AEWCH 179: DEAN SPADE or HOW TO LIVE WITH SPIRITUALITY AND ORGANIZING (AT THE SAME TIME)
I talk with organizer and activist Dean Spade about spirituality in organizing on the fifth installment of my How To Live in 2022 series!

I talk with organizer and activist Dean Spade about spirituality in organizing on the fifth installment of my How To Live in 2022 series!
In the fourth of my How To Live in 2022 series, I talk with Jessica Dore - tarot reader, author, and mystic philosopher.
I talk with philosopher and writer Zena Hitz about the importance of learning for its own sake in this third episode in a series on How To Live,
I talk about the radical proposition of reincarnation.
On part 1 of my How To Live in 2022 series, I talk with occult scholar Mitch Horowitz about how to use the 7 Hermetic Principles in your daily life.
I talk with death expert and Ask A Mortician host Caitlin Doughty about the year about to die and what we need to leave behind as we move into 2022.
I'm so proud to share with you a comprehensive introduction and exploration of Irish mystic philosopher John Moriarty's work. The episode is a recording of the event I curated at the National Concert Hall, Republic of Birds, featuring me, Simone George, Mary McGillicuddy, and Dónal Ó Céilleachair.
I talk with scientific genius James Lovelock about the Gaia theory, the computer beings that will save us from climate change, and Rudolf Steiner.
A live episode with Una Mullally and Andrea Horan of the United Ireland podcast, talking exercises you can do to start creating utopia now.
I talk with archaeologist and co-author (with AEWCH 99 guest, David Graeber) of The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity, David Wengrow!
I talk with master of horror Ramsey Campbell about credulity and violence in horror narratives. Happy Halloween!
I break down Jacques Lacan's psychoanalysis/philosophy with theologian Peter Rollins + we discuss how it can be applied to culture/politics/economy.
I talk with the hosts of the wildly popular Weird Studies podcast about the philosophy of the weird.
To celebrate Michaelmas, I discuss what evil is (and isn't) and how to overcome it.
I talk with philosopher, historian, nature writer, and memoirist Philip Hoare about animals (especially whales), and nature (especially water).
I talk with journalist, author, and filmmaker Jon Ronson about walking away from snark, violence, and cruelty - even when we're anxious.
I talk about compassion and love with forensic psychiatrist Gwen Adshead, whose patients include serial killers and other violent offenders.
I talk with my best friend and (yikes!) ex-boyfriend - game designer and musician Jeb Havens - about the way love transforms us and also what a terrible boyfriend I was.
I talk with political journalist and documentarian Abby Martin about the love behind all activism and social change.
I talk with creator of The Midnight Gospel and The Duncan Trussell Family Hour, Duncan Trussell, about love and heartache.
I talk with bestselling horror author Paul Tremblay about why horror moves and repels us.
I talk with poet and editor Daniel Poppick about conversation and the way poetry evades the loss of possibility.
I talk about the problems with environmental narratives and conservationism with science writer Michelle Nijhuis.
I talk about the occult view on evolution & death, and especially what that means for our concept of extinction.
I talk timeline jumping, freedom, love, individuated spirituality, and more with energy mechanics worker Pilar Lesko.
I talk about the occult potency of James Joyce's Ulysses in conjunction with my new online book club, Ulysses f or the Rest of Us, for the Museum of Literature Ireland!
I talk with occult and paranormal scholar Terje Simonsen about the uses and misuses of the paranormal.
Writer/artist/activist Una Mullally returns to AEWCH to talk utopia, folkloric animals, and the radical changes ahead.
On the 150th episode (!!!) I talk about what happens after we die from an occult perspective, and why it matters for our politics and philosophies.
I talk with author Carmen Maria Machado about the way desires always outrun us, about horror, about abuse narratives, and about genre.