Good Life Project - How to Not Lose Hope in a World That Feels Increasingly Dark
Episode Date: April 6, 2026 If you feel like the world is crashing down, you are not alone in that darkness. This moment of global contraction isn't necessarily the end of the story, but perhaps the beginning of a difficul...t birth.Today we sit down with Valarie Kaur, a renowned social justice leader, lawyer, and founder of the Revolutionary Love Project. A graduate of Harvard and Yale, she is the author of the book, Sage Warrior: Wake to Oneness, Practice Pleasure, Choose Courage, Become Victory.Together, we explore:The "Womb vs. Tomb" Frame: A simple mental shift that changes how you view global and personal crises.The Power of "Breathing and Pushing": Why pacing your effort is the only way to sustain long-term change without burning out.A New Definition of Victory: How to feel invincible and successful based on your faithfulness to values rather than immediate outcomes.Why Pleasure is Essential: The ancestral secret to using joy and sensory experiences as a shield against despair.How to figure out how to stand in your conviction in a way that honors your truth and circumstanceIn a time when many feel breathless and afraid, this conversation offers a practical way to reclaim your power. Play this episode to discover how to move from paralyzed fear to courageous action.You can find Valarie at: Website | Instagram | Episode TranscriptNext week, we're sharing a really meaningful conversation with Rachel Zoffness about why pain isn't just physical, and how we can literally retrain our brains to find relief.Check out our offerings & partners: Join My New Writing Project: Awake at the WheelVisit Our Sponsor Page For Great Resources & Discount Codes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So I think a lot of us are kind of looking around right now with our heads just spinning.
There's this heavy sense of, you might even call it collapse,
or the very least, a constant nagging question of,
what in the world is going on around us?
It's easy to feel like we're living through tough and confusing days,
but my guest today offers a different lens that has personally shifted how I see the world.
Valerie Kor is a civil rights leader, lawyer, and founder of the Revolutionary Love Project.
She spent decades on the front lines of justice and her latest work, Sage Warrior,
it dives into the sick wisdom that helped her ancestor survive their own apocalyptic times.
Valerie is someone who has really looked into the eyes of those who meant her harm and chose
to extend a hand and not a fist, not out of complacency or giving up, but out of strength.
In this deeply moving conversation, we talk about how to find your post in the world.
then why letting in pleasure isn't a distraction.
It's actually essential for the fight.
We explore a fight.
Victory isn't always about the final result,
but about who you become in the process.
So excited to share this conversation with you.
I'm Jonathan Fields, and this is Good Life Project.
We are having this conversation at a quote,
interesting moment in time where I think a lot of people
are looking around and their heads are spinning and they're kind of feeling this sense of collapse
or apocalypse or at a bare minimum they're just asking the question, what is happening here?
You know, no matter where you come from, no matter what your beliefs are, I think a lot of people
are just in this moment of what in the world is going on. And it seems like there's, you know,
there's just a lot of fear, a lot of harm, a lot of concern.
You have this really interesting frame on moments like this,
which is more of like fertile ground than sort of like the end of days.
So take me into this a bit.
The future is dark.
Is this the darkness of the tomb or the darkness of the womb?
What if our America is not dead, but a nation still waiting to be born?
What if the story of America is one long labor?
A series of expansions and contractions, and we are in a severe and painful contraction,
but what if this is precisely the moment to show up in the labor?
What if all of our ancestors who have pushed through the fires before us through colonization and genocide and enslavement and mass incarceration?
What if all of them are standing behind us now, whispering in our ear, you are brave, you are brave?
What if this is our greatest transition?
The midwife says to breathe and to push.
Jonathan, I believe that we are living in an era of transition that our lifetime will be marked by this era of transition.
And just as those ancestors who labored for a future they could not see stayed faithful to the labor, so too are we called to that sacred task.
I don't know how many more turns to the cycle it's going to take to birth the America that is
waiting to be born to birth a planet that knows how to live sustainably with itself. I want
so badly to see those futures, but I've had to reckon, in the last few years, especially every
day now, I've had to reckon that I might not live to see that outcome. And yet,
I can see the task before me, the role that I have to play. And so with ancestors at back and the
children of the future and their children before our eyes, can I show up every morning and roll
up my sleeves and take a deep breath and make the push that I am called to make?
I believe that each of us are called right now to be braver with our lives and braver with our
love than ever before. And the only way that I can stay faithful to the laborer is if
I'm breathing and pushing with love. That's how I get up.
morning. It's a frame that I think so many will not long listening to and then ask themselves,
but how? How do we live with courage and joy and love when everything feels like it's falling
apart? You know, like how, how it seems, yes, you're not along. And there's a little voice,
I think, inside of so many of us that says, would that that were there are a reality? But is it
Really? It's a question, right? What if this is not the darkness of the tomb, but the darkness of the womb?
It is both. I think it is important when you feel that breathlessness and that despair that carries information that is so vital.
It means that you are awake to the gravity of what we are losing every day on our planet and our democracy, the people that we are losing amongst us.
It means that we are awake.
And so the sacred task is to stand in those moments when you can taste the ash in your mouth
and all that grief and all that pain and lift your gaze and realize that you are not alone in the dark,
that we are right on the other side reaching our hand.
Will you take our hand?
Will you take someone else's hand?
Will you breathe and push with them?
We don't go to battle alone.
We don't give birth alone.
So what does it mean?
And that first step is to take another's hand.
and then to decide what is the one step we can take together on this precious day with this
one sacred life what is the one push that we can make together and to trust it and to believe in
it Parker Palmer is a great Quaker elder who's been a godfather to me for so many years and
he once told me after the 2016 election I'm like all is lost all is lost it's the tomb after
all. And Parker said, don't measure your labor based on outcomes. Care about the outcomes. We care so
deeply about the outcomes, but the labor is ongoing. And you are part of generations who are
laboring for a just and liberated world. And so our task is to measure our labor by our faithfulness,
measure our success by our faithfulness to our deepest values. Can you stay faithful to the labor? And I have found,
especially these days, that I cannot labor alone. Like, I need my beloveds next to me. I need my
husband, my children, my parents. I need my community. I need to invest in deep in those bonds of
solidarity so that I can take that step together. And when you ask, like what people ask me,
what do I do? What do I do? What do I do? And the truth is we need people everywhere.
every single one of you, the labor or the fight is happening in the streets and in the courts.
It's happening at our kitchen tables and our classrooms.
It's happening in our churches and our yoga studios.
It's happening in our hearts every day.
Can we stand in that despair and choose love and turn that love into courageous action?
Can we see through the eyes of love?
Can we see through the eyes of the sage and the heart of a warrior?
And I think that is what I believe that we are called to do.
right now when I talk about being braver than we've ever been, what does it mean to stretch ourselves?
I know that I have been stretched since we've last talked. And I notice that every time fear
wants to make me contract, if I can take the hand of a beloved and breathe and push and expand,
that I become more than I've ever been. And so that's what I mean about all of us being called
to being braver than we've ever been, to be more than we've ever been.
And the truth is when we are leading with love, we can free ourselves, we can practice the world
we want and the space between us as we're laboring for that world to come.
I have come to believe that laboring for a more just and liberated world with love can be
the greatest meaning of life.
And so this is an opportunity, a sacred invitation for each of us to be more alike, more loving than ever before,
trust in the labor.
You know, it's interesting you bring up Parker Palmer as well.
I had a wonderful chance to sit down with him.
Probably a couple of years ago now and just explore some similar ideas from his lens
and experience.
Parker's, I guess, he's got to be like around 85-ish now, somewhere around there.
And it was interesting because he was also sharing his journey.
And this relates to sometimes how we show up is that, you know, often the shape of that
changes over time, over the seasons of our life.
He was sharing how when he was younger, he showed up, he was on the street.
He was advocating.
He was a champion of the causes as an activist on the street in a very physically present way.
And over the seasons of his life, that felt like that wasn't his greatest form of contribution anymore.
That he didn't, he wasn't opting out of saying what he wanted to say and felt like he needed to say and bringing people together in community.
But he need to do in a different way.
and more in the role of somebody who thinks deeply connects people in conversation, in sacred containers, and shares that with the world.
Does that land with you?
Oh, absolutely.
Let me tell you a story.
When I was in my 20s, I was in the streets with the bullhorn a lot protesting the Iraq War.
And I experienced a moment of police brutality that, in my 20s, I was in the streets, you know,
my arm and neck and led to decades of chronic pain. I still haven't healed from it. And so I
took seriously the idea that there are multiple front lines and that we all have a role wherever we are.
And so I found other front lines than the streets. I went to writing and speaking and organizing.
And I thought, especially after I became a mama, I said, well, I can't nurse my babies from a jail cell.
So my babies need a mama who comes home every night. That's the most important thing. And that was in
those early childhood years, that that was my post, that was my front line. And I thought that
once you find it, and it's always that. And then this last summer, when our neighbors started
to disappear here in Los Angeles, as our city was selected as the first city to deploy this
force of masked men, to abduct and kidnap people off the streets, I realized my
children were now old enough to understand what was happening and that they didn't need a mama who
minimized risk above all. They needed a mama who showed them what courage looked like.
And so I found myself, I'm in my 40s now, I found myself driving to the federal building downtown
where the protests were happening. This is where they keep people they've abducted.
And as I was driving there, it was everything that you saw in the
use is the helicopters and the rifles and the batons and the tear gas and the cavalry. And I,
I knew what I was driving into. My whole body started to shake. I had the jail support number on my
arm. I had my bandana in my bag for tear gas. My whole body started to shake. It was a little girl
in me who was so injured by that officer who knew the cost of courage and I wanted to turn around.
And it was my grandfather's voice, right? You told me when I was a little girl, my dear,
do not abandon your post. Your post is where deepest wisdom meets your words and actions.
And all that time, my post was elsewhere, but now I knew that the city of Los Angeles needed to see
faith leaders in the streets modeling nonviolent resistance rooted in love. I knew the nation needed to
see it. So that became my post. And there was that little critic, that fear in me that said,
do you know how dangerous this is? You can lose your other arm. You could not come home tonight.
right and the truth that voice of fear in you is not wrong about the threat it's just wrong about the
solution the solution is not silence the solution is more solidarity who can you show up to that
front line with who will have your back and so that's when i called my teammate anusha we're both
there now and it was everything that you saw the tensions were rising between the soldiers and the
protesters and we as faith leaders put our bodies between them and started to sing the old
civil rights songs and everything started to calm down. We prevented so much violence that day. And
and suddenly I get a push from behind me, a rabbi. He's like, Valerie, you pray. I'm like,
oh, okay, okay. She's like, no, pray that way. And she turns me around to face this wall of ice agents
and officers. And I feel that little girl in me shake again. And I look up and
And I remember that the people they're caging can hear us if we sing loud enough.
And so I take a breath and I close my eyes.
I can remove my shoes.
This is how we pray in the sick tradition.
I'm like, the asphalt is hot under my feet.
I'm like, close my eyes holding flowers.
And I start reciting my grandfather Shabbid song prayer.
Thati vaoamanao, Joga, Mare Ramka,
the hot winds cannot touch you.
The hot winds cannot touch you.
you are shielded by love.
And as I was reciting, the people behind me started to recite their ancestor's songs.
And it was as if all of those song prayers of love were flowing through the centuries.
I really felt like it was like a force that was filling our hearts and making the shield.
It was so powerful.
I opened my eyes.
And the officer is this far away from me.
The baton is a few inches away away.
from my heart. And I realized that while my eyes were closed, they had advanced their entire line,
so they were almost on top of me. You know what? I wasn't afraid. I wasn't shaking anymore.
I don't know how to tell you this, but it was as if in that moment I was invincible. Like they could
arrest me, they could beat me. They could even take my life. But they could not end me.
because I was part of a song of love
that began long before we were born
and would continue long after
we'd go and that song of love was more powerful
than any amount of weapons
any amount of oppression,
that song of love
was the freedom that I felt.
The tear gas canisters go off,
the flash bang grenades, a curfew was called
and we have to turn back
but I remember that the people in the cages
they have to stay
and right the solution
is not silence, it's more solidarity. So one week later, the faith leaders, we returned to the
federal building. And this time we brought hundreds of people with us. And we were all carrying flowers.
And like, what happens if not just one person, but so many of us had that feeling of invincibility
and power and demonstrating love above all what happens? And we showed it. We demonstrated it.
We were singing together. And when I spoke that day, I turned to the agents and I asked them,
Who do you want to be in this moment in history?
What does courage look like for you?
What does risk look like for you?
Is this who you want to be?
And we finished singing, and I knew that revolutionary love is leaving no one outside of our circle of care.
Right?
That's what I declare.
And so I turned and we left the flowers for the families, but we also left, I turned and I placed flowers at the feet.
of each of these ice agents and their full military gear and their weapons and their masks.
I turned around to leave. The vigil's over and I hear, ma'am, I turn around. And he gestures me to come
toward him. So I stepped toward him and he says, thank you. And he puts out his hand.
What do I do? In this very spot, you pointed your rifle.
at me. You've held your baton over me. And now you extend your hand to me? What do I do? I had to remember my own words. I wrote,
and Sage Warrior, I wrote, Revolutionary Love is the choice to block your actions with one hand and extend the other,
with the hope that one day you will take it or your children will take it. For the brief high of domination
is nothing compared to the infinite love and joy of true community.
So I took his hand.
I don't know whether that officer will stop hurting our people.
But I want to be the one who believes in that possibility.
That is who I want to be in the story.
The story of what we did in L.A., that summer of resistance started to spread.
And as troops and ICE agents began to be deployed in cities across America, people began to show up.
And this time, thousands of people brought flowers, thousands of flowers left at detention centers.
And given to agents, people in Portland, they added the chicken and the frog.
We were embodying a new way of resisting that was itself showing the world that we wanted, a world of love and joy.
and courage above all.
And here's the thing that the front line is not only in those streets.
The front line is anywhere where we get to choose to be brave with our love.
And so my question for all of us right now is what is your front line in this moment in your
life, in this season in your life, with a sphere of influence you have, the courtroom, the
boardroom, the classroom, the living room, the kitchen table, that what is your front line?
And what does it look like to come to your front line with flowers?
And we'll be right back after a word from our sponsors.
You use the phrase, um, sage warrior in there, which is also the name of your, um, your newest
work. And you also say, I found those words in your book.
When you asked, like, you defined
the sage as someone who awakens insight and the warrior as someone who gathers and leads.
It was so beautiful to see those archetypes, you know, across time and place and in different
forms.
But yes, my last book is called Sage Warrior.
Yeah.
And it's really powerful.
And you've used, I mean, you just shared a deeply, deeply compelling moment.
And if we went back and looked at the transcript,
of like this entire story that you just shared with us,
I would imagine the word that is repeated most is love.
And I don't want to just blow past that, you know.
And this has been a core part of your philosophy, like, from the very beginning.
And it's also, it involves this notion of reframing the quote capital O opponent, you know.
And also weaving in this.
notion of oneness, you know, these kind of really core elements of not just your beliefs,
but how you show up in the world. And these are, again, these are these aspirations that a lot
of people look and say, well, what if I could see my quote, opponent as not an opponent,
but simply somebody else, like where there is some way that we shared beliefs or values
and we wanted the same thing for and from each other, but we just couldn't get to a place where
the mechanism was agreed upon.
And in fact, it may be almost violently different
the way that we perceive it.
What if I could see the other as not another,
but simply just an extension of me and I, an extension of them?
These are ideas where, like, I think all of us have heard them.
All of us have read them.
All of us have been preached them.
And probably most of us not long as saying,
would that, I wish that this was the world
that I live in, but is it really?
And I was fortunate to sit down with And Ande DeFranco a couple of months ago on the podcast.
My dear sister.
Right.
Of course you come up in the conversation because how could you not, right?
And we were talking a lot about her and her relationship to your work and how she tries.
And in the early part of her conversation, she was referencing the opponent.
By the time we came around towards the end of the conversation, she was saying,
my work in the world right now is basically to stop doing that
is to acknowledge the fact that we see the world differently
but how can I see them as me and me as them
and stop even using that label
powerful aspirations
to weave this undertone of love and connectedness
into even moments like what you just described
and then the big question I think so often is
how do we operationalize that?
Like, how do we go past thinking,
that sounds awesome,
wouldn't it be cool
if that was really the way that it worked?
But how do we make this
an actual part of our day-to-day reality?
I think this is a lot of what you go into
in Sage Warrior.
So let's actually just talk about that phrase, even.
Like, let's start out there
with, like, the notion of Sage Warrior.
Take me to tell what this actually means.
Well, I've spent 20 years,
of my life organizing around hate, I have made a promise to spend the rest of my life organizing
around love. And so your question about how do we operationalize this is the question that I am
designing into and organizing around and building. The Revolutionary Love Compass is a tool that we
put into people's hands about how to love others and opponents and ourselves. And we have this
beautiful learning hub with free curricula and meditations and guides for how to take the compass
into your life wherever you are. When we hold the compass in our hands, it requires that bravery.
And I had designed the compass when I wrote my first books, you know, A Stranger. And then when I
wrote that book in 2020, it came out in 2020, I didn't think the world, the world didn't
feel like it was ending. And then it did feel like it was ending.
between the pandemic and the racial reckonings and now the rise of authoritarianism capturing
our country and countries around the world with climate catastrophes upon us, it has felt like
so breathless. And I realized that if I was going to hold this compass, if I was going to keep
leading with love and organizing around it, that I had to go deeper. And so I spent time in
the rainforest with my family. And every morning I would sit next to a river and close my eyes
and ask myself, how did my ancestors survive apocalyptic times? How did they confront authoritarian
regimes and still walk this path of love? In the Sikh tradition, it's a tradition 550 years old,
our ancestors called us to be Synth Sabahi, sage warriors. The warrior fights, the sage loves.
It is an ancient doorway into revolutionary love.
I believe that I feel strangely prepared for this moment in history because I'd spent all that time in retreat, retrieving the stories of those ancestors and what it meant to be a sage, to see through the eyes of wonder, to be able to look up on the face of anyone and say, you are a part of me, I do not yet know.
That is a practice.
Our minds are wired to see the world in terms of us and them.
and is especially rigid in the culture that we live in now.
And so to practice seeing all others as kin is a revolutionary practice that begins within.
To imagine our connection to everyone and everything is to produce a sense of awe inside of you.
And we can't live into it all of the time, but we can drink from it.
In our tradition, it's called Vismad, those ecstatic moments where you realize, I don't know where I begin and you end.
I had that a lot when I was nursing my baby daughter.
I don't know where I end, where you begin.
Lately, I've been feeling it.
As we're marching in the streets singing and the song prayers go on and on, right?
I don't know where I end.
And you begin.
And so those moments of oneness are not throwaway moments.
It's not incidental.
They are insights into the sacred nature of things.
And so our task then is to remember what we drink from when we have those sage moments
into what we do.
And that then drops us into the warrior, the Sepahi, to,
to be able to put that love into action for the people who are in front of us and those we are
accountable to. My grandfather taught me that my task was to face the hot winds of the world with
the eyes of the sage and the heart of a warrior. And that means our ethics and the sick tradition
are not, it's not any list of rules or commandments at all. It's an orientation, a way of being,
a way of seeing that leaves no one outside of our circle of care.
All of that came down to me through from the ancestors, the gurus, the matas, and the babies.
And so this book became a compilation of stories and scriptures and song prayers that I needed
to fortify the sons of pahi and me.
And truly, you know, because what I do is sometimes really dangerous, especially now,
There's a comfort I have and knowing that my children have now an inheritance that I most wish to give to them
so that they can play their role when it comes to be their time and their moment in history to be as brave, as awake, as free.
I believe that we all can become San Sufahi. Oh, we all can be sage warriors, that this is the deepest ancestral wisdom across time and place to be brave with our love.
And I think when we call ancestors saints, we drain them of their power because we're saying that we cannot be like them, but to believe truly deeply that love is our birthright, that you already know how to do this, that we came into the world thirsting for love. We came to the world with the eyes of wonder, right? And we know how to be brave. That first time we spoke or did the hard thing or defended someone, we'd have these capacities within us. And our job is to simply to surface them and fortify them to be.
become more of them. And that's why we're building this movement of revolutionary love across the
country, why we're inviting people. Like you said, this is not the world that it is. And you're absolutely
right, but it is the world that could be. And the invitation is to practice that world in the space
between us every part of my life now, whether it's my husband coming home and he's really tired or
my children throwing a tantrum. I mean, they're out of tantrums now. Now it's more like bedtime,
bed time, bed time, but there are all these moments, right? Inside your own home.
inside your daily life and then out in the streets and then out in the world and with your
public, in all the ways. Everything I see now as an experiment, as a practice space. I have come to
see my life as a series of experiments with revolutionary love. And I think that's the best we can
ask of each of us now. It's like, what do we have to lose? Can you take this compass in your hand?
Can you experiment? And you might be surprised by what you find. I've been braver than I've ever
been and I didn't know that that also would mean being freer than I've ever felt. In a time when
they want to control us, colonize us, suppress, us, silence us, I feel so free and so powerful.
And I want that for each and every one of us who cares. And there's a way to do it. And our deepest
ancestral wisdom shows us how and sage warrior is one invitation to take that into your life.
I mean, so powerful.
And I think it actually makes sense to talk about that word actually powerful.
Power, because this is a central part of what we're talking about.
Power is intimately involved in everything here.
And we have a complicated relationship with the notion of power and also the word power.
It's so often associated with dominance.
Yes.
Power over.
You know, like I get to, quote, control.
You invite a different frame around power,
which is, if I'm understanding right,
built more around protection.
Is that a word that lands?
Care.
Tell me more.
I remember the moment my son was first born
and landed on my chest
and I was shaking and sobbing from that rush of emotion
and I thought this was love, I was falling in love.
And I was.
There was a role for the falling.
But as I was feeling this rush,
I looked over at my mother and she was opening her bag
and taking out her doll and Joel and feeding me.
Like feeding me as I'm feeding her baby as I'm feeding my baby.
And that was the first time I looked at my mother with new eyes.
And I realized that she had never stopped laboring for me
from my birth now to my baby's birth.
And she had never seemed so powerful.
She was teaching me that love was not simply a feeling that comes and goes,
ebbs and flows, sentimental, fickle, anemic, right?
That love is sweet labor, fear.
demanding, life-giving, a choice we make again and again.
And when we make that choice again and again,
it has the power to transform the world around us.
When I think about how terrified I was those early years
raising these small, brown children and a nation more dangerous for them than it was for me
and realizing that for all my tools as an activist,
I couldn't protect them from the racial slur in the street or the country
or the schoolyard, that I might not be able to protect them for what's coming from them.
I was beginning to learn what black and brown and indigenous mothers on the soil have long
learned, that we can only give our children a sense of freedom within in a world that would
deny them. We can only give our children a sense of their belovedness in a world that
wants them to hate themselves. We can only give our children a sense of their belovedness in a world that wants them to hate themselves.
We can only give our children a sense of their power in a world that says that they're powerless.
And then when we do that, when in the space between us as mother to child, as families, as communities, as neighbors, we begin to plant liberation experiments that model what the whole world could one day be.
And I believe that these liberation experiments are not like soap bubbles that pop and disappear.
I believe that there are sound waves that carry far into the future, just the way I'm talking about hearing those ancestors who practice that beloved community on the riverbeds of Punjab 500 years ago.
I hear that music.
And now I want to ask, what does that look like now here in the space between us, right?
So two.
So two, 500 years from now, will they hear our song?
Will they practice?
Will they be inspired?
that is powerful. That kind of power outlasts any actions that are driven by domination and aggression and
oppression. I truly believe this and I believe that it is up to each of us to hold fast to that
conviction now, to our own sense of agency, right? Otherwise, it's a self-fulfilling prophecy.
If we believe we're not powerful, then we will not be. But if, and that's what they, precisely they want.
want us to feel like only those who hold the reins of wealth and weapons in this world hold power,
only the authoritarian who are willing to inflict violence to kill civilians, to let rogue agents
take the lives of innocent people. Like, they want us to believe that they are the ones who have
the power, but it only becomes true if we deny our own. And I notice that when I look at my
mother and think about her power and how she is shaped and changed and sent me into this life,
everything I am.
I can access my own power to do that with and for the people around me.
And that is how imagine multiplying that and building that and that's what movements are made of.
And we'll be right back after a word from our sponsors.
And when you frame power in the context of care,
yes.
Nobody is excluded.
You don't have to wait.
Our circle of care.
That's it.
Right.
You know, it's like because everybody can show up and offer care in even the smallest
way.
And if that is power, it can really never get taken away from us.
No, it's, to love is our birthright.
and that is the most powerful gift we're given as human beings.
And so why deny yourself, the one gift that fills your life with joy?
That's what I've discovered too.
As deep as the despair goes, as the grief goes, as the rage goes,
when I continue to return to the labor with love,
it always brings the joy of community and connection,
of being alive here and now in motion.
in this conversation with you, Jonathan,
oh, that's what it means, right?
To be awake as a sage,
to take the wonder and mystery and magic of being alive
and to be in the current of action together
brings all the meaning that makes life worth it.
I mean, which also makes me think about the word pleasure,
which, again, is something else that you dip into.
Because oftentimes in moments where we feel like
there's a lot of struggle around us,
whether it's this moment or 10 years ago
or something very personal in your life, we feel that we actually, we don't have access to pleasure.
And in fact, sometimes it extends beyond that. We feel like we shouldn't have access to pleasure.
The moment is too heavy. The moment is too important. This is not a moment about pleasure.
Pleasure is taking the energy away from where it should be directed, which is, you know, some form of progress.
You see it differently.
I wish I learned this much earlier when I was a 20-year-old activist in those.
streets, you know, I, my first, oh, all those years where I only knew how to push, I didn't know
how to breathe, I ground my bones into the earth, and I called that service. I was always
comparing my suffering to the people I was serving. And so, of course, I was not worth that.
I measured my worth by how little I slept, how much I produced, and how quickly. And it was, of
course that leads to break down, right? And it was, I realized that this is again where community
saves you. I just remember back in 2016 after that election, that moment again, when you continue
to not deny yourself the kind of life that you wish for everyone around you, it is probably the
greatest act of violence one could commit. And I remember a voice in my head saying after that election,
in 2016, you're not strong enough to live in this world.
And I'm so glad I said those words out loud because it was my husband who caught me,
my mother who caught me, and that's how I first left the country for the rainforest
to think and write and breathe. And the rainforest, they say, is in many indigenous cultures,
like the womb of the earth. Like, it's warm and wet and safe and generative. And I know many
women, women of color, don't have that option. And I'm so grateful that I was able to save my own
life there to breathe and to know that I was worthy of breath. That was the first step.
Not pleasure, just breath, just rest was the first step for me. And that was the beginning of
me understanding that, you know, my baby's in my arms. You are so good. You are so beautiful. You are
you are so beloved, you are worthy of all the gifts and joys and pleasures of this world.
You are brilliant.
He's a newborn.
Like you are, and my husband's like, why don't you speak to yourself that way?
I'm like, oh, I'm married too well.
And I realized I had to practice, right?
That little critic was so loud in my head.
I had to practice.
I had to find the voice of the wise woman in me.
The way I do this and talk to my beloved baby or my beloved, can I talk to myself that way?
And so I got a journal.
And it says every day, wise woman here, wise woman says, oh, my love.
Like, that's what I call my children.
Oh, my love.
So I call my, oh, my love.
You are tired today.
It's time to rest.
You're going to pour yourself a cup of tea.
And you're going to sit down.
I know the protests are happening.
I know you've got to speak at that vigil tomorrow.
And you don't know how to prepare for this conversation with Jonathan, but you don't have to be perfect.
You just have to be present.
She's talking to me every day.
that wise woman. It's been 10 years now. My eldest is now 11. It's been 11 years now of
practicing, listening to her voice. And it's how, it's why I don't have to continue to be in the
rainforest. Now I'm back here. The rainforest is inside of me. The wise woman tells me, oh, my love, rest,
breathe. And then the last few years, she's been challenging me, let in pleasure.
And it was only going back to the ancestors that I understood that pleasure wasn't a nice to have a modern convention that actually our deepest ancestral wisdom was about letting in the experiences that would awaken your senses, that pleasure can actually be a conduit to the divine and the beloved.
There's a whole chapter in Sage Warrior cult practice pleasure, and it tells us.
story of the guru, Guru Armadas, who is sitting in meditation. And all, you know, we're just longing
for that connection, that feeling of connection to the oneness that always is. And as he's connected,
as he's feeling it, you know, the word that comes to his lips? Anand. Anand. Anand, Anand,
which means ecstatic, divine pleasure. To be enlightened, to be connected to the one is not a
detachment from the body, a mind-only experience. In my tradition, it is fully embodied. Your body
quakes with the waking up, right? The sweat beads, the heartbeat, the aliveness of the senses you are
here, you are now. And across time and place, all of these traditions are wisest tools call us to pleasure
through music and meditation and movement and song and certain substances. Mine is chocolate, I can say,
Cacao is my substance, 100% cacao from the rainforest, right?
Same here, by the way.
And sensual pleasure too, right?
How many of us as women especially have been taught to, like, cut ourselves off from that desire, that need.
And to be able to know that all of these are conduits to the oneness that is around us, one not worth more or better than the other, you get to choose the practices that are most meaningful to you.
the practices of anand.
And so once I discovered that, and I'm like, well, my gurus tell me,
then now I'm so much more intentional.
We got a record player.
I got my instruments.
If I'm going to show up in the streets and fight authoritarian forces,
then I got to be, I got to double down on my game when it comes to the sage in me
so I can be the warrior, right?
So now I have music in my life every day.
I have sung it.
I have community that I bring into my house all the time.
I have my cacao in my dusk.
And I have my mint that I inhale for the deep breaths.
Like to be able to take these in, I used to feel so guilty about them.
But no, my loves are not just like, it's not just okay.
It is actually essential.
How did our black ancestors stand in those fields and sing songs of freedom that gave them wings?
Right.
How did our indigenous elders continue to gather around the fires when their children have been shipped to boarding schools and sing and shake and shake and drum?
right? How do people all over the planet survive mass graves and the impossible? Their children
disappeared and this is what I did. I traveled to Brazil and Guatemala and South Africa to study
other authoritarian regimes this last year. And every time there was a horrific story,
you know what the women would do? They would then, the Mayan women, the condomblei elders,
they would take out the drums and they would start dancing. Like they would dance.
Would the graves just a few feet away to declare their sovereignty, declare their freedom,
to let in the pleasure of being alive and saying, we are free, we are liberate, and you cannot take
that away from us, we are sovereign. And that, that is the kind of way we are called to show up now.
And that's why I say, the sage who leads with wonder and joy and let's in pleasure is just as
important as vital for the warrior to be braver with voice and action than every before.
And so as you're listening, like, what do you need more of in your life?
Do you need to deepen the sage?
do you need to show up as the warrior
and who can you do that with?
And I guess part of that is also
taking the time
to really create the space and pause
and ask
of yourself
what is and isn't showing up?
What part of those?
Is there, am I all warrior?
Am I all sage?
And
what am I
what harm am I doing to myself and to other or to the causes that I believe in
by basically becoming the embodiment of one half of this really beautiful, powerful stance
and not all of it together.
That's it.
That's it.
To be whole.
Yeah.
One of the other things I did want to dip into, and I think it kind of touches on what we're talking about here also,
is this notion of, and this is from your last book too,
becoming victory.
You kind of referenced it a number of times
in a conversation, but not directly
in the way that you invite people to show up.
The phrase is powerful and curious to me.
Take me into it.
This was another thing I learned
from going back to the ancestors.
Guru Gobind Singh was our
10th Guru, and he was the one who was charged to fight an emperor who is ruling with authoritarian
violence. And there's a story about how the city of Anandpur was under siege. And the emperor
granted the Guru, swore on the Quran, that he would have safe passage, him and his family. And he's
crossing the river Sarsa in the middle of the night with his children and the last of his
warriors and as they're crossing this icy river, arrows start to fly and they are under siege.
And all of his children are killed and his mother dies in a tower and he's separated from his
family and he's lost everything. He's lost his city. He's lost his family. He has a few people
left. He wanders to the wilderness and he's singing in the wilderness and we still have these
songs that he composed. And when he emerges from the wilderness,
he writes this letter to the emperor that's called the Zafernama, the epistle of victory.
And it says, essentially, you took my city, my children are dead. I seem to have lost everything,
but you are the one who broke your promise to Allah to the beloved. And so who is one?
Who does victory belong to? The guru is giving us a new definition.
of victory. So many people ask me, what do I do? What do I do? And I ask them, well, who do you
want to be? Who do you want to be in this moment in history? And if we are showing up with our integrity,
our deepest values, our humanity, if we're insisting on love above all, then we are becoming
victory. No matter what happens here and now. And that's why I think that moment, for the first time in
my life, I feel like I had a taste of what that was when I was facing those officers and the baton
and I felt invincible. I think I finally experienced what it felt like to become victory in that moment.
And there are moments now since I wish I could say, and I felt invincible since.
There are plenty of moments where I've been afraid, afraid for my family, for the nonprofit that I run,
for the people I'm serving, we're talking in the wake of the most recent murder, and we're
about to show up in the streets again. And so there are plenty of moments where I'm afraid,
but I hold that memory now of what it meant for me to choose courage. And I'm a little bit
braver than I've been before. And I know that those moments of invincibility of becoming
victory are the lasting truth. And I rest in that. And this, too, is an invitation for everyone.
What does it mean for you to become victory?
That feels like both a good question and a good moment for us to come full circle in our conversation.
I asked you this question once before, five or so years ago, maybe at this point, maybe longer.
I'll ask it again.
Some time has passed in this container of Good Life Project.
If I offer up the phrase to live a good life, what comes up?
Is to love.
Thank you.
I love you, Jonathan.
Thank you.
I love you too.
Hey, before you leave, be sure to tune in next week for our conversation with Rachel Zoffness about why pain isn't just physical and how we can literally retrain our brains to find relief.
Be sure to follow Good Life Project wherever you get your podcast so you don't miss an episode.
This episode of Good Life Project was produced by executive producers, Lindsay Fox, and me, Jonathan, Jonathan,
Fields, editing help by Alejandro Ramirez and Troy Young, Chris Carter crafted our theme music. And of course,
if you haven't already done, so please go ahead and follow Good Life Project wherever you get your
podcast. If you found this conversation interesting or valuable and inspiring, chances are you did
because you're still here. Do me a personal favor, a seven second favor and share it with just one person.
If you want to share it with more, hey, that's awesome. But just one person, even then, invite them to talk with
you about what you both discovered to reconnect and explore ideas that really matter, because that's how
we all come live together. Until next time, I'm Jonathan Fields, signing off for Good Life Project.
