This episode shares an interview with Nicole Rose on the Sage’s Cabin Podcast, hosted by Rox Madeira. We talk about herbal livelihoods, solidarity work and navigating trauma with herbalism.
Links & resources from this episode
- The Sage’s Cabin Podcast – https://roxmadeira.com/podcast/
- Rox Madeira’s website – https://www.roxmadeira.com/
- Interview with Rox – https://solidarityapothecary.org/the-frontline-herbalism-podcast/62-solidarity-medicine-making-with-rox-madeira/
- Herbalism, PTSD and Traumatic Stress Course – https://solidarityapothecary.org/herbalismandptsdcourse/
- Practical Medicine Making Intensive – https://solidarityapothecary.org/practical-medicine-making-intensive/
- Making Herbal Medicine with Glycerine workshop, use the code BLACKFLAG for 50% off as a fundraiser for the Black Flag Herbal Clinic – https://solidarityapothecary.org/product/glycerinecourse/
Find them all at solidarityapothecary.org/podcast/
Music from Sole & DJ Pain – Battle of Humans | Plant illustrations by @amani_writes | In solidarity, please subscribe, rate & review this podcast wherever you listen.
Transcript
Welcome to the Frontline Herbalism Podcast with
Nicole:your host, Nicole Rose from the Solidarity Apothecary.
Nicole:This is your place for all things plants and liberation.
Nicole:Let's get started.
Nicole:Hello.
Nicole:Welcome back to the Frontline Herbalism Podcast.
Nicole:I'm sorry for ghosting you again.
Nicole:Just the same excuse really of like feeling very overwhelmed with one to one work,
Nicole:which I absolutely adore.
Nicole:But yeah, it is definitely a big workload.
Nicole:I've realized I've got like 60 people I'm
Nicole:supporting, which is a little bit wild considering that I only get like 12 hours of
Nicole:childcare a week paid by the state.
Nicole:Like I am eligible, eligible for more.
Nicole:But like I want to be with my baby.
Nicole:Do you know what I mean? He's only two years old, so he just does like
Nicole:four mornings a week.
Nicole:Anyway,
Nicole:just a couple of updates.
Nicole:So I have decided to teach the Practical Medicine Making intensive for the third time
Nicole:this, this year.
Nicole:I normally only teach it twice,
Nicole:but the last two courses have been so amazing.
Nicole:Like such awesome humans and so joyful to
Nicole:teach that I thought, right, let's try and make another one happen.
Nicole:And obviously, you know, it's like a
Nicole:kind of income boost.
Nicole:I've been in a little bit of a pickle financially, not gonna lie.
Nicole:I just, I tend to start stuff with this like, prototype of like, let's just do it and then
Nicole:see and we can evaluate and change.
Nicole:And I think I started the Black FL Herbal
Nicole:Clinic, like the Anarchist Free Clinic without thinking.
Nicole:Oh, I've always supported people for years unpaid, like, it'll be fine.
Nicole:But actually just like completely underestimated the cost of providing kind of
Nicole:like ongoing herbal support to people and like just, you know, new costs like the paying like
Nicole:my neighbor to help look after my child so I can do calls in the afternoon,
Nicole:etc. Etc. So anyway,
Nicole:there is a Black Flag Herbal Clinic fundraiser at the moment.
Nicole:I haven't put it on Instagram,
Nicole:what am I like,
Nicole:but I've put it on my newsletter list.
Nicole:So basically my Making Herbal Medicine with Glycerin workshop, which is ******* awesome,
Nicole:FYI goes into loads of details about what glycerin is, some of the sustainability stuff,
Nicole:its medicinal properties, which herbal constituents do really well in glycerin and
Nicole:like the two methods that I use, like the slow cooker warm method as I call it,
Nicole:and like cold infusing certain herbs and which herbs do and don't like that method anyway,
Nicole:it's absolutely banging.
Nicole:It's normally 40 quid and you with the code
Nicole:Black Flag, all cap, lock caps, locks cap,
Nicole:all capital letters can get it for just £20, like, and 100 of that money will be ring
Nicole:fenced for the Black Flag Herbal Clinic for all the postage costs and the herb costs and
Nicole:stuff.
Nicole:So.
Nicole:Yeah,
Nicole:but you know, the Black Flag crew are like absolute bunch of babes and we've got like a
Nicole:long way to go in terms of like developing systems and doing fundraisers and we've been
Nicole:talking about like, how do we decentralize, like, care and you know, the end goal has
Nicole:always been to create like global infrastructure for,
Nicole:you know, like herbal solidarity,
Nicole:especially within the kind of anarchist movement.
Nicole:So watch this space.
Nicole:But yeah, for now, the practical medicine making course, literally like a
Nicole:quarter, no, a third, I think a third of
Nicole:the places have gone already from one
Nicole:email to my list.
Nicole:I haven't put it on Instagram yet, so.
Nicole:So if you want to get on that, I would sign up right away.
Nicole:There are like payment plans available at checkout.
Nicole:I'm not sure about solidarity places for this round simply because there's shitloads of
Nicole:people who applied last time who I wasn't able to support because it's like a limited numbers
Nicole:course.
Nicole:So I might kind of allocate things to them anyway.
Nicole:I'm still trying to figure it out.
Nicole:But you know, email, if it's something you're
Nicole:interested in and we can always add you to that waiting list, you can fill in the form,
Nicole:like applying for the solidary places and then you'll be kind of like top of the queue for
Nicole:next year,
Nicole:if that makes sense.
Nicole:But yeah, today the episode, the podcast episode is actually a reshare of an interview
Nicole:I did on the Sage's Cabin podcast.
Nicole:So if you're into herbal medicine, check it out.
Nicole:It's a podcast run by my friend Rox Madeira, and she's a Scottish Iranian herbalist.
Nicole:Been involved in the mobile Herbal Clinic Calais for like donkey's years.
Nicole:And yeah, it's just all round.
Nicole:Awesome human.
Nicole:I interviewed her on the show a year or so ago where we talked all about like solidarity,
Nicole:medicine making and all the stuff that her workers co op do up in Scotland.
Nicole:So yeah, please check that out if you're interested and check out her podcast.
Nicole:And I'm gonna be back soon, I promise.
Nicole:I'm gonna do an episode all about how I work
Nicole:with people one to one and why I make certain decisions and how that's structured in case
Nicole:you're interested in herbal support.
Nicole:And then baby, I have like planned a whole series all about medicine making.
Nicole:It's gon epic.
Nicole:I'M gonna batch it in advance and then pass it
Nicole:to an amazing friend who helps me with media stuff and just like get it scheduled.
Nicole:That's the.
Nicole:That's the plan.
Nicole:So, yeah, I'm going to be talking all about what makes medicine potent, how to make
Nicole:tinctures, how to make glycerites, how to make infused oils.
Nicole:Yeah, I just thought it's the summer, it's like medicine making season.
Nicole:And then after that, yeah, we'll come straight back in with all their kind of like trauma
Nicole:content with the herbalism, PTSD and traumatic stre course, which, by the way, you can join
Nicole:the wait list for now.
Nicole:And hopefully dotted between now and then, we'll have some more interviews because I
Nicole:don't know if you've checked out the last interview with Bonnie from Ravenson
Nicole:Apothecary, but it was like absolutely epic.
Nicole:And again, it's on my to do
Nicole:list to put out some graphics with some of the quotes.
Nicole:Yeah, it literally gave me goosebumps.
Nicole:I'm still, I still think about it all the
Nicole:time.
Nicole:And yeah, I think if you feel like aligned
Nicole:with the Solidarity Apothecary and like, all the stuff that, like, I'm doing and like,
Nicole:people in other herbal projects are doing, I think you'll really love that episode a lot.
Nicole:So, yeah.
Nicole:So please check that out.
Nicole:All right.
Nicole:I will be back soon.
Nicole:Thanks for listening.
Nicole:Take care.
Nicole:Hello and welcome to the Sages Cabin.
Nicole:I'm your host, Rox Madeira.
Nicole:I'm a historical and community herbalist researching medieval and early modern healing
Nicole:traditions, women's ancestral knowledge, and the role of plants in restoration,
Nicole:memory and belonging after rupture.
Nicole:So I post most of my work on Patreon.
Nicole:I do a lot of stuff in person,
Nicole:like women's circles,
Nicole:foraging walks and restore your core.
Nicole:So if you want to connect with me, you can check out my website,
Nicole:rocksmadira.com a lot of my community work happens under Movement in Time where we
Nicole:support marginalized communities through herbal medicine.
Nicole:So you can check that out@movementintime.com and then I also do live herbal reenactment
Nicole:with the Historical herbalists and so you can check us out.
Nicole:We do lots of events across the country and you can see all our events on
Nicole:historicalherbalists.com if you enjoy the podcast.
Nicole:I really appreciate it.
Nicole:If you like, share and subscribe and
Nicole:considering becoming a subscribe patron on Patreon, which is under the Wise Herbal Ways
Nicole:banner.
Nicole:In today's podcast, I'm speaking with Nicole Rose from Solidarity Apothecary.
Nicole:She's Somebody who I've been wanting to get on podcast for a while.
Nicole:She has inspired a lot of the work I do with Movement in Time.
Nicole:She has some really good resources out there.
Nicole:So check her out.
Nicole:It was a really nice to finally chat to her, get her on.
Nicole:I work with her with on the Mobile Herbal Clinic Calais.
Nicole:So I hope you really enjoy the podcast and get a little help it.
Rox:So yeah, I mean I wanted to get you on the podcast for ages
Nicole:and finally they managed to.
Rox:To do it
Nicole:to start with.
Rox:It would be nice if you could introduce yourself in your own words and just like say
Rox:what you do and everything.
Nicole:Sure.
Nicole:Yes. I'm Nicole.
Nicole:I.
Nicole:I'm an anarchist and a herbalist and I live in the southwest of England.
Nicole:Very far away from you unfortunately.
Nicole:But yeah, I run a project called the Solidarity Apothecary.
Nicole:So I focus as a herbalist on supporting people who experience state violence.
Nicole:And that mostly is like organizer types experiencing state repression.
Nicole:Refugees and people on the move, for example, were both involved in this project, Mobile
Nicole:Herbal Clinic Calais.
Nicole:Sadly not going there very often now because of the baby, but have been quite heavily
Nicole:involved for a long time.
Nicole:And I get books to prisoners around the world.
Nicole:Wrote a book called the Prisoner's Herbal that it's like written specifically for people
Nicole:inside.
Nicole:And I also send kind of care packages to
Nicole:people like prisoner families and people going through repression and yeah, all the things
Nicole:like that.
Nicole:And I also have like an online course which sort of funds everything which is about
Nicole:herbalism and PTSD and traumatic stress.
Nicole:So yeah, lots of.
Nicole:Lots of hats.
Nicole:But the main threads are just.
Nicole:Yeah, supporting people experiencing state
Nicole:violence and different forms of trauma with herbal medicine.
Rox:Yeah. I was looking at your site.
Rox:You're doing so much stuff.
Rox:I feel like you seem to be doing so much more than you were before as well.
Rox:Like how are you managing with.
Nicole:Oh really?
Nicole:I mean I think I did most of the like groundwork for everything before having a
Nicole:baby.
Nicole:So now I'm just kind of in like systems mode.
Nicole:Oh yeah.
Nicole:I also have a clinical practice and have
Nicole:started this anarchist free clinic called Black Flag Herbal Clinic that I forgot to
Nicole:mention.
Nicole:Yeah, it's a hustle in it.
Nicole:Like I only have like 12 hours of nursery time
Nicole:a week and a bit of help in the afternoons on the odd day.
Nicole:So.
Nicole:And then nap time, bedtime,
Nicole:like a bit of graft then.
Nicole:But yeah, it's definitely.
Nicole:It's definitely a lot.
Nicole:I'd love to pick your brain sometime about how
Nicole:you cope with motherhood and all this stuff because You.
Nicole:How many kids have you got?
Rox:You've got three.
Nicole:Whoa. ****** hell.
Rox:It's intense.
Rox:And I think I said to you the last time I spoke to you when I was on your podcast that I
Rox:found the transition quite difficult,
Rox:like,
Rox:because I kind of gave up a lot of stuff and then kind of took a whole break because I was
Rox:just like, oh, my God,
Rox:children.
Rox:Yeah.
Nicole:I cannot imagine.
Nicole:I would love to have more kids one day if I
Nicole:ever met someone else.
Nicole:But, like, oh, my God, I cannot imagine more
Nicole:than one little human needing me.
Nicole:I think it would blow my mind.
Rox:Now starting to get to the point where some of them.
Rox:So they can do a bit by themselves.
Rox:I say that, but then they're always like,
Rox:mommy, Mommy.
Rox:But,
Rox:yeah, at least they've stopped fighting, so that's good.
Nicole:How old are they?
Rox:They are nine, seven and four.
Nicole:Wow.
Rox:Okay.
Nicole:Big kids.
Rox:Yeah. So I think I want to unpack kind of all of that stuff that you've said.
Rox:So one,
Rox:I would like to was wondering how did Solidarity Post Creek kind of come about in
Rox:the first place?
Rox:And you've got quite a big presence online and stuff.
Rox:And I was.
Rox:So I was wondering, like, for kind of any
Rox:budding herbalists and stuff that are watching, how did you kind of develop the kind
Rox:of business side of what you're doing?
Nicole:Oh, oh, that's.
Nicole:I've not been asked that before.
Nicole:So, yeah, I guess the kind of, like,
Nicole:brief origin story is studying herbal medicine in prison when I was a prisoner for this
Nicole:animal liberation campaign,
Nicole:sorry to swear, years ago, when I was 21.
Nicole:And then I was a sort of DIY home herbalist, just learning everything, reading everything,
Nicole:listening to podcasts, going to workshops, practicing, putting everything in a jar
Nicole:possible for a really long time.
Nicole:And I loved that.
Nicole:And then I finally found, like, a herbal
Nicole:school that,
Nicole:like, didn't kind of prejudice me because of my background and enabled me to study with
Nicole:them.
Nicole:And then that clinical training just, like,
Nicole:completely changed my life.
Nicole:And I just wanted to do all the herbal things
Nicole:all the time,
Nicole:but I'd already started supporting people,
Nicole:like different comrades and different groups and stuff, just like, informally with herbal
Nicole:medicine.
Nicole:And then I just kept seeing it everywhere.
Nicole:Everyone being burnt out, everyone being depleted, vast amounts of chronic illness.
Nicole:I got really sick myself,
Nicole:and that was like a whole other journey.
Nicole:And I just kind of, like, wanted to create a
Nicole:structure that could support people who wanted to support their health, but, like, didn't
Nicole:want to do it in a, like, really de.
Nicole:Politicized way.
Nicole:They wanted to kind of acknowledge, like, the
Nicole:Structural conditions that were contributing to them being sick.
Nicole:Whether that was like racism or class or poverty or you know, sexism or transphobia,
Nicole:like all of these things that affect our bodies.
Nicole:So yeah, so it just kind of like went from there really, of starting to do that like
Nicole:informally and then do my clinical training and yeah, just like wanting this livelihood
Nicole:from it.
Nicole:But yeah, the business side I guess,
Nicole:like,
Nicole:I think it's actually good to learn from people who thrive in this world, AKA white
Nicole:men.
Nicole:And I listen to a lot of like podcasts from these like business coaches that were like,
Nicole:you know, talking about like digital products and like, how do you like build an audience?
Nicole:And I created this online workshop about glycerin and it was like a test drive and I
Nicole:made like a thousand pounds from selling this workshop online with one Instagram post.
Nicole:And then I was like,
Nicole:oh my God, like this is a game changer.
Nicole:Like that would have taken me like so many one
Nicole:to one consultations to make that money.
Nicole:So then I decided, right, I'm going to do like a proper online course.
Nicole:And like, yeah, that was just like life changing.
Nicole:And again like listening to all this like business advice.
Nicole:So like I focused heavily on like building my newsletter and just like encouraging people to
Nicole:subscribe to that and get updates via that.
Nicole:My books like the Prisoner's Herbal and Overcoming Burnout, like they were mostly
Nicole:distributed by sort of like anarchist, kind of like DIY publishers.
Nicole:But I feel like that built up quite a big support base as well.
Nicole:And then starting my own podcast was like another way of building affinity with people
Nicole:and interviewing different people.
Nicole:And yeah, and then I've just created a model where like twice a year I have my online
Nicole:course, I build up that waiting list and then I open it for access a couple of times a year
Nicole:for like two weeks, promote it really heavily on social media.
Nicole:And then that sort of raises enough money to keep the apothecary going for like six months
Nicole:until the next course launch.
Nicole:So yeah, but then I also make money from my clinical practice and I don't know if that
Nicole:like stuff is like interesting to people, but like I spent a long time experimenting of how
Nicole:the hell to make that financially sustainable.
Nicole:And I think lots of herbalists are wildly undercutting themselves and not figuring out
Nicole:actually how time consuming it is to be a herbalist, to listen to someone and all their
Nicole:health issues, to do research, to put together their herbal recommendations, to make all the
Nicole:medicine, to post it out.
Nicole:So I offer like five month packages because I was sort of tired of people reaching out for
Nicole:support,
Nicole:giving them a lot of energy and attention and then not hearing from them because they didn't
Nicole:want to pay for further hurts because they didn't have any money.
Nicole:So now I offer like payment plans and we work together for like five months.
Nicole:And it means that like you know, someone actually goes from having like crippling
Nicole:endometriosis to actually being able to function and like sleeping well and being in
Nicole:less pain and like they don't even ask for like refills anymore for their pain blend
Nicole:because their inflammation has like like shifted so much.
Nicole:So yeah.
Nicole:So I don't know if I've like gone on some
Nicole:tangents but like no,
Rox:because I think that's, that's always the hard thing, isn't it?
Rox:Trying to decide where you kind of position yourself price wise.
Rox:Because it's almost people I think, I think I said I've told somebody else about this but
Rox:like you,
Rox:nobody ever wants to say how much they charge and anything and everybody's very.
Rox:And you don't want to overcharge and then you don't want to undercharge.
Rox:So it's very hard to kind of price yourself I think.
Nicole:Yeah. And like I'm like a real,
Nicole:I'm like a real like systems number person so I like like costing things out and like
Nicole:working it out and I think like yeah, I think the challenge is like herbalists have such
Nicole:huge hearts and they want to support people.
Nicole:But like I talk about this with like class stuff.
Nicole:It's like the person that has like no money because of you know like being on disability
Nicole:benefit or having like a few kids and like hardly any financial support or whatever,
Nicole:giving them a 10 pound discount on a course that's 120 quid or something isn't going to
Nicole:help them.
Nicole:Whereas for someone that's like maybe a bit
Nicole:more middle class or like financially resourced,
Nicole:like they can often just afford more than we charge them if that makes sense.
Nicole:So and I think people that have the shared values like they will pay like a higher rate.
Nicole:So like one of my PTSD course is like no one turned away flak of funds, like anyone can
Nicole:join that.
Nicole:But like people do pay like the resource rate, you know, and I specify like if you, you know,
Nicole:own several houses or you have like inherited wealth that you're living from, then like
Nicole:yeah, you should pay more.
Nicole:And I think like that sliding scale is a bit of a like not a dance but it's like
Nicole:challenging to navigate.
Nicole:But ultimately like I'm able to like offer a Lot of, like, unpaid support to people because
Nicole:I'm have become comfortable with charging other people more.
Nicole:Does that make sense?
Rox:Yeah, I know that I. We try doing, like, the sliding scale, and I did look at yours,
Rox:because it.
Rox:Did you have specifics about what people who.
Rox:Because I have found people being quite confused by it and being like, oh, just tell
Rox:me how much to charge.
Rox:And we've tried to have donation things to send, things that people are very much like,
Rox:kind of.
Rox:I don't know what to give you.
Rox:Just tell me what price should I give you?
Nicole:Yeah,
Nicole:yeah, no, definitely.
Nicole:And I think, like,
Nicole:people,
Nicole:like,
Nicole:because capitalism generates, like, scarcity for everyone,
Nicole:even people that have, like, millions and millions of pounds will feel like they don't
Nicole:have enough money and will, you know, like, make certain decisions,
Nicole:you know, spend like, three hours researching something to save ten pounds or whatever.
Nicole:So I think, like, taking a bit of that emotionality out and being like,
Nicole:you know, this, this, and this.
Nicole:But also just like, a lot of people, like, you
Nicole:know, like, I grew up on, like, benefits and stuff with a single mom, and, like, I hated
Nicole:feeling like a charity case.
Nicole:Like, I love paying people.
Nicole:Like, you know, like, the person that helps
Nicole:with my son, like, I pay her, like, way more than, like, any, like, you know, other paid,
Nicole:like,
Nicole:childminders advertise and stuff for.
Nicole:Because I'm like, I want to value your labor.
Rox:Yeah.
Nicole:And so it's like,
Nicole:sorry, I lost my thread then.
Nicole:But, like, yeah, like, I think people like
Nicole:being able to pay, like, over several months or, like, a payment plan or, like, because
Nicole:they don't.
Nicole:It's not always empowering to, like, receive something for free, if that makes sense.
Rox:Yeah, no, totally.
Rox:Yeah. Yeah.
Rox:I mean, I used to do a lot of massage with people who were, like, really struggling, and
Rox:they were kind of through this kind of mental health charity, and they would get it for
Rox:free, but then they would try and give me money and I'd be like,
Rox:I'm getting paid already, you know, and they did, like, be sneaking money into my bag and
Rox:stuff.
Rox:I'd leave and I'd be like, oh, it's like,
Rox:that was always nice.
Rox:Yeah, I know what you mean.
Rox:I know my dad does taxi driving, and he kind of always said that the people who have got
Rox:the least amount of money always tipped him more than anybody who got a lot.
Nicole:Yeah, 100. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Nicole:No, without a doubt.
Nicole:And like, I. Yeah, I see that all the time in my work as well.
Nicole:And I'm probably, like, that sort of person too, but I think I Don't know, like if anyone,
Nicole:any herbalist is like interested in starting a business.
Nicole:Like, I do think, like you think that you have to learn a lot about like gut health and this
Nicole:and this and you do.
Nicole:But actually you really have to learn about
Nicole:like money and people's relationship to money and like, you know, like,
Nicole:what's a pension? And like, do you know what I mean?
Nicole:Like all this stuff that you need to think about.
Nicole:It's like a self employed person.
Rox:Yeah, I. Stuff that nobody wants to think about and nobody thinks about is what they
Rox:have to think about, you know? Yeah.
Rox:Everything around it, marketing and everything as well, I think is a huge thing.
Rox:Like selling yourself and stuff.
Nicole:Yeah. I mean, like, don't get me started on the horrors of social media.
Rox:So let's.
Rox:Let's go into a different topic.
Rox:Let's talk about herbs.
Rox:Maybe we could.
Rox:So I started doing your herbs for ptsd, traumatic stress.
Rox:I've been here since the beginning of it, I have to say,
Rox:but I'm enjoying it.
Rox:But yeah, I wonder if we could talk about some
Rox:specific herbs.
Rox:Just any that you could think.
Rox:I mean, obviously there's lots, lots of
Rox:nuance, obviously, I know that as well.
Rox:But maybe just some specific things that
Rox:people could maybe start using or implementing,
Rox:like gateway herbs, I guess.
Nicole:Ooh.
Nicole:So like, my course looks at like different categories of like nervines, which are herbs
Nicole:with an affinity for the nervous system.
Nicole:And they're sort of, I guess the ones that we maybe like take for granted are like the
Nicole:relaxant nervines.
Nicole:So the herbs that don't necessarily make you
Nicole:like, relax, as in, like sit and put your feet up, but they just reduce the activation of the
Nicole:sympathetic nervous system, which is like our kind of fight or flight,
Nicole:like activated state.
Nicole:And I think people maybe don't realize how much their body is in that state, like
Nicole:frequently.
Nicole:And so anything we can do to kind of like gently tone down that activation is like very
Nicole:valuable.
Nicole:So that's why herbs like chamomile are like so underrated.
Nicole:Because everyone just thinks chamomile, like, it's boring.
Nicole:You can like buy it in any coffee shop.
Nicole:But like a really high quality,
Nicole:delicious chamomile tea like, will ****** knock me for six, do you know what I mean?
Nicole:Like, I will want to just like sit down and like, not, you know, not carry on working.
Nicole:But I really think like, certain herbs like chamomile or lavender or if you can access
Nicole:them, like herbs like lemon balm, like having them through the day are just like Such
Nicole:amazing resources for the nervous system.
Nicole:They're just like, reducing the energy that the body is spending on potentially being
Nicole:triggered or distressed or being, you know, hypervigilant or.
Nicole:Yeah.
Nicole:So I try.
Nicole:And in my care packages I make like a,
Nicole:A glycerite,
Nicole:which is like herbal medicine in glycerin.
Nicole:And it's like hawthorn berry,
Nicole:lemon balm and chamomile.
Nicole:It's just that little triplet and you can just like swig it through the day.
Nicole:And I've had people that just have messaged me being like, what on earth is in this?
Nicole:Like, it's just.
Nicole:I've never felt like this before because it's
Nicole:just got that kind of like,
Nicole:calming effect on like, the blood vessels and like, relieving tension and like soothing like
Nicole:digestive challenges that we get often.
Nicole:Like, that's where people feel their stress.
Nicole:So, you know, it can just like settle down an anxious tummy.
Nicole:So. Yeah, so those are like three of my, my go tos that I'm like,
Nicole:you know, it's rare that I'd have a client that I wouldn't give them to.
Rox:Yeah. I think,
Rox:because I think when I messaged you, I was talking about, like, I've been in this kind of
Rox:free state with this kind of the, with the war in Iran and everything.
Rox:And it's like something that I've been.
Rox:It's like I feel like I've been waiting to
Rox:happen the whole of my life, you know,
Rox:with all like the kind of concert propaganda and everything.
Rox:And I think the herbs that have helped me that I found helpful has been a combination of like
Rox:a rose glycerin with oat straw and then some Schisandra as well.
Rox:But if I, when.
Rox:If I have them, like together.
Rox:Shazanda.
Nicole:This is so.
Rox:It's so nice when it's by itself, but then when you have it after something sweet,
Rox:I'm always like, oh, don't do that because it's so sour.
Rox:Yeah, yeah.
Rox:I think they've helped me quite a lot.
Nicole:How. Do you mind sharing more about, like, how you've been feeling if you want to,
Nicole:like, how that's been?
Rox:Oh, I've just been in this kind of like,
Rox:freeze.
Rox:Yeah, that's the basic holy seat.
Rox:So I haven't been able to, like, I don't, I don't.
Rox:I've been stuck at, like,
Rox:to do anything.
Rox:Like, normally I'm kind of like, I have.
Rox:There's a lot of things I want to do and I want to do this and that and then I'M kind of
Rox:being like, no, I just need to look at the news and I have to see what was going on.
Rox:And we haven't heard from family, so it's like, well, how are they doing thinking about
Rox:all this kind of stuff.
Rox:And then one thing I. Then I, I made a.
Rox:Some teas which then I translated into like Persian and into Arabic to send for like
Rox:Lebanese communities in Arabic and Persian communities,
Rox:asylum seekers.
Rox:And that site to make me feel a bit better
Rox:because I felt like I was actually doing something again, you know.
Rox:And like,
Rox:yeah, I think I've just struggled with putting anything online.
Rox:I'm kind of.
Rox:I think the diaspora has been the difficult
Rox:thing.
Rox:I'm kind of watching them and thinking,
Rox:I don't know, it's.
Nicole:There's so.
Rox:There's so many tensions and stuff and you kind of, you don't want to almost like,
Rox:because I'm only half Iranian, it's.
Rox:There's this kind of thing of like, oh, well,
Rox:you're.
Rox:You can't really speak for us and everything.
Rox:And it's like, who's the real Iranian?
Rox:And you know,
Rox:that's been all trying to navigate through.
Rox:That's been kind of.
Rox:Yeah.
Rox:Difficult.
Nicole:Yeah, no, I'm.
Nicole:I can't.
Nicole:Yeah, I think like,
Nicole:yeah,
Nicole:like, I think the freeze response is like one of the most like, interesting, kind of like
Nicole:genius, but also like full on nervous system responses of like,
Nicole:it's like, especially when there's like an issue that's like not resolved because it's
Nicole:like systemic.
Nicole:Right.
Nicole:So it's like this constant hyper vigilance of like, you know, this like terrifying thing
Nicole:might happen or this might happen or this might happen.
Nicole:And it's like, what does the body do with that much like overwhelm and it normally just can't
Nicole:do much.
Nicole:Hence the like, you know, shut down kind of.
Nicole:And I think herbs can like,
Nicole:can
Nicole:help shift that state.
Nicole:If they can help someone like move into like feeling a bit more safe.
Nicole:Like if they can like forage something and they're like, okay, I'm not in like immediate
Nicole:danger.
Nicole:I can do this and this.
Nicole:But that's when like, that's why with all, everything I do, it always has to come back to
Nicole:like the political stuff.
Nicole:Because it's like,
Nicole:how do you feel safe if like this is happening?
Nicole:Do you know what I mean? Or people you love are like threatened.
Nicole:And it's like,
Nicole:that's why it can't just be herbalism.
Nicole:It has to be all the other.
Nicole:Solidarity and the organizing and the resistance.
Nicole:And stuff.
Rox:Because,
Rox:yeah, you know, underpins it all, doesn't it? Because.
Rox:Yeah, it's kind of the background of everything.
Rox:No, I was gonna say my sister's just been doing this,
Rox:like, international development course and.
Rox:And she's kind of like really into it, but
Rox:she's come away being like, it's all terrible.
Rox:Everything's so bad.
Rox:She's like.
Rox:And now.
Rox:So she's now also in another freeze with like.
Rox:Well, I don't know what to do to, like, make things,
Rox:to change things, because right from the very core of it, you know, it's all broken.
Nicole:Mm.
Nicole:I think, like,
Nicole:yeah, like, that balance, like, that's why I love the apothecary so much or like, why I
Nicole:love, like that one to one clinical work so much is because,
Nicole:like, I might not be able to stop this, this or this, you know, whether that's like
Nicole:deforestation for some ******* coal mine in Germany or,
Nicole:you know, like genocide in Gaza or, like, you know, but I can, for example, have like a one
Nicole:to one call with someone who's like, you know, organizing loads of mutual aid for, like,
Nicole:their family in Gaza and, like,
Nicole:is not sleeping very well.
Nicole:And I can get them, like, loads of lavender
Nicole:oil in the post, which is like infused in olive oil from the West Bank.
Nicole:And then, you know, they can text me and be like, for the first time since October, I've,
Nicole:like, slept and it's like,
Nicole:like, okay, I've not like, stopped like this like, horrible, like, oppressive state, but
Nicole:I've, like, somehow helped that one person in that, like, moment.
Nicole:Does that make sense?
Rox:Yeah, I think that's sometimes the thing, isn't it, that you feel like you're not doing
Rox:enough and.
Rox:But it's like even like just taking it back
Rox:and just being like, well, if I help like one or two people who then go and help one or two
Rox:people who help one or two people,
Rox:it becomes enough.
Nicole:Yeah. And just seeing these, like, manifestations, like, all the time of, like,
Nicole:what does this, like, chronic stress look like, you know, like.
Nicole:And everyone has like, a different manifestation of it, of whether it's like
Nicole:loads of gut issues or, you know, loads of panic attacks and nightmares or, you know,
Nicole:like, whatever.
Nicole:And it's kind of like,
Nicole:yeah, you're.
Nicole:I feel like with my clinics especially, like, I'm constantly seeing the, like,
Nicole:manifestations of all these other forms of oppression just show up in someone's body and
Nicole:it's like the thing that can meet them is like, the herbs, if that makes sense.
Nicole:Like, I can't take away that person's,
Nicole:like, trauma or what they've been through on their journey to Europe, for example.
Nicole:But I can,
Nicole:you know, like, dress their feet or, like, wash their feet and, you know, dress their
Nicole:wounds.
Nicole:And, like, especially this work in France,
Nicole:it's like,
Nicole:if it does feel like a sticking plaster, because you are literally sticking plasters on
Nicole:people, but at the same time, it's like, well,
Nicole:if you weren't there, then that person,
Nicole:you know, their wounds get.
Nicole:Might get even more infected and they might
Nicole:get sepsis and they might not make it, or, like.
Nicole:Do you know what I mean? So it's kind of like,
Nicole:yeah, just this balance all the time of, like, the amazing possibility with herbal medicine
Nicole:and then just, like, coming up against these limits of just, like, how screwed up the world
Nicole:is and how, like, powerless we all feel.
Rox:Yeah, yeah, definitely.
Rox:Yeah. Actually, that's one of the things I wanted to ask you about was the mobile herbal
Rox:clinic in Calais.
Rox:And.
Rox:Because I know you're not going out there just now, but I wonder if you could talk more
Rox:about, like, what it was like to go out there.
Rox:I've been wanting to go out for ages, but too
Rox:many kids stop me.
Rox:Eventually I will go.
Rox:But,
Rox:yeah, I wonder if you could talk about that.
Rox:Like, what kind of things you were kind of
Rox:seeing and how the herbs were received by the people, but also by, like, other
Rox:organizations.
Rox:Sure.
Nicole:So I started going out in:Nicole:Um,
Nicole:and that was, like, pretty much.
Nicole:I went on the second trip of the project when it was, like, in its infancy, so I was
Nicole:learning with another herbalist called Melissa, who was, like, my sort of clinical
Nicole:supervisor.
Nicole:And so I kind of had, like, an interesting experience of, like, being one of the people
Nicole:that was trying to set up the systems,
Nicole:you know, like, our inventory and our databases and, like, all of this stuff.
Nicole:And sometimes I think that stuff's, like, eclipsed my memories of, like, the actual
Nicole:clinic.
Nicole:But then when I actually talk about it, I get,
Nicole:like, really emotional because it's like people.
Nicole:Yeah, like,
Nicole:when you're doing stuff in the uk, like, to support it, which is, like, it couldn't happen
Nicole:without it, you know, like, the fundraising and the sourcing and the medicine making.
Nicole:But, like,
Nicole:yeah, when you're working there, it's like.
Nicole:We call it the vortex.
Nicole:It's like you're in this, like,
Nicole:really intense world where, like,
Nicole:you know, you pull up with the van in a field where people are, like, living in some sort of
Nicole:encampment, and there's just, like,
Nicole:rubbish everywhere and, like, human feces, because the cops have like taken away the
Nicole:toilets or taken away the hand washing and like,
Nicole:you know, you're just like meeting people and families and you know, three year old kids
Nicole:that have been like pepper sprayed by the cops, that are like crying or like a guy
Nicole:that's like crawled 2km to your clinic who's like broken his foot on like a propeller of a
Nicole:boat or someone else who's just been like beaten half to death by the police that you
Nicole:now have to like take to hospital.
Nicole:Like it's so full on.
Nicole:But then you also have moments where you're just like in the sunshine and people are
Nicole:playing football and you've got like five lads with their feet in foot baths because the day
Nicole:before they were all walking like 20 kilometers and their feet hurt and you're
Nicole:just, you know, putting their feet in hot water with Epsom salts and essential oils.
Nicole:And it's like, it's just like such a weird world of like, so many different things going
Nicole:on at once.
Nicole:But like,
Nicole:yeah, it's quite,
Nicole:yeah, it's quite intense.
Nicole:Like we have like an external station where
Nicole:we're doing like foot care and like wound dressings, things like this.
Nicole:And then we have like an internal station for people that have like,
Nicole:you know, like upper respiratory infections, like coughs, colds, flu and like digestive
Nicole:problems.
Nicole:But like all the time we're like constantly
Nicole:scanning to see if we're missing anyone with something serious going on who needs like
Nicole:further, like higher care.
Nicole:So, you know, clocking the person who has had blood when they cough for like three months,
Nicole:you know, rather than the person that's had a cold for three days, like, and that person,
Nicole:you know, maybe has tb and we have to get them to hospital and we have to like advocate with
Nicole:like the racist French doctors and like get them the test they need.
Nicole:Whereas the other 300 people we see, we have to just, you know, give them a cold and flu
Nicole:pack and make sure they know where the hospital is if they get worse.
Nicole:But we can give them like cough syrup and immune tonic and a chest rub and that will
Nicole:just help them sleep and help prevent their chest infection from getting worse, for
Nicole:example.
Nicole:But yeah, I don't know if you have like specific questions about it, but it's just
Nicole:kind of everything under the sun.
Nicole:Like one minute is like a gunshot wound and
Nicole:the next it's like,
Nicole:you know, you're just playing doctors and nurses with like three kids because there's
Nicole:like no one around and you're just like hanging out.
Nicole:So yeah, it's Very.
Nicole:Yeah. Different.
Rox:I think I was just.
Rox:Yeah, I just wanted to talk about because I
Rox:think it's something that people don't see and then this kind of climate at the moment where
Rox:you know, so many people kind of saying all about the migrants coming and then you know,
Rox:to get like take our stuff and like.
Rox:And they get all this stuff when they come here and everything and it's just kind of
Rox:making awareness that it's not, they don't.
Rox:It's not like they're coming here and they've
Rox:got like the simple life and they just kind of walk in and they're just like pampered or
Rox:something.
Rox:You know, the way that people say, you know, they get put up in these hospitals, hostel
Rox:hotels and things and they kind of imagine that I think in this, that they're having like
Rox:five star treatment and stuff and it's like,
Rox:you know, it's not like that.
Rox:And I think it's just good for people to hear
Rox:about it a bit more.
Nicole:Yeah, I mean, yeah, like the level of like violence against people is like so
Nicole:extreme and people like are not.
Nicole:Yeah. Like people, they're not making those journeys like from a place of like choice.
Nicole:Right.
Nicole:Like, it's really like I, I can't think of a
Nicole:single person that I've met who hasn't had like some really full on story where you know,
Nicole:their village has been like massacred or you know,
Nicole:they're like on the run because if they get caught they're gonna get like hung or
Nicole:something.
Nicole:Like it's really like, you know, and we don't
Nicole:ask people like where they're from.
Nicole:Like we don't open that box but we always listen if someone wants to share.
Nicole:And yeah, like it's, it's just kind of like unimaginable like trauma and yeah, like
Nicole:unfortunately the far right have like started going to France, like the British far right.
Nicole:So that they can, you know, like harass people.
Nicole:And yeah, like we've always, there's always been like fascists in France that you know,
Nicole:like target you.
Nicole:Like my windscreen of my van got like smashed
Nicole:for example.
Nicole:Managed to like crowdfund to replace that in like an hour which was nice and like felt
Nicole:quite defiant of.
Nicole:Just like screw you.
Nicole:Like we're still going with the clinic.
Nicole:Like we're gonna, you know, keep on.
Nicole:But yeah, like it's not.
Nicole:Yeah, I think people,
Nicole:yeah.
Nicole:Don't just don't like don't comprehend like.
Nicole:Yeah. What people have been through.
Nicole:And also like France is like one of their like
Nicole:last places, right.
Nicole:Like, and then they have this dangerous way of
Nicole:getting to the UK over the sea or like hiding in a lorry or.
Nicole:Whereas, you know, you forget like someone is like potentially traveled across a lot of
Nicole:Europe or Northern Africa or you know, cross the Mediterranean Sea, which is like one of
Nicole:the most dangerous seas in the world in terms of like people that are dying there because of
Nicole:like neglect from,
Nicole:you know, like lifeboats and things and the navies of the various countries.
Nicole:But like, you know, we're seeing people that have had horrific violence like through the
Nicole:Balkans route or have lived in camps in like Greece for like several years or have been
Nicole:forced to like live like underground.
Nicole:Like it's just.
Nicole:Yeah. By the time someone's got to France, they've just been through sometimes like years
Nicole:and years of being a refugee in different countries and like trying to apply for asylum
Nicole:and like.
Nicole:Yeah,
Nicole:it is hard when people like,
Nicole:you know,
Nicole:reproduce like such racist values.
Nicole:And I'm just like, if you could just swap
Nicole:places for five minutes, like,
Nicole:you know.
Nicole:Yeah,
Nicole:so.
Rox:Yeah,
Rox:yeah,
Rox:Yeah. So yeah,
Rox:yeah.
Rox:So what I was wondering as well was like,
Rox:how do the other, the other like organizations that are working there, how do they view like
Rox:the herbs and herbal clinic?
Nicole:Yeah. Do you know what, like, what I really like about Calais is like,
Nicole:there is like a really good ecology of like solidarity between the different groups.
Nicole:And I feel like people really respect the mobile Herbal Clinic Calais, but with any
Nicole:herbalist you'll know that like you're not far away from like prejudice if that makes sense
Nicole:of people's opinions about herbal medicine.
Nicole:But like the actual refugees all have like, you know, all coming from places with really
Nicole:strong like plant medicine traditions.
Nicole:So they're like, oh, you know, oh, ginger tea,
Nicole:amazing hibiscus tea.
Nicole:Whereas I feel like sometimes there is like more prejudice from countries where there's
Nicole:like a lot of repression against herbalism, including France and Germany.
Nicole:But generally like most of the medical agencies like super value the clinic.
Nicole:Like the people that distribute food and clothes and stuff, like refer people to us.
Nicole:Like we also support volunteers when we're there.
Nicole:So we'll have like one to one calls and sessions with people that are struggling with
Nicole:like burnout and stuff.
Nicole:So yeah, like, I think it's, it's like fragile, but it's taken like years.
Nicole:But like there is like really good relationship between groups and I think people
Nicole:really recognize how the things we distribute are actually like, very helpful and like very
Nicole:in demand by the people we serve.
Nicole:So lots of the refugees will go to the other medical projects and be like, you have more of
Nicole:this, you know, like more of the cough syrup or like they want our muscle rub or like
Nicole:things like this.
Nicole:And they're like, oh, sorry, you know,
Nicole:we don't have it.
Nicole:But like, yeah, so I think like people can see that we really offer things that
Nicole:people really need because like, you know, okay, you're only there for like five to seven
Nicole:days, but you, you see that person on the first day who is just super unwell with flu.
Nicole:And by the time you see them like three days later after they've had loads of medicine,
Nicole:they're just feeling like so much more resourced and you know, Times that by 300,
Nicole:like you can see that impact like straight away in terms of like how valuable the
Nicole:medicines are.
Nicole:So I think that other medical agencies have lot of like, respect and because, because of
Nicole:the herbalism, like, I feel like we take the clinical safety almost like more seriously
Nicole:than the other projects because we know that like, we'll have the eyes on us if that makes
Nicole:sense.
Nicole:So like, we always have to like, make sure that everyone leaves the clinic with a
Nicole:translated information sheet about where to go to hospital where they can find like medicines
Nicole:demand or the red Cross, like where they can get their dressings changed.
Nicole:Like, I feel like because of how people perceive herbal medicine, like we have to like
Nicole:constantly be like really shithole at our stuff and in a way that's like improved,
Nicole:like.
Nicole:Yeah, improved our practice.
Nicole:And I feel like a lot of like my next steps
Nicole:with the sold out apothecary, like I want to create this like online frontline herbalism
Nicole:membership thing that like offers people training in like herbal first aid and like
Nicole:clinical red flags and like, you know,
Nicole:like your scope of practice and like all, all these things I've learned from like four,
Nicole:five years in France.
Nicole:Like just.
Nicole:Yeah, what does that look like if you want to start a project in your community?
Nicole:You know, like, is it okay to just do like some dressings for someone who's like
Nicole:homeless?
Nicole:Like, what do you need to consider, like, do you need to refer them somewhere?
Nicole:Like, what if they've got sepsis? Like, you know, like all of these like extra
Nicole:things.
Nicole:But yeah, I feel like there's a good, a good like environment there in terms of,
Nicole:you know, and everyone's like in the same boat, if that makes sense.
Nicole:Like everyone has seen like the horrors of that place and there's like, you know, some
Nicole:sort of like.
Nicole:Yeah, shared experience of this like weird vortex of like everything that's going on and
Nicole:yeah, if that makes sense.
Rox:Yeah, that's good.
Rox:I know that, like,
Rox:working in.
Rox:In Scotland, we've had.
Rox:Sometimes we've had some kind of pushback
Rox:from.
Rox:Mostly from people who are from Scotland, I
Rox:have to say, who are like,
Rox:yeah, we can't work with herbs.
Rox:What's this kind of witchy stuff, you know,
Rox:this kind of stuff.
Rox:And you still get that.
Rox:And I find that if we get people from other places who are like.
Rox:Because we tend to work with organizations who already be with.
Rox:Who are already supporting refugees, so we've got that kind of support as well around them.
Rox:And it tends to be.
Rox:If we get people.
Rox:Not all the time, obviously, but, like, if we
Rox:get people from other places, they are more open to send herbs into them.
Rox:Yeah.
Nicole:I mean, people don't realize, like, how it's like, I don't know how many
Nicole:generations, like,
Nicole:at least seven generations where people have been, like, displaced from the land.
Nicole:Like, you know, like the, you know, clearances and stuff in Scotland and everything in
Nicole:England and Wales.
Nicole:But it's like.
Nicole:Yeah, like, it's really.
Nicole:I love, like, speaking about herbal medicine
Nicole:to people from countries where they haven't had as much, like, like, repression.
Nicole:I mean, there's still, like, a lot of, like, medical imperialism and stuff against, like,
Nicole:indigenous traditions, obviously, but, like,
Nicole:yeah, people are, like, so much more.
Nicole:Yeah. Just have that, like, affinity with plants of, like, oh, yeah, of course I'll make
Nicole:a tea.
Rox:Like, it's obvious.
Nicole:I'll just make a tea with this thing.
Nicole:And.
Nicole:Whereas, yeah, it can be a bit punishing in the UK with, like.
Rox:Yeah, I guess it kind of happened here first, didn't it?
Rox:Then we started exporting it out to everybody else and being like, hey, stay away from the
Rox:land.
Rox:You don't want those herbs.
Rox:Take these chemicals instead of.
Rox:Yeah.
Nicole:And kill every feminized person.
Nicole:That's a threat.
Rox:Yeah, yeah, yeah, that.
Rox:Yeah, yeah.
Nicole:So one of the other things that.
Rox:So you talked about, the Black Flag Herbal Clinic,
Rox:I particularly liked the framing that you've put about caring for yourself and you.
Rox:I think you're.
Rox:I wrote down what you actually said, that it's
Rox:a rebellion against neglect and disposability culture.
Rox:And I do like that because I think, like, quite often that.
Rox:But I found people in groups like this tend to,
Rox:you know, fighting for things that are so huge, and you really don't kind of look after
Rox:yourselves.
Rox:So I wonder if you could just kind of just talk more about the Black Flag Clinic in
Rox:general and why you think it's so important to look after yourself?
Nicole:Mm, sure.
Nicole:So, yeah, just the context of the clinic, like
Nicole:I'd been supporting people,
Nicole:like unpaid, I guess, doing a lot of like one to one support,
Nicole:like different comrades and things.
Nicole:But I wanted to create like a structure that
Nicole:was like separate from the sold out apothecary or like eventually separate and that was like
Nicole:more collective.
Nicole:Probably because I miss going to Calais and I miss working with people,
Nicole:like more intensely.
Nicole:But so I put a call out, got really
Nicole:overwhelmed with the amount of interest.
Nicole:But now we've got like different kind of
Nicole:signal groups and things.
Nicole:So people come to calls that I'm taking with
Nicole:someone so they can like watch and observe and then no one's been confident yet in terms of
Nicole:where they are in their herbal journey.
Nicole:But ideally we'll get to the place where people feel confident to take a call
Nicole:themselves and I can like observe and like support and mentor and other herbalists can
Nicole:get involved and also offer care.
Nicole:So it's not just me.
Nicole:And we can, you know, fundraise for it and stuff.
Nicole:But yeah, we're mostly supporting people online and then sending them herbal medicines
Nicole:in the post.
Nicole:And you know, we've had folks from the US who
Nicole:are like resisting ice there.
Nicole:Like, you know, we've had people from like Italy who are doing loads of prisoner support
Nicole:and like, yeah, just like all over the world.
Nicole:And it's just been amazing.
Nicole:But I think probably from my experience in these sort of like movements or, I don't know,
Nicole:some people might call them subcultures I guess, but like
Nicole:there
Nicole:is this pattern of like the struggle or the movement or this bigger thing is much
Nicole:more important than me and my needs.
Nicole:And instead of questioning that kind of binary thinking,
Nicole:we just see constant patterns of self neglect and martyrdom and self sacrifice.
Nicole:And yeah, that often just leads to the same picture of extreme depletion, burnout, chronic
Nicole:illness,
Nicole:mental health challenges and all sorts of distress.
Nicole:And I think that was my historic pattern of looking after a very kind of mentally unwell
Nicole:parent and doing loads of solidarity stuff from a really young age where I learned that
Nicole:my self worth related to what I did for other people and the way I earn love is to care for
Nicole:everyone.
Nicole:So it's kind of like how on earth do you unlearn that conditioning?
Nicole:And I'm still ****** trying on that one.
Nicole:But I realized, yeah, it's just not this
Nicole:binary.
Nicole:And actually,
Nicole:yeah, like being able to,
Nicole:you know,
Nicole:prioritize your needs and look after your health, it does mean that you can serve other
Nicole:people like more effectively, you know, because you're more resourced, but also like,
Nicole:you intrinsically matter.
Nicole:And I think that's what,
Nicole:like, you know, a lot of kind of like organizer types need to just learn is like,
Nicole:they are important too.
Nicole:And,
Nicole:you know, like, whether that's like just getting enough sleep or having periods where
Nicole:they're not like, hyper adrenalized and in like intense chronic stress or just, you know,
Nicole:the basics of nutrition.
Nicole:Like, I lost a lot of older kind of huge mentors in my life because their patterns of
Nicole:self neglect and self sacrifice were so extreme.
Nicole:You know, like, oh, why should I spend money on food when I could donate it to an animal
Nicole:sanctuary?
Nicole:Or like something ridiculous.
Nicole:But I feel like I've just, yeah.
Nicole:Been on such a big learning journey of how do these things connect and like, you know, like,
Nicole:learning from like, abolitionist and,
Nicole:you know, like feminist movements that about care and talk about mutual aid and talk about,
Nicole:you know, infrastructure for care.
Nicole:And I feel like it's probably a kind of
Nicole:predictable pattern for like a working class femme to be talking about it, but I feel like
Nicole:the direction of my political work has gone in, is just screaming from the rooftops about
Nicole:care is really important.
Nicole:Like, health is really important.
Nicole:Like, herbal medicine offers us this, like,
Nicole:amazing way to care for each other in like, a decentralized way, you know, where we can,
Nicole:like, build our own systems up and things.
Nicole:And like,
Nicole:yeah, I feel like Black Flag is just this like, tiny little microcosm.
Nicole:And people that seek care from Black Flag, like, sometimes they are just excluded from
Nicole:healthcare, like, especially the people in the US like, oh, my God, like over there with all
Nicole:this, like, health insurance stuff.
Nicole:Yeah,
Nicole:sometimes it's just.
Nicole:They actually just want to talk to someone
Nicole:where they feel affinity with them, where they're not going to experience,
Nicole:you know, like, loads of transphobia or they want to be involved in their own care and not
Nicole:just receive a prescription from a doctor.
Nicole:You know, they want to understand what's going
Nicole:on in their body.
Nicole:They want to make their own medicine.
Nicole:So, yeah, like, I guess Black Flag is like just.
Nicole:It's kind of just a big experiment really, of like, how can we,
Nicole:you know, try and put some of these principles of like, mutual aid and solidarity and stuff,
Nicole:like, into practice so that we can support each other, so that our movements can be
Nicole:stronger.
Nicole:Because if you've been involved in things for a long time, you'll just realize this stuff is
Nicole:like one big burnout train.
Nicole:You know, it's just get involved for a few
Nicole:years,
Nicole:get absolutely wrecked physically and emotionally, abandon things,
Nicole:do you know what I mean? So it's like, how do we stay involved for the
Nicole:long haul? Because none of these like social problems are
Nicole:like easy fixes, right.
Nicole:Or like short term things, you know, like look
Nicole:how long people have been like resisting the regime in Iran.
Nicole:You know, that's like intergenerational now.
Nicole:So it's like, like we have to take like a long
Nicole:term perspective on social change.
Nicole:And therefore that means like valuing like
Nicole:people and what they contribute and their health and their needs and like it doesn't
Nicole:have to compete with the struggle.
Nicole:Like it will support it.
Nicole:Does that make sense? I feel like a web.
Rox:Yeah, yeah.
Rox:So does this like then fit into.
Rox:Because you also, you've also got support groups, right?
Rox:Like Horse on the Rose group.
Rox:Oh yeah.
Rox:Along the same kind of.
Rox:Of Are they just kind of in, in a container?
Rox:I guess.
Nicole:Yeah. So those programs are like also kind of experimental.
Nicole:So people access them and they get one to one support.
Nicole:So they get that like really focus time on their health needs where it's like really
Nicole:specific and we're looking at their blood tests and blah, blah, blah.
Nicole:And then they also get access to a group space so they get that like collective care of you
Nicole:know, group calls with people that like understand what they're going through and you
Nicole:know, sweet messages and memes like in between calls and things as well as like accessing
Nicole:like content so they can learn about herbalism and stuff.
Nicole:As well.
Nicole:So yeah, so they're not under that.
Nicole:They're still in the like solidarity
Nicole:apothecary framework if that makes sense or banner.
Nicole:But yeah, I think but it's about
Rox:like kind of care and stuff as well.
Rox:Look after yourself as well.
Nicole:Yeah, yeah.
Nicole:And it's really like treating you know, like a
Nicole:lot of people that are like,
Nicole:you know, have access those spaces like you know, they've like cried in consultations
Nicole:because like no one has ever been so interested in their body or you know, they
Nicole:will see a GP and they can talk about one issue for five minutes and out the door and
Nicole:they'll just cry being like,
Nicole:wow, someone cares about me and this is all really connected and I can't believe someone
Nicole:is just doing this out of solidarity and that,
Nicole:you know, how can I matter because I've like smashed something up in an arms factory.
Nicole:Like I'm not suffering compared to this person, this person person.
Nicole:But actually like it's just kind of like reaffirming that actually no, you do matter
Nicole:and like let's you know, look at your body and look how you're feeling and you know, get you
Nicole:herbs in the post.
Nicole:And yeah, I think that there is like a level of like emotional resourceness to do that kind
Nicole:of like relational stuff.
Nicole:And I feel like when I used to do more prison
Nicole:related things, it was like much more PTSD for me.
Nicole:So I just like,
Nicole:we just hated everyone.
Nicole:Just like,
Nicole:you know, just absolutely hated it.
Nicole:Whereas now, like,
Nicole:yeah, I. I must have recovered from my health issues because I'm like actually enjoying
Nicole:working with other people, which is a miracle.
Rox:Yeah, I think it goes in waves, doesn't it?
Rox:Because sometimes I'm just like, yes, I need to be with people.
Rox:At times I'm like, oh my God, I can't talk to anybody right now.
Rox:Yeah,
Rox:I, like, at the moment,
Rox:yeah, I'm not.
Nicole:I mean, but when you're going through something traumatic,
Nicole:it actually, like you can,
Nicole:you know, like we're all chatting away on the discord, like on this server for Cali, and
Nicole:it's like, I don't have family in Iran.
Nicole:Do you know what I mean?
Nicole:Like, it's not on my nervous system.
Nicole:So it's like, it's no surprise if like,
Nicole:you know, you're like, I don't feel any connection with these people right now because
Nicole:they.
Nicole:We can't understand what you're going through.
Nicole:Do you know what I mean?
Rox:Yeah, yeah, Everybody's got their own little, you know, they.
Rox:Yeah, of course.
Nicole:But yeah, yeah.
Rox:Oh, also, thank you for my T shirt.
Rox:Let's do it on my.
Rox:On the video.
Nicole:Oh, look at that Lovely stuff.
Rox:So if people want to get in contact with you and check out any of your stuff, do you
Rox:want to give like, kind of handles and links and everything?
Rox:Sure.
Nicole:So everything is on the solidarity apothecary.org website.
Nicole:I've got a podcast called the Frontline Herbalism Podcast and the newsletter that I
Nicole:mentioned.
Nicole:And then if anyone is still on social media
Nicole:anymore, then my Instagram is at Solidarity Apothecary.
Nicole:Sometimes I'm very active on it, mostly when I'm trying to promote something.
Nicole:And then other times I'm like complete hermit and you won't see me on there for weeks.
Nicole:So best to get me via email if possible.
Nicole:Yeah.
Rox:Thank you very much for your time.
Rox:It's been a nice time.
Rox:No. And you stop the video
Nicole:when you realize it's not been recording.
Nicole:Thanks so much for listening to the Frontline Herbalism podcast.
Nicole:You can find the transcript, the links, all the resources from the
Nicole:show@solidarityapothecary.org podcast.
