AI, Nature & Future Potential

Contemplations on the evolving relationship between technology, the natural world, and humanity's potential. These pieces inspire reflection on how we can harmoniously integrate innovation with the wisdom of nature for a sustainable future.

Through everything I’ve lived, read, and listened to, one truth keeps revealing itself: we are at a turning point. If we, as humans, don’t learn to adapt and evolve with the world around us — from emerging technologies to nature’s shifting rhythms — we risk falling behind not just practically, but spiritually.

I’ve always been fascinated by patterns — it started with trend forecasting in the fashion world, but it’s become something much deeper. Now I see cycles everywhere: in nature, in history, in the rise of AI, and even in our own personal growth. When we honour the past, stay fully present, and remain open to what’s coming, the future becomes less of a threat and more of an invitation — to co-create something wiser, more connected, and more soul-led.

Books

Books in this space have helped me explore what’s possible when ancient wisdom meets modern innovation. From nature’s intelligence to the ethics of AI, these pages offer both caution and hope for what lies ahead.

This book made me pause — deeply. With such care and clarity, Dr. Gabor Maté explores something many of us intuitively feel but struggle to articulate: that our bodies often carry the weight of unspoken emotions. Through heartfelt stories and years of medical insight, he gently asks powerful questions — like whether loneliness can affect our health, or if suppressing emotions might play a part in illness.

Reading this felt like being given permission to look inward with compassion, not blame. It was like holding up a mirror to parts of myself I hadn’t fully acknowledged. It helped me understand how stress, people-pleasing, and emotional repression may quietly shape our wellbeing and how they have played out in my own life. What I especially loved were his “Seven A’s of Healing” — a kind, hopeful framework for finding our way back to ourselves. This book doesn’t offer a quick fix, but it does offer truth, understanding, and a softer way to start listening when our bodies speak.

This book is often called the “trauma Bible” — and honestly, I can see why. It is one of those life-changing books that gently — and sometimes uncomfortably — opens our eyes to the deep imprint trauma leaves on the body and mind. Through years of clinical experience, research, and heartfelt storytelling, van der Kolk shows us that trauma isn’t something that simply happens in the past — it lives in our nervous system, shapes our relationships, and often drives our behaviours in ways we may not realise.


Reading this book helped me see how unprocessed pain can linger silently beneath the surface — not just emotionally, but physically — and how healing requires more than just talk. It asks for connection, safety, and a reconnection with the body itself. If you’ve ever wondered why certain patterns persist, or why healing feels just out of reach, this book offers hope, science, and a deeply human path forward.

conversations

These talks are for the curious and open-hearted — voices that challenge, expand, and reimagine what it means to be human in a rapidly changing world. They’ve sparked ideas in me about how we might live more consciously, even in the face of great unknowns.

In this powerful talk, Dr. Gabor Maté gently but boldly redefines trauma — not as the event itself, but what happens inside us as a result. With deep compassion, he shares how childhood wounds, emotional repression, and disconnection from self are often at the root of anxiety, addiction, and illness. This isn’t just about healing pain — it’s about coming home to ourselves.

"We don't respond to the present moment. We respond to the past."-Gabor Maté 

Step Inside the Circle moved me deeply. Watching it revealed just how profoundly childhood trauma can shape a life — and how behind every hardened exterior is often a wounded child. This powerful short film invites us to see those in prison not as broken or evil, but as human beings shaped by pain. It reminded me that no one is born violent — and that healing begins with understanding and compassion.

teachings

Here you'll find guiding insights from futurists, scientists, spiritual thinkers and systems-change leaders. Their lessons remind me that the future isn't something to fear — it's something we can shape with awareness, intention, and care.

In this poignant talk, filmmaker Almudena Toral brings to light the unseen psychological scars left by trauma. Through the story of Adayanci Pérez, a six-year-old girl from Guatemala who suffered severe trauma after being separated from her father at the U.S. border, Toral emphasises the power of storytelling in healing. Her work is a heartfelt call to recognise and address the deep wounds caused by policies that dehumanise, urging us to listen, empathise, and advocate for change.

Dr. Gabor Maté’s keynote at Scotland’s ACEs to Assets Conference was a profound turning point in my understanding of trauma. It was the first time I encountered the term Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs), and it felt like a light switched on. Suddenly, the patterns of addiction, anxiety, and disconnection I’d witnessed in others—and felt within myself—made sense.

Maté’s message was clear and compassionate: trauma isn’t just what happens to us, but what happens inside us when we’re left alone with pain. He showed how early emotional wounds can shape our entire lives, and how healing begins when we reconnect with our true selves.

This talk reminded me that no one is born broken. We all carry stories, and with awareness and compassion, we can begin to rewrite them.