Episodes
Thursday Jul 21, 2022
Pandemic Fatigue
Thursday Jul 21, 2022
Thursday Jul 21, 2022
We’re languishing (still!) after two years of the pandemic. Can a burnout psychologist help?
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Feeling a bit blah mid-way through 2022… still?
In 2021, organisational psychologist Adam Grant named that pandemic feeling. He called it “languishing” and described it as “the absence of well-being”.
“You’re not functioning at full capacity. Languishing dulls your motivation, disrupts your ability to focus, and triples the odds that you’ll cut back on work,” he wrote in the New York Times.
In this episode of Life & Faith, we call it something else: pandemic fatigue. Or just “not coping”. Natasha gives us her take on “not coping” being the new “busy” - in other words, the standard reply to the question “how are you?”. And she tells us how potatoes relate to pandemic fatigue.
We also ask clinical psychologist Dr Valerie Ling how exhaustion and burnout relate to all of the above. For even if these conditions go by different names, they all seem to describe similar things.
It’s enough to make you want to throw your hands in the air and go, “Potato, potahto, tomato, tomahto, let’s call the whole thing off”.
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Explore:
Natasha’s piece on “not coping”
Adam Grant’s article that named the blah we feel
Dr Ling’s ebook My Burnout Prevention Plan: From a psychologist who knows the cost of burnout
The Centre for Effective Living
Our episode on burnout with Jonathan Malesic
Thursday Jun 30, 2022
REBROADCAST: Space for the Sacred
Thursday Jun 30, 2022
Thursday Jun 30, 2022
Philosopher and theologian John Milbank on left vs right, Harry Potter, and how none of us behave like we’re just atoms.
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If you’re wanting a crash course on “isms” like liberalism, secularism, and populism from anyone, it’s John Milbank.
In this wide-ranging conversation with Simon Smart, the philosopher and theologian has a way of never saying quite what you expect him to. He questions the idea that left and right are really in opposition to each other, calls the final Harry Potter book “a profound theological meditation”, and is enthusiastic about people’s longing for paganism.
What does he think Christianity might give people that’s surprising? “Pleasure,” he replies immediately. “It would make their lives far more interesting, exciting, and pleasurable - and physical, because they’re essentially alienated from their bodies if they think their bodies are just bits of matter.”
Does he think a revival of religion is on the cards? “The reason I do think religion may revive is that it is on the side of common sense … all the time people behave as if they had minds, as if they had souls, as if the good, the true, and the beautiful, the right and wrong, were real - and yet the scientific discourses which we have, or rather their scientistic reductive modes, can’t really allow the reality of any of these things.”
From politics to angels, Milbank turns his formidable intellect on some of the quirks and contradictions of our time.
Thursday Jun 23, 2022
Seen & Heard: The Third
Thursday Jun 23, 2022
Thursday Jun 23, 2022
Simon, Justine, and Natasha debrief on their fave reads/watches of 2022 thus far.
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The CPX team - no surprises here - love a good book or film, and also love a good gossip about them afterwards.
Join Simon Smart, Justine Toh, and Natasha Moore as they gush about what they’ve seen and heard of late.
Natasha repents of her snobbery about audiobooks, having been converted to the form by Trevor Noah’s remarkable memoir Born a Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood.
Justine makes the case for her claim (less than halfway through the year) that the fantasy/sci-fi film Everything Everywhere All At Once is the best film of 2022.
And Simon is super impressed by Jonathan Franzen’s latest novel Crossroads - especially by his depiction of people of faith, in the context of a pastor’s family in 1970s Illinois.
Race, faith, family, the multiverse, and struggling through hard times: some themes emerge as the team consider their recent cultural consumption, and try to persuade you to watch or listen as well.
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Explore:
Listen to Trevor Noah’s memoir Born a Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood
Watch the Everything Everywhere All at Once trailer
Read Jonathan Franzen’s novel Crossroads
Watch Trevor Noah’s monologue about Kim Kardashian and Kanye
Listen to the Radio National interview with Jonathan Franzen
Thursday Jun 16, 2022
How chronic distrust became a way of life
Thursday Jun 16, 2022
Thursday Jun 16, 2022
It’s been 50 years since the Watergate scandal. Our trust in institutions has never quite recovered.
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On June 17, 1972, police arrested a group of burglars at the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate complex in Washington, D.C. Evidence linked the attempted burglary to US President Nixon’s campaign for re-election – leading to a Senate investigation that ultimately led to Nixon’s resignation.
Since then, the suffix ‘gate’ has been attached to any scandal (political or otherwise), story of mismanagement and abuse, or suggestion of a cover-up. The net effect has been to dissolve people’s trust that they’re being told the truth.
Half a century on, we live in societies of chronic distrust, as measured by annual polls like the Edelman Trust Barometer, and research conducted by organisations like More in Common, which studies polarisation and political division across the West.
In this episode of Life & Faith, we revisit the main beats of the Watergate scandal and its reverberations in our culture – and popular culture. We also explore what it means for our societies when distrust has become a way of life, and the role of local communities - including, surprisingly, communities of faith - in nurturing trust between people.
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Explore:
Garrett M. Graff’s Watergate: A New History
More in Common’s 2021 research report Two Stories of Distrust in America
Edelman Trust Barometer 2022
Thursday Jun 09, 2022
For the love of dog
Thursday Jun 09, 2022
Thursday Jun 09, 2022
What our favourite companion animals can teach us about ourselves – and about God.
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Are you a dog person or cat lover? You’re one or the other, apparently.
Wth 69% of Australian households now owning a pet, according to a 2021 survey by Animal Medicines Australia, this week Life & Faith is pleased to get controversial: we reveal that Australia’s “two-pet” system has a clear winner. Dogs.
We speak to Barney Zwartz, long-time dog tragic, about the dogs in his life: the border collie-labrador cross Nessie, whom Barney dubs “Mary Poppins” because she is “practically perfect in every way”, and Lennie, a border collie-whippet who had a special connection with Barney’s late son Sam.
What explains the human-dog bond? Is it dogs’ “hypersociability”? Or “exaggerated gregariousness”? Professor Clive Wynne, the founder of the Canine Science Laboratory at Arizona State University, just calls it dogs’ capacity for “love”.
Barney draws on Professor Wynne’s Dog is Love: Why and how your dog loves you when discussing his own immensely popular columns in The Age reflecting on how heaven-sent dogs seem to be, given their loving, forgiving natures. But don’t worry, cat people: Justine demands Barney account for his outrageous quip in one of those columns that “cats, of course, are despatched from below”.
Meanwhile, we borrow a snippet from Nick Spencer’s interview with philosopher John Gray about his book Feline Philosophy: Cats and the meaning of life. In this extract from the podcast Reading Our Times, John Gray ponders what cats reveal about the problem of human consciousness: we worry endlessly, while they don’t really seem bothered by anything.
So if you, a human animal, are weighed down by many cares, we hope this lighthearted look at what our pets can teach us about God, or what it means to be human, is as fun as a dog with a bone, or a cat toying with a mouse. Enjoy.
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Explore:
Barney’s columns about Lennie and Sam and Nessie (pictures included!)
Nick Spencer’s interview with John Gray about Feline Philosophy from the podcast Reading Our Times
Clive Wynne’s book Dog is Love: Why and how your dog loves you
John Gray’s book Feline Philosophy: Cats and the meaning of life
Benjamin and Jenna Silber Storey’s book Why We Are Restless: On the modern quest for contentment
Thursday Jun 02, 2022
Mid-Life Crisis: A Guidebook
Thursday Jun 02, 2022
Thursday Jun 02, 2022
For centuries, all kinds of people have testified that Dante and his epic poem changed their life.
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Midway along the journey of our lifeI woke to find myself in a dark wood, for I had wandered off from the straight path.
A 700-year-old epic poem may not be the first place you’d think to turn when life gets messy, painful, or confusing. But across times, cultures, and different walks of life, people say that reading The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri changed - or even saved! - their life. What is it that they find in this strange old book?
In this episode of Life & Faith, Simon and Natasha hear from a scholar and also a few recent - and enthusiastic - readers of Dante about what this story of one man’s imagined journey through the afterlife (hell, purgatory, paradise) has meant to them.
“Dante finds us in hard times,” says Professor Jane Kim from Biola University, who found herself returning to the poem during the peak of the pandemic. “I think for those of us who may be experiencing the proverbial midlife crisis or who may be feeling lost or stranded, Dante is reminding us that the midway point is the beginning of the epic, the middle is always the beginning of a new adventure.”
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Explore: One Hundred Days of Dante
Thursday May 26, 2022
Daniel Principe takes on Porn Culture
Thursday May 26, 2022
Thursday May 26, 2022
Sexuality, consent and pornography might not be the first topic of conversation we’d raise at a dinner party. But perhaps we should!
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Issues around consent, pornography and sexuality are a minefield to navigate for young people today and sometimes it’s hard to find helpful places to go to find help.
Daniel Principe, Youth Advocate and Educator at Collective Shout, is one source of information and encouragement for young people and his work is hitting a nerve.
What are ways to help young women and men flourish together when pornography and objectification are such powerfully warping influences and so hard to counteract. Daniel Principe is out in schools offering a different way to think and to be, and young people are lapping this message up.
Listen to Dan tell something of his story, his passion for the subject and why he thinks there are things that can be done to help people find healthy and life-giving relationships that will serve both individuals and the common good.
Despite the darkness of the subject matter, this is an uplifting and optimistic conversation.
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www.collectiveshout.org
Last of the Romans: Reimagining Masculinity, restoring virtue
1800 Respect or 1800 737 732
Men’s Referral Service or 1300 766 491
Lifeline or 13 11 14
Thursday May 19, 2022
Making Peace with our Limitations
Thursday May 19, 2022
Thursday May 19, 2022
Steph Judd was a healthy, sporty and musical teenager when, unexpectedly, things that she could, up until then, do naturally and easily, suddenly became physically difficult, and then, eventually, impossible.
Steph has now had about 15 years to process a significant physical change and adjust to living with a disability. But she has learned plenty of things about herself and picked up some wisdom along the way. Her thinking and writing on the topic of our limitations offers a counter-cultural approach to engaging not with our “potential” but the things that limit us.
Steph believes there is something vital about coming to terms with those limitations and hence our humanity. In wrestling with her own limits, and accepting her vulnerability, Steph has found she has been opened up to relationship, community and a connectedness that might otherwise have eluded her.
This is an honest, refreshing and challenging conversation that cuts against the grain of our culture’s obsession with “maximising” our potential and shrugging off human limits.
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Read Steph on “The Gifts of Our Limitations”
Steph writes about Dignity in Aged Care
Listen to Steph’s Lecture for ADM on The Dignity of Our Limits
Thursday May 12, 2022
A Bigger Story of Us
Thursday May 12, 2022
Thursday May 12, 2022
Tim Dixon illuminates the forces across the Western World that are driving us apart and the challenge this presents for how we live together in pluralistic societies.
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Tim Dixon gave CPX’s Richard Johnson Lecture in 2019, and in this extended podcast we revisit the timely insights we gained from Tim that night. This speech turned out to be eerily prescient given all that came to pass in the years after it was delivered.
In a lively and engaging presentation, we are reminded of the perils of public conversation that is overrun with a spirit of contempt. Our democracies are precious and fragile, and Tim believes there really are things we can do to preserve them.
He offers realistic initiatives that help us withstand the forces of division and strengthen the social glue that healthy societies require. Might faith communities have something unique to offer in this regard? Tim Dixon believes so.
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Explore:
Richard Johnson Lecture
More in Common
Thursday May 05, 2022
The Pastor Politician
Thursday May 05, 2022
Thursday May 05, 2022
On May 21, Australians won’t simply elect a Prime Minister but the nation’s “comforter-in-chief”.
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Bushfires, floods, and pandemic: Australians have weathered plenty of crises over the last few years. Who do they look to in times of trouble – and what do they want from those who lead them?
In this Life & Faith, we explore an unofficial but significant part of any political leader’s job: their responsibility to not only steer people through a crisis but also comfort them with empathy, compassion, and wisdom.
Regardless of whether we have a Prime Minister or a President, we also want our leader to be a pastor to the nation.
Tim Costello, Senior Fellow at CPX, explains the role of the pastor and how former Australian Prime Ministers have inhabited that role over time.
Erin Wilson, Professor of Politics and Religion at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands, explains how “civil religion” – the intertwining of religious symbols and language with the political state – accounts for the “priestly role” of national leaders.
Mike Baird, Former NSW Premier, gives an insight to the pastoral role he played during the aftermath of the Lindt Café Siege in Sydney.
We also hear a few American presidents in that “comforter-in-chief” mode and sample the stylings of New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern in this area as she prepared New Zealanders to bunker down in the fight against Covid-19.
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Explore:
Want more on civil religion? Read Erin Wilson’s article for CPX
Hear more about what Mike Baird has been up to since leaving politics
Listen in on Part 1 and Part 2 of Life & Faith’s interview with Tim Costello as he looks back over a long career advocating for social justice
Check out CPX's other podcast
Richard Johnson Lectures
The Richard Johnson Lecture is an annual public event that seeks to highlight Christianity’s relevance to society and to positively contribute to public discourse on key aspects of civil life. www.richardjohnson.com.au