
In this episode, Lyanda Haupt shares her journey from divorce to discovery and nature’s wisdom for life’s transitions. She challenges everything you might think you know about hope, about walking barefoot on the earth, and about what it actually means to feed the good wolf.
Discover the six hidden saboteurs that quietly derail your best intentions—like autopilot behavior, self-doubt, and emotional escape. Download our free guide to uncover what’s getting in your way and learn simple strategies to take back control. Get it now at oneyoufeed.net/ebook.
Key Takeaways:
- Psychological concepts related to change, addiction, hope, disappointment, and self-efficacy.
- The complexities of addiction and the distinction between harmful behaviors and positive attachments.
- The challenges of personal change and the forces that resist it, including fear of disappointment and existential anxiety.
- The concept of “fear of hope” and its impact on motivation and willingness to change.
- The importance of social support and community in the recovery process.
- Critique of current addiction treatment models and the need for a more compassionate, harm reduction approach.
- The role of context in shaping an individual’s ability to change and the limitations of individualistic approaches.
- The significance of incremental change and the value of small steps in personal growth.
- The importance of respecting resistance to change as a form of self-love and preservation.
Lyanda Lynn Haupt is an award-winning author, naturalist, ecophilosopher, educator, and speaker whose work explores the beautiful, complicated connections between humans and the wild, natural world. Her writing is acclaimed for combining scientific knowledge with literary, poetic prose. Lyanda is a winner of the Sigurd Olson Nature Writing Award, the Nautilus Book Award, a finalist for the Orion Book Award, and a two-time winner of the Washington State Book Award. She has created and directed educational programs for Seattle Audubon, worked in raptor rehabilitation in Vermont, and been a seabird researcher for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in the remote tropical Pacific. Her newest book is “Rooted: Life at the Crossroads of Science, Nature, and Spirit”
Connect with Lyanda Haupt: Website
If you enjoyed this conversation with Lyanda Haupt, check out these other episodes:
How to Find Joy, Wisdom, and Wonder in Nature with Mark Coleman
How to Find Healing in Nature with Ralph De La Rosa
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Episode Transcript:
Lyanda Haupt 00:00:00 I don’t want to be walking around without having to be attentive. With movement that doesn’t involve my mind, my intelligence, my imagination.
Chris Forbes 00:00:16 Welcome to the one you feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts. We have quotes like garbage in, garbage out or you are what you think ring true. And yet, for many of us, our thoughts don’t strengthen or empower us. We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don’t have instead of what we do. We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it’s not just about thinking our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction. How they feed their good wolf.
Eric Zimmer 00:01:00 What if the relationships that end. Aren’t failures, but completions? I’ve been thinking about this idea ever since my conversation with today’s guest, and it’s completely shifted how I view my own past marriages.
Eric Zimmer 00:01:14 You see, we live in a culture that only calls a marriage successful if someone dies first. But we might be getting this wrong. What if recognizing when we’ve grown apart and choosing a farewell is actually completion? Today’s guest, Linda Haupt, an award winning naturalist and author of Rooted Life at the Crossroads of Science, nature and spirit, is going to challenge everything you think you know about hope, about walking barefoot on the earth, and about what it actually means to feed the good wolf. Fair warning this conversation might change how you see your own story. I’m Eric Zimmer, and this is the one you feed. Hi Lyanda. Welcome to the show.
Lyanda Haupt 00:02:01 Hi, Eric, I am so happy to be here.
Eric Zimmer 00:02:03 We’re going to be discussing your book called Rooted Life at the Crossroads of Science, Nature and Spirit. But before we do that, we’ll start like we always do, which is with the parable. There’s a parable where there’s a grandparent who’s talking with their grandchild, and they say, in life there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle.
Eric Zimmer 00:02:21 One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love, and the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandchild stops and they think about it for a second, and they look up at their grandparent and they say, well, which one wins? And the grandparent says, the one you feed. So I’d like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you in your life and in the work that you do.
Lyanda Haupt 00:02:45 Thank you Eric. You know, thinking about this before speaking with you, I went back in my mind to the very first time I heard that parable. It’s been out in the world for a while, and there are a lot of thoughts about it, but the first time I heard it was maybe 10 or 12 years ago at a huge venue, like probably a TEDx talk or something. So there’s thousands of people in the room. Most of us haven’t heard this story. And when the speaker gets to that lie, you know which one is going to win.
Lyanda Haupt 00:03:12 With thousands of people, there’s always kind of a hum of conversation or just a little background noise, even if people are being basically quiet. And at that question, there is this hush. And when the speaker said, the one you feed, you heard this palpable kind of kind of a gasp of recognition, you know, it just landed. Never heard. It was like, we know what that means. And we have that wolf right in this moment, all of us in different ways. And so since that time, I’ve heard this parable deconstructed and interrogated and complex and non-dual and, you know, all this stuff which I think is fascinating and valuable. But I just wanted to go back to that beginner’s mind that just thunk. I know what that means. You know, and for me personally, right now, I am in a transitional moment. A year ago, my now former husband and I decided to complete our 25 year marriage. And we just signed the papers on that really a couple of weeks ago.
Lyanda Haupt 00:04:13 So I’m in this sort of shedding of a certain kind of skin, a certain molting of feathers that leaves when raw and open. And for me, in this time, I’ve been struggling with a little bit of acedia, that kind of fear and uncertainty that leads to a listlessness with regard to the choices we make. And so for me, feeding the good wolf is right here, Eric, I’m in the very most basic things, like putting my yoga clothes at the end of the bed. So I get up. You know, having that already so I don’t even have to make the choice to do yoga before going into the sort of over Cultural productivity day, literally keeping good food and, you know, holy basil tea and blueberries in my fridge right now to nourish body and mind and spirit. Just all those little basics that move me into, you know, brightness and awakening and aliveness and also turning to some of the Earth based practices in my book. So the way that manifests in my work life is on not so basic a scale.
Lyanda Haupt 00:05:17 That idea of drawing people through connection to the ecological whole into their truest, most alive selves from which they can be in service to the earth and community.
Eric Zimmer 00:05:31 It’s interesting the way you put completed your 25 year marriage. I love that phrase, and even with that, I will offer my understanding of how difficult that period is. And I love how you’re doing the very simple things when life feels difficult, because that’s the way we get through these things. So maybe we could explore that word completion, because that is a very different word than we ended our 25 year marriage. We’re getting a divorce, which is technically what’s happening, but I’d love to know a little bit more about the use of the word completion and how that helped you in the process, and maybe how it helped you and your husband’s relationship in the process.
Lyanda Haupt 00:06:13 Right? Well, I don’t want to sound overly enlightened. The mediation process of the last year, you know, was hard, and it does not bring out the best in anyone.
Lyanda Haupt 00:06:24 I pictured myself being, you know, this sweet Bhodisatva like being during the process seeking both of our higher good, but fell off that way again now and then, as did my former partner. So. But that’s okay. It’s part of the process. But that language completion, I thought was really meaningful because the cultural language around divorce and ending marriage is the language of failure. And we talk about failed marriages and people have always even said that to me. Oh, I never thought your marriage would fail. And I think, what are you talking about? It didn’t fail. We lived together for 25 years. We created a beautiful household. We raised this daughter to completion. Eric, you and I both have a 24 year old offspring. And she’s radiant and wondrous. And I’m proud of everything we did. That is not a failure. You know, in our culture, the only successful marriage is one in which both partners, you know, just kind of limps along until someone dies.
Lyanda Haupt 00:07:24 I mean, maybe they do really well until someone dies, but one person dying, right, is what a successful marriage is. And I’m thinking we have to reframe that and bring back the honoring of, you know, the families and the homes and the lives that we create. And then recognizing when we grow apart, that what’s best for our journey might be a farewell. It might be a certain kind of closure, a completion, a different framework for being family. And so I want to rethink that language of failure.
Eric Zimmer 00:07:55 Yeah, I love that idea because it assumes that the only metric of a successful relationship is its permanence. Right. And I, like you don’t think that’s really true. I think there are lots of different ways to think about relationships, and I have had two, if we call them that failed marriages, but I don’t think of them as failures. I think I learned a lot from them. And like you, I’ve got a 25 year old child who was part of both of those marriages, and I’m so grateful for how he has turned out.
Eric Zimmer 00:08:25 And, you know, we just we never know what the past would be. And so I really like that way of thinking of sort of completing something and transitioning into a new way of family. And my thoughts are with you as you go through that, because it is a big change and can bring up some strong feelings.
Lyanda Haupt 00:08:41 Right. No matter how right it is, there’s still some grief around. Yes. You know what you had imagined? Loss of a certain kind of identity.
Eric Zimmer 00:08:50 Yep. Yep. So let’s pivot now into talking about the book. And I’m going to start with where I thought you might go with the Wolf parable, which is to talk about Francis and the wolf, because I don’t know if that story has ever been told on this show. And if it has, it’s been once, sometime in the distant past. So I love Saint Francis. That prayer of peace that’s traditionally attributed to him is such a beautiful piece of writing, and was so instrumental to me early in my journey of sobriety.
Eric Zimmer 00:09:24 So I’ve always had sort of a warm feeling for him. So tell us the story about Francis and the Wolf.
Lyanda Haupt 00:09:28 Okay. And you’re right. There are a lot of wolves in my book. And I pondered that, but I still went back to that original telling. But there is the wolf that little Red meets in the forest. There’s the literal wolves that are, you know, clawing for continuation as climate changes and as they continue to be reviled as predators. And then there’s this beautiful story about Saint Francis. So as the story goes. So it’s the 1200s hillside town in Italy called Gubbio. And the mayor calls on Saint Francis because he has a reputation for being peaceful and maybe being able to speak beyond, you know, the human species boundary. He’s known for giving sermons to birds who come to perch and listen. So he calls upon this wild Saint Francis, and he says, you know, we have this problem. This wild, hungry beast, ferocious wolf is surrounding our town, eating our shepherds, carrying away children.
Lyanda Haupt 00:10:29 You know, soldiers go out to kill the wolf, and they come back either dead or their sword is snapped and everyone’s living in fear. And, you know, the more these tales are told, the more ferocious and horrible the wolf becomes in the people’s imagination. Now they’re all just staying indoors and inside the gates of the city. So Francis arrives and he says, well, I’m just gonna seek out this wolf and see what I can find out. So he finds her and he speaks with her, and he listens to her story, and she tells him that she has been injured. She’s separated from her own pack of wolves. She’s struggling to find sustenance. She’s starving. She hates killing the villagers. It is not what she wants, but she has no other way of sustaining herself and the cubs that she is about to bear. It’s the only thing that she can do. So Francis goes back and he reports this to the villagers, and they listen, and they figure out a way to offer the wolf food so that she can sustain herself.
Lyanda Haupt 00:11:28 And she, for her part, leaves the village alone. So the interesting turn that I want to make on this story is that in almost every telling, the title of the story is Saint Francis tames the wolf, tames the wolf as if he makes it subservient to human wants and needs. And what I get from this is that he hasn’t tamed the wolf. He just listened to the wolf in a way that allows her continued true wildness.
Eric Zimmer 00:11:57 Yeah, I love that story. And I’m like you, I think that the parable hits immediately and you immediately get it right. It’s like, boom, right? But the interpretation of it that I get more and more from people as we begin to learn more about our trauma responses, as we begin to learn more about how our circumstances have shaped us and all these different things, is that we do want to listen to the bad wolf. We want to understand what’s happening there, right? You know, we don’t want to starve it. And so that story speaks to that so much because it really shows that, you know, the wolf was acting a certain way for a reason.
Eric Zimmer 00:12:37 And when the wolf was given other options, it chose to do the less destructive things. And I think that is often so true in our lives, is that these things we would call the bad wolf when we give it different options, when we give it what it needs in a healthy or less destructive way, it will often, you know, turn into our good wolf in many ways. And so I love that story, both because I love Saint Francis. And I like that way of thinking about these darker sides of ourselves.
Lyanda Haupt 00:13:08 Right. And I love, too, that it’s not just a story about giving the wolf options, but realizing that from the side that is afraid of the wolf, understanding the fear from the other side is, you know, a form of integration. And I think so often in your wolf parable, the so-called bad wolf becomes conflated with things like our anxiety or our fear of death or our grief, you know, pushing those things down. And as you so often discuss, that’s not what’s bad.
Lyanda Haupt 00:13:38 That can be part of the good side. What’s bad if we want to use that word is are the actions that remove us from bringing those things into wholeness that keep us in isolation and disconnection?
Eric Zimmer 00:13:51 Yeah. I interviewed somebody yesterday and she had a line in her book, which is just a very simple statement of a very obvious truth, but one that we can all hear, which is emotions are not bad, but the behaviors that spring from emotions can be bad, you know? And I think, you know, that’s certainly been very true in my life. And there’s another line from one of the first probably 15 podcasts we did that just came into my mind. It does periodically because it hit me so hard. And the basic idea he was saying was, when our behavior is under control, we are safe to really feel our emotions. Yes. And that really hit me because once upon a time, strong emotions caused me to go into just deep, deeply self-destructive behaviors that were nearly fatal. But now that I know that’s not going to happen, I have a whole lot more window to say, okay.
Eric Zimmer 00:14:44 I can feel the emotions that are coming up and now I know how to work with them in a far more skillful way.
Lyanda Haupt 00:14:49 Just yesterday I was thinking about it in terms of this parable the idea of food, you know, and what the feeding and food is in the story. You know, as a writer, I’m cognizant of not wanting to over torture the metaphor, but I was thinking because I fed my cat, you know, when we’re feeding our cats or our dogs or ourselves, our own bodies, we don’t wait, you know, meal by meal to go, oh, mealtime. I have to go out and get some food, you know, to feed the cat or myself. We have a stockpile. And so I was thinking for myself in this sort of marriage completion. Acedia. What is the stockpile? Yes. It’s literal good food. It is the yoga clothes. It is the meditation practices. It is the nature connection practices in terms of our seeking to deepen our connection as members of the Earth community.
Lyanda Haupt 00:15:38 You know, all of the practices of rootedness that I explore in the book and life, you know, of putting our bare feet on the earth, of being in communion with trees and every day weather and wildness. Now having that stockpile of practices and things that bring positive physical comfort, just a kind of literal food. I sort of like that idea of having all these things in the cupboard so that when the wolves are there, we have the right food for the right wolf.
Eric Zimmer 00:16:07 Absolutely. As we move into the book, I’d like to talk about a theme that shows up in this book and in several of your other books, also around the idea of hope. And I just want to read something that you wrote to sort of set it up. You say hope is our positive orientation towards the future, a future in which we simultaneously recognize difficulty, responsibility and delight. Hope is not relative to the present situation, nor is it dependent upon a specific outcome. It’s not an antidote to despair or a sidestepping of a difficulty, but a companion to all these things.
Eric Zimmer 00:16:42 Talk to me about hope.
Lyanda Haupt 00:16:44 We live in a time where hope is presented, I think so often as a shiny ideal and expectation that things are going to go well and look better in the future. And there is alongside that, the sense that the reason that we participate in the unfolding of the future, the reason that we create selves that are able to be responsible activists and artists in the world is because we are creating a future that is going to look better. And I hope that that is true, but I don’t know if that’s true. I don’t know. I mean, we look at the science around climate crisis right now. We look at the things that we know we are. No matter what happens or unless something very extreme happens, we know that we’re not going to be able to turn so many things around and that there are things very, very difficult unfolding in our ecological future. Does that mean that we throw up our hands and say, well, I’m not going to do anything because there’s no hope? Or that we act only because we think that we can absolutely turn that around and create an eco topia.
Lyanda Haupt 00:17:55 No, I just think we have to absolutely decouple the rightness of our actions in the world the acting with love, the acting with compassion, the acting with an eye towards the unfolding future, whatever that may be, has to be absolutely decoupled from. It’s hard to speak about this without using the word hope, with a hope that is going to look a certain way that it does in our imagination. I mean, we just can’t wait for that, because if we do, we will either become mired in an inability to go forward, mired in a kind of paralysis, because we’re scared that it’s not going to work. You know, if all we’re hoping for is a certain outcome and we see how difficult that is. I think part of us just want to, you know, go in a cave and eat pizza and drink red wine. And, you know, we act in hope just as we act in love. This is kind of a difficult metaphor, but I’m thinking if we have a loved one who is very ill and who may not survive, we don’t just go out the door and say, oh, well, you know, they’re not going to make it.
Lyanda Haupt 00:19:01 Now what do we do? We go by the bedside, we hospice, we hold the hand of our beloved. And in a sense, that’s what we’re doing in this earthen community. Maybe not. Maybe there are still many, many things that can improve. But we show up with that love no matter what.
Eric Zimmer 00:19:20 I love that idea. And there was a ecological writer and I cannot remember her name right now, which is a shame. But I saw her speak in Atlanta, Georgia, and she was talking, you know, she was alluding to Hope a little bit, and I was working on a workshop around Hope. And so I just asked her, I said, you know, given everything you’ve said about the climate crisis and all the fears and how bad things are, is hope an appropriate response or do you have hope? And what I remember from her response was basically she just focuses on love. And when you love something, you take care of it. I think that’s a great analogy with someone in our family.
Eric Zimmer 00:19:54 It’s not like we give up caring for someone if we don’t know whether they’re going to make it or not, because honestly, none of us are going to make it right. At the end of the day, right. So that’s not how we orient to so many things. We orient out of care and love. And that is a way of, I think, relating to most all challenges where we can sort of get out of this hope or despair element, but it is hard to stay that way. I mean, I think I saw yesterday that maybe the hottest day ever on record happened yesterday or the day before, anywhere, you know, and you hear that and there’s just a part of you that just feels like, oh, you know, inside, just like. Oh. And so I think some degree of hope is important in moving forward in our lives. But I think, like you said, sort of turning it away from hope in a specific outcome. I know in my own life what I tend to have hope towards is when I’m looking at my own challenges, is my ability to find a way through them.
Eric Zimmer 00:20:57 You know, like, I don’t know what the outcome is and I often don’t even know what the right outcome is, but I know I can find my way through them. You also say elsewhere I chose to dwell, as Emily Dickinson famously suggested, in possibility, where we cannot predict what will happen, but we make space for whatever it is and realize that our participation has value. And then you have a line that I love. This is grown up optimism. That is a phrase I love. Grown up optimism.
Lyanda Haupt 00:21:23 Grown up optimism means we know that we’re not necessarily going to get our way, and yet we act from our highest self anyway. I think about the work that Joanna macy is doing in the world that honors both our love and our hope in terms of our ecological connection and our ecological responsibility, but recognizes further that our grief has to be part of that. That, I mean, we’re kind of going back to that parable again, right? The integration of that parable that our grief has a place in our love, our optimism, doesn’t outweigh the recognition of the depth of our grief and the love that both of those things stem from sorrow and optimism.
Eric Zimmer 00:22:04 Yeah. Use a phrase in the new book. I don’t know if I’m going to pronounce it right. Adsum
Lyanda Haupt 00:22:09 O, adsum
Eric Zimmer 00:22:11 Adsum. Okay. Yes. Any sort of word that needs pronunciation like that, you can be fairly certain I will get it wrong. So add some talk about that.
Lyanda Haupt 00:22:20 Right. So I have a friend who is a monk in a Benedictine monastery. And actually the process by which they make their profession of vows is usually really sacred. But he spoke to me about it one night and told me this one part where they are asked to commit to this life of psychological wilderness. Basically, it’s when you’re committing to a community, but you are also committing to a certain kind of solitude and psychological depth and exploration, which in a sense is the life that we all lead. You know, where we don’t know what’s going to happen, but we’re asked to commit wholeheartedly to it anyway. And that Abbot says, Will you do this? And the monk who is professing says, assume it’s Latin.
Lyanda Haupt 00:23:10 It means I am here. And I talk about that in the book in relation to I think I have a section called the I am here of hope. Tyson. Like we look at all this tangled complexity, we turn our ear to the other beings, to the beyond human world, to the voices of the trees and the birds and the earth. And we hear the call to presence, to service, to meaning. And we just kind of go, well, what do I do? The first thing is just that response. Adsum, I am here. I’m listening. I’m here.
Eric Zimmer 00:24:17 I’d like to change direction a little bit and talk about attention and being with things in our world in a different way. You quote. Here’s another name I’m going to mess up Paul Ellard.
Lyanda Haupt 00:24:32 I think that’s good.
Eric Zimmer 00:24:33 Yeah. Oh, yeah, that was close. Okay.
Lyanda Haupt 00:24:35 I actually don’t know any better than you, so let’s just. All right. Let’s go with that.
Eric Zimmer 00:24:38 Let’s go with it. All right.
Eric Zimmer 00:24:39 Paul be forgiving. He says there’s another world, but it is in this one. And you also talk about, you know, believing in the power of sacrament, not as a Catholic, but as a human who’s open to the truth that something can be made sacred by the attention we grant it.
Lyanda Haupt 00:24:55 We live in a time, I think, where, especially with a lot of the health based approaches to nature, you know, where we’re looking at the natural world and thinking, oh, if we go outside, we feel better. Oh, when we go outside, it activates our parasympathetic nervous system. And so we are going out looking for something for ourselves. You know, I spent 20 minutes in nature, I feel better, I’m thinking I want to be very, very careful in this time where literally the earth is burning because of, in large part. Commodification in terms of, you know, our extracting our resources for our use and human consumption. I want to be really careful when we’re using these beautiful new sciences that connect our health, the health of our bodies and spirits to nature, that we don’t flip that into another form of commodifying nature.
Lyanda Haupt 00:25:44 And so I’m getting around to your question, which is what we bring to that then, is the idea of reciprocity. Not when I walk into the world, what can I get? But we will receive. But in that receiving, what do we offer in return to make that circle continue to spin and spin and what we offer? It doesn’t have to be huge. It doesn’t have to be, you know, the creation of a new non-profit organization. It can be attention. It can be witness, simple witness. It can be gratitude in the form of praise. And I mean that very expansively, a kind of honoring and recognition of beauty. Just taking that in and loving it and offering gratitude for that. That is one of the kinds of attentiveness that is most important to me. Just like offering our deep, sweet, quiet witness to this earth that offers us so much. And it’s one of the things that we have to offer in return. So often, too, we just impose our own story upon the natural world like we think animals are like, or what they want or what things need.
Lyanda Haupt 00:26:48 And it’s also that attentive listening that can bring us into a deeper communion, where we can respond from the truth of what the natural world is speaking rather than what we impose on it in terms of the human story.
Eric Zimmer 00:27:01 Yeah, I always love that idea of the reciprocity and of recognizing that when I am in nature, as you said, there can be a way in which you could think of me as consuming nature, you know, or I’m paying attention to nature, but it’s also paying attention to me like it knows I’m there. You know, when I say it, I mean, I don’t mean in a in a grand sense. I mean, like, the squirrel knows I’m there. The various creatures, the birds, they all, they all. There is a two way relationship there where they know I’m there. And I love to think about that, that there’s this interplay and, as you said, sort of reciprocity. And I also just love the idea of attention. I don’t know if it was in your book or on a podcast interview, but you talk about the Zen tradition of bringing yourself wholeheartedly to everything that you do.
Eric Zimmer 00:27:49 And as I was reading that line about There’s Another World, but it’s in this one, it made me think of one of my favorite phrases by a Zen teacher. I’ve been a Zen student for a long time is from Zen Master Dogan, who says enlightenment is intimacy with all things. And I love that idea that the more we’re intimate with the things around us, you know, the closer we get towards quote unquote enlightenment or awakening. It’s that attention to something that’s not just ourselves that is that opening.
Lyanda Haupt 00:28:20 Absolutely. And as you speak, I’m thinking about the ways that our modern kind of over culture way of being in society is one that contrives to separate us from that intimacy. You know, just the we are so isolated in our work right now. We’re so removed from the natural world because we are so dependent upon the built environment. There’s a statistic that says that 93% of our modern human lives here in North America are spent inside buildings, and most of the other 7% is spent walking between our cars and buildings.
Lyanda Haupt 00:29:01 Yeah.
Eric Zimmer 00:29:01 And that does not surprise me.
Lyanda Haupt 00:29:03 Right. And so it’s no wonder that we are suffering this sense of disconnection and isolation. In large part, we’re struggling with a sort of mismatch disorder, right. Where organisms are not adapted, they’re not up to speed on a changing external environment here. We’ve spent 99.99% of our lives living in closer relationship with the earth out of doors. And so here we are, spending most of our time removed from that. We’re in this constant stress state because our bodies and our minds are wired to be attuned to the wild earth, and yet we’re separated from that, and we’re in this horrible light mismatch or dysphoria that prevents that kind of intimacy and attention. So that’s why I’m so obsessed with practices that will bring us back into that intimacy.
Eric Zimmer 00:29:53 Yeah. So let’s maybe turn towards some of those practices right now, I’m curious what sort of things you would offer to the general listener out there who says, yes, I do want to be a little bit more connected to nature, you know? And yeah, some of it is because the science says it’s good for me.
Eric Zimmer 00:30:13 And like, we all do things because, you know, it’s why we do yoga. We know it to be good for us on some level, and just to have a deeper connection with something more meaningful. What are some practices that you often recommend to people?
Lyanda Haupt 00:30:26 I’m just going to start at the most basic for people that are living in urban places. We’ll just sort of often ask the question, you know, what do I do? I don’t have trees all around me. I don’t have a body of water to contemplate. There’s no coyotes roaming my neighborhood, which, you know, you may or may not be right about that. We’re in Portland or Seattle. We know there’s plenty of them around Chicago. There’s coyotes among us anyway.
Eric Zimmer 00:30:47 There’s coyotes in Chicago.
Lyanda Haupt 00:30:49 Oh, so many coyotes in Chicago. Some of the deepest research on urban coyotes that took place in Chicago. Yeah.
Eric Zimmer 00:30:56 Okay. Well, I learned something new today.
Lyanda Haupt 00:30:59 Yeah, coyotes among us. But anyway, one of the things I want to offer is that we are connected to the natural world, no matter where we live.
Lyanda Haupt 00:31:05 If we open our window, we put our head out of the window, become aware of the ground beneath us, the sky above us, the wind that teases our hair in the same way it teases the leaves on the trees. The rain falls on our face just as it’s falling on. You know the forest far from us. Just the moon is turning in her face as above our head. Just as all over the rest of the earth. And so just being aware of the cycles of life. Allowing that into our daily life with just recognition. Moments of pausing to acknowledge our place in these cycles is a form of connection. It’s a very radical form of connection, even, and in the way that our culture is currently structured to keep us separate from those moments of intimacy. I also think it’s important to realize, you know, we hear so often that, oh, these little things that we do from our homes don’t matter. You know, we recycle, but what does it matter if I get on a plane the next day? And for that, I want to return to kind of the discussion we were just having, that we act from our highest self, we act from the place that we know is right, and people think that we need to, you know, get in the SUV and go way out to the wilderness to go on a hike to connect with nature.
Lyanda Haupt 00:32:16 But the truth is that ecologically, the choices that we make from our home, how we feed ourselves, how we clothe ourselves, how we heat our homes and use our water, these are the things that tie us into the very, very stuff of the life of the earth. And so we have every moment an opportunity to recognize that constant continuation in the lives that we live. So that’s just the most basic level. But I do have in the book a lot of ways to just, you know, connect with trees and connect with our own solitude. And we can talk about those, but a very first kind of next step beyond the household that I throw out is the idea of removing our shoes and socks and putting our feet directly on the earth. And if that can’t be the soft earth of a woodland trail for you, then the soft grass of a parking strip or an urban park can Bring this very, very lively, neurologically connected part of our body into connection with the complexity that our feet were meant to know and walk upon, and that enlivens our whole sense of creativity and connection.
Eric Zimmer 00:33:30 Before we dive back into the conversation, let me ask you something. What’s one thing that has been holding you back lately? You know that it’s there. You’ve tried to push past it, but somehow it keeps getting in the way. You’re not alone in this, and I’ve identified six major saboteurs of self control. Things like autopilot behavior, self-doubt, emotional escapism that quietly derail our best intentions. But here’s the good news you can outsmart them. And I’ve put together a free guide to help you spot these hidden obstacles and give you simple, actionable strategies that you can use to regain control. Download the free guide now at one you feed. a book and take the first step towards getting back on track. So one of the things I love about your work, and it’s in the very title of the book, is The Life at the Crossroads of Science, Nature and Spirit. And so you are a scientist, among other things. And you know, when I hear take your shoes off and walk on the earth, there’s something the old punk rocker in me just has a little bit of a feeling towards it.
Eric Zimmer 00:34:40 You know, it’s.
Lyanda Haupt 00:34:40 Like crunchy granola.
Eric Zimmer 00:34:42 Yes, yes. Which as I’ve gotten older, I’ve realized I’m very much a crunchy granola kind of guy. But my 18 year old is like, I’m not in favor of this, but I have a mohawk, so I’m giving him some degree. You know, I’m keeping some of my 18 year old self alive. Talk to me about is there science around this groundedness idea?
Lyanda Haupt 00:35:01 Yeah. So, I mean, there’s this word earthing, and I want to tease that out a little bit. Before I wrote this book, I was walking. I’ve taken barefoot walks for years, and I was walking in the wooded park near my home, and there was this other woman who just seemed to be. I was carrying my sneakers in my hand, and this other woman came towards me, and she had her sneakers in her hand, too. And she had this lovely, ethereal look on her face. And I should have respected the silence. But just, you know, sometimes things pop out of our mouths, right? So I said, oh, happy barefoot walking.
Lyanda Haupt 00:35:33 I was thinking maybe I was making a little clever connection with her, and she just kind of set her gaze above me off into the world. And she said, I’m earthing. And she floated past and I thought, oh, well, then I’m earthing, too. And I kind of remembered that phrase. Do you recognize that phrase, earthing?
Eric Zimmer 00:35:54 I’ve only heard it one other time. So yes, I know a little bit about it, but relatively very recently actually.
Lyanda Haupt 00:36:00 Yeah. So after she said that, I kind of thought, wait a minute, I know this word. It’s some kind of trend. And I went home and googled it. And sure enough, it was in the 80s, this group of kind of a motley, science adjacent group of folks explored this idea that, in a nutshell, that the Earth has a negative ionic charge and our human bodies have a positive ionic charge. And by separating our feet from the negative ionic charge of the Earth with shoes that don’t conduct like if we were wearing leather, it would be okay.
Lyanda Haupt 00:36:32 We are causing inflammation and all of the kinds of attendant ailments of that. And I thought, wow, that’s kind of this beautiful poetic idea that we actually need to walk barefoot to be in full health. But I explored it. I threw myself into it. I talked to physicists. I talked to, you know, electricians. I looked at the papers that these people had written in support of it, and unfortunately, all the footnotes that they had referred back to other papers they had written, I couldn’t find anything external. And the physics people I talked to about it said, this is just not how things work. It’s not how things work. So leave that out there in the world. Maybe something will come of it. In the future. We’ll learn something more. But for now, I want to keep the word because I think it’s very intentional. That woman said that I didn’t know anything about the irons and all of that, but when she said earthing, I thought, oh, I know what that means.
Lyanda Haupt 00:37:26 It means walking with attentiveness, with consciousness, something I do intentionally. I’m not just like playing in the beach, which is a great way to be barefoot, but I’m making this choice intentionally to create a connection. And so I love that beautiful word. So I did look further into the benefits of walking barefoot and found another kind of science that supports it, which is biomechanics. It relates with the way that our bodies move in the world, and it turns out that walking barefoot is an ancient human intelligence. You know, it’s one of those things. Until very, very recently, our feet evolved around contact with a complex substrate. Straight. And so we cast our feet as biomechanics. Katie Bowman says, I really love her work. She has a book called Move Your DNA, which I just highly recommend. She says that when we basically put our feet in little casts, which sometimes we need casts, our feet are injured and we need to keep them from movement to protect them. But for the most part, we put them in these highly engineered shoes where we can’t feel the earth, they don’t move.
Lyanda Haupt 00:38:30 And so it weakens all those little tendons and muscles that if we were walking barefoot, would be strengthened. And so when we finally do go barefoot or try, God forbid, running barefoot without just, you know, right out of the gate, without strengthening those feet, we injure ourselves. And then everyone goes, oh, see, we’re not meant to walk barefoot. What we are meant to do is to work up very slowly, to having feet that can be responsive to all of the contours of the earth. Katie Bowman says that most of our walking involves mind unnecessary movement. And I thought, wow, that just hit me really hard. I don’t want to be walking around without having to be attentive with movement that doesn’t involve my mind, my intelligence, my imagination. And when we take off our shoes automatically, we’re attentive. We drop into mind active movement. And we have learned, too, that even though we can walk faster and take more steps, when we put on our engineered shoes and walk on a concrete flat substrate, whether it’s up and down hill or not, when we take off our shoes and we walk on a natural substrate, our minds become more active.
Lyanda Haupt 00:39:35 Our creativity is enlivened, but also we work our bodies just as hard. Yes, we might have to move. So for fitness people, we might be moving slower, but we’re working just as much. But it’s a beautiful, ancient, innate human movement that our bodies and minds were created to experience.
Eric Zimmer 00:39:56 Yeah. It’s interesting. I work out at a gym with a physical therapist. She’s a physical therapist slash trainer, and I started working out with her when I had injuries, and I’ve just kind of kept doing it because I seem to periodically always have something in my body that’s like, ouch, that hurts. But she trains a lot of athletes, like she consults for many of the athletic departments across the country, and there is some of their work where they are very much focusing, particularly on rehab with people about having them work out in bare feet, because there’s something, again, about the biomechanics of it that produces more stability and strengthens muscles and tendons in very different ways. And so, you know, from somebody who’s a little bit more science based, sort of pointing to like, there’s real benefit to this barefoot idea.
Eric Zimmer 00:40:45 And for sure, when you start walking barefoot, I mean, I do pay more attention if for no other reason, because I’m like, well, I don’t want to step on a piece of glass or, you know, my feet are tender. I’m going to be careful. It does bring the experience of walking into much more consciousness. And it reminds me of a Zen idea that I love. It’s called work. Practice, Samu. And it’s a way of developing our attentiveness. And it basically means you take something that you could do without thinking about it. Wash the dishes. As an example, you could do it without thinking about it. Most of us do, but by giving it your full attention, you actually strengthen your ability to pay attention. You strengthen your ability to be present with what’s happening. It’s seen as a bridge between like seated meditation and the rest of life.
Lyanda Haupt 00:41:34 And then in, just like the biological or the physical science of it strengthens our feet. It makes them healthier.
Lyanda Haupt 00:41:41 And that goes up. We know it’s all connected, goes up to making our legs, makes our knees stronger, brings all the joints all the way up to our head and our neck. So can I riff on the philosophical side of this? Sure. So one of the things that because you can tell now, I’m really obsessed. I went down the rabbit hole of barefooted ness and one of the most famous admonitions to take off our shoes is from the Hebrew Testament, where Moses is approaching the burning bush. The voice of the divine and the divine speaks and says Moses. And the translation that we almost always see is take off your shoes or remove your sandals. But I learned when you go into the Hebrew Aramaic history of this word, the word is a stronger word. It’s shed or it is shed. And I think that is a powerful exclamation or proclamation of transformation, right? What do we shed? Snakes shed their skins in the great turning deer’s shed. Their antlers and antler is an organ, you know.
Lyanda Haupt 00:42:45 It’s innervated. It’s blood. It’s the leaving behind of something that was once an organ of our body. Like skin or antlers to make way for the next space. And I thought to myself, when I was writing that chapter, I thought, shed, what do I shed? What if. By removing my shoes. Figuratively, what am I shedding? And I put a big piece of paper and a bunch of crayons out. So every time I walk by, I could sort of think of something and add to this list or something that had come to me through the day, and I had this list of what, you know, by removing my shoes, I remove a certain kind of security, right? A certain kind of beauty, an otherness, a separateness, an elevation, potentially a certain kind of comfort, a certain kind of complexity leads me into this deep, deep simplicity. And so it can be a metaphor for just kind of doffing all of the cultural modes of separation that keep us from deeper connection.
Lyanda Haupt 00:43:46 So taking up our shoes works on so many levels.
Eric Zimmer 00:44:08 Let’s change directions to birds.
Speaker 4 00:44:12 Oh, yay.
Eric Zimmer 00:44:13 I mean, I guess I’ve always appreciated birds, but we have become. We can’t even call ourselves backyard birds because we don’t have a backyard. We simply have a balcony that I have managed to, by hook or crook, string up a couple bird feeders. But the joy that comes from just seeing these birds that close to us consistently is sort of surprising to me just how much we enjoy it, particularly Jenny. Jenny is just over the moon about the birds she’s always talking about, you know, listen to that song and that song and, you know, so talk to me about birds because you’ve written a lot about birds. You wrote a book about Mozart, Sterling. And I think you have an entire book about birds, right?
Lyanda Haupt 00:44:52 I do. My very first book was Rare Encounters with Ordinary Birds. I wrote a book about crows and yes, Mozart Starling. I don’t want to go off format here, but I’m curious what makes you feel joyful about watching birds? Like, what do you think it is for you?
Eric Zimmer 00:45:07 Well, I have always loved to watch animals.
Eric Zimmer 00:45:11 I love to see them move. I mean, I love to think about the fact that they’re interacting with the world in a way that I can’t imagine really. And to try and imagine what that might be like, even though I know I can’t because it sort of stretches my mind. It feels like, you know, I’ve just always loved animals. Generally. I haven’t had animals that close to me, you know, dogs. But, you know, most animals I see are either kind of off in a distance or I’ve seen them on TV or. But here are these birds right outside, and we get to see their patterns be like, oh yeah, that guy comes by every day around 7:00 and sings his little song and he comes with his partner, or he comes alone. And I just love to watch the way they eat. I don’t have words for it. It just fills me with a certain buoyancy.
Lyanda Haupt 00:45:59 I love that I think that you’re hitting on something when you say that you don’t get to see wild animals that close very often, because I do think that birds will allow us to come close to them.
Lyanda Haupt 00:46:10 There’s this thrill of being in proximity to a wild creature who could choose to leave. She has wings, right? They can. They could fly away. And yet here we are, being close together and creating this kind of intimacy. And that makes us feel excited. And there’s this psychological word for something we’re feeling now which is called species loneliness, that humans are so separate from the wild earth that we kind of miss. Once again, that proximity to wild creatures that we have evolved alongside. And here, birds interrupt that species loneliness by coming near or allowing us to approach. I think it’s important to remember, you know, when we feed birds, we’re not really doing it for the birds. The birds are fine. You know, if they’re around, there’s enough food for them. We’re doing it for us, but that’s a perfectly good reason to do it. It enlivens our spirits, and it also makes us more aware of the wildness that’s around us. I mean, they’re hanging out, and then all of a sudden, I also love this moment with birds.
Lyanda Haupt 00:47:09 They have that kind of poetic beauty, right? Being winged, unlike us, most of them, when we’re sitting there and we’re just hanging out with them, we’re like, oh, here we are. Being with the birds, they’re so pretty. I love them. And then they fly. All of a sudden we’re like, oh yeah, oh yeah, they take flight, there’s the sky off they go into this wild world that we are now connected to. They were with us, and now they fly off with maybe a little piece of our heart and imagination along with them. So they offer a rare, rare thread between us and the wilder.
Eric Zimmer 00:47:42 Yeah, yeah. The more I learn about them, the more fascinating they are as creatures. I have a question for you that I wonder about my birds, and maybe you know the answer to this. Maybe you don’t, But I think that I recognize like, we get, you know, a certain set of cardinals that tend to come by, we get a certain set of goldfinches that come by.
Eric Zimmer 00:48:01 There’s some other birds that are more common that I can’t remember their different names that we see a lot of. Do the birds recognize each other, do you think, are they like, oh yeah, that’s that cardinal that comes by. I see him hanging around the neighborhood again. I know birds don’t think like a human does, but I’m kind of curious what their relationship with each other is.
Lyanda Haupt 00:48:20 Right? So for the most part, the birds that we see regularly in our backyards or our balconies are the same birds from day to day. So that’s not always true because there are migration times. So different birds come through and birds can fly, so they can go to different yards. But by and large, the residential birds, we’re seeing the same ones over and over again. And they absolutely recognize the other birds in their close group through a whole variety of ways of apprehending that. Like you say, we don’t always understand. So some birds really connect with one another through vocalizations. Some connect with one another through physical movements that they make.
Lyanda Haupt 00:48:57 And we’ll find like different family groups that have the same kind of physical tics or vocal tics. But it’s also just like, you know, people that look at, you know, a family and say, oh, you guys all look alike. You know, I can’t tell you apart. Or we’ll look at twins that we don’t know and or triplets and we’ll say, how do we tell them apart? And their parents are like, what are you talking about? You know, maybe we think they’re identical, but they’re absolutely not. And so bird communities are like that with each other. As far as we know, there’s many studies that have been done that prove to us that they do recognize one another, or they recognize when another bird from another flock comes in. So yeah, they do.
Eric Zimmer 00:49:30 It makes me think of like how dogs just they key into each other. Like I take my dogs out every morning. And, you know, there are other dogs on the other side of the street that walk by.
Eric Zimmer 00:49:40 And my dog, Benzie is very old and she’s nearing the end, although I keep saying that. So she doesn’t pay much attention anymore. But she used to. But, you know, there’s just certain dogs, they just stop and they’re like, there’s a dog over there. Like, they’re very keyed in. They wouldn’t be keyed in necessarily to me. They’d be like, oh, whatever. They pay no attention. But the fact that it’s another dog, they’re like, oh, I gotta check this out.
Lyanda Haupt 00:50:03 Being a parent, have you noticed that with raising a kid two, you’re out with your two year old and they spot each other. All the two year olds spot each other. And then the same with the teenagers you’re growing up. They all spot each other. They don’t notice the two year olds. They don’t notice the 30 year olds, but they notice one another. And I think that continues on. That’s really fascinating and probably has evolutionary value to find our people.
Eric Zimmer 00:50:25 It probably does.
Eric Zimmer 00:50:27 In your book, you have a number of what you call the tenants of rootedness, and we’re not going to have time to go through all of them. But I thought I might pull a couple out that I wanted to talk about. And one was that truth and fact are not synonyms. Say more about that. I think that’s a really interesting idea.
Lyanda Haupt 00:50:46 We are one of the only cultures in all of history that has conflated truth with scientific fact. Now, I want to be really careful right now, because we are in a time when science is being questioned, and I want to absolutely honor the significance of science in our conservation choices and climate crisis and health. And I’m saying something a little bit different, and that is that sometimes we know things. We know things with a capital N, we know things with our heart knowing and our spiritual dimension of apprehension. And I mean that non religiously. By spiritual I mean those kind of non quantifiable ways of accessing or apprehending the world or wonder our sense of beauty, even our sense of anxiety and grief, all of these things that can’t be reduced to scientific quantification but still have everything to do with human intelligence and imagination.
Lyanda Haupt 00:51:47 So these are all ways of knowing that though we can’t find them in quantifiable or lexicons, language of science, we know that we honor them as a kind of truth with a capital T. It’s sort of like looking at a poem. A beautiful poem. Is the poem factual? We look at a piece of literature, a beautiful novel. Is it true? Did it happen? And or is it factual? Did this really happen? No. But is it true? Absolutely. Is it true in the sense of art? In the sense of that expansive sense of spirit I was just speaking to? Is it true in the sense that we know it in our heart? Absolutely. So the problem when we pit science against what we would normally call spirit. I think that is a false dichotomy. I think that science, as we find more and more of the minutia of how the wild earth works, the more enamored we can become with fascination and wonder. It’s just extremely gorgeous. And so that is in itself a kind of poetry.
Lyanda Haupt 00:52:51 And then when we look at the stories and mythology of science and we bring to it our own imaginations, when we bring that knowledge into our own human stories, then the science becomes enlivened and sold. So I think the problem comes when science is the sole arbiter of validity of any thought or way of being that we have. And yes, sometimes it it has to be. The stringent science is so meaningful right now. So I don’t want to say in any way that I’m diminishing the role of science in our conservation and health choices, but recognizing that in creating whole humans that relate to a more than human world, there are other dimensions of knowing that are also true.
Eric Zimmer 00:53:35 I think that example of a poem and a novel makes a lot of sense. And, you know, knowing what mode of apprehending might be Most useful. You know, as soon as we start talking about like that, we absolutely know something like intuitively, I always get a little anxious around that because that is how often, you know, many misguided people are misguided.
Eric Zimmer 00:53:58 They’re like, I just well, I know the science says this, but I know that vaccines are dangerous. You’re like, well, all right, this is a science based conversation, probably, that we should be having. You know, I used to know on a deep level that heroin was a good idea for me, right? It felt so true. And yet there is a way of apprehending the world and engaging with the world that is not strictly scientific. And, you know, I know I have changed in this way over the years where I’ve moved from feeling like everything should be explainable via science to recognizing that even when science explains many things, it doesn’t necessarily really explain them to me on the deepest level about how life came to be and how things are. There are these deeper mysteries that I’ve become a lot more comfortable with over the years about saying like, well, who knows? This is a mystery that is very alive for me.
Lyanda Haupt 00:54:55 I’m just thinking of a really practical example of something like that.
Lyanda Haupt 00:54:59 Is spending time with a tree. And this is a beautiful practice. Even if you just have a backyard or a city park is finding a tree that you’re drawn to, you know, that you respond to in some way. And then spending time repeatedly over and over again with that same tree. We have this sense of responsiveness. You know, you might be walking along and kind of go, oh, there’s my tree. Just this kind of recognition and then this sense of responsiveness from the tree. If we return over and over again, sometimes we’ll get that sense that maybe a breeze passes over and the leaves are fluttering and you think, oh, the tree is saying hello to me now. Is that scientifically factual? Maybe. But we don’t know that now. And maybe we will come to know that someday. But is it true for me? Is it meaningful to me? Am I in a kind of relationship with this tree that has a poetic truth? That is an absolutely beautiful thing to live under the influence of?
Eric Zimmer 00:55:55 That makes me think a little bit about a maxim that’s often used in psychology around working with your thoughts.
Eric Zimmer 00:56:02 And one of the ones that I found to be the most helpful starting point is, is this useful? Right? You know, because thoughts aren’t exactly true or untrue to a large extent. Now, there can be facts within thoughts that are true or not true. And maybe this is a good analogy for what we’re also talking about. But a lot of our thought is interpretation. It’s meaning based, right? And so knowing that it’s not necessarily strictly true or untrue, this idea of is it useful is a really helpful framework. And if it’s a thought that’s leading me towards being kinder, more compassionate to myself, to others, to responding more wisely, to the world, to all those things, then it’s a thought that’s worth keeping around. And if, on the other hand, it’s a thought that isn’t contributing to any of those things, it might be a good idea to say, well, what can I do to work with this, to sort of move it to the side because it’s not contributing anything.
Eric Zimmer 00:56:52 And I think there’s a little bit of that in kind of what you’re talking about. Like, is the tree responding to me? We don’t really know. I mean, the trees are responding in ways that 50 years ago we couldn’t have imagined. You know, it’s astounding the ways that trees are, are responsive to their environment, that 50 years ago people would have said, you’re crazy. So is the idea that the tree is responding to you strictly factual? Not necessarily. But is it a useful thought? If it brings you into closer community with the world around you?
Lyanda Haupt 00:57:22 Absolutely right. And is it true from a poetic sensibility?
Eric Zimmer 00:57:26 Absolutely right. Because a poetic sensibility is exactly that. I think the novel is a great, great example of that. I love fiction, I don’t get to read as much of it as I’d like with all the work I do for this show, but over the last month I’ve had a lot less interviews, so I’ve been reading a lot of it, and I’ve been thinking a little bit about that aspect of, well, these things aren’t factual, but there’s a truth in them that is deeply profound, that is there and feels very true, even though it’s, to your point, not factual.
Lyanda Haupt 00:57:53 And I also think there’s a innate sort of human sensibility. I don’t want to press this too far when because, as you say, there comes a point when anyone can say, well, I just know this to be true, I just know it. But in terms of things that tend to be ecologically helpful, I think we often have a sense of that. Sometimes we don’t need the scientific paper to tell us that when we plant a tree, more birds come. You know, we have eyes and we have hands, you know, so we know so, so these kinds of things, like sometimes we just have this basic common sense knowing that we don’t have to wait for science to validate. It comes from observation. It comes from attentiveness. It comes from just walking on the earth with a sense of connection and willingness to listen. Going back to that.
Eric Zimmer 00:58:40 Yeah. And like I said, it’s one of the things I’ve loved about your work is you bring a scientist’s view to it. But it’s not the only view that you bring.
Eric Zimmer 00:58:47 I love it, and I’ve often thought about you mentioned the nature studies earlier about where we start to quantify the benefits of being in nature. And it made me think a little bit about kind of what’s happened with meditation and mindfulness in the modern world. Right? We’ve quantified in many ways why it’s helpful, and there can be ways in that in which that strips away some of the broader context that have gone around them. You know, there’s the term mindfulness, right? Because you’ve stripped away everything except that just the thing itself. So there are ways in which that can be problematic. But there are also wonderful ways in which science is backing up. We see this in a lot of the ecological research, right, is that we see that this interconnection that the mystics have been talking about forever is really absolutely true. And so, you know, I kind of tend to like it when different areas of interest of mine sort of align and, and overlap. And I know that to be true for you also.
Lyanda Haupt 00:59:45 Right. And in fact, that was sort of the root of this book. Rooted was a lot of this new science that’s coming out that is affirming that the health of our bodies are strongest when we are in continuity with nature and when we have exposure to nature. We’re learning things like trees do communicate both through, you know, the movement of their limbs and the chemicals that they release in the wind from that down to their roots and the mycelial network. We’re learning that animals have forms of consciousness that we never dreamed, and we are able to observe these days scientifically. What’s funny and what I just kind of want to always be mindful of is, once again, that connection is that science did not discover these things. Science is giving us the mechanisms by which we can understand these things and their beauty and their depth. Things that we could never just simply observe with our eyes. Scientific study offers us this deep, deep window. But what we have to remember is that in terms of again, now we’re going back to the truth, just a basic awareness of a conscious universe, of an animistic world in which beings beyond humans have consciousness, where we are alive and invigorated and creative and affirmed when we’re out in nature.
Lyanda Haupt 01:01:00 These are things that indigenous cultures, earth based religions, poets, musicians have known, and just everyday people walking the earth have known for. Across time and across cultures. Forever.
Eric Zimmer 01:01:14 Before we wrap up, I want you to think about this. Have you ever ended the day feeling like your choices didn’t quite match the person you wanted to be? Maybe it was autopilot mode or self-doubt that made it harder to stick to your goals. And that’s exactly why I created the Six Saboteurs of Self Self-control. It’s a free guide to help you recognize the hidden patterns that hold you back and give you simple, effective strategies to break through them. If you’re ready to take back control and start making lasting changes. Download your copy now. At one you feed. Net e-book. Let’s make those shifts happen starting today. One you feed e-book. 50 years ago we would have said like that trees are not communicating in ways. And you’re right. The Western scientific worldview would have said trees are not capable of doing that. But to your point, many indigenous cultures have been very clear about all the different ways in which these things are alive and consciousness.
Eric Zimmer 01:02:16 And yeah, my favorite consciousness game is to try and imagine what it might be like to be an octopus, which again, you can’t do it. You know, it’s like, what would it be like to have a thousand individually controlled suckers and to be able to change my skin color instantly because my skin can see color. I mean, like, you just are like, well, there’s intelligence there that is so vast and so completely unlike mine that just to even contemplate it just brings me a sense of wonder and happiness.
Lyanda Haupt 01:02:47 I love that because you’re tapping into that idea that, you know, so often humans recognize intelligence just insofar as another animal is like us, you know, if they think like us, if they make eye contact like us, if they can make vocalizations that we can vaguely sort of get a handle on, we think, oh, that’s a smart one. And that keeps us from recognizing all of the myriad just infinite intelligences that are surrounding us every single time we step out the door, but we don’t even recognize because we’re just caught in what looks like intelligence to us as humans.
Eric Zimmer 01:03:20 Right? What is our type of intelligence? Yeah. I mean, animals are so intelligent, but it’s just you have to think of it in a different, a much broader and wider context. I mean, I was at the zoo the other day and I was contemplating flamingos. I love to look at it. You know, I think we all do. If we paid a little bit of attention to evolution and all that, and you think like what? Like, how did we get here? How did we get a creature that looks like that? But you realize, given certain conditions, like this thing evolved beautifully and perfectly. It’s just incredible.
Lyanda Haupt 01:03:50 You know, I love that line, Eric. It sounds like the beginning of a poem. I was at the zoo, and I was contemplating Flamingo. Yeah, yeah. But, you know, all of this is. What if we’re going to use that word hope, which gives me a grown up optimism, is this idea that we are living in a time.
Lyanda Haupt 01:04:06 So we have this rare confluence. Now, all of a sudden, for the first time of this new super modern science that is recognizing this interconnection that the mystics always recognize. Grounding it in ecological science. And so we have our imaginal side, that expansively spiritual side, and the deeply scientific side Excited, affirming each other. That’s powerful. That gives us. That’s a tool. We can use this power, you know.
Eric Zimmer 01:04:36 Yep. Well, we are at the end of our time. So thank you so much for coming on the show. I really enjoyed the book. I really enjoyed talking with you. Of links in the show, notes to where people can find you and your work. And again, I really enjoyed it. Thank you so much.
Lyanda Haupt 01:04:52 I loved our conversation. Thank you for having me, Eric.
Eric Zimmer 01:04:54 Thank you so much for listening to the show. If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring, or thought provoking, I’d love for you to share it with a friend. Sharing from one person to another is the lifeblood of what we do.
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