A Cosmovision of Belonging

Eco-Soulutions

It started as questions:
How did we get here?  Do some deserve more? Is humanity really ‘above’ other life? How can anyone own the land we walk upon?
What if we remembered with gratitude, pride, hope, music and poetry that earth is our life giver, our knowledge holder, teacher, healer — our relatives and even ourselves. We might recast Seneca’s “Per Aspera, Ad Astra” instead of a call to ego, into a noticing that caring for all life is caring for ourselves, within a thriving interdependent universe.

From this place of belonging together, we celebrate our past and future, and Lead with our Hearts in Service of the Common Good in

Service

Physically participate in the work and service of our hearts. For our loved ones and our local, global, and cosmic communities. Service is devotion made tangible, where responsibility becomes embodied action and love becomes visible through effort, presence, and care within the greater living whole.

Celebration

Consider careful listening to the universe that sings to and within us. It is not only more knowledge or science that we need, but wisdom from mind, body, emotion, spirit, earth, and stars. As members of the democracy of species, we remember we are the younger brothers of creation, learning with every act, to live in conscious participation.

and Gratitude

Gratitude nurtures relationship through taking time to notice, name, and share thanks and praise for what is before us and within us. Claiming the language and stories of our ancestors, and the teachings of our plant and animal relatives, we find opportunities to align Prophecy and intention.

OUR PROJECTS

Our ecosystem of projects is stewarded regeneratively.

Check out our core principles and projects below.

Participate!

Be The Movement You Want To See!

In seeking the future where ecology, anthropology, and ethics meet, we honor the science first, materialist civilization that has lifted our imaginations beyond our nomadic forbears’ wildest dreams, while also acknowledging what was lost along the way. That mystery, ritual, and ecological intimacy of our ancestors still calls to us and to our shared purpose, sometimes clear and other times seemingly unknowable. Let’s keep practicing together.