• Song of the Seasons: A Meditation on Cycles, Story, and Humility – by Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee
    Apr 14 2026

    This special episode features the audio edition of our new pocket book, Song of the Seasons, by Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee, which offers a meditation on how the sacred nature of the seasons reveals itself to us in every moment and asks us to respond from a place of gratitude and humility. Like the book, this audio version is meant to be listened to outside, amid the Earth's cycles of birth, growth, decay, and death, accompanying you as you seek a deeper engagement with the seasons.

    Discover the print edition of Song of the Seasons.

    Artwork by Maurits Wouters.

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    56 mins
  • Wildflower Beauty and the Search for Home – by David George Haskell
    Apr 7 2026

    This week, biologist David George Haskell brings us into the tangled histories and biological rhythms of four wildflowers that grow around his home in Atlanta, Georgia, revealing how each is rooted within webs of innovative, reciprocal relationships between hummingbirds, puddles, bee tongues, and human hands. Tracing how these heralds of spring have adapted to new climate conditions and new neighbors, he invites us to seek the stories of the flowers where we live to ground ourselves in the shifting realities shaping us too.

    Read the essay.

    Discover our latest print edition, Volume 6: Seasons.

    Hear more from David on the seasons and wildflowers in his conversation with Dara McAnulty and Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee.

    Image caption: Aquilegia coerulea

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    52 mins
  • Making Light: An Invitation… – by Kerri ní Dochartaigh
    Mar 31 2026

    This week, Irish author Kerri ní Dochartaigh offers an evocation on how we might hold the duality of lightness and darkness in a world increasingly divided. When fear and loss are pervasive, how do we engage with the life that remains? Can we see experiences of grief as invitations into feeling our relationality with all living things? Tracing how a childhood in Derry in the northwest of Ireland taught her to tend the delicate, often invisible threads that bind us to each other, she brings us into the Celtic celebration of Bealtaine, which marks the transition towards the brightness of summer, to reveal how Earth’s cycles of light and dark are a dance of which we are a part.

    Read the essay.

    Discover our latest print edition, Volume 6: Seasons.

    Photo by Al Brydon and J.M Golding

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    35 mins
  • A Thousand Ways to Live Within the Seasons — A Conversation with David G. Haskell, Dara McAnulty, and Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee
    Mar 24 2026

    In this second episode of our seasons conversation series, Volume 6 contributors David G. Haskell and Dara McAnulty explore how our senses shape myriad experiences of the seasons, some collective and some deeply personal. Finding wonder in the symbolism of daffodils in spring, carnivals of pollen-dusted black bees, and the feeling of joy tinged with grief as familiar seasonal moments return each year altered, David and Dara invite us to open our eyes, ears, and hearts to the celebration that lives within the seasons.

    Read the transcript.

    Discover our latest print edition, Volume 6: Seasons.

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    1 hr and 5 mins
  • Summer Light: A Failed Essay in Four Parts – Jake Skeets
    Mar 17 2026

    This week, Diné poet Jake Skeets brings us into the rising dust, big sky, and bent light of summers on the Navajo Nation, and explores how the body is not separate from the seasons, rather one of the many terrains upon which they play out. Now living amid excessive heat warnings, sandstorms, and wildfire haze that test his love of the summer, Jake asks how such extremes will reshape our intimate and ancestral relationship with the seasons.

    Read the essay.

    Discover our latest print edition, Volume 6: Seasons.

    Image Credit: Evelyn Dragan / Connected Archives

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    34 mins
  • On the Road with Thomas Merton - Fred Bahnson
    Mar 10 2026

    For Christian mystic Thomas Merton, the sacred and the profane were continuous: all was alive with divine presence. Stands of redwoods were his cathedral, the sky, birds, and wind were his prayers, and the silence of the forest his lover. This week, we return to an essay by Fred Bahnson, who follows Merton’s 1968 pilgrimage to the American West as he travels to Redwoods Monastery and Christ in the Desert Monastery. Guided by Merton’s contemplation and seeking the same solitude, Fred discovers anew the ways God runs through both land and heart.

    Read the essay.

    Watch the companion film by Jeremy Seifert.

    Photo by Thomas Merton.

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    1 hr and 8 mins
  • The Springing Time – Melanie Challenger
    Mar 3 2026

    Can we learn from more-than-human beings how to bring our bodies into a more direct conversation with the seasons? In this week’s story, bioethics and history researcher Melanie Challenger explores how our culture insulates us from experiencing seasonal signals in the natural world, ultimately impeding our ability to respond to ecological change. Examining how animals and plants translate important shifts in the land into meaningful activity, Melanie reflects on what it would take for humans to reawaken the same attunement to the changes, great and small, unfolding around us.

    Read the essay.

    Discover our latest print edition, Volume 6: Seasons.

    Photo credit: Credit: Alex Strohl / Verb Photo

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    33 mins
  • Echoic Memory – CMarie Fuhrman
    Feb 24 2026

    This week, author and poet CMarie Fuhrman listens to the forest speak its old stories through the roll of thunder, the river emptied of salmon, and the howl of wolves in Idaho’s remote Frank Church Wilderness. In these sounds and silences, she remembers the people and knowledge that colonial history has tried to erase. Recognizing herself as a “person of ground,” she contemplates the past as something that we can call forth into the present, and memory as moving in the opposite direction of prayer—down into the Earth.

    Read the story.

    Discover our latest print edition, Volume 6: Seasons.

    Photo by Luca Werner

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    20 mins