The Earth has been teaching slowness since the beginning—we just forgot to listen. In this episode about slow living, mindfulness, and sustainable personal growth, we explore three lessons nature offers: why real transformation happens underground, why rest and low-energy seasons aren't failures, and why small consistent daily habits matter more than dramatic life changes.
If you've been struggling with burnout, feeling overwhelmed, or rushing through life trying to keep up, this is your invitation to remember what the Earth never forgot. Perfect for anyone seeking work-life balance, stress relief, and a more intentional life.
In this tender threshold between years, we explore what it means to live unrushed—not as an ideal, but as a practice of staying with yourself when the season asks something hard.
This episode honors the complexity of the holidays: the joy and the grief, the togetherness and the tension, the pressure to be ready for a new year when your body is asking you to rest.
Drawing on Mapuche wisdom and the concept of küme mogen (living in right relationship), we remember that rushing isn't just about speed—it's about being out of relationship with your body, your grief, and the season's natural pace.
Includes a gentle embodied practice for coming back to your own rhythm, even in the middle of everything.
For those navigating loss, difficult family dynamics, or simply needing permission to move at your own pace—this one's for you, mija.
Your nervous system is tired — not broken, not weak, not failing. Just tired from holding too much for too long.
In this episode, we explore nervous system fatigue, burnout, and chronic stress through the lens of slow living, ancestral wisdom, and embodied healing. This is a gentle conversation for anyone who feels exhausted by constant urgency — especially immigrants, children of immigrants, caregivers, cycle-breakers, and those who have learned to survive in hyper-responsibility.
Through breath, personal reflection, and lived experience, this episode reframes nervous system exhaustion as adaptation rather than failure. We also name a deeper truth: much of what is now called “nervous system regulation” comes from Indigenous lineages that were never meant to be extracted, optimized, or rushed.
This episode invites you to slow down without guilt, reconnect with your body, and return to healing as relationship — not another thing to fix.
You’ll also be guided through a simple, grounding practice with plant relatives — a small ceremony you can do anywhere, reminding you that rest, presence, and connection are already within reach.
Perfect for listeners interested in:
nervous system healing, burnout recovery, slow living, trauma-informed wellness, Indigenous wisdom, ancestral healing, rest practices, and embodied spirituality.
Listen while driving, walking, or resting. Ceremony meets you where you are.
In this episode, we explore slowness not as a luxury, but as ceremony—a way of returning to ourselves in a world that keeps asking for more. Through story, reflection, and gentle guidance, I share what it means to reclaim presence as a first-generation woman reconnecting with her ancestral rhythms. Together we walk through the core principles of slow living, turning everyday tasks into moments of intention and reverence. Whether you’re driving, moving through your day, or listening with both feet on the ground, this episode offers practical, embodied ways to slow down, breathe, and remember yourself again.
If this episode speaks to you, share it with someone who needs the reminder that they don’t have to rush their way through life.
In this first episode, Antüpewma invites you into the ancient medicine of moving slowly. Through story, honesty, and a gentle guided practice, you’ll remember the pace your body was born to trust. Slowness isn’t laziness — it’s a way home. Breathe, soften, and return to the rhythm beneath the noise… ese ritmo más humano, más tuyo.