Reimagining Ourselves at the End of Our World: Kinship, Interconnection, and Spirituality in the Metacrisis with Samantha Sweetwater
The Great Simplification with Nate Hagens
Nate Hagens
4.8 • 549 Ratings
🗓️ 24 November 2025
⏱️ 94 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Over the past decade, the world has become increasingly chaotic and uncertain – and so, too, has our cultural vision for the future. While the events we face now may feel unprecedented, they are rooted in much deeper patterns, which humanity has been playing out for millennia. If we take the time to understand past trends, we can also employ practices and philosophies that might counteract them – such as focusing on kinship, intimacy, and resilience – to help pave the way for a better future. How might we nurture the foundations of a different kind of society, even while the end of our current civilization plays out around us?
In this episode, Nate is joined by guide and author Samantha Sweetwater to explore how separation is at the root of the metacrisis and how nurturing interconnection, relationships, and ecological maturity act as foundational components for systems change. Samantha delves into the distinction between power of life and power over life, emphasizing the need for personal transformation that aligns with collective evolution. She also describes how we could shift our cultural focus from the hero's journey to a kinship journey through the practices of remembering, reconnection, and tending to collective emergence.
How might we reimagine humanity's ecological role as that of stewards, rather than domination? Could focusing on reconnection, rather than separation, help us bridge the polarizing divides that currently prevent many of us from working together? And how might this work of remembering, which begins with ourselves, ripple out into stronger connections with our loved ones, communities, and ultimately to humanity and life as a whole?
(Conversation recorded on October 1st, 2025)
About Samantha Sweetwater:
Samantha Sweetwater is a wisdom guide, author, and founder of One Life Circle—a ministry of remembering. She works at the fertile nexus where unraveling systems make way for emerging forms of kinship, leadership, and value. For over three decades, she has facilitated individuals and organizations across five continents through journeys of personal, cultural, ecological, and spiritual emergence. She mentors leaders in business, technology, and finance, helping them to navigate awakening, develop systemic wisdom, and align impact with regenerative futures.
Founder of Dancing Freedom and Peacebody Japan, she sparked a global movement of embodied awakening and has trained hundreds of facilitators. She has also been a seed farmer—a practice that taught her the rigors of tending the real. She holds an MA in Wisdom Studies, a BA in Social Theory and Dance, and has been initiated into indigenous lineages of Africa, Latin America, and Turtle Island.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | underlying the crises of crises is the way in which we've structured our world according to |
| 0:07.3 | the logic of separation or the idea that anything can be separated from anything else. |
| 0:12.4 | We're in an epochal shift from the hero's journey as the primary narrative of personal |
| 0:17.9 | development to what I call a kinship journey. The hero's journey begins |
| 0:22.5 | when you realize that you need to understand yourself, which a lot of people's processes |
| 0:28.3 | does begin there. And the kinship journey is a journey of recognizing that your life can't actually |
| 0:34.3 | be meaningful if you don't find how you're part of the ecology in service to |
| 0:40.2 | something larger than yourself. |
| 0:44.5 | You're listening to the Great Simplification. I'm Nate Hagen's. On this show, we describe how |
| 0:50.4 | energy, the economy, the environment and human behavior all fit together and what it might |
| 0:56.2 | mean for our future. By sharing insights from global thinkers, we hope to inform and inspire |
| 1:02.3 | more humans to play emergent roles in the coming great simplification. |
| 1:19.0 | Today I am rejoined by a ceremonial guide and educator Samantha Sweetwater to discuss her new book titled True Human, which offers a path for sensemaking through the turbulence of coming |
| 1:25.5 | decades in hopes of fostering a future worth loving |
| 1:28.8 | and fighting for. |
| 1:30.7 | Samantha Sweetwater is a master facilitator, executive coach, and founder of One Life Circle, |
| 1:36.2 | a ministry of remembering. |
| 1:38.3 | For over three decades, Samantha has guided individuals and organizations across five continents |
| 1:43.1 | through journeys of personal, |
| 1:45.1 | cultural, ecological, and spiritual regeneration. In this episode, she explains why she sees |
| 1:51.8 | the metacrisis as a spiritual opportunity calling us to cultivate relational intelligence, |
| 1:58.2 | as well as moral imagination. At the core of Samantha's work, |
... |
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