Zoe Helene
Zoe Helene (born July 18, 1964) is a classically trained multi-disciplinary artist, environmentalist, and cultural activist best known for advocacy in the areas of psychoactive and psychedelic plants and fungi, specifically in regards to education, safety, legalization, and "psychedelic feminism," a term and hashtag she coined [1] and popularized.[2][3][4][5][6][7][8]
Zoe Helene | |
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Zoe Helene with ayahuasca vine in the Peruvian Amazon photographed by Tracey Eller for Cosmic Sister | |
Born | |
Occupation | Feminist, Cultural Activist, Artist, Environmentalist |
Spouse(s) | Chris Kilham (2007-present) |
Website | www.zoehelene.com |
Early Life and Early Career
Helene grew up in New Zealand, where she moved in 1974 at the age of 9 years old because her father thought that there was a high probability that a "nuclear holocaust" would begin in the United States.[2] Both parents fought for a Nuclear Free Pacific.[9] Her mother, Ewanna Becky Castanas Greene, is a retired artist, gallery curator, and successful restaurant entrepreneur.[10] Her father, William Sprott Greene, Jr. is a retired artist and founding faculty of the University of North Carolina School of the Arts, a merit-based arts conservatory (then called The North Carolina School of The Arts) who taught gifted performing artists and advocated for the sciences and arts as allies.[11][12] Helene left New Zealand at the age of 19 and attended college in the United States, earning a Master of Fine Arts in theatre at Brandeis University under mentor Patricia Zipprodt.[13][12][14]
During the 1990s, she was the artistic director for Millennium Productions and the chief creative officer for General Interactive, Inc., a company that she co-founded with her fiancé at the time.[15] While at Cambridge, Massachusetts-based General Interactive, she helped combine the arts and artificial intelligence and led a creative team of artists and engineers in developing early interactive digital campaigns for Fortune 500 clients.[12][17][18] She also worked in theatre and the recording arts business, and trained as a Disney animator.[17]
Cultural Activism
Helene is best known as an advocate for the use of natural psychedelics, particularly as related to feminism, which she calls "psychedelic feminism." [19][20] Many of her advocacy efforts are for education about the benefits and risks of "journeying with" ayahuasca and cannabis as well as their legalization.[21][13] She reports that her first experience with psychedelics was cannabis as a performing arts student in the 1980s.[22] She first experienced ayahuasca in 2008 in the Peruvian Amazon while her husband was speaking at a psychedelics conference [15] and says she cured her PTSD in an ayahuasca ceremony in the Peruvian Amazon.[8]
In 2007, Helene founded Cosmic Sister to provide women in the natural products industry with feminist support.[2] The company is also a cannabis reform and psychedelic educational advocacy network for progressive women that works toward a balance of power between genders.[15][5] Through the Plant Spirit Grant, the company provides grants to women to travel to Peru and participate in traditional ayahuasca ceremonies for healing and empowerment by helping combat social programming from a patriarchal society.[5][6][7] The merit grant has taken women to ayahuasca retreats since 2013.[15] A related project, the Cosmic Sister Women of the Psychedelic Renaissance initiative, provides funds to educate the public about the benefits and risks of psychedelics and responsible use of sacred plants and the need for gender equity in the field, while Cosmic Sisters of Cannabis serves a similar function for cannabis.[5][13] Funding for these projects comes from Helene and from donations through a fiscal sponsorship with Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS).[15]
She is also a wildlife advocate who published about animal rights, particularly regarding endangered species such as wolves and New Zealand's endangered Maui's dolphin.[12][23]
Medicine Hunter
At age 40, Helene left her high tech career.[15] In 2005, she met ethnobotanist Chris Kilham at a natural products trade show while she was working in natural products communications. They eloped in 2007.[13] They live in Amherst, Massachusetts, but have traveled the world together for over a decade searching for herbal and natural remedies as part of the Medicine Hunter team, a company and television series that promotes medicinal plants, natural remedies, and cultural preservation. Helene is a business partner of the company.[24][23][25][26]
She is a spiritual agnostic and leads a "vegetarian holistic lifestyle that includes occasional marijuana use."[21][25] She meditates and practices yoga daily.[22]
References
- Hewitt, Kim."Psychedelic Feminism: A Radical Interpretation of Psychedelic Consciousness?." The Journal for the Study of Radicalism. February 2019
- Friedman, Leia. "Where Eco-Feminism and Psychedelics Meet." Psymposia. April 20, 2017
- Boston Business Journal. [Boston Business Journal, March 1, 2018
- MAPS./ "Psychedelic Feminism Grants Hand Talking Stick to Women." Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS). July 10, 2018
- Woodward, Lynn. "Empowering Women's Voices of the Psychedelic Renaissance." Utne Reader Mind and Body. June 2015
- Richardson, Kate. "These Women are Fighting Sexism in Psychedelic Research." Vice. May 10, 2017
- Jenny, Valentish. "Ayahuasca is the New Frontier for Psychedelic Feminism." Australian Broadcasting Corporation. August, 2018
- Susan, Strongman. "The Woman Who Says Psychedelic Medicine Cured Her PTSD." Radio New Zealand. October 24, 2018
- Benson, Deborah. "Fresh Thread for Gallery." Rodney Times ARTBEAT. Feb, 1993
- Neill, Rolfe. "Epicureans." The Charlotte Observer. September, 1960
- Staff Reporter. "Course Stresses Originality, Blends Ballet, Geometry." Charlotte Observer. Feb, 1966
- Kitchen, Patricia. "Artistry for the Small Screen." Newsday. September 1999
- Short, April M. "A Feminism on a Mission to Introduce Women to Ayahuasca, the 'Cosmic Spirit.'" Alternet. March 11, 2016
- Tapp, Fiona. "The Feminist Who Helps Women Find Their Voices with Psychedelic Plants." The Wisdom Daily. May 11, 2017
- Bess, Gabby. "Feminists are Going to the Amazon to Drink Ayahuasca." Broadly. Dec. 29, 2016
- Reidy, Chris. "As far as the Senate is concerned, Dr. Email is in." The Boston Globe. June 4, 1999.
- Imperato, Gina. "The Email Prescription." Fast Company. April 20, 1999
- Lorenzo. "Psychedelic Feminism." Psychedelic Salon. August, 2018
- Austin, Paul. "Psychedelic Feminism and Male Allies." The Third Wave. June, 2018
- Godard, Julie K. "What is Psychedelic Feminism? An Expert Explains." Bust Magazine.
- Short, April. "Why Women are Leading the Charge to (Re)unite Cannabis and Yoga." LA Yoga. April 20, 2017
- Hendricks, Steve. "In the Jungle with Dr. Feelgood." Outside Magazine. December 2013
- Ducharme, Jamie. "Massachusetts Native and Professor Chris Kilham is 'The Medicine Hunter.'" Boston Magazine. Dec. 3, 2014
- Lawrence, Robyn Griggs. "Is Marijuana Booming Among Boomers?" Forbes. May 16, 2013
- Branson, Richard. "Screw Business as Usual." December 2011. Penguin Group. Pgs. 236-240