
UCLA LiveWell
Dr. Wendy Slusser of UCLA's Semel Healthy Campus Initiative Center interviews leading experts about new perspectives on health and wellbeing. LiveWell champions an interdisciplinary and intersectional approach to health equity-- from food and climate, to social justice and emotional wellbeing.
With guests like Evan Kleiman, Peter Sellars, and Bob Thurman, we've set out to explore the many facets of what it means to live well.
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UCLA LiveWell
88: The Story of a Wildcat: Community Resilience and Cultural Connection
Our latest LiveWell podcast episode features an enlightening conversation with Dr. Dan Wildcat, a professor at Haskell Indian Nations University and a profound thinker on Indigenous perspectives of ecology, technology, and community. Dr. Wildcat shares his transformative journey from Sociology to Environmental studies, deeply influenced by his mentor, Vine Deloria Jr.
In this episode, we discuss:
· His unique approach to understanding the relationship between nature and culture through an Indigenous lens
· The concept of eco-kinship and moving beyond anthropocentric thinking
· His experience writing "Red Alert" and finding hope in the face of climate change challenges
· The power of storytelling, gratitude, and generosity in creating resilient communities
· The importance of reframing technology to enhance life for all living beings, not just human convenience
Whether you're an environmentalist, educator, or anyone interested in Indigenous wisdom and sustainable living, this episode offers profound insights into reimagining our relationship with the natural world.
Listen now and subscribe for more stories that challenge conventional thinking and inspire holistic well-being.
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[00:00:00] Wendy Slusser: Thank you so much, Dr. Dan Wildcat, for agreeing
to be part of our LiveWell UCLA podcast. It's such an honor to have you here.
[00:00:10] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Well, thank you for the invitation. I always like to
talk about living well, and that's close to my heart.
[00:00:18] Wendy Slusser: You bet. Can you tell us how you got started on
your journey as a professor at Haskell Indian Nations University?
[00:00:24] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So, I was one of those kind of typical grad
students. I just did undergraduate, went into a graduate program, and I was all
three years in, and I was thinking — well, what am I gonna do? When I get the
doctorate, you know, where am I gonna go?
[00:00:49] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And I was at Kansas University in Lawrence,
Kansas — right in the backyard of Haskell Indian Nations University. I had the
GI Bill. So, when I got out of the service, I decided — well, I'm gonna go to
Kansas University. I had cousins that [00:01:00] were attending Haskell when I
was in the service. And then when I got out, I had a cousin — good cousin,
Dennis Barnett, that was attending Haskell.
[00:01:08] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So, I knew about Haskell. I really appreciated
what Haskell did in its role in Indian country and education. A funny thing
happened. I started teaching as a graduate teaching assistant at Kansas
University, get this — in the Western Civilization program, and they used to
have a two semester sequence for all liberal arts majors — Western civilization.
[00:01:33] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We used to jokingly call it Plato to NATO.
Anyway, I had about three years in my graduate studies, getting a little bit
burnout because I had gone right in. Right after finishing my bachelor's degree,
the dean from Haskell came up to see me at KU and he said, “I understand
you're a sociologist.”
[00:01:55] Dr. Dan Wildcat: He said, “we've got a position in sociology at
[00:02:00] Haskell, and would you have any interest in coming down there and
teaching?” It just — it was one of those things — it was like, “Wow, yeah, Ithink I would.” And so, I went to Haskell. Haskell is a unique place. Indigenous
students from all over the contiguous 48 states and Alaska.
[00:02:21] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We cannot serve Hawaii natives. That's because
they have a little different legal classification. They're US citizens, but Hawaii
natives are not treated the same way that American Indians and Alaska natives
are. Long story short, when I went to Haskell, the incredible diversity there
blew me away and I fell in love with that place.
[00:02:46] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I fell in love with this kind of incredible richness
of native Indigenous culture I found at that campus. I started teaching there a
long time ago. I'm getting ready to go into [00:03:00] 40 years of teaching there.
I went there in January of 86, but the thing that really sold me on Haskell was
the incredible diversity of Indigenous peoples — their cultures.
[00:03:12] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And I began to make this connection between
Indigenous peoples in their cultures and the places they lived. And that really
made it real easy for me to work with my mentor, Vine Deloria Jr. He was a
great mentor to me. We wrote a book together, “Power and Place: Indian
Education in America.”
[00:03:36] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I started my journey, really in what I'm doing
today — going to Haskell. Falling in love with the incredible diversity I saw
among Indigenous peoples in the United States. And then I started working with
Vine Deloria Jr., and that was kind of a dream come true. So that's how I got
started on this journey.
[00:03:59] Wendy Slusser: [00:04:00] Wow. So I didn't know you were a
sociologist because I, when I first met you, I listened to you on an incredible
panel that was during COVID, so it was all virtual and you were talking all
about the environment.
[00:04:16] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yes.
[00:04:17] Wendy Slusser: Tell me, how did you get from Sociology to
focusing more on the environment?
[00:04:24] Dr. Dan Wildcat: See, this is a great question because I don’t get a
chance to talk about this often. So part of the beauty of Haskell now is that
Haskell is a small liberal arts college now. When I went there in 86, it was still
essentially a two year, like junior college and it had not really transitioned to
that four year baccalaureate granting status.[00:04:52] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And so it was small, about 800 students — 600 to
[00:05:00] 650 of them living on campus. So it's a residential campus and the
departments were small, so for some reason they had the Social Sciences and
the Natural Sciences all in the same college under the same dean. And so I
began talking to biologist ecologists, environmental scientists in the department,
and that's when I really started to formulate the thinking in my own work that
was so heavily influenced by Vine Deloria Jr.
[00:05:36] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Who made thinking about history and culture
from a spatial perspective — one of the Cornerstones of his work. And so when
I got to Haskell, I just started talking to the natural scientist. They were a small
department and they welcomed me. They said, “oh yeah, we're really interested,
you know, in those kinds of questions.”
[00:05:59] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And we see [00:06:00] that connection too. When
we talk to our students, a lot of the students wouldn't know the Latin, scientific
names for plants, but they were amazed at how students could identify plants in
their native language. Words for sunflower, words for purple cone flower, words
for dandelion. And they began to say, “oh, there's a real cultural connection
here.”
[00:06:25] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I was so lucky because when I got to Haskell, my
dean just basically said, “Dan, what do you wanna teach?” And so I just started
developing these kinds of hybrid courses and I was teaching sociology. But that
connection to me between culture and nature — I never saw this tension.
[00:06:50] Dr. Dan Wildcat: A lot of people see between, well, “is it nature or
is it culture?” In my traditions, it's both. Simultaneously, [00:07:00] our cultures
are symbiotically connected to the natural world. Really being at Haskell
allowed me to begin working with environmental scientists and atmospheric
scientists and physical scientists, probably in a way that — if I had gone to
another large institution, I wouldn't have had that opportunity.
[00:07:23] Wendy Slusser: What you're touching on, which is a big movement
right now, is this whole trans-disciplinary approach to solving the challenges of
our time. And then you certainly landed on it 40 years ago, which is really a
harbinger for the kind of forward thinking that you do every day that I've really
been impressed by.
[00:07:45] Wendy Slusser: I'd like to hear a little. You keep mentioning Vine
Deloria Jr. You say he was so important to your first stepping stone at school.
Give me a little bit more background on that.[00:07:59] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yeah, so [00:08:00] Vine Deloria Jr. is probably
one of the most important thinkers of the 20th century. An incredible intellect.
He was an iconoclast. There was something about the late sixties. Now, you and
I can reminisce on this, right? But there was something going on there that we
haven't seen since then.
[00:08:20] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And in 1969, two New York time bestselling
books were by American Indians. One of them by. N. Scott Momaday, our own
Pulitzer Prize winning poet, novelist, and artist — House Made of Dawn. And
then a book written by Vine Deloria Jr, provocatively entitled “Custer Died for
Your Sins.: And part of that generation, just when I read that book, I said, “wow,
here is a guy — a native guy — who gets it, who understands it and can
[00:09:00] be funny, irreverent, and very insightful at the same time.”
[00:09:05] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So I became a big fan of Vine Deloria early on,
and then this is really fortuitous. The second year I was at Haskell, a couple of
folks out at UC Berkeley put together a six weeks seminar and it was called,
“Great American Indian Intellectual Traditions with Clara Sue Kidwell.
[00:09:30] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Professor Clara Sue Kidwell was one of the
conveners of that seminar. Each week she invited in different native scholars. I
think it was about the fourth week she invited Vine Deloria Jr. to come. So here
I was, finally face to face with a man, you know, I just really revered for his
intellectual and his scholarship.
[00:09:53] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We hit it off. I think the book, I'd highlight for
people who are listening, if they wanna know more about [00:10:00] Vine
Deloria's influence on contemporary Indigenous studies today. I think it was his
fourth book. “God Is Red.”
[00:10:14] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Again, kind of a provocative title, but in that
book, he really lays out what I refer to as the nature culture nexus: this idea that
you could never separate native people's identity, their culture, and their history
from the places, the spaces where their people emerged over time and as distinct
Tribal peoples. That really resonated with me. It was just such a great way to
start a career in teaching.
[00:10:42] Dr. Dan Wildcat: He really appreciated the fact that I knew a lot
about the Western tradition. I had taught in the Western Civ program for three
years as a graduate student at Kansas University. So I really understood it and I
knew when I went to Haskell, you'll get a kick out of [00:11:00] this.[00:11:00] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I told the Dean, he said, “what do you wanna
teach?” I said, “I wanna offer Western civilization here,” but I told him, “I’m
not gonna do it the way they do it. At K.U., we're gonna do a comparative
approach.” So when we go through the classic thinkers, the topics they raise,
I'm gonna find Indigenous Counterpoint.
[00:11:21] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So when we'd read, St. Augustine’s confessions, I
had them read Black Elk Speaks. When we read Locke and Hobbes, and all of
their social contract theory, I'd have them read Vine Deloria Jr’s essays on this
kind of connection between people and their culture and the institutions they
built that were often modeled after natural systems.
[00:11:48] Dr. Dan Wildcat: The one thing I have to emphasize, I have just
been so fortunate in my life. I've just had so many wonderful opportunities
[00:12:00] that came before me, and I took advantage of most of them. And, the
rest is history. But Vine Deloria is a scholar. I wish every person in America
would read at least one of his books. I'd start with, “Custer Died For Your Sins.”
And then my next favorite would be, “God is Red,” but he's got — I think it's
close to 20 books. So he was prolific.
[00:12:27] Wendy Slusser: So from Plato to NATO at Kansas University to
nature and culture, and then merging the two of them together.
[00:12:38] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yes, right.
[00:12:39] Wendy Slusser: That’s really cool. And from my discipline, they
always say nature versus nurture, but it shouldn't be versus — it’s nature and
nurture.
[00:12:51] Dr. Dan Wildcat: It should be, yes.
[00:12:53] Wendy Slusser: Yeah. Your book called “Red Alert.”
[00:12:57] Wendy Slusser: You have a great quote about our [00:13:00] human
knowledge of reality must always be approached with humility. And I'm hearing
a lot of humility in what you're sharing here. As a sociologist who is really
blending this whole nature piece, you've actually really immersed yourself in
climate science.
[00:13:22] Wendy Slusser: And there was a point there though that you felt
deeply discouraged and, what helped you move through that despair?[00:13:31] Dr. Dan Wildcat: You've heard me mention this before, but I was,
again, talk about incredible opportunities. So in about late 2000, and then in
2001, an East European scholar who I had met by virtue of her love of Vine
Deloria works, who I had met in the United States.
[00:13:55] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Her name was Irina Sumi. She was a sociologist
[00:14:00] from Ljubljana, Slovenia. And, I got an email from her and she said,
“Dan, I want you to come to Eastern Europe. I'm doing a proposal, for the
Soros, foundation and his open society initiative to get Eastern European
societies, you know, Make sure their institutions became fully democratized and
things.” Anyway, long story short, I went to Eastern Europe. I was going back
and forth for three years in that project. An amazing project. It really opened my
eyes to my own ethnocentrism as an American Indian and then as a US citizen.
But, during that time, every time I would come back from Europe, we'd be
talking about the crazy weather that people were experiencing and people were
talking about climate change.
[00:14:51] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Al Gore had started the time climate change, you
know, [00:15:00] almost, two decades earlier. And, I thought, you know,
something's going on here. So when I wrapped up my work in Eastern Europe, I
thought, I’m gonna do a book on climate change.
[00:15:10] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So this is about 2005 now. So I've been in Eastern
Europe, I had a great experience. 2006, I said, okay, I'm gonna take a year, and
all I'm going to do is immerse myself in climate science. So, I just started
reading everything I could find. Books. international reports on climate change,
and I tell you, I did that for a year and I got so depressed, Wendy.
[00:15:43] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I thought, “oh my God.” I wasn't reading just,
your, whole wheat tree hugging kind of lovers of nature. I was reading NASA
scientists, NCAR [00:16:00] scientists, NOAA scientists and the forecasts were
saying, we're in for some big trouble if we don't do something soon.
[00:16:10] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And I got depressed and I said, “why am I even
gonna think about writing a book about climate change?” I got so immersed in
the science that I got depressed. I was like, “oh man, I shouldn't waste the time
to write a book about something that we're doomed,” you know? And, about
that time, I always had my support network, so I was reaching out to people like
Albert Whitehat, beautiful man from Sinte Gleska Tribal College on the
Rosebud Sioux Reservation.[00:16:45] Dr. Dan Wildcat: The legendary Billy Frank Jr. of the Northwest
Indian Fisheries commission. All of these Indigenous elders who I had met
through the years, who had always been really [00:17:00] kind and open to me.
Even my aunts, my aunties, Josephine Bigler, one of our real important elders in
helping revitalize the Yuchi language again.
[00:17:08] Dr. Dan Wildcat: They said, “Dan, put the books down. You need to
get outdoors again.” And, it was like, yeah, that's where life is — outdoors. I
always took my dog for walks every day, and we started taking walks down
along the Kansas River.
[00:17:36] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I live fairly close to the Kansas River, maybe
about a 10 minute walk from the North Bank of the Kansas River. As it
meanders across the northern edge of Lawrence. And you know what, Wendy,
after about three or four months of putting the books down and just getting
outdoors and walking my dog and I just realized, [00:18:00] “Wow, Dan, you
forgot.
[00:18:04] Dr. Dan Wildcat: You got so immersed in this Western science and
way of thinking. You forgot what you really wanted to write about, and this is
what you wanna write about: our relationship to the land, the air, the water, the
plants, the animals.” And I tell you, it was almost an epiphany of sorts.
[00:18:25] Dr. Dan Wildcat: One day after a walk, I just started thinking about
that. I said, “why do I feel so good?” It is horrible, the situation we’re in, but I
felt good. And then I thought, I feel good because my relatives had been giving
me some good medicine. Not just my human realties, but that river, those trees,
the wind. And I thought, you know what?
[00:18:50] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I'm gonna write this book because that's the
message that we need to convey. That is that, when we think of our [00:19:00]
communities, our kin, we have a tendency to think very anthropocentrically. We
think just about our human selves. What evolutionary biology teaches is that
we're related to all life on the planet.
[00:19:15] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And that's part of ancient Indigenous wisdom.
And so that was really the thing that made me realize, “Oh, Dan, you got too
tied up in this human perspective and you need to write that book because
you've gotta share that broader Indigenous perspective. So that's when “Red
Alert” really took off and I thought, you know what?[00:19:42] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I've read enough science. I'm gonna write Red
Alert now.
[00:19:46] Wendy Slusser: I have to say to all listeners, everyone should read
Red Alert. It’s digestible and it's a great Christmas present. I totally have been
giving it to all my friends and relatives. [00:20:00] There's a couple of terms
that you've mentioned. One is the anthropocentric, which I guess as I
understand is to understand our relationship to the environment.
[00:20:10] Wendy Slusser: Can you explain what it means? More precisely
how I just said it, and also, what's the difference between that and echo kinship?
[00:20:20] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So, an anthropocentric view is a kind of
humanism that basically declares that humans are the center of everything —
that we're the smartest, we're different than the rest of life. And so really,
everything. It's all about us. And so that’s anthro for man, pocentric. It's
thinking that somehow, humans are the measure of all things that, you know,
everything revolves around what we do and how we act and what we behave.
[00:20:53] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And then it can [00:21:00] sometimes lead into
when it's in its most hubris written, arrogant kind of notion is, oh, all these
problems in the world are therefore for us to fix. And so that's the
anthropocentric view. Now, I would suggest to you that.
[00:21:19] Dr. Dan Wildcat: For 99, I'm not gonna say every Indigenous
people in the world, but it's gotta be 99 point something percent of Indigenous
people who still hold their traditional tribal worldviews, and understand that is
the most foreign idea you could ever imagine because from an Indigenous lens,
yeah, we're different, but we see kinship and understand the trees, the
[00:22:00] plants, the soil, the wind, the water.
[00:22:05] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Not as resources, but as relatives. And people
have asked me about my name. I always think it's really funny when people ask
me about my name, Wildcat. They say, how did you get that name? And I say,
well, and among my people, Wildcat is not an unusual name. we have deers, we
have wind.
[00:22:28] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Many of us, some of us were fortunate that after
the deadly Trail of Tears, my people were part of those Eastern Indians that
were removed to Oklahoma territory. And some of us were lucky because
somehow or other when they were working with translators, my great-
grandfather was identified by his clan totem.[00:22:54] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Wildcat. So our clan totems are basically an
ecological [00:23:00] map. Wind, raccoon, deer bear. you can, and then even,
some plants, you can kind of see, okay. These are the places, these are the kinds
of animals that they identified kinship with, and that meant looking at them as
relatives.
[00:23:19] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We had respect for them and we were just
incredible observers of the natural world. And so to us, Robin Wall Kimer has
this great line in her book, “Braiding Sweet Grass,” where she talks about how
her Potawatomi relatives, always human relatives, always understood that the
trees and the plants — we’re their elders.
[00:23:48] Dr. Dan Wildcat: They evolved. They've been here longer. They
evolved way before humans did. And so, we can learn things in our relationship
with those. [00:24:00] Again, not resources, that's the key trick, right? Not
resources, but relatives. And that means then you develop a whole different kind
of relationship. And I think that’s when I talk about eco kinship.
[00:24:16] Dr. Dan Wildcat: That's exactly what I mean, and I want people to
know I'm not speaking euphemistically. I'm not trying to be romantic. I'm
speaking Indigenously. I'm speaking scientifically that we misspeak every time
we talk about the world full of natural resources because they're not our
resources, they're our relatives.
[00:24:44] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And that's what modern science teaches us now.
So even modern science has come around to understanding that, although we
still have this resource thinking that we're burdened with.
[00:24:58] Wendy Slusser: Yeah, it reminds me [00:25:00] of something that a
lot of people are trying to shift in the thinking and about when are we going to
make a dead tree? They say dead trees are worth more than a living tree, but
how can we change that incentive?
[00:25:13] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yes. Yes, exactly. And so again. You mentioned
humility, and I wanna say something about this because this is something I think
we desperately need today, and that is this culture of, you know, everyone
thinking you gotta have the smartest person in the room, and if you're bitten
with that horrible hubris, you have to think you're the smartest person in the
room.
[00:25:42] Dr. Dan Wildcat: That arrogance is something that I think is totally
foreign within Indigenous cultural traditions because the person who thinks theyknow it all and among my relatives is the most dangerous person you could ever
be around [00:26:00] because we know it's foolish. How could any of us know
it all? We're much wiser when we learn from others, right?
[00:26:10] Wendy Slusser: So true. And it gets back to one of the points you
actually bring up in Red Alert, which really resonates with me, is this
hopefulness. I think your nature and culture nexus really speaks to that and
gives you some action oriented. So could you define your nature culture nexus a
little bit more detail for our listeners?
[00:26:34] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yes. So Vine Deloria, the book that we did
together is entitled “Power and Place: Indian Education in America.” We wrote
that in 2000 and 2001, early 2001. And, a great opportunity to work with, one of
my idols and, he was just, so [00:27:00] generous with me, but his idea was that
power permeates the world, the universe, and most of it we can't see, we can't
touch, but it's there.
[00:27:14] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And now, of course, modern scientists will tell
you there is no empty space and the cosmos may have these nine nanoparticles
of energy, of physical elements and, so there is no empty space. Deloria thought,
power permeates everything. And he said, but it expresses itself uniquely in
different places.
[00:27:41] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And because it expresses itself uniquely, the
people of those places have unique personalities. So that was Deloria's axiom
for Indigenous metaphysics — power and place equals [00:28:00] personality.
I'm a sociologist and I thought, “wow, this explains the incredible diversity
Indigenous people have.”
[00:28:09] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Now it makes sense. It's obvious that Cherokee of
the South Eastern United States are nothing like the Lummi or the Tulip on the
Northwest coast. Now why is that? Because their identities, their personalities,
their cultures were emergent out of what I began to call the nature culture
nexus.
[00:28:35] Dr. Dan Wildcat: The symbiotic relationship that we can never
break. At least not until we get to modern society, and some people are so
ignorant of this relationship that they don't even realize what they're doing to it,
right? That's because they think we're separate. We're above the rest of nature.
[00:28:56] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We're in charge. We're in control. Foreign
[00:29:00] idea to indigenous people. I think the hope goes back to the story Ishared with you when you asked me about writing Red Alert. When I got so tied
up in that reading of Western science that I forgot that, “hey, my community and
my kinship is not just with other humans.”
[00:29:26] Dr. Dan Wildcat: It's with the river, it's with the earth, it's with the
life that resides here. And so when I got outdoors again, started making those
connections, all of a sudden I started feeling better again. I was situated in
community. Now, again, not just a human community, but an eco kinship
community.
[00:29:56] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So here's where ultimately I think hope [00:30:00]
resides. As much damage as humans have done to the earth. We are still
surrounded by beauty and we just have to slow down. We have to take the time
to realize that there are lessons that we humans can learn if we adopt that
position of mindfulness, of humility.
[00:30:35] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And again, for me, Wendy, you've heard me say
this before, that's not Indigenous romanticism. That's ndigenous realism. The
world that we live in has much to teach us. Yeah, if we are mindful, if we pay
attention, and [00:31:00] to me. It means I don't just have to depend on my
human relatives. My family's bigger than that.
[00:31:08] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I've got a gigantic family. The plants, the animals,
the earth, the soil itself, the water, the wind. Of course, in my people, I don't
know if I ever shared this with you. I think I did, the Yuchi or as we would refer
to ourselves, the Zoyaha. That translates as the children of the sun. We
recognize the sun too, as, one of our parents.
[00:31:37] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And it's really interesting when you start diving
into Indigenous worldviews and cultures, because I can't think of a single one
where you don't, as you get into it, you start to realize, wow, the Navajo
Pueblos, how they were [00:32:00] connected to the desert, to the sun. How
when you get to the Northwest coast, it was the salmon, it was the waters.
[00:32:10] Dr. Dan Wildcat: It was the trees, the forest. And we go up and
down the Great Plains. What was the greatest, most important relative, the
grandpa of them all — the American bison, the buffalo. And so, you know, hope
resides in realizing we don't have to be in this alone and I wanna say something
just for a minute about this, because I've been seeing all the reports and stuff
about this.[00:32:46] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I think we can call it a crisis. A lot of our students,
high school age, even college age now, are reporting loneliness as one of the
primary things they [00:33:00] causing depression, causing them, sometimes to
not feel very good about life. And what I would like to encourage them, all of
young people and old people too, we do need our human relatives.
[00:33:20] Dr. Dan Wildcat: That's important. But remember, we’ve got
relatives too that are outside the walls of these buildings that we're sitting in
right now. And sometimes that's good medicine. Sometimes that's the medicine
we need. And so I think for me, hope really resides in everything we should do.
At this point, Wendy, with everything that we're facing economically, politically,
culturally, technologically, I think community is more important than ever. We
need to focus on [00:34:00] building, human communities, but not just human
communities in isolation from the places they call home, but really including
those places as part of the community. I am dying to hear what your engineers
and material scientists and architects are doing with the rebuilding there, with
the fires you folks had there in Los Angeles County. I'm hoping that someone
you know, is raising up this issue that as we think about rebuilding, let's be
mindful of this larger, sense of community that we need to be a part of, because
I think it could really be an incredible opportunity to illustrate how we can live
well, in our human [00:35:00] communities by recognizing the deep
relationship we have in kinship with the places that we call home.
[00:35:10] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So it’s, to me, there's just all of the things that
we're seeing. These incredible. natural events fueled by climate change or at
least, I won't say fueled by — they are exacerbated often by climate change.
They're not the sole cause there are a lot of things that are causing the kinds of
flooding we see.
[00:35:32] Dr. Dan Wildcat: It's fires that we see. But climate change is a
factor. And I think part of what we need to do now is reaffirm. Reaffirm a kind
of eco kinship with the balance of life on this planet. I'm absolutely hopeful that
we can create more [00:36:00] vibrant, more healthy, more resilient senses of
communities.
[00:36:07] Wendy Slusser: I so agree. And all the different points, and trying to
wrap it up in your theme of it being attentive. Where you live and who you're
living with and what's living around you or part of your environment can not
only bring great joy and uplift your spirits like it did for you, and inspire you to
write Red Alert, but also the fact that it can also really touch on other parts of
your life, like the loneliness part, which you don’t have to feel lonely if you’re
out there, just as long as you can practice that muscle of being attentive.[00:37:03] Wendy Slusser: And I'm thinking, you mentioned climate change,
but not necessarily as one that [00:37:00] is the fault of all that we're
experiencing right now. But what you've discussed in other writings, and also
just in your conversations is the interaction. There are three Cs that you've
identified that are prioritized currently, and then you suggest three other Cs that
you think we should be speaking to. You wanna share some of that with us?
[00:37:26] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Oh, I'd love to. So I just finished an article. It's
gonna come out in the Journal of Geography, which is a journal that's dedicated
to geography education. It's just called Journal of Geography. Be watching for
the next issue. I just finished a piece with a scientist at Ncar and wanted to write
about this age of the Anthropocene, the age of humans that we're now living in.
[00:37:55] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Many big picture scientists would say, we've
really [00:38:00] created a new almost geologic epoch here. The age of the
Anthropocene, the age of humans. We wanted to write about technology. And, I
told Tim I'd been playing around with this for about 20 years, and it dawned on
me that the dominant way that humans, and again, here we go.
[00:38:25] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Now we're thinking, see. an anthropocentric kind
of perspective. It's all about us. When we think about technology, we think
technology is good, so long as it promotes human convenience. Human
comfort, puts money in our pocket capital gains. Those are the three Cs I said of
modern thinking technology is here to promote human convenience, human
comfort, and capital gains.
[00:38:49] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I said, let's counterpoint that. So I started playing
around and thinking about reading Deloria and [00:39:00] thinking about all the
Indigenous scholars and elders I've worked with. And I said, you know what?
We're not anti-technology, but we reframe it.
[00:39:08] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So for us, okay. Technology is equal to another
three Cs. Community, culture, and communication. And those values, those are
the numerator. What's the common denominator? The earth, and I kept thinking
we really need to reframe technology.
[00:39:35] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So we've written a piece about this in the Journal
of Geography. I hope people can get access to that. And technology ought to be
about, how I end Red Alert, promoting systems of life enhancement and life
enhancement, meaning not just human life.
[00:39:59] Dr. Dan Wildcat: But [00:40:00] all life on the planet.[00:40:01] Dr. Dan Wildcat: What we put back usually isn't that good for the
Earth in terms of pollution and waste. But the other view would be to say, no,
we need to go back to that world of relatives and our technology should be one
that enhances our community, not just the human community. It can do that.
[00:40:30] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Our culture give us resilient kinds of opportunities
to express beauty in the world we live in. And I think, now at least, I think it's
worth us talking about, and I'm hoping people will read it and maybe people
will have a way to tweak it or improve it or say, maybe you got this wrong.
[00:40:53] Dr. Dan Wildcat: How about this? But it's not about being right, it's
just about being [00:41:00] honest and trying to share something. And I always
tell people, look, all I can promise you is that I'm gonna speak honestly. Now,
that means that I might honestly be wrong, and so therefore, when you hear me
misspeak, I welcome you to correct me.
[00:41:24] Dr. Dan Wildcat: You might help me understand something better.
Now, again, think of that attitude. See that, that twisting that around. Now that
you're not attacking me. You're being a good relative. You're saying, Dan, I like
that point, but maybe you ought to think about it this way. You're not being
negative. You're being a good relative.
[00:41:46] Dr. Dan Wildcat: You want me to understand something more fully
and better? I'm lucky I have a lot of good relatives who are always saying, Dan,
I think you better rethink that and work on [00:42:00] this a little bit. So I mean,
isn't that, isn't that beautiful though? Think of what the academy would be like
if we could have that kind of interaction.
[00:42:08] Wendy Slusser: So, I'd love to lean in on the communications part,
especially given that communicating with stories is such a powerful means of
communicating. And I'd love to hear a little bit about what kinds of stories could
you think of to drive for culture and cultural change.
[00:42:33] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yeah. I think they're all there. Everyone has a
story. Everyone has a story. Now, some people don't get a chance to ever share
their stories, but everyone has a story to tell their experience, their life. To me, I
think the most powerful stories are the ones that center around [00:43:00] our
relationships in this world.
[00:43:08] Dr. Dan Wildcat: How we all experience in this life hurt. We feel
pain, not just physical pain, but emotional pain. And to me, the most powerful
stories are the ones where you don't back off the painful, hurtful part, but thestories don’t end there. They always have the good stories that are the ones that
have this sense of almost — a sense of redemption, a sense of, finding peace.
[00:43:55] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Finding understanding as a result of [00:44:00]
something, you know, that, may be very painful and, and maybe was very,
hurtful, in one's life. I think right now, what we really need to think about in a
very deep way is how our relationships — and I'll give you a theme that I share
with a lot of scholars — but the one I think of almost immediately — a couple
come to mind — N. Scott Momaday, but then my biologist sister, Robin Wall
Kimmerer. Here’s a metaphor to think about. Life is a gift. Now, sometimes
when when you get gifts, they might not be what you think they are, they might
[00:45:00] not even be what you want. But when you begin to think about the
idea of gifts. Gifting. Then you begin to recognize that we don’t have to be
credit worthy when we come into this life because that first breath of air we take
is a gift.
[00:45:16] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We didn't have to see if we were credit worthy to
take that first breath of life. And I think this metaphor of life as a gift is
powerful because I've heard her talk about it.
[00:45:44] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And what comes with that is then that attitude of
gratitude.
[00:45:51] Dr. Dan Wildcat: A world full of gifts promotes a sense of gratitude.
And here's the really [00:46:00] powerful part. It ends with a responsibility to
be generous. Generosity is what really helps the world go round. And I tell you,
I don't know about you, Wendy, but I was so offended when I heard a person
who's been in the news quite a bit frequently actually say that he thought
empathy was the biggest weakness of modern humans to have empathy.
[00:46:40] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I couldn't disagree more. Empathy, gifting, gift
giving, gratitude, generosity. The three Gs. The three Gs. I think that is the
stories that [00:47:00] I think of in my life and my stories are, those are pretty
common elements. And remember, again. Sometimes the stories start in a bad
place, but it's not where they start, it's where they end up.
[00:47:18] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I think we need, we desperately need good
storytellers today.
[00:47:26] Wendy Slusser: And I think that what you just identified is some
life enhancing activities, in order to incentivize behavior.[00:47:34] Wendy Slusser: Is there anything else you'd like to share with the
listeners about within our new economy or the current economic system?
[00:47:44] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yeah. I keep thinking about this a lot. I think right
now, what we need more than ever is community. We need to stand together.
[00:48:00] You and I don't know, we're maybe coming up on a two year
anniversary of actually, meeting each other on this flat screen, but, you are kin
and it means something when we know someone has our back, when we know
that I’m not in this alone.
[00:48:15] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So we're separated by a great amount of land, but
this use of the technology might be a good example of how we could use this
technology in a good way that promotes culture, communication, and
community. And so I'm just thankful.
[00:48:49] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I think right now, don't let the loneliness, don't let
the craziness surrounding us. And by the way, it's mostly human made
[00:49:00] craziness. Let's be very specific about this, it's human made
craziness. Let's not let that blind us to the beauty around us, and I think there's
great healing powers in the world around us.
[00:49:20] Wendy Slusser: We just have to figure out how to open ourself up to
them. Thank you. I love that advice and I'm gonna follow it, I’m going to go out
and enjoy the sun for a few minutes.
[00:49:32] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Oh, that's a great thing to do.
[00:49:35] Wendy Slusser: Yeah. we're winding down now. I'm sad, but we'll
have hopefully other opportunities to share conversations with each other. But
we usually like to end our interviews with a question with all of our guests, and
that is, how do you live well?
[00:49:54] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yeah. How do I live well? I’ll tell you what I
[00:50:00] try to every day: begin every morning with a very mindful
expression of gratitude. For that gift. Everyday is a gift and I want to use it that
gift responsibly. I wanna be generous with the gifts that I've been given, and
that's why I have to express incredible gratitude to you, Wendy, because you've
given me another opportunity to share, and I'm just filled with gratitude that I've
got a good, strong sister out there on the West coast.
[00:50:42] Wendy Slusser: I feel very honored to be part of your circle and I
feel the same. So much gratitude and, you have opened up a whole world to methat I haven't thought about, and I feel very comfortable in. Yes, thank you. And
also, we will [00:51:00] definitely, include all of those incredible books that you
described.
[00:51:05] Wendy Slusser: We’ll share that on our website for sure. All your
writings, you not only wrote Red Alert, but many other books. So we will
include those for all our listeners. Yes. And again, thank you Dr. Dan Wildcat.
[00:51:22] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yeah. Thank you so much.
[00:51:27] Wendy Slusser: Other thing. Okay. The other thing, Dan, is I will be
formally introducing you, uh, with another clip. So right now I won't have to do
that, so we'll
[00:51:38] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Okay,
[00:51:39] Wendy Slusser: yeah. So
[00:51:40] Dr. Dan Wildcat: cool.
[00:51:41] Wendy Slusser: thank Okay. So thank you so much Dr. Dan
WildCat for agreeing to be part of our LiveWell UCLA podcast. Uh, it's such an
honor to have you here.
[00:51:52] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Well, thank you for the invitation. I'm, uh, I
always like to talk about living well and, uh, that's [00:52:00] kind of close to
my heart. You bet.
[00:52:02] Wendy Slusser: Great. Well, um, we'll get to it soon in this
interview, how we met originally.
[00:52:10] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yeah.
[00:52:10] Wendy Slusser: I'd love to first start with, um, can you tell us how
you got started on your journey as a professor at Haskell Indian Nations
University?
[00:52:20] Dr. Dan Wildcat: You bet. So, uh, you know, I was one of those
kind of typical grad students. I just did undergraduate, went into a graduate
program, and I, I. I was all three years in, um, and I was thinking, well, what,
what am I gonna do? You know, when I get the doctorate, you know, where am I
gonna go? And I was at half at Kansas University, Lawrence, Kansas.[00:52:50] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Right in the backyard of Haskell Indian Nations
University. I had the GI Bill. So when I got out of the service, I decided, well,
I'm gonna go to Kansas University. [00:53:00] I had cousins that were
attending, uh, Haskell when I was in the service. And then when I got out, I had
a cousin, good cousin, Dennis Barnett, that was attending Haskell.
[00:53:09] Dr. Dan Wildcat: But I, I, so I, I knew about Haskell. I really
appreciated what Haskell did its role in Indian country and education. A funny
thing happened. I, I started teaching as a graduate teaching assistant at Kansas
University, get this in the Western Civilization program, and they used to have a
two semester sequence for all liberal arts majors, Western civilization.
[00:53:37] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We used to jokingly call it Plato to nato. And
anyway, uh, I had. About three years in my graduate studies getting a little bit
burnout 'cause I'd gone right in, right after finishing my bachelor's degree, the
dean from Haskell came up to see me at KU and he said, you know, I
understand you're um, [00:54:00] sociologist.
[00:54:00] Dr. Dan Wildcat: He said, we've got a position in sociology. At
Haskell. And would you have any interest in coming down there and teaching
and, you know, it just, it was one of those things, it was like, wow. Yeah, I think
I would. And so, um, I went to Haskell. Haskell is a unique place. You have
students from, uh, indigenous students from all over the contiguous 48 states
and Alaska.
[00:54:30] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We cannot serve Hawaii natives. That's because
they have a little different legal classification. They're US citizens, but Hawaii
natives are not treated the same way that American Indians and Alaska natives
are. Long story short, when I went to Haskell, the incredible diversity there
blew me away and I fell in love with that place.
[00:54:55] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I fell in love with this kind of incredible richness
of [00:55:00] native indigenous culture I found at that campus. And, you know,
um, the rest is history. I started teaching there, um, a long time ago. I'm getting
ready to. 40 years of teaching there. I went there in January of 86, but the thing
that really sold me on Haskell was the incredible diversity of indigenous
peoples, their cultures.
[00:55:25] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And I began to make this connection between
indigenous peoples in their cultures and the places they lived. And, um, that
really. Made it real easy for me to work with my mentor, um, Vine Deloria Jr.And, um, you know, we had, we had, he was a great mentor to me. We wrote a
book together, power and Place, Indian Education in America.
[00:55:53] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I sort of started my journey really, um, you know,
in what I'm doing today, [00:56:00] going to Haskell. Falling in love with the
incredible diversity I saw among indigenous peoples in the United States. And
then, um, you know, started working with Vine Deloria Jr. And that was kind of
like a, a dream come true. So that's how I got started on this journey.
[00:56:22] Wendy Slusser: Wow. So I didn't know you were a sociologist
'cause I, when I first met you, I hearing, I listened to you on a incredible panel
that was during COVID, so it was all virtual and you were talking all about the
environment.
[00:56:39] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yes.
[00:56:40] Wendy Slusser: Tell me, how did you get from sociology to, uh,
focusing more on the environment?
[00:56:47] Dr. Dan Wildcat: See, this is a great, this is a great question because
I don't. Get a chance to talk about this often and up. So part of the beauty of
Haskell now, Haskell is a small [00:57:00] liberal arts college now, when I went
there in 86, it was still essentially. A two year, uh, like junior college and it had
not really transitioned to that four year baccalaureate granting status.
[00:57:16] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And so it was small, about 800 students, 600 to
650 of them living on campus. So it's a residential campus and, um. The
departments were small, so for some reason they, they had the social sciences
and the natural sciences all in the same college under the same dean. And so I
began, um, talking to. Uh, biologist ecologists uh, environmental scientists in
the department, and it really was just, um, that's when I really started to
[00:58:00] formulate the thinking in my own work that was so heavily
influenced by Vine Deloria Jr.
[00:58:06] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Who made, you know, thinking about history,
culture from a spatial perspective, one of the. Cornerstones of his work. And so
when I got to Haskell, I. I just started talking to the natural scientist. They were
a small department and they welcomed me. They said, oh yeah, we're really
interested, you know, in those kinds of questions.
[00:58:30] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And we see that connection too. When we talk to
our students, a lot of the students wouldn't know. The Latin, uh, scientific namesfor plants, but they were amazed at how students could identify plants in their
native language. Words for sunflower, words for purple cone, flower words for
dandelion. And they began to say, oh, there's a real cultural connection here.
[00:58:57] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And so, um, [00:59:00] yeah, it was, I think. I was
so lucky because when I got to Haskell, my dean just basically said, Dan, what
do you wanna teach? And so I just started developing these kind of hybrid
courses and uh, I was teaching sociology. But that connection to me between
culture and nature. I never saw this tension.
[00:59:27] Dr. Dan Wildcat: A lot of people see between, well, is it nature or is
it culture? In my traditions, it's both. Simultaneously, our cultures are
symbiotically connected to the natural world. And so, you know, it, it, it really
being at Haskell allowed me to begin working with environmental scientists and
atmospheric scientists and physical scientists, probably in a way that, you know,
if I had gone to another large institution, I wouldn't have had that [01:00:00]
opportunity.
[01:00:02] Wendy Slusser: Well, what you're touching on, which is a big
movement right now, is this whole transdisciplinary approach to solving the
challenges of our. A time, and then you certainly landed on it 40 years ago,
which is really a harbinger for the kind of forward thinking that you are, you do
every day. That I've really been, um, impressed by.
[01:00:25] Wendy Slusser: Um, I'd like to hear a little, I you keep mentioning
Vine Deloria Jr. What was, uh, you say he was so important to your. First
stepping stone at school. Uh, gimme a little bit more background on that.
[01:00:41] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yeah, so Vine Deloria Jr is probably one of the
most important thinkers of the 20th century. He, uh, you know, he was, uh, in an
incredible intellect. He was, uh, an iconoclast and, um. He, it's, it's [01:01:00]
interesting, there was something about the late sixties. Now you and I can
reminisce on this, right? But there was something going on there that we haven't
seen, uh, you know, since then.
[01:01:11] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And in 1969 2 New York time bestselling books
we're by American Indians. One of 'em by. N Scott Momaday our own Pulitzer
Prize winning poet, novelist and artist and, um, House Made of Dawn. And then
a book written by Vine Deloria Jr. Provocatively entitled Custer Died. Four
Your Sins. And uh, that book. I part of that generation that that book, just when
I read that book, I said, wow, here is a guy a, a native guy who gets it, whounderstands it and can be funny, irreverent, and very insightful at [01:02:00] the
same time.
[01:02:01] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So I became a big fan of Vine Deloria early on,
and then this is really fortuitous. The year, the second year I was at Haskell, um,
a couple of folks out at uc, Berkeley put together a six weeks, uh, seminar and it
was called, uh, great intellectual. Amer great intellect, great American Indian
intellectual traditions, Clara Sue Kidwell.
[01:02:34] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Professor Clara Sue Kidwell was one of the
conveners of that seminar. Each week she invited in different native scholars. I
think it was about the fourth week she invited Vine Deloria Jr. To come. So here
I finally face to face with a, a man, you know, I just really revered for his
intellectual, um, uh, inside and his scholarship and, um.[01:03:00]
[01:03:00] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We hit it off. And, uh, I think the book I'd
highlight for people who are listening, if they wanna know more about Vine
Deloria's influence on contemporary indigenous studies today, they should read
his, um, I think it was his fourth book. Um, God Is Red. Uh, again, kind of a
provocative title, but in that book, he really lays out the, this, this kind of, um.
[01:03:29] Dr. Dan Wildcat: What I refer to as the nature culture nexus, this
idea that you could never separate native people's identity, their culture, and
their history from the places, the spaces where their people emerged over time
and as distinct. Tribal peoples. And that really, that really resonated with me.
And so, um, you know, it was just, it was just such a great way to start a
[01:04:00] career in teaching.
[01:04:01] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Uh, meeting Vine Deloria we hit it off
immediately. Um, uh, he was really, I think, uh. He really appreciated the fact
that I knew a lot about the Western tradition. I had taught in the Western Civ
program for three years as a graduate student at Kansas University. And um, so
I, I really understood it and I knew when I went to Haskell, you'll get a kick out
of this.
[01:04:29] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I, I told the Dean he said, what do you wanna
teach? I said. I wanna offer Western civilization here, but he said, but I told him
I'm not gonna do it the way they do it. At ku, we're gonna do a comparative
approach. So when we, you know, go through the classic thinkers, the topics
they raise, I'm gonna find Indigenous Counterpoint.[01:04:50] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So when we'd read, uh, St. Augustine's, uh,
confessions. I had them read Black Elk Speaks when we'd had them, when
[01:05:00] we read, uh uh, Locke and and Hobbes and all of their social contract
theory, I'd have them read Vine Deloria Juniors essays on this kind of
connection between a people and their culture and the institutions they built that
were often modeled after natural systems.
[01:05:23] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So. Again, it was just like, I've been so fortunate.
The one thing I have to emphasize, I have just been so fortunate in my life. I've
just had so many, uh, wonderful, uh, opportunities that came before me, and I
took advantage of most of them. And, um, you know, the rest is history. But
Vine Deloria as a scholar. I, I wish every. Person in America would read at least
one of his books. I'd start with, um, [01:06:00] Custer Died For Your Sins. And
then my, my next favorite would be, um, God is Red but he's got a, a, you know,
I think it's, it's close to 20 books. So he was prolific.
[01:06:13] Wendy Slusser: Wow. It's so from Plato to NATO at Kansas
University to nature and culture, and then merging the two of them together.
[01:06:27] Dr. Dan Wildcat: yes. Right.
[01:06:28] Wendy Slusser: That's, that's really cool. And you know, from my
discipline, it's, they always say nature versus nurture, but it shouldn't be versus
it's nature and the, and nurture.
[01:06:41] Dr. Dan Wildcat: exactly, exactly. It should be, yes.
[01:06:44] Wendy Slusser: Yeah. Like, well, you know, in your, your book
called Red Alert, you.
[01:06:50] Wendy Slusser: You have a great quote about our human knowledge
of reality must always be approached with humility. And I'm hearing a lot of
humility [01:07:00] in what you're sharing here.
[01:07:02] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
[01:07:05] Wendy Slusser: what as a sociologist who is really blending this
whole nature piece. Uh, you've actually really immersed yourself in climate
science,
[01:07:21] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Oh,[01:07:22] Wendy Slusser: uh, and there was a point there though that you felt
deeply discouraged and
[01:07:27] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Oh,
[01:07:28] Wendy Slusser: helped you move through that despair.
[01:07:31] Dr. Dan Wildcat: You know that, you know, you've heard me
mention this before, but um, I was real, again, talk about incredible
opportunities. So in about 2000. Late 2000. And then in 2001 A, a East
European scholar who I had met. By virtue of her, her love of Vine Deloria
works, who I had met in the United States.
[01:07:59] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Her name was [01:08:00] Irina Sumi. She was a,
um, uh, sociologist from, uh, Ljubljana Slovenia. And, um, I got an email from
her and she said, Dan, I want you to come to Eastern Europe. I'm doing a
proposal, uh, for the Soros, uh, foundation and his open society. Uh, you know,
um, initiative to get Eastern European societies, you know, um.
[01:08:29] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Make sure their institutions became fully
democratized and things. Anyway, long story short, I I, I went to Eastern
Europe. Um, I, I was going back and forth for three years in that project. A
amazing project. It really. Opened my eyes to my own ethnocentrism as an
American Indian and then as a US citizen. Um, and uh, but during that time
things were, every [01:09:00] time I would come back from Europe, uh, you
know, we'd be talking about the crazy.
[01:09:07] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Weather that people were experiencing and people
were talking about climate change. Al Gore had started the time climate change,
you know, almost, uh, at this point, you know, two decades earlier. And, um, I, I
thought, you know, something's going on here. So when I wrapped up my work
in Eastern Europe, I thought.
[01:09:28] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I'm gonna do a book on climate change. So this is
about 2005 now. So I've been Eastern Europe, had a great experience. 2006, I
said, okay, I'm gonna take a year, and all I'm going to do is immerse myself in
climate science. So I just started reading everything I could. I could find books.
You know, the um, uh, international reports, you know, on climate change, and I
tell [01:10:00] you, I did that for a year and.
[01:10:04] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I got so depressed, Wendy. I thought, oh my God,
I now remember these aren't, you know, I'm, I I wasn't reading just, you know,your, your, you know, whole wheat tree hugging kind of lovers of nature. I was
reading NASA scientists NCAR scientists. NOAA scientist and they're. Forecast
were saying, we're in for some big trouble if we don't do something soon.
[01:10:35] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And I, I got depressed and I said, you know, why
am I even gonna think about writing a book about climate change? I, I got so
immersed in the science that I, I, I got depressed. I was like, oh man. I shouldn't
waste the time to write a book about something that we're doomed, you know?
And, [01:11:00] um, about that time, you know, I, I always had my support
network, so I was reaching out to people like Albert Whitehat hat, uh, uh,
beautiful man from, uh, uh, Sinte Gleska uh.
[01:11:18] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Tribal College on the Rosebud Sioux Reservation.
Uh, the legendary, uh, Billy Frank Jr. Of the Northwest Indian Fisheries, uh,
commission. Uh, all of these indigenous elders who I had met through the years,
who had always been really kind and open to me. And, um, even my aunts, my,
my aunties, uh, uh, Josephine Bigler, one of our real, uh.
[01:11:48] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Important elders in helping revitalize the Yuchi
language again. Um, they said, Dan, put the books down. You [01:12:00] need
to get out of doors again. And, you know, it was like, yea that's, that's where life
is out of doors. So I started taking, um. I always took my dog for walks every
day, and we started taking walks down along the Kansas River.
[01:12:20] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I live fairly close to the Kansas River, maybe
about a 10 minute walk from the North Bank of the Kansas Rivers. As It
meanders across the northern edge of Lawrence. And you know what, Wendy,
after about three or four months of putting the books down and just getting out
of doors and walking my dog and. I just realized, wow, Dan, you forgot.
[01:12:48] Dr. Dan Wildcat: You got so immersed in this Western science and
way of thinking. You forgot what this, you really wanted to write about, and this
is what you wanna write about [01:13:00] our relationship to the land, the air,
the water, the plants, the animals. And uh, I tell you it was, it was. Almost it, it
was almost an epiphany of sorts.
[01:13:16] Dr. Dan Wildcat: One day after a walk, I just started thinking about
that. I said, why do I feel so good? It's, it is horrible, the situation where, but I
felt good. And then I thought, I feel good because my relatives had been giving
me some good medicine. Not just my human realties, but that river, those trees,
the wind. And I thought, you know what?[01:13:40] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I'm gonna write this book because that's the
message that we need to con convey. That is that, you know, when we think of
our communities, our kin, we have a tendency to think very, an anthropocentric,
we think just about our human selves. But you [01:14:00] know, what is, you
know, evolutionary biology teaches. We're related to all life on the planet.
[01:14:08] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And, um, you know, that's, that's part of ancient
indigenous wisdom. And so that was really the thing that, that made me realize,
oh, Dan, you got too tied up in this human con, you know, perspective and you
need. To write that book 'cause you've gotta share that broader indigenous
perspective. So that's when Red Alert really took off and I thought, you know
what?
[01:14:37] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I've read enough science. I'm gonna write Red
Alert now.
[01:14:42] Wendy Slusser: Well, I have to say to all listeners, everyone should
read Red Alert and it's, uh, digestible and. It's a great Christmas present. I
totally, uh, have been giving it to all my friends and relatives that every I can
get. Um, you mentioned, there's a couple of terms that you've [01:15:00]
mentioned. One is the anthropocentric, uh, which I guess as I understand is to
understand our relationship to the environment.
[01:15:08] Dr. Dan Wildcat: yeah. Right.
[01:15:09] Wendy Slusser: Can you explain, um, what it means? Um, more
per, you know, more precisely how I just said it, and also, uh, what's the
difference between that and echo kinship.
[01:15:20] Dr. Dan Wildcat: yeah, yeah, yeah. So, um, you know, uh. So an
anthropocentric view is, is a kind of humanism that basically declares that
humans are the center of everything that, you know, we're the smartest, we're
different than the rest of life. And so really, um, everything. It's all about us. You
know? And so that's, that anthro for man pocentric it's, it's, it's look thinking that
somehow humans are the measure of all things [01:16:00] that, you know,
everything.
[01:16:02] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Revolves around what we do and how we act and
what we behave. And then it can sometimes lead into when it's in its, you know,
most hubris written, arrogant kind of notion is, oh, well all these problems in the
world are therefore us to fix. Right? And so that's the anthropocentric view.
Now, I would suggest to you that.[01:16:30] Dr. Dan Wildcat: For 99, I'm not gonna say every indigenous
people in the world, but it's gotta be 99 point something percent of indigenous
people who still hold their traditional tribal worldviews, uh, and understand
those, that is the most foreign idea. You could ever imagine because from an
indigenous lens, [01:17:00] yeah, we're, we're different, but we see kinship and
understand the trees, the plants, the soil, the wind, the water.
[01:17:17] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Not as resources, but as relatives. And so, you
know, people have asked me about my name. I always think it's really funny
when people ask me about my name, Wildcat. They say, how did you get that
name? And I say, well, and among my people, Wildcat is, is is not an unusual
name. You know, we have deers, we have wind, you know, we have.
[01:17:44] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Many of us, um, some of us were fortunate that
when after the deadly Trail of Tears, my people were part of those Eastern
Indians got that were removed to Oklahoma territory. And [01:18:00] uh, some
of us were lucky because somehow or other when they were working with
translators, um, my great-grandfather was identified by his clan totem.
[01:18:12] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Wild cap. So our, our to our clan totems are
basically an ecological map. Wind, raccoon, deer bear. You can, you can, and
then even, you know, some plants, uh, you can kind of see, okay. These are the
place, these are the kinds of animals that they identified kinship with, and that
meant looking at them as relatives.
[01:18:41] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We had respect for them and we were just
incredible observers of the natural world. And so to us, Robin Wall Kimer has
this great line in, in her book, um. Braiding Sweet [01:19:00] Grass where she
talks about how her Potawatomi Relatives, always human relatives, always
understood that the trees and the plants. We're their elders.
[01:19:12] Dr. Dan Wildcat: They evolved. They've been here longer. They
evolved way before humans did. And so we can learn things in our relationship
with those. Again, not resources, that's the key trick, right? Not resources, but
relatives. And that means then you develop a whole different kind of
relationship. And I think that's, when I talk about eco kinship.
[01:19:40] Dr. Dan Wildcat: That's exactly what I mean, and, and I want
people to know I'm not speaking euphemistically. I'm not trying to be romantic.
I'm speaking indigenously. I'm speaking scientifically that we misspeak every
time we talk about the world full [01:20:00] of natural resources because they're
not our resources, they're our relatives.[01:20:09] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And. That's what modern science teaches us now.
So even modern science has kind of come around to understanding that,
although we still have this resource thinking that we're, you know, burdened
with
[01:20:25] Wendy Slusser: Yeah, it reminds me of something that a lot of
people are trying to shift in the thinking and about like a dead, we need to, when
are we going to make a dead tree? They say dead trees are worth more than a
living tree, but how can we change that incentive?
[01:20:41] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yes. Yes, exactly, exactly. And you know, so
again. You mentioned humility, and I wanna say something about this because
this is something I think we, we desperately need today, and that is [01:21:00]
this culture of, you know, everyone thinking it's. You know, you gotta have the
smartest person in the room, and if you're bitten with that horrible hubris, you
have to think you're the smartest person in the room.
[01:21:12] Dr. Dan Wildcat: That arrogance is something that I think is totally
foreign within indigenous. Cultural traditions because the person who thinks
they know it all and among my relatives is the most dangerous person you could
ever be around because we know it's foolish. How could any of us know it all?
We're much wiser when we learn from others, right?
[01:21:43] Wendy Slusser: So true. And it gets back to, um, one of the points
you actually bring up in Red Alert, which I really, really resonates with me, is
this hopefulness.
[01:21:54] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yes,
[01:21:55] Wendy Slusser: I would love you to, I think your nature and culture
nexus [01:22:00] really speaks to that and gives you some action oriented. So
could you, uh, define your nature culture nexus a little bit more detail for our
listener.
[01:22:10] Dr. Dan Wildcat: yes. So this idea, so Vine Deloria, the book that
we did together is entitled, uh, power and Place Indian Education in America.
We wrote that in 2000 and 2001, um, early 2001. And, um. A great opportunity
to work with, you know, one of my, my idols and, and, uh, he was just, uh, so
generous with me, but. His, his idea was that power permeates the world, the
universe, and most of it we can't see, we can't touch, but it's there.[01:22:55] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And now of course modern scientists will tell you
there is no empty [01:23:00] space and the cosmo may have these nine
nanoparticles of energy of, of. Physical, you know, elements and, uh, so there is
no empty space. Well, Deloria thought, you know, power permeates everything.
And he said, but it expresses itself uniquely in different places.
[01:23:25] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And because it expresses itself uniquely the
people of those places. Have unique personality. So that was his, that was
Deloria's axiom for indigenous metaphysics, power and place equals
personality. Well, I'm a sociologist and I thought, wow, this explains the
incredible diversity indigenous people will have.
[01:23:54] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Now it makes sense. It's, it's obvious that, you
know, uh, Cherokee of the [01:24:00] South. Eastern United States or nothing
like the Lummi or the two Ellips on the northwest coast. Now why is that?
Because their identities, their personalities, their cultures were emergent out of
what I began to call the nature culture nexus.
[01:24:21] Dr. Dan Wildcat: The symbiotic relationship that we can never
break. Okay. Uh, at least, uh. Not until we get to modern society and some
people are so ignorant of this relationship that they don't even realize what
they're doing to it, right? That's because they think we're separate. You know,
we're above the rest of nature.
[01:24:44] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We're in charge. We're in control. Foreign idea to,
to indigenous people. I think the hope, the hope goes back to the story I shared
with you. You know, when you asked me about. [01:25:00] Writing red alert.
When I got so tied up in that reading that Western science, I, I forgot that, hey,
my community and my kinship is not just with other humans.
[01:25:17] Dr. Dan Wildcat: It's with the river, it's with the earth, it's with the
life that resides here. And so when I got out of doors again. Started making
those connections, you know, all of a sudden I started feeling better again. I was
situated in community. Now again, not a, not just a human community, but an
eco kinship community.
[01:25:49] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So here's, here's where ultimately I think hope
resides. As much damage as humans have done [01:26:00] to the earth. We are
still surrounded by beauty and we just have to slow down. We have to take the
time to realize that there are lessons that we humans can learn. If we. Adopt that
position of mindfulness, of humility.[01:26:29] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And I again, you know, for me, Wendy, you've
heard me say this before, that's not indigenous romanticism. That's indigenous
realism. The world that we live in, you know, has much to teach us. Yeah, if we
are mindful, if we pay attention, and to me. It means I don't just have to depend
on [01:27:00] my human relatives. My family's bigger than that.
[01:27:04] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I've got a gigantic family. Uh, you know, the
plants, the animals, the earth, the soil itself, the water, the wind. Of course, in
my people, I don't know if I ever shared this with you. I think I did, but you
know, the Yuchi or as we would refer to ourselves, the Zoyaha That translates as
the children of the son. we recognize the son too, as, you know, one of our
parents.
[01:27:36] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And, and so, uh, yeah, it's, uh. It's really
interesting when you start diving into indigenous worldviews and cultures,
because I, I can't think of a single one where you don't, if as you get into it, you
start to realize, wow, [01:28:00] the Navajo. Pueblos, how they were connected
to the desert, to the sun. How when you get to the northwest coast, it was the
salmon, it was the waters.
[01:28:14] Dr. Dan Wildcat: It was the trees, the forest. And we go up and
down the great plains. What was the greatest most important relative, the
grandpa of them all the American bison, the buffalo. And so, you know, it's it to
me. Hope resides in realizing we don't have to be in this alone and you know. I
wanna say something just for a minute about this, because I've been seeing all
the reports and stuff about this.
[01:28:51] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Um, I think we can call it a crisis. A lot of our, our
students, um, high school age, even [01:29:00] college age now are reporting
loneliness as one of the primary, um. Things they fight and causing depression,
causing them, you know, um, sometimes to not feel very good about life. And
what I would like to encourage them, uh, all of of young people and old people
too, we do need our human relatives.
[01:29:31] Dr. Dan Wildcat: That's important. But remember. We've got
relatives too that are outside the walls of these buildings that we're sitting in
right now. And sometimes that's good medicine. Sometimes that's the medicine
we need. And so I think for me, hope really resides in everything we should do.
At this point, Wendy, with everything that we're facing. [01:30:00]
Economically, politically, culturally, technologically, I think community is more
important than ever. We need to focus on building, you know, human
communities, but not just human communities in isolation from the places they
call home, but really including those places. As part of the community, I am, Iam dying to hear what your, you know, engineers and materials scientists and,
and architects are doing with the rebuilding there, you know, with the fires you
folks had, you know, there and, uh.
[01:30:43] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Los Angeles County. I mean, I'm, I'm hoping that
you know, someone you know is raising up this issue that as we think about
rebuilding, let's be mindful of this [01:31:00] larger, you know, sense of
community that we need to be a part of, because I think it could really be an
incredible. You know, uh, opportunities to illustrate how we can live well, you
know, in our human communities by recognizing the deep relationality we have
in kinship with the places that we call home.
[01:31:29] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So it's, it, it's just, to me, there's just all of the
things that we're seeing these incredible. Uh, natural events fueled by climate
change or, or at least I won't say fueled by, they are exacerbated often by
climate change. They're not the sole cause there are a lot of things that are
causing the kinds of flooding we see.
[01:31:52] Dr. Dan Wildcat: It's kind of fires that we seen. But climate change
is a factor. And I think part of [01:32:00] what we need to do now is reaffirm.
Reaffirm a kind of eco kinship with the balance of life on this fa on this planet.
And if we do so, I'm absolutely hopeful that, you know, we can create more
vibrant, more healthy, more resilient.
[01:32:28] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Senses of communities and I, uh, sense of
community, and that's I think what we desperately need right now.
[01:32:38] Wendy Slusser: I so agree, and all the different points, and trying to
wrap it up in a, your theme of it being attentive. Where you live and who you're
living with and what's living around you or part of your environment can not
only bring great joy and uplift your spirits like it did for you and [01:33:00]
inspire you to write red alert, but also the fact that uh, it can also.
[01:33:06] Wendy Slusser: Really touch on other parts of your life, like the
loneliness part, which
[01:33:11] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Absolutely.
[01:33:12] Wendy Slusser: don't have to feel lonely if you're out there, just if
as long as you can practice that muscle of being attentive.
[01:33:20] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yes,[01:33:21] Wendy Slusser: big piece of it. And I'm thinking, um, you talk
about, you just me mentioned climate change, but not necessarily as one that is
the fault of all that we're experiencing right now.
[01:33:36] Wendy Slusser: But what you've discussed in other. Writings and
also just in your conversations is the interaction. Uh, there are three Cs that
you've identified that prioritized currently, and then you suggest three other Cs
that you think we should be speaking to. You wanna share some of that with us?
[01:33:59] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Oh, I'd [01:34:00] love to. So I just finished an
article. It's gonna come out in, uh, the Journal of Geography, which is a, a, a
journal that's dedicated to geography education. It's just called Journal of
Geography. Be watching for the next issue. Um, I just, uh, finished a, a piece,
uh, with, uh, a scientist at ncar and we did, wanted to write about this age of the
Anthropocene, the age of humans that we're now living in.
[01:34:34] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Many big picture or scientists would say, you
know, we've really created a new almost geologic epoch here. The age of the
Anthropocene, the age of humans. We wanted to write about technology. And,
uh, I told Tim I'd been playing around with this for about 20 years, and I,
[01:35:00] it, it dawned on me that the dominant way that humans, and again,
here we go.
[01:35:08] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Now we're thinking, see. An an anthrop post
century kind of perspective. It's all about us. When we think about technology,
we think technology is good, so long as it promotes human convenience.
Human comfort, of course, puts money in our pocket capital gains. Those are
the three Cs I said of modern thinking technology, you know.
[01:35:34] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Is is here to, to
[01:35:35] Dr. Dan Wildcat: promote human convenience, human comfort, and
capital gains. I said, let's counterpoint that. So I started
[01:35:42] Dr. Dan Wildcat: playing around and thinking about reading
Deloria and thinking about all the indigenous scholars and elders I've worked
with. And I said, you know what? We're not anti-technology, but we reframe.
[01:35:53] Dr. Dan Wildcat: it So for us, okay. Um, the algorithm [01:36:00]
for the value of, of technology is technology is equal to another three Cs.
Community, culture, and communication. And those values, those are thenumerator. What's the common denominator? The earth. Place and I, I kept
thinking that, you know, we really need to reframe technology.
[01:36:28] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So we've written a piece about this in the Journal
of Geography. I hope people can get access to that. And, um. We really say the
we're not anti-technology anything, but that we just need to reframe technology.
Technology ought to be about, as you know, how I end red alert, promoting
systems of life enhancement and life [01:37:00] enhancement, meaning not just
human life.
[01:37:03] Dr. Dan Wildcat: But all life on the planet. And yeah, so I, I, it's,
um, it's a, a neat device, uh, uh, uh, uh, you know, mnemonic device to help us
remember how maybe we could think about technology differently because that
anthropocentric way of thinking about technology means we just keep taking
and taking and taking out of the earth.
[01:37:34] Dr. Dan Wildcat: What we put back usually isn't that good for the
earth in terms of pollution, uh, and waste. But the other view would be to say,
well, no, we need to go back to that world of relatives and our technology
should be one that enhances our community, not just the human community. It
can do that,
[01:37:59] Wendy Slusser: [01:38:00] And what example?
[01:38:00] Dr. Dan Wildcat: community.
[01:38:02] Wendy Slusser: Yeah.
[01:38:03] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Our culture give us resilient, you know, kinds of
opportunities and, and, and opportunities to express beauty in the world we live
in. And, and then, you know, culture, you know, communication, community,
and I think. now, at least I, I think it's worth us talking about, and I'm hoping
people will read it and maybe people will have a way to tweak it or improve it
or say, well, maybe you got this wrong.
[01:38:37] Dr. Dan Wildcat: How about this? But, you know, it's not about
being right, it's just about being honest and trying to share something. And um,
you know, I always tell people, look, you know. All I can promise you is that
I'm gonna speak honestly. Now, that means that [01:39:00] I might honestly be
wrong, and so therefore, when you hear me misspeak, I welcome you to correct
me.[01:39:12] Dr. Dan Wildcat: You might help me understand something better.
Now, again, think of that attitude. See that, that twisting that around. Now that
you're not attacking me. You're being a good relative. You're saying, Dan, I like
that point, but maybe you ought to think about it this way. You're not being
negative. You're being a good relative.
[01:39:33] Dr. Dan Wildcat: You want me to understand something more fully
and better? I'm lucky I have a lot of good relatives who are always saying, Dan,
I think you better rethink that and work on this a little bit. So I mean, isn't that,
isn't that beautiful though? Think of what the academy would be like if we
could have that kind of interaction.
[01:39:56] Wendy Slusser: So. So I, I'd love to [01:40:00] lean in on the
communications part, especially given that communicating with stories is such a
powerful means of communicating. And I'd love to hear a little bit about what
kinds of stories could you think of to drive for culture, cultural change, what.
[01:40:21] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I think they're all there.
There if you, everyone has a story. Everyone has a story. Now, some people
don't get a chance to ever share their stories, but every everyone has a story to
tell their experience, their life. To me, I think the most powerful, uh, stories are
the ones that center around how in our relationships in this world, how.
[01:40:58] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We all [01:41:00] experience in this life hurt. We
feel pain, not just physical pain, but emotional pain. And to me, the most
powerful stories are the ones where you don't back off the painful, hurtful part,
but the stories don't. end there, they always have. Um, the good stories are the
ones that have this sense of almost a, a, a sense of redemption, a sense of, you
know, finding peace.
[01:41:47] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Finding understanding as, as a result of
something, you know, that, uh, maybe very painful and, and maybe [01:42:00]
was very, um, hurtful, you know, in one's life. I think right now what we, what
we really need to think about is. In a very deep way how our relationships, and,
and I'll give you a, a theme that, uh, I've, I share with a lot of scholars, but the
one I think of most immediately, a couple come to mind, N Scott Momaday but
then my, you know, my scientist, my biologist sister Robin Wall Kimmerer and,
um.
[01:42:47] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Here's a metaphor to think about. Life is a gift.
Now, sometimes when you, when when you get gifts, um, they [01:43:00] might
not be what, what you think they are, they might not even be what you want.But when you begin to think about the idea of gifts. Gifting. Then you begin to
recognize that
[01:43:22] Dr. Dan Wildcat: none of us have to take a, have to get a, um, we
don't have to be credit worthy when we come into this life because that first
breath of air we take is a gift. We didn't have to see if we were credit worthy to
take that first breath of life. And I think this, this metaphor of life as a gift is
powerful because I've heard her talk about it.
[01:43:54] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And what comes with that is then that attitude of
[01:44:00] gratitude.
[01:44:04] Dr. Dan Wildcat: A world full of gifts promotes a sense of gratitude.
And here's the really powerful part. It ends with a responsibility to be generous.
Generosity is what really helps. The world go round. And I tell you, I don't
know about you, Wendy, but I was, I was so offended when I heard person
who's been in the news quite a bit frequently actually say that he thought
empathy was the biggest weakness of human, modern humans to have empathy.
[01:44:53] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I could, couldn't disagree more. Empathy,
[01:45:00] gifting, gift giving, gratitude, generosity. The three Gs. The three Gs.
I think that is the stories that, uh, I, I think of in my life and, and my stories are,
those are pretty, those are pretty common elements. And remember, again.
Sometimes the stories start in a bad place, but it's not where they start, it's where
they end up.
[01:45:34] Dr. Dan Wildcat: That's important, you know? And, um, so anyway,
I'm, I'm, I'm, I, I think we need, we desperately need good storytellers today.
[01:45:50] Wendy Slusser: And I think that what you just identified as some
life enhancing activities, uh, in order to incentivize behavior. 'cause there's a
nice. [01:46:00] Is there anything else you'd like to, um, share with the listeners
about within our new economy or the current economic system, what you would
like
[01:46:09] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yeah. You know, I, I keep, I keep thinking about
this a lot, you know, I think one of the things is, um, so right. Let, let's, let's go
back to kind of where we, we began. I think right now what. We need more than
ever is community. We need to stand together. You and I, you know, uh, you
know, I don't know, we're maybe coming up on a two year anniversary of, of
actually, you know, meeting each other on this flat screen, you know, but, um,
uh, you are kin and it means something when we.[01:46:59] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We [01:47:00] know someone has our back when
we know that I'm not in this alone. So we're separated by a great amount of
land, but this use of the technology might be a good example of, you know, um,
how we could use this technology. You know, in a good way that promotes
culture, communication, and community. And so I'm, I'm, I'm just thankful.
[01:47:37] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I think right now, don't let the loneliness, don't let
the craziness surrounding us. And by the way, it's mostly human made
craziness. Let's be very specific about this, you know. Uh, it's human made
craziness. Let's not let that blind us to the [01:48:00] beauty around us, and I
think there's, there's great healing powers in the world around us.
[01:48:12] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We just have to figure out how to open ourself up
to them. Mm-hmm.
[01:48:19] Wendy Slusser: Thank you. I love that advice and I'm gonna follow
it. Uh, after this call or this, uh, interview, I'm going to go out and enjoy the sun
for a few minutes for
[01:48:31] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Oh, that's a great, that's a great thing to
[01:48:33] Wendy Slusser: Yeah. So, um, we're winding down now. I'm sad,
but we'll have hopefully other opportunities to share, um, conversation with
each other. But we usually like to end our, our interview with a question with all
of our guests, and that is how do you live well.
[01:48:55] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yeah. How do I live? Well, I tell you what
[01:49:00] I try to every day begin with that morning a very mindful expression
of gratitude. For that gift and, and I, I just, every day's a gift and I want to use it.
That gift responsibly. Well, I wanna be generous. You know, uh, with the gifts
that I've been given, and that's why I have to express incredible gratitude to you,
Wendy, because you've given me another opportunity to share and I'm just filled
with gratitude and, uh, so glad that, uh, you know, I've got a good, strong sister
out there on the West coast.
[01:49:49] Wendy Slusser: Well, I feel very honored to be part of your circle
and I feel the same. So much gratitude and, um, you, uh, have [01:50:00]
opened up a whole world to me that I haven't thought about. Uh, and I feel very
comfortable in. So, yes, thank you. And also, uh, we will definitely, uh, include
all of those incredible books that you described.[01:50:16] Wendy Slusser: We'll, uh, share that on our website for sure. All
your writings, you, you're not only, you not only wrote Red Alert, but many
other books. So we will include those for all our listeners. Yes. And um, again,
thank you Dr. Dan Wildcat.
[01:50:34] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yeah. Thank you so much.
[01:50:40] Wendy Slusser: I.
[01:50:40] Wendy Slusser: Other thing. Okay. The other thing, Dan, is I will be
formally introducing you, uh, with another clip. So right now I won't have to do
that, so we'll
[01:50:51] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Okay,
[01:50:52] Wendy Slusser: yeah. So
[01:50:54] Dr. Dan Wildcat: cool.
[01:50:55] Wendy Slusser: thank Okay. So thank you so much Dr. Dan
WildCat for agreeing to [01:51:00] be part of our LiveWell UCLA podcast. Uh,
it's such an honor to have you here.
[01:51:05] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Well, thank you for the invitation. I'm, uh, I
always like to talk about living well and, uh, that's kind of close to my heart.
You bet.
[01:51:15] Wendy Slusser: Great. Well, um, we'll get to it soon in this
interview, how we met originally.
[01:51:23] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yeah.
[01:51:24] Wendy Slusser: I'd love to first start with, um, can you tell us how
you got started on your journey as a professor at Haskell Indian Nations
University?
[01:51:33] Dr. Dan Wildcat: You bet. So, uh, you know, I was one of those
kind of typical grad students. I just did undergraduate, went into a graduate
program, and I, I. I was all three years in, um, and I was thinking, well, what,
what am I gonna do? You know, when I get the doctorate, you know, where am I
gonna go? And I was at half at [01:52:00] Kansas University, Lawrence,
Kansas.[01:52:03] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Right in the backyard of Haskell Indian Nations
University. I had the GI Bill. So when I got out of the service, I decided, well,
I'm gonna go to Kansas University. I had cousins that were attending, uh,
Haskell when I was in the service. And then when I got out, I had a cousin,
good cousin, Dennis Barnett, that was attending Haskell.
[01:52:22] Dr. Dan Wildcat: But I, I, so I, I knew about Haskell. I really
appreciated what Haskell did its role in Indian country and education. A funny
thing happened. I, I started teaching as a graduate teaching assistant at Kansas
University, get this in the Western Civilization program, and they used to have a
two semester sequence for all liberal arts majors, Western civilization.
[01:52:50] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We used to jokingly call it Plato to nato. And
anyway, uh, I had. About three years in my graduate [01:53:00] studies getting a
little bit burnout 'cause I'd gone right in, right after finishing my bachelor's
degree, the dean from Haskell came up to see me at KU and he said, you know,
I understand you're um, sociologist.
[01:53:13] Dr. Dan Wildcat: He said, we've got a position in sociology. At
Haskell. And would you have any interest in coming down there and teaching
and, you know, it just, it was one of those things, it was like, wow. Yeah, I think
I would. And so, um, I went to Haskell. Haskell is a unique place. You have
students from, uh, indigenous students from all over the contiguous 48 states
and Alaska.
[01:53:43] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We cannot serve Hawaii natives. That's because
they have a little different legal classification. They're US citizens, but Hawaii
natives are not treated the same way that American Indians and Alaska natives
are. Long story short, when [01:54:00] I went to Haskell, the incredible
diversity there blew me away and I fell in love with that place.
[01:54:08] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I fell in love with this kind of incredible richness
of native indigenous culture I found at that campus. And, you know, um, the rest
is history. I started teaching there, um, a long time ago. I'm getting ready to. 40
years of teaching there. I went there in January of 86, but the thing that really
sold me on Haskell was the incredible diversity of indigenous peoples, their
cultures.
[01:54:38] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And I began to make this connection between
indigenous peoples in their cultures and the places they lived. And, um, that
really. Made it real easy for me to work with my mentor, um, Vine Deloria Jr.And, um, you know, we had, we had, he was a [01:55:00] great mentor to me.
We wrote a book together, power and Place, Indian Education in America.
[01:55:06] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I sort of started my journey really, um, you know,
in what I'm doing today, going to Haskell. Falling in love with the incredible
diversity I saw among indigenous peoples in the United States. And then, um,
you know, started working with Vine Deloria Jr. And that was kind of like a, a
dream come true. So that's how I got started on this journey.
[01:55:35] Wendy Slusser: Wow. So I didn't know you were a sociologist
'cause I, when I first met you, I hearing, I listened to you on a incredible panel
that was during COVID, so it was all virtual and you were talking all about the
environment.
[01:55:52] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yes.
[01:55:53] Wendy Slusser: Tell me, how did you get from sociology to, uh,
focusing more on the [01:56:00] environment?
[01:56:00] Dr. Dan Wildcat: See, this is a great, this is a great question because
I don't. Get a chance to talk about this often and up. So part of the beauty of
Haskell now, Haskell is a small liberal arts college now, when I went there in
86, it was still essentially. A two year, uh, like junior college and it had not
really transitioned to that four year baccalaureate granting status.
[01:56:30] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And so it was small, about 800 students, 600 to
650 of them living on campus. So it's a residential campus and, um. The
departments were small, so for some reason they, they had the social sciences
and the natural sciences all in the same college under the same dean. And so I
began, um, [01:57:00] talking to. Uh, biologist ecologists uh, environmental
scientists in the department, and it really was just, um, that's when I really
started to formulate the thinking in my own work that was so heavily influenced
by Vine Deloria Jr.
[01:57:19] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Who made, you know, thinking about history,
culture from a spatial perspective, one of the. Cornerstones of his work. And so
when I got to Haskell, I. I just started talking to the natural scientist. They were
a small department and they welcomed me. They said, oh yeah, we're really
interested, you know, in those kinds of questions.
[01:57:43] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And we see that connection too. When we talk to
our students, a lot of the students wouldn't know. The Latin, uh, scientific namesfor plants, but they were amazed at how students could identify plants in their
native [01:58:00] language. Words for sunflower, words for purple cone, flower
words for dandelion. And they began to say, oh, there's a real cultural
connection here.
[01:58:10] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And so, um, yeah, it was, I think. I was so lucky
because when I got to Haskell, my dean just basically said, Dan, what do you
wanna teach? And so I just started developing these kind of hybrid courses and
uh, I was teaching sociology. But that connection to me between culture and
nature. I never saw this tension.
[01:58:40] Dr. Dan Wildcat: A lot of people see between, well, is it nature or is
it culture? In my traditions, it's both. Simultaneously, our cultures are
symbiotically connected to the natural world. And so, you know, it, it, it really
being at Haskell [01:59:00] allowed me to begin working with environmental
scientists and atmospheric scientists and physical scientists, probably in a way
that, you know, if I had gone to another large institution, I wouldn't have had
that opportunity.
[01:59:15] Wendy Slusser: Well, what you're touching on, which is a big
movement right now, is this whole transdisciplinary approach to solving the
challenges of our. A time, and then you certainly landed on it 40 years ago,
which is really a harbinger for the kind of forward thinking that you are, you do
every day. That I've really been, um, impressed by.
[01:59:38] Wendy Slusser: Um, I'd like to hear a little, I you keep mentioning
Vine Deloria Jr. What was, uh, you say he was so important to your. First
stepping stone at school. Uh, gimme a little bit more background on that.
[01:59:54] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yeah, so Vine Deloria Jr is probably one of the
most important thinkers of the [02:00:00] 20th century. He, uh, you know, he
was, uh, in an incredible intellect. He was, uh, an iconoclast and, um. He, it's,
it's interesting, there was something about the late sixties. Now you and I can
reminisce on this, right? But there was something going on there that we haven't
seen, uh, you know, since then.
[02:00:24] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And in 1969 2 New York time bestselling books
we're by American Indians. One of 'em by. N Scott Momaday our own Pulitzer
Prize winning poet, novelist and artist and, um, House Made of Dawn. And then
a book written by Vine Deloria Jr. Provocatively entitled Custer Died. Four
Your Sins. And uh, that book. I part of that generation that that book, just when
I [02:01:00] read that book, I said, wow, here is a guy a, a native guy who getsit, who understands it and can be funny, irreverent, and very insightful at the
same time.
[02:01:14] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So I became a big fan of Vine Deloria early on,
and then this is really fortuitous. The year, the second year I was at Haskell, um,
a couple of folks out at uc, Berkeley put together a six weeks, uh, seminar and it
was called, uh, great intellectual. Amer great intellect, great American Indian
intellectual traditions, Clara Sue Kidwell.
[02:01:47] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Professor Clara Sue Kidwell was one of the
conveners of that seminar. Each week she invited in different native scholars. I
think it was about the fourth week she invited Vine Deloria Jr. [02:02:00] To
come. So here I finally face to face with a, a man, you know, I just really
revered for his intellectual, um, uh, inside and his scholarship and, um.
[02:02:13] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We hit it off. And, uh, I think the book I'd
highlight for people who are listening, if they wanna know more about Vine
Deloria's influence on contemporary indigenous studies today, they should read
his, um, I think it was his fourth book. Um, God Is Red. Uh, again, kind of a
provocative title, but in that book, he really lays out the, this, this kind of, um.
[02:02:42] Dr. Dan Wildcat: What I refer to as the nature culture nexus, this
idea that you could never separate native people's identity, their culture, and
their history from the places, the spaces where their people emerged over
[02:03:00] time and as distinct. Tribal peoples. And that really, that really
resonated with me. And so, um, you know, it was just, it was just such a great
way to start a career in teaching.
[02:03:14] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Uh, meeting Vine Deloria we hit it off
immediately. Um, uh, he was really, I think, uh. He really appreciated the fact
that I knew a lot about the Western tradition. I had taught in the Western Civ
program for three years as a graduate student at Kansas University. And um, so
I, I really understood it and I knew when I went to Haskell, you'll get a kick out
of this.
[02:03:42] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I, I told the Dean he said, what do you wanna
teach? I said. I wanna offer Western civilization here, but he said, but I told him
I'm not gonna do it the way they do it. At ku, we're gonna do a comparative
approach. So when we, you know, go through the classic thinkers, [02:04:00]
the topics they raise, I'm gonna find Indigenous Counterpoint.[02:04:03] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So when we'd read, uh, St. Augustine's, uh,
confessions. I had them read Black Elk Speaks when we'd had them, when we
read, uh uh, Locke and and Hobbes and all of their social contract theory, I'd
have them read Vine Deloria Juniors essays on this kind of connection between
a people and their culture and the institutions they built that were often modeled
after natural systems.
[02:04:36] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So. Again, it was just like, I've been so fortunate.
The one thing I have to emphasize, I have just been so fortunate in my life. I've
just had so many, uh, wonderful, uh, opportunities that came before me, and I
took advantage of most of them. And, um, you [02:05:00] know, the rest is
history. But Vine Deloria as a scholar. I, I wish every. Person in America would
read at least one of his books. I'd start with, um, Custer Died For Your Sins. And
then my, my next favorite would be, um, God is Red but he's got a, a, you know,
I think it's, it's close to 20 books. So he was prolific.
[02:05:26] Wendy Slusser: Wow. It's so from Plato to NATO at Kansas
University to nature and culture, and then merging the two of them together.
[02:05:40] Dr. Dan Wildcat: yes. Right.
[02:05:41] Wendy Slusser: That's, that's really cool. And you know, from my
discipline, it's, they always say nature versus nurture, but it shouldn't be versus
it's nature and the, and nurture.
[02:05:54] Dr. Dan Wildcat: exactly, exactly. It should be, yes.
[02:05:57] Wendy Slusser: Yeah. Like, well, you know, [02:06:00] in your,
your book called Red Alert, you.
[02:06:03] Wendy Slusser: You have a great quote about our human knowledge
of reality must always be approached with humility. And I'm hearing a lot of
humility in what you're sharing here.
[02:06:15] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
[02:06:18] Wendy Slusser: what as a sociologist who is really blending this
whole nature piece. Uh, you've actually really immersed yourself in climate
science,
[02:06:34] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Oh,[02:06:35] Wendy Slusser: uh, and there was a point there though that you felt
deeply discouraged and
[02:06:40] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Oh,
[02:06:41] Wendy Slusser: helped you move through that despair.
[02:06:44] Dr. Dan Wildcat: You know that, you know, you've heard me
mention this before, but um, I was real, again, talk about incredible
opportunities. So in about 2000. Late [02:07:00] 2000. And then in 2001 A, a
East European scholar who I had met. By virtue of her, her love of Vine Deloria
works, who I had met in the United States.
[02:07:12] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Her name was Irina Sumi. She was a, um, uh,
sociologist from, uh, Ljubljana Slovenia. And, um, I got an email from her and
she said, Dan, I want you to come to Eastern Europe. I'm doing a proposal, uh,
for the Soros, uh, foundation and his open society. Uh, you know, um, initiative
to get Eastern European societies, you know, um.
[02:07:42] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Make sure their institutions became fully
democratized and things. Anyway, long story short, I I, I went to Eastern
Europe. Um, I, I was going back and forth for three years in that project. A
amazing project. It really. [02:08:00] Opened my eyes to my own ethnocentrism
as an American Indian and then as a US citizen. Um, and uh, but during that
time things were, every time I would come back from Europe, uh, you know,
we'd be talking about the crazy.
[02:08:20] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Weather that people were experiencing and people
were talking about climate change. Al Gore had started the time climate change,
you know, almost, uh, at this point, you know, two decades earlier. And, um, I, I
thought, you know, something's going on here. So when I wrapped up my work
in Eastern Europe, I thought.
[02:08:41] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I'm gonna do a book on climate change. So this is
about 2005 now. So I've been Eastern Europe, had a great experience. 2006, I
said, okay, I'm gonna take a year, and all I'm going to do is immerse myself in
climate science. So I just [02:09:00] started reading everything I could. I could
find books. You know, the um, uh, international reports, you know, on climate
change, and I tell you, I did that for a year and.
[02:09:17] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I got so depressed, Wendy. I thought, oh my God,
I now remember these aren't, you know, I'm, I I wasn't reading just, you know,your, your, you know, whole wheat tree hugging kind of lovers of nature. I was
reading NASA scientists NCAR scientists. NOAA scientist and they're. Forecast
were saying, we're in for some big trouble if we don't do something soon.
[02:09:48] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And I, I got depressed and I said, you know, why
am I even gonna think about writing a book about climate change? I, I got so
immersed in the [02:10:00] science that I, I, I got depressed. I was like, oh man.
I shouldn't waste the time to write a book about something that we're doomed,
you know? And, um, about that time, you know, I, I always had my support
network, so I was reaching out to people like Albert Whitehat hat, uh, uh,
beautiful man from, uh, uh, Sinte Gleska uh.
[02:10:31] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Tribal College on the Rosebud Sioux Reservation.
Uh, the legendary, uh, Billy Frank Jr. Of the Northwest Indian Fisheries, uh,
commission. Uh, all of these indigenous elders who I had met through the years,
who had always been really kind and open to me. And, um, even my aunts, my,
my aunties, uh, uh, Josephine Bigler, one of our [02:11:00] real, uh.
[02:11:01] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Important elders in helping revitalize the Yuchi
language again. Um, they said, Dan, put the books down. You need to get out of
doors again. And, you know, it was like, yea that's, that's where life is out of
doors. So I started taking, um. I always took my dog for walks every day, and
we started taking walks down along the Kansas River.
[02:11:33] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I live fairly close to the Kansas River, maybe
about a 10 minute walk from the North Bank of the Kansas Rivers. As It
meanders across the northern edge of Lawrence. And you know what, Wendy,
after about three or four months of putting the books down and just getting out
of doors and walking my dog and. I just realized, wow, [02:12:00] Dan, you
forgot.
[02:12:01] Dr. Dan Wildcat: You got so immersed in this Western science and
way of thinking. You forgot what this, you really wanted to write about, and this
is what you wanna write about our relationship to the land, the air, the water, the
plants, the animals. And uh, I tell you it was, it was. Almost it, it was almost an
epiphany of sorts.
[02:12:29] Dr. Dan Wildcat: One day after a walk, I just started thinking about
that. I said, why do I feel so good? It's, it is horrible, the situation where, but I
felt good. And then I thought, I feel good because my relatives had been giving
me some good medicine. Not just my human realties, but that river, those trees,
the wind. And I thought, you know what?[02:12:53] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I'm gonna write this book because that's the
message that we need to con [02:13:00] convey. That is that, you know, when
we think of our communities, our kin, we have a tendency to think very, an
anthropocentric, we think just about our human selves. But you know, what is,
you know, evolutionary biology teaches. We're related to all life on the planet.
[02:13:21] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And, um, you know, that's, that's part of ancient
indigenous wisdom. And so that was really the thing that, that made me realize,
oh, Dan, you got too tied up in this human con, you know, perspective and you
need. To write that book 'cause you've gotta share that broader indigenous
perspective. So that's when Red Alert really took off and I thought, you know
what?
[02:13:50] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I've read enough science. I'm gonna write Red
Alert now.
[02:13:55] Wendy Slusser: Well, I have to say to all listeners, everyone should
read Red Alert and it's, uh, [02:14:00] digestible and. It's a great Christmas
present. I totally, uh, have been giving it to all my friends and relatives that
every I can get. Um, you mentioned, there's a couple of terms that you've
mentioned. One is the anthropocentric, uh, which I guess as I understand is to
understand our relationship to the environment.
[02:14:21] Dr. Dan Wildcat: yeah. Right.
[02:14:22] Wendy Slusser: Can you explain, um, what it means? Um, more
per, you know, more precisely how I just said it, and also, uh, what's the
difference between that and echo kinship.
[02:14:33] Dr. Dan Wildcat: yeah, yeah, yeah. So, um, you know, uh. So an
anthropocentric view is, is a kind of humanism that basically declares that
humans are the center of everything that, you know, we're the smartest, we're
different than the rest of life. And so really, um, everything. [02:15:00] It's all
about us. You know? And so that's, that anthro for man pocentric it's, it's, it's
look thinking that somehow humans are the measure of all things that, you
know, everything.
[02:15:15] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Revolves around what we do and how we act and
what we behave. And then it can sometimes lead into when it's in its, you know,
most hubris written, arrogant kind of notion is, oh, well all these problems in the
world are therefore us to fix. Right? And so that's the anthropocentric view.
Now, I would suggest to you that.[02:15:43] Dr. Dan Wildcat: For 99, I'm not gonna say every indigenous
people in the world, but it's gotta be 99 point something percent of indigenous
people who still hold their traditional tribal [02:16:00] worldviews, uh, and
understand those, that is the most foreign idea. You could ever imagine because
from an indigenous lens, yeah, we're, we're different, but we see kinship and
understand the trees, the plants, the soil, the wind, the water.
[02:16:30] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Not as resources, but as relatives. And so, you
know, people have asked me about my name. I always think it's really funny
when people ask me about my name, Wildcat. They say, how did you get that
name? And I say, well, and among my people, Wildcat is, is is not an unusual
name. You know, we have deers, we have wind, you know, we have.
[02:16:57] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Many of us, um, [02:17:00] some of us were
fortunate that when after the deadly Trail of Tears, my people were part of those
Eastern Indians got that were removed to Oklahoma territory. And uh, some of
us were lucky because somehow or other when they were working with
translators, um, my great-grandfather was identified by his clan totem.
[02:17:25] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Wild cap. So our, our to our clan totems are
basically an ecological map. Wind, raccoon, deer bear. You can, you can, and
then even, you know, some plants, uh, you can kind of see, okay. These are the
place, these are the kinds of animals that they identified kinship with, and that
meant looking at them as relatives.
[02:17:54] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We had respect for them and we were just
incredible [02:18:00] observers of the natural world. And so to us, Robin Wall
Kimer has this great line in, in her book, um. Braiding Sweet Grass where she
talks about how her Potawatomi Relatives, always human relatives, always
understood that the trees and the plants. We're their elders.
[02:18:25] Dr. Dan Wildcat: They evolved. They've been here longer. They
evolved way before humans did. And so we can learn things in our relationship
with those. Again, not resources, that's the key trick, right? Not resources, but
relatives. And that means then you develop a whole different kind of
relationship. And I think that's, when I talk about eco kinship.
[02:18:53] Dr. Dan Wildcat: That's exactly what I mean, and, and I want
people to know I'm not speaking euphemistically. I'm [02:19:00] not trying to be
romantic. I'm speaking indigenously. I'm speaking scientifically that we
misspeak every time we talk about the world full of natural resources because
they're not our resources, they're our relatives.[02:19:22] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And. That's what modern science teaches us now.
So even modern science has kind of come around to understanding that,
although we still have this resource thinking that we're, you know, burdened
with
[02:19:38] Wendy Slusser: Yeah, it reminds me of something that a lot of
people are trying to shift in the thinking and about like a dead, we need to, when
are we going to make a dead tree? They say dead trees are worth more than a
living tree, but how can we change that incentive?
[02:19:54] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yes. Yes, exactly, exactly. And you know, so
[02:20:00] again. You mentioned humility, and I wanna say something about
this because this is something I think we, we desperately need today, and that is
this culture of, you know, everyone thinking it's. You know, you gotta have the
smartest person in the room, and if you're bitten with that horrible hubris, you
have to think you're the smartest person in the room.
[02:20:26] Dr. Dan Wildcat: That arrogance is something that I think is totally
foreign within indigenous. Cultural traditions because the person who thinks
they know it all and among my relatives is the most dangerous person you could
ever be around because we know it's foolish. How could any of us know it all?
We're much wiser when we learn from others, right?
[02:20:56] Wendy Slusser: So true. And it gets back to, um, one of [02:21:00]
the points you actually bring up in Red Alert, which I really, really resonates
with me, is this hopefulness.
[02:21:07] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yes,
[02:21:08] Wendy Slusser: I would love you to, I think your nature and culture
nexus really speaks to that and gives you some action oriented. So could you,
uh, define your nature culture nexus a little bit more detail for our listener.
[02:21:23] Dr. Dan Wildcat: yes. So this idea, so Vine Deloria, the book that
we did together is entitled, uh, power and Place Indian Education in America.
We wrote that in 2000 and 2001, um, early 2001. And, um. A great opportunity
to work with, you know, one of my, my idols and, and, uh, he was just, uh, so
generous with me, but. His, his idea was that [02:22:00] power permeates the
world, the universe, and most of it we can't see, we can't touch, but it's there.
[02:22:08] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And now of course modern scientists will tell you
there is no empty space and the cosmo may have these nine nanoparticles ofenergy of, of. Physical, you know, elements and, uh, so there is no empty space.
Well, Deloria thought, you know, power permeates everything. And he said, but
it expresses itself uniquely in different places.
[02:22:38] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And because it expresses itself uniquely the
people of those places. Have unique personality. So that was his, that was
Deloria's axiom for indigenous metaphysics, power and place equals
personality. Well, I'm a sociologist and I [02:23:00] thought, wow, this explains
the incredible diversity indigenous people will have.
[02:23:07] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Now it makes sense. It's, it's obvious that, you
know, uh, Cherokee of the South. Eastern United States or nothing like the
Lummi or the two Ellips on the northwest coast. Now why is that? Because
their identities, their personalities, their cultures were emergent out of what I
began to call the nature culture nexus.
[02:23:34] Dr. Dan Wildcat: The symbiotic relationship that we can never
break. Okay. Uh, at least, uh. Not until we get to modern society and some
people are so ignorant of this relationship that they don't even realize what
they're doing to it, right? That's because they think we're separate. You know,
we're above the rest of nature.
[02:23:57] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We're in charge. We're in control. [02:24:00]
Foreign idea to, to indigenous people. I think the hope, the hope goes back to
the story I shared with you. You know, when you asked me about. Writing red
alert. When I got so tied up in that reading that Western science, I, I forgot that,
hey, my community and my kinship is not just with other humans.
[02:24:31] Dr. Dan Wildcat: It's with the river, it's with the earth, it's with the
life that resides here. And so when I got out of doors again. Started making
those connections, you know, all of a sudden I started feeling better again. I was
situated in community. Now again, not a, not just a human community,
[02:25:00] but an eco kinship community.
[02:25:02] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So here's, here's where ultimately I think hope
resides. As much damage as humans have done to the earth. We are still
surrounded by beauty and we just have to slow down. We have to take the time
to realize that there are lessons that we humans can learn. If we. Adopt that
position of mindfulness, of humility.
[02:25:43] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And I again, you know, for me, Wendy, you've
heard me say this before, that's not indigenous romanticism. That's indigenousrealism. The world that we live in, you know, has [02:26:00] much to teach us.
Yeah, if we are mindful, if we pay attention, and to me. It means I don't just
have to depend on my human relatives. My family's bigger than that.
[02:26:17] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I've got a gigantic family. Uh, you know, the
plants, the animals, the earth, the soil itself, the water, the wind. Of course, in
my people, I don't know if I ever shared this with you. I think I did, but you
know, the Yuchi or as we would refer to ourselves, the Zoyaha That translates as
the children of the son. we recognize the son too, as, you know, one of our
parents.
[02:26:49] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And, and so, uh, yeah, it's, uh. It's really
interesting when you start diving into [02:27:00] indigenous worldviews and
cultures, because I, I can't think of a single one where you don't, if as you get
into it, you start to realize, wow, the Navajo. Pueblos, how they were connected
to the desert, to the sun. How when you get to the northwest coast, it was the
salmon, it was the waters.
[02:27:27] Dr. Dan Wildcat: It was the trees, the forest. And we go up and
down the great plains. What was the greatest most important relative, the
grandpa of them all the American bison, the buffalo. And so, you know, it's it to
me. Hope resides in realizing we don't have to be in this alone and you know. I
wanna say something just for a minute about [02:28:00] this, because I've been
seeing all the reports and stuff about this.
[02:28:04] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Um, I think we can call it a crisis. A lot of our, our
students, um, high school age, even college age now are reporting loneliness as
one of the primary, um. Things they fight and causing depression, causing them,
you know, um, sometimes to not feel very good about life. And what I would
like to encourage them, uh, all of of young people and old people too, we do
need our human relatives.
[02:28:44] Dr. Dan Wildcat: That's important. But remember. We've got
relatives too that are outside the walls of these buildings that we're sitting in
right now. And sometimes that's good medicine. Sometimes that's the medicine
[02:29:00] we need. And so I think for me, hope really resides in everything we
should do. At this point, Wendy, with everything that we're facing.
Economically, politically, culturally, technologically, I think community is more
important than ever. We need to focus on building, you know, human
communities, but not just human communities in isolation from the places they
call home, but really including those places. As part of the community, I am, I
am dying to hear what your, you know, engineers and materials scientists and,and architects are doing with the rebuilding there, you know, with the fires you
folks had, you know, there and, uh.
[02:29:56] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Los Angeles County. I mean, I'm, I'm hoping that
[02:30:00] you know, someone you know is raising up this issue that as we
think about rebuilding, let's be mindful of this larger, you know, sense of
community that we need to be a part of, because I think it could really be an
incredible. You know, uh, opportunities to illustrate how we can live well, you
know, in our human communities by recognizing the deep relationality we have
in kinship with the places that we call home.
[02:30:42] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So it's, it, it's just, to me, there's just all of the
things that we're seeing these incredible. Uh, natural events fueled by climate
change or, or at least I won't say fueled by, they are exacerbated often by
climate [02:31:00] change. They're not the sole cause there are a lot of things
that are causing the kinds of flooding we see.
[02:31:05] Dr. Dan Wildcat: It's kind of fires that we seen. But climate change
is a factor. And I think part of what we need to do now is reaffirm. Reaffirm a
kind of eco kinship with the balance of life on this fa on this planet. And if we
do so, I'm absolutely hopeful that, you know, we can create more vibrant, more
healthy, more resilient.
[02:31:41] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Senses of communities and I, uh, sense of
community, and that's I think what we desperately need right now.
[02:31:51] Wendy Slusser: I so agree, and all the different points, and trying to
wrap it up in a, your theme of it being attentive. [02:32:00] Where you live and
who you're living with and what's living around you or part of your
environment can not only bring great joy and uplift your spirits like it did for
you and inspire you to write red alert, but also the fact that uh, it can also.
[02:32:19] Wendy Slusser: Really touch on other parts of your life, like the
loneliness part, which
[02:32:24] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Absolutely.
[02:32:25] Wendy Slusser: don't have to feel lonely if you're out there, just if
as long as you can practice that muscle of being attentive.
[02:32:33] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yes,[02:32:34] Wendy Slusser: big piece of it. And I'm thinking, um, you talk
about, you just me mentioned climate change, but not necessarily as one that is
the fault of all that we're experiencing right now.
[02:32:49] Wendy Slusser: But what you've discussed in other. Writings and
also just in your conversations is the interaction. Uh, [02:33:00] there are three
Cs that you've identified that prioritized currently, and then you suggest three
other Cs that you think we should be speaking to. You wanna share some of that
with us?
[02:33:12] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Oh, I'd love to. So I just finished an article. It's
gonna come out in, uh, the Journal of Geography, which is a, a, a journal that's
dedicated to geography education. It's just called Journal of Geography. Be
watching for the next issue. Um, I just, uh, finished a, a piece, uh, with, uh, a
scientist at ncar and we did, wanted to write about this age of the Anthropocene,
the age of humans that we're now living in.
[02:33:47] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Many big picture or scientists would say, you
know, we've really created a new almost geologic epoch here. The age of the
Anthropocene, the [02:34:00] age of humans. We wanted to write about
technology. And, uh, I told Tim I'd been playing around with this for about 20
years, and I, it, it dawned on me that the dominant way that humans, and again,
here we go.
[02:34:21] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Now we're thinking, see. An an anthrop post
century kind of perspective. It's all about us. When we think about technology,
we think technology is good, so long as it promotes human convenience.
Human comfort, of course, puts money in our pocket capital gains. Those are
the three Cs I said of modern thinking technology, you know.
[02:34:47] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Is is here to, to
[02:34:49] Dr. Dan Wildcat: promote human convenience, human comfort, and
capital gains. I said, let's counterpoint that. So I started
[02:34:55] Dr. Dan Wildcat: playing around and thinking about reading
Deloria and thinking about all the [02:35:00] indigenous scholars and elders I've
worked with. And I said, you know what? We're not anti-technology, but we
reframe.
[02:35:06] Dr. Dan Wildcat: it So for us, okay. Um, the algorithm for the value
of, of technology is technology is equal to another three Cs. Community,culture, and communication. And those values, those are the numerator. What's
the common denominator? The earth. Place and I, I kept thinking that, you
know, we really need to reframe technology.
[02:35:41] Dr. Dan Wildcat: So we've written a piece about this in the Journal
of Geography. I hope people can get access to that. And, um. We really say the
we're not anti-technology anything, but that we just need to reframe technology.
[02:36:00] Technology ought to be about, as you know, how I end red alert,
promoting systems of life enhancement and life enhancement, meaning not just
human life.
[02:36:16] Dr. Dan Wildcat: But all life on the planet. And yeah, so I, I, it's,
um, it's a, a neat device, uh, uh, uh, uh, you know, mnemonic device to help us
remember how maybe we could think about technology differently because that
anthropocentric way of thinking about technology means we just keep taking
and taking and taking out of the earth.
[02:36:47] Dr. Dan Wildcat: What we put back usually isn't that good for the
earth in terms of pollution, uh, and waste. But the other view would be to say,
well, no, we [02:37:00] need to go back to that world of relatives and our
technology should be one that enhances our community, not just the human
community. It can do that,
[02:37:13] Wendy Slusser: And what example?
[02:37:14] Dr. Dan Wildcat: community.
[02:37:15] Wendy Slusser: Yeah.
[02:37:16] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Our culture give us resilient, you know, kinds of
opportunities and, and, and opportunities to express beauty in the world we live
in. And, and then, you know, culture, you know, communication, community,
and I think. now, at least I, I think it's worth us talking about, and I'm hoping
people will read it and maybe people will have a way to tweak it or improve it
or say, well, maybe you got this wrong.
[02:37:51] Dr. Dan Wildcat: How about this? But, you know, it's not about
being right, it's just about being honest and trying to share [02:38:00]
something. And um, you know, I always tell people, look, you know. All I can
promise you is that I'm gonna speak honestly. Now, that means that I might
honestly be wrong, and so therefore, when you hear me misspeak, I welcome
you to correct me.[02:38:25] Dr. Dan Wildcat: You might help me understand something better.
Now, again, think of that attitude. See that, that twisting that around. Now that
you're not attacking me. You're being a good relative. You're saying, Dan, I like
that point, but maybe you ought to think about it this way. You're not being
negative. You're being a good relative.
[02:38:46] Dr. Dan Wildcat: You want me to understand something more fully
and better? I'm lucky I have a lot of good relatives who are always saying, Dan,
I think you better rethink that and [02:39:00] work on this a little bit. So I mean,
isn't that, isn't that beautiful though? Think of what the academy would be like
if we could have that kind of interaction.
[02:39:09] Wendy Slusser: So. So I, I'd love to lean in on the communications
part, especially given that communicating with stories is such a powerful means
of communicating. And I'd love to hear a little bit about what kinds of stories
could you think of to drive for culture, cultural change, what.
[02:39:34] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I think they're all there.
There if you, everyone has a story. Everyone has a story. Now, some people
don't get a chance to ever share their stories, but every everyone has a story to
tell their experience, their life. To me, I think the most powerful, uh, stories are
the ones that [02:40:00] center around how in our relationships in this world,
how.
[02:40:11] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We all experience in this life hurt. We feel pain,
not just physical pain, but emotional pain. And to me, the most powerful stories
are the ones where you don't back off the painful, hurtful part, but the stories
don't. end there, they always have. Um, the good stories are the ones that have
this sense of almost a, a, a sense of redemption, a sense of, you know, finding
[02:41:00] peace.
[02:41:00] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Finding understanding as, as a result of
something, you know, that, uh, maybe very painful and, and maybe was very,
um, hurtful, you know, in one's life. I think right now what we, what we really
need to think about is. In a very deep way how our relationships, and, and I'll
give you a, a theme that, uh, I've, I share with a lot of scholars, but the one I
think of most immediately, a couple come to mind, N Scott Momaday but then
my, you know, my scientist, my biologist sister Robin Wall Kimmerer and, um.
[02:42:00]
[02:42:00] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Here's a metaphor to think about. Life is a gift.
Now, sometimes when you, when when you get gifts, um, they might not bewhat, what you think they are, they might not even be what you want. But when
you begin to think about the idea of gifts. Gifting. Then you begin to recognize
that
[02:42:35] Dr. Dan Wildcat: none of us have to take a, have to get a, um, we
don't have to be credit worthy when we come into this life because that first
breath of air we take is a gift. We didn't have to see if we were credit worthy to
take that first breath of life. And I think this, this [02:43:00] metaphor of life as
a gift is powerful because I've heard her talk about it.
[02:43:07] Dr. Dan Wildcat: And what comes with that is then that attitude of
gratitude.
[02:43:17] Dr. Dan Wildcat: A world full of gifts promotes a sense of gratitude.
And here's the really powerful part. It ends with a responsibility to be generous.
Generosity is what really helps. The world go round. And I tell you, I don't
know about you, Wendy, but I was, I was so offended when I heard person
who's been in the news quite a bit frequently actually say that he thought
empathy was the [02:44:00] biggest weakness of human, modern humans to
have empathy.
[02:44:06] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I could, couldn't disagree more. Empathy, gifting,
gift giving, gratitude, generosity. The three Gs. The three Gs. I think that is the
stories that, uh, I, I think of in my life and, and my stories are, those are pretty,
those are pretty common elements. And remember, again. Sometimes the stories
start in a bad place, but it's not where they start, it's where they end up.
[02:44:47] Dr. Dan Wildcat: That's important, you know? And, um, so anyway,
I'm, I'm, I'm, I, I think we need, we desperately need good storytellers today.
[02:45:00]
[02:45:03] Wendy Slusser: And I think that what you just identified as some
life enhancing activities, uh, in order to incentivize behavior. 'cause there's a
nice. Is there anything else you'd like to, um, share with the listeners about
within our new economy or the current economic system, what you would like
[02:45:22] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yeah. You know, I, I keep, I keep thinking about
this a lot, you know, I think one of the things is, um, so right. Let, let's, let's go
back to kind of where we, we began. I think right now what. We need more than
ever is community. We need to stand together. You and I, you know, uh, you
know, I don't know, we're maybe coming up on a two year anniversary of, ofactually, you know, meeting [02:46:00] each other on this flat screen, you know,
but, um, uh, you are kin and it means something when we.
[02:46:12] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We know someone has our back when we know
that I'm not in this alone. So we're separated by a great amount of land, but this
use of the technology might be a good example of, you know, um, how we
could use this technology. You know, in a good way that promotes culture,
communication, and community. And so I'm, I'm, I'm just thankful.
[02:46:50] Dr. Dan Wildcat: I think right now, don't let the loneliness, don't let
the craziness surrounding us. And by the [02:47:00] way, it's mostly human
made craziness. Let's be very specific about this, you know. Uh, it's human
made craziness. Let's not let that blind us to the beauty around us, and I think
there's, there's great healing powers in the world around us.
[02:47:25] Dr. Dan Wildcat: We just have to figure out how to open ourself up
to them. Mm-hmm.
[02:47:32] Wendy Slusser: Thank you. I love that advice and I'm gonna follow
it. Uh, after this call or this, uh, interview, I'm going to go out and enjoy the sun
for a few minutes for
[02:47:44] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Oh, that's a great, that's a great thing to
[02:47:46] Wendy Slusser: Yeah. So, um, we're winding down now. I'm sad,
but we'll have hopefully other opportunities to share, um, conversation with
each other. But we [02:48:00] usually like to end our, our interview with a
question with all of our guests, and that is how do you live well.
[02:48:08] Dr. Dan Wildcat: Yeah. How do I live? Well, I tell you what I try to
every day begin with that morning a very mindful expression of gratitude. For
that gift and, and I, I just, every day's a gift and I want to use it. That gift
responsibly. Well, I wanna be generous. You know, uh, with the gifts that I've
been given, and that's why I have to express incredible gratitude to you, Wendy,
because you've given me another opportunity to share and I'm just filled with
gratitude and, uh, so glad that, uh, you know, I've got a good, strong sister out
there on the West [02:49:00] coast.
[02:49:02] Wendy Slusser: Well, I feel very honored to be part of your circle
and I feel the same. So much gratitude and, um, you, uh, have opened up a
whole world to me that I haven't thought about. Uh, and I feel very comfortablein. So, yes, thank you. And also, uh, we will definitely, uh, include all of those
incredible books that you described.
[02:49:29] Wendy Slusser: We'll, uh, share that on our website for sure. All
your writings, you, you're not only, you not only wrote Red Alert, but many
other books. So we will include those for all our listeners. Yes. And um, again,
thank you Dr. Dan Wildcat.