conscient podcast

a calm presence - pressing pause

Episode Notes

pressing pause

An extended break from the production of conscient podcast, balado conscient, a calm presence and related social media

Why do this? 

One reason is that I noticed that I sleep better when I don’t produce podcasts or essays about the end of the world as we know it.

Imagine that.

But it’s also because my learning and unlearning journey, which I began back in 2020, some 5 years ago, has come full circle. 

It feels like the end of a chapter.

I sometimes think of it as a five-year mission to explore strange new art, to seek out solutions to the ecological crisis and to boldly talk about things that have never been talked about before. 

Maybe they have, but it’s worth repeating.

You know, it was a trek, with many mistakes and a few discoveries. 

And, of course, there are many, many more stories yet to be told that can inspire us to action, or at the very least comfort us in troubled times.

There are many more examples of transformative artworks that I hope we will know about and eventually experience.

There are many more questions, good questions, to be asked by artists.

Also, artists can play a role in providing us with a few moments of respite and escape from the doom and gloom around us. 

I see the value in this kind of media and storytelling work and support whoever is doing it, as best I can. 

But for me, it’s time to press pause

There’s a quote that I want to read to you that’s my northern star. It’s by the great Vietnamese zen master Thich Nhat Hanh:

I’m going to think about this and have it at the heart of my daily life and think about what it means to listen deeply to the sounds of the earth crying, which is essentially ourselves. 

How can this insight lead to healing?  We’ll see where my spirit takes me.  I really have no idea where it’s going to go.  

Before ending this last Substack posting I wanted to remind you that I’ve recently published four new podcast episodes of conscient podcast, 2 in English et 2 en Français. 

On conscient podcast: 

Sur le balado conscient :

There you go.

Thank you so much for reading and listening over these many years. 

It’s been my privilege to be able to express myself and receive your feedback. 

Thanks to my guests and collaborators on all these platforms.

I’m now going to go silent for a long time, possibly forever, depending on the outcomes of my reflections. 

Take care. 

See you down the road…

Episode Transcription

pressing pause

an extended break from the production of conscient podcast, balado conscient, a calm presence and any related social media

Why? 

One reason is that I noticed that I sleep better when I don’t produce podcasts or essays about the end of the world as we know it.

Imagine that. 

But it’s also because my learning and unlearning journey, which began back in 2020, has come full circle. The end of a chapter. 

I sometimes think of it as a … five-year mission to explore strange new art, to seek out solutions to the ecological crisis and to boldly talk about things that have never been talked about before. 

Maybe they have but it’s worth repeating. 

You know, it’s a trek. 

And of course there are many, many more stories yet to be told that can inspire us to action, or at the very least least comfort us in troubled time, there are many more examples of transformative artworks that I hope we will experience, there are many more questions to be asked and, thankfully, many more artists offer us a few moments of respite and escape from all of this doom and gloom.

I see the value all of this media and storytelling work and support whomever is moving it forward but i’m done, for now. 

I’m pressing the pause button. Over the last 5 years or so I’ve produced 345 podcast episodes, 243 in English and 102 in French, not counting the ones I’ve erased, in all kinds of formats: interviews, monologues, mini series, soundscape compositions, sound walks, roundtables and so on. 

And I think 345 is enough to chew on and so I begin a period of self care that will be nourished by my daily zen practice, some time in nature and a bit of pickleball here and there. 

And I plan to be guided by this quote from the great Vietnamese zen master Thich Nhat Hanh :

So does one listen, deeply,to the sounds of the Earth crying and how can these insights lead to healing ?

I’ll see where my spirit takes me.

But before I go, a reminder that I’ve recently published four new podcast episodes, 2 on conscient podcast et 2 sur le balado conscient, that conclude season 6. 

On conscient podcast you can hear an ENCORE presentation of e41 – emergency preparedness from 2021 with Jen Rae, a Melbourne, Australia based artist, researcher, facilitator and educator of Canadian Red River Métis and Scottish descent who talks about the intersection between art, emergency preparedness, disaster risk-reduction and resilience.

You can also hear e244 roundtable - death as transformation, recorded on december 2, 2025 and originally broadcast on december 13, 2025 as an episode of the Making Waves radio program, where I moderated a panel of sound artists and previous guests of conscient podcast, ​​Azul Carolina Duque, Kenneth Newby, and Wendelin Bartley where we talk about our understanding of ‘death as a natural transformation of energy and consciousness, not an end’ and how our practices as sound artists relate to this transition.

Et sur le balado conscient je vous invite à écouter un episode ENCORE cette fois l’épisode 27 - l'énergie créatrice libre avec l’artiste sonore, musicienne, réalisatrice radio, sculpteure et une bonne amie de longue date, Hélène Prévost qui nous parle de sa tristesse pour l'état du monde et comment l’art, s’il est libre, peut devenir un puissant levier de changement et de ralliement social.

Je termine la saison 6 avec é171 - villeray acoustique avec deux artistes sonores, Magali Babin et Chantal Dumas, le collectif dB, un entretien enregistré pour un article dans la Revue Circuit, qui parle du projet de recherche-création Villeray acoustique une exploration de l’écoute de ce quartier de Montréal comme expérience sensorielle. 

So there you go. 

Thank you so much for reading and listening over these many years. It’s been my privilege. 

Thanks in particular to my guests and collaborators on all these platforms and to all those who have provided feedback and moral support. 

See you down the road.