Wilma and Keri have known each other since their PR days in London almost fifteen years ago. Keri spent eleven years at Nando's, latterly as Global Head of Communications, and created the legendary Nando's Black Card — the underground membership scheme that connected the brand to Stormzy, Little Simz and Ed Sheeran before any of them were household names.
Then she walked away. A yoga teacher training in Costa Rica that she swore wasn't about becoming a yoga teacher. She came home a teacher anyway.
This episode tracks the whole arc. Fashion to chicken to yoga to sound. From "I'm no Lauren Hill, I shouldn't be singing" to building Healing Sound System and co-founding Wykd, the free wellbeing project she started for the Notting Hill community after Grenfell. Wilma and Keri get into radical self-care as activism, why "sound bath" isn't quite the right word, the difference between magic and bullshit, and what it costs to back yourself when no one else is convinced yet.
About the Guest
Keri Perkins is a cultural strategist, sound practitioner and yoga teacher. Founder of Healing Sound System, co-founder of Wykd, and a board member of Bridges for Music in South Africa. She has spoken at Tate Late, the House of Commons, International Music Summit and ADE.
Connect with Keri:
Key Topics
Memorable Quotes
| “It was a whisper, and then it was a bolt.”
| “You did that. You can do this. It might take some time. Invariably it does, but it's okay. I believe in myself. I really do. I back myself.”
| “Radical self-care, as Angela Davis talks about, is so important when we're in this political time. That has to happen from within.”
| “The truth is in here. It's not out there.”
Resources Mentioned
Sordoe
Wilma and Keri are working together on the launch of Sordoe Intention Water.
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