Harry Turner is a British war veteran who couldn’t handle Afghanistan, so he packed his bags and went to the Amazon jungle to either die or find a new purpose in life.

Thankfully, he didn’t die and, instead, found a new purpose in life: nature.
Wildcat is an Emmy-winning documentary that follows Harry’s emotional and inspiring story of redemption.
Animals are medicine—they teach us presence and mend our souls in ways no doctor can touch.
— Jane Goodall, primatologist and anthropologist
It’s available on—wait for it—Amazon Prime. 🤣
Here's the trailer:
As Harry explained to me, the film’s production wasn’t planned initially; it just kind of emerged. He meets Sam, who runs a wildlife rehabilitation centre, and his life gains new meaning when he is entrusted with the care of an orphaned baby ocelot.
'I went to the Amazon to die'
Well, two baby ocelots: Khan and Keanu.
Being African, I have never seen an ocelot in real life, so I won’t lie—I am a bit jealous. They’re kind of like small leopards.
Nature’s power to heal isn’t a myth—every tree, every bird carries a life force that can pull us back from the edge.
— Robin Wall Kimmerer, botanist and Potawatomi author
Nature wins
My wife and I make a habit of going into the bush once or twice a year, and by ‘going into the bush’ I mean something big like the Kruger National Park or Kgalagadi, two of South Africa’s most incredible game parks. It's very therapeutic and beautiful.





From our trips to Kruger and Kgalagadi
Basically, Harry joined the British Army and the war in Afghanistan left him with PTSD and severe depression. Being a pawn in a pointless chess game played by globalist politicians can have that effect on you. During one of his lowest moments, he attempted suicide and planned an expedition to Peru without intending to return.
Nature saved him.
Breaking free from the matrix, even if just for a while, is what brought him back to reality. Today, he runs a non-profit, Emerald Arch, to aid environmental conservation, especially after witnessing the ongoing destruction of the Amazon.
Harry chatted to me about being in a war zone and then in the jungle and his experience with rehabilitating the ocelots. Of course, he included other bits and pieces too, like the problems with poaching and logging, being stalked by a puma and so on.
🎙️ Podcast episode
Harry took me on his journey, and it was depressing, uplifting, ugly, beautiful, and finally uplifting.