Walk Around Podcast Por Hudson Gardner arte de portada

Walk Around

Walk Around

De: Hudson Gardner
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Distilled moments of presence in nature

www.walkaround.runHudson Gardner
Biografías y Memorias Ciencias Sociales Espiritualidad
Episodios
  • All The Energy in the World for Nothing At All
    Feb 27 2026
    I am sitting on the floor, at a pine coffee table I bought from IKEA a few months back. Simmering on the stove is a blend of herbs I formulated for the challenges of my current stage of life.In the oven is a piece of salmon caught in a distant ocean.I am typing on a laptop that is essentially a magic rock, made of elements (Aluminum, Copper, Gold, Selenium, Silicon, rare earth metals) from supernovæ that somehow made their way to earth over inexplicable time.Its quiet in this room, in this condo in a building in downtown. It feels, in some ways, like a library. As possessions go, I could fit everything I own in here in my van and drive away, with plenty of room for a passenger. But I own more things than I have in ten years. I am living a life I never could have imagined.And yet, amidst all the change, life always feels about the same. I guess because it is me that is living it. There is a strange thread that continues, day after day after day, and that thread I suppose I call myself. Resilient through changes and losses and gainses (sic), it continues while all else falls away.Until, I suppose, it doesn’t.But I don’t know what that feels like, and can only guess at the hereafter.There is so much talk of big shifts this year. “A new world order” as a world leader said. Large movements of distant planets that are said to impact our emotions. A lunar new year with double fire energy.Everyone seems to be saying: get ready.Get ready.Get ready.But ready for what?To me, readiness creates tension. Some kind of bracing for a fast start, or some future that cannot be controlled.But I don’t know what to get ready for. Maybe others do, maybe they know exactly where they are headed and how to do it all.I own that I don’t. I have no idea what to be ready for. And to fabricate something seems to be fabricating a form of augury that I don’t have an honest claim on.And so maybe what I need to be ready for, is to release control. To allow what comes.In many ways, living alone, I am spending more time on my own, with my own thoughts, than I have in some time. And studying medicine, I’m finding yet again that I am on a somewhat solitary, inward journey.Having come through the most difficult two years of my life, I am now sitting at a precipice, looking into the future. What will I do with all the supposed potential of my current life? I want to create a healing arts center in the high desert that will allow expressions of creativity as a form of life giving culture. And the opportunity for people to come practice healing modalities of many different kinds there.But to be honest, I don’t even know what healing is.And some days, I suck at caring for myself.I have a hard time eating alone, because it’s boring. I like cooking for people.Living alone and being single in a city can be hard. There are rules here that I have had to learn, and a lot of unhealthy social dynamics that people accept as status quo.Though I feel that all of this is on some kind of thread of direction that feels real to me. At least as real as anything I’ve done before, with the added aspect of being recognized after this passage as more than just a random artist with a camera, laptop, microphone, and notebook. I’ll have a license, be an “acupuncturist.”Is this what becoming yourself looks like?Because to me it feels messy, imperfect, uncertain, misty, painful, lonely, and strange—and this process has been going on for a LONG time.Sometimes I don’t know where its leading me.Two springs ago, when I couldn’t sleep more than a couple hours for weeks on end, was having panic attacks and night terrors when I did sleep, felt haunted by my own psyche, like I was an embarrassment to myself, my family and the world—I went to visit my sister in Boise. It was a blur of a trip. I can’t remember really what happened. My nervous system was so dysregulated, that even with my years of mediation experience, I couldn’t get myself into a calm state. I had to stop consuming any form of caffeine for half a year—I went off sugar completely for over a month. I experienced a complete nervous system collapse. This is what recovery from a long term addiction looks like, in case you were wondering.But there was a moment in the airport on the way, when I was sitting in the atrium area, and I noticed an old man dressed nicely, accompanied by his wife. They came up to me. I was listening, as I often do, to an album, and had recently been inspired to investigate dance by a person I was dating. The track was called Scythe Master by Four Tet. So I was dancing a little in the chair. I don’t know if he saw me dancing, or was just attracted to whatever vibe I was giving off.But he sat down at the table with me, after asking permission. He looked to be late 80s or early 90s, and his wife had a beautiful German accent. He told me he was a retired doctor, from WSU Medical Center in Seattle. He asked where I was going, and told me about the train ...
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  • Resistance Takes Effort
    Oct 9 2025

    Without honesty, life becomes a pantomime. And yet it’s hard to know what’s true.

    I’ve found that truth unfolds in concentric rings; like ripples in a still pool of water, or the growth of a tree.

    And each ring references, yet also takes space from, the previous.

    And so only in cycles of time, and in seasons, is a kind of long term knowing revealed.

    It’s easy to forget that there is a kind of glacial energy to the every day, like leaves unnoticed piling in drifts in the gutters in autumn. Each day another leaf, and soon enough, there’s a drift of half noticed moments, forgotten days, and the occasional memory that stays forever. And this is life?

    Through the threads of being and days, acting and passivity, choices and impositions, life passes.

    There’s a phrase in the northern part of Italy, up against the alps: “Tiempo alla passa. Passa il bin.” Which is dialect for: Time passes. Pass it well.

    And I came across a phrase, translated from Lao Tze by Lori Dechars, that says:

    How do I know the way of things at the beginning?

    I feel like I’ve come to a thought about life and love in general recently that feels clear: which is that I should let what loves me do so, and I should love only what I love. And endlessly let go of those things that aren’t this.

    In that way, I stop resisting the flow of life, and live out a trajectory that is true. And maybe I’ll gain some energy from no longer resisting the inevitable course that my journey wants to make.

    In all this, in writing and in conversation, I try to find the words that are true. And yet its always hard to find the right words. And in that same way, its hard to know when to follow what is easy, or pursue what is hard.

    It’s important to remember the rules of life. But I lost my rule book long ago. I do my best to make up whatever makes sense to do, whatever’s true, vital, alive, and real. And to remember that resisting is a form of safety. That it’s good to be safe sometimes, but a life that’s always safe... is maybe one that produces no living.

    Thanks for listening ~



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.walkaround.run
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    3 m
  • Delivered Quietly
    Sep 21 2025

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    TRANSCRIPT

    A long time ago, I used to have some friends who liked to go around the country by riding freight trains

    They'd hitch out of Omaha or Lincoln or usually Kansas City and end up in Pennsylvania or Montana, California, Arizona

    I never caught a ride with any of them

    I didn't really ever have the chance

    But I liked to sit with them on the rails and the bridges and watch the trains go by

    And they'd tell me about the different kinds of cars and which ones were good rides, where they were going, what you had to look out for

    Maybe that's why when I went for a walk recently and found an old abandoned railroad trestle in the western part of Victoria's downtown in Canada, where I live now. I climbed over a fence and went and sat on it for a while

    And I've been going back to it, sitting there and watching cars go by, people, a couple of stories up above the ground

    I don't really have anything else to say but that, just a funny memory, I guess

    Maybe a reflection about living in an urban place because I've lived out in the countryside for so long now

    Read more here



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.walkaround.run
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    9 m
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