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What does it mean to live an authentic life? Meet Linda Wolf, a woman who has fearlessly navigated cultural revolutions, personal struggles, and social upheaval since the 1960s, never losing sight of her core values along the way.
Linda's journey began in Los Angeles, where her feminist mother instilled principles of compassion, honesty, and boldness that would guide her remarkable path. At 19, she broke barriers as one of the first female rock and roll photographers, capturing iconic moments with Joe Cocker's tour before living and studying in France. But her lens captured more than celebrities—it revealed humanity in all its complexity, documenting both joy and injustice across cultural boundaries.
Throughout our conversation, Linda shares the pivotal moments that transformed her: from sneaking backstage to meet Mick Jagger at 14, to her revolutionary realization in her forties that "nobody was going to love me till the day I died but me." This profound insight fueled her work founding Teen Talking Circles and the Daughters Sisters Project, organizations that have created safe spaces for authentic expression and compassionate listening for countless young women.
What distinguishes Linda from many of her counterculture contemporaries is her unwavering commitment to social justice across five decades. While others abandoned the ideals of those early "love-ins and be-ins," Linda continued evolving, connecting dots between racism, environmental challenges, and gender inequality. Her philosophy of "saying yes, then growing to meet that yes" reveals how embracing opportunities—even when uncertain—can lead to extraordinary growth.
Today at 75, Linda finds joy in community dinners on Bainbridge Island, her growing family, and continuing creative expression. Her perspective on our current cultural moment offers wisdom for navigating turbulent times: focus locally, maintain connections, and choose optimism over mere hope. "It's not about wrapping your head around everything happening," she advises, "but about doing what you can, where you are."
Listen now to this compelling conversation that weaves together art, activism, and authentic living. Then ask yourself: What might happen if you began saying "yes" to life's invitations, trusting that you'll grow to meet them?
Linda Wolf Photography Linda Wolf
Thanks for listening to Soul SiStories. We hope you follow us on your favorite podcast platform. Five-star ratings and reviews always help to spread our message of hope.
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By Dona Rice & Diana Herweck5
1212 ratings
Send us a text
What does it mean to live an authentic life? Meet Linda Wolf, a woman who has fearlessly navigated cultural revolutions, personal struggles, and social upheaval since the 1960s, never losing sight of her core values along the way.
Linda's journey began in Los Angeles, where her feminist mother instilled principles of compassion, honesty, and boldness that would guide her remarkable path. At 19, she broke barriers as one of the first female rock and roll photographers, capturing iconic moments with Joe Cocker's tour before living and studying in France. But her lens captured more than celebrities—it revealed humanity in all its complexity, documenting both joy and injustice across cultural boundaries.
Throughout our conversation, Linda shares the pivotal moments that transformed her: from sneaking backstage to meet Mick Jagger at 14, to her revolutionary realization in her forties that "nobody was going to love me till the day I died but me." This profound insight fueled her work founding Teen Talking Circles and the Daughters Sisters Project, organizations that have created safe spaces for authentic expression and compassionate listening for countless young women.
What distinguishes Linda from many of her counterculture contemporaries is her unwavering commitment to social justice across five decades. While others abandoned the ideals of those early "love-ins and be-ins," Linda continued evolving, connecting dots between racism, environmental challenges, and gender inequality. Her philosophy of "saying yes, then growing to meet that yes" reveals how embracing opportunities—even when uncertain—can lead to extraordinary growth.
Today at 75, Linda finds joy in community dinners on Bainbridge Island, her growing family, and continuing creative expression. Her perspective on our current cultural moment offers wisdom for navigating turbulent times: focus locally, maintain connections, and choose optimism over mere hope. "It's not about wrapping your head around everything happening," she advises, "but about doing what you can, where you are."
Listen now to this compelling conversation that weaves together art, activism, and authentic living. Then ask yourself: What might happen if you began saying "yes" to life's invitations, trusting that you'll grow to meet them?
Linda Wolf Photography Linda Wolf
Thanks for listening to Soul SiStories. We hope you follow us on your favorite podcast platform. Five-star ratings and reviews always help to spread our message of hope.
Soul SiStories
Instagram
Facebook
Soul SiStories Podcast - YouTube
SoulSiStoriesPod (@soulsistoriespod) | TikTok