• Can You Hear the Earth Crying?: John Seed on PYP 617
    Feb 20 2025

    John Seed was a 3-piece suit tech worker, then a meditating hippie farmer, before stumbling into his lifelong calling as an environmental activist.

    He participated in the world's first direct action to preserve a rain forest in the 1970s. He co-founded the Rainforest Information Center and raised money and awareness to save the "lungs of the planet."

    John soon realized that raising awareness wasn't going to accomplish the mission. After all, most people were aware of the damage humans were doing to the planet, but still weren't taking action to stop it.

    His discovery of the Deep Ecology movement brought new clarity and led to the creation of new forms of activism. With Buddhist scholar and activist Joanna Macy, John developed what's now known as The Work that Reconnects (and Experiential Deep Ecology in Australia).

    This work invites us to honor our feelings, even the most painful and hopeless ones. It asks us to see the possibilities that can arise when we see ourselves as part of, rather than apart from and above, nature.

    In our conversation, we talk about capitalism, economics, advertising, right livelihood, psychedelics, 4 billion years of evolution that lives in each of our bodies, and the distinction between personal biographical trauma and that trauma that every living being experiences on a planet at war with itself.

    I feel so lucky to be able to imbibe John's wisdom and spirit and humility.

    I don't know if I have more hope than before, but I have more clarity, direction, and resolve.

    I wish the same for you, and all my human relations.

    Links

    JohnSeed.net

    Thinking Like a Mountain

    The Work That Reconnects

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    1 hr and 3 mins
  • Non-Sleazy Selling That Works: Ian Ross on PYP 616
    Feb 11 2025

    https://youtu.be/lqbkngcx5Qo

    Let's talk about persuasion!

    Whether in the form of sales, or a helpful coaching conversation, or "street epistemology" for a cause you care about, it's very useful to understand how human beings make decisions.

    Today's guest is Ian Ross, a sales trainer specializing in understanding human psychology and communication.

    In our conversation, Ian debunks the common misconception that effective sales techniques are inherently sleazy. Instead, he argues, sales can be all about communicating effectively so that our conversation partner makes a good decision.

    It's certainly possible to misuse powerful communication skills, as with any tool. (You should see the havoc I can wreak with a reciprocating saw.) And there is a fine line between influence and manipulation — ultimately, it's all about intent.

    After covering the basic principles of sales psychology, which apply to everyday interactions, we pivot into helping me become better at selling my own consulting and coaching services.

    Ian helps me create a process for the sales call, including the right and wrong questions to ask, how to deal with financial issues, and how to end the call with a decision — whether yes or no — rather than a vague and wriggly "I need to think about it."

    Ian's wisdom is invaluable for anyone looking to improve their persuasion skills, in both professional and personal contexts.

    Links

    Vivid Selling on Instagram

    Ian's Substack newsletter

    Ian's Close More Sales podcast

    Chris Voss on the Plant Yourself Podcast

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    1 hr and 29 mins
  • The Straw that Breaks the Camel's Back: Why We "Lose It" Part 1: Dr Howie Jacobson on PYP 615
    Jan 30 2025

    Join me on a morning walk as I provide a stream of consciousness introduction to my latest book project while dodging traffic and pitying looks from people noticing me talking to myself with two mics attached to my jacket.

    The book is about triggers — what causes us to behave in ways we don't like, out of alignment with our goals and values. Like breaking our food rules or buying sh-stuff we don't need or losing our temper with family members and colleagues.

    This is the first of four episodes on triggers, and in it I cover the concept of allostatic load.

    That's the build-up of stress in our nervous systems, which can turn even the most benign or insignificant glance, comment, or traffic delay seem like a life-or-death struggle.

    I discuss the science of stress — how and why it occurs, and how and why it subsides — and how our big brains and modern lifestyles have colluded to turn us into constantly stressed-out beings on the verge of exploding.

    And I briefly cover some strategies for reducing allostatic load, so we can be more resilient and composed in the face of the inevitable stressors that come at us all the time.

    And here are some photos of the construction in La Plana, which explains some of the ambient noise that you'll hear during the episode.

    Want more of this type of show? Got questions about triggers? Let me know in the comments.

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    35 mins
  • How Do You Walk Through Life?: Michael Gelb on PYP 614
    Jan 22 2025

    Michael Gelb returns to the podcast to talk about his latest book, Walking Well, co-written with Bruce Fertman.

    In our conversation, we cover a wide range of topics:

    • the biomechanics of walking
    • how we can powerfully improve the experience of walking through simple mindfulness and imagination exercises
    • why walking is the quintessential human activity
    • the benefits of walking (physical, cognitive, emotional, spiritual)
    • other basic human postures (standing, sitting, lying down)
    • materialist vs spiritual orientation to life
    • and much more...

    Michael makes the case that walking, if done well, is kind of a magic Swiss army knife for life. It can give us the same benefits as meditation, strenuous exercise, yoga, breathwork, and many other "advanced" modalities.

    From the eminently practical (you'll learn three exercises that will have you walking better in minutes) to the deeply philosophical, this is a conversation (and book) that you won't want to miss.

    Links

    MichaelGelb.com

    WalkingWell.com

    Walking Well

    Lessons from the Art of Juggling

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    1 hr and 4 mins
  • Healing Trauma with Compassion and Imagination: Yael Zivan on PYP 613
    Dec 17 2024

    I've been on a memory reconsolidation mission since I was first introduced to it a couple of years ago.

    Two missions, in fact.

    One, to learn as much as I can and incorporate it into my coaching and mentoring.

    Two, to share it far and wide.

    Today, we're going to talk about memory reconsolidation and some of the techniques that you can use to help bring it about for yourself and for others. My guest is my daughter Yael Zivan who has been studying memory reconsolidation and experiential therapies with some of the luminaries in the field that we talk about in this episode.

    I'm so happy and delighted that she is carrying on this mission in her way, bringing healing and support and compassion and love to people thanks to this recent neuroscience breakthrough, that shows us how to shortcut transformation and make it effortless and permanent.

    In our conversation, we dive deep into therapeutic modalities and memory reconsolidation.

    Yael shares her journey in transforming her own trauma into a passion and career, exploring techniques such as AEDP and Coherence Therapy.

    We talk about the importance of self-compassion, understanding schemas, and innovative approaches to healing triggers and old patterns.

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    53 mins
  • Health Fundamentals for Humans: Lucas Rockwood on PYP 612
    Dec 3 2024

    Well, it's getting to be that time of life when I begin to realize that I'm mortal. Next year I turn 60, which, according to the Jewish blessing "May you live to a hundred and twenty," puts me smack dab in middle age.

    I've been whole food plant-based for decades, and I'm pretty athletic. I meditate, and I keep a journal just in case I ever get the urge to write in it. I drink water, avoid tobacco products, drink about a quart of alcohol a year, and wear a bike helmet.

    So you'd think that I'd be going into the second half of life all guns a-blazing, ready to tackle any and all challenges.

    But you'd be wrong.

    The area where I'm weakest is flexibility.

    I'm working harder and harder to put my socks on. When I'm playing Ultimate or Padel, I have trouble bending down to catch a disc or return a ball.

    I'm worried about turning into a caricature of an old man: shuffling around, complaining about the weather and my rheumatism.

    I decided to do something about it.

    Maybe I even mentioned this to my wife, because in no time my Facebook feed was swollen with ads for online stretching programs.

    One caught my eye, because the presenter seemed real and down-to-earth. So I bought a "Science of Stretching" course from Lucas Rockwood, founder of YogaBody.

    Then I realized that I knew Lucas.

    In fact, he'd hosted me on his Age Less / Live More Podcast way back in March, 2014, where I talked about my goal of turning the world into a giant food forest. (Ah, permaculture :).

    We'd first met, in fact, about 8 years before that, when we were both learning the ins and outs of digital marketing.

    And one thing that caught my eye was that Lucas had settled in Barcelona, less than 30 km from where I live. So I reached out, and he graciously agreed to be a guest on Plant Yourself. I shlepped my recording equipment into the city, and we met at his studio and had a really good conversation.

    Mostly we talk about how to maintain healthspan, particularly in the second half of life.

    Lucas shares lots of valuable insights:

    • how our athleticism might evolve as we age
    • the balance between training and injury prevention
    • how to get the benefits of yoga if someone (ahem) isn't crazy about actually doing yoga
    • the power of intentional breath practices for regulating the nervous system
    • the science of flexibility training (and why it's more or less unknown in most gyms)

    Lucas gives us the three principles of flexibility practice, and shares why most of the stretching we do doesn't actually increase our range of motion.

    And he shares three types of breathing and how to apply each one in practice and in daily life.

    We also cover some of the problems in the yoga community, including sexual exploitation. As you can see, our "range of conversation" parallels Lucas' own range of motion, and hopefully the one that I'm developing as I continue to deepen my own practice.

    If you plan on living a full and vibrant life, and you're approaching A Certain Age, this episode may serve you — as it did me — as a wakeup call.

    Links

    YogaBody.com

    Lucas' Age Less / Live More Podcast

    My appearance on the Age Less / Live More Podcast

    Job's Body: A Handbook for Bodywork, by Dean Juhan

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    1 hr and 5 mins
  • The Actual Science of Change: Richard Boyatzis, PhD, on PYP 611
    Nov 19 2024

    One of the things I love about being an executive coach and organizational consultant is how creative I get to be and how many different things I get to try.

    Every year, at least 10 or 20 pretty significant books on related topics get published. They talk about personal performance, about how to get people to change, how to get teams to become more effective, and how to get organizational culture to shift.

    Helping clients navigate change is definitely fun, but it can also feel like an infinite candy shop. It's hard to choose a single approach as the right one, and hard to combine a bunch of different approaches into anything resembling a coherent strategy and action plan.

    And the truth is, when you look at the field of consulting and coaching, we don't have a great track record.

    As in, there's a lot of stuff that people do that seems nice—and just doesn't work.

    I remember when I first went back to graduate school for public health. I had this naive idea that anything that had a good message was good. So I thought that DARE—Drug Abuse Resistance Education; the drug education program where police would come into the community and tell kids not to do drugs—was great.

    And then I started looking at the research that DARE just didn't work. The kids who went through DARE were using drugs at least as much as kids who'd never been exposed to it.

    And then I started looking at abstinence-based sex education and realizing that there were more teen pregnancies there than in communities where kids were taught how to use birth control and how to talk to each other about sexuality and sex.

    Stuff that seemed like it was obvious, wasn't.

    Those revelatiopns made me realize how badly we need science in the social sciences to inform what we do.

    And that is all by way of teeing up today's guest, Dr. Richard Boyatzis, who's written a book called The Science of Change.

    It's a guide for changemakers, for practitioners, for scholars, for academics, for community organizers, for honorable politicians, and for activists.

    It explores key questions relating to how we bring about change.

    What's the recipe? What are the intructions. What are the key elements, and what are the tipping points to pay attention to?

    In other words, how do we put it all together and lead change effectively and not just creatively and heartfeltly.

    It's not an easy book. But it's for you if you really want to understand how to create change the most micro level—the personal—and in concentric rings outward, to the familial, communal, societal, and national levels.

    Links

    The Science of Change, by Richard E Boyatzis

    Helping People Change, by Richard Boyatzis, Melvin Smith, and Ellen van Oosten

    I Heard There Was a Secret Chord, by Daniel Levitin

    This is Your Brain on Music, by Daniel Levitin

    You Can Change Other People, by Peter Bregman and Dr Howie Jacobson

    Outliers, by Malcolm Gladwell

    Start with Why, by Simon Sinek

    This is What It Sounds Like, by Susan Rogers and Ogi Ogas

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    54 mins
  • We are the Great Turning: Jess Serrante on PYP 610
    Nov 15 2024

    According to climate activist Joanna Macy, there are three stories that explain the world we're living in.

    The first is Business as Usual.

    That is, "Don't worry. Everything's fine."

    For example: "Global warming? No sweat — we're going to figure out how to suck carbon out of the air. No worries. The capitalist system will figure things out and the people who come up with the best, most valuable ideas will be rewarded. All is good."

    Sounds reasonable, especially if you consume mainstream news and listen to experts and pundits promoted and funded by capitalism.

    The second is the Great Unraveling.

    As in, "We're doomed."

    And it can sound like this: "The oceans are dying. Fisheries are collapsing. There's poverty everywhere. The climate is chaotic and dangerous. Everything's on fire or under flood waters. There's oppression and war and degradation, and income inequality is skyrocketing. And it's too late; there's nothing we can do anymore."

    Well, I can't argue with any of that. When I read scientific papers on climate science and oceanography, when I talk with farmers — it's hard to feel a big surge of hope about our future.

    And then there's a third story: the Great Turning.

    The Great Turning says, "Let's build a just and life-sustaining society."

    Living into the Great Turning isn't a spectator bet on what will happen, but rather a decision to get onto the field of play to affect the outcome.

    And that's what my guest, Jess Serrante, and I, cover in this conversation.

    So if you have been in despair and rage, bewilderment, and depression; or if you're thinking, if only we had elected the other folks then everything would be fine — this third story will offer you a way forward.

    Links

    We Are the Great Turning Podcast

    JessSerrante.com

    Jess Serrante on Instagram

    "Wild Geese," by Mary Oliver

    An amazing Padel point

    YogaBody.com

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    1 hr and 16 mins