The world is talking. It has always been talking. We are the only species that decided, somewhere along the way, to stop transmitting.
This week's episode is the second in the Invisible Altar series — and it goes somewhere unexpected. We start in the barn, with the frozen silence of a person who has just been offered a list of options and can't locate, anywhere inside themselves, what they actually want. And we end with humpback whales singing across four hundred miles of open ocean, elephants grieving into the ground, wolves locating each other across valleys and forests, and a horse's hoof picking up seismic signals through the earth.
These aren't separate subjects. They're the same one.
IN THIS EPISODE
Why consent and choice are the hardest exercises we do at Bramblewood Stables at Lavender Hill — and what that reveals about how far humans have drifted from their own signal
The science of how humpback whales transmit evolving songs across entire ocean basins — and what MIT researchers recently discovered about a sperm whale phonetic alphabet
How elephants grieve through infrasound frequencies the earth carries better than air, sending mourning through the ground from one set of feet to another
What Pacinian corpuscles are, why horses have them in their hooves, and why you have them in your feet — and what it means that both of you have been standing on a transmitting earth this whole time
Why the leaves coming in at Lavender Hill this week changed the frequency of the entire farm — and what the people who hadn't visited in two weeks felt in their bodies before they understood what had changed
What happens to the body when we interrupt our own transmission long enough — and how the channel back is shorter than we think
THIS WEEK'S PRACTICE
At the end of the episode you'll find an audit and a practice. The short version: find one signal your body has been trying to send this week that didn't get to complete — a breath, a sigh, a walk, a hand on something living — and give it five unwitnessed minutes. The wolves don't explain the howl. You don't have to either.
IF THIS EPISODE FOUND YOU
Last week's episode — the first in the Invisible Altar series — introduced the idea of the farm as a place of practice, and Indigo the cat as an unlikely teacher. If you haven't heard it, it's a good place to start.
Next week we go further in: what it means to build a practice around something you can't fully name yet, and why that might be exactly the point.
FIND THE FULL ESSAY + SOURCES
Read this week's essay on Substack.
If Relatively Stable is finding you at the right moment, the best thing you can do is share it with one person who might need it too. Leave a review if your podcast app allows it — it matters more than the algorithms want you to think.
And if you want the written version delivered to you each week, Stable Roots is where this all lives. Come find me there.
Love, Kim