It's kind of like some kind of church for me, playing live. Each show, good people from different pockets of the world come and open their soul and let their spirits mingle and dance. That energy comes up through me, and all I do is channel it; it's like a circular motion and very sacred.

It's always great to visit Taranaki; it's beautiful, and I've caught some great waves there.

The music comes through me, and I let it come the way it comes, and it shapes itself. I just hold space for it. I don't intend to write it for a purpose, but it comes as it comes and am proud of the way it can support change because I believe strongly in what I sing about.

I do pinch myself, like when shows in non-English speaking countries are sold out, and people are singing my lyrics. I don't think I'll ever lose that; I'm always appreciative every day of the support I have as an artist, because I'm not a commercial artist.

When people connect to my work, it makes me feel great. A lot of that stuff is really deep, and when I play something and people feel what I feel, and use it in important situations in their lives, like at weddings or funerals, that's so powerful. It means I can connect with them on an important level.

The spirit of yidaki is like a guardian for the song and the journey of my music.

I was always drawn to the didgeridoo.

The best wisdom comes from the hardest struggle.

The music industry is not set up well at all, environmentally. But I sing about what I feel, and I'm very inspired by activists and friends that I get to connect with.

My music is roots music: it's a combination of growing up on the coast and mucking around with wood and wooden tones and sounds, salt, sand, fire, dogs, and heaps of brothers.

I love New Zealand and don't get to come there much. The south coast of Australia and New Zealand have a similar vibration, and a lot of the music comes from this kind of space.

Didgeridoo is a name that white people gave it when they came to Australia, from the sound that it makes. Its traditional name is yidaki.

“Once we give up searching for approval we often find it easier to earn respect.” 

“We've begun to raise daughters more like sons... but few have the courage to raise our sons more like our daughters.” 

“so whatever you want to do, just do it...Making a damn fool of yourself is absolutely essential.” 

“Writing is the only thing that when I do it, I don't feel I should be doing something else.” 

“You're always the person you were when you were born," she says impatiently. "You just keep finding new ways to express it.” 

“Empathy is the most radical of human emotions.” 

“A woman reading Playboy feels a little like a Jew reading a Nazi manual.” 

“we are the women our parents warned us against, and we are proud” 

“The first problem for all of us, men and women, is not to learn but to unlearn.” 

“Far too many people are looking for the right person, instead of trying to be the right person.” 

“Laughter is a rescue. p.204” 

“One day an army of gray-haired women may quietly take over the Earth!” 

“If the shoe doesn't fit, must we change the foot?” 

“A pedestal is as much a prison as any small, confined space.” 

“Women are always saying,"We can do anything that men can do." But Men should be saying,"We can do anything that women can do.”

“I do not like to write - I like to have written.” 

“When humans are ranked instead of linked, everyone loses.” 

“Decisions are best made by the people affected by them.” 

“Also, one of the simplest paths to deep change is for the less powerful to speak as much as they listen, and for the more powerful to listen as much as they speak.” 

“This is no simple reform. It really is a revolution. Sex and race because they are easy and visible differences have been the primary ways of organizing human beings into superior and inferior groups and into the cheap labor on which this system still depends. We are talking about a society in which there will be no roles other than those chosen or those earned. We are really talking about humanism.” 

“We need to remember across generations that there is as much to learn as there is to teach. ” 

“If you find yourself drawn to an event against all logic, go. The universe is telling you something.” 

“Dying seems less sad than having lived too little.” 

“Having someone who looks like us but thinks like them is worse than having no one at all.” 

“Law and justice are not always the same. When they aren't, destroying the law may be the first step toward changing it.” 

“Remember: "For want of a nail, the horseshoe was lost, for want of a horseshoe, the horse was lost, for want of a horse, the battle was lost, for want of a battle, the war was lost." This parable should be the mantra of everyone who thinks her or his vote doesn't count.” 

“Self-esteem isn't everything; it's just that there's nothing without it.” 

“Each others' lives are our best textbooks.” 

“The art of life is not controlling what happens to us, but using what happens to us” 

“If you want people to listen to you, you have to listen to them. If you hope people will change how they live, you have to know how they live. If you want people to see you, you have to sit down with them eye-to-eye.” 

“No man can call himself liberal, or radical, or even a conservative advocate of fair play, if his work depends in any way on the unpaid or underpaid labor of women at home, or in the office.” 

“Swiftboating enters the English language as a verb that means attacking strength instead of weakness. In feminist and other social justice contexts, this has long been called trashing, attacking leaders for daring to write, speak, or lead at all. Taking away the good is even more lethal than pointing out the bad. p.189” 

“A lot of my generation are living out the un-lived lives of our mothers.”

“We might have known sooner that the most reliable predictor of whether a country is violent within itself—or will use military violence against another country—is not poverty, natural resources, religion, or even degree of democracy; it’s violence against females. It normalizes all other violence.” 

“I began to see that for some, religion was just a form of politics you couldn’t criticize.” 

“Happy or Unhappy, families are all mysterious. ” 

“Don't think about making women fit the world -- think about making the world fit women." ” 

“Altogether, if I'd been looking at nothing but the media all these years, I would be a much more discouraged person-especially given the notion that only conflict is news, and that objectivity means being evenhandedly negative.”