By Jill Zheng
Tell us something about the natural world that you love and don’t wish to lose.
I love hiking in the woods, listening to bird songs and seeing different shades of greens, yellows and reds in the vegetation. It’s a time to be with other species and appreciate the multitude forms of life that allows our planet thrive. There was also a rare moment in the city of Shanghai when a squirrel suddenly landed on my hand as I was walking on the street. It was a split second of touch, yet a true moment of intimacy (the paws pressed on my skin) felt from our kin. Life is a planetary phenomenon, and its biodiversity is something I don’t wish and we can’t afford to lose. We need to rebuild our kinship with life on earth that’s deeply rooted in evolutionary time and understand our place as a node in the mesh of the more-than-human world.
I think interdisciplinary initiatives like One Planet Podcast and The Creative Process play a vital role in inspiring change. The environmental crises we’re facing also means we’re at the intersection of shedding the old skin of thoughts that separate us from the natural world, and forming a new non-anthropocentric narrative to better understand and thus take action to rescue ecological collapses. Interdisciplinary voices are important attributes in weaving this new narrative, and podcasts are a powerful medium to reach a global audience.