Welcome to The Cearley Cultivation
Your digital haven for creative exploration and cultural dialogue.
Discover Our World:
Panhandle Primate Podcast: Dive into our thought-provoking podcast that dissects the digital age, counterculture movements, and the evolving landscape of media. Join us as we challenge conventional narratives and ignite discussions that matter.
Cultural Blog: Stay informed and inspired with our cultural blog, where we unpack trends, offer fresh perspectives on art and activism, and examine the intersections of technology, society, and creativity.
Short Stories: Lose yourself in our collection of original short stories. Each narrative is crafted to transport you into imaginative worlds that blend reality with the surreal, offering both escape and insight.
At The Cearley Cultivation, each piece of content is a seed planted for a more connected, thoughtful, and inspired future. Explore, engage, and join us in cultivating a richer cultural landscape!
The Panhandle Primate Podcast
In this episode host, Dexter and Trent, introduce and discuss mesh networks, LORA devices, and some of the implications of “OFF” grid comms. Mesh networks are a system of series of nodes connected through radio waves to create a decentralized network, each node acts like a repeaters increasing possible range and reliability of transmissions. These devices vary from DIY to Military grade, coupled with software like Meshtastic and Meshcore create a communication network in case of disaster or for local messaging in areas with poor cell coverage. They can even be used with applications like ATAK. Per usual we chase some rabbits and at one point talk about drug overdose somehow… This is not my last episode on this topic and in the future I hope to be a little bit more versed since I am now playing with these devices daily.
Links to the devices referenced in this episode:
LiLy go T-Deck
I highly recommend getting these devices if you have kids. They are fun to build together and it gives the kids a way to have a device in their hands that is not connected to the internet. We as a society need to begin rethinking our interface with technology. Think of these devices as walky texts. If you do buy these devices or are interested in delving deeper into the rabbit hole I suggest the following YouTubers
Mesh core and the Like with Andy kirby
The Comms channel, great intro series
Thank you for reading!
In this episode Dexter is joined by Shannon and sound guy Trent to discuss the pop culture phenomenon of the Max Headroom Incident from 1987 where the regular programming was interrupted by a pirate signal. This bizarre incident is still relevant today as we question our own reliance on our own “feeds”. Is the Medium the message? Is there anything that can shake our reliance on national narratives? Join along as we attempt to Hack the Feed.
Short Stories
Charlie Buchanan has a condition. He is homeless, stands on the corner to beg for money, and eats only… at the finest restaurants? Follow Charlie on a fabulous night out in Charleston SC.
I have always felt a tinge of remorse whenever I saw splattered wildlife on the side of the road. To me, road kill is a symbol of the insanity of our age. Our cruelty seems to be our desire for convenience at whatever cost, especially if that cost has no dollar signs attached. This story is a critique of modernity, and I also take it as an opportunity to take a poke at the carpetbaggers flooding into Texas. I hope you enjoy this story
I have wanted to write a story that captures the hope and despair that exist at the end of the night in every dive bar that I have ever been in. I also was attempting to capture some of the interesting cultural expressions around the Covid-19 pandemic at the same time. I hope you enjoy
This in the first episode in a series where I intend on laying out what my paradigm of the past is and my hope for the future. When talking of social change reference to the past is vital. It is natural to seek analogues from the past to observe what the "natural" arc of a civilization has been. It is from that perspective that first attracted me to Graham Hancock and his book "Fingerprints of the Gods". Through his book and Randall Carelson's repeated appearances on the JRE I became convinced that there was more to the story than the standard narrative was able to provide. This episode focuses on the massive climate shift Known as The Younger Dryas. The standard narrative for recession of the ice sheet is gradualism and blames the extinction of mega fauna, like the wooly mammoth, on over hunting by humans... with pointy sticks... I ascribe more to the alternative history of cataclysm that reset civilizations back to the Stone Age and in the fall out most mega fauna died off. The standard narrative has in it a belief that humanity, in a natural state, over consumers causing the eradication of animals and collapse of ecosystems, this is in contrast with the possible reality that humanity itself barely survived the cause of the extinction event and that the overconsumption of humanity today may be from a belief system and is not inherent to humans. This would cause a reframing of humanity from consumers to survivors. From destroyer to cultivators? It is here where I believe the reconstitution of the facts could help liberate the modern person towards the true purpose of Humanity on this earth, which I believe is to take a broken world and make it better. I hope you enjoy this series. Please leave a comment below if you noticed something I missed or have anything to add. If you plan on going to the Cosmic Summit 2025 let me know! I am really excited to see a lot of the people who have helped me gain a more robust view of the world around me.
Peace, Dexter