Resilience Gone Wild (WinWinWin Mindset) – Details, episodes & analysis

Podcast details

Technical and general information from the podcast's RSS feed.

Resilience Gone Wild (WinWinWin Mindset)

Resilience Gone Wild (WinWinWin Mindset)

Jessica Morgenthal & Kai M Sorensen

Science

Frequency: 1 episode/9d. Total Eps: 68

Blubrry
Explore how nature’s most adaptable species can inspire you to overcome challenges, lead with purpose, and create lasting change in yourself, your organization, and your community. Resilience isn’t just about bouncing back—it’s about evolving, learning, and thriving in the face of adversity.Join Jessica Morgenthal, a positive psychology trainer, teacher, author, speaker, coach, and consultant, as she uncovers stories of nature’s remarkable adaptation and survival. Learn from the resilience of sea turtles, parrotfish, banyan trees, and more, and discover what these incredible examples can teach us about building a win-win-win mindset.Each week, we’ll dive into awe-inspiring stories from the wild and follow up with expert insights, offering practical lessons on resilience that you can apply to your life, leadership, and organization.When nature wins, we win. Subscribe to “Resilience Gone Wild” wherever you listen to podcasts, and let’s grow stronger together.Produced by BLI Studios in partnership with a Win Win Win MindsetConnect with the host Jessica via email: jessica@winwinwinmindset.comOr on the web: winwinwinmindset.comConnect with producer Kai via email: kai@balancinglifesissues.comOr on the web: https://balancinglifesissues.com/podcast-bli/
Site
RSS
Apple

Recent rankings

Latest chart positions across Apple Podcasts and Spotify rankings.

Apple Podcasts

  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - nature

    16/05/2026
    #89
  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - nature

    15/05/2026
    #58
  • 🇩🇪 Germany - nature

    14/05/2026
    #97
  • 🇩🇪 Germany - nature

    13/05/2026
    #85
  • 🇩🇪 Germany - nature

    12/05/2026
    #64
  • 🇩🇪 Germany - nature

    11/05/2026
    #51
  • 🇩🇪 Germany - nature

    10/05/2026
    #43
  • 🇺🇸 USA - nature

    14/03/2026
    #96
  • 🇺🇸 USA - nature

    13/03/2026
    #63
  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - nature

    12/03/2026
    #92

Spotify

    No recent rankings available



RSS feed quality and score

Technical evaluation of the podcast's RSS feed quality and structure.

See all
RSS feed quality
To improve

Score global : 53%


Publication history

Monthly episode publishing history over the past years.

Episodes published by month in

Latest published episodes

Recent episodes with titles, durations, and descriptions.

See all

Rainforest Resilience: Rhett Ayers Butler on Connection, Awe & Action

mercredi 24 septembre 2025Duration 47:09

Step into the Amazon rainforest with environmental journalist Rhett Ayers Butler, founder of Mongabay, as he shares a lifetime of lessons about connection, resilience, and the hidden systems that sustain life.

This episode of Resilience Gone Wild blends vivid storytelling with science to reveal how the smallest sparks of awe, whether a frog’s call, a monkey’s leap, or a single seed, can ignite powerful change in both ecosystems and human communities.

What You’ll Learn:

  • How rainforest biodiversity regulates climate, stores carbon, and supports human health.
  • The origin story of Mongabay and how one child’s love for frogs grew into a global conservation network.
  • Why storytelling creates deeper engagement than data alone, and how emotional connection drives action.
  • Lessons from rainforest communities on balance, restraint, and interdependence.
  • Practical ways to apply systems thinking to daily choices, from the coffee you drink to the products you buy.

Episode Highlights:

  • 02:35 – Immersive sensory journey through the Amazon rainforest’s hidden rhythms.
  • 11:42 – Rhett’s childhood fascination with frogs sparks a lifelong mission for conservation.
  • 19:58 – The founding of Mongabay and the power of digital storytelling to drive global impact.
  • 27:16 – How a single investigative report in Gabon changed national policy on forest rights.
  • 34:03 – Encounters with manta rays, orangutans, and other species that reveal animal intelligence and resilience.
  • 40:25 – Soundscape science: using bioacoustics to measure ecosystem health and biodiversity.
  • 44:10 – The resilience lesson, how small personal actions ripple outward like seeds in a rainforest.

Meet the Guest:

Rhett Ayers Butler is an award-winning environmental journalist and the founder of Mongabay, a leading platform for global conservation news. His work bridges science, storytelling, and community action to protect the world’s most threatened ecosystems.

Tools, Frameworks, or Strategies Mentioned:

  • Soundscape monitoring and bioacoustic analysis to track biodiversity.
  • Solutions journalism as a framework for inspiring action through hopeful narratives.
  • Community-driven conservation models that scale from local victories to global impact.

Closing Insight:

Resilience grows when small sparks of wonder connect into something larger. Each story, each action, each choice becomes part of the living system that sustains us all.”

Connect with Rhett Ayers Butler: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rhettayersbutler/

Listen on Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/resilience-gone-wild-winwinwin-mindset/id1765376951

Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/67dhrI6rX4o1hX0Qf2HPAU?si=24d3d984bf974eb9

Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@ResilienceGoneWild

Website: https://resiliencegonewild.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61565572327566

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/104957749/admin/dashboard/

Subscribe to our newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/resiliencegonewild/resilience-gone-wild-newsletter

Mother Trees and Mothers: What The Woods Can Teach Us (And Our Kids)

mercredi 10 septembre 2025Duration 01:11:23

What if screen time could become a bridge for curiosity instead of a battle at the dinner table?

In this episode, Rion Nakaya, creator of The Kid Should See This (TKSST), reveals how curated educational media can inspire children, parents, and educators to explore the world together. With over 7,000 handpicked videos, Rion shows how shared media experiences nurture trust, spark creativity, and build resilience across generations

What You’ll Learn:

  • Why co-viewing transforms screen time into a shared learning journey.
  • How curated video can foster curiosity, creativity, and critical thinking in children.
  • The importance of trust, attention, and storytelling in building healthy digital habits.
  • How metaphors like the “children’s menu” limit what kids consume—and why breaking that mold matters.
  • Practical ways to connect digital content with hands-on, real-world exploration.

Episode Highlights

  • 02:48 – Why “The Kid Should See This” began with Ella Fitzgerald scat singing.
  • 10:15 – Rethinking screen time: from restriction to shared curiosity.
  • 19:02 – How co-viewing creates trust, connection, and a shared vocabulary.
  • 28:37 – The power of factory and nature videos in sparking real-world exploration.
  • 38:55 – On being the “mycelium” that connects experts, educators, and families.
  • 49:22 – How children’s podcasts and storytelling expand attention spans and imagination.
  • 58:47 – Modeling resilience through failure as learning.
  • 01:05:10 – Future of TKSST: community, partnerships, and amplifying unseen voices.

Meet the Guest

Rion Nakaya is the award-winning founder of The Kid Should See This (TKSST), a curated library of over 7,000 educational videos that connect children and adults with science, art, nature, and curiosity. She is also a California Naturalist, storyteller, and digital curator committed to reshaping how families learn together.

Tools, Frameworks, or Strategies Mentioned:

  • Co-viewing framework: Watching videos together to create shared learning moments.
  • Living Library Model: A continuously updated archive of trusted educational resources.
  • Biomimicry & Design Thinking: Learning innovation from nature’s systems.
  • Resilience Through Failure: Using real-life stories to normalize mistakes as growth.

Closing Insight or CTA:

“We are not grownups, we’re the oldest kids. And learning together is what keeps us resilient.” – Rion Nakaya

Listen on Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/resilience-gone-wild-winwinwin-mindset/id1765376951

Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/67dhrI6rX4o1hX0Qf2HPAU?si=24d3d984bf974eb9

Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@ResilienceGoneWild

Website: https://resiliencegonewild.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61565572327566

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/104957749/admin/dashboard/

Subscribe to our newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/resiliencegonewild/resilience-gone-wild-newsletter

The Wood Wide Web: Mother Trees and the Hidden Science of Resilience, Part 1

mercredi 10 septembre 2025Duration 18:36

Have you ever wondered how ancient forests teach us about resilience, connection, and care?

In this episode of Resilience Gone Wild, Jessica Morgenthal explores the hidden intelligence of mother trees, the oldest, strongest trees that sustain life around them through the “wood wide web.” With Mother’s Day as a backdrop, this story shows how nature’s quiet networks reveal timeless lessons about nurturing, legacy, and human resilience.

Listeners will discover how forests model sustainable systems, why unseen acts of care hold entire ecosystems together, and how small, intentional practices can deepen both personal and collective resilience.

What You’ll Learn:

  • The science behind the mother tree theory and the “wood wide web” of underground fungal networks.
  • Why resilience is not just bouncing back, but holding space and sustaining others with wisdom.
  • Practical nature-inspired frameworks like Root & Reach, Circle of Care Mapping, and Legacy Seeds for applying these lessons to daily life.
  • How old-growth forests stabilize climate, store carbon, and protect biodiversity, and why protecting them protects us.

Episode Highlights:

  • 00:00 – What mother trees reveal about unseen resilience and care
  • 03:12 – The “wood wide web”: how forests communicate and collaborate
  • 06:40 – Why true resilience means conserving strength while nurturing others
  • 10:25 – Nature-inspired tools for building sustainable care (Root & Reach, Circle of Care Mapping, Legacy Seeds)
  • 14:18 – The urgency of protecting old-growth forests and their role in climate resilience
  • 17:10 – A call to honor the quiet nurturers in our lives and communities

Tools, Frameworks, or Strategies Mentioned:

  • Root & Reach: Aligning personal grounding with intentional acts of care.
  • Circle of Care Mapping: Visualizing layers of relationships and identifying where small actions can ripple.
  • Legacy Seeds: Planting values, habits, or practices today that strengthen tomorrow’s systems.
Closing Insight:

“Resilience doesn’t always roar. Sometimes it’s the quiet strength that holds everything together, just like the mother trees.”

Honor the unseen nurturers in your life and explore how intentional care can build stronger systems for people, purpose, and planet.

Listen on Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/resilience-gone-wild-winwinwin-mindset/id1765376951

Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/67dhrI6rX4o1hX0Qf2HPAU?si=24d3d984bf974eb9

Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@ResilienceGoneWild

Website: https://resiliencegonewild.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61565572327566

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/104957749/admin/dashboard/

Subscribe to our newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/resiliencegonewild/resilience-gone-wild-newsletter

The Parrotfish Sleep Bubble: Lessons in Rest, Resilience, and Renewal, with guest Dr. John Lesku, Part 2

mercredi 3 septembre 2025Duration 58:53

In part 2 of our episode on the extraordinary parrotfish, Jessica and Kai take a deeper look at the parrotfish’s remarkable sleep bubble and its metaphor for resilience.

Along with guest Dr. John Lesku, they uncover how animal sleep patterns, from parrotfish to magpies, reveal hidden lessons for human well-being, environmental adaptation, and the neuroscience of rest.

This conversation connects marine biology, positive psychology, and practical strategies for creating your own “protective bubble” in times of stress, showing why sleep is not just rest, but a foundation for resilience and thriving.

What You’ll Learn:

  • Why the parrotfish’s “sleep bubble” offers a model for building resilience in stressful environments
  • The neuroscience behind sleep and how it resets the brain for learning and creativity
  • How light pollution, noise, and even pharmaceuticals in waterways impact animal and human sleep
  • Practical strategies for better sleep hygiene, removing distractions, setting boundaries, and creating conditions for recovery
  • Insights into the resilience of wildlife in urban ecosystems and what that means for human adaptation

Episode Highlights:

02:41 – The parrotfish bubble as a resilience metaphor for protecting sleep

08:15 – Why society undervalues sleep and the hidden costs of sleep deprivation

15:02 – The neuroscience of synapses, memory, and learning during sleep

22:40 – How pollution, light, sound, and psychoactive chemicals disrupt wildlife sleep

31:28 – Why magpies and other birds reveal surprising sleep adaptations

39:12 – Do jellyfish and brainless creatures actually sleep? The answer may surprise you

46:57 – Extreme cases: penguins with 10,000 micro-sleeps and sandpipers thriving with near-total deprivation

55:10 – Final reflections: what humans can learn from the diversity of animal sleep

Meet The Guest:

Dr. John Lesku is a zoologist and a leading expert in animal sleep at La Trobe University, Australia. His research spans species from jellyfish to birds and mammals, uncovering how sleep evolves, adapts, and shapes resilience across ecosystems.

Tools, Frameworks, or Strategies Mentioned:

  • The Sleep Bubble Framework – inspired by parrotfish, a metaphor for setting boundaries and protecting rest

  • Sleep Hygiene Protocols – consistent bedtime routines, limiting caffeine, reducing blue light exposure

  • Somnozoology – an emerging field studying sleep across the animal kingdom

Closing Insight:

“By extending your waking day by eight hours, your capacity drops to the level of someone legally drunk. Sleep isn’t weakness, it’s resilience in action.”

The Parrotfish Sleep Bubble: Lessons in Rest, Resilience, and Renewal, Part 1

mercredi 3 septembre 2025Duration 18:50

What can a parrotfish’s nighttime bubble teach us about resilience, health, and rest?

In this episode of Resilience Gone Wild, Jessica Morgenthal explores how nature’s most unusual sleep strategies, like the parrotfish’s mucus cocoon, offer profound lessons for humans on stress management, brain health, and creating protective boundaries. Listeners will walk away with practical insights for building their own “sleep bubble” to restore balance and thrive.

What You’ll Learn:

  • Why parrotfish build protective “sleep cocoons” and what this reveals about resilience

  • Four critical reasons sleep is non-negotiable for brain, body, and emotional health

  • How to identify “sleep predators” (external disruptions) and “sleep parasites” (internal worries)

  • Simple, science-backed tools for creating a healthy nighttime routine

  • The surprising links between ocean conservation, resilience, and human flourishing

Episode Highlights:

  • 00:00 – Why parrotfish and their sleep bubble matter for resilience

  • 03:10 – How the mucus cocoon protects against parasites, predators, and infection

  • 06:25 – Four essential reasons humans need restorative sleep for resilience

  • 09:40 – “Sleep predators” vs. “sleep parasites”: identifying external and internal disruptors

  • 13:05 – Practical tools: gratitude, journaling, mindfulness, and bedtime rituals

  • 16:45 – Final insights: what parrotfish teach us about protecting both sleep and ecosystems

Tools, Frameworks, or Strategies Mentioned:
  • Sleep Bubble Framework: predators vs. parasites metaphor for identifying barriers to rest

  • Gratitude Practice + Journaling as tools to calm internal chatter before bed

  • Mindfulness Techniques: progressive muscle relaxation, breathing, visualization

Closing Insight:

“Think like a parrotfish: build your protective sleep bubble and wake up ready to thrive.”

Your resilience starts tonight. Rate, review, and share Resilience Gone Wild to help others discover how nature’s wisdom can unlock human flourishing.

Balancing Purpose and Profit in Ocean Conservation with Andy Dehart Part 1

mercredi 27 août 2025Duration 56:46

What do sharks, sea turtles, and coral reefs teach us about resilience?

In this powerful conversation, Andy Dehart, shark biologist turned CEO of Loggerhead Marinelife Center, shares lessons from the ocean that apply as much to human resilience as they do to marine ecosystems. From tiger sharks’ unique feeding strategies to sea turtles’ fight for survival, this episode uncovers how risk, adaptation, and purpose drive conservation success.

What You’ll Learn:

  • Why sea turtles embody resilience by balancing risk, survival, and adaptation
  • How aquariums fuel conservation and education, connecting communities to ecosystems they may never see firsthand
  • The real threats facing coral reefs and marine life, including plastics, disease, and climate-driven heat stress, and the innovative solutions being tried
  • Why purpose-driven organizations must operate with business discipline to remain financially sustainable
  • Inspiring animal encounters that reveal the emotional and cognitive depth of marine species

Episode Highlights:

  • 03:18 – How tiger sharks have adapted to hunt sea turtles, and how turtles outsmart them
  • 09:42 – Lessons in risk and reward from sea turtles’ foraging, and Andy’s own career journey
  • 16:09 – Why aquariums are essential for sparking conservation in communities far from the ocean
  • 24:51 – Coral reef challenges: heat stress, disease, and innovative rescue strategies
  • 33:05 – Balancing purpose-driven missions with business-minded funding models
  • 41:12 – A personal story: bonding with a tiger shark and the surprising intelligence of sharks
  • 49:20 – Loggerhead’s future: education, underserved community access, and immersive ocean technology

Meet the Guest:

Andy Dehart is the CEO of Loggerhead Marinelife Center, a world-renowned sea turtle hospital and conservation hub. With decades of experience in aquariums, shark research, and marine science communication, he has appeared on Discovery Channel and National Geographic, inspiring global audiences with his deep commitment to ocean conservation.

Closing Insight:

“There’s no reward without risk. The biggest leaps in my career came when I stepped into uncertainty.” – Andy Dehart

Connect with Andy Dehart: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andy-dehart-9a35098/

Listen on Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/resilience-gone-wild-winwinwin-mindset/id1765376951

Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/67dhrI6rX4o1hX0Qf2HPAU?si=24d3d984bf974eb9

Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@ResilienceGoneWild

Website: https://resiliencegonewild.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61565572327566

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/104957749/admin/dashboard/

Subscribe to our newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/resiliencegonewild/resilience-gone-wild-newsletter

Balancing Purpose and Profit in Ocean Conservation Part 2

mercredi 27 août 2025Duration

In part 2 of our episode on the importance of balancing purpose with profit in ocean conservation, Jessica and Kai take a deeper look at the extraordinary resilience of mama sea turtles and the lessons they offer humans about mistakes, growth, and adaptability.

Through vivid storytelling, we explore how nesting behavior connects to themes of resilience, mindset, and conservation, and why reframing mistakes as learning opportunities is essential for both nature and people.

What You’ll Learn:

  • Why labeling choices as “mistakes” can block creativity and growth
  • How mama sea turtles adapt nesting strategies to increase survival odds
  • The connection between resilience, imperfection, and psychological safety
  • Practical steps for reframing errors into teachable moments
  • How sea turtles maintain balance in marine ecosystems and why they need protection

Episode Highlights:

  • 00:00 – Why calling something a mistake damages resilience
  • 02:15 – A July morning on Singer Island: the awe of mama sea turtles nesting
  • 05:42 – How sea turtles navigate thousands of miles back to their birthplace
  • 08:10 – The Herculean labor of nesting and the miracle of hatchling survival
  • 11:05 – Hot chicks and cool dudes: temperature and turtle sex ratios
  • 13:20 – Lessons from false crawls: why there’s no such thing as a mistake
  • 15:45 – Four choices when things go wrong: blame, ignore, or reframe
  • 17:30 – Sea turtles as teachers of resilience, wisdom, and adaptability
Tools, Frameworks, or Strategies Mentioned

  • Five steps for shifting from mistake to teachable moment
  • Psychological safety and growth mindset in resilience practice
  • Loggerhead Marinelife Center & conservation advocacy resources

Closing Insight

“Next time you think you’ve made a mistake, picture the mama sea turtle on the beach, resilient, persistent, and always learning.”

Listen on Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/resilience-gone-wild-winwinwin-mindset/id1765376951

Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/67dhrI6rX4o1hX0Qf2HPAU?si=24d3d984bf974eb9

Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@ResilienceGoneWild

Website: https://resiliencegonewild.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61565572327566

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/104957749/admin/dashboard/

Subscribe to our newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/resiliencegonewild/resilience-gone-wild-newsletter

The Honey Badger’s Guide To Courage, Part 1

mercredi 20 août 2025Duration

What can the fearless honey badger teach us about courage and resilience in everyday life?

In this episode of Resilience Gone Wild, host Jessica Morgenthal explores how nature’s most determined survivor embodies the lessons we need to rise after setbacks, face challenges head-on, and inspire resilience in others.

Through vivid storytelling, Jessica reveals how the honey badger’s adaptability, persistence, and grit offer a natural blueprint for building courage muscles that help us thrive in the wilds of work, relationships, and personal growth.

What You’ll Learn:

  • The key differences between bravery (a flash of action) and courage (a steady flame).
  • Why resilience is built through small, repeated acts of courage rather than one big leap.
  • How the honey badger’s adaptability mirrors our own need for flexibility in uncertain times.
  • Why setbacks are not failures but essential steps in the resilience journey.
  • How acts of courage ripple outward to inspire communities, families, and teams.
Episode Highlights:

  • 03:12 – The fearless nature of honey badgers and what it teaches us about resilience.
  • 08:45 – Bravery vs. courage: why one fades quickly while the other endures.
  • 14:20 – Daily practices to strengthen your “courage muscle.”
  • 19:05 – Ripple effects: how personal courage inspires resilience in others.
  • 25:33 – Honey badger conservation and why protecting resilience in the wild matters.
  • 32:10 – Closing reflections: applying nature’s courage lessons to your own life.
Tools, Frameworks, and Concepts:

  • Functional Resilience – Courage as a daily, practiced skill.
  • Courage Ripple Effect – One act of courage multiplies across communities.
  • Resilience Muscle – Built through repeated acts of persistence and adaptability.
  • Nature as Teacher – Using wildlife as metaphors for personal transformation.
Memorable Quotes:

“True courage isn’t the absence of fear; it’s the willingness to rise again and again, no matter how hard the fall.” — Jessica Morgenthal

“Bravery is a flash. Courage is a flame that never goes out.” — Jessica Morgenthal

“Courage isn’t about giant leaps. It’s about steady, deliberate movement, like the honey badger advancing through the wild.” — Jessica Morgenthal

“By embodying courage, we inspire those around us to do the same, creating waves of resilience that reach far beyond our own lives.” — Jessica Morgenthal

Closing Insight:

Like the honey badger, we can thrive not by avoiding challenges but by stepping into them with persistence and adaptability. Every small act of courage strengthens resilience—for ourselves and for those around us.

Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@ResilienceGoneWild

Website: https://resiliencegonewild.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61565572327566

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/104957749/admin/dashboard/

Subscribe to our newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/resiliencegonewild/resilience-gone-wild-newsletter

The Honey Badger’s Guide To Courage, Part 2, with guest Oliver Dauert

mercredi 20 août 2025Duration

How do resilience, adaptability, and courage come together when life feels most uncertain?

In Part 2 of Episode 51 of Resilience Gone Wild, host Jessica Morgenthal dives deeper into the lessons from nature’s most fearless survivor: the honey badger.

This continuation expands on Part 1 by exploring how courage becomes contagious, how resilience grows through setbacks, and how small, deliberate acts of adaptability help us face our own “wild” with strength and purpose.

What You’ll Learn:

  • Why the resilience muscle grows stronger through daily practice.
  • How courage and adaptability create ripple effects in families, communities, and organizations.
  • What the honey badger’s behavior teaches us about confronting challenges without hesitation.
  • Why setbacks are essential to building long-term resilience.
  • How nature offers a living blueprint for cultivating courage in human life.
Episode Highlights:

  • 02:50 – Why resilience requires adaptability in the face of the unexpected.
  • 07:18 – The ripple effect of courage: how one person’s bravery inspires many.
  • 11:42 – Lessons from the honey badger on persistence through setbacks.
  • 17:30 – How small, repeated acts of courage shape long-term resilience.
  • 23:55 – Nature as teacher: why observing wildlife transforms our perspective on resilience.
  • 27:40 – Final reflections on courage, adaptability, and thriving in uncertainty.
Tools, Frameworks, and Concepts:

  • Functional Resilience – Built through adaptability and persistence.
  • Courage Ripple Effect – How one act inspires others to follow.
  • Resilience Muscle – Strengthened by repeated acts of courage.
  • Nature as Teacher – Using wildlife metaphors to understand human growth.
  • Adaptability Blueprint – Lessons from animals on thriving in uncertainty.
Memorable Quotes:

“Resilience is not built in a single moment—it’s built through the steady rhythm of courage repeated daily.” — Jessica Morgenthal

“Adaptability is resilience in motion, the way we adjust when life throws us into the wild.” — Jessica Morgenthal

“Every setback is not an ending—it’s part of the resilience blueprint.” — Jessica Morgenthal

Closing Insight:

Courage is contagious. Like the honey badger, we can embody persistence and adaptability so fully that our resilience doesn’t just change our lives—it ripples out to strengthen those around us.

Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@ResilienceGoneWild

Website: https://resiliencegonewild.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61565572327566

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/104957749/admin/dashboard/

Subscribe to our newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/resiliencegonewild/resilience-gone-wild-newsletter

Tracking Giants: The Resilient Work Behind Whale Shark Conservation

vendredi 8 août 2025Duration 58:22

What can a gentle ocean giant teach us about leadership, adaptability, and resilience in the face of uncertainty? 

In this episode of Resilience Gone Wild, marine conservationist Stella Diamant shares her journey from Belgium to the turquoise waters of Madagascar, where she founded the Madagascar Whale Shark Project.

Through her lens, we explore Resilience Through Nature, the Win-Win-Win Mindset, and the art of Purpose-Driven Leadership that bridges community needs with environmental stewardship.

What You’ll Learn:

  • Why whale sharks are living symbols of Resilient Leadership from the Animal Kingdom
  • How Stella navigated rejection and resource scarcity with a Regenerative Thinking approach
  • The science, mystery, and global collaboration behind tracking whale shark migration
  • Practical ways individuals and teams can support conservation without a science background
  • How conservation leadership mirrors challenges in business, teams, and systemic change

Episode Highlights:

03:14 – The moment Stella realized veterinary work wasn’t her calling

09:28 – How a remote village in Madagascar reshaped her view of conservation

16:45 – Lessons from whale sharks’ “thick skin” and adaptability

24:02 – Building trust with local communities for lasting environmental impact

31:20 – The role of mentorship and global networks in marine research

38:47 – Why whale shark migration remains one of nature’s greatest mysteries

44:55 – Confronting the threats: microplastics, vessel strikes, and climate change

51:33 – Action steps anyone can take to help protect whale sharks

Meet the Guest:

Stella Diamant is the founder of the Madagascar Whale Shark Project, dedicated to researching and protecting whale sharks through science, community engagement, and eco-tourism best practices. Her work blends rigorous research with nature-inspired coaching principles that resonate beyond marine conservation.

Tools, Frameworks, or Strategies Mentioned:

  • Resilience Through Nature approach
  • Win-Win-Win Mindset for conservation and community development
  • Global whale shark photo-ID database (SharkBook)
  • Tagging technology for long-term marine research

Closing Insight:

“Conservation is about adapting, pivoting, and staying solid in the face of uncertainty.”

Discover how nature’s largest fish can inspire a more conscious, connected way of leading and living. Listen now and explore more episodes of Resilience Gone Wild to fuel your journey toward purpose-driven impact.

Learn more about the Madagascar Whale Shark Project: https://www.madawhalesharks.org/

Website: https://resiliencegonewild.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61565572327566

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/104957749/admin/dashboard/

Subscribe to our newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/resiliencegonewild/resilience-gone-wild-newsletter


Related Shows Based on Content Similarities

Discover shows related to Resilience Gone Wild (WinWinWin Mindset), based on actual content similarities. Explore podcasts with similar topics, themes, and formats, backed by real data.
Bouffons
Something Was Wrong
B&H Photography Podcast
The Storytelling Lab
Human Capital Leadership
The Misfit Behaviorists - Practical Strategies for Special Education and ABA Professionals
We're All Insane
The Obesity Guide with Matthea Rentea MD
Rena Malik, MD Podcast
Ologies with Alie Ward
© My Podcast Data