Naturalist Terry Tempest Williams brings meaning and direction to the grief around ecological loss and climate change. She’s a self-described “citizen writer” rooted in the American West, and she draws connections between fierce love and hard work — both in the natural world and the human world. “It all comes down to relationships, to place, to paying attention, to staying, to listening, to learning — of a heightened curiosity with other,” Williams says.
Williams is a writer-in-residence at Harvard Divinity School. Her books include “When Women Were Birds: Fifty-four Variations on Voice,” “Refuge: An Unnatural History of Family and Place,” and most recently, “The Hour of Land: A Personal Topography of America’s National Parks.”
Find the transcript at onbeing.org.
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The Universe Participates in the Mystery of God | Guy Consolmagno and George Coyne
I Feel, Therefore I Am | Eve Ensler
We Reclaim Abandoned Spaces | Shane Claiborne
We Choose Our Own Tribes | Seth Godin
Spirituality Is Enfolded Into the Act of Living | Sylvia Boorstein
The Good in the Other, the Doubt in Ourselves | Frances Kissling
The Inner World Is a Great, Undiscovered Terrain | Pico Iyer
Present to Life, Moment by Moment | Jon Kabat-Zinn
The Paradox of Suffering and Love | Kate Braestrup
Enriched by Difference | Jonathan Sacks
The Hidden Hand of the Equations | Brian Greene
The Desire to Know Each Other | Elizabeth Alexander
Compassion for Our Bodies | Matthew Sanford
Beauty Is an Edge of Becoming | John O'Donohue
Mapping Meaning in a Digital Age | Maria Popova
Courage Is Born from Struggle | Brené Brown
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