56. Thirsty for the Waters of Life

56. Thirsty for the Waters of Life

From Nature :: Spirit — Kinship in a living world by Priscilla Stuckey

May 10, 2025 · 29 min

About this episode

The episode explores mental and epistemic abuse through the lens of Tara Westover's memoir and its connections to authoritarianism and Indigenous thought.

Tara Westover’s memoir, Educated , grabs me hard because her story resonates so deeply with mine. So today I use both of our stories to explore mental abuse or epistemic abuse—attacking the mind of another, trying to control how and what they think. It’s key to authoritarianism. And we explore the 2000-year-old form of authoritarianism in Western history and how it rests on a religious idea that took hold as Rome was crumbling. The fixes we need today run even deeper than education because the academy too is rooted in authoritarian patterns, as Indigenous thinkers such as Daniel Wildcat (Muscogee Nation of Oklahoma) and Ilarion Merculieff (Unangan) remind us. We need a new worldview—one that begins with the knowing inside us, honoring the waters of life within each one. Get full access to Nature :: Spirit — Kinship in a living world at priscillastuckey.substack.com/subscribe

People in this episode

Host: Priscilla Stuckey

Topics covered

  • mental abuse
  • epistemic abuse
  • authoritarianism
  • religious ideas
  • Indigenous perspectives
  • new worldview

Keywords

  • mental abuse
  • epistemic abuse
  • authoritarianism
  • Tara Westover
  • Educated
  • Indigenous thinkers
  • new worldview

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: Muscogee Nation of Oklahoma

Books & works: Educated

Places: Rome

More episodes of Nature :: Spirit — Kinship in a living world

Explore listener stats, chart rankings, contacts and more on the Nature :: Spirit — Kinship in a living world podcast page.