Calling in the Healers
This week on Calling in the Healers, I sit down with Mona Cliff (Aaniiih/Nakota) — multidisciplinary artist, seed beader, and community member — to explore creativity, responsibility, and what it means to carry culture forward in a world where it can feel like (another) apocalypse might be just around the corner. In her work and life, Mona emphasizes indigenous joy and resilience alongside the, as she puts it, "heavier things." Through the materials she works with, Mona introduces us to a way of making inspired by the continuous processes of reinvention and reclamation. Both ourselves and the world around us. From lessons gathered while scraping buffalo hides with her grandparents to reclaiming discarded computer motherboards and transforming them into future regalia, Mona shares how the teachings she's been given are expressing themselves through her without losing their integrity. Her work asks a powerful question: what will our sacred objects be in the generations to come? What are we leaving behind? Together we talk about: * “Beautiful messes” — play, experimentation, and letting materials guide the work * Craft as ceremony — why beadwork, regalia, and making are living knowledge systems * Reclamation — noticing what’s available and honoring what others discard * Indigenous futurism — creating artifacts for futures where Indigenous peoples still exist * Knowledge as responsibility — why learning takes time, relationship, and worthiness * Parenting and creativity — about the work and joy of raising self-sufficient kids * Visibility as healing — why public art matters for belonging, memory, and community identity Calling in the Healers uplifts hyper-local stories that help us see healing as a collective project — intergenerational, ecological, and rooted in place. Available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, and iHeartRadio.
12 episodios
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