Become a Creator today!Start creating today - Share your story with the world!
Start for free
00:00:00
00:00:01
Work/Rest Balance with Koren Helbig image

Work/Rest Balance with Koren Helbig

Reskillience
Avatar
1.3k Plays6 months ago

Many of you have requested interviews with folks who are making beautiful nests in less-than-perfect contexts, like the city. Who haven’t flown off to Planet Permaculture but are sticking with modern civilisation. You’ve asked to explore the personal terrain of chronic pain, limited energy and neurodivergence; highlighting radical self compassion as the necessary first step in the radical reimagining of everything.

And so I reached out to Koren Helbig, a restful role model for our times.

If you don’t know Koren, she’s a digital marketing strategist and journalist based in Tarntanya/Adelaide. She shares stories of gardening and climate positive futures for publications like the ABC and the guardian, and top quality fluffy poultry content over on instagram.

I’ve been watching Koren’s work from afar for ages, half envious and wholly admiring of her ability to weave permaculture principles throughout her entire life, from how she grows food, connects with neighbours, pays the mortgage and runs her business to — as I discovered in this conversation — deliberately building rest and reflection and fallowing into her schedule. Best of all, Koren is a real and warm human who exudes a quiet brilliance. I loved spending time with her, and know you will too.

Koren’s home on the web

Koren on Instagram

The Art of Frugal Hedonism ~ Annie Raser-Rowland & Adam Grubb

She Makes Magic podcast

The Food Forest

Holistic Decision Making with Dan Palmer

Kirstin Neff ~ Self Compassion

Beyond Climate Grief ~ Jonica Newby

***Support Reskillience on Patreon***

Recommended
Transcript

Introduction to 'Resculience' and Life Changes

00:00:07
Speaker
Hey, this is Katie, and you're tuned into Resculience, a podcast about the hard, soft and surprising skills that'll help us stay afloat if our modern systems don't. I'm typing these words on my phone while squatting in the mud next to a huge reservoir on Jaja Wurrung country. The sun is out, the birds are singing, and there's a fine translucent line between me and dinner. Jordan and I are fishing. We moved house this week into an old yellow cottage that we're renting from a friend. It's quite a big change for both of us.
00:00:45
Speaker
As you might know, I've been living with David Holmgren and Sue Dennett at Meliodora in a tiny house for almost three years. I've been chopping wood, turning compost, weeding veggie beds, seeding green manures, cooking humanure and slowly forgetting what it's like to pay cash for kale. Because at Meliodora I had no rent, no bills and no shortage of leafy greens. I paid my way in participation. Arriving at Meliodora was like stepping off a veggie oil-fueled rocket ship and onto planet permaculture, with its unique atmosphere of intentionality, where every plant, animal person, and innocuous piece of piping had a reason for being, and ways of being in service to the whole.
00:01:32
Speaker
Planet permaculture, guided by the ethics of Earth care, people care and fair share, pulsates with living systems and an unmistakably pungent culture, exemplified by Sue Dennett's ultra-funky goat's cheese.

Sustainable Living and Personal Adjustments

00:01:47
Speaker
After three magical years in this very special place, re-boarding the veggie oil, rocket ship and blasting off into the rent-a-sphere has been a bit of a shock. A good shock, because now Jordan and I get to dream up our own household culture, work on designing our own systems from scratch. Which brings me back to fishing.
00:02:09
Speaker
At this point, I've caught a stick and Jord has caught sight of five pelicans. It's not looking promising for protein, but our hope is that we can fish or hunt or forage at least some of our food. And we want to establish systems and routines around that. Nights of the week we go hunting, weekends we go fishing, a plan for picking up roadkill. And with these aspirations, a great unfurling of questions like where do the fish hang out? How healthy is the river? Which hooks and lines and sinkers are less likely to harm the river should they get lost? How do we forge connections with local farmers who might let us hunt rabbits on their land? Which families raise animals for meat around here and how can we get in on that? Where do we source the veggies and grains and fats and condiments that we can't conjure up ourselves? Which weeds can we forage? Where are they and have they been peed on?
00:03:06
Speaker
Do we want to be old mushroom foragers or bold mushroom foragers? How do we store excess food passively? How do we normalise non-cheesy mealtime blessings? How do we continuously acknowledge and care for country? We're building a composting toilet with permission from our lovely land holder, one of those simple squatty ones with a 20-litre bucket and sawdust so that we can start gifting our triple-chop colonic brownies back to the earth. We're trying with all our might to cook on the piping hot top of the slow combustion fire, using wood energy, which is an abundant local resource, rather than gas energy, which is a natural disaster.
00:03:48
Speaker
We're attempting to make our money go further, so we can keep pursuing the low-paid, love-charged, creative jobs we actually care about. And so on, and so on. Jordan and I stayed out fishing till the sun lost its warmth and a bitter wind sprung off the water, heading home with an empty esky. And when we finally got back to the burrow our empty bellies overrode that stoic intention to cook on the fire making use of the wood energy that was already warming the living room and instead we put some store-bought meat in the pan and chucked it on the gas.
00:04:24
Speaker
We're doing what we can to be radical permaculture renters, but sometimes our energy and determination and systems will break down and will revert to modern convenience. It's almost impossible to completely decouple from the machine. And even if you could, what of everyone else without the access or ability or privileges to follow suit? It's a tricky business, this counter-culturing, and I don't have any firm answers other than to keep having fun.

Corin Helbig on Sustainable Housing and Lifestyle

00:04:52
Speaker
But one woman, with many a clue as to how to design elegant and energy-efficient household systems, is Corin Helbig.
00:05:00
Speaker
I've been watching Corinne's work from afar for ages, half envious and wholly admiring of her ability to weave permaculture principles throughout her entire life, from how she grows food, connects with neighbours, pays the mortgage and runs her business, to, as I discovered in this conversation, deliberately building rest and reflection and fallowing into her schedule. Many of you have requested interviews with folks who are making beautiful nests in less than perfect contexts like the city, who haven't flown off to planet permaculture, but instead are sticking with modern civilization. Similarly, you've asked for conversations that speak to personal challenges like chronic pain, limited energy, and neurodivergence, highlighting radical self-compassion as the necessary first step in the radical reimagining of everything.
00:05:51
Speaker
And so I reached out to Corin, a restful role model for our times. If you don't know Corin, she's a digital marketing strategist and journalist based in Tontanya, Adelaide. She shares stories of gardening and climate-positive futures for publications like the ABC and The Guardian, and top quality fluffy poultry content over on Instagram. Most of all, Corinne is a real and warm human being who exudes a quiet brilliance. I loved spending time with her, and I'm sure you will too. There are lots of updates and shout outs at the end of the episode, so be sure to hang around for those. And for now, soak up this delightful conversation with Corinne Helbig. Oh my gosh, these like beautiful crisp autumn days are so lovely. Like it's just being really sunny.
00:06:43
Speaker
And like, you know, this, this window that I'm sitting in, this is a north facing window. So I sit here all day with the sun on my back and it's just like divine. How long have you been in the house you're in now? So I moved to this house in 2017 originally as a renter. Um, and it was like, you know, pretty rundown, chaotic space. The backyard was like shoulder height weeds and, um, no one had lived in the place for two years, which feels, unimaginable now and you kind of look at the rental crisis but you know this house is small and it only has one um bathroom and only two bedrooms it didn't have any air conditioning at the time like it just wasn't a house that people wanted to live in but I did because I could see it had all of this potential like it had rainwater tanks and solar panels like wicked in a rental um and a whole hip and north facing aspect and yeah I just saw these things that
00:07:38
Speaker
like from a permaculture and sustainable living perspective, I was like, oh, tick, tick, tick. And, you know, the flashy on the fans and walls and the shoulder height weeds out the back. Like that's all manageable. i can I can deal with that. People come to me with questions around transition. And I think your story of going from renting to buying or, you know, paying off a mortgage on that same property is really fascinating. Are you able to expand a little upon that process? oh Yeah. Yeah. So I moved here in 2017 with my partner at the time.
00:08:11
Speaker
Um, and we had this wonderful few years of living here in kind of a share house environment. We had a really close friend of mine moved in. Um, and it was like this wonderful chaotic life because, um, this partner and I were just getting into permaculture life and all of these weird and wonderful and random things were going on as we were experimenting with all these different ways of living sustainably. Um, but I was sort of approaching my late thirties at the time and I was really ready to buy a house. I hadn't ever owned a house. I hadn't ever owned anything more expensive than my car in my life and my car's worth like $5,000 or something. It's not very good car. um So yeah, so we started looking and we looked and looked and looked and I had this really um clear list of criteria of things that I wanted in a home and they were all related to sustainable living. So it was things like north facing aspect and rainwater and
00:09:07
Speaker
solar panels and stuff like that, space for a garden, not a very big house, that sort of thing. um And it's actually really hard to find homes like that. Like, unfortunately, when places are built, they're not often built with those sorts of things in mind. And the whole time we were looking, I just kept thinking, like, I actually just want to live here. Like, I love this house that I'm renting. I just want to live here. And we'd contacted the owner, who um is an Australian, but she lives in Austria, a few times asking her if she would sell Um, and she, she kind of, you know, just, um, wasn't ready to, I guess. And then there was this weird sequence of events where we put an offer in on a house and we missed out on it, even though we were the highest bidder. And I was so furious. I was like, how dare they, you know, just really, really angry. Um, and then the very next day our landlord called and she was like, I'm getting all these emails from Doris, the owner of your house. Like, have you seen her emails and.
00:10:04
Speaker
Anyway, it turns out that she had emailed me months ago saying, okay, actually I'm ready to sell. And obviously it went into my spam and my spam is a nightmare. I never check it. Um, and I totally missed it. And, um, she was like, you know, I've got three other people interested. So give me your best offer. And, um, Well, I never saw that email and in the preceding three months, um, the other buyers that I knew nothing about fell out of the race. Um, and so by the time, you know, it came to us, it it was really just us in the race and she wasn't interested in, um, putting the house on the market. So we were incredibly lucky that was in 2021 that we purchased and, um, you know, the housing market was already starting to get pretty crazy there. So we were lucky that she didn't want to go out onto the market.
00:10:51
Speaker
um And then I suppose we you know started the whole, like, how are we going to fix this place up to make it even more um comfortable to live in, to make it you know lighter on the planet? um um You know, all of those sorts of things. And that's kind of when the renovations began. How did you get in contact with the land owner rather than just having that intermediary of the real estate agent? o We tried lots of different ways to get in contact with her directly. um Her brother still lives here in Tandanya Adelaide. And so we tried through him and he was very much like, shoot, how's the landlord? You know, go through, go through him. So um yeah, we tried all our little wily permy ways to um to get that direct contact, but it wasn't possible. So in the end, we went through the agent. But I did um go to a lot of effort to butter up the agent whenever she came, um the landlord, whenever she came through to
00:11:47
Speaker
do inspections, I'd always send her off with a big basket of homegrown food and be sure to show her you know how beautiful this section of the garden was looking now. um Because what we'd done when we moved in um and faced you know this garden that was in tatters and ruins, um that's sort of the um the agency had said, oh, we'll we'll send a gardener in and they'll clean it up for you. But I was really worried that they would you know deal with that in really unsustainable ways. And so we negotiated for slightly lower rent in return for caring for the garden. um So that became this really great talking point with the agent whenever she came around. And I think that helped as well. There was already a beautiful relationship kind of happening there. ah So much good comes from
00:12:30
Speaker
bringing those relationships home. And it's not about some kind of grand strategy or interpersonal manipulation. It's simply the fruits of relating directly with people and doing those normal everyday human things that you would with a friend to open up all of those possibilities. And yeah, I have This sense of holding you know the complexity of all of the challenges that we face in accessing housing and land and the costs of living, but also the opportunities that present themselves when you start really tuning in to each other as human people who can support.
00:13:06
Speaker
and assist and provide those extracurricular opportunities that we may not actually see on realestate.com. And another thing you said, Corin, which pricked my ears and piqued my interest was that you were in your late 30s when you were renting, um having this share house experience. And I'd like to ask you a little bit more about that because I know as someone in my mid 30s, I do feel a certain degree of pressure around you know, what assets I do or don't have and where I'm going to find security in that definition that we have around that being four walls and a roof and also doing life differently, you know, as a freelancer, as a creative person, as someone who likes to live in the gaps. But yeah, tell me a little bit more about where you were at in your late thirties and why, what choices you've made that kind of saw you just have a car as your primary asset and yeah, how you were, how you were sitting with that. Hmm.
00:14:03
Speaker
ah Well, I've always lived in share houses as an adult up until now. I live um here by myself now. But yeah, previously, um I've always lived in share houses and absolutely loved it. And I really wish it was more normalized. like I can remember um maybe last year talking to a friend who was in the online dating scene and she was like, I bet this guy, he seems great, but he's like 36 and he still lives in a share house. Like what the heck? And I was like, good for him. What a legend. Imagine all the connections he's got. And really just tried to kind of, you know, normalize that situation because um this desire for us all to live such individualistic lives and in our own little pockets of the world, I think is um really disconnected. But also, you know, that has a,
00:14:48
Speaker
an impact on the housing crisis as if more of us live together. um You know, a lot of those empty spare rooms might be able to have warm bodies in them overnight. um So yeah, I just, I've loved share housing. I guess for me, that sort of began when I moved, I've um moved to Brisbane in my mid 20s and I lived there for five years and and kind of share housed around there. um And then I moved to Spain um just before I turned 30 and lived there for about four years and lived in a ah really chaotic, hilarious share house over there. um So when I moved back home, it really was a no-brainer to just kind of you know continue that um scenario. I guess the one thing I have done the entire time I've share housed was um saved, very um very consciously saved money. So I guess my my bargain with myself was like,
00:15:42
Speaker
You can have no assets. You can live this free life. You can do whatever you want. Um, but there needs to be some sort of little safety net of a nest egg that's being built, um, you know, at all times. And, you know, when I lived in Spain, I really, um, that's when I first started my own business, but it was actually more just like a hobby because I was much more interested in like hanging out with Spanish people. So I could really learn the language going to the beach every day and. traveling around Europe as much as I could because that was the time where I was nearby and the travel miles were less and and that kind of thing. So, you know, while I was there, I think I earned like $25,000 a year or something really tiny, um but I still tried to save or at least if not save money, then, um then you know, not not dip into that nest egg too much. And so that's what's helped me get to where I am now, you know, like that nest egg really did help me get
00:16:38
Speaker
um, into home ownership where I am now. And it even helped me, you know, eventually, um, or pretty soon after my ex partner and I bought the house, that relationship actually broke down. And that was really challenging. Like we'd been together for almost seven years. Um, we were engaged. It was like this huge sort of laugh event. Um, but I really, I knew I really wanted to keep this house. i kept It had just ticked so many of those boxes. That was so important to me from a sustainable living perspective. And having had that lifelong sort of saving approach is what helped me be able to do that because I had put in more money than he had um at the start. So it made gave me a bit of a leg up coming out the other side. um So yeah, I sort of always think, you know, like assets are great um or savings are great. Like it's it's um you can do either. I just think you kind of need to be doing something to kind of secure your future, whatever that looks like for you.
00:17:40
Speaker
h Yeah, nice.

Frugality and Financial Strategies for Sustainability

00:17:42
Speaker
And that saving, squirreling away mentality does lend itself beautifully to a life of, you know, frugal hedonism. Are there specific ways that you went about actively saving money? Yeah, I love that you've mentioned frugal hedonism. That is one of my favourite ways to describe it. that um That book by Adam Grubb and Ani Reza-Rolland, Frugal Heavenism is ah one of my all-time favorites. I think I've read it like five times and so it's almost like in my annual reading list as a reminder of how life can and should be. um So yeah, I definitely take my cues from that. I mean, i um I think I've always been a fairly thrifty person, but that's been more motivated from an environmental perspective rather than a monetary perspective, like knowing the impact that consumerism has on our planet and wanting to make more conscious choices so that might impact us as low as possible. But the wonderful upside of that is that it often costs you less money. You know, things like buying clothes at the secondhand shop or um bartering with a mate to help build your garden beds or
00:18:54
Speaker
um rifling through a bin for your dinner, a supermarket bin, um all of those sorts of things, like they they have a really they're lowering your impact on the environment, but they also mean that life is cheaper. So that's definitely helped. I guess now that I am a solo mortgage owner and also a self-employed person, which are two things that I think five years ago maybe would have been too terrified to even kind of contemplate, um But today me is oddly calm about it all. I kind of, the way I build resilience into that system is that I act as though my interest rate is much, much higher than it actually is. And I always um pay extra off of my mortgage each week, each fortnight or however often it comes out. um And so the idea behind that is um there's some bandwidth there for if interest rates do rise, I'm protected, I'm already living within a meet at
00:19:50
Speaker
that kind of means, so it won't affect me too badly. um It makes it easier to live more thriftily because the money in my day-to-day spending account is lower, so there's a bit of a kind of a feedback loop there. um And it gives me this stability like of being um having ah being several months or a ahead on my mortgage. It's just kind of a piece of security for me knowing like if I get really sick and can't work for a while or something like that, um and i have um I live with chronic pain, I have a fairly serious back injury that has in the past, um I think three times rendered me almost unable to walk for like months at a time. So that is a real possibility for me that I could end up being knocked out of work for some months at a time. um And so, you know, that say what, ah what I call circle savings, but it kind of is now just extra payments has given me this sense of security, even in, um in this mortgage world, which is a really weird one to live in having such a huge amount of debt hanging over your head.
00:20:50
Speaker
m ah such a beautiful and candid response. And again, a few things that I'd love to dig into there. One, a huge one being your your business and how you build in rest and those elements. But first, I'm quite intrigued by your um accountability to those limits that you're setting for yourself. You know, like the kind of an invisible structure that you've put around your your payments, your your um savings, like how do you invest those conscious limitations with it with enough authority that you'll actually keep answering to them and not just expand to kind of spend all of the money that you make, which I know I so readily do and I think human people are so prone to do. Yeah, definitely.
00:21:39
Speaker
um It does take some restraint and I don't have great willpower. So the way that I have done it is through a systems approach. I think that's probably why I like permaculture so much because it's a systems approach also. um So I've kind of added those sorts of systems into my financial life. So for example, I have um A budget mapped out, it's not anything different to what a normal budget looks like where you just, you know, figure out absolutely everything you ever spend money on and then break that down by um month and week. And, you know, that kind of falls out to how much you money you need each week. um But then I have a couple of different bank accounts. And so i the money that I spend each week
00:22:21
Speaker
I almost like pay myself a wage. So each week I just you know transfer a few hundred dollars over and that's kind of like my living expenses money for the week, you know just to cover things like um petrol and um going out with the mate maybe and um I don't know if there's other op shopping crucial weekly expense. um So, you know, and all of them aren't very much money. um But you know, it just makes me conscious, like if I'm at the petrol bowser, I'm conscious of how much money I have to spend there. And if I spend a bit more, then um then maybe I can't go out for dinner on Friday or something like that. So that helps as a really clear feedback loop, because, um you know, I've got this other
00:23:05
Speaker
larger bucket of money that would be very easy to just be like oh well cool there's heat there I'll spend it all um but kind of paying myself this wage and having this feedback system week to week that tells me whether I'm within my budget or not um is much more immediate and then if I'm over budget I have to physically transfer it across um and that's like a pause moment I like do I really need this do I really want this um is this important enough to to maybe go without something in the future because it's not in my budget. um And it it's kind of all automated, so I don't have to think about it. It just automatically transfers over. So that's been crucial, I think, to figuring it all out. Thank you for sharing that insight. It's really helpful to hear how people manage things in that financial realm. How did you decide what was enough to pay yourself? Just from the budget, literally, um looking at how much I thought I would be able to earn and
00:24:01
Speaker
things that were absolutely non-negotiables like the mortgage, but also, you know, like council rates and water and electricity and gas and all those very boring, must pay things. um Obviously my house in off grid, I live in the suburbs in Adelaide. It's just a ah pretty regular house. So I have, you know, all the regular expenses that a normal person would have. um And then, and then looked at the things that I do have some agency over like, um, you know, going out and spending money out like um at a a pub or a restaurant and and deciding how much money I wanted to spend on that. And my budget there is actually pretty tiny. Like I think I've got something like, I call it entertainment. I think I've got something like $70 a week allocated for entertainment, which really almost isn't even enough to cover like going out for a meal, you know, a meal and a drink kind of thing.
00:24:51
Speaker
um but that's sort of deliberate because what that means is I'm then um often proposing more creative ways to um see the people that I love you know like let's go for a beach walk or a walk in the forest or let's take your little dog down to the dog park or um come over and we'll make dinner here or like let's do something in the garden together sort of looking for ways that don't spend money so yeah I guess in in looking at how much was enough I looked at Um, not only like literally the financial value, but what way, what did I, how did I want to live my life? Like I absolutely want to catch up with my friends and family regularly, but I don't want to bomb 200 bucks a week on that because that's going to upset the stability of my, um, of my like financial. Position and ah or mean I have to work more, which I don't want to do. I don't want to push myself into working more just so I can, you know, eat at a fancy restaurant. So, um,
00:25:51
Speaker
Yeah, those that there's I guess that's another feedback loop that has helped. Yeah, amazing. So beyond a number, a figure in a bank account, what does make you feel wealthy? I think one of my most treasured possessions is um ah this box of seeds that I have. um And it's kind of like a combination of things that I've grown in my own garden and saved or um you know purchased or got at seed swaps or been gifted by friends. um And whenever I'm feeling a little bit wobbly, I'll kind of like go there and have a look at what's in there and maybe pull out a few things and go and plant something new because ah that feels like resilience. It's like, okay, well, you know, I've got food here. what If I need it, this is a way that I can um make food um available to me. And even just having like a well-stocked pantry um really helps me to feel like I have and enough.
00:26:48
Speaker
Um, I guess the other thing when I think about enough is enough time and space to rest. Like I, I just can get very tired very quickly. Um, and I think in previous versions of my life, I kind of ignored that a little bit and pushed past beyond, like well beyond my capacity. And so now like figuring out when I've had enough, you know, I've had enough stimulation and it's time to just roll back into rest. Um, that's becoming increasingly important. Yeah, you're expressing some really insightful and um kind of old-fashioned ways of operating, and I'm wondering who your role models have been, who those influences have been in your life, who have shaped you.
00:27:34
Speaker
Well, I guess I guess it all starts with my parents. They have really strong environmental values and um strong sort of moral and social compass, which they've handed down to me and my two sisters. We all now have our own businesses and that's like a really um strong thread for all of us through our businesses. um And they did, you know, a few kind of unconventional things with us and more kids like ah when we were in primary school, they would take us out ah of school on huge road tricks, you know, up to Cape York or across to Western Australia, to the Kimberley. um And they were always very interesting and respectful of First Nations cultures. So they often tried to give us opportunities to kind of intersect with and meet um First Nations people. And I have these really incredible memories of life
00:28:23
Speaker
walking alongside an elder sort of out on country somewhere in the middle of nowhere um and being told about you know stories of the land and the plants and ways of being and doing doing that had been handed down. um And that was just like an unbelievably beautiful experience. I'm so grateful to have had that in my childhood.

Influences and Application of Permaculture

00:28:44
Speaker
And I think that has um really informed a lot of my beliefs and kind of respect for culture that I have now. um I mean, I have to say, um we were also just like a regular family. Like we went to a mainstream school, um we had like, you know, meat and three veg for dinner, like that kind of thing. But, you know, there were elements of of that,
00:29:04
Speaker
um sort of more unconventional life. I think also mum and dad didn't have a lot of money when we were growing up. So they did a lot of things um to ensure that we had like a really healthy diet that didn't cost too much money. Like they'd buy you know a huge box of tomatoes and sit outside in summertime in the shed, stirring homemade tomato sauce for hours. um Best sauce ever, I have to say, but gosh, whatever ah um what a task to get it done. So yeah, I guess I grew up seeing um things being made and used and handed down and and that sort of thing. um And then I guess as I've gotten older,
00:29:45
Speaker
um a lot of a lot of the, knowledge that I really um have come to rely on has come from books. Like I i was a really big reader as a kid um and that I'm really grateful that I still have that kind of lifelong thirst for reading. um And so, you know, I just ah just read voraciously. I'm the kind of person who has to have a book in every room that's on the go, you know. um So you might be reading five books at a time or something like that. um And I just like, I like
00:30:21
Speaker
the um constant exposure to new ideas through books and that kind of helps me to tim um keep kind of editing my life to make it ever more like comfy for me but low impact for the world. Oh, that notion of editing your life is so beautiful. That's really ringing my writerly bells. um So in in kind of reading back over, you know, the drafts of your existence, was there a point where you started to see that thread of permaculture and activism and change making really strongly coming through and and selecting for that in the next chapters? Like when when did that happen?
00:31:01
Speaker
Yeah, there was a there was a definite moment where that happened. So I was living in Brisbane um with my sister and we were both working pretty mainstream jobs. Like I was working as a journalist for ah um a political journalist for a major metropolitan daily newspaper in Brisbane. And my sister was doing like technical systems, um like Uh, God, I'm not doing this any justice. She'll be horrified if she listens to this, but something to do with computers for big companies. as ah Um, and we were both feeling, you know, fairly out of alignment. Our work life was feeling it fairly out of alignment with our personal life. Um, and we were living together in this tiny little house and we decided to launch a blog, um, called she makes magic, which eventually turned into a podcast as well. Um, this was maybe 12 years ago or something.
00:31:51
Speaker
longer, actually. Wow, so ahead of your time. like didn' Yeah, it was wonderful, actually. And we we used those two frameworks um as a platform to talk about sustainable living and also to expose ourselves to people who were living on the edge, you know, a life less conventional, um kind of almost like as I wrote a pathway for us to follow, because we both knew that we wanted to jump at some point, but we didn't ah we didn't feel ready yet. And so we sought out all of these people, um largely women who were already on that path and picked their brains by a podcast and and kind of tried to inspire ourselves. um And then in terms of permaculture, I distinctly remember when I first came across permaculture, um like I was traveling with my sister, same sister, Alana,
00:32:40
Speaker
um in Tasmania. So at the time I was living in Spain, but she had bought a camper van and had invited me to do ah a one month trip around the entire you know perimeter of Tasmania. And so we'd gotten to the west coast and we'd taken that little ferry across the Paimon River to Carina, I think is the name of the place, which, you know, I think it's some sort of little eco-resort. So it's not much more than um a restaurant, a few buildings and a campground. um Anyway, so that night we were um hopping into the van to go to sleep And we're both very early to bed type people, but we heard, you know, all of these people in the communal cooking area having this like grand old time, like playing guitar and laughing and just sounding like they were having so much fun. And we thought, all right, let's pop out and, you know, see who these legends are.
00:33:26
Speaker
Um, and we ended up like staying there the whole night and having the shared meal with these people. And it was just totally wonderful. And we asked them why they were there and they said, Oh, we're Permies. And we were like, okay. like what's that ah And they said, Oh, there's been the, um, Australian permaculture convergence here, um, in Tasmania. And we've, we've just been there. We're all inspired. And we've just come down here to kind of debrief. I think it might've been in 2015 or something. And I just remember walking away from that experience and thinking like, what is permaculture and how can I get involved? Because these are people who are like super intelligent. They're so interesting. They're living these incredibly different, diverse, wild lives. They're really skilled. Like, look at that guy go on the guitar. Look at that other person like cooking dinner. And they're so welcoming. Like we were totally random people. We just rolled in and we instantly welcomed.
00:34:19
Speaker
Um, so yeah, that was kind of when I was like, I need this in my life. This fits really well. Um, but ah it took another couple of years when I came back home to South Australia before I kind of got really serious. And I did a ah permaculture design certificate at the food forest here in, in South Australia in Gala. And, you know, like for many people, that was sort of really pivotal and just set my life on a whole new trajectory. Mm, amazing. Yeah, I'm eating the Food Forest's divine pistachios at the moment. They're just the best.
00:34:53
Speaker
really And they um David and Sue went to visit them pretty recently and they came back with all of these otherworldly delights like pomegranates and jujubes and pistachios and stories. And so then having this this burgeoning interest in permaculture and then an ongoing study and exploration of permaculture, I'm wondering how you went about applying that to your garden and your home over the years, first as a rental and now as your as your nest. who Yeah, well, I guess, first of all, it was just like, okay, um this seems like a really practical approach to life. I'm going to get out into the garden and and see what I can do out there. And, you know, it was rentings. There wasn't a lot that I could um could do. Just, you know, like, um there was an existing garden. I just operated within it, which was really cool. um But I guess, like, I live a
00:35:46
Speaker
pretty close to the city centre here in Tandanya Adelaide. I'm like maybe five kilometres from the city centre on 478 square metres. Like it's a small urban um block. And I started looking around to say like, well, what are other people doing in terms of permaculture in cities? Like where's that narrative? Because I, especially once I bought, you know, the dream of moving to the country had flown the coop. I realized that that was probably um outside of my financial um means, but also my energetic means. like I ah do you know battle tiredness, especially with chronic pain and the sort of makeup of my brain. um So I was like, no, I think I'm actually a city person. I think I'm here to stay in the city. um And and how can how can permaculture help me here in this urban environment?
00:36:35
Speaker
Um, and so yeah, I just, I kind of just started, um, applying some of those principles here at home and really taking it, trying to take it beyond the garden. Cause this is the kind of thing that I love about permaculture. Like obviously there's often a gardening thread because growing even just a little bit of your own food is so has so many positive benefits for you and the planet and your community. Um, but it is actually a design system for life and you can apply it to absolutely anything from you know, your career to the type of house you choose or the way you want to hang out with your friends or, I don't know, the the kind of partner you choose in life, like literally anything you can use it for. So um that became kind of the framework that I started to apply here, like, okay, well, what does permaculture look like in the city? And ah around the same time, I read this statistic from the United Nations, which predicts that um seven in 10 people will live in urban areas by 2050, which is
00:37:33
Speaker
about double the um population size that we're in right now. So it started to feel really important to me. um You know, we we don't live very sustainably in city areas. It's pretty frightening how unsustainable our cities are. And so I was really interested in looking into permaculture as a way to, you know, maybe provide some solutions at that urban level. um And yeah, I guess for me, that's looked like we're talking about the type of house that I chose, but also some of the renovations that we did. Like I really wasn't interested in a cosmetic facelift, you know, just like, you know, knocking out the perfectly good kitchen to put a prettier one in. Like that, that just seems a bit unconscionable to me in this age of climate crisis. I was more like, well, what's insulation and how can I get like better insulation? And I don't know, what are ways to warm up my house passively and what changes can I make?
00:38:33
Speaker
um so that the indoor air quality is healthier for me. And um how can I connect all my rainwater tanks so I've got more water resilience? like Those were the kinds of questions that I started asking myself. And then obviously after I'd bought, um that became a really good opportunity to play with the garden. So now I've you know created a native butterfly garden out the front and a um ah permaculture food garden out the back. And it's been really lovely to talk about the different ways that gardening can um can be a force for good in a city area as well without it needing to be overwhelming like it doesn't need to be this ginormous sprawling garden.
00:39:12
Speaker
Yeah, i I really dig the conscious embrace of that environment and the thrill of that challenge of working in an urban and as it stands unsustainable system. So do you feel like the home that you're creating and it's ah it's an um ongoing unfolding process obviously, but is this getting you closer to a sense of of resilience, of not so much self-sufficiency, but like community sufficiency? Do do you see this as ah as a good solution or are we still like a long kind of a long way away from a point where cities and suburbs could be you know quote unquote sustainable?
00:39:54
Speaker
um
00:39:58
Speaker
it's That's a tricky one to answer because um like I sort of see what's happening in my little bubble and feel really positive about that and you know I've i've got this wonderful community of people that I'm connected to on Instagram who are like-minded and I see all of their little bubbles and I think wow like this is totally possible um but then I go for a walk around my street and kind of look at all my community and look at you know the astroturf and the lack of trees and um people, you know, but putting down like weed matting and mulch and and I just think, oh gosh, we've actually really still got so far to go.
00:40:35
Speaker
um But yeah, my sense is that people feel, you know, are worried about the ah scenario that we've found ourself in, that we've created for ourself and the future, what the future of the planet looks like amid climate crisis. but they feel overwhelmed by where to start or disempowered. Like, I can't make a difference. I'm not even going to try. um But I like sort of speaking into this micro space of like, well, here's how I fix the insulation in my house. Or um here's how I installed a ah fireplace and minefully source um wood or move move that heat around my house so I don't have to turn on an air conditioner.
00:41:16
Speaker
and kind of presenting these as like, well, maybe here's a little place you can start, and or here's another little place you can start. um And i'm I'm always really kind of overjoyed by the um the the messages, the emails and the DMs that I get from people, you know, with my journalism stories or things that I'm writing about online um to sort of say like, oh, I'm spending more time in the garden now, or I'm doing this thing differently and it's having such a positive impact. And I ah kind of feel like it all starts there. Like, yes, we need this big systemic change. There's these, you know, big um ah powers, forces it um at work that are huge and beyond the impact of or the capability of one individual. But often systemic change comes from, you know, um people asking for it like that groundswell of of people want demanding change. And people can't demand change if they
00:42:12
Speaker
um if they don't care. So, you know, starting these small things at home, I feel like they're the the gateway drug or something, they sort of start to open your mind up to, okay, well, now I care about, um you know, I realise how important a north facing aspect is. for my house, I'm actually pretty annoyed at the way new developments are allowed to new housing developments are allowed to go in with no um thinking whatsoever done about orientation. I'm actually feeling pretty annoyed about that. I think I'm going to start you know writing to people about that and start advocating for change. And I do feel hopeful around that kind of thing. So I guess in answer to your question, it's like, yes and no. like I think we've got so far to go um for our cities to become even sustainable, let alone regenerative.
00:43:00
Speaker
um But that's not a reason not to start. And if we all kind of just started, I just feel so hopeful about what kind of groundswell of change that that could create. Yeah, nice. And yeah, one thing I just absolutely adore when I when i read your work, when I look at your Instagram page, when I see you popping up on the ABC is the way that you meld the radical and the regular. like it's so um It's so blissfully approachable and and beautiful and you don't take for granted
00:43:32
Speaker
you know people's level of knowledge and it's not patronizing in the slightest, it's just pure digestible and actionable content and I think that actually takes a fair whack of wisdom to express and to put out there because I know the deeper you get into the weeds of permaculture and um you know ecological thinking and and connection, it's it's like hard to keep your head and and remember the the profundity of that of that simple, small and simple stuff. So yeah, do you really feel like you're you're in your your flow as a, I suppose as an activist, as someone who is a living embodiment of their values. Like, do you think you're working effectively and where you where you kind of want to be? Or... I don't know, that's like quite a big question, but I'm just yeah curious about that sense you have of like, um yeah, I'm doing the work that I want to be doing.
00:44:25
Speaker
I love this question. My brain's hooked on being called an activist because I've actually realized I don't think of myself as an activist, but maybe I maybe i should. That's really fascinating. word That word is really loaded as well. So I'm redefining it on an individual basis.

Permaculture Writing and Work-Life Balance

00:44:41
Speaker
But yeah, please, please continue with with your thought process there. Yeah. I mean, yeah, to some extent, I feel like I'm sort of arriving at this place where, you know, 20 years of very random skills have led me to a place where I can, um ah yeah, communicate to the mainstream in a way. Like I guess for context, I've i've been a journalist for 20 years. um That's kind of my my background before I started digital marketing. And I've written, you know, for publications all over the world, um
00:45:14
Speaker
told all sorts of stories that you can imagine, but mostly as an observer, telling other people's stories. And it's really only been in the last two to three years, um sort of from when I began writing regularly for the ABC, that I started um speaking in first person and telling about things in my own life and speaking from my own perspective. um And it's definitely, that's definitely harder. There's elements of that are harder, like I'm more directly connected to the criticism. Um, people can be really mean in comments and sometimes people just email me really mean, mean things. Um, and I don't have a very thick skin around any of that. I don't, I don't actually think I have the ability to develop a thick skin. So that is, um, hurtful and can like knock me off my perch a bit. But I guess that's balanced by, um, you know, the really empowering fact that I'm more connected to the positive as well. And I i do hear that feedback of people who are like,
00:46:14
Speaker
I've made these changes in my life and it's, it's really helped me or I feel like I'm actually being able to do something about the climate crisis now. So yeah, I feel, I feel like that, that sort of connection, that level of connection has just grown to a point where people, people seem to be listening. And I love the idea that, you know, I'm writing for the ABC or the Guardian. They're the two main people that I, publications that are at for now. Um, and I'm always trying to like sneak permaculture principles and ethics into those stories. And I love the idea that that's going out to, you know, at times hundreds of thousands of people Australians, but all over the world as well. And just, and just starting to crack open, um, some of these ideas and put pop them back into the mainstream. Cause like you say, they're not actually radical. They're just the way that people always lived. Um, you know,
00:47:06
Speaker
years ago and it's only really in the last um half a century to a century that we've moved so far away from it that that this is radical now to live in this way um but I don't think it needs to be considered that so it's kind of nice to be popping back in um you know kind of popping that back into the narrative and then also I guess from the like the main part of my business now like I do a little bit of journalism but I actually find that quite um energetically taxing to keep writing, writing, writing for, for publications. So the main part of my work now is um digital marketing. And I really am hyper focused on working with like ethical small business owners who have, you know, really strong value system and um you know, people who are concerned with that triple bottom line. So like people, planet and profit, not just profit. And, and again, that's the space where it feels like this 20 years of kind of um random skills development have
00:48:03
Speaker
um have helped me arrive at a place where I can actually be quite useful to people because I can help them with their communication and their marketing, but I can also layer over you know lots of sort of sustainable living threads or um ethics and principles that make it a lot more manageable or make it feel good for business owners. It's not so icky or outside of alignment. um but But yeah, it sort of feels like it's just getting started. I'm interested to see what's happened in the next sort of five years. I am too. I'm really excited. And it stimulates my brain. No end when I see people like you integrating things that we've somehow they've they've drifted apart and separated out and they're in these boxes. The way we do everything matters from these little tiny moments of engagement, even
00:48:54
Speaker
sometimes the way I sign off an email I feel like I can put something in that sign off that might just seed a little idea or create an image in someone's mind and you just never know what that is going to flourish into in the future but in terms of how you do business not just what you do in your business the how is is so alive when I when I see your work and what you're sharing from your personal perspective about you know the the permaculture ethics and principles that you're applying to to your work and to your way of working. I'd love to hear you expand on that Corinne like how you're consciously designing your business around those permaculture ethics and principles. Well yeah I have this sort of like multi-branched business now where I get to do lots of different things like there's the journalism stuff the
00:49:47
Speaker
digital marketing stuff. I also do some sustainable living like education and workshops, which is really amazing. um And I just want to put a plug in here for generalists. Like we live in this highly specialised world, right, where people are going, yeah um and necessarily so, getting very specialised in all these different fields. But I think there's a strong case for um also having generalists in our society as well, which is what I consider myself to be. um you know, someone who's good at doing lots of different things. And I think that um means you can kind of step back and see the bigger picture. um you You have this sort of perspective that allows you to see how things interlock. um And it also means you can spot wider patterns and then design from those, which obviously is a permaculture principle, design from patterns to detail. So I feel like that's a lot of what my work is doing, sort of stepping back and looking around and going, right, what is the wider pattern here?
00:50:41
Speaker
and then how can we design that down into something that really, really um connects with people, or really means something or really makes change. But yeah, I think the the opportunity to work for myself has been just phenomenal in terms of like having a go at challenging some of the accepted norms of the corporate world and just playing with some different ways of working. um I was really lucky to do a holistic decision making course with Dan Palmer before he passed away. And that has been pivotal life changing for me, um really helping inform my life choices because it focused, you sort of start with how you want to feel, like what you want your life to feel like, what's important to you. um And then you kind of create enabling actions out of that and your kind of goals and what actually you do in your life all falls out of that.
00:51:33
Speaker
um So that's kind of led me to some interesting decisions. Like one at at a small scale is that I just don't take, um, scheduled phone calls. Like if a client calls me and we don't have a meeting scheduled, I just don't answer. And maybe later on I'll text to say like, Hey, I noticed you called. Um, if you'd like to schedule an email, um, a meeting, please send me an email and we'll we'll work it out. Um, and that's because I personally find, um, phone calls, like unscheduled phone calls, incredibly disruptive. I like to work in really focused blocks of time. And if I get interrupted during those focused blocks of work, it takes me a long time, um, to kind of come back into it. And I just, I don't get to do my best work. And so I've kind of developed this system that, um, you know, helps to preserve something that I know that I need.
00:52:23
Speaker
There's the same with meetings. like i I largely avoid video meetings because I find them quite energetically draining um and I'll always ask for a phone meeting unless there's something that absolutely needs to be um done on screen. It also has a lower environmental impact so that kind of hits two values for me. um What other things? i've I've built in a lot of flexibility in the way that I work so I can shuffle work around if I'm not feeling too well. Like I ah do live with chronic pain um and I have a um ah brain type that's quite sensitive and susceptible to um overwhelm and burnout. And so sometimes I just, there are days where I wake up and I just don't have it in me.
00:53:07
Speaker
as I've created this but this kind of work life where I can easily shuffle time around. um And what about the structure that you mentioned on socials recently around the weeks that you insert as rests rest periods? Yeah, so this is um quarterly weeks off, I call them. um I have a bit of a tendency to overwork and to push myself beyond my energetic kind of um capability. and so a year or two ago, I realized I need to actually set up a structure that means this doesn't keep happening. um And the way that I've done that is just blocked out an entire week in my calendar every
00:53:48
Speaker
quarter which is lovely because it's like a seasonal holiday um and I just don't book anything over the top of that um and it's sort of like this system that ensures that I get regular rest and maybe I'll take a holiday on that time but sometimes I don't or oftentimes I don't oftentimes I just hang out at home um you know maybe go for long walks and hang in the garden and I don't know read five books or something like that. um I also have transitioned since January, I've transitioned to a four day work week. So I um generally have Fridays off. um And I've found that's really helpful. It's helpful having that extra day in my week, because if I'm having a ah low energy day midweek, it's not a big deal. I can just shuffle, you know, shuffle that day to the Friday and take the day to rest when I need to. um But it's also, it just gives me, you know, more
00:54:43
Speaker
um perspective, like it allows me to sort of step back from projects for a bit longer and and kind of think deeply, like my brain likes to work away on things in the background when I'm not actively thinking about them. So that's been really helpful. Um, I mean, I know, I know these structures don't necessarily work for everyone and have in fact had a few older folk subtly suggest that I'm doing business wrong, you know, like silly little girl kind of vibes. Um, but I balanced that with the fact that I, you know, have dozens of clients who love working with me and the way that I work, um, and appreciate kind of that spaciousness and calm that comes with working together. So I guess like.
00:55:27
Speaker
I guess I'm at the point where i I just, I feel like we need more diversity in our corporate approach in general, like rather than this sort of like homogenized neurotypical nine to five, almost like kind of robotic experience. um And i I think if more people, more small business owners leaned into working in ways that um are more supportive of themselves and their own like neurotypes and nervous systems, like Imagine what that would create for the corporate world. Like imagine how that would open up the working world for um all different types of people, especially people who might currently be excluded from traditional working life because they just don't have, you know, the um the brain type or whatever that fits into that really rigid sort of working way. um So yeah, i like I like kind of pushing the boundaries with the way I work as a waiter. Yeah, just break it all open a little bit more, I think. Yeah, thank you for role modeling that because I've been having constant conversations lately about not only how to do things slash everything differently, but how to take seriously those signals from our minds and bodies to rest. I suppose I'm still in that stage of grappling with what that means and what that might look like.
00:56:45
Speaker
So I wonder if you can share some of your biggest learnings around, around rest, around surrendering to listening to tending that, that sense of overwhelm and fatigue. Like what, what do you have to say as someone who has obviously lived through those things and, and, and pain too. I know a lot of people I know are living with chronic pain and, and trying to figure out what their life can look like with that as something that is part of them as part of their whole being. Yeah, it's really, it's really challenging. um And I feel like this is the lesson that I've already learnt and forgotten two or three times in my life and then had to circle back and relearn it and go kind of look up and go, darn, I'm not doing that anymore. I better, better rethink it. um
00:57:31
Speaker
I guess I'm lucky in inverted commas to have like two quite serious handbrakes on my life. like i um you know I love having this really diverse and multiplicitous life and doing all the things. um But yeah, these handbrakes often um come and remind me that I can't do everything. So one is my health. like i have Um, a back injury that I mentioned earlier that, you know, often it has me in chronic pain daily at a low level, but it can ramp up a fire over, overdo it. Um, there's your chicken in the grease. Rooster at the door. Love that. Um, yeah, so, um, that that's a definite handbrake. And then the other thing is just have a ah neurotype that's quite
00:58:17
Speaker
prone um to that sensory overload and and burnout. And so those two things sometimes combine to leave me feeling just like I've got absolutely nothing in the tank. um And on those days, literally all I can do is lay on the couch and watch TV, you know, maybe for 14 hours or something like that. And I used to really beat myself up over that. Like I used to think like, um a this isn't rest like rest is supposed to be I don't know like laying in a field of sunflowers as a setting sun like Beautifully sets over a beach or I don't know, you know this sort of idealized version of what rest should be um It shouldn't be like slug life on the couch with takeaway wrappers all around you um But I've been really interested in the work that Kristin Neff does around self compassion. She's got a couple of really great books and um some excellent meditations and online resources. And that's really helped me to kind of just accept that sometimes that's what I need. And there's actually nothing wrong with that. And rest can look like just vegging out in front of the TV. um So that's been super helpful, I guess, um in terms of kind of
00:59:32
Speaker
helping myself not get to that point, I've used systems again. um So I use time blocking in my calendar. So I literally add blocks of time to my calendar for everything I'm doing, whether it's like paid work, um unpaid work like admin type, unbelievable stuff or volunteer work. um You know, this podcast and the preparation went into the calendar. But even things that I'm doing with friends and family or, um you know, fun activities. And because I love visual stuff, it's all color coded. And when I look at my calendar, it's just a digital calendar. When I look at it each week, it gives me a very clear visual of whether I'm overdoing it or not. And that helps to balance things out and make sure that I um do you have lots of rest built into my calendar. um And then, then
01:00:27
Speaker
Something I've been really kind of working out lately is figuring out what things, you know, when I'm not at that complete burnout point, when I when ah can get up off the couch, what actually is restorative to me? Like I kind of asked myself this question at the beginning of the year and realized I didn't know the answer and I was a bit shocked. I was like, oh, damn. So I've been really paying attention to that in the last few months. And what I've noticed is that It's often things that have um some form of movement or where I'm using my hands, like um like doing a puzzle, for example, or, um you know, chopping up veggies to make pickles or um fruit to make jams or um weaving, like I had the opportunity to learn weaving from, um you know, during a First Nations-led workshop last year. And now I've got this like knowledge to make these baskets and it's just like the most beautiful process.
01:01:24
Speaker
Um, and I think there's something ancient in that, right? Like that's kind of what we used to do. Um, or seed savings, another really good one. Um, and I noticed that that kind of lets my mind, um, I almost imagine it like it's floating across the top of like a really calm, warm ocean surface, you know, like ah my hands are there doing something and my brain's engaged, but not fully just enough to stay afloat. And then it can float wherever it wants. And I really do just find that. So restorative. So it's been helpful to clock that those things are good for me because now instead of being like, oh, I can't, you know, I can't fit weaving in this week. That's like a superfluous activity. I've got all these other things I have to do. It's more like, no, I need weaving or gardening. You know, gardening is hugely restorative for me.
01:02:11
Speaker
um I actually need that in order to be able to keep going and do all the other things. So what can I shift of the other things to make room for that thing, which is rest. So I guess I've had to redefine what rest is. Cause I, you know, some weird part of my brain thought it had to be like meditation or walking or whatever. Um, but it turns out for me, rest can be like going hard at a shovel in the garden for like an hour. um or it could be you know sitting on the couch for eight hours. It's really yeah variable.
01:02:43
Speaker
Well, if you'd like to collaborate on a dictionary of modern bre definitions of redefining everything dictionary, um I would be most amenable to that. and but yeah I feel like we need so many new definitions and those words that we use to describe anything carry all of the old inherited meanings and can actually interrupt our our reality and use our our our of our personal paradigm. So yeah, rest can be digging a big fucking hole. I love that. Yeah. Yeah. What I wondered as you were speaking Corinne was like, when you, when you reflect, when do you block that reflective timing? Because obviously so much reflection and refinement has gone into this routine that you've established for yourself. And then maybe further to that and and potentially it's connected, but how do you start the day? Cause I think this, you know, the the starting of the day, that new fresh East kind of sunrise energy does set the tone for not only the day, but also our lives.
01:03:43
Speaker
So yeah, when do you reflect and also how do you how do you greet the day? ah The reflection piece is something that I've built into my business this year. So a lot has changed for me this year. I previously was working part time in my business and part time for, um you know, I had firstly a three day a week job and then a two day a week job for other other people. um And then in January, i I moved fully into my own business. So that's been amazing because it's given me space to um really think closely about my systems and what's important to me. um So I have like i have a time blocked period of what I call business development time each week, but I'm finding that I rarely use that for reflection. The reflection comes on the Friday off when I'm out in the garden or walking or kind of at random times. So I have um
01:04:34
Speaker
I use OneNote just to jot down every thought I've ever had around that kind of thing and then sort of add them into, you know, like my holistic decision making context or my key messaging document or or something like that. um So I guess kind of intentionally set the time aside, but then be open to the inspiration coming whenever it comes and just jotting it down um as I can. And then in terms of starting the day, it's a movable feast. So you've caught me um right as I've just started a new um routine that's gonna make me sound like some sort of angel. right excellent ahm So happy that that's happened. I've been getting up and doing like a 10 to 15 minute meditation and then 15 to 20 minutes of yoga.
01:05:24
Speaker
um and then, you know, sort of trying to do a little fast. So just having herbal tea until maybe like nine or 10 and then eating breakfast. um that definitely doesn't happen every day and that's sort of um something that I do for a while and then I forget that it even exists and I just you know start waking up at like 8 a.m. and coming out of bed all you know sleep-crusted eyes and sitting straight down at the computer so there's definitely um I'm definitely not a saint in that um realm but I think the reason I've returned to that healthier wake-up
01:05:57
Speaker
scenario now is because one of those handbrakes has been speaking to me. So my back has been quite sore generally lately. um Like I've been having, as I said before, I always have some pain every day, but I've been having a little bit more every day than I normally do. So that feedback loop is telling me, I think it's telling me I need to move more because I had just stopped like I was doing a bit of walking, but it wasn't really doing much more than that. um And also like I've finished a lot of my really large scale garden reno's, which is great, but they kept me so fit. Like there was so much shoveling and building and lifting and carrying and I was really really fit during that um period. So now I have to be a bit more mindful about um exercise. sorry it's So it's interesting to note, like now I've kind of been back in this routine for a week or two and already my back is starting to calm down and it's telling me like, yeah, great. Thank you. Thanks for listening.
01:06:53
Speaker
Mm. Oh Karun, it is such a treat to wander through your inner and outer realms. I feel like you shared yeah so candidly about your life, and that is exceptional for for me to hear, and I know that people will just be completely fascinated and inspired by how you live. and the non saintliness of it all as well. It's very raw and real. um Is there anything that I haven't asked you that you really wanted to elaborate on? And if not, um where can people hang out with you? I guess I guess one thing I'd love to say is sort of in in response to thinking about the broader climate crisis and how we sit within that.

Encouragement and Future Episodes

01:07:37
Speaker
um Because, you know, like many people, I feel
01:07:40
Speaker
um deeply worried about the future ahead of us and and the troubles that lay ahead of us as the climate crisis worsens. um Big change really does feel inevitable. um But, you know, I guess, like, I love this, there's this really great book by Joanna, um sorry, Johnika Newby, who um it's called Beyond Climate Grief. And she says, like, no one's going to join a movement um where there's no path or or belief in change. Like, we have to have courage. and keep moving forward and then courage inspires courage and I think that's kind of what I'm trying to do across all areas of my life is just whether I'm working or hanging out with friends or doing stuff in my garden or renovating my house it's like what's the courageous thing that I could do here to spark a little bit of positive change and it doesn't even have to be a big thing like it could literally just be like adding insulation to your roof rather than building a new kitchen or something like that um and I think
01:08:40
Speaker
that's really inspiring for other people. Like when when we see other people being brave, it kind of gives you the courage to think that you can be brave too. And so I guess if I could just leave that with people of like, you know, you don't, there are these huge systemic issues and they are deeply overwhelming and worrying, um but you know, you don't need to fix them all. You can start with a ah small thing and just kind of take it from there. and And maybe your courage to do that little thing will inspire your neighbor or your friend or your workplace or or something like that. Oh, thank you so much. Small acts of bravery. Yeah, that's a beautiful takeaway. And yeah, is it is it mainly like Instagram where you're sharing stuff? Are you writing elsewhere where people can tune in? Yeah, Instagram is definitely the the best place to find me at the moment. So that's just under name, Corin Helbig. I have a website where I um do a little bit of blogging. I sort of share the stories that I write for the ABC and the Guardian um and then other bits and bits and bobs. So that's always a good place to hang out. There is a new sign up button on there. um I think I've sent two newsletters to that crew in like four years. I do have plans to kind of ramp that back up this year. So
01:09:56
Speaker
if you're not a social media user, then the newsletter would be a great place to start. Brilliant, brilliant. I love a newsletter. It's my absolute favourite form of communicating with people, but I too let it fall by the wayside because it is a pink ah big time commitment. Yeah, so I can't wait to see what you pen and what enters my inbox. Thank you so much. ah I'm so grateful for this time and space and the just so deeply insightful questions, Katie, that you ask that, you know, a breath of fresh air. So thank you so much. for like me ah That means a lot to me.
01:10:33
Speaker
I'm so grateful for Corinne's work in the world and her conversational generosity. You can find Corinne's offerings and all the cool stuff we talked about linked in the show notes. In other news, Resculience is increasingly listener-funded, which is the most exciting thing since I saw a white-bellied sea eagle on the weekend, 200 kilometers inland. I didn't start this podcast to get paid, but the thought of being supported to produce it, to pour even more hours and intention into broadcasting conversations that offer solace and inspiration and nervous system support during gnarly times, well, that is actually my wildest dream. I heard this really cool stat that if we each spent 100 bucks per year on a creator we love, an artist or a producer or a local artisan,
01:11:24
Speaker
And if a thousand people did that, that creator would have an annual income of $100,000. To me, that is a shit ton of money, but it also sounds completely plausible as a circular model of wealthification, each of us consciously distributing our coins towards fellow humans whose work really truly feeds us. So, a massive shout-out to Risky Leance's newest patron, Pat, who signed up for the highest tier, which will very soon offer monthly missives in the post, and access to the Resculient Saloon, which will be an online space where we can all talk it out. Thank you so much, Pat. And my heartfelt gratitude to existing Patrons, Jude, Mads, Jordan, Ian, Ellie, Rachel, Danny, Sam, Kat and Robin.
01:12:13
Speaker
If you want to have a nose about the Patreon page, head to patreon dot.com slash riskilience. And of course you can easily and freely and legendarily support the podcast by simply telling a friend, sharing it on your socials or leaving it a five-star review on Spotify or iTunes. Thank you to everyone who's already done that. I'm super excited about the next episode, which is with another powerful woman, Eleanor Young, who's fusing permaculture with midwifery and casually rewilding the birthing space. But even if you're not into babies, I think you'll love our conversation, which is one of those really special whole life deep dives that you can only have with someone as genius as Eleanor.
01:12:58
Speaker
So, meet you back here in two short weeks for that one, and happy reskilling in the meantime.