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The Human Layer

Podcast af cstreet

engelsk

Business

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The Human Layer is a podcast for those who refuse to be optimized, for the builders and breakers at the intersection of emergent technology, political resistance, and the fight for a positive-sum future.

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14 episoder

episode Embracing AI Without Losing Your Mind cover

Embracing AI Without Losing Your Mind

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2460445/fan_mail/new] In this episode of The Human Layer, Crystal and Taylor sit down at the Regen Hub [https://regenhub.xyz/] in Boulder with Neil [https://www.linkedin.com/in/neilyarnal/], a sign-painter-turned-creative-director, and Jon [https://jon.bo/], a software engineer ten years deep in startup work. What unfolds is less a conversation about AI than a live demonstration of four different operating systems negotiating coherence in real time each with their own relationship to flow, identity, and the particular vertigo of mid-2026. The conversation moves through the question of whether AI flow is the same as painting flow or photography flow (it isn't, exactly — and the difference matters), why the antidote to AI psychosis at scale is almost certainly hyperlocal community, and what it means that the most extractive frontier models are the ones least capable of telling you "I don't know." Neil's "let's blow the bloody doors off" energy meets Crystal's nervous-system literacy meets Jon's ground-truth pragmatism meets Taylor's contrarian curiosity, and the room keeps finding the third frame underneath every binary the moment offers. By the back half, the four of them are stacking on each other rather than counter-pointing — landing on a definition of operating systems that has very little to do with productivity and everything to do with sovereignty: a translation membrane that encodes what would otherwise require your continuous presence, and then sets the recipient free from needing you. The metric of a good OS, it turns out, isn't how well it scales you. It's how cleanly it makes you optional. Support the show [https://cash.app/$cstreetstudios] Be sure to follow The Human Layer's signals on Substack [https://humanlayer.substack.com/] to stay in the loop!

7. maj 2026 - 1 h 5 min
episode Labor, Shadow Unions & Weaponizing AI for Good cover

Labor, Shadow Unions & Weaponizing AI for Good

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2460445/fan_mail/new] Crystal riffs with dear friend Monera [https://www.moneramason.com/] about shadow unions, whisper networks, and what actually happens when brand values collide with frontline reality inside a metrics-obsessed workplace. Together they map practical ways to protect your nervous system, document toxic leadership, and use AI to push back — without becoming the next target. * Choosing the "worst job ever" as a deliberate leadership lab * Command-and-control restaurant managers colliding with algorithmic metrics they don't understand * Why untrained leaders transfer emotional labor downward — and how supremacy culture makes accountability feel like identity death * Somatic leadership at the frontline: praising bathroom breaks, liberating the body, and watching productivity rise * Flipping the script on documentation — tracking system failures instead of blaming workers * Weaponizing AI for pattern recognition, HR responses, and law-aware language that speaks power's own dialect * Retaliation for questioning a 10-degree food safety change and other "don't ask" moments * Accommodations, dress codes, and Christian deism as low-key sovereignty hacks * The plantation-to-spreadsheet pipeline: how modern metrics thinking echoes older systems of control * The two pipelines — private school autonomy vs. public school body-policing — and how they reproduce leadership and labor * Gen Z, the IEP generation, and mothers with unlimited energy to challenge toxic leaders * Rebuilding belonging without conditions through co-generational communities and third spaces Support the show [https://cash.app/$cstreetstudios] Be sure to follow The Human Layer's signals on Substack [https://humanlayer.substack.com/] to stay in the loop!

11. apr. 2026 - 1 h 59 min
episode Story As Infrastructure cover

Story As Infrastructure

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2460445/fan_mail/new] In S2E5 of The Human Layer, hosts Crystal and Taylor are joined by Mason Pashia who tells stories and runs media for Getting Smart [https://www.gettingsmart.com/], a learning innovation organization that covers the future of education with a commitment to the idea that the system can and must change. We explore why storytelling shapes what education values and how learners can reclaim agency by curating the narratives of their lives. We trace how myths, scarcity thinking, and tech hype distort school and how attention, lineage, and grief work can guide more regenerative systems.  • Mason’s path from songwriting to education media and learner advocacy  • Storytelling as a way to translate lived experience into transferable skills  • Curation as identity work and as an act of subtraction  • Why “redesign school” feels strangely ungenerative for many people  • Hollywood depictions that lock school into the same script  • Abundance as a learning mindset when systems feel defined by scarcity  • Gift economy reciprocity as a model for learning and teaching  • Web3 sovereignty and regenerative community experiments for education  • How crypto’s original decentralization story gets captured and warped  • Grief, hospicing, and forgiveness as prerequisites for system change  • Risks of wellness theater and spiritual bypass in leadership  • AI as a servant of one user versus a tool for the many  • Lineage and ancient texts as guardrails for pattern recognition tools  • Attention and taste as core educational outcomes  • Signs of hope in analog culture coming back  Support the show [https://cash.app/$cstreetstudios] Be sure to follow The Human Layer's signals on Substack [https://humanlayer.substack.com/] to stay in the loop!

21. mar. 2026 - 1 h 3 min
episode OS Upgrades & Archetypes cover

OS Upgrades & Archetypes

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2460445/fan_mail/new] Fire as Practice: Building Human Operating Systems for Unstable Times The weather is getting strange. Instead of pretending otherwise, we step into the cremation ground and practice transmutation together. This conversation tracks how we're debugging our "human OS" for 2026—not as self-help, but as actual survival infrastructure. We're building executable commands that work under pressure, treating collapse as composting material rather than catastrophe to bypass. We start with fire as both terror and teacher. What survives the burn isn't what performs resilience—it's what's already rooted in practice. From journalism to local government, the institutions we relied on are entering their own cremation grounds. The question isn't whether systems collapse, but whether we can metabolize the energy released without fragmenting. This is where archetypes become operational: La Loba gathers scattered bones and sings them back to coherence. Kali strikes down ego-attachment so authentic alignment can flow. These aren't metaphors—they're runtime patterns that help transmute rage into evidence, grief into capacity, institutional death into distributed infrastructure. Then we get technical. Our "human OS" consists of simple commands you can actually execute when your nervous system is activated: resume_without_shame(), notice_reality(), listen_past_words().  No borrowed dogma. No wellness theater. Just debugged responses that preserve dignity under extraction. We trace this through music as portal—from the Grateful Dead's improvisational practice to tantric teachings on death and rebirth. The pattern is the same: service requires ego-death requires community. Not the performed kind, but ride-or-die crews where language, values, and response patterns align so mutual aid is fast and human. What we're documenting isn't a solution. It's a practice for staying sovereign while touching power, building post-institutional infrastructure while institutions collapse around us, and transmuting extraction's energy into actual capacity. The bones are scattered. The singing has begun. The wild-knowing ones are waiting for these maps. For listeners navigating their own cremation grounds: Subscribe. Share with someone in the fire with you. Leave us one command from your own OS that's keeping you coherent. Support the show [https://cash.app/$cstreetstudios] Be sure to follow The Human Layer's signals on Substack [https://humanlayer.substack.com/] to stay in the loop!

19. jan. 2026 - 56 min
episode Rituals of Relearning cover

Rituals of Relearning

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2460445/fan_mail/new] What if the most important operating system isn’t digital at all, but human?  We sit down with Louka Perry, a speaker, futurist, strategist, linguist, and creative ddventurer [https://www.linkedin.com/in/louka-parry-41813055/] who works globally with education systems, teachers, and leaders. Currently learning his fifth language (Mandarin Chinese), Louka brings both philosophical depth and practical wisdom to questions about learning, identity, and human agency in the age of AI. In this conversation—what Taylor calls "a palate cleanser" after their previous exploration of zombie democracy—Louka immediately reframes the question of what he does to "who do I try to be in the world?" What unfolds is a rich dialogue about transformation, identity, and cultivating knowledge in an era of exponential technological change. On Identity and Transformation: Louka challenges fixed professional identities: "The minute I calcify to an identity marker, I'm restricting my own growth." He advocates for seeing ourselves as "activators of learning" rather than locked into roles that may become obsolete, emphasizing that being literate in the 21st century means being willing to unlearn and relearn. On Knowledge vs. Creation: "I don't think we are in a knowledge economy anymore," Louka observes. "I think we are absolutely in a creation economy." With AI making knowledge accessible, what matters now is "what we do with what we know" and "who am I being as I do things with what I know?" On AI and the Human Layer: Crystal voices a concern many feel: "AI's taking up the quiet space." This sparks candid discussion about what gets lost when technology fills liminal spaces where genuine thinking happens. Yet Louka emphasizes agency: "Joy is a radical act today. Just to be joyful, just to choose that." On Community and Third Places: Crystal shares observations from her daily coffee shop visits, watching different generations navigate technology and connection. Some young people leave phones untouched, having organic conversations. Others remain absorbed in screens, disconnected from surroundings. This leads to reflections on what real community looks like as physical third places become increasingly valuable. On Building a 2030 Vision: When asked to envision the knowledge garden of 2030, Louka gets personal: "Relationships are at the center of my garden." He shares meeting his fiancée by choosing to turn around on a plane and join a conversation rather than plugging into entertainment. "I think the universe rewards people that notice." His vision involves becoming "a local man of community with really significant global community." Key Themes * Knowledge gardens and learning ecosystems * Identity fluidity vs. calcification * Knowledge economy to creation economy * AI's impact on quiet space and liminal thinking * Joy as radical act * Third places and community in the digital age * Noticing as practice Mentioned in This Episode E.O. Wilson on "god-like technologies" • Jonathan Haidt's The Anxious Generation • Harvard Study on Adult Health • Bloom's Taxonomy • "Hidden grammar" in education Support the show [https://cash.app/$cstreetstudios] Be sure to follow The Human Layer's signals on Substack [https://humanlayer.substack.com/] to stay in the loop!

2. dec. 2025 - 1 h 6 min
En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
Rigtig god tjeneste med gode eksklusive podcasts og derudover et kæmpe udvalg af podcasts og lydbøger. Kan varmt anbefales, om ikke andet så udelukkende pga Dårligdommerne, Klovn podcast, Hakkedrengene og Han duo 😁 👍
Podimo er blevet uundværlig! Til lange bilture, hverdagen, rengøringen og i det hele taget, når man trænger til lidt adspredelse.

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