• No Justice; No Health
    Feb 2 2026

    How can being together on the land and engaging in ceremonies and healing support transformational change for people who have experienced incarceration? How can we create futures that center Indigenous perspectives and experiences of health and justice? And what examples can we look to of this healing work in motion? In this final episode of From Ceremony Up, we hear from Dr. Nicole Redvers and Darla Rasmussen to explore these questions and more through stories that have inspired them as they fight for Indigenous justice and wellbeing.

    Episode 3 transcript (PDF).

    Guests: Nicole Redvers, Darla Rasmussen

    Recommended resources from our guests on episode 2:

    • Continue learning from Dr. Nicole Redvers poignant insights through her book The Science of the Sacred: Bridging Global Indigenous Medicine Systems and Modern Scientific Principles.
    • Learn more about the urban land-based healing camp in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada through the article Urban Land-Based Healing: A Northern Intervention Strategy.
    • ‘Feel that connectivity’ by tuning into the musical talents of Fawn Wood.

    Our host, Dr. Lyana Patrick, would love to hear from you, our listeners. Keep the conversation going via email at lyana_patrick@sfu.ca.

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    1 Std. und 1 Min.
  • Where We Gather; Healing Comes
    Feb 2 2026

    How can we support healing and create wellness in urban Indigenous settings? What role do policies and the land play in seeing that healing bloom? And how can we turn to hope and keep pushing for change when faced with the reality of systemic colonial harm? In episode two, Lyana sits down with Ginger Gosnell-Meyers and frontline workers from the Native Courtworker and Counselling Association of British Columbia to explore these questions and more through their change-making work.

    Episode 2 transcript (PDF).

    Guests: Ginger Gosnell-Myers, Melissa Vabic, Aaron Mitchell, Ava Vargas, Lynn Power

    Recommended resources from our guests on episode 2:

    • Dive into Emergent Strategy, a book by Adrienne Maree Brown that offers practical advice for change makers that is grounded in lived experience as an activist with Black Lives Matters and Indigenous environmentalism.
    • Check out Embers: One Ojibway’s Meditations, a book by Richard Wagamese that offers personal reflections and teachings from Elders on how to gain strength, mourn effectively, find peace, and keep going with the important work in front of you.

    Our host, Dr. Lyana Patrick, would love to hear from you, our listeners. Keep the conversation going via email at lyana_patrick@sfu.ca.

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    1 Std. und 9 Min.
  • Our Communities; Our Healing
    Feb 2 2026

    How can organizations like the Native Courtworker and Counselling Association of British Columbia support Indigenous healing in and beyond the justice system? What makes this work so vital? And what is the story behind this essential work? In this first episode of From Ceremony Up, we welcome Hugh Braker, Melissa Vabic, and Lara-Lisa Condello for a foundational conversation on how Indigenous peoples are both deeply impacted by and resist historic and ongoing colonial violence to imagine different pathways forward.

    Episode 1 transcript (PDF).

    Guests: Hugh Braker, Melissa Vabic, Lara-Lisa Condello

    Recommended resources from our guests on episode 1:

    • Check out The Grandmothers. For the Next 7 Generations on YouTube for deep teachings and a discussion on how important it is to honor holistic approaches to healing.
    • Gain a deeper understanding of how Indigenous resistance and restoration counters colonial harms through All Our Relations: Finding the Path Forward by Tanya Talaga

    Our host, Dr. Lyana Patrick, would love to hear from you, our listeners. Keep the conversation going via email at lyana_patrick@sfu.ca.

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    1 Std. und 9 Min.
  • Season 6 Trailer
    Feb 2 2026

    In Season 6 of On Being Ill we’ll be doing things a bit differently…

    This whole season will be a chance for you to explore a brand new podcast mini-series – From Ceremony Up, hosted by Lyana Patrick, our Podcaster in Residence. She'll present diverse Indigenous understandings of health and justice, and explore what it means to take a strengths-based and decolonial approach to the work. This mini-series is based on Lyana's extensive collaborative research with the Native Courtworker and Counselling Association of British Columbia.

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    2 Min.
  • Redefining Accessibility with Anna Veprinska
    Apr 29 2025

    What role does noise pollution play on our embodied health and the health of the planet? How can the seemingly small act of writing poetry connect us to the biggest historical and contemporary issues? Does pain have a number? And if not, why are we still using pain scales? In this episode, Emilia sits down to discuss these questions and more with poet and scholar, Dr. Anna Veprinska.

    You can follow Anna on X and instagram @SplitEndedPoem

    You can contact us at OnBeingIllPodcast@Gmail.com. We’d love to hear from you!

    Click ⁠here⁠ for a full transcription of this episode.

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    51 Min.
  • Listening to the Bees with Jenna Butler
    Apr 29 2025

    How might one begin to transform a remote bush quarter in Northern Alberta into an off-grid organic farm and artist residency? Can citizen science help us keep track of ecological change? And why oh why must we listen to the bees? In this episode, Emilia sits down to discuss these questions and more with writer, farmer, and environmentalist, Dr. Jenna Butler.

    You can find Jenna’s work at JennaButler.com and you can check out what Larch Grove is up to at LarchGroveFarm.com.

    You can contact us at OnBeingIllPodcast@Gmail.com. We’d love to hear from you!

    Click ⁠here⁠ for a full transcription of this episode.

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    55 Min.
  • Deconstructing Fluency Privilege with Joshua St. Pierre
    Apr 29 2025

    How does the logic of speech pathology affect stutterers and non-stutterers alike? Can we deconstruct, unsettle, and bend fluency privilege in favour of embracing vocal difference? And how might one go about designing an interactive knowledge platform with this goal in mind? In this episode, Emilia sits down to discuss these questions and more with writer, professor, and Canada Research Chair in Critical Disability Studies, Dr. Joshua St. Pierre.

    You can find Joshua’s work at JoshuaStPierre.com and you can check out The Stuttering Commons at StutteringCommons.org.

    You can contact us at OnBeingIllPodcast@Gmail.com. We’d love to hear from you!

    Click ⁠here⁠ for a full transcription of this episode.

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    1 Std.
  • Season 5 Trailer
    Mar 23 2025

    We're back for season five of On Being Ill. This time, we sat down with three writers who ask: what might be gained, for stutterers and non-stutterers alike, by interrogating fluency privilege? Can numbers or words ever really convey the feeling of pain? And what might we hear if we stop to listen to the bees? Tune in this April, wherever you listen to podcasts, to hear those conversations in full. And check out our brand new project: CreativeEntanglementCollaboratory.ca where you’ll find this podcast and much more.

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    2 Min.