• Beyond the Cushion: Food, Gathering, and Community as Mindfulness Practice
    2026/07/09

    What if one of the most profound mindfulness practices isn't found on a meditation cushion, but around a table instead?

    In this conversation, meditation teacher Meryl Arnett sits down with anthropologist, meditation teacher and author Dr. Ashanté Reese to explore how food nourishes not only our bodies, but our histories, our communities, and our capacity to care for one another. As Our Mindful Nature enters its final series after 11 years, this episode opens a rich exploration of food as a doorway into everyday mindfulness.

    Dr. Reese is the author of Gather: Black Food, Nourishment, and the Art of Togetherness, and together she and Meryl examine the gardens, family reunions, repasts, and mutual aid spaces where ancestors are honored, cultural traditions are sustained, and communities practice radical hospitality, all as expressions of mindfulness itself.

    What To Expect:

    - Why the meditation cushion is just one small entry point into a much larger awakeness

    - The meaning of nourishment beyond food: tending to our social bodies, preserving memory, and cultivating belonging

    - How gathering around food has historically been communal, and what we lose when we treat it as purely private

    - The gap between our stated values and how we actually live, and how mindfulness (and food) can help close it

    Featured Guest

    Dr. Ashanté Reese is a cultural anthropologist and author of Gather: Black Food, Nourishment, and the Art of Togetherness (W.W. Norton). Her research explores community, belonging, and how people come together around food. She is based in Austin, TX, and has been a dedicated meditation practitioner for years.

    Find Dr. Reese at https://www.amreese.com/ and on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/dramreese/ and on Threads at @areese07.

    Resources Mentioned

    Gather: Black Food, Nourishment, and the Art of Togetherness by Dr. Ashanté Reese — available at indie bookstores, including:

    BEM of Brooklyn (first bookstore in the country dedicated to Black food): https://www.bembrooklyn.com/

    Yes Please Books (Atlanta area): https://www.yespleasebooks.com/

    After 11 incredible years, this summer series marks the final season of Our Mindful Nature. Stay tuned in the coming episodes as Meryl shares more about what's next.

    Thank you to Brianna Nielsen for production and editing support. Find her at: https://www.instagram.com/itsbriannanielsen

    This podcast explores meditation, mental health and the power of connection, offering guidance for caregivers, healers, and therapists facing compassion fatigue, burnout, and other mental health struggles through self-care, self-compassion, and resilience. With a focus on anxiety, depression, and overwhelm, each episode provides tools like meditation, mindfulness, breathwork, and grounding to cultivate clarity and reduce stress. Listeners can also experience nature-inspired guided meditations, designed to bring peace and balance in times of distress.

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    25 分
  • Extended Listening Experience: Spring Rain in the Cascade Mountains for Meditation, Work, or Sleep (No AI!)
    2026/04/16

    What if you could experience the complete journey of a spring rainstorm from beginning to end? This extended nature listening episode offers the full, unedited soundscape that formed the backdrop for the three-part "Chasing the Ephemeral" meditation series. Recorded in Washington State's Cascade Mountains, this pure nature experience invites you into deep listening without guidance, narration, or interruption.

    Perfect for meditation, work, study, sleep, or any time you need the grounding presence of authentic nature sounds to support your wellbeing.

    About the Recording

    This soundscape was captured by acoustic ecologist Nick McMahon in the deep western valleys of the Cascade Mountains, on the ancestral land of the Stillaguamish People. The recording location features a saturated valley floor soft with marshes, old-growth groves, rivers, and streams. During early spring months, this pristine wilderness offers profound solitude where the transition from night to day can be heard through nature's own expression. No AI!

    Recording credit: Nick McMahon, Acoustic Ecologist

    Land acknowledgment: Recorded on ancestral lands of the Stillaguamish People

    Learn more: https://www.stillaguamish.com/about-us/

    Series Pause and Summer Return

    The podcast will take a brief pause before returning with summer meditation series. Subscribe to Meryl's newsletter for bonus reflections, soundscapes, book recommendations, and between-seasons content at merylarnett.com.

    Sign up for my newsletter at http://eepurl.com/jjPrV2 to receive free mini meditations and soundscapes each week, along with creative musings and more.

    In 2026, Our Mindful Nature will release seasonal series rather than weekly episodes, allowing for richer, more in-depth explorations of meditation and mental health topics.

    Learn more or contact me at https://www.merylarnett.com/.

    Thank you to Nick McMahan for today’s nature field recordings; and thank you to Brianna Nielsen for production and editing support. Find them at:

    https://www.nickcmcmahan.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/itsbriannanielsen

    This podcast explores meditation, mental health and the power of connection, offering guidance for caregivers, healers, and therapists facing compassion fatigue, burnout, and other mental health struggles through self-care, self-compassion, and resilience. With a focus on anxiety, depression, and overwhelm, each episode provides tools like meditation, mindfulness, breathwork, and grounding to cultivate clarity and reduce stress. Listeners can also experience nature-inspired guided meditations, designed to bring peace and balance in times of distress.

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    18 分
  • Chasing the Ephemeral Part 3: Salamander Meditation & Finding Balance Between Water and Earth
    2026/04/09

    What does tender self-care look like when the world feels overwhelming? In this final episode of the "Chasing the Ephemeral" spring series, meditation teacher Meryl Arnett turns to the salamander, quiet guardian of vernal pools, for wisdom about gentle transformation and emotional balance. Through a deeply personal dream about tending to what's been neglected, this meditation explores how to practice radical self-care during times of moral injury and societal upheaval.

    Set against the continuing spring rain soundscape, this salamander-inspired practice teaches us to balance emotional energy (water) with earthly stability (land), finding our way between overwhelmed withdrawal and constant activism.

    What You'll Experience

    A guided meditation inspired by salamander wisdom that balances emotional energy with grounded stability

    Discussion of moral injury - the anguish from witnessing harm that violates our deepest values when we feel powerless to stop it

    Practical self-care guidance that goes beyond social media wellness to include simple, tender acts of care

    The three pillars of healing: getting present, feeling what you feel in your body, and reconnecting with yourself and others

    Salamander symbolism exploring their dual life in water and on land as teachers of balance and transformation

    About the Soundscape Conclusion

    This meditation completes the spring rain journey recorded by acoustic ecologist Nick McMahon in Washington's Cascade Mountains on Stillaguamish ancestral lands. The full three-part series has followed water from gathering storm to vernal pool creation, mirroring our own cycles of emergence and transformation.

    Recording credit: Nick McMahon, Acoustic Ecologist

    The photos you see throughout this meditation are also from Nick McMahan.

    Sign up for my newsletter at http://eepurl.com/jjPrV2 to receive free mini meditations and soundscapes each week, along with creative musings and more.

    In 2026, Our Mindful Nature will release seasonal series rather than weekly episodes, allowing for richer, more in-depth explorations of meditation and mental health topics.

    Learn more or contact me at https://www.merylarnett.com/.

    Thank you to Nick McMahan for today’s nature field recordings; and thank you to Brianna Nielsen for production and editing support. Find them at:

    https://www.nickcmcmahan.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/itsbriannanielsen

    This podcast explores meditation, mental health and the power of connection, offering guidance for caregivers, healers, and therapists facing compassion fatigue, burnout, and other mental health struggles through self-care, self-compassion, and resilience. With a focus on anxiety, depression, and overwhelm, each episode provides tools like meditation, mindfulness, breathwork, and grounding to cultivate clarity and reduce stress. Listeners can also experience nature-inspired guided meditations, designed to bring peace and balance in times of distress.

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    19 分
  • Chasing the Ephemeral Part 2: Pink Moon Meditation for Meeting Beauty
    2026/04/01

    How do we meet beauty at the precise moment it appears and practice releasing it just as gently? In this second episode of the three-part "Chasing the Ephemeral" series, meditation teacher Meryl Arnett guides us beneath April's Pink Moon for a practice in experiencing awe without attachment. Just like the creeping phlox that suddenly carpets the ground in pink before fading away, this meditation teaches us to honor what blooms in our lives right now.

    Set against the continuing spring rainstorm in Washington's Cascade Mountains, this lunar meditation explores the many names for April's moon and invites you to expand beyond individual self into universal connection.

    What You'll Experience

    A guided lunar meditation that directs awareness upward to connect with the moon's presence, visible or not

    The story of many cultural names for April's moon: Seed Moon, Pink Moon, Awakening Moon, Frog Moon, Fish Moon, Planter's Moon, and many others

    Practice in expansion and release - breathing beyond body boundaries to melt into the universal

    About the Continuing Soundscape

    This meditation continues the spring rain recording from Part 1, captured by acoustic ecologist Nick McMahon in the deep western valleys of the Cascade Mountains on the ancestral land of the Stillaguamish People. The ongoing rainstorm provides continuity as we deepen our exploration of ephemeral beauty and the practice of meeting each moment with awe.

    Recording credit: Nick McMahon, Acoustic Ecologist

    The photos you see throughout this meditation are also from Nick McMahan.

    Your Practice This Week

    Become a guardian of your own solitude. Protect a few quiet minutes daily to listen to your breath, the changing season, and the subtle feelings that rise and fall within you. Notice what is blooming in your life right now and honor it before it shifts into something new.

    Coming Up in This Series

    Part 3 releases next Thursday, continuing to follow the rain as it gathers and transforms, exploring salamander wisdom and completing our journey into ephemeral spring magic.

    Sign up for my newsletter at http://eepurl.com/jjPrV2 to receive free mini meditations and soundscapes each week, along with creative musings and more.

    In 2026, Our Mindful Nature will release seasonal series rather than weekly episodes, allowing for richer, more in-depth explorations of meditation and mental health topics.

    Learn more or contact me at https://www.merylarnett.com/.

    Thank you to Nick McMahan for today’s nature field recordings; and thank you to Brianna Nielsen for production and editing support. Find them at:

    https://www.nickcmcmahan.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/itsbriannanielsen

    This podcast explores meditation, mental health and the power of connection, offering guidance for caregivers, healers, and therapists facing compassion fatigue, burnout, and other mental health struggles through self-care, self-compassion, and resilience. With a focus on anxiety, depression, and overwhelm, each episode provides tools like meditation, mindfulness, breathwork, and grounding to cultivate clarity and reduce stress. Listeners can also experience nature-inspired guided meditations, designed to bring peace and balance in times of distress.

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    16 分
  • Chasing the Ephemeral Part 1: A Spring Rain Meditation Practice
    2026/03/26

    What if the most meaningful experiences are the ones we can only meet in the moment? This first episode in a three-part spring series explores the concept of "ephemeral"—those fleeting wildflowers, temporary woodland pools, and brief moments of wonder that can only be caught when we're fully present. Join meditation teacher Meryl Arnett for a journey into spring's hush, where we learn to practice awe and find renewal in life's most transient moments.

    Set against the backdrop of a mountain rain shower in Washington's Cascade Mountains (real sounds, no AI), this episode teaches the AWE technique—a simple practice for cultivating wonder in everyday life, even when spring feels chaotic and overwhelming.

    What You'll Discover

    The meaning of "ephemeral" and why spring offers unique lessons about impermanence, presence, and renewal

    The AWE technique - a simple 30-second micro-practice using Attention, Wait, and Exhale to cultivate wonder anywhere

    How to find stability in spring's chaos by learning to "linger on the edge of now" rather than rushing toward summer

    A 20-minute guided meditation with spring rain sounds to practice cultivating awe and presence

    About the Spring Rain Soundscape

    This meditation features the authentic sounds of a spring rain shower recorded by acoustic ecologist Nick McMahon in the deep western valleys of the Cascade Mountains, on the ancestral land of the Stillaguamish People. The saturated valley floor, soft and spotted with marshes, old-growth groves, rivers, and streams, provides pristine solitude during early spring months. As the days grow longer, these recordings capture the transition from night to day, allowing us to listen to the movement of time through nature's expression.

    This recording also captures Nick's first recording of a Barred Owl, discovered during the editing process, adding an extra layer of ephemeral magic to the soundscape.

    Recording credit: Nick McMahon, Acoustic Ecologist

    Your Weekly Practice

    Choose one ephemeral moment each day and pause for it. Use the AWE technique: pay attention, wait, and exhale. Notice how this practice of reverential wonder softens the boundaries of self and connects you to something larger.

    Coming Up in This Series

    Part 2 releases Wednesday (one day early) with April's Full Pink Moon, continuing this spring rain meditation and deepening our exploration of the ephemeral

    Part 3 completes the series as we follow the full journey of spring's renewal and impermanence

    The photos you see throughout this meditation are also from Nick McMahan.

    Sign up for my newsletter at http://eepurl.com/jjPrV2 to receive free mini meditations and soundscapes each week, along with creative musings and more.

    In 2026, Our Mindful Nature will release seasonal series rather than weekly episodes, allowing for richer, more in-depth explorations of meditation and mental health topics.

    Learn more or contact me at https://www.merylarnett.com/.

    Thank you to Nick McMahan for today’s nature field recordings; and thank you to Brianna Nielsen for production and editing support. Find them at:

    https://www.nickcmcmahan.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/itsbriannanielsen

    This podcast explores meditation, mental health and the power of connection, offering guidance for caregivers, healers, and therapists facing compassion fatigue, burnout, and other mental health struggles through self-care, self-compassion, and resilience. With a focus on anxiety, depression, and overwhelm, each episode provides tools like meditation, mindfulness, breathwork, and grounding to cultivate clarity and reduce stress. Listeners can also experience nature-inspired guided meditations, designed to bring peace and balance in times of distress.

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    18 分
  • Forest Bathing at Dawn in a Frozen Evergreen Valley | Sensory Meditation with Winter Birds
    2026/01/29

    Before the world wakes, the frozen forest comes alive. This unique 30-minute listening experience invites you into the pristine winter dawn of Washington State's Sinlahekin Valley, where winter birds greet the morning with bold, communal song that cuts through the cold and offers deep reassurance.

    Unlike traditional guided meditations, this is pure, unfiltered nature—no narration, no instructions, just you and the authentic sounds of winter's dawn chorus. Perfect for when you need grounding, presence, or a reminder that you're never truly alone.

    What You'll Experience

    30 minutes of authentic winter birdsong recorded in real-time in Washington's frozen evergreen forest

    Pure nature soundscape with no AI enhancements, additions, or artificial sounds—this is a real place, real presence

    Unguided listening meditation that allows you to settle at your own pace without instructions to follow

    Dawn chorus of winter birds whose clear, insistent calls offer comfort after the long stillness of night

    Flexibility to listen for as long or short as works for you—use the full 30 minutes or take snippets throughout your day

    About the Recording Location

    This soundscape was captured by acoustic ecologist Nick McMahan in the Sinlahekin Valley of Washington State, on the traditional lands of Indigenous peoples now known as the Colville Confederated Tribes. Located deep in the isolated wilderness on the northeast edge of the Cascade Mountain Range, this frozen evergreen valley transforms during winter's dawn as the forest awakens with enthusiastic birdsong. The loud, joyful calls feel especially reassuring after long, chilly nights in this remote valley, where winter's silence gives way to nature's morning symphony.

    The photos you see throughout this meditation are also from Nick McMahan.

    Sign up for my newsletter at http://eepurl.com/jjPrV2 to receive free mini meditations and soundscapes each week, along with creative musings and more.

    In 2026, Our Mindful Nature will release seasonal series rather than weekly episodes, allowing for richer, more in-depth explorations of meditation and mental health topics.

    Learn more or contact me at https://www.merylarnett.com/.

    Thank you to Nick McMahan for today’s nature field recordings; and thank you to Brianna Nielsen for production and editing support. Find them at:

    https://www.nickcmcmahan.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/itsbriannanielsen

    This podcast explores meditation, mental health and the power of connection, offering guidance for caregivers, healers, and therapists facing compassion fatigue, burnout, and other mental health struggles through self-care, self-compassion, and resilience. With a focus on anxiety, depression, and overwhelm, each episode provides tools like meditation, mindfulness, breathwork, and grounding to cultivate clarity and reduce stress. Listeners can also experience nature-inspired guided meditations, designed to bring peace and balance in times of distress.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    19 分
  • Winter Meditation: Finding What Lives Beneath the Snow (Nature-Inspired 10 min Guided Meditation)
    2026/01/22

    What lives beneath the surface of your winter mind? In this gentle guided meditation, host and meditation teacher Meryl Arnett invites you into the quiet wisdom of winter's stillness. Inspired by the children's book "Over and Under the Snow," this practice explores what rests beneath the metaphorical snow of our busy lives - the feelings, needs, and truths that are warming, waiting to be revealed in their own time.

    Perfect for anyone seeking deeper self-awareness during winter months or when something feels "fine" but you sense there's more underneath.

    About the soundscape you hear throughout the episode:

    The winter sounds in this meditation were recorded by acoustic ecologist Nick McMahan in the Sinlahekin Valley of Washington State, on the lands of Indigenous peoples known today as the Colville Confederated Tribes. Deep in winter, this remote valley feels more wild and isolated than any other time of year. The soundscape captures the stunning quiet beauty of steep snow-covered slopes, small frozen ponds, and the sense of exaggeration each environmental sound holds during winter's cold, dark days.

    The photos you see throughout this meditation are also from Nick McMahan.

    Sign up for my newsletter at http://eepurl.com/jjPrV2 to receive free mini meditations and soundscapes each week, along with creative musings and more.

    In 2026, Our Mindful Nature will release seasonal series rather than weekly episodes, allowing for richer, more in-depth explorations of meditation and mental health topics.

    Learn more or contact me at https://www.merylarnett.com/.

    Thank you to Nick McMahan for today’s nature field recordings; and thank you to Brianna Nielsen for production and editing support. Find them at:

    https://www.nickcmcmahan.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/itsbriannanielsen

    This podcast explores meditation, mental health and the power of connection, offering guidance for caregivers, healers, and therapists facing compassion fatigue, burnout, and other mental health struggles through self-care, self-compassion, and resilience. With a focus on anxiety, depression, and overwhelm, each episode provides tools like meditation, mindfulness, breathwork, and grounding to cultivate clarity and reduce stress. Listeners can also experience nature-inspired guided meditations, designed to bring peace and balance in times of distress.

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    8 分
  • Personal and Global Grief: How to Process Both Without Overwhelm Through Meditation & Poetry
    2026/01/15

    How do you welcome a new year when your heart is still holding grief?

    Host Meryl Arnett sits down with beloved poet James Crews to explore the essential practice of turning toward grief rather than away from it. In this conversation, James shares insights from his latest poetry collection "Turning Toward Grief" and offers gentle guidance on holding both sorrow and beauty as we enter 2026.

    What You'll Discover

    Why poetry becomes essential during grief and how it helps us process emotions that feel too big for ordinary words

    How to comfort someone who is grieving through James' beautiful poem with practical wisdom about presence versus fixing

    How to hold personal grief alongside global uncertainty without becoming overwhelmed or shutting down

    Perfect For

    People processing recent losses or grief who want gentle, practical guidance

    Meditation practitioners experiencing difficult emotions during practice

    Caregivers and healing professionals dealing with secondary grief and overwhelm

    Anyone feeling the weight of global events and personal challenges

    Featured Guest

    James Crews is a celebrated poet whose work focuses on turning toward life's most difficult emotions with tenderness and wisdom. Author of multiple poetry collections including "Love Is All Is for All of Us" and "Turning Toward Grief," James creates accessible, healing-centered poetry that helps readers navigate loss, love, and the complexities of being human.

    Learn more about James at https://www.jamescrews.net/

    Sign up for my newsletter at http://eepurl.com/jjPrV2 to receive free mini meditations and soundscapes each week, along with creative musings and more.

    In 2026, Our Mindful Nature will release seasonal series rather than weekly episodes, allowing for richer, more in-depth explorations of meditation and mental health topics.

    Learn more or contact me at https://www.merylarnett.com/.

    Thank you to Nick McMahan for today’s nature field recordings; and thank you to Brianna Nielsen for production and editing support. Find them at:

    https://www.nickcmcmahan.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/itsbriannanielsen

    This podcast explores meditation, mental health and the power of connection, offering guidance for caregivers, healers, and therapists facing compassion fatigue, burnout, and other mental health struggles through self-care, self-compassion, and resilience. With a focus on anxiety, depression, and overwhelm, each episode provides tools like meditation, mindfulness, breathwork, and grounding to cultivate clarity and reduce stress. Listeners can also experience nature-inspired guided meditations, designed to bring peace and balance in times of distress.

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    23 分