#106 Decolonizing Medicine through Food with Jamee Pineda

Hey everyone,

I’m so happy to share this episode with you – a true joy to record. I hope you’ll enjoy it too and check Jamee’s work out below. Here is what we talked about:

  • How Jamee came to the healing arts and how the pandemic has changed his work
  • What decolonizing medicine means to him and why stinky food matters so much
  • What gateways to ancestral connection we can explore
  • The magic of food as ritual, as healing, as a practice of reclamation

There is a content note for colonial violence roughly 20 to 28 minutes into this episode, take care of yourself and skip this if you like.

About Jamee:

I am a hilot binabaylan, acupuncturist, and Chinese medicine practitioner.  My practice is informed by my identity as a queer, trans, non binary, Tagalog person living in the U.S.  With the combination of my lived experience and training, my goal is to help individuals and communities live their fullest lives by offering a decolonizing approach to medicine rooted in traditional and ancestral practices.

Here are all of Jamee’s links, including the sign up for the upcoming workshop:
https://linktr.ee/Jameepinedahealingarts

This is the Embodied Business Community I mentioned: https://yarrowdigital.com/diy-business-school/

And here is the Web Design Course: https://yarrowdigital.com/web-design-adventure-course/

 

Listen to the Grief Glimmers podcast on
Apple Podcasts // Spotify

I offer a free Substack newsletter & community with monthly Spark sessions, new podcast episodes and reflections on creative practice & life.

Hi, I’m Yarrow and this is my local river. 

I’m a maker, grief companion and tarot reader living on the East coast of Scotland. 

I facilitate creative projects and gentle rituals for seasons of loss, make handmade textile magic and host the Grief Glimmers podcast. My wish is to change the culture around grief and death so that we can explore these experiences as gateways into a softer, more embodied life.

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