4.8 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 3 May 2023
⏱️ 56 minutes
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How might we honor and follow the authentic call of our purpose? This week, guest Rachel Cargle shares in a rich and enthralling conversation with Ayana that calls forth themes of rootedness, truth, and renaissance. Rachel honors a rootedness that comes from deep connection to ancestry, to Blackness, and to the earth, and she recognizes the way the earth and its cycles offer us examples of what presence and reciprocity look like.
As Rachel points out in her forthcoming book A Renaissance of Our Own, we are in need of a renaissance. Attuned to years of intense work around race and racial consciousness within the United States, Rachel uses the dreams and desires from this time as the raw materials for revolution, Rachel envisions a collective renaissance that centers on intergenerational conversation. Rooted in trust, how might we reimagine this world together?
Rachel Elizabeth Cargle is an activist, entrepreneur, and philanthropic innovator. She is the founder of The Loveland Group; a family of companies including Elizabeth’s Bookshop & Writing Centre, a literary space that celebrates marginalized voices and The Great Unlearn, an adult learning platform that centers the teaching of BIPOC thinkers. In 2018, she founded The Loveland Foundation, offering free access to mental health care for Black women and girls. Cargle is a regular contributor to Cultured Magazine, Atmos, and The Cut, and her work has been featured in The Washington Post, The New York Times, and The New Yorker. Her new book, A Renaissance of Our Own: A Memoir and Manifesto on Reimagining, comes out in the U.S. May 16th, 2023.
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Music by Eliza Edens and Mikayla McVey (generously provided by The Long Road Society Record Label). Visit our website at forthewild.world for the full episode description, references, and action points.
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0:52.8 | Hello and welcome to For the Wild podcast. I'm Maiana Young. |
0:59.9 | Today we are speaking with Rachel Cargill. That we aren't just this |
1:06.0 | unfixable thing, we are a soil that can be replanted and nourished, and the more we put our |
1:12.8 | energy and effort and show up in community to do that for others who we see it in, |
1:19.2 | I think we can really take the earth as a muse. Rachel Elizabeth Cargill is an activist, |
1:24.9 | entrepreneur, and philanthropic innovator. She is the founder of the Loveland group, |
1:30.8 | a family of companies including Elizabeth's Bookshop and Writing Center, a literary space that |
1:36.9 | celebrates marginalized voices and the great unlearn, an adult learning platform that centers |
1:43.7 | the teaching of BIPOC thinkers. In 2018, she founded the Loveland Foundation, offering free access |
1:51.4 | to mental health care for black women and girls. Cargill is a regular contributor to cultured |
1:57.7 | magazine at most in the cut, and her work has been featured in the Washington Post, the New York |
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