, what would it be?
 18. What practices can people start todayâright nowâto begin rekindling their relationship with theÂ
Imaginol
It slips in like breath against bare skin â
Slow, deliberate, inevitable.
A hush before the breaking,
A hand at the throat of the night.
It does not knock.
It enters.
Imaginol â
The soft parting of darkness,
The heat that pools low and deep,
A whisper wet with promise,
Teeth grazing the edge of a pulse.
It slides beneath reason,
Fingers tracing the lines of what could be,
What will be,
Until thought is nothing but a trembling gasp.
It pulls.
It commands.
The ache before surrender,
The tension of a body held taut â
Not in fear,
But in offering.
Imaginol â
A...
By George Monty4.6
2020 ratings
Support the show:
https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_US
One on One Video Call W/George
https://tidycal.com/georgepmonty/60-minute-meeting
đď¸đď¸đď¸Roger Duncan
https://www.amazon.com/Nature-Mind-Roger-Duncan/dp/178220377X
http://linkedin.com/in/roger-duncan-b4550b10
Aloha, my friends! Today, Iâm incredibly honored to introduce a truly visionary guest, one whose work fuses the wisdom of nature with the depth of human psychology. Roger Duncan is not only a trained biologist and Waldorf teacher but a guide of profound rites of passage in the wilderness. With thirty years of experience, Roger has walked the wild paths of both nature and human transformation, bridging the gap between our internal worlds and the natural environment that sustains us.
Rogerâs journey took him through pioneering roles at Ruskin Mill Education Trust, where he crafted therapeutic education programs for complex adolescents, immersing them in the transformative power of woodlands and wilderness settings. As a Systemic Family Therapist, Roger now works within the NHS and in private practice, guiding individuals, families, and organizations to find innovative, nature-infused paths to healing and growth.
But Roger doesnât stop thereâhe is the author of Nature in Mind, a groundbreaking book that examines the deep-seated madness at the heart of our modern world: a world that has severed its connection to the ecosystems that sustain us. His writing is a clarion call for reclaiming our indigenous relationship with nature, a topic he champions through webinars and immersive courses in eco-psychotherapy.
With a career dedicated to blending systemic thinking with ecological mindfulness, Roger is at the forefront of a movement that seeks to heal both the individual and the collective by reconnecting us to the earth. Today, he joins us to share his insights, wisdom, and the healing potential of the imaginal world.
Please welcome, Roger Duncan.
The Madness of Modernity & Ecological Crisis
 1. In Nature in Mind, you describe a âmadness at the core of the developed world.â Can you elaborate on this? How has our disconnection from nature led to both psychological and ecological collapse?
 2. Many see environmental destruction as an external issue, but you argue itâs deeply tied to human mental health. What psychological wounds mirror the wounds of our planet?
 3. How do you respond to those who say modern civilization is âprogressâ while ignoring the destruction it leaves in its wake?
Reclaiming the Imaginal & Indigenous Wisdom
 4. You emphasize the need to bring âexperiential encounters with the imaginal worldâ into mainstream culture. What is the imaginal world, and how can reconnecting with it heal us?
 5. Ancient and indigenous cultures saw the land as alive, full of spirit and wisdom. How can modern people, lost in technology and consumerism, reawaken this relationship?
 6. Do you believe Western psychology is fundamentally incomplete without an ecological and mythological perspective?
Eco-Psychotherapy & Systemic Healing
 7. How does eco-psychotherapy differ from traditional therapy, and why is nature such a powerful force in healing trauma?
 8. Youâve worked with individuals, families, and even organizations. Have you seen systemic healingâwhere reconnecting one person to nature creates a ripple effect in their community?
 9. Can you share a profound transformation youâve witnessed in someone through your work in wilderness therapy?
Rites of Passage & Personal Growth
 10. Youâve guided wilderness rites of passage. Why are initiatory experiences in nature so vital for human development, especially in adolescence?
 11. Do you think the lack of meaningful rites of passage in modern society is contributing to a generation unmoored from purpose?
 12. How can adultsâwho may have missed their own initiationâfind a path back to transformation?
The Future of Ecological Consciousness
 13. If humanity does not change its relationship with the Earth, where do you see us in 50 years? Is there hope for a return to balance?
 14. What role do you think AI and digital technology shouldâor shouldnâtâplay in our evolving relationship with nature?
 15. If you could design an ideal education system that integrates nature, imagination, and systemic thinking, what would it look like?
Personal & Spiritual Insights
 16. Have you had a personal moment in nature that profoundly shifted your understanding of yourself or the world?
 17. If you could whisper one truth into the heart of every person struggling with modern disconnection, what would it be?
 18. What practices can people start todayâright nowâto begin rekindling their relationship with theÂ
Imaginol
It slips in like breath against bare skin â
Slow, deliberate, inevitable.
A hush before the breaking,
A hand at the throat of the night.
It does not knock.
It enters.
Imaginol â
The soft parting of darkness,
The heat that pools low and deep,
A whisper wet with promise,
Teeth grazing the edge of a pulse.
It slides beneath reason,
Fingers tracing the lines of what could be,
What will be,
Until thought is nothing but a trembling gasp.
It pulls.
It commands.
The ache before surrender,
The tension of a body held taut â
Not in fear,
But in offering.
Imaginol â
A...

229,674 Listeners

3,993 Listeners

1,291 Listeners

27,989 Listeners

2 Listeners

31 Listeners

8,854 Listeners

1,149 Listeners