"Wild Rising with Dr. Daniel Wildcat"
Wild Rising: Dr. Daniel Wildcat — Reclaiming the Earth Through Indigenous Wisdom
Wild Rising: Dr. Daniel Wildcat — Reclaiming the Earth Through Indigenous Wisdom
Welcome to the very first print in my new series, Wild Rising, where I celebrate the environmental warriors rising up with love and grit to protect our shared home. These aren’t just activists — they’re teachers, dreamers, and change-makers. They remind us that with care and conscious action, we can shift the world toward healing.
Today, I want to introduce you to someone whose work feels like a compass pointing us back to the Earth: Dr. Daniel Wildcat.
A Yuchi member of the Muscogee Nation of Oklahoma, Dr. Wildcat has been quietly — and powerfully — reshaping how we think about the environment. Not through panic or doom, but through deep Indigenous wisdom, fierce intellect, and unshakable love for the land.
"The Climate Change We Need"
Dr. Wildcat talks about climate change in a way that cracks something open in you. Yes, we need to tackle rising sea levels and shifting weather patterns. But more than anything, he says, we need a cultural climate change — a transformation in the way we view our place in the world.
In his words: "Unless we foster a non-anthropocentric worldview, it will be difficult to successfully address the physical climate change problems humankind has produced."
That idea — that we need to shift from dominating the Earth to living with it — resonates so deeply. It’s a truth Indigenous peoples have carried for generations. And it’s time we started listening.
Indigenuity: A New (Old) Way Forward
In his latest book, On Indigenuity, Dr. Wildcat introduces a word I can’t stop thinking about: Indigenuity. It’s the beautiful blend of Indigenous knowledge and ingenuity — a reminder that sustainable living isn’t some futuristic tech dream. It’s rooted in ancestral traditions, passed down through story, ceremony, and a way of life centered on balance.
He doesn’t just write about this — he lives it. As co-director of the Haskell Environmental Research Studies Center, Dr. Wildcat has spent years mentoring Indigenous students, building bridges between tribal knowledge and scientific research, and launching projects like the American Indian and Alaska Native Climate Change Working Group. His work empowers Native communities to be leaders in the climate movement — not just participants.
Rising Voices, Changing Coasts
One of the most exciting pieces of Dr. Wildcat’s work right now is the Rising Voices, Changing Coasts research hub. This groundbreaking initiative brings together Indigenous knowledge keepers, scientists, students, and community members to address coastal hazards and climate change through collaboration — not just consultation.
Funded by the National Science Foundation, this hub is a space where Native wisdom leads the conversation, especially on how climate change is already affecting coastal and island communities. It’s about listening to the people who’ve lived in harmony with their environments for millennia — and supporting solutions rooted in those relationships.
It’s the future of climate science — and a return to something beautifully ancient.
A Legacy of Action
In 2008, Dr. Wildcat helped organize the "Planning for Seven Generations" climate conference, bringing together tribal voices and environmental scientists to talk about long-term stewardship. Seven generations. Imagine what the world would look like if we all made decisions with that kind of foresight.
His work has always been about more than data and policy. It’s about values. About re-rooting ourselves in humility, gratitude, and care. That’s what makes him such a force. His leadership feels less like a megaphone and more like a drumbeat — steady, grounding, and impossible to ignore once you’ve heard it.
Why He’s Wild Rising
Dr. Wildcat shows us that the most radical thing we can do in the face of climate change is not invent something new — it’s remember something old. His teachings call us back to our relationships: to place, to people, and to the planet. He reminds us that real change doesn't just happen in policy rooms or labs — it begins in our hearts and communities.
He is Wild Rising. And I’m honored to share his story with you.
Let’s keep learning from Indigenous leaders like Dr. Wildcat. Let’s keep rising — together.
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