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Reclaiming Awe and Wonder to Reverse the “Nature-Deficit Disorder” Crisis with Richard Louv
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In the first episode of Raising Wild, Ashley Arnold talks with Richard Louv, author of Last Child in the Woods and Noticing: Intimate Encounters with the Natural World, about what children lose when they lose regular, direct contact with the natural world, and why the answer isn't as simple as blaming screens.
Richard traces the roots of nature-deficit disorder through technology, parental fear, urban design, over-structured childhood and the ways modern life has made outdoor freedom harder to come by. They talk about why kids don't need parents to know every plant name or turn every outing into a lesson; what children remember is discovering something in nature alongside an adult who feels the same sense of wonder they do. The conversation also moves into environmental grief, climate anxiety and the comfort of paying closer attention to the world we're afraid of losing, from frogs in a pond to mountain lions outside Richard's window.
As Richard puts it, "Nothing was ever protected that wasn't loved. And nothing is loved if it's not noticed."
Full show notes and links on our website.