The Flutter By Effect Podcast Por Samantha Bean | Flutter By Meadows arte de portada

The Flutter By Effect

The Flutter By Effect

De: Samantha Bean | Flutter By Meadows
Escúchala gratis

Obtén 3 meses por US$0.99 al mes + $20 crédito Audible

In The Flutter By Effect, Samantha Bean explores the practical and poetic sides of rewilding — from native plants and migrating birds to the quiet intelligence of seasonal change. Each episode blends storytelling with ecological insight, helping listeners reconnect to the stories nature is always telling.

flutterbymeadows.substack.comSamantha
Ciencia Ciencias Biológicas
Episodios
  • Episode 8 | No-remember November
    Nov 26 2025

    November has a way of turning every day into an improvised obstacle course. You start the morning with a plan—simple, linear, achievable. And then suddenly you’re vaulting over school emails, leaping around rescheduled appointments, and dodging the relentless notifications that somehow always arrive at the exact wrong moment.

    It’s not just busy. It’s parkour.The untrained, mildly chaotic kind.

    And yet—this is also the time of year when nature is quietly doing its own kind of parkour, too. The squirrels in our yard have reached peak acrobat mode, launching themselves across branches like tiny woodland stunt doubles. They’re quick, nimble, determined…and absolutely forgetful.

    Researchers estimate that squirrels forget a significant portion of the nuts they bury—little pockets of intention scattered everywhere. But here’s the surprising part: the things they lose end up becoming the forests we later walk through. Their forgetfulness turns into renewal. Their misplaced acorns become maples and oaks. Their “oops” moments become canopy.

    I’ve been thinking a lot about that.

    Because every November, I find myself misplacing things—keys, earbuds, my sense of time, sometimes my entire train of thought. Just trying not to do a face plant into the holidays.



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit flutterbymeadows.substack.com
    Más Menos
    4 m
  • Episode 7 | Are Notifications Quietly Stealing Our Ability to Notice?
    Nov 19 2025

    Every day our phones send us tiny digital bells. There are pings and reminders intended to grab our attention at any given moment. They pile up sometimes, and just as quickly, get swiped away. The notification bells of our lives are often a nuisance.

    Seen…gone. Noticed? Not really.

    Episode 7 of The Flutter By Effect dives into a strange little truth I’ve been wrestling with: notifications were originally designed to help us know things. It’s the very origin of the word. But somewhere along the way, we traded knowing for reacting. We traded awareness for urgency. We see it. But do we notice it?

    We’re living in a world where our devices constantly ask us to pay attention, yet we’re becoming less able to actually notice anything at all. We want to stay informed, but we’re drowning in so many “important” things that everything starts to blur together. The reflex to swipe away what we “don’t have time for” might be slowly training our brains to notice…less.

    Perhaps the rapid swiping and dismissal of the notifications is re-calibrating our brain to stop noticing at all.

    And noticing — really noticing — is where you find presence and maybe something you’ve been overlooking. In my garden, the counterweight to this is always the same:one bird, one moment, one pause long enough to take it all in.

    Episode 7 is a little love letter to that pause, guided by a red-breasted nuthatch that stole my heart.To the tiny gap between seeing and noticing.To reclaiming attention in a season where everything feels urgent.

    And if you want the full expanded essay version — the deeper dive into definitions, attention, and the little moments that grounded me this week — it’ll be up on the blog tomorrow.

    Lastly, many thanks to my neighbor Kim for the notification you sent me that night. For without it, this episode would not have be scripted!

    With gratitude,Samantha

    Audio Credits:Red-breasted nuthatch call courtesy of: Ross Gallardy, XC344953. Accessible at www.xeno-canto.org/344953.

    License: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit flutterbymeadows.substack.com
    Más Menos
    8 m
  • Episode 6 | Is an Empty Nest Truly Empty?
    Nov 12 2025

    In this episode, Samantha explores how nature mirrors our own life transitions — especially the quiet ones that sneak up on us. From empty bird nests in the fall garden to shifting seasons in our homes, this story is about finding grace in what looks like loss, and understanding that letting go is its own form of growth.

    What looks empty often isn’t. Empty nests, bare trees, quiet homes, job transitions, even full career changes — they’re all spaces between one life stage and another. Nature reminds us that beneath every still moment, there’s quiet renewal happening: roots deepening, strength gathering, and life preparing for what’s next.

    In this episode, she explores how nature teaches us about change, resilience, and the tender art of letting go.

    Thanks for listening! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and podcast episodes and support my work.



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit flutterbymeadows.substack.com
    Más Menos
    10 m
Todavía no hay opiniones