Green Dreamer: Seeding change towards collective healing, sustainability, regeneration

Kaméa Chayne
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Mar 19, 2026 • 59min

Solaris J. Capehart: Turning toward one another amid times of crisis

How do we navigate questions around staying to resist, versus relocating to find home — in a time when certain places may no longer feel safe for certain bodies? What might it look like to push back against gentrification as a community? And how do we confront the complicity of our entanglement in systems of oppression, extraction, and displacement?In this episode, Green Dreamer’s Kaméa Chayne speaks with Solaris J. Capehart, a Liberian poet who works alongside their neighbors to nurture The Garden Abolitionist Bookstore & Community Well.Join us as we explore how gentrification is wrapped up in particular ideals of advancement and particular visions of quality of life that are not neutral; how we can continue showing up for ourselves and our communities during precarious times; and more.We invite you to…tune in and subscribe to Green Dreamer via any podcast app;tap into our bonus extended and video version of this conversation on Patreon here;and read highlights from these conversations via Kaméa’s newsletter here.Song feature: “I Am” ft. India Arie by Beautiful Chorus
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Mar 5, 2026 • 56min

Zach Weiss: Restoring watersheds, revitalizing community

Zach Weiss, founder of Water Stories and watershed restoration practitioner, discusses how water shapes landscapes and communities. He explains the watershed death spiral, decentralized water retention, making landscapes spongy with agroforestry, and practical local actions like rain gardens and community-built recharge. The conversation highlights rapid restoration wins and community sovereignty through water work.
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Feb 19, 2026 • 1h 7min

Vanessa Machado de Oliveira: Sensing into collapse and what it is asking of us

Vanessa Machado de Oliveira, scholar and author of Hospicing Modernity and Outgrowing Modernity, explores how to sit with collapse without quick fixes. She discusses seeing crisis as cumulative consequences, the limits of written literacy, and the need for metabolic, place-based practices. Short, probing reflections invite feeling, relational maturity, and slow communal work amid urgency.
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Feb 10, 2026 • 46min

Matthew Wolf-Meyer: Unsettling disgust and how it keeps us apart

Where do our senses of disgust come from? What does it mean to interrogate and unsettle the ways that our senses of disgust may have been shaped? And how has the Standard American Diet limited curiosity while reinforcing certain social hierarchies?In this episode, we welcome Matthew Wolf-Meyer, the author of American Disgust: Racism, Microbial Medicine, and the Colony Within.Join us as we explore the social and biological histories of our most visceral emotion, how disgust has been used as a tool of settler colonialism, and more.We invite you to…tune in and subscribe to Green Dreamer via any podcast app;tap into our bonus extended and video version of this conversation on Patreon here;and read highlights from these conversations via Kaméa’s newsletter here.Song feature: “Peaches” by Isla Greenwood (@islagreenwood on Instagram)
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Jan 24, 2026 • 47min

Manulani Aluli Meyer: Nurturing untaxable relationships of mutual sharing

Why have the majority of coconut trees across the Hawaiian islands not been allowed to bring coconut fruit into maturity? What does it mean to nurture communities of sharing and caring that are more relational, less transactional, and therefore less taxable? And how do Hawaiian ways of knowing — situating the intellectual and sensorial in the biocultural — fundamentally differ from Western epistemologies?In this conversation, Green Dreamer’s kaméa chayne is joined by Dr. Manulani Aluli Meyer, the author of Hoʻopono: Mutual emergence, and co-director of NiU Now!, a community cultural agroforestry movement emerging to affirm the importance of niu (coconut) and uluniu (coconut groves).Tune in as we explore the biocultural significance of coconut groves in Native Hawaiian culture, how the ongoing work of revitalizing uluniu supports community food sovereignty in Hawaiʻi, and more.We invite you to…tune in and subscribe to Green Dreamer via any podcast app;tap into our bonus extended and video version of this conversation on Patreon here;and read highlights from these conversations via Kaméa’s newsletter here.Song feature: “E ʻOlu” by Pohai (ft. Pulama), via Ohana Records
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Jan 19, 2026 • 46min

[BONUS] Dean Spade x adrienne maree brown: Nurturing relationships within resistance movements

Today, we are doing an episode swap with Dean Spade's podcast, Love in a F*cked Up World, featuring his conversation with adrienne maree brown!Dean’s show rests on this acknowledgment that social and resistance movements are rooted in relationships and are only as strong as they are — so he explores what it means to build the skills we need for creating and sustaining strong relationships.If you enjoy this episode, please go check out his podcast, book of the same title, and Patreon as well where they do live events and some bonus content not shared on other more hostile platforms. You can learn more at patreon.com/deanspadeThanks for tuning in, and I’ll look forward to catching you again next week with our regular programming!
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Jan 8, 2026 • 1h 8min

Dean Spade: Radical love and solidarity in the face of growing repression

What does it mean to bypass formalized structures of change-making and to engage in mutual aid? How does the philanthropy-nonprofit-industrial complex itself discourage systemic change? And how do we balance participation in immediate care response with the less visible, longer term, more mycelial work of rewiring community power?In this episode, Green Dreamer’s kaméa chayne speaks with Dean Spade of Mutual Aid and Love in a Fucked Up World: How to Build Relationships, Hook Up and Raise Hell Together.Join us as we explore what it means to honor difference and expertise in activism without replicating oppressive hierarchy, reflect on lateral conflicts within the messy terrains of movement building, and more.We invite you to…tune in and subscribe to Green Dreamer via any podcast app;tap into our bonus extended and video version of this conversation on Patreon here;and read highlights from these conversations via Kaméa’s newsletter here.Song features: “Earth Dog” and “Peaches” by Isla Greenwood (@islagreenwood on Instagram)
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Dec 18, 2025 • 1h 4min

Dr. Jennifer Mullan: Decolonizing healing and honoring our sacred rage

Dr. Jennifer Mullan, a psychotherapist and author known as 'the Rage Doctor,' delves into the concept of sacred rage and its importance in the face of injustice. She discusses the necessity of grounding practices to navigate trauma, emphasizing the need for rest as resistance. Mullan distinguishes between sacred and blind rage and advocates for community support in emotional crises. Her insights on creating rituals to honor rage and the power of collective action offer a transformative approach to mental health and activism.
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Dec 4, 2025 • 1h 2min

Ixchel Lunar: Decolonial time and reclaiming flow as a birthright

What have been the impacts of colonial time on individual well-being and community dynamics? What does it mean to reclaim the state of flow as a birthright? And how can rethinking our perceptions of time enable us to experience life with deeper attunement, responsiveness, and senses of aliveness?In this episode, Green Dreamer’s kaméa is joined by Ixchel Lunar, an Indigenous-Time Ecologist and medicine guide, who guides us to explore the challenges of burnout in a fast-paced world and the historical context of how colonialism has shaped our perception of time.Join us as we unravel the historical, biocultural layers of decolonial time, and ask ourselves: In such heavy times often demarcated by urgency, purpose, and overwhelm, what can we learn from slowing down and quieting our minds, honoring space for play and pleasure?We invite you to…tune in and subscribe to Green Dreamer via any podcast app;tap into our bonus extended and video version of this conversation on Patreon here;and read highlights from these conversations via Kaméa’s newsletter here.Song features:“Time” by Kolinga feat. Booboozzz' All Stars“Grandmother (I am the Earth)” by Ayla Schafer
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Nov 24, 2025 • 47min

Thomas Parker: Taste as biocultural, relational, and experiential

Why is it that cuisines have historically been dismissed as a serious field of study? How have social factors, such as cultural norms and class, influenced people’s perceptions of the prestige or disgust of different foods across different times? And how are acquired tastes and market demands for food shaped by the broader food landscape that people are situated within?In this episode, Green Dreamer’s kaméa chayne speaks with Thomas Parker, whose latest book is Paranatures in Culinary Culture: An Alimentary Ecology.Join us as we explore what is possible when we deepen our connections with the sources of our foods, and what it means to understand taste as multi-sensorial, experiential, and context-dependent — not just based on the objective biochemical compositions of what we ingest.We invite you to…tune in and subscribe to Green Dreamer via any podcast app;tap into our bonus extended and video version of this conversation on Patreon here;and read highlights from these conversations via Kaméa’s newsletter here.Song feature: “I am the Earth” by Olivia Mancuso (@oliviamancusomusic)

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