The Smoke Trail S2 E43: Luke Wallin- The Garden, The Practice and the Merge
Luke Wallin
The Garden, the Practice, and the Merge
Episode Metadata
Slug: GUEST-WALLIN-LUKE
Season: 2
Episode: 43 (Season 2, Guest Episode 2)
Arc: Consciousness Frameworks & Healing Science (primary); Spiritual Discernment & Navigation (secondary)
Guest: Luke Wallin (returning — Season 1 Episode 7)
Relationship: Smoke's father
Recorded: April 29, 2026, in person, Sedona, Arizona
Status: Filmed — ready for post-production
Guest book: The Night We Call the Owls (Ember Press, 2023)
Guest Bio
Luke Wallin is a writer, philosopher, and seeker with forty-six years of teaching across philosophy, fiction writing, American studies, and English. He holds an MFA in Fiction Writing from the Iowa Writers' Workshop, an MA in Philosophy from the University of Alabama, and a Master of Regional Planning from UMass Amherst. He has taught philosophy at the School of Visual Arts, American studies as a Fulbright Fellow at University College Dublin, English at UMass Dartmouth, and writing in the Spalding University MFA program.
His novels have been selected as best books by the American Library Association and the New York Public Library, translated into Danish, and recorded for the blind by the Library of Congress. He is co-author with his daughter Eva Sage Gordon Raleigh of The Everything Guide to Writing Children's Books. His most recent book is The Night We Call the Owls, a collection of poems and stories from Ember Press, 2023.
Luke first appeared on The Smoke Trail in Season 1 Episode 7, where he and Smoke went deep into philosophy, nature, and creativity as survival tools for the soul. This second conversation is different. After a lifetime in scientific materialism and analytic philosophy, something shifted three years ago when Smoke visited him. He returns now as a man who has lived through what he had always told his students: that reality is going to turn out to be much stranger than anyone thinks.
Episode Hook
Three years ago I went to visit my father, Luke, and something shifted. He had spent a lifetime in philosophy, the Iowa Writers' Workshop, decades of teaching, the whole architecture of Western analytic thought, and he had always told his students one thing: reality is going to turn out to be much stranger than you think. What he didn't expect was to live long enough to find out he was right. This is the second conversation. The first was deep in the woods. This one is where the woods led.
Show Notes
• The boy in the garden at 7: oak bark pressed to the eyeball trying to find what made one tree different from its identical neighbor, Ginger the Cocker Spaniel as constant companion, the early intuition that the universe is contained in every speck — and the lifetime of philosophy spent traveling back to what that boy already knew
• Boredom as a gift: the lost developmental capacity to sit with nothing, develop the will, and discover that the 80,000 to 90,000 thoughts streaming through the mind each day are not the same thing as the self
• The Idaho fire lookout tower at 19: a whole summer alone on a mountaintop watching shadows, eagles, grouse, and bears — sometimes lonely, never bored, the early evidence that presence is its own form of company
• The shift three years ago: scientific materialism, the residual skepticism, and the moment a son's lived experience cleared what a thousand books couldn't — including Luke's resistance to David Hawkins, and the eventual full immersion (audiobooks while mowing the grass)
• Why academia — the institution structurally designed for open inquiry — has become one of the hardest places to honestly explore consciousness: tenure, peer review, and the social cost of taking telepathy or reincarnation seriously even when the evidence is good (Jeffrey Kripal, Dean Radin, The Telepathy Tapes)
• Suspending disbelief as a practice: not the leap of faith, but the willingness to hold a question open long enough to test it directly
• Rebecca Johnson and Presence Practice: the small Sunday night Zoom meditation group, why "transformational listening" is structurally different from interior meditation, and what changes after a year of being quietly present with strangers
• The bodies of light: what happened the first night Luke closed Zoom and asked if the group could still be there — fifteen luminous presences appearing in his loft, then twenty-four a week later, still accessible whenever he turns toward them
• The laser surgery merge: the Jeff Mara podcast interview with the Irish doctor's near-death experience as the conceptual primer, and the unmistakable felt experience three weeks later of Luke's etheric body and the surgeon's etheric body rising, meeting, and merging during a thirty-hole laser procedure
• A new theory of intimacy: why sex is a bigger deal than the standard explanations account for, why crowded subways feel intolerable, and why some merges are sacred and others violating
• The eye that self-healed: the macular hole diagnosed in June, Smoke's remote work with energy balancing by numbers and the quantum block, the September appointment where the surgeon said only one to two percent of people have this close on its own
• The Seth material channeled by Jane Roberts, Dean Radin's Real Magic, and Tom Campbell's My Big TOE: imagination as a portal, the field of love as the operating substrate, and why setting intention into the field works while gripping the outcome with the conscious mind does not
• Attention and intention as the highest sovereign powers a human being has — and the daily cost of letting the ego mind run them by default
• The Gift of a Practice: ask to meet your guardian angel — a specific, simple, unguarded practice anyone can begin this week without a teacher, a group, or a tradition
• A closing challenge to the determinist: choose what you give your attention to, set an intention, and watch. If outcome is determined, lucky you. If not, you helped. Either way, the practice is participation.
Key Moments From the Conversation
The Boy in the Garden
Luke describes a childhood lived on a hilltop with woods behind the house, hours alone, and the early intuition that nothing anyone said about nature was adequate to what nature actually was. Two red oak trees in the yard, identical in size and appearance, became his first philosophical problem — the ancient question of universals and particulars discovered in a 7-year-old's hands. He pressed his eyeball to the bark trying to find the unique signature of one tree against the other. Smoke names it: a child's intuition that the whole universe is contained in every speck.
"I had always told my students: reality is going to turn out to be much stranger than you think. And you should always keep that in mind. It just deepens the wonder."
— Luke Wallin
Boredom as a Gift
Luke had hours...