A digital campfire for meaningful dialogue about life, purpose, society, and all the things that make us human. A space for real, unfiltered conversations with everyday humans doing fascinating things. From artists and thinkers to activists, immigrants, and dreamers, people who may not be household names, but whose stories hold profound lessons about what it means to be alive right now, on this planet
A digital campfire for meaningful dialogue about life, purpose, society, and all the things that make us human. A space for real, unfiltered conversations with everyday humans doing fascinating things. From artists and thinkers to activists, immigrants, and dreamers, people who may not be household names, but whose stories hold profound lessons about what it means to be alive right now, on this planet
Today’s episode explores the intersections of identity, migration, cultural adaptation, Eurocentrism, and reclamation through the lived experience of Rana: a Lebanese, Egyptian, born in the Congo, now navigating life in the Netherlands.
We examine belonging not as assimilation but as a process of decolonization, of peeling back the imposed layers and returning to the body as a site of memory, truth, and self-definition.
In our conversation, we discuss:
• The psychological and emotional impact of growing up between cultures
• The “switching” mechanisms children of diaspora develop to survive
• The expectations of Dutch tolerance vs. the reality of social exclusion
• How disappointment can become a catalyst for deeper self-inquiry
• Decolonization as an embodied experience, not an intellectual one
• Dance, food, and clothing as forms of cultural continuity and resistance
• The concept of “de-shaming” inherited identity
• How to build community when your identity doesn’t fit neatly anywhere
We end the episode by reframing belonging itself: not as fitting in, not as blending, but as freedom, and a self-rootedness that cannot be taken away.
If you are navigating intercultural identity, diaspora living, or the complexity of selfhood in globalized spaces, this conversation offers insight, language, and grounding.
What does it mean to be human in a world that moves faster than our ability to feel? In this very first episode, your host, Onyinye Ijeh (me!) introduces Interesting People (of Earth), a digital campfire for meaningful dialogue about life, purpose, culture, and the messy, beautiful layers of being alive right now. This episode is part reflection, part origin story. I share how the podcast came to life, from my early YouTube influences and years working in International Development, to rediscovering the art of listening in a world obsessed with reacting. Themes explored include: The meaning of authenticity in a filtered world Identity, belonging, and creativity Emotional intelligence as a baseline, not a bonus Humor, humility, and the absurdity of existence * The power of nuance in modern discourse If you’ve ever wanted to slow down, think deeply, and reconnect with what makes us human, welcome home. Produced by O.R.I. Media🎧 New episodes every week Follow @wontonamera and @interestingpplofearth for more conversations that make you think.