81 episodes

Welcome to Mind, Body, and Soil. Join me, Kate Kavanaugh, a farmer, entrepreneur, and holistic nutritionist, as I get curious about human nature, health, and consciousness as viewed through the lens of nature. At its heart, this podcast is about finding the threads of what it means to be humans woven into this earth. I'm digging into deep and raw conversations with truly impactful guests that are laying the ground work for themselves and many generations to come. We dive into topics around farming, grief, biohacking, regenerative agriculture, spirituality, nutrition, and beyond. Get curious and get ready with new episodes every Tuesday!

Mind, Body, and Soil Kate Kavanaugh

    • Society & Culture
    • 4.9 • 140 Ratings

Welcome to Mind, Body, and Soil. Join me, Kate Kavanaugh, a farmer, entrepreneur, and holistic nutritionist, as I get curious about human nature, health, and consciousness as viewed through the lens of nature. At its heart, this podcast is about finding the threads of what it means to be humans woven into this earth. I'm digging into deep and raw conversations with truly impactful guests that are laying the ground work for themselves and many generations to come. We dive into topics around farming, grief, biohacking, regenerative agriculture, spirituality, nutrition, and beyond. Get curious and get ready with new episodes every Tuesday!

    The Tapestry of American Manufacturing with Rachel Slade

    The Tapestry of American Manufacturing with Rachel Slade

    In this episode, Kate sits down with author and journalist Rachel Slade to discuss her books Making It In America: The Almost Impossible Quest to Manufacture in the USA (and How It Got That Way) and Into the Raging Sea: Thirty-Three Mariners, One Megastore, and the Sinking of El Faro. Rachel’s books are incredible explorations of humanity and she deftly weaves together complex threads. We focus on Making It In America in the episode. The book is so much about where trade, manufacturing, farming, immigration, the textile industry, unions, and the history of the hoodie itself meet. We start by exploring how manufacturing made America and touching on the complex series of events that led to the offshoring of the majority of American manufacturing after NAFTA. This episode is about grit and determination and a commitment to vision by American Roots, the hoodie company featured in the book, and what entrepreneurship means and what it might mean to manufacture in America once again. It’s a wide-ranging conversation about history, geopolotics, economics and the externalities of focusing solely on the bottom line. It’s about building and re-building community and networks of support and it’s about what it means for us, as humans, to make things by hand. 
    We also talk about;
    Men’s mental health
    Supply chains
    Find Rachel:
    Making It in America
    Into the Raging Sea
    Articles + Essays
    Instagram: @rachelmslade
    Made in USA Brands
    Resources Mentioned:
    Fields of Gold by Madeleine Fairbairn: 
    90% of Everything by Rose George
    Eating Nafta 
    Rachel on the Julian Dorey Podcast: 
    Melanie Challenger’s On Extinction

    Also Check Out Episodes
    -Kate’s Solo on Resources
    -Melanie Challenger

    • 2 hr 28 min
    We are Just Bodies Bodying: Exploring Skin, Touch, and Love with May Lindstrom

    We are Just Bodies Bodying: Exploring Skin, Touch, and Love with May Lindstrom

    In this week’s episode Kate sits down with the lovely, the ineffable, the effervescent May Lindstrom. Together they explore themes of grace, slowness, and the intricate dance between our inner and outer worlds. May shares many of her incredible stories and laces throughout them a call to live a life full of compassion and love and a cherishing of the everyday. She invites us to think about how we connect to ourselves and to nature, about what it might mean to grow old while integrating the perspectives of ourselves when we were younger, and to follow a north star of love. Throughout is a conversation about what it means to have a body that is bodying - whether that’s your body, a worm body, or to imagine all the other bodies that surround us. She also dives into frontloading pleasure, making a mess, and building something you really believe in. May’s words and wisdom shine in this episode that is really about coming home to yourself. 
    Find May:
    May Lindstrom Skin
    Instagram: @maylindstromskin
    If you loved this episode:
    With Caroline Nelson 
    With Lacey Jean 
    Support the Podcast:
    Substack
    Leave a one-time Tip
    Connect with Kate:
    Instagram
    email: kate@groundworkcollective.com
    Current Discounts for MBS listeners:
    15% off Farm True ghee and body care products using code: KATEKAV1510% off Home of Wool using code KATEKAVANAUGHKateK20 for 20% off Herbal Face Food

    • 2 hr 42 min
    the Future is Not Inevitable: Re-Imagining Infrastructure with Deb Chachra

    the Future is Not Inevitable: Re-Imagining Infrastructure with Deb Chachra

    In this episode, materials scientist and engineering professor Deb Chachra shares about infrastructure. Her book ‘How Infrastructure Works: Inside the Systems that Shape Our World’ is a multi-layered dive into infrastructure. In this episode, Deb and Kate explore ideas of how we move resources to bodies and waste away from bodies. It is a brief exploration of the rise of globalization and our telecommunications, physical infrastructure, and roads, but it is also an exploration of how access to energy is also access to agency. In it, the concept of ‘away’ is explored - whether it’s the away that we send our waste or the away from which we extract resources using human labor and the complexities of infrastructure’s harms and benefits. It’s also a re-imagining of what the future could look like, which Deb reminds us “is not inevitable” and how we can ask ourselves questions about our values and how we might shape the our care for people now and in the future. Infrastructure is a big and complex subject and Deb’s book deftly explores it. This episode is a small peek into her work. 
    Find Deb:
    How Infrastructure Works: Inside the Systems That Shape Our World by Deb Chachra
    Metafoundry Newsletter
    X: @debcha
    Instagram: @debcha

    Books Mentioned:
    Crossings by Ben Goldfarb
    Do Artifacts Have Politics? By Langdon Winner
    The Power Broker by Robert Moses 
    Golden Gulag by Ruth Wilson Gilmore

    Other Episodes of Interest:
    With Ben Goldfarb
    Solo on Infrastructure

    Support the Podcast:
    Substack
    Leave a one-time Tip
    Connect with Kate:
    Instagram
    email: kate@groundworkcollective.com
    Current Discounts for MBS listeners:
    15% off Farm True ghee and body care products using code: KATEKAV1510% off Home of Wool using code KATEKAVANAUGH
    KateK20 for 20% off Herbal Face Food

    • 1 hr 26 min
    Seeing the Unseen: How Sand Builds Our World with Vince Beiser

    Seeing the Unseen: How Sand Builds Our World with Vince Beiser

    Sand. It’s everywhere and it’s foundational to the built and digital worlds, yet we rarely see or think about it. Vince Beiser’s the World in a Grain tells the story of sand as it makes its way into the materials that make up our world: concrete, glass, silicon chips, and beyond. In this episode of the podcast, we explore some of the broader implications of sand - what it means to build worlds, how to grapple with the largesse of sand’s impact as we run out of this critical resource, and what, if anything, we can change in our relationship to sand. It’s about infrastructure, but it’s also about our relationship to infrastructure and how often the use of more resources begets the use of… more resources. We dive a little into the magic of sand, not just to house and transport us, but also the creation of the lens and how sand allows us to see things really small, really far away, and also really everyday - through glasses. We also talk about time, which sand is a measurement for and also a manifestation of, with the average grain of sand created over 200 million years. This is a conversation that will change the way you see and relate to your world.
    Find Vince:
    World in a Grain: the Story of Sand and How It Transformed Civilization
    Power Metal Newsletter
    X: @VinceBeiser
    Website

    Books Mentioned:
    Crossings and Eager by Ben Goldfarb
    Ninety Percent of Everything with Rose George

    Other Episodes of Interest:
    With Ben Goldfarb
    Solo on Infrastructure

    Support the Podcast:
    Substack
    Leave a one-time Tip
    Connect with Kate:
    Instagram
    email: kate@groundworkcollective.com
    Current Discounts for MBS listeners:
    15% off Farm True ghee and body care products using code: KATEKAV1510% off Home of Wool using code KATEKAVANAUGHKateK20 for 20% off Herbal Face Food

    • 1 hr 31 min
    Our Relationship to Our Resources: A Solo Episode with Kate Kavanaugh

    Our Relationship to Our Resources: A Solo Episode with Kate Kavanaugh

    Our relationship to resources shapes the world. Our food, our clothing, our devices, our building materials and the infrastructure that underpins moving them from place to place. On this podcast, we've explored a lot around food as a resource - its impact on land and human health and some of the inputs and externalities of our food system. Now, I'd like to take a turn to explore some other resources and the ubiquitous, yet unseen, infrastructure that moves them to us and our waste products away from us. Coming episodes will be filled with this exploration and so I want to give us a little primer on why this became so interesting to me and why it matters.
    Support the Podcast:
    Substack
    Leave a one-time Tip
    Connect with Kate:
    Instagram
    email: kate@groundworkcollective.com
    Current Discounts for MBS listeners:
    15% off Farm True ghee and body care products using code: KATEKAV1510% off Home of Wool using code KATEKAVANAUGHKateK20 for 20% off Herbal Face Food

    • 1 hr 8 min
    How to Be Animal with Melanie Challenger

    How to Be Animal with Melanie Challenger

    In this episode of the podcast, Kate sits down with author and poet Melanie Challenger to discuss her two books How to Be Animal and On Extinction. Melanie also hosted the beautiful podcast ‘Psychosphere’ exploring the minds of animals outside of the human animal. This episode explores our disconnection with nature and how it begins in childhood and how it might separate us from the truth that we, as humans, are also animals. It explores what it might mean to come home to the realization that we are animals. Death, mortality, and grief and their roles in our animal bodies are explored as is our human superpower ability to love. This is big episode with a lot of beautiful explorations into what it really means to be human. 
    Find Melanie:
    How to Be Animal by Melanie Challenger
    On Extinction by Melanie Challenger
    Galatea by Melanie Challenger
    Resources Mentioned:
    Animals in the Room
    Support the Podcast:
    Substack
    Leave a one-time Tip
    Connect with Kate:
    Instagram
    email: kate@groundworkcollective.com
    Current Discounts for MBS listeners:
    15% off Farm True ghee and body care products using code: KATEKAV1510% off Home of Wool using code KATEKAVANAUGH
    KateK20 for 20% off Herbal Face Food

    • 1 hr 20 min

Customer Reviews

4.9 out of 5
140 Ratings

140 Ratings

Jaden Jaymes ,

Thought provoking

Kate phenomenal interviewer. She knows how to tune in with each guest to weave a story from an interview. She is full of knowledge and wisdom to create a vibrant conversation and also bringing so much light, honesty, and vulnerability to the show. Thank you for the work you do and continue to do.

TJahraus ,

Thought-provoking for anyone who’s curious about the interface between our food and the land

This is a beautiful podcast that holds conversations about reestablishing our intimate relationships to our food, the animal welfare behind it, the rich environmental quality that acts as a foundation to all of this, and with the people committed to fostering these relationships- these threads all weave together to form the tapestry that is regenerative agriculture. Kate’s a brilliant host who brings thoughtfulness, curiosity, and a genuine commitment to a moral code that ties into a model for how our industrial food systems can return to something that quite literally makes the world a better place. She’s graceful with her thought processes and words. Each conversation is thought-provoking and a fulfilling opportunity to better inform our connections to the land, water, animals, and ranchers.

Milk_it1 ,

Enlightened

I started listen to your podcast via search for regenerative agriculture. At first I thought you were way far out there. I kept listening in hopes I would learn something. After a few episodes I realized that if you were way far out there, so was I. Since then, I have listened to all your episodes and look forward to new ones.

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